Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 17, Number 36, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 February 1887 — Page 4
1
lorw
W
PER FOR THE PEOPLE.
P. S. WESTFALL,
8#®l
ITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
KIPTION PRICE, ©.00 A YEAR.
PUBLICATION OFFICE,
FOB. 20 and 22 South Fifth Street, Printing House Square.
r-ifg§
TEItKE HAUTE, FEB. 28, 1887
TWO EDITIONS
Of this Paper are publiahed. The FIItHT EDITION on Thursday Evening has a large circulation In the surrounding towns, where it is sold by newsboys and agents. The SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Afternoon, goe# 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.
Advertisement* first appearing in the Saturday issue go in the Thursday edition of next week without extra charge.
BENJAMIN F. TAYLOR, the poet, author and lecturer died on Thursday, at his home in C'loveland, Ohio, after a week's illness.
PNERA IIATIONH are being made at Utica, X. Y., for the execution of Mrs. Roxanna Druse, the murderess, on Monday. The woman has relinquished all hope of escape from the gallows.
IT is evident now that the new extradition treaty with England will not be ratified by the Senate at the present session and the road to Canada will still be 'open to Amorican boodlers, sad to say.
K~ THERE is a dead lock to all legislation at Indianapolis. The House has resolved J' "k not to recognize the Senate while Green len 1 is in the chair, and the Republirst ^V*an Senators are taking no part in the teen proceedings. ^in his bi 'run up I.THERK has been idle gossip at Washhalf {Jigton to the effect that the President the r».may veto the new anti-Mormon bill. No
When dajiger. Mr. Cleveland is not the man exlstenceMnuflf out his presidential prospects by stitutkany such foolishness. on Feb & ment
the
paratltmons
bringing of foreign Mor-
into the
country will be stopped
by the new anti-polygamy law, the MorThe mons seem determined to redouble their ^•queti proselyting efforts among the ignorant
Are whites of the South, where they are able jto" gather many converts. The next time the Mormon law is amended it should be made to put an end to this infamous branch of the business.
XHE New York Legislature has refused to pass a law prohibiting the execution of female murderers and Qov. Hill declines to commute the sentence of Mrs. Druso, who is to bo hanged on next Monday for the murdor of her husband. The crime was deliberate and peculiarly cold-blooded and atrociou*. A woman who can commit such a crime is none too good to be punished as other murderers are. _______
THE choss-players of the country have settled upon Washington's birth-day as speoiul day for indulging in thoir favorite gamo. On last Tuesday there
Avero
State tournaments in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Georgia, Ohio,* Indiana, Illinois, Maryland and Michigan. The idea is spreading fast und In a few years it is likely that every State will have an annual chess tournament on that day.
THE earthquake shocks along the northern shore of tho Moditermean iu France, Italy and Germany, on Wednesday were terrible in dlstruction of life and property. In one district alone it is said that 1,500 people wore killed. Buildings were toppled over like toy houses und the inmates crushed beneath tho ruins. In some casos whole villages builton the mountain sideswere thrown into the valleys. The little earthquake at Charleston was a mere quiver compared with the one at Nice and Genoa.
NOT for many years, if ever before, lias the State of Indiana been so disgraced and scandalised as by the revelations recently made in connection with the management of the Insane Hospital and the Southern penitentiary. The facts are familiar to our readers and we will not recite them here. They are such as must throw a deep and dark shadow on the party whose representatives have been elevated to the control of these institutions. After all that has happened it will be an outrage if the ponal and benevolent institutions of the State are not divorced from party politics and placed under the management of a nonpartisan board of honest and capable men and women.
The verdict of the coroner who held an inquest upon the victims of the Republic, (., railway disaster has not the uncertain ring which usually characterise such document*. It says in plain terms that the railway company was guilty of negligence in using an engine that was defective after having notice that It was unfit for use, and in having defective brmkee on its express train and having the cars lighted and heated by unsafe means that the engineer of the freight irmln was not intoxicated, but was worn out by a long run with a poor engine and thai the freight conductor was guilty of Uljligene* in not flagging the expraes tnOn. This is a heavy indictment against the Baltimore A Ohio railroad company but it to probably deeerved, as the coroner appears to have made a careful Investigation of the facta.
1
THE Mormon newspapers of Salt Lake affect to be in high spirits over the new law against polygamy and assert that the most harmful features of the bill were eliminated by the conference committee. Doubtless the bill was greatly weakened by the concessions that were made, but enough remains to bear very heavily upon the polygamous Mormons if the law is faithfully enforced. This defiant crowing of the Mormon organs is simply an attempt to keep up the courage of the saints under the heavy hand which has been laid upon them.
DuftfNO" this week a new national party has been brought into existence at Cincinnati, the "Labor Union." We cannot think that the movement gives promise pf great results. The attendance was not only rather slim but it was made up of all sorts of "isms'' and the declaration of principles contains nothing good that has not been long in the platforms of the old parties and nothing new that will meet with the hearty indorsement of many voters. The new party is not calculated to arouse much enthusiasm or to offer persuasive inducements for converts from the old parties.
THE result of the German elections has been a victory for Bismarck, who secured a large majority in the new reichstag. The seven-year army bill will now be passed and the chances of war greatly lessened. It was a bulldozing campaign which the Iron Prince made and which was successful only because of his unbounded personal power. It is safe to predict that such tacties cannot win with the German electors when Bismarck is gone. The struggle has been between military and parliamentary rule and the latter will be triumphant when the great war chancellor is dead.
THERE is a rumor in Chicago to the effect that Mr. Walter Blaine, eldest son of Hon. James G. Blaine, is negotiating for the purchase of the Evening Mail of that city, ex-Postmaster General Hatton's paper. The Blaine family seems to run in the direction of journalism. Mr. Blaine was himself an editor until he went to Congress, his youngest son took service on a Pittsburgh newspaper and now the oldest son is to engage in journalism also. It is furthermore said that the latter is engaged to the daughter of Mr. Medill, of the Chicago Tribune In this event the morning and the evening papers could work together verj nicely.
THE Supreme court on Wednesday reversed the decision of the court below in the Smith-Robertson case. It holds that the Legislature has the exclusive right to decide the contested election for Lieu-tenant-Governor. It was supposed that the decision of the highest court in the State would be accepted as the end of the matter. It was even understood that Green Smith agreed to this. But such has not proved to be the case. Although Smith's injunction was not sustained he refused to vacate the presiding officer's chair, and when Col. Robertson demanded possession of it on Thursday morning he was for«ibly ejected from the Senate chamber. The conduct of the Democratic majority in the Senate has been lawless and revolutinary and the party will be called to answer for it before the people at tho next election.
THE EADS SHIP CANAL. If Capt. James B. Eads succeeds in getting his bill, which the Senate has passed, for the building of his Isthmus ship railway, through the House, he will be in a fair way of realizing the hopes which ho has indulged for years.
His plan is to cross tho Isthmus at Tehuantepec and the ships are to be lifted by hydraulic power to the track of the railroad, which will consist of a number of ordinary tracks that can be used also for railway trains. The ships will be drawn by several locomotives. The length of the road will be about 150 miles but by means of it the distance between Now Orleans and California will be 1,250 miles shorter than by the Nicaragua route and 2,200 miles shorter than by the Panama route.
The Mexican Government has made liberal concessions to Capt. Eads. It has given him a half-mile with fright of way across the Isthmus and has granted him a million acres of public land, besides giving him other valuable rights. The Government of the United States does not become financially responsible to any extent for the enterprise, which will be built bv private capital if it is built at all.-- /,
THE NEW RAILROAD BILL. Certain Eastern papers have professed to be very solicitous lest the effect of the Inter-State Commerce bill should prove disastrous to the people of the West, the very section of the country which it was especially designed to benefit. As we have said before, the present law is merely an experiment in the way of national railway legislation and will probably need amendment. It would not be possible to draft a perfect law at the first attempt. What will be needed when the law goes into operation will be a fair and reasonable construction of its provisions.
Mr. Chauncey M. Depew, president of the New York Central railroad, says of the bill:
If h»» railroad commission take* tiie view of the bill presented bv
Senator
Cullum I do not
apprehend any evil effects from its enforcement: on the contrary, much food may come from it I am most anxious that every form of rebate, discrimination and special advantage to the Individuals, Arms or localities should di*»ppear in thUcountry. If that was done It would nraoove friction between the public and roads, and place the railroad companies upon
a
much sounder basis, because
there never will be any serious trouble about rate*. The number aod mile* of railroads are so lafsebr in
excess
of
the
necessities or bosi-
ntm or the country that with their competition with each other and the ever present rivalry of alt water lines rates are always bound to be reasonable and on a downward
Commissioner Fink, of the Trunk Line pool, one of the most able and well-
mmmm
TEERE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
informed of the railroad men of the says that the "long and short haul" clause* which presents the gravest difficulties of interpretation, must be so construed that "the transportation charges of the railroads shall be reasonable and just."
These suggestions of sagacious and expert railroad men do not warrant the fears which have been expressed as to the damaging effect of the new law. It will doubtless be the aim of the commissioners to give the law a liberal construe tion so as to carry out the intention of its framers and if this is done, "much good may come from it," as Mr. Depew admits.
OAS FUEL.
Cincinnati is considering the problem of piping natural gas from the wells around Findley in order to supply the city with a clear and smokeless fuel. If they succeed in doing this it will work a wonderful transformation in Cincinnati by giving it clear skies and air unclouded by murky coal smoke.
But whether or not natural gas can be conveyed cheaply enough to Cincinnati and other large cities to compete with coal, it is the belief of those who are now using natural gas that even if the wells should become exhausted they will never go back to coal again. They believe that gas can and will be manufactured from coal the use of which will be as cheap or cheaper than that of coal. Several inventors have solved the prob lem of cheap gas manufacture, others are harji at work upon it, and there can be little doubt that eventually a way will be found to make a gas fuel which will be less expensive, as it is infinitely more cleanly and convenient than crude coal.
In the order and sequence of nature it would seem that gas fuel should succeed solid fuel, just as gas has succeeded tallow candles and oil lamps for illuminating purposes. Nature herself has pointed the way to it and men will not be slow to take the hint. But just how soon the era of smokeless and ashless fuel will come remains for the future to disclose
THE VETOED PENSION BILL. The Mail gives space in its columns to-day to a communication from Mr. D. N. Foster, late commander of theG. A. R. of Indiana, in criticism of an article last week commending the President's veto of the Dependent Pension bill. We are ready to admit that there is force in some of the points made by Mr. Foster, and with these we have no quarrel.
It is true that there is great diversity of opinion as to the merits of the vetoed bill. The old soldiers themselves are divided on the question, many of them being strongly opposed to it. The Scout and Mail, the Philadelphia organ of the Grand Army, in a strong editorial justified the President's action in vetoing the bill. The Dahlgren Post, G. A. R., of Philadelphia, passed this resolution:
Resolved, That Colonel Ulric Dahlgren Post, No. 14, G. A. R., Department of Pennsylvania, do tender their sincere thanks to Grover Cleveland, President of these United States, for his manly veto of the pauper pension bill lately passed by Congress.
And the Warren Post the following: Resolved, That General G. K. Warren Post, No. 15, G. A. R, Department of Pennsylvania, heartily approves the action of President Cleveland in vetoing the Dependent Pension bill.
General Sickles, himself a brave soldier, sent a letter to the Presedent in which, among other things, he said: "I am persuaded that the bill you have vetoed was not desired by the soldiers of this country. I thank you for maintaining the honor of the pension roll, for so long as it is contined to those who are disabled by service it is a roll of honor."
These views are held by many of the moBt distinguished members of the Grand Army, who are not demagogues and are not willing to impose heavy burdens on taxpayers mainly for the benefit of the lowest type of pension sharks who would get most of the money paid out. We agree with Mr. Foster that the gallant men, who, by wounds or disease contracted in the service were unfitted for the battle of life, deserve all that a grateful country can give them, but those who came back sound and whole are too proud of the patriotic service in which they were engaged to ask for alms.
The attempt to pass the bill in the House over the veto failed on Thursday, the vote being 175 in favor of its passage to 125 against, not a two-thirds majority.
WHAT THE PAPERS ARE8A YINO.
Louisville Journal: Persistent industry is the best antidote for temptation. Cincinnati Telegram: How to make a girl's room attractive—putthe girl in it.
Whitehall Times: Tears sprinkled across life's highway settles the dust of sorrow.
Somerville Journal: You needn't pack up any worries. You can get them anywhere as you go along.
Burlington Free Press: In the discharge of even a single duty, always be sure that it is loaded.
Kennebec Reporter: A lie is like a brush-heap on fire it is easier to let it burn out than to try to extinguish it.
Philadelphia North American: Doc tors who do not invent new names for diseases are thought to be old-fashioned
Boston Transcript: It is strange that poverty bears up so well, considering there are so many people strugling withg it.
Washington Critic: Boston society note: T. O'Boggan hugs more girls than any twenty-five men in society this winter.
Lowell Courier: Philadelphia has a policeman whose name is John Seraphim. He certainly ought to be "one of the finest.'*
Garl Pre tool's Weekly: A goot dsal of der unhabbiness of dis vordit comes oat of der fhet vhen a man vas got sick of himself.
Journal of Education: One of the queer things in life Is that the man who knows it all seldom can tell any of it to anybody's satisfaction.
MIL BEECHERS LETTER.
TO PARENTS ON THE TRAINING OF CHILDREN.
PAIFENTS UNFAMILIAR WITH THE DOINGS OF THEIR CHILDREN—THE EVIL ATTENDING THE You NO ON THE
STREETS AT NIGHT—A CHILD COMPARED TO A FANCY CUP—UNWATCHED LIBERTY AFTER DARK THE SURE DESTRUCTION OF A CHILD—MR. BEECH ER'S TRIBUTE TO HIS FATHER AND MOTHER. Correspondence of Saturday Evening Mail.
BROOKLYN, Feb. 23,1887.
I do not like to sow the seeds of suspicion in the minds of parents about their children, but there are thousands of parents in our great cities who think who know that their children "never lie," and yet their tongue is like a bended bow. They think their children never drink but there is not a fashionable saloon within a mile of their homes that the boys are not familiar with. They think their children never do unvirtuous things and yet they reek with unvirtue. There are many young men who, when they return to their fathers houses, are supposed to have been making visits to this or that person. It is a mere guise.
The practice of allowing children to go out at night to find their own companions and their own places of amusement may leave one in twenty unscathed and without danger but I think that nineteen out of twenty fall down wounded or destroyed. Aud if there is one thing that should \e more imperative than another, it is that your children shall bo at home at night or that, if they are abroad, you shall be abroad with them There may be things that it is best that you should do for your children, though you would not do them for yourselves but they ought not to go anywhere at night, to see sights, or to take pleasure, unless you can go with them, until they are grown to man's estate and their habits are formed. And nothing is more certain than that to grant the child liberty to go eutside of the parental roof and its restraints in the darkness of night is bad, and only bad, and that continually.
Do not suppose that a child is hurt only when he is broken down. I have quite a taste in china cups and such things. I like a beautiful cup, and I have noticed that when the handle gets knocked off from a cup of mine that cup is spoiled for me. When I look at it afterwards I never see the beauty, but always see the broken handle. If I have a beautiful mirror and it is cracked, it may still answer all the purposes that I want a mirror for, to reveal my beauty, but nevertheless it is spoiled for my eye. There is that crack, and when I look into the glass I never see myself half so much as I see the crack. Its perfection !is gone. In the matter of beauty, a speck lor a blemiih is more than all besides,, and takes away the pleasure of all besides. And it does not require that a child should be broken down to be made useless by his exposures to temptation. I aver that there are many things which no man can learn without being damaged by them all his life long. There are many thoughts which ought never to find a passage through a man's brain. As an eel, if he were to wriggle across your carpet, would leave a slime which no brush could take off, so there are many things which no person can know and ever recover from tho knowledge of.
There are the minions of Satan that go around with hidden pictures and books under the lapels of their coats, showing them to the young, with glazing, lustful, hideous, infernal scenes represented, when once to have seen is to remember.
I can say these things, when some others could not, because I am known, and want to be known, as a friend of liberty and a friend of pleasure. I rebuke the young who would turn monks. do not believe in solitude. I do not believe in melancholy. I believe in gayety and joyousness. And I believe that the closer a man keeps to the laws of nature the happier he will be, and ought to be. Therefore being on the side of liberty, though not on the side of license —being on the side of wholesome, manly pleasures, and freedom in the indulgence of them—I have authority to say, when you pervert nature in this way it is utterly wicked and utterly abominable. fe,
There is another application which, although partial, is of great range and of Supreme importance, addressing itself to 'doctors, to gnardians, and to parents, .chiefly. I refer to the practice of allowing children to go out at night into the streets, if in cities or, if in the country, allowing children to find their companions at night, and their pleasures at night, away from parental inspection. If I wanted to make the destruction of a child sure, I would give him unwatched liberty after dark. You cannot do a thing that will be so nearly a guarantee of a child's damnation as to let him have the liberty of the streets at night.
I db not believe In bringing up the
young
to know life, as it is said. I should
just as soon think of bringing up a child by cutting some of the cords of his body and lacerating his nerves and scarring and tattooing him and making an Indian of him eutright as an element of beauty, as I should think of developing his manhood by bringing him up to see life—to see its abominable lusts, to see its hideous Incarnations of wit, to see its infernal wickedness, to see its extravagant degrading scenes, to see its miserable carnalities, to see its imaginations set on fire of hell, to see all those temptations and delusions which lead to perdition. Nobody gets over the sight of these things. They who see them always carry scars. They are burned. And though they live, they lire as men that hare been burned. The scar remains.
And to let the young go out where the glazing courtesan appears, to let them go where the lustful frequenter of dens of iniquity can come withing their reach, to let them go where the young
gather
I thank God for two things—yes, for a thousand but for two among many: First, that I was born and bred in the country, of parents that give mea sound constitution and a noble example never can pay back'what I got from my parents. If I were to raise a monument of gold higher than heaven it would be no expression of the dept of gratitude which I owe to them, for that which they unceasingly gave, by the heritage of their body and the heritage of their souls, to me. And next to that I am thankful that I was brought up in circumstances where I never became acquainted with wickedness. I know a great deal about it for if I hear a man say A, I know the whole alphabet of that man's life, by which I can imagine all the rest. If I see a single limb, I have the physiolo gist's talent by which I know the whole structure. But I never became acquainted with wickedness when I was young by coming in contact with it. I never was sullied in act, nor in thought, nor in feeling, when I was young. I grew up as pure as a woman. And I cannot express to God the thanks which I owe to my mother, and to my father, and to the great household of sisters and brothers among whom I lived. And the secondary knowledge of these wicked things, which I have gained in later life in a professional way, I gained under such guards that it was not harmful to me.
To all husbands and wives whom these written words may reach, I say, if you have children, bring them up purely. Bring them up with sensitive delicacy. Bring them up so that they shall not know the wickedness that is known, unfortunately, by the greater number.
And if there are children that are sometimes impatient of parental restraint, let me say to them, you do not know what temptation you are under, and if held back by your mother, if held back by your father, you shall escape the knowledge of the wickedness that is in the world, you will have occasion, by and by, to thank God for that, more than for silver or for gold or for houses or for lands.
Keep your children at home at nights. There is many a sod that lies tover tho child whose downfall began by vagrancy at night, and there is many a child whoso heartbreaking parents would give the world if the sod did lie over ^hom. What a state that is for children tocome to, in which the father and the mother dread their life unspeakably mofe than their death! What a horrible state of things that is, where parents feel a sense of relief in the dying of their children! Then, I say, take care of your children at night.
THE PENSION BUSINESSf
Editor Saturday Evening Mall. Last week, in speaking of tljua President's veto of the Dependent Soldier'g Bill you say:
There is a general feeling that the pension business has gone far enough. The principle of the vetoed bill was not such as has characterized previous pension legislation, that of recompensing the soldier for disabilities incurred in the service of his country. Its effect would have been in reality simply a transference of part of the burden of pauperism from tho local to the general government. Pensions have never been granted upon such a theory and they ought not to be.
Much loose talk of this kind is being indulged in. I am led by what yousay to offer the following suggestions:
The "pension business" has not gone far enough so long as any brave defender of his country, overtaken by misfortune or disease, is forced "over thp hills to th6 poor-house." Go with one of your children to a county alms-house. Point out to him a decrepid old man. Tell him he was a gallant soldier of the Republic that he fought at Donelson, Vickburg, Antietam, Gettysburgh was wounded at Fredericksburg, endured the horrors of Anderson ville, and cam* home broken in health. Tell him this man refused to go into the hospital so long as he could drag one foot after another, and so came out of the service with no hospital record on which to rely for a pension when age and ill-health came upon him. Tell him that the Congress of the United States passed a law to take such gallant men as he eut of the poor-houses of the country and that President Cleveland, drawing a salary of 150,000 a year, vetoed the bill. See, Mr. Editor, if that child of yours doesn't express itself about his Excellency in a manner so emphatic that you will not feel like saying to ft, the President did '•the proper thing."
This country maintains no standing army. It relies for its safety on the patriotism of its sons and daughters. It cannot afford as these grow up to permit their enthusiasm for the flag to be dampened by the sight of a blind but gallant and worthy soldier ending his days amid the miseries of a peor-house, because, forsooth, he cannot clearly trace his loss of sight to the hardships and privations he endured that this nation might live. Such a spectacle may teach "the ingratitnde of Republics" but most emphatically it does not teach that "it is sweet to die for one's country." It is possible it does teach it is better to die for one's country than to live to come home, broken in health, to endure the scoffs of men who accumulated fortunes while be was giving the best years of his life to the defense of the flag.
Yon think the burden of "pauperism"
together to cheer with bad wit, to let, is not the result of his vices it is an everthem go where they will be exposed to such temptations—why, a parent is insane that will do it. To say "A child must be hardened, he has got to get tough somehow, and you may as well put him in the vat and let liim tan"—is that family education Is that Christian nature? Is that bringing a child up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord?
ought not to be transfered from the local to the general goverment. I don't like your use of the word. I would rather hear of the poverty of a crippled soldier' than of his "pauperism." If his poverty
lasting disgrace to this country, with itaoverflowing treasury, that Grover Cleveland ever was given the opportunity.,., to speak of his "pauperism."
During the war 220 battles were fought: 89 in Virginia, 87 in Tennessee, 35 in Missouri, 12 in Georgia, 16 in South Carolina, 11 in North Carolina, 7 in Alabama, 5 in Florida, 14 in Kentucky, the Indian Territory and New Mexico 1 each. There were seventeen naval engagements.
1
HENRY WARD BEECHER.
•V
"'Wt
A
But tell me why, Mr. Editor, the bur-^* den of the soldier's poverty ought not to be transferred "from the lecal to the general government?" He fought for the nation in a much larger sense than he fought for the few square miles put down^^lS upon our maps as Vigo county. Her'* gathered the seeds of disease in then,, swamps of the Chicahominy, in the" ditches at Vicksburg or with Sherman, on his march to the sea, and not
They have geographical socials in Detroit. The gentlemen have cards| bearing the name of a county the* ?-,i' ladies' cards bearing the name of a^"'. county-seat, and the gentlemen are ex-
pected to find their partners for supper by this guide. Sometimes they can and sometimes they cannot, and in the lattercase they pay a forfeit of ten cents. /f
A Jacksonville, Fla., newspaper has this advertisement: "Being warned of approaching death by my physicians, I will sell my new 450 piano for $165. I will also sacrifice my organs and sewing.. machines, or rent them. Also American Encyclopedia. People's Encyclopedia, General Grant's Memoirs, and other books. J. P. Hotel news office." .M
COST OF NECESSARY FOOD. [Spartanburg (a C.) Spartan.! When you consider the question of necessary food for afield haud you will see that it costs little. A hand can live well on #iy?5 a month, provided his cooking has not to be paia for. A bushel of meal costssHO cents, a quarter of a pound of meat a day will cost 55 cents, and that« leaves 40 ^-eents for molasses, salt and other extras. That will bring the living up to f21 a year. The farmer who boards his hands can do it at this pricp^"^* attaches no value to his vegew^ fruit and the occasional extra occasions. If any^,..^ *0 Ja dozen hands amV^1"1"18
far experience ^"mechanics tbaa within
Special! I
Monday Morning ^February 2Stli,
*4* We will place on sale
'tmi
1*
upon|£'W}
Fort Harrison prairie. Grover Cleveland's veto of the disabledif or dependent soldier's bill is such brutality there isn't ink enough in the*'7 country to successfully write its defense.
D. N. FOSTER.
,:\
5
1
Living is now eh Machinery^ trarnganc« Ola! Jjea_
vj.''.
"all Work'j
p%lfll,°IALTY"
1'}
t-H
1$
.#1
50
Pieces v:
PRINTED
•ft/
At the Low Price,
121CTS:
Per Yard/?! "i?'
Elegant Quality, 33 inches wide.
New
I
Navy, Black, Brown, Garnet, Myrtle, Bronze, Pink, Light Blue and Cream grounds. Many ex
quisite designs shown for the first time this season.
1
HOBERG^f4'-
ROOT & CO.
518 and 620 Wabaah Av.
mm
