Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 19, Number 13, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 September 1888 — Page 1

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Vol. 19.~No. 13.

E I A I

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

Notes and Comment.

We have the letters. The next thing is to get the ballots.

Only seven week* from next Tuesday till election. The big fight of the ballots is near at hand. _____

Society baa made another sensible innovation. For the time being bridesmaids and ushers have gone out of fashion. In stylish weddings this fall the bride and groom will not divide the honors of the occasion in the eyes of spectators. It is well.

Just as bananas an other tropical fruits were getting cheap enough for the people to indulge in freely the report come of a "trust" organized to control this line of produce. The big New Orleans fruit dealers are at the head of it and a capital of $19,000,000 will enable them to fix prices as they like. How long is this thing to last? Down with the monopoly trusts! _____

The Grand Army boys have had a grand time at Columbus this week. Heavily loaded trains went from all parts of the country and the wonder is that the Ohio capital was able to* take care of them all. The muster rolls now contain a grand total of 400,000 names. What an army of citizen soldiery and yet bow many thousands have crossed to the other shote in the last 28 years! No one will begrudge the veterans all the pleasure their reunions bring them.

When you go into a sick room always make it a point to toll how much she looks like Mrs. So-and-so just before she died. Talk of all softs of sickness and death. Offer every remedy and receipt you know of, and totally ignore all ininstructlons given by the doctor. If you know of any person who died with the same disease the patient has, don't forget to give it with all Its sickening details. Enlarge on the beath-bed scene. If you can imitate the dying gasp so much the better. It will give force to your narrative. Always wear squeaky shoes and speak In a loud whisper cast a sorrowing look at the patient every now and then. If you area friend of the imfterer kiss her and cry over her before you leave, and bid her good-bye as if you never expected to see her again, it will hasten the funeral. If theso directions are closely followed out, you may have the pleasuro of reading your victim's name on a tombstone, very shortly.

"If you had a valuable estate how mat.y men do you know among whom you would select an executor?' This startling inquiry was propounded the other evening to a group of gentlemen seated in front of the National House. Various expressions and opinions were given and the questioner continued: "I wager to-night, among your acquaintances you cannot select three men with whom you could repose such a trust. Bad commentary upon universal hypocrisy and utter selfishness." This re mark betrayed a want of confidence in mankind that facts do not justify. It reaches of trust are indeed too frequent banks are sometimes robbed by cashiers and presidents, and estates have been frittered away by dishonest executors. But when we recall the fact that the great bulk of the banks, savings institutions, insurance companies, etc., are wisely and honestly managed when we remember the vast number of estates that death is constantly passing Into the hands of executors and administrators, and the small number of delinquencies which reach the courts, or are even hinted at, compared with the estates honestly administered, it must be admitted that there Is such a quality as integrity In mankind—and that negligent or dishonest guardians are the exception and not the rule.

A thoughtful writer complains of the lack of home education among the children of the present day that the moral training of the young is turned over to the churches and their mental braining to the schools, thus eliminating an important factor in family Nfe.

There is good ground for the criticism. This it an age of machinery *nd we have allowed ourselves to run to machine method* in everything. We pay the pew rent and the preacher is expected to take care of our souls. The salary of the school teacher Is supposed to provide for the mental training and development of the children. But we cannot thus shift all the responsibility upon the shoulders of others. The family is the unit of the nation. It is the first as It should be the last and best school. If the home is what It ought to be*there will be no In* fluence Ills that of father and mother, ofWter and brother.

The schools and the churches are well in their way hot parents hare no light to turn their children over wholly to the charge of others.

They

Hardly!

can not,of course,

be teachers In tho technical sense of giv. lag IwtnwtioB In nil the varied branches of modern study, but they can make

-i 1* &

--v'-i'^T

the home a training school by surrounding it with an atmosphere purity, refinement and love, so that be child will unconsciously absorb the elements of a noble, unselfish character, snd this constitutes the best education life can give.

Now here is a thing which American young women may protest against. An international matrimonial bureau was established for importing robust Russian maidens for wives of Western farmers. The argument is that these strongbodied young women are both willing and able to share the hardships of frontier life and they are coming over in quantities only to find themselves snapped up with avidity by those wifeless Westeners. Talk about protection! Why here is practical free trade in women already going on right under our noses. It is high time our American girls were gettinig right up on their pretty coral ears and demanding what Congress is going to do about the thing. The fisheries, retaliation, tariff, the Maine election, even the bustle question, dwindles into invisible insignificance In the face of this new and astounding stab at our vested, or rather at our corseted rights. In the language of the poet: "Can such things be and overcome us like a summer cloud. Without our special wonder?"

The Chambersburg, (Pa.) Academy has adopted a capital rule. No boy will be admitted as a member of the school who uses tobacoo in any way. We presume no teacher will be employed who uses it. Thoro is abundant reason why educators should act decidodly In this matter. It is no longer a matter of sentiment to oppose tobacco. We now know to a certainty that it is a damage to health and a serious injury also to the brain. The cigarette Is not only charged with nlcotino but with opium. It is a disgrace to civilization to allow our boys bo form the habit of using narcotics before they are fully grown. Their nerves can never attain strength and health, and it will be impossible to prevent a large amount of degeneration in the very face of education. The Chambersburg faculty is right. It they will use the weed, do not educate them. Let them go one way or the other—up or down.

Tho American Analyst comes to the front to warn tho women against use of hair dyes, to produce "the delicate golden shade so much admired by the court circles of Europe and the high society of tho United States." The three constituents of the nostrums used' to produce this shade of color are peroxide of hydrogen, aqua regia and bronser's acid. The first is the most harmless, but It produces sores on tho scalp and gives rise to skin complaints. The acids attack and burn the hair as well as the skin. -'They cause In time a disease like the itch and produce inflamatlon of the hair cells." This leads to discharges of the scalp of lymph and blood. On the whole, perhaps, the women had better turn to some other hobby and get on without tho "delicate gold shade" of hair. Baldness Is not the worst result, but Is a sure end of the use of the ingredients named.

Says the Chicago Inter-Ocean: One of the vulgar customs of the times Is gum chewing. A woman may be ever so pretty, but with a big quid of gum in her mouth she is deformed. Regular gum cbewers soon develop the masseter

Increase the sim of the ssllvmry glands, and eventually change tye entire expres

the batchers say, am cut by-ua.

*f* it'~ -r i-ft*"* 4£ej £s-

%$'"

5

A most astounding revelation has come to those who have been confidently trusting to appliances for purifying their drinking water. It seems that the all the evening until someone struck a ordinary filter, instead of rendering the bar or two on the piano and she laid actually the down her fan, clasped her hands loosely water pure and safe, is means of producing just the opposite re- in fiont of her, lifted her head and purssuingAip her mouth in the prettiest way, begau to whistle like a bird, only much better and more musically than any bird

suit. The Rhode Island Medical Society throngh Dr.Swarts, shows that some fil ters when first used do remove a proportion of disease germs. But after being in use only a few days there is a marked bird and outdo him at his own business." increase in tho number of colonies of germs in the filtered, as compared with thr unflltered water. In one instance the unflltered water showed the presence of thirty-six colonies, while the filtered contained the enormous number of 2,000, 8,000, 4,000, and even more. That is, the poison caught up by the filter the first few days becomes the source of a vast multiplication of thedangerous element. So look to your precautions, and then be on your guard. If you cannot constantly cleanse your filters you had bettor destroy them.

gum cnewers soon uevw*.u© muscles, unduly enlarge the month, and country girl who Is visiting New York uiuiww, uuu far Lho first time, and who in Indnlo-inff for the first time, and who is indulging

SHV •»r—J"

slon of the face. It is a thoughtless, *H- «-I.

pu.au AooM to It th.t It 1. not RUMm||a(rp|| g|_

fastened upon the children. A thought- rr. "V. ful, cultivated gentleman the other day

GIRL'S GOSSIP.

A few girls go through Vassar otj, what they earn themselves. Still others have their board and tuition paid, but get no allowance for dress or—larks. I^st year a pretty, blue-eyed girl stated during the first week that her tuition and board were paid by a relative, bnt that every penny for dress, car fare and the thousand one little incidents she must earn herself. Soon after her arrival the following announcement appeared on her door: "Gloves and shoes neatly mended for ten cents each. Breakfast brought up for ten cents. Hair brushed, each night for twenty-five cents a week. Beds made up at ten cents a week." The helpless daughters of rich men patronized her liberally and by the end of the year she had earned almost $200 In this humble manner.

I ever heard

t.

Mrs. Alice Shaw, the "whistllst" aS she has been dubbed In London, is thus described in a private letter from England: "We saw

Mrs.

Shaw there look­

ing very well indeed, gowned in pure dead white brocade of a heavy rioh texture. The draping was cleverly modeled on the Greek original. It was brought in a long sweep from the left shoulder and drawn slightly to the right side. The bodice and part of the back drapery of the skirt of soft, white corded silk. She wore a red rose in her dark hair and carried a white ostrich feather fan, but indulged in never a sparkle of jewelry. She seemed to be very well amused and to ere were two or three men about her

She can mock a mocking

A rod-beaded girl never turns brown. That, it is understood from a learned physician, is because she lias too much iron in her blood. It is the iron that gives the fine Titian hue to her hair. If she had less iron in her blood her hair would probably be brown or chestnut, or perhaps blonde. Tho varying degrees of redness that you see In different redheaded girls is due-to the different proportions of iron in their blood. A girl with glossy, brownish hair that s'jows red in a Btrong light has only a fair share ofiron in her blood, but a brlcktop, if the expression is permitted, a bricktop is full of iron. The doctors know of no way of neutralizing the effect of the iron. Perhaps they wouldn't resort to it, even if they knew it. For it is iron In the blood that makes red-headed girls so strong and hardy and good-natured. It is also the cause /t freckles, which are very good for the health. And it is noted as a singular thing—probably also having some relation to the Iron In tho blood—that mosquitoes never bite a redheaded girl. So you see, according to the dictum of this learned physician, a red headed girl has many advantages over her dark-haired sister.

Two Buffalo girls have bought out one of the oldest drug stores on Main street, and have taken possession. Both are qualified by long and highly responsible business training to make a success of tho enterprise, and they have taken the course in pharmacy at the medical college.

A St. Louis belle, whose luxuriant half is of the shade that her rivals call red, has determined upon a novel method of revenging herself upon them, the method being to give the most elegant ball of the summer and invite no one whose hair is not red. A local paper, in speaking of the event, says: "Pages with auburn curls will attend In hall and cloak room while sunny-^ired maids will serve the supper. Table linen and service will be of the popular color the only difficulty seems to lie in procuring colored mnsicians to harmonize with the dancers. Carriages drawn by white horses will be at the service of the guests. Several young gentlemen have offered to conceal their odions dark locks under a wig of the brightest shade obtainable. Bnt fraud and deception will be strictly guarded against, and impostors if detected will be promptly unwigged before the entire company.

The New York Sun describes a country girl's visit to the city of boodle Alderman in this way: For a picture of rabid, gasping Mid transcendental bliss nothing exceeds the expression of a

In the bewildering attractions of ice

cream soda water. This extraordinary

ml**«re,

twilrtwd, I Ond myMlf In ,.t. frutu tod cream, orange water Ice ana .um owx-lu, gom eb«w«

j. Newton Gotthold, the actor, well eoctlon that would drive toper, who known from hb frequent visits to this taM "wsllow a pint of benalne, to the city, died last Wedn«d«y at his borne edge of the grave. The country girls sit in Sewickly, Pa., Bright*s disease.

composed of soda

(ra.0

.. long-handled sliver spoon. It is a con-

with

on the high stools with their heels stock under them, their shoulders hnmpad

This season's fashions In dressed beef, and their hssds bent forward consuming with slow and awful onctkm ths swset-

'Sitfe-*!?"

vMT

life

yjlO -:.iws«ii

#4:

TERRE HAUTE, ESTD., SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 15,1888

w,

ened stuff before them. Nothing ever disturbs them while at work, and, when it is all over, they rise, and, with a heartfelt sigh, move along with backward oeB^f,regret.

.WOMEN'S WAYS.

Mrs. Mary E. Lapham and tvfo other young women hare for several years successfully conducted a bank at Northville, Michigan.

A women's Knights of Labor assembly has been organized in Toledo, O. It has established a co-operative association for the sale of knit goods, hand-mado garments, clothing and various home products.

There are foufmatrons in Media, Pa., who are the mothers of eighty-four children. Mrs. William Wright boasts of fifteen, Mrs. Samuel Field Of twentyeight, Mrs. Joseph Chandler of twentyfive and Mrs. Barrett of sixteen.

A doctor in Chicago makes dimples for young women at $60 a dimple. Better spend the $50 in teaohing the same yountf woman to make good coffee and bake good broad. She will get along better with her husband than if she had fifty dimples.

A young woman passenger on the Union Pacific railroad, near Cheyenne, lost her bonnet out of the window, and jumped off the train to get it. She escaped with no broken bones, but received internal injuries that will probably prove fatal. Tho bonnet was ruined.

No one could accuse Mrs. Bromley, of Middletown, N. Y., of being a "gad about." She lived in her own house in good health for twelve yoars without going out or seeing anybody but her husband. She might truly be characterized as having a retired disposition.

A wonder story comes from Mecklenburg County, Va., of a woman, sick unto death, whose lair was cut short during her illness, and when it grew again was almost white, so the hair cut off most obligingly turned white, too, and as a switch still ornaments its owner's head.

A Saratoga dame has learned tho sure way of attracting attention for the variety of costumes. Instead of wearing dresses of the same range of colors but In varying styles, she comes out all red ono day, oil white the next, all blaok the third and so on, making by decided con^rast a deep impression upon all ob servers?

The woman who starts out in the vocation to which she believes herself best fitted, even if it is something of an innovation, and tho' incredulous critios look at her askance, usually succeeds and silenoes all unfavorable comment, even If she does not win approval. It takes honest pui pose and earnest, undaunted endeavor to start out in the first place, and the same qualities are what obtain the success.

Last Sunday Miss Jennie McKenzie, aged seventeen, only daughter of the richest farmer of Blue Rapids, Kan., in trying to imitate the feats of a contortionist whom she had seen in a circus the day before, placed both feet behind her head, but was unablo to remove them. Becoming frightened she gave a hard pull at one leg and released it, but dislocated the thigh. Her screams brought her mother, and with the assistance of a physician, the other limb was released and the dislocated thigh set.

President Cleveland remained at Red Top Monday, while his wife went to the city to do some shopping On her return to tho country Mrs. Cleveland presented her husband with a box of cigars that she had purchased for him. When be opened the box he found fifty choice weeds just the shape and strength to please him. A woman who can purchase cigars that will satisfy the exacting taste of an experienced smoker possesses ability of a high order.

It is time for ladies who have auburn tresses to rejoice. The tide is again setting in their favor, and it looks very much as though red bait' is going to be as popular as it onoe was some years ago. A number of writers who make It a business to comment on everything, from political economy down to pugilism, have taken op the cudgel in favor of auburn tresses. Some one discovered that Anne Boleyn, Queen Elizabeth, the Spanish poet Camoeans, Christopher Columbus, Marshal Ney, John Milton and William Sbakspere all had fed hair, and that "anyone wearing tawny locks ought to be proud of it."

Here is a story that comes from Long Branch: Mrs. Moses Frmley, of California, who Is dazzling the fashionable world of Long Branch by her extravagance, is the wife of a former Baltimore newsboy. She is pot do-rn ss the possessor of fortyright trunks, five maids, two hundred pnln of shoes, six dogs snd $1,000,000 worth of jewels. She changes her toilet five times a day and never appears in the same dress twice. Ons of the dogs is a King Charles spaniel, for which Mrs. Frmley Is said to have paid $1,300. This elegant pet wears a solid gold collar with her name, Fkrorita, set in diamonds, whites row of small gold hells attached to the collar make music as she goes about. Favorlta sleeps in an upholstered couch, under cover of sn elegant plush robe. Ths excinsivs duty of ons of tho maids Is to look after the dogs.

^^Hr-ssrr

THE OLD-FASHIONED DOCTOR. POSING FOR PHOTOGRAPHS.

II. C. HODOK.

O, don't you remember the old-fashioned doctor Who, when we were children, would enter the room And. looking as wise as an owl or a proctor,

Would frighten and fill us with thoughts of the tomb? He'd stalk to oar cribside and order us gruffly

TO stick out our tongue, which we'd do with such dread. And Rive^ while he handled our pulses so

An amfnous shake of his solemn old head. And then, while he listened to mother's description

Of things we had eaten and what we had done, He grimly would write his old Latin prescription

For nastiest medicines under the sun. Those horrible doses! How mother would scold us

And beg us and buy us to take 'em in vain. And O, how we'd struggle when father would hold us.

And squeeze shut our noses regardless of pain! And, when forced to open our mouths, quickly mother

Would shove In a spoonful that strangled U8 till We spluttered it out—just in time for another.

It's vile, deathly taste's in our memory still. Thank goodness that old-fashioned dosing is ended,

With sweet candy pellets and powders in lieu. The sicte little toddlers who take them so splendid That even tho well ones all cry for 'em too.

SAUCE FROM OTHER SANCTUMS.

Pack: All the world's a stago and most of the men and women on it are merely supers.

Lincoln Journal: The untutored heathen should be given credit for having invented the modern bathing costumes.

Harper's Magazine: What an ardent prayer was that of the colored brother who besought tho Lord to an'int his congregation with the "ilo" of Patmos!

Omaha Republican: Is "old-fashion-ed cholera morbus" to bo make an issue of this campaign.

Pittsburg Post: Tho quick and the dead—a slap and a mashed mosquito. Philadelphia Enquirer: The man who is tired of life is usually ono who has never made any use of It.

RIGHTS OF OTHER PEOPLE.

Too commonly the faot Is ignored that a man's opinions and oonvictions are his private personal matter, with which no one else nas the right to meddle.

In politics, the spending of money, in social life, in dress and education, each one should scrupulously avoid acting as censor of others who may differ with himself.

No ono is privileged while a guest to 18 P' attack the opinions of the family whose hospitality he enjoys. When, for any reason, ho cannot acquiesce in the fam ily regulations let him depart and not try to reform the family to his standard of propriety.

A man may believe in homeopathy to the highest dilution, but that belief aoes not entitle him to the privilege of calling his neighbor to account because he chooses to seek relief by means of mercury and quinine in as horoic doses as he may fancy.

By calm, personal arguments or by force of example one may try to convince another that his way is the better, but a true courtesy requires that he shall not unasked present his oplnlous where to do so will wound and not alter In the slightest degree the course of his opponent.

Let no person flatter himself that because a man is loud of voice and blunt in speech, ever ready with cruel judgment of others and f^ee with advice on all mailers, that he will pleasantly accept such treatment from others, for he Is quLte as likely to resent interference with' his atT^ini as the man of gentler speech and greater charity.

It is so easy to form the habit of meddlesomeness and to persuade one's self Into the belief that one's mission is to bo a "private investigator and public adviser," that one is apt to forget that in the regulation of one's own conduct life presents enough perplexing problems without trespassing npon the rights of others in a mistaken zeal to convert them to a better way.

ONE OF 1HE BOYS WAS DEAD. Speaking of the late Charles Crocker the San Francisco Call relates that on one occasion there was a disastrous wreck ont somewhere on the road in which fireman met his death. When the representatives of the operating department came to report the matter to Mr. Crocker he was much disturbed and questioned very closely to find ont bow the accident bad happened. It was explained that everything possible had been done, and that full particulars would be obtained during the day. This appeased him somewhat, and in ex-

rianatton

A

of bis anxiety be said: "But

was thinking of this ail last night and could not sleep." One of the officers told him it was no use worrying over

up and replied

mently, "Bat, my God, man, one of our boys was killed, snd I could not get that out of my head."

One of Kansas City's richest inhabitants is woman, Mrs. Sarah W. Coates, whose fortune i« estimated st $10,000,000. I tall came from a successful venture in rest estate, a bit of land that cost her husband $2^)00. It was then farm, bnt Is now twenty seres in ths heart of Kansas City. Mrs. Coates, who is a woman about 59 yean of age, established the first literary club ever organized in Kansea City, snd she bss always taken an active part in the sdvancement of worn en in the west. At present she is en gsged in writings hook.

W

Nineteenth Yeai

Says a St. Louis photographer in the Globe-Democrat: The most difficult part of our business is the posing. People are fussy in almost every case, and we have to draw largely on our patience to satisfy their whims. Of course babies are the most difficult to place before the camera properly, and we yet have never met an instance where parents thought justice done to the little future President or President's wife. After the babies come the stage people. You would think an actress an easy subject for a sitting, but she is in reality tho most difficult to manage. For Instance, the moment she her takes her falls

position as a model she

into one of her theatrical attitudes, and the effect in the finished picture is stiff and stagey in the extreme. *To avoid this result, we often spend several hours before a natural pose is effected, which will be graceful in depiction. Actresses, with the exception of the ballet and the lighter drama, desire natural and simple pictures,and take much trouble to obtain that effect. The society girl, on the other hand, is anxious to "look like an actress," and for that reason wo keep a lot of stage flummery, as we call it, on hand. When the "regulars" come In they disappear in tho dressing room, and change their handsome oostumes for the fluffy, light materials we have on hand,and then, when the dashing belles emerge in the unfinished waists and fleecy draperies, and cheap ornaments, which we also keep on hand, the other side of tho picture is presented. I can tell one of these from the after effect' when produced cleverly with the assissun camera and paper. Now that the statuary mode has gone out of fashion, and the decollete style is fast being abolished by the Parisian dictates, we have more of the street costume pictures, and less trouble in posing. We nearly always invite celebrities who come along to sit for us, in a complimentary wav of course, and many accept. Fanny Davenport was formerly the most graoious in obliging us in that line, and she is a superb subject. Lately, nowover, her time is so limited that she seldom poses for a photograph. Gllmore i» the most*, difficult celebrity to induce to have his picture taken, and I believe the only timo he over would submit to have one made was in this oity. About the ease of sitting men correctly? They are the least difficult to pose, as they usually drop in in their business suits, take the first position they drop into, and there's an end of it. Yes, it is easier to pose them: but, of courso, women make the most beautiful pictures, and that is dear to an artist's heart and ambition.

DOUGLAS ON DRINKING.

TEMPERANCE FROM A WORLDLY STANDPOINT.

That little speech made a few years ago by Stephen A. Douglas, the son of the "Little Giant," at a Chioago temperance meeting, is worth printing today. It is a sermon of common sense: "I am a man of great faults, a plain, blunt man, but I am not a hypocrite. I was invited hereto say what I think. I am not a Prohibitionist. My objections to this doctrine are two: First, I have never seen it prohibit and, secondly, it takes out of this question the elements of self-control and self-respect. Yoa can't legislate men Into the kingdom of heaven. No man is in heaven to day who didn't want to get there. I believe in temperance. I am not going to speak from the standpoint of a Christian, but a man of tho world. 1 don't drink whisky because I don't want to and I don't want to because there is no sense in it.. There Is no place anywhere for the drinker. Social life has no use for him business has no place for him there is no place anywhere for him. Twenty years ago a congressman might got drunk twice a weelc without alsrace, but to-day, if he gets drunk once ten years, and his constituency find it ouLhe will liave to look for another job. To-day it is thesuckef wbodrinks* The plain, common sense of this question is, it don't pay it defeats one's success in life, it destroys one's health, it Is a dead loss in every way. and the sensible man will be a total abstainer and throw his influence on the side of purity and humanity."

POSITION IN SLEEP, [Baltimore News.]

"Of all our sleeping millions who arise at sun call how many are freefrom morning headache? Not a large proportion so far as I have observed. It Is probable that a majority acquire their pain from a wrong posture during sleep," says a correspondent. "I have asked many how they H« in bed. I find generally they rest upon their side, with legs drawn up and chin upon the chest, rolled up like a chicken in an egg shell. Some sleep upon the back, some prone, and others with an arm stretched up beneath the head but the usual posture is, I think, as first stated.

Now, in this shape, the human body describes an arc of a circle, with M^od and air vessels constricted by pre-'ire on the inside of the arc, and their caliber sensibly diminished. Jugular veins, returning exhausted blood from the brain, fiod the flow of their contents interfered with, and a condition of passive congestion is set up. Lungs compressed by weight of head and curvature of trunk, expand but partially, and their work is badly done. Therefore it takes sn hour or more in the morning, with bath and toilet, to set wheel* going that should never have been checked, and to get rid of tbe headache. Try this way onoe: When fairly In bed, lights out. and ready for sleep, throw tbe bead well beck, upon a pillow of medium height, chest forward, arms by the side and Tegs extended. Fight it out for a few minutes snd sleep will come—this time without a headache."

LICENSED TO WED.

John F, Fry and Umtr L. Smith. Wm. J. Warren #ora B. Hbirlsy. Oeo. W. LMsadand

Mary Wilmer.

John Goets and Mary Gilkerwon. Henry J. Baker and Elisabeth HamllL Wm. ttummertoll and Annie Jones.