Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 14, Number 28, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 January 1884 — Page 4
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THE MAIL
A
PAPER
FOR THE
PEOPLE.
PUBLICATION OFFICE,
NOB. 20 and 22 South Fifth Street, Printing Home Square.
'P. S. WESTFALL, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TEKHE HAUTE, JAN. 5, 1883
"SPRING" bottom panta are coining in style again. Very appropriate for "le-ip" year. .,
THEcantilever b-idge was begun April 19th, and finished Dec. 1st. The cantlever young man was begun at a very early age and is only finished when he sees her father coming round the corner.
BBASS in all its HHAPES and forms is one of the most fashionable materials for house-decoration. Several of our young men are besieged with requests to loan out their "cheek" for parties, teas, etc.
TUB immigration by way of Castle Garden the past year has been about four hundred thousand. These immigrants are like a superfluity of children, they will come even though they are not wanted.
A London doctor has declared that nightmare is the result of not wearing night caps. But if people take to wearing night caps it will cause their bed fellow to have the nightmare, so what is to bo done?
THE President received six silk uraVbrellas among his Christmas presents. If he is like the average man, they will only last him until it rains six times and then they will all be numbered among the lost.
THIS unkindest CUL that has ever been giveu to Susan B. Anotby is by Nye's Boomerang. It is a wood cut and makes Susan look like a holy terror, instead of the really great-hearted, philanthropic woman she really is.
AN exchange says it is a fact that "brainy women have big feet. It should have said that brainy women have too much sense to wear shoes several sizes too small in the vain hope of making their feet look little.
DIGITATED stockings the color of mashed potatoes are the latest. Each stocking has tfve distinct toes and they cost three dollars ajpair, but money is no object to a man with a corn, which these stockings are warranted to cure.
LOUISA AI^OTT'S long promsed book, "Jo's Boys, and what became of them,'' was not issued in time for the Holidays, as was expected. It was a disappointment to the little folks who are anxious to know how thb "Liitle Men" turned out.
WHEN the jjiidegroorn solemnly declares at the altar. "With all my worldly goods I the eendow," why is it that the law only gives the widow one third of the estate? Where is the fraud— in the law, the bridegroom or the marriage service?"
IT is snid that the English sparrows is really good for food. Why not? it is plump and tonder, and if properly served, might very well be passed off as snipe provided of course a restaurant keeper could be found who would consont to practice deception upon his customers.
LITTI.K women may now become tall. The process is very simple. The woman is encased in a tight corset fifty pouuds of lead are hung on each foot and "he is suspended from the ceiling. This is repeatod at frequent intervals for six months and, after the height is increased three inches, the woman is handed over to the doctor.
THR Cnrrent, the much talked of Chicago literary weekly is out. This is the third week of its existence and it fully sustains the high standard of merit promised by its publisher Mr. Edgar L. Wakeman. It is for each week what the tuagaelues are for the month. We presume that a sample copy will be sent any reader of The Mail on application to the publisher,
ANDKRSON, I his State, can sympathize with lu our telephone difficulties. They are having a war with their g.ta company which has removed all their street lamps and the city is now in darkness. These troubles will have one good oflfect, they will demonstrate to the people in general what It is to be in the power of a monopoly and make them more sympathetic in nerd to the working masses who are in toils.
MR. BKKCHKH said in a late sermon, MWin« is not now, formerly, a token of hospitality it is i-uaecap indication of vanity." He is qgifce The more vulgar and ignorant a rich man is, the more loudly keK :sts of bis liquors. He never I anything i-.t the ©1 ?n«t and best, so ue a-\r*, arf? iw witr^nipoi you to drink it it he ha* pour «i n. A great many men take more prWe in their wine cellars than in th^r IH ies aud can much be
THa-IatfUroatmHs ,?,«rra! ibtcai* the new year by puu.'gou a new and very tiaudsome dress of fle-m-fuc^i The ft rr :}.'»? iy .••on.-- U) is in he ts ".ui'rV 1 pilars iy, «sly and' vlit I, about the l^t rc&'c.Uu *n mt'ly
Important mnvs of I lie vi (r •»!. It J- a -Hs !•„. JkSr hi »'V* «r!'i ih" Wo«\
IT is said that Mr. Langtry is quietly) following his wife from place to place and jealously watching her. He must derive great satisfaction, these frosty nights, in standing upon the railroad tradk and watching the Lily's private car where she and Freddie are safely sheltered, "dreaming the happy hours away."
TWELVE bachelors recently undertook to complete aquiltala Methodist church fair in Trenton, N. J. Ten cents admission was charged to see them sew, but after ej»ch one jabbed the needle under his thumb nail three or four times the minister interfered to stop the profanity and the seamsters were locked up till they cooled off.
THERE is no more room in "Westminster Abbey indeed, it has been uncomfortably crowded for a longtime. The illustrious dead are encroaching upon one another's graves and historic bones are stacked about without regard to rank, sex or condition. London needs a new graveyard and "needs it bad."
IT is the purpose of the committee over public lands in Congress to declare forfeited a large number of grants to railroads where the conditions of the grant have not been complied with. According to Mr. Cobb, of this State, who is chairman of the committee, any where from twenty-live to one hundred million acres of the public domain can be thus recovered for the use of settlers.
As the beginning of a new year is a popular time to swear off, it will interest a certain class to know that there is a prescription in use in England for the cure of drunkenness which thousands are said to have found successful. It is as follows: Sulphate of Iron 20 grains, Magnesia 40 grains, Peppermint 44 drachms, Spirits of Nutmeg 4 drachms. Dose, one tablespoonful twice a day.
CHICAGO comes smilingly to the front with a showing that during 1883 the new buildings erected within her borders measure a frontage of ten and a half miles, and cost. $24,000,000. Chicago is the town of which it has been said that the only view posterity will be able to get of their ancestors will be in photographs representing them as running to catch something. Busy place, Chicago.
IT is to be hoped that Mr. Beecher's premonition, which he intimated to his church last Sunday, that he might uot be with them another year, will not be fulfilled. No man has been more criticised for his religious utterances than Beecher, but there are few greater minds in the world to-day. Doubtless, like the rest of us, he would soon be forgotten when gone, but it would be pleasant to have him with us for a score of years yet.
THE Chicago Express has made a discovery. It says: "We recognize the fact that if all the clergy were suddenly to esponse the truth and preach it boldly and in its purity, the result would be the destruction of the church and of society in its existing condition. In other words it would precipitate aevolution." If this is the case the clergy would better let the truth alone. But what is thia wonderful truth which it isn't safe for the preachers to fool with?
Low neck dresses have become so very low in the large cities that even the wicked newspapers feel called upon to remonstrate. Many of them are so decollete that if the slender ribbon, which ties them on the shoulder, should break, the dress would fall off. And the*e dresses are worn not only to parties but to the opera where all the vulgar crowd may see. Nothing is left for the imagination, the bare facts are plainly, visible. The women who wear these dresses may be virtuous, they certainly are not modest.
A DISTINGUISHED fashion paper in its Notes to Gentlemen says, "There is no crime against good maimers more gross than that of puttiug on your dress suit by daylight, even for a marriage. It is a crime Which almost amounts to an indecency. Your swallow-tail is the owl of your wardrobe and should only come out at dark." Gracious Hevings. For years we have been cutting wood and making tires and sweeping off the walks aud going to market in a full dress-suit. And now to be told that our highly respected swallow-tail is an indecency! It is too much, too much. ,\
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^MARION CRAWFORD, in his new novel, makes one of the characters exclaim, "What cau these wtetched, shallow society men know aloat the 1 problems of life?" It is Uic-t' very uion^ who do know all about Intra. They are perfectly familiar with the^reat problem of how to make one dollar do the work of two how to credit at every, possible how tn I'.VOH priylntj debts how to kef-p up falsa aj'pear.iuc^sj uil of the terribly serious questions of life they understand from intimate acquaintances and the time they have statin up ji I'toxl'if's, if pniit.ibiy np!»ye.l. w.miJ .liAVO langagu fatulab* I'LL I LIE L)IU! HTIT.
'Sua D' nocfiMc etn:!•» of tn© 8uvg mi» .Mi'riivn-.i.iy In nnf! .i i.ife.-s-i-.l Vy Mr. »--Lin i!»j a^. 1 luinjtn-'.ed at lfi
TBRRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
ON the 16th inst. there is to be a meet- j-• ing in Washington of persons interested in the passage of a National bankrupt law. There is very strong pressure for such a law and the sentiment of I merchants and business men generally is in favor of it. The objection to the insolvent laws of the several States is their want of uniformity, the trouble in adjusting claims to which they give rise, and the exceptions and preferences they allow Besides, in some of the States, an obstinate creditor, by refusing to sign a release to the debtor, can prevent him from going again into business in his own name, except by resorting to the subterfuge of an agency, and thus damage his reviving credit. A uniform Bankrupt law that would guard the interest alike of debtor and creditor, and permit the former to go free and begin life agaiu after au honest explanation of his losses and equally honest transfer of his assets, would be a good thing for the country. If a new law is enacted great care will be taken to guard against many defects which existed in the old law.
TttE Evansville Journal seems to leel called upon to prescribe a Presidential ticket for the Republicans. After disposing of Senator Harrison and General Gresham, by saying that their mutual jealousy will prevent either of them from having the first plaoe dh the ticket, it counsels a compromise by Indiana making no claim for the first place, but being satisfied with the second, and suggests that Gov. Porter would make an excellent candidate for Vice-President with Gen. Sherman or someothnr strong man for the tirst place. Perhaps it would be just as well if the Journal did not labor quite so hard upon this troublesome question. The Republican party in Indiana is bigger than any man. whoever he may be, and' may be trusted wisely to decide what is the best course for the party to pursue. One thing is pretty certain, howeve^, aud that is, if an Indiana man cau be put at the head of the National ticket for 1884, he will go there, whether the man be Gresham or Harrison, and they would be blanked fools if they didn't feel that way.
MR. Louis KIMMHL, of. Lafayette, the governmentagent at St. George's Island, Alaska, gives an interesting account of the inhabitants and mode of living in that far-off country (2400 miles from San Francisco!) for providing a government for which Senator Harrison has lately introduced a bill in Congress. Mr. Kimmel seems to be justified in the statement that St. George's Island hasn't much to commend it as a Dlace of habitation, as it is usually enveloped in a dense fog and it is a,rare thing to get an hour*s sunshine in a day. The highest temperature last summer was 45 degrees while in winter the temperature ranges from 5 to 25 below zero. The inhabitants are dirty diseased and devoted to a Russian game of cards. They live on seal fat aud rook's eggs. The climate there is well suited to the wearing of sealskin, "but the Alents "prefer bright calicoes and brass jewelry to seal skin and pure gold." In this respect they are like the people Columbus found in the new world, who were only too glad to exchange their ornaments of solid gold for gaudy bits of colored glass aud similar brilliant baubles. One ©f their shrewdest and fiercest chiefs even permitted the wily Spaniards to put a pair of steel handcuffs on him, brightened to a silver sheen, and represented to be costly ornaments, and thus to be carried away captive from his warriors. But to return to Alaska, the seal output amounts to from 7t,000 to 100,000 skins per year, for which the government receives $2 each and $55,000 a year from the Alaska Commercial Company f®r its privileges. This company has a monopoly of the business until 1890, and must make an enormous income, as the skins cost the company'only about $9 each delivered in San Francisco. Most people have some notion of the prices which these furs bring when sold from the merchant's counter.
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IH*anPtitfajK»'iit«r anil w«» listened byl. an amli'Miee Of Ji'M 1J^_ tr-.:-In-r the .T^nf Th» ui- lv Ju sup'.'|uiirrelin.u: rsi:at c.uid: i:iteH n«d «li»vot«* thf- n«olvcs to ih« piireletn» eriJtle p25-ie'j'.»»| A r^oh«!«'-»n that Mr* Mol »Qt-ld thctr t'h'-ii-e th« p-r.jvr ani v** «, n. *.\h 't •!.' .r can i:'!"' a* an overp jwe.-ii^g sue 1
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Although the crops were reasonably good for the year 1883 and the farmers generally are well fixed, the business world suffered heavily, the failures for the year numbering 9,189, with liabilities of $172,000,000, as against 8,738 failures in 1882 with liabilities of $101,000,000. The failures last year were greater than thos6 of any year since 1878, when they reached 10,478, with liabilities of $284,0 0,0( 0. That year was the last under the uporation of tbe bankrupt law, and a great many persons went into insolvency just before the law ceased to exist, in order not to miss the opportunity to get rid of their debts." On the whole the v("ir ju1 closed was not a very prosperous one for busing men, one person out of every -ninety-four engaged in business having failed. It is but just to say, however, that many of the failures were ranged'by sper'ulating in margins an that ni vst h^tftes *ftiptged in legitifeute buiiuc-jw ami wi'U the requisite amount of emit.)!, were atile to show reasonably fair profit
As to the outlooi: fr i8S4 it is too soon in sp-ak wfth (v.? ti^-nae,. though -the central ?nfi^re-!-iui f-imua to that it is fw--: '. &<ueh will of course depend |. apofe .the cr* i*. I only nppirontuse for anx at pr -ent grows out of t.i'* f.»: tli.it 11 ie ir for the itaiional" iiii' t-.x aileii-iift wh..'h i-- :tnl to \v» «ou.e'-vhat to b0 {vantage.of bt -j: •*.* Lei, oahepe for the lio*ever itheeropa will t» i.x»d, th-i? tbe prew ni Congress will n-: f-c«a cue, that ttrC? raw r«*iJ*nt. wh'-evbi-, ba urny be, *iU fee .i -.fch convulsing tbe nation T. !*II JK V. exdtemeat.
DURING the past year the national debt was reduced about $110 000,000. We have reason to be proud of our financial record since the close of the war. It has certainly been a remarkable one. In his famous article, "Kin beyond Sea," Gladstone, after speaking of the growth of the debt until the interest became tbe highest in the world, draws this parallel between England and the United States: "In England, at the close of the great French war, tbe propertied classes, who were supreme in Parliament, at once re- 1 belled against the Tory Governmentand refused to prolong the income tax even for a single year. We talked big, both then and now, about tbe payment of our national debt but sixty-three years have since elapsed, all of them except two called years of peace, and we have reduced the huge total by about.oneninth that is to say, by little over oue hundred millions, or scarcely more than one one million and a half a year. This is the conduct of a State elaborately digested into orders and degrees, famed for wisdom and forethought and consolidated by along experience. But America continued long to bear, on her unaccustomed and still smarting shoulders, the burden of the war taxation. In twelve years she has reduced her debt by one hundred and fifty-eight millions sterling, or at the rate of thirty millions for every year. In each twelve months she has done what we did eight years her self-command, self-denial, and wise forethought for the future have been, to say the least, eight-fold ours. These are facts which redound greatly to her honor and the historian will record with surprise that an enfranchised nation tolerated burdens which in this country a helected class, possessed of the representation, did not dare to face, and tbe most unmitigated democracy known to the annals of the world resolutely reduced at its own cost prospective liabilities of the State, which the aristocratic and plutocratic and monarchical government of the United Kingdom has been contented ignobly to hand over to posteritv."
IT is most sincerely to be hoped that Capt. E. L. Johnson will speedily take himself off to Tennessee for permanent residence. The public has been nauseated by his couduct towards his poor dear wife, whose name he has sullied as much as possible, unless, as the Cincinnati Enquirer suggests, he finishes by carving his heart broken confession upon her tombstone. The fact is, Johnson has greatly overacted the role of injured husband and there are aot wanting those who doubt the sincerity of bis protestacious. The comments of the press have been exceedingly severe upon Johnson, especially in those localities where his wife was best known. Mr. Johnson should keep silent and retire Southward.
THK Emma Bond case, on trial at Hillsboro, Ills., ended on Wednesday evening by the jury finding the defendants not guilty of the crime charged. The feeling over there is very strong against the jury and there was talk of lynching the accused, but the weather probaly had much to do in cooling the passions of the people. It certainly has not been, very favorable for such out door pastime.
ISA YINOS AND DOINGS.
'•Diamonds at the Vanderbilt ball were absolutely satiating," says a New York swell. ,.
In Florida they run the defendant out of town if he is acquitted and c'oesn't treat the jury. v-
Sergt. Mason, who shot at Guiteau, will settle down in Washington as a shoe-maker.
The Mormon papers claimed Congressmnn Haskell's death was a judgment on him for opposing polygamy.
The editor o^ the Topeko Capital has found out that "the best thing to do when you go shoping with ladies is to take notes."
A storekeeper in Toronto, Can., has been fined $20 and costs for selling chances to guess the number of beans in a bottle for prizes.
The percentage of divorces in New England has doubled in the last ten years. It won't do to poke fun at the West about divorces.
A Carson City photographer treats each customer who will take it to a drink of liquor, in order to get tbe proper "pleased expression" of the face.
A medical writer says girls are so constructed Chat they cannot jump. If you want to test the thing, young man, just make one of them an offer of marriage.
They were about to bury a grandchild of Gen. Turner of Memphus, when some one insisted that it should be bathed and slapped on the back. It is now alive and doing welU
Sacramento lincehesa gambling, And Mayor Brown says that fewer youog men are lured into thegamea than before the city began to derive$8,000 annually from them.
The favorite wife of the late Brigham Young married soon after his decease two of his sons have died drunkards two of his daughters are married to the same husband, and three or more of their half sisters have gone to the bad.
It was a dull day in a barber's shop it* Bangor, Me., and one of the loungers offered him 75 cents for t!i receipts of the day. The ouar having 1 ft «ecepted, thelounarer went oat and »irMsmned np his frien +, and the receipt®. r-d.-lied a!tOUt$10.
Dr. John Hall says 1 lurches require educH'eJi men for -lifcisfer*— «i,auniin? a®. j!W&*a "d by h-.s!»!t:il:iy, Jii--n«y And yet in a majority of c»-'-s pay th»»?n sahria# am »li®r '.hm are received by postmen and jjotieemet*
The feilow -who went on a wedding Vmr, pit'ami tn Irave bis wife I--hlnU i» a |»Mma to. Nine m-** ia ten the" wo^-ey on wt ing tours could be be'. «r c- for future comforts and luxuries in tbe
house. A young couple of moderate means are sensible who marry and set about arranging the dishes and putting up tbe kitchen stove. The expense of a single day at a fashionable hotel will buy a good many juicy beefsteaks.
Did yon make a careful examination of your sleigh when you hauled it out for use after the first snow fall? A Maine farmer found $B0O tucked away in his. It is supposed to have belonged to a tramp who used to sle pin the barn and was arrested as a vagabonds
They say that at a grayer meeting in Westfield, Mass., the other night, a good brother rose and said he "wanted to hear sung that beautiful hymn, 'Split Doors.'" Every oue looked at everybody else in perplexity for a moment, and then a quick-witted sister struck up "Gates Ajar," which was what the good brother wan tec,.'
In Mr. Spurgeon's inexhaustible fund of illustrated stories is one of a man who used to say to his wife: "Mary, go church and pray for us both." But tbe man dreamed one night, when he and his wife got to the gate of heaven, Peter said: "Mary, go in for both." He awoke and made up his mind that it was time fbr him to become a Christian on his own account. 1
A story &>out Speaker Carlisle comes from Kentucky, which proves that be is a genuine Kentuckian, all wool and a yard wide. He once challenged a Yankee lawyer to fight a duel. The latter accepted promfjjly, and, as was his right, selected the place and weapons, which he chose to be, respectively, Boston Common and clapboards. Mr. Carlisle let the matter drop.
Whep Weston started, the other day, from Westminster bridge, London, to walk fifty miles a day for oue hundred days, to illustrate the physical advantages of temperance, a crowd of distinguished doctors and eminent clergymen and benevolent barons and fair ladies gathered to see him off, and he started to the strains of a temperance hymn. The veteran tramp is in clover again.
Mary Clemmer complains of finding, on entering the Capitol that the beautiful corridors, given to cleanliness and silence for nine mouths, had been seized by the Philistines, and besmeared aud defiled by the tobacco-chewing politicians. During tbe sessions of Congress, ahe says, the internal condition of the Capitol of the nation is a perpetual insult and grief to every refined American. Moreover, she believes that the Huns of Attila, when they swooped down from north, did not look half so dissipated as these men do.
A Dr. Granville writes to the London times: "Many persons who are uot by habit 'dreamers' are dreaming a great deal just now and wondering why they do so. The answer is very simple. When cold weather sets in suddenly and is much felt at night, the head,
per ya«i
which is uncovered, has the blood supplied to it ^riven from the surfade to the deep parte, notably the brain—the organ of tha mind. The results are light sleep am dreams. The obvioua ramedyis to vnar a nightcap or wrap the head warmW, at least while cold weather lasts, ^believe we of this generation suffer mote from brain troubles than our predecessors because we leave the head exposed aVnight and the blood vessels of our celebr^ organs are seldom unloaded."'
A St. Paul, Minnesota, tailor pred'eta that knee breeches wil be the prevailing fashion for gentleirmi in this country inside of four yearsX He adds that he is a full fledged Ameruan and has no "biggod English nousensa" about him, but that American tailon generally are recognising that knee Nreeches are better adapted to this climate than the style of trousers—being warmer and more confortable. The fastening at the knee prevents a rush of cold air u? the leg, and warm woolen stockings and thick drawers will protct the ankles and calves very effectively. He puts the introduction as early as 1885.
A church fair has been interupted in a very unbecoming manner at New Haven, Conn. The Rev. Charles H. Siebke, of the German Lutheran Trinity Church, with an eye to the main •hance, proposed to iutroduce some harmless innovations, such as a bar with beer and whiskey, lotteries with all sorts of prizes, and a see-sawing orchestra, and giddy, waltzing women to catch the half-dollars of the throng at their church fairs. A few hypercritical members objected to these, and there was a split, the disaffected going off and starting anew church organization.- The New York Consistory, of which the rhurch is a member, threaten to dismiss the offending church from the general assembly. Four of the recalcitrant members have been expelled from Mr. Siebke's Sunday-school. The item reads more like an episode iu Texaa than in the Laud of Steady Habits.
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HOBERG, ROOT & CO:
Their Annual ILinen Sale!
WOMAN'S BRAIN., Somerville Journal.
A woman's brain is of finer quality than that of a man. Fineness of brain gives quicitnesii of perception, and we see that fact illustrated in this: A woman can tell what another woman has on, at a glance, whether a man might study^ the matter a year and be no wiser.
LIVING ANEW LIFE. Rheumatism loves to riot in a body weighted with years. Until tbe discovery of ATHLOPHOKOS there was but little hopes for the aged who were victims of the disease. But now Mr. Wesley UifT, Cedarville, Ohio writes: "I took ATHLOPHOROS as directed and find I am well of leumatism. I am 65 years old and was yetting stiff in my joints and limbs.
Now
I ain as clear of
Rheumatism and stiffness as I ever was in my life. Consider ATHLOPHOKOS the greatest and best medicine 1 evet heard ot.»
^1,
ANNOUNCE WITH PLEASURE,^
'lp
•X
-B. 3* $*4!*
Knowing tliat tins splendid opportunity to sectlr6 bargains in linens will be of great beneft to
We Offer Without Reserve -2
At an average reduction of 33^ per cent, our usual complete stock of TABLE LINENS, TOWELINGS, TUIiKEY DAM^JS^ and WHITE GOODS, JK
In addition to a large purchase made for this sale early in December of choice Novelties and desirable staple goods. All to be sold at less than ordinary wholesale prices, jjfs' *1^ V'A. jS-
"KV
Richardson's Linens,
$ $•(**.
8-4 Satin Damasks, Damask Sets, Cloths and Napkins, Fringed Cloths and Napkins all at 60 to 75c. on the dollar, t,
HEAVY GERMAN TABLE LISTENS^.
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At 10 cts. 25 cts. 33 ct?. 37 cts. 45 cts. 50,cts. and 58 cents. FINE DAMASK TABLE LINENS, at 50 cts. 62 cts. 68 cts. 80 cts. 87 cts. 90 cts. up to $2 a yard, all 10 to 30 centa under former prices.
l&JLFTZXliT&tVt
3.8, 5-8 and 3-4 size to-day 50c., 65c., 75c., 85c., 98c., $1.15, $1.25, $1.40, and up per dozen were 75c., $1, $L25, $1.60, $1.90 per dozen.
TURKEY-RED DAMASK,
Fifty pi »s, iK'W i-h'le, extra wide, colors, at 37 1-21£, 40c., 48c. 62c. and 75 cents. DAMASK AND HUCK TOWEJVS—A large towel for Sc., 10c., /lA 1» .. 1 DO /IA O'sa OMA
We mean mine bari.riins ana are ni prur)s that will save you mon y. Ex:u jirte our gfiods compare the quotations with any you own or see.
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HOEEEGI BOOT & CO,
518 and 520 Main St., Bet. Fifth and Sixth.
