Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 17, Number 4, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 July 1886 — Page 4

HE _NI AII..

PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

P. S. WESTFALL,

EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR*

HuBSCRtrriov PRICK,82.00 A YEAK.

PfBMCATtOX OFFICE,

NOB. 20 and 22 South Fifth Street, Printing House Square.

TERRE HAUTE, JULY 17, 1880.

TWO EDITIONS

Of thin Paper are published. The FIRST EDITION on Thursday Evening ha* a large circulation in the surrounding towns, where It I* sold by newsboys and agents. The SECOND EDITION", on Saturday Afternoon, goes into the hands of nearly every reading person in the city, and the farmers of this immediate vicinity.

Every Week's Issue Is, in fact, TWO NEWSPAPERS, in which all Advertisements appear for the price of ONE PAPER

Advertisements first appearing in the Satnrday Issue go In the Thursday edition of next week without extra charge.

DON'T LEAVE TOWN 4

Until you order The Mail sent to your Summer nojourning place, to keep you posted aa to the goings on at home and the doings of our people. Sent to any address, or to follow up in your rambles nt same price you pay the newsboys.

IK the toy pistol can slay its thousands the picnic ice cream is good for its tens of thousands.

MORE L«lnk failures and a corresponding increase in the American colony in Canada. Can't something be done to stop this?

Hugh M. Brooks, alias Maxwell, who was convicted at St. Louis, of murdering his companion, Charles A. Preller, whose body he packed in a trunk, was sentenced Wednesday morning to be hanged on the 27th of August.

AFTEK nearly a month's effort a jury has Anally been secured to try the Chicago anarchists and if somebody doesn't get sick or die now, the trial will proceed. If the rest of tho proceedings pull along as slowly as tho initiatory ones thero is no predicting when tho ond will bo. ___

ENTKHPIUSINO Minneapolis was just a little too enterprising this time. She published her city directory in advance of St. Paul and the latter has been able to count up a few moro inhabitants than tho city of the falls. She keeps up a bold front though and "claims" '2«r,000 more than St. Paul.

Lonn SAI.isnntY will undoubtedly be tho head of the new government in England, with Ooeschen and Hartington probably filling important posts. The Irish question will be that of commanding interest and it is conceded that important concessions will bo made in the Tory policy, though no distinct plan lias of course as yet been formulated.

SAM JONKS exceeds all the revivalists as a money-maker, it is said ho Is to have $1,000 for delivering threo sermons at Chautauqua and he stated himself recently that he was now worth $100 a day. Hut ho should make his ha}' while tho sun shines, for some of theso days his popularity will go down as rapidly as it came tip. Sensations of that kind do not last long. ...

A

MAN

A

ments*

named Graham has gone

through tho Niagara rapid* in a big barrel which he made for tho purpose. lie did it for glory alone. It hard to see just where the glory comes in but perhaps Mr. Graham knows. His next trip is to be over Niagara itself and after that it is prefectlv safe to say that ho will suspend navigation on the Niagara river or anywhere else.

GKX. GnANTleft a fortune to his family in his book, but it is doubtful whether they have the ability to take care of it It is said that Mrs. Grant has been investing largely in the New \ork steam pipe company, with which Col. Fred Grant is connected in an official capacity and it is an enterprise whose prospects are regarded with some degree of doubt by shrewd business men of the metrop oils.

WITH great dignity and coolness Mr Gladstone is awaiting the complete returns of the elections before deciding upon his policy. He is too Ifcrge a man to regard the defeat of his Irish policy as

personal defeat, and he Is not disappointed in any personal sense. Doubtlew he will ho only too willing to surrender the reins of power to Salisbury or anvotte else who can offer a more satisfactory policy than he has been able to do, ami will cheerfully retire to those congenial pursuits which are more In harmony with his age and inclinations than the active life of a political leader. Hut whether premier or private, Gladstone will continue to be the greatest figure in Kngland.

THK National Consumers' Meat Company of New York proposes to do a good thing for the people of that city, as it has already done for Baltimore* by welling western fresh meat direct to the con«ut tor without the intervention of middlemen. The company has Its own ranches In New Mexico, slaughter* houses refrigerator ears* and shops in the cities where the meat la to be sold. It i* claimed that by this means the price of tut nt In Baltimore has been lower**! 3D per cent. Three shops have been opened In New York and others will

•'1

Tmmnc ttautb

THKRK is talk again of the unhappy married life of Nellie Grant Sartoris. She does not find in the English home tltat generous regard for womanhood which Americans are wont to accord. In his book entitled "Aristocracy in England," General Adam Badeau says Englishmen look at women as being made for their special comfort and accommodation and are far from being the kind and considerate husbands which, as a rule, the men of this country make. American girls should understand English habits and customs very thoroughly before they transfer their affections from the country of their birth. Otherwise they are liable to many sad disappoint-

THE Dakota people seem to be a good deal divided among themselves as to the manner in which their Territory shall come into the Union. The South Dakotians are very anxious to secede from the northern part of the Territory and organize a State government at once without waiting* for Congressional action. In order to decide whether they should be allowed to do this a constitutional convention was held this week at Sioux Falls, and by a vote of 31 to 20 the question was decided in the negative, but a resolution was adopted which authorizes question of dividing the Territory to be submitted to the pebple at the elections in November. Those who favor the erection of a State government for South Dakota urge that nothing will be done by Congress unless the people show a determination to do something for themselves.

THEODORE ROOSEVELT, the New York ranchman and litcrateur in Dakota, who is said to own two of the finest ranches in the United States, says tho profits of cattle raising in the Territories have been greatly reduced of late years. Those who are in the business are still making money, but not so much as they once made, while the business is drifting into tho hands of large syndicates of capitalists. One of the most serious checks on the ranchman is the rapid encroachment of settlers who are taking up the rich lands over which thousands of cattle roamed a few years back. Mr. Roosevelt thinks It Is only a question of time when ranching on the colossal scale of to-day will be a thing of the past. And it may be said that few will deplore the loss but the' ranchmen themselves. When tho country is settled up by farmers it will produce much more of everything than it can possibly give under the ranch system.

THE extravagance which prevails in eastern colleges, and which but recently came to general notice, is being very properly condemned. Attention was first called to the fact in Harvard, where there is a class of rich young men who spend their money most lavishly and unnecessarily and make it unpleasant for those of more moderate means who are unalilo to compete with them. The caso is probably not essentially different at Yale, Princeton and Columbia. These habits of extravagance among the studonts cannot help being detrimental to the colleges where they prevail, as young men of moderate means, who commonly make tho best students, will seek insti tutions where the mode of life is more in accordance with the size of their purses. It is a foolish and' senseless practico of course, and yet it is hard to see how it can be broken up, for rich young men of limited intellectual call bers will bo spendthrifts if they want to bo in spite of protests from any quarter.

A LITERARY REVIVAL. There is a tendency abroad in tho litorarv world just now which looks to an improved quality of reading matter. For some years past the publishers of trashy books in cheap form have dumped upon tho public an incredible mass of worthless reading matter, interspersed occasionally with a book of some real merit, and the public, eager for eheap literature, has bought the whole mass in the hope of getting a few good books at a low price.

Moro recently attention has been called especially to the works of the old masters and cheap editions of their works are being supplied. Some of these are in tho form of twenty-five cent paper volumes, as the Harper Handy Series, and others in well bound cloth editions, like the Lippincott Thackeray for fifty cents a volume. Several carefully prepared lists of "the best books" have been made out by such men as Sir John Lubbock, Frederick Harrison and others. Harrison particularly urges the reading of the old masters, from those of Greece and Rome down to the older English lletrature. He will not Include any authors whose work has not been tested by at least fifty years of time.

This, however, is insisting upon too much. Doubtless it is well to read the old masters and they have been too much neglected in recent times, but it wonld not be wise to read them to the exclusion of all contemporary literature. There is some good work In every age and a great deal of valuable literature Is certainly

being

produced at the present time on both sides of the Atlantic. But it is the little, mixed with the great mass of slush and slop.

A

niwirat and nemlstent studv refreshments in a condition wholly un ana s.op. A liberal and persistent stuoj

ture. As in other things, so In reading.

the wisest course is not to to go to one

temperate middle course which rounds,

up well la the long run. But the revival

books of our own time,*

Saturday

A CARD.

Judge Eggleston is aggrieved at the reference madeln this evening's Mail regarding his connection with the Rigler will case, ana has given me his version of the same. Had his statement been made before The Mail went to press, the objectionable paragraphs would not have appeared,

WESTFALL,

&

July 10,1886. Editor Mall. The above card was published in Sunday's Express. Since then we have called upon Judge Rhoads, who was associated with Judge Eggleston in the ease, who confirmed the statement of the latter and convinced us that an injustice had been done in the publication of the articles. This we now frankly admit. Judge Rhoads thought the paragraph about his associate being "rattled" was particularly unjust, as well as untrue, and assured us that Jhe had no complaint to make of the management of the case. The Mail has ever been quick to correct a blunder or an injury done a citizen. We very much regret the publication of the items complained of, and sincerely hope they will in no way harm Mr. Eggleston, who is well known in this community and at the bar as particularly well versed in the law, zealous in the interests of hjj, clients, and as an honorable citizen.

WHEN Henry Ward Beecher preached in the City Temple, London, the other day, he would not occupy the pulpit in which Mr. Parker, the Beecher of London preaches, so a platform was made for him. Before he began to speak there were cries throughout the* crowded church of "Pulpit," "Pulpit." The fire kindled in the old man's eyes as he replied and silenced all cries for the pulpit. In a ringing voice he said: .v„ "As to the pulpit, I think about that as Daniel Webster thought-that he reganled the continuance of religion in this world in spite of pulpits to be one of the signs of its divinity. I suppose^uipits originally were framed after the Apocalyptic version of a candlestick, and ministers have been too much like wax candles in the candlesticks, hard and stiff, giving out very little light. No man would ever undertake to plead for the life of a man out of a pulpit. No man would ever undertake to go before a crowd for their votes and be perched upou the tip end of a candlestick. When a man is in earnest in preaching be might preach from the top of his head to his toe. It is not the voice alone but the man that preaches."

THE English newspapers which are complaining of the interference of Americans in their political campaigns, should have memories long enough to reach back to the war times, when English sympathy for the South asserted itself more strongly than any words could do, as by subscribing for confederate bonds and helping to fit out cruisers to prey upon shipping. There was a selfish mO' tive in the course of England it was a matter of cheap cotton, of dollars and cents with her while America's sympathy for Ireland is purely honorable and unselfish.

THO TJGHTS OF THE EDITORS.

Utica Herald: Speaking of drinking, it may be observed that a man who "can take it or leave it alone" generally takes it.

Rochester Herald: Some nervous people are afraid Mrs. Cleveland's "head will be turned." A woman that can turn Grover Cleveland's head Is pretty safe so far as her own is concerned.

Boston Record: The best resort for hot day like this is a remote beach somewhere, away from the crowd. Wham you get there, a wad of cotton in each ear will make a very comfortable bathing suit.

New York Commercial Advertiser: It will soon be time for the exilo departing for tho horrors of the beach to drop in and have his address changed. He will say that we must not mention his de pnrture in print, but if we take him ^t his word he will be certain to stop his paper.

A Philadelphia barber has been interviewed on tho ghastly subject of shaving dead people. Barbers, It seems, object to the job, and generally charge from $ to $10 for post mortem services. One objection the barber has to this sort of work is that thero is no pleasure in talk ing to the victim. •,

SOCIETY GIRLS.

[Carrie McAyeal in Des Moines Times.] An eminent physician has been recently lecturing in Boston on questions rela tive to the health of American women and especially to the women of the up per classes of society. He delates that the daughters of fashionable classes are perishing from two causes: fatigue and famishment. That a young lady, daugh ter of a millionaire, should be perishing of fatigue when she has servants to perform every office for her, and that she is famishing with hnnger in her luxurious home, seems a wild assertion to make And vet, what Hercules in physique could" endure the exposures, the late hours, the tortuous dressing and the in cessant irregularities of a young lady devoted to society! It is not hard work that kills one half so surely as the break ing of nature's laws—the living on "nerve" and excitement. The good Lord intended the daylight for eatlnj working and pursuits of every kin He made the night for rest. He never yet made a human soul in human body who dared with impunity to transverse his eternal order of things. A penalty as fixed as the stars Is attached to the breaking of every divine law in the ph vsleal world as well as the moral. My dear girl, ust fresh from school, vour rose-leaf face and rounded limbs enter society if you think you must do

Dance from 9 to 12. then partake of so.

guch lhin?f At 2

of the books which have lecn approver! jn morning go to bed with tired bv the agt* will so cultivate the reader's muscles, and worse—tired nerves. Sleep teste that he will be able to distinguish late on the morrow. You will probably _tirr0nl Htera- waken with little or no appetite. The the good from the had in current liter*

fmti

I

extreme or the other, but to hold to the and tell me If, at the age ofthirtv, you ....

mnnj.

of teste for the old master workers in broken law, and law-breaking brings

*, thov Tho ptan llltnturr In mry to jfrtoij one and could be fol-1 and there la little danger that it wui oe burden. i)*re you complain when yon t?wed with advantage in some other! carried to the extreme of neglecting the bold, at leasts a few threads of fate in lhic* of production.

or 3 o'clock

has brought on lack of desire of

anr)

hence conies the famishment,

Keep un your mode of life for five years

are fine and strong and healthy in the

0f

not

glorious womanhood. If

not? Simply because you have

your own hands.

ilfiSf:

mmm®

4 -H Ji

evening mail.

FORTY YEARS AGO. Port Deposit (Md.) Call.

There was time to live. $• Men slept yet in their beds. The epoch of haste had not come. The saddle was the emblem of speed. Brawn and brains went hand in hand. We were still a nation of hand-work-ers.

A day's journey was a serious matter. The highways were dusty and populous.

No^house contained a sewing machine. The canvas-covered wagon was the ark of trade.

The turnpike was still tho great artery of trade. There was not a mower or harvester in existence.

The land was lighted with candles after nightfall. Butter was unmarketable 100 miles from the dairy.

The steam saw-mill had just begun to devour the forest. The lord of a thousand acres sat with his harvesters at dinner.

The day began with the dawn and not with the train's arrival. The spinning wheel and shuttle sounded in every farmer's house.

He who counted his possessions by the square mile kept open house for the wavfarer.

The telegraph had begun in Washington and ended in New York twelve months before.

The rich were lavish in an abundance which was not yet coveted by the keen eye of commerce.

From East to West was the pilgrimage of a life from North to South was a voyage of discovery.

A WOMAN AS A MAGNET. "I hired a good looking woman to lather my customers for the male operator to operate upon, but it didn't work at all," said a barber on Third avenue to

Mail and Express reporter yesterday. "I had an idea that a woman's touch would have magic in it and soothe the most savage customer. Well, it did, and the savage man never knew when he had enough lather on his face. She had to explain to every customer how long she had been in the business, where she came from and whether she was married. Many would ask her to shave them, which of course, she could not do. My customers increased at a rapid rate, but they all had to be attended by the female latherer. It became impossible for her to lather them all, and the result was discontent. Tho dandy 'masher' usually managed to occupy her time almost exclusively, much to the disgust of the others. I finally saw that my good regular customers were dropping of£ so I had to shut down on the project and dis charge the woman. It is said women can be useful in any calling, but when it comes to rubbing a man's chin I think the line must be drawn. Man is a vain and susceptible animal, and desires to chuck every pretty female that he see under the chin hence they both connot do the same thing."—Mail and Express

HIRED SEASIDE FINER Y. Baltimore American. While chatting with tho propritor of a well known Long Branch hotel the other day, I remarked that I could already see signs of the coming summer oxodus. He laughed and said: "Well my dear boy, I feel that the moro signs you see the less visitors we'll have. I have just dropped on to one or two of tho latest wrinkles of those people who pose as oil summer tourists-on excessively .^_n11 incomes. A dressmaker whom my wife wont to see to-day told her that she had a great variety of drosses for the summer season which she would hire out on reasonable terms, and change for others once a week. Now, ain't that an idea! You see, Miss De Smith can go to Long Branch with seven morning and seven evening dresses, and after a week she secures another fourteen, and can bloom out in an entirely new set for the following week. All these costumes aro made upon a sliding scale basis, with big seams and wide flounces, which facilitate thoir being changed to fit many sizes. You see that with four sets of dresses the customer can change them from one watering place to another, and thus serve four people simultaneously, giving each a constant succession of new toilets.

For about twenty-five dollars a week tho girls can have the use of a wardrobe that couldn't be duplicated under $2,000. Think of that for American enterprise.''

SLOW TO TAKE THE HINT. Ind. Times. The mother of one of our most prominent and popular society ladies was complaining a few evenings since of the increase in society dissipation of late years She said her daughter had been out every evening last week, not retiring until after midnight during that time, and was almost exhausted. On Friday evening several callers dropped in, but two of the gentlemen remained until 11 o'clock. Thinking it was about time they were going home she stepped into the parlor, and after a few moments conversation, sat down to thepianasand played "Home, Sweet Home." The callers complimented her playing, but did not take the hint. Twefve o'clock came and she had almost lost her patience. Turning to the piano she played "Now I Lay Me Down toSleep," and still they remained. Finally she suggested to the young men that they would have to excuse the young ladies, as they had been up very late every night during the week, were tired out, needed rest and must retire. Of coufse the

Y. M.

At

At

At

"excused them" and

departed. The mother said when she was a girl such hours would not have been permitted, and a young man who woula remain until so unreasonable an hour woula be In great danger of receiving a visit from the male head of the house. Indeed he would.

GOOD COFFEE EASY TO MA KE. Miss Corson, in a lecture, says: Itisone of the simplest things in the world to make a cup of good coffee, and this can easily be accomplished by applying a little common sense. If you put boiling water on coffee, and do not let it boil, vou have a 11 the good qualities preserved. One reason dyspeptics can not drink coffee is because it is boiled. The style of coffee is just a matter of fancy. I have made as good coffee in an old tomato can as I have ever supped from the finest French coffee urn. We should take lessons in this matter from the Turks and Arabians, who grind their coffee to a fine powder. When theconee ut it in a

the escape of the grounds. If you use a cupful of unground coffee you can make a quart of very strong, black coffee. In making coffee many people sacrifice flavor for strength. Bitterness comes from boiling. When boiling water to placed on the bag of ground coffee it should stand at least three minutes before serving. Remember, the longer it stands the stronger it becomes."

£^c A Caso of 24 inch Printed Sateens. ChoiceSt vies."

14

We Will Sell a Lot Quantity Limited.

'8

At -iph

We are other

rpHE MAIN ADVANTAGE '(.V V\ I. OF THK

"Quick Meal"

Don't fail to see the "Quick Meal" *-r before buying elsewhere.

C. C. SMITH,

303 Main Street

pHCENIX FOUNDRY

'V"- '"tfi

AirD

SUMMER

Nos. 518 and 520 Wabash Avenue.

Keep Movin

STOVE

OVER ALL OT1IKRS

Is tho Simplicity and Ease with which it can bo Opened, Closed and Regulated. There are no thumb screws to turn, to burn the fingers with and confuse people. The Patent Lever Valve is a "dead open and shut." When the little knob Is pushed over the word "open" It Is open. when it Is pushed over the won! ed" It is closed and no mistake. No one can use It wrong. The "Single Generator" Stove excels all others In closing.it also closes the gas burners. The "safety tank" attachment does not only extinguish every light but also closes every burner before the tank can be filled, thus, avoiding leakage In case it is neglected torellghi the stove.

Now Is Your Opportunity.

moving more sugar and better sugar for the money tha her hnuse in the city. Our sugars are purchased aircet by us from refiners.

NOTE THESE PRICES.

14lbs. Granulated Sugar for .$1.00 15 lbs. Confectioner's A Sugar 1.00 16 lbs. Soft White Sugar for 100 17 lbs. Yellow Sugar for 1 00 Choice Comb Honey, per pound 15 Kingan's sugar cured shoulders 8 Kingan's kettle-rendered lard 10 New York cream cheese, per lb 1V Best brands of flour at market price. Rye iiour, Schumacher's Akron Graham flour. Sorghum molasses, per gallon 40 Table syrup, per gallon 40 Choice New Orleans molasses, per gallon 50 Pure cider vinegar (Pegg's)per gallon 30

W. W. OLIVER,

631 Main Street.

*3

MACHINE WORKS,

Manufacture and deal In all kinds of

Machinery and Machinery Users Supplies.

^Flouf MU1 Work If

OUR

SPECIALTY.

Have more patterns, larger experience and capacity, and employ more mechanics than any other similar establishment within sev-enty-five miles of Terre Haute.

RepairJand Jobbing Work.•.•? ..• Given special attention. Write or call on us and see for yourself. 201 to 236 N. 9th St.,"near Union Depot

rJ?

Terre Haute, Ind.,,..

HF.

?.

H. F. BcHrwnrr, ^JOHJ* BKKXHAKDT.

SCHMIDT & CO., Dealers in

WATCTfBS, CLOCKS, SILVER and PLATED WARE, FINE JEWELRY,

OPTICAL GOODS, Ac.

*03 Street.^^

Jm

Should sell out in a fow

About 3,000 Yards of Extra Fine Printed^Lawris, 33 inches wide worth 10c.

7c Job Lots of Ginghams and Seersuckers. I reduced from 12}^ and 15c.

At We own 5 cases of Apron Check Ginghams, about 10,000 yards O bought to job in our Wholesale Department at 7c. We offfer bought to job them at retail as a leader at 5c.

HOBERG ROOT &

da vs.

of 33 inch Extra Fine Printed Sateens.

449

1 Among this lot are goods

co.(

than any

Q.OODRICH STEAMERS Running out from

CHICAGO ?v \F* TO ALL

Principal Lake Ports

On I^ake Michigan and Green Bay

Avoid Heat and Dust

And Knjoy a Cool nnd Refreshing IJIde on theso Elegant Pt- niu r, mid Have Extra Fare on Railroads for H.ooplng earn.

Ill 1

"V From Chicago to Milwaukce. Hound trip, JSI/IO Including Dinner on day trip and Htate Koom Berth at night.

ss

Fare on other routes at same low rates. ,. TIME TABLE. Tw!c$"dally for Ilaclno and Milwaukee, at 0 a. in.* and p. m.* Dally for Ludlngton Manistee and Frankfort, at 9 a. m.» Dally for Hheboygan and Manitowoc, at 8 p. in.1* For Kewaunee, Sturgeon Bay, Menominee.

Escanaba, etc., Monday, Wednesday ana Friday, at 8 p. m. For Grand Haven, Muskegon, Grand Rapids, etc.,Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 7 p.m.

Sunday's excepted. Dock foot of Michigan aVcnuc. For other Information address

1

JOHN MINGLKTON, «. P. A. Chicago, Ills.

TUB POPULAR ROUTE BBTWEKX

CINCINNATI, INDIANAPOLIS and CHICAGO.

The Entire Trains run thxough Without change. Pulman Hleepers and elegant Reclining Chair Cars on night trains. Magnificent Parlor Cars on Day Trains.

Trains of Vandalla Line {T. H. A L. Dlv.] makes close connection at Colfax with C. I. HU L. & C. Ry trains for Lafayette A Chicago. Elegant Reclining Chair Cars, through without change between Bt. Louis, Terre Haute and Cincinnati via Vandalla Line and Big 4.

Four Trains each way, dally except Hunday two trains each way on Hunday, between Indianapolis and Cincinnati. Tho lllilv T1ifiAWh,ch

make"

Clncin-

JLIie v/Hiy lilllrfnatl Its Great Objective point for the distribution of Houthern and Eastern Traffic. The fact that it connects In the Central Union Depot, In Cincinnati, with the trains of the C. W. A B. It It. fB. A O.J N. Y. P. A O. It It, [Erie,] and the C. C. C. A I. R'y, [Bee LlneJ for the East, as well as with the trains of the C. N. O. A T. P. R'y, {Cincinnati Houthern,] for the Houth, Houtheast and Houthwest, gives it an advantage over all Its competitors, for no route from Chicago, Lafayette or Indianapolis can make these connections without compelling passengers to submit to along and disagreeable Omnlqus transfer for both passengers and :«ge.

alace Bleeping Cam through from Indiana-

K,»Jls

via C. I. ML L. A C., C. W. A. and B. A O. R*s, to Washington and Baltimore without change.

Through Tickets and Baggage Checks to all Principal Points can be obtained at any Ticket office, C. I. Ht, I* A C. Ry, also via this line at all Coupon Ticket Offices throughout theconntr J. II. MAI

ifTIRTIX,' JOHN KOAX, ana. Agi. Oen.<p></p>Chftl. P« 16 Meridian st. Ind'pis.

Dlst Pass. Agi. Pass. A Tkt. Agt. Cincinnati, O.

TPLLSWOBTH J-Li Deale

ABBOTT,

Dealer in

Fine White and Decorated

Q,UEE]SI SWARE, Domestic and Imported Glass and Cutlery." 136 South fourth Street. •*.

1

y* 1