Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 19, Number 46, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 May 1889 — Page 1
The
t, 'K'.*
Vol. 19.~No, 46.
THE _MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
Notes and Comment.
OilJOilltMl! Here's tc Frank I)ana Id son.
Boom the oil find and Terre Haute.
Now is the time for Terre Haute to awake. ______ BusineM men and citizens genorally should boom the oil prospects,
Instead of local Democracy being in the saddle, it is now in the «oup.
Councilman Weldele is known as tne Little Lord Fontleroy of the Democracy.
The Democrats sang a mournful tune on Tuesday night. The refrain was "Wel-de-le."
The first knowledge the Fifth warders had of oil was through the sense of smell. It smells to the skies.
Three victories for Terre Haute this week,
All
in one day: Republican ticket,
oil well, cow ordinance.
Since oil has been discovered in this olty our neighboring rival
earth has yielded bountifully this week. If the sky would do its part and give us rain we would be thankful.
With oil of an excellent quality, we can now compete with natural gas towns, and why not drill more wells for gas?
Tho Indianapolis Journal says that the Sentinel is frothing at th© mouth, and add* that there is a mad-stone in Terre HautcW
Oil and enterprise is all that is needed to push tho city to the front. We have •the former and the latter if It were aroused. ^. 1
Councilman Dunn, of Indianapolis, offered a resolution providing that the. -jrtve^pter- company sprinkle its trecka. Well "Dunn."
Tho Fivansville Journal says that a few first-class funerals of wealthy peoplo are needed in that city bofore Evansville can prosper as It should.
Should the findlug of oil prove of immense value to Torre Haute and give its business interests a boom, wisdom will f»e noeded In the oounoll.
President Cleveland's $1,800 span of horses have been sold to a livery stable for $282. That Is the way things go after tho four sjars'termls over.
Brazilians want to know why there Isn't oil at Braxll if there is at Terre Haute, The way to find out ts to put dowu a fow wells the drills will tell.
It is noted as a piece of journalistic enterprise that the first person to die a naturwl death in Oklahoma was a newspaper man. No use trying to get ahead of these Journalists.
Tho Mail has faith In the Immense value oil will be to Terre Haute, aud assists in booming It by the publication of a thousand extra copies to day. Now is the time to subscribe.
President Harrison is said lobe slightly atieoted with deafness in his right ear. This Is probably the ear Into which many ortloe-seokors have poured their claim* for recognition.
Kate Drexel* the beautiful New York girl who was left a fortune of $4,000,000 by her father, Is golug to become a nun ^t Is said. Any girl Pan do that,so what is tho good of money after all.
Rich reins of copper are reported uuder some of the principal streets of Pnloth. In this city oil has been discovered almost in the heart of the city, only a block from the Union depot.
It Is estimated that Americans will aptmd in Europe this season. Very different Is this from the way the F.uropeanstreat ua. They come over hew to get money, not to spend it.
Mayor Creajter, or Chicago, has announced that gambling will be permitted if it is not conducted op&nly. Anyone who Is acquainted with the ways of Chicago, the wicked city, will know what this means. ____
The Chicks© pftysw should how J*t satlaiiod. Columns have daily been devoted to the Oirter divorce liove letters in rhyme have found their way Into the avidewc# aw* perhaps the otttalde world can be assured that the worst la over.
Tb« 1% pnna of the new American war ship, a h*ve be*n tented and found to work perfectly. So wo are learning bow te build ships of war as well a* py#rj'thit!8 else. The Yankee will sjet there every time, whatever the undertaking may be.
r-^
u»n
pocket" has been lost sight of.
the
The American colony in Canada did not celebrate the Centennial. Tbe^extradltion bill has become a law.
The first question that is put to all inquirers regarding the oil well: "Are you a Standard Oil company man?"
Cities like men always have greatness thrust upon them. This city has fallen heir to a source of great wealth. We have a great opportunity presented to us and it shoald be taken advantage of without delay. ______
Grasshoppers continue to be a standing plague with the farmers of the northwest. Minnesota last year paid a dollar a bushel for destroying the pest, and 17,000 bushela»««rere paid for. It is now proposed to plow np all ground where their eggs are found in the hope of exterminating them before birth. It would seem that some way ought to be discovered of destroying this terrible peat of the farmers.
George Jacob Schweinturtb, who is posing as the 8aviour returned to earth, is a farmer living near Bockford, 111. He says he has made $50,000 in the last six years. That is a poor attestation of his divinity. The original Jesus of Nazareth did not bare "where to lay his head." He borrowed a beast to make triumphal entry into Jerusalem and was laid in a borrowed tomb at his death. The Rev. George Jacob appears to be pursuing a radically different policy.
The general public is satisfied with tfhe workings of the Inter-State Commerce law. Chauncey Depew considers "pooling" a good thing, and thinks that it should be permitted. The tendency of all roads is to lower freight rates, and no amount of "pooling" can affect this. The Inter-State Commerce bill,Jty obliging the roads to publish their rates, has given the stronger roads more business and taken it away from the weaker lines. "The Inter-State law will never be effective nor operative," said he, "until in some form or other you have a legalizod pooi.^Y, :\v\
Chicago now has the largest iron and steel works In the country. This was brought about by the recent consolidation of the North Chicago Rolling Mill Company, the Union Steel Company and the Joliet Steel Company, with a cftpltal of $26,500,000. Andrew Carnegie said not long ago that Chicago was the real rival of Pittsburg In the
Iron
business and the
formation of this powerful combination will add new force to his words. Each of these great^nills, five in all, will hereafter be devoted to a single kind of work wlth the result of greater efficiency and economy. Chicago will probably lead In the iron trad& of tfr^, country in the future. _____
By all means let the American flag wave everywhere. President Harrison very fittingly said In New York: "These banners with which you have covered your walls, these patriotic inscriptions, must come down, and the ways of commerce and of trade be resumed again here but may I ask yon to carry these banners that now hang on the walls Into your homes, Into the public schools of your city, and Into all your great institutions where children are gathered, and to drape them there that the eyes of tho young and of the old may look upon that* flag aa one of the familiar adornments of every American home. Have you not learned that not stocks or bonds or stately houses or lands or mill or field is our eonntry? It is a spiritual thought that is in our minds. It is the flag and what it stands for it Is Its glorious history it is the fireside and the home it is the high thoughts that are in the heart, born of the inspiration which comes out of the story of the fathers, the martyrs to liberty it is the graveyard Into which our grateful country has gathered tho unconscious dust, of those who died."
Hie nude in art continues to be a subject of mnch diversity of opinion. The Sorosls club, of New York, had it up for discussion the other day. Miss Smith, Miss Eggleston and Mrs. Hitchcock maintained that the unclothed form In art was refining and ennobling, while Mrs. Clapp declared that she never looked at a nude woman in picture or sculp ture without feeling her sex degraded, and added: "Artists taffc about the nude human form being the highest type of art, but if It is, why do they still insist on wearing clothes? Sin caused Adam and Eve to don some drapery. When w® become sinless we can perhaps afford to go without clothes. When we do I shall approve of the nttde in art. Miss Eggleston, the daughter^ the novelist, on the Cher hand, said ahe had been studying tho nude in art since shej waa fifteen tb:U in herein them arej twenty aiiw??h '»ni .'5strap-f ||Ve Oil !Mni lh»t she iX'lM UOt •. see studying the mule In art bad harmed anyone of th**ni. Pmba. dynot. These girls are *nd tdratis *. They Out of !»ur* ar.i t« h» 'pa to allfttra. Hu-.t ••irtu* f«»t many t-b# ««,? «ot artists but for the
Will the nude lO ennohie
them, that is the question. St is a eon -j troveraT in which much enn "i both hMfis It Is
My
that at- -ng .»rt*•»*•! the i— ing «t» I I
The Rlt -M ordbK---1 r* TVt't:v?It' last90 of th# r. »t ball ta-.ii'itfrow nlgti'. arcbostra of Vb« B-.r. Opera company.
News and Interviews.
Ii would seem that there is a lack of enterprise in taking advantage of the discovery of oil in this city. Complaint is made that the find was not prwerly advertised, that it should have be«m sent broadcast through the press of the country and every effort made to secure the attention of foreign capital. What is wanted in this city is something of a boom, not one of the species that is founded upon rage and uncertain prospects in the future, but a healthy and stable development of our resources and interests. Terre Haute is now a city of no mean proportions, but it'has attained a point where it is quite necessary for something to give it a push over the line and make it a city in every sense of the woid. It is believed that the discovery of oil will do this, and before long the city will be quite the metropolis of this section of country and the envy of cities of much larger'population. Energy is required to accomplish such an end. It is true that Terre Haute is in the main slow going. It has risen to its present position by steady progress, and as a result stands to-day upon a substantial basis. Business does not become excited or convulsed at any turn affhirs may take. There has never been the inclination to spasmodic effort land it does not exist to-day, yet a little more energy and enterprise properly exerted is the need of the present. The discovery of oil created no furore, and it Is doubtful if many fully realized the importance to Terre Haute. Many lemarked that it would give an impetus to the city Vi in terest, but this Is not sufficient. The greater effort that Is put forth the greater will be the rewards.
In speaking of the discovery, a stockholder of the well said that if any of the western boom towns had struck such a rich vein of oil they would have let the world know of it as,speedily as possible. They would have illuminated over the prospects, hired brass bands, paraded the streets, etc. All such demonstrations are, of course, unnecessary, yet they are indicative of enthusiasm. Aa the news of the discovery spread many private telegrams were received asking for definite Informatiou concerning the discovery. The oil had not been flowing long until the president of the business men's association of one of the largest cities in northern Indiana telegraphed a Main street merchant for full particulars of the find. This is calculated to show the Interest that is taken by other cities In the oil discovery. Many visitors have been in the city this week locking over the territory. Some are here from Pennsylvania and others from Ohio and Indians, to investigate for themselves. It is high time that we ourselves were awakening to the importance of the find. One oil man pronounced the oil the best he had ever seen. It is a high grade oil, good for lubricating purposes and can easily be refined. Since the well has been flowing the volume of oil has decreased somewhat. It is not permitted to flow to its fullest capacity, yet hundreds of barrels escape through the pipe each day. Other companies are forming and it is to be hoped the extent of the oil territory will soon be determined. o-Aj&'-lwS**
The retiring oouncil has been blamed form any things, and few have had much to say to its credit. However, at Its last session it passed an ordinance which will go "thundering down the ages" to its praise. And It was so unexpected, too. Busiuess men and down town res idents went about quietly and solicited the council to pass a cow and stock ordinance. It was presented and passed This would seem strange were it not for the fact that five of the members were serving the city for the last time and their action would have no effect upon their political hopes. The polls had closed at six o'clock, and another contest will not occur for a year. Only two council men voted against the ordinance It was done so quietly that when it was announced in the papers nearly everyone passed the matter by, remarking "It will never be enforced." But a determined effort will be made to keep cows and stock off tho street. Hie first fence to be torn down was that about A. Z. Foster's residence on south Sixth street, occupied by J. It. Duncan. The tenant consented to the demolition of the fenoe. Mr. Foster called on bis frirn Is, pr ured an ax, and an boor nfivr couu. il adjourned the fence
Messrs. Putnam, Warren and
other* assisted in tho work, and the T..»rty thorns.i»ly enjoyed it. Only the iron re-nat? standing ftlkd tfense v. !-rt- remm-.vl ih xt ^.iv. -•"This Is tin? miy ^to secure tho uatoteefflept of th."
onlmftn*e,'t
w\
1»reii
that ho auth^fftk-.
ti kv--r
ts.
liT
PISS!
MM
msmm
3:i
Jos
Gilbert
TERRE HAUTE, END., SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 11,1889.
John Lents
said one frontteoum.
"Let ev«rjr property owner sear down th front fonefr. If rows and hUvtk tr: over th* ibcr*"' will W st: h'
m*!
Wt'^e
wi)l
jiiiimaN tT 'he sir
Ky all dow^t witfc the for. I he rlauifl whif|| wal the ^nKii.inee 'ij-ra dUv- .*f:«-r it* rw-.w Afi»
wn new
i-. *et to .«
pul-H
upttV'ii«
Jl
i!1*
a.*yr
1770 'M.i.
pretentions of Terre Haute permitted stock in the street for so long a period." tliere is some talk of an attempt to repeal the ordinance at the next meeting the council. immy Fit* pa trick has the reputation being the best politician in the Demotic ranks, and his defeat for city treaswas a severe blow to the party. He always has a pleasant smile no matter whether under success or defeat. Wednesday morning he strolled into his office with a smile on bis face. Deputy Jimmy Bell's face was about a yard long. After the good-mornings had been said, Bell asked the defeated candidate how he could possibly smile under the circumstances. Fitzpatrick replied very pleasantly: "Weil, I was be«ten and there is no use crying about it. I've got to accept it and might as wtll take it good naturedly." Frank Schmidt apparently did not feel badly ofer his defeat. He was seen the next daV standing at the front fenoe of his residence, enjoying a smoke from a big pfye. "I didn't expect it," he said. He added that he attended a B. L. ineetitife Tuesday night and went home and retired before any returns were in that wjuld indicate the result.
president W. R. McKeen was ^ttotlg the visitors at the oil-well on Tuesday morning. He stepped under the ropes with several other directors and was surveying the gusher. Someone noticed that he held a cigar in his band and informed a policeman of the fact. The officer stepped up to him and called his attention to the cigar. Without looking at it and as quick as though it had burned his fingers, he throw it behind him. Everyone smiled at the incident. No one was permitted near the well with a lighted cigar.
The election on Tuesday passed off quietly. In fact, from appearanoes one scarcely knew that balloting was going on. The result was almost a complete victory for the Republicans. The Democrats succeeded in saving only one man from the wreck, Weldele, in the Fourth ward. All Republican candidates were elected by handsome majorities. The result was a surprise to everyone. Democrats could not realize that they had been so hopelessly beaten and Republicans could scarcely believe that they had been so successful. When the result was kttown a large serenading party started 0M4 headed by the Military band, and oamd^on the successful candidates. Danaldson, Hauck and Duddleston made short speeches. The vote was as follows:
FOR MAYOR.
Frank C. Danaldson ...... Frank F. Schmidt. .' FOR TREASURER. William Vf. Hauck ... James FiUpatrick
David Davis
A.
.3207. 2670
Atkins
520
.2978. 29Q0
67
FOR CLERK.
Aloneo C. Duddleston Burton H. Sanderson FOR MARSHAL. Andrew J. Thompson
.3585. .2805
1170
.3518. TFLL
FOR ASSESSOR.
James W. Haley 3100 UeoiTf© H. Purdy
206
in
2804
FOR COUNCILMEN—FIRST WARD. William E. Barnes William
685. .* *259
376
SECOND WAHD.
W.B. Steele f»W.O. Patton
00
IV
400
THIRD WARD, A^-T'
John J. Thomas
487
558.
FOURTH WARD.
Russell R. freel W. O. Weldele
James P. Leinberger Thomas Casey SIXTH WARD, FranitStorz George Klug
over
Bab's Babble. •.' -f?
A
PRETTY YOUNG WOMAN'S ON THE
Mr
480.
FIFTH WARD.
3
510 458
512. 481
The new council will stand 7 Democrats and 6 Republicans. Had it not been for the clean sweep of a year ago the council would be Republican. The new council will be composed of the following: SL^I 'jta
First Ward—Walsh jB" Curias. IU Second Ward-Hertwig, D: Steel, R. Third Ward-Siedentopf, Tbomiw, R.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox, the well known "poetess of passion," has made a bad break. In her controversy with Mrs. Atherton, the Oalifornian, she allnded to "the women of Kankakee sitting with their limbe
chair arms in company."
This brought a howl of indignant piotest from the fair dames of Kankakee, who claim to he as refined and educated as those of other civilised regions.
T!K
generous Ella responded to this protest by a letter in which she av*urc th scandalised Kankakeeans thju sbe "did not know there wn- stiHt pi*' on earth as Kankrtfc**/' havi.,y npo that it was met an laiairinsrf pla-e. This is an honest confession truly but the reparation oomef very near to beinc »rsethan the "flense. To anyone, much l©#* «u 'r--a poeteMS of pawl- 'i. sh---i! i, n«t know there is Kankakee! A Kanknkr*-
librnry, *harehe. atio
richoJa-tie in«ti'.uti-:n* e-, id nny
ci itth® '1 nv- sus a:v! ••'if -*-rs«r "s* ^to rt.inv." «.», I\' i! rii.il i/v'*u fnf arv to have a *mSt-
u-rwiij Of ','r u»hy.
•Itkuiji*, the aronder »ill be bow a city of1 in bamTit.g w«s .!-'sb!t.yjle.
YVrett*% li i~ ^i'i ef a di*-tn.-t reii-v ..ni wcv., by a rival poll* that the or.:? tk.s.jj be ew-r soc-
CENTENNIALIDEAS
HURRAH.
amis
WOMKN WHO WKRE DRUNK OVKR GOLD LACK—THE GOVERNORS WHO WERE ADMIRED BY PRETTY WOMEN—A RAP FOR
GOVERNOR HILL—THE COURTLY LEE— AT THE CENTENNIAL BALL—THE DISGRACEFUL SCENES THAT WERE ENACTED—YOUNG WOMEN IN THE DANCE—INFLUENCE OF THE WALTZ—THE BONNET THAT MEN UKE—"BAB'S" BRIGHT NEW YORK JOTTINGS. [Spcwlal Correspondence.]
NEW YORK, May 8.
We haven't recovered from it yet. By it I mean the gold fever which, during tho Centennial week, attacked every woman in New York and made her feel that even a man who never told a lie, whose record was irreproachable and whose tailor was honored by serving him, amounted to nothing if he wore plainclothes—the general feminine heart was given to the bold soldier boy. It made no difference to her whether he marohed well or ill she did not care if in the field of battle he would be much more .liable to shoot himself than his enemy, but she did care very much if his gold lace were bright, and if his trip pings were of a color she fancied.^
TRKTTY WOMEN AT THE PARADE. All political feeling was given the goby, and the women born under the Confederate flag cheered and applauded the Fifth Massachusetts, while she who had come into the world under the Stars and Stripes burst her gloves approving the Fifth Maryland, the boys from Richmond and those darlings in their allwhite suits that came from way down in Texas. Flags were waved and dainty palms were clappod together for the well-dressed boys from Cleveland and every heart was laid at the feet of the gallant Kentuckians. Women wore drunk with gold lace, and the soldiers seemed to know just how they were succeeding, as far as the New York women went they walked with an air of being monarchs of all they surveyed, and whether the band played "Razzle-Daz-zle," or "I Know It, 'Cause My Mother Told Me So," which, by-the-by, was a favorite tune, they walked along with a happy air of having done their duty In that part ibf the regiment in which it had pleased the colonel to place them.
THE GOVERNORS PLEASE THE WOMEN. And the Governors! At heart, what Tories women are! They yearn for a king they want the semblence of monarchy always, and they greeted It in the form of the Governors of the different States. They kissed their hands and waved to courtly Governor Bigg of Delaware they appreciated with dainty mouchoir and screams of delight the geniality of Foraker they beheld with flashing eyes and delighted mien the bows of Buckner the Governor of Massachusetts came in for a wonderful amount of approbation, while Vermont's ruler, In his picturesque cloak and the bit of green in his hat, caused a fresh burst of enthusiasm and every woman tongue thought it all so clever. The Governors of North Carolina and South Carolina received the expected saluta-
*5) W 2
tions.
,,(
litM'w•:*%
W
V-
*$m
Sfe. '„.
"I
-ftr
*&** AJGAP FOP GOVERNOR HILL.
And the Governor of New York? I no longer swear fealty to him. A woman near me said, "He looks like a tough and he act like a brute!" You see all the other Governors had been behaving very politely, and it seemed rather odd to gaze at a commonplace man who found the raising of his hat to the wives and daughters of the men who elected him too great an exertion. He managed to get it an inch or two from hia head and then dropped it. It was evident that be had not been bread in the same school as that of Governor Fitz-Hugb tjee, who sat on bis horse like a Centkur, and was as gallant as only aLee can be. Don't tell me anything about there being nothing In blood. Fltz-Hugh Lee comes from a race of gentlemen, a race of Christian gentlemen, and his bow to the greeting given him was as much for the ragged woman on the wayside as for the gorgeously dressed one in tli •.* window Of mansion on Fifth avenue. In hor^p- Mood «hows. why shouldn't it in th*: i_.!. vrd'-r of the animal racef Nobody buys a dog without knowing It pedigree, and we ought to be just tieuiir abotitel'.-HTiig our roU-r*. llw' arc men who «r*t of lh*»fr
hia.mifa
nobi'-Jii'-n,j
but v. b'. re m«- of th'.?*e i* found nothingj wcti convince me th «t there is not fcr bade h-i ac jfM"d bi'»'»d that hsia l^a*. ncl thf wh'.!'- tui.Mp. Tr.\v nr,y prnrorhn art
it sn1 -«ruiniy
Uicre. uo,
rtl t!ui hii-J iy in trying to inakf a] i,i nure—well, y»a know the fa ti» Ath# bi^r-py controller of five Vf:t»s I w^h to an*io -ie- iliat
It 1
A^E t.x::i
Nineteenth Year
and beef extract which is known as consomme. AT THE CENTENNIAL RALL.
Now about the ball! I never felt so like investing my money in a huge poster having upon it, in the brightest of greens, reds, yellows*god black, the galling words, "I told you so!" I have most emphatically said by word of mouth and in print that In New York no ball where tickets are sold can be exclusive, unless It's exclusively rowdy, and that was the trouble with this one. The ladies who danoed in the famous quadrille were escorted to and from their boxes by the soldiers, so that they were safe, but the rest of the respectable women were stared at by roughs and toughs if they were in boxes, and had their gowns torn, ran the risk of being struck and were in a mob not as well behaved as that at the French ball when they wore on the floor. In the supper room, If they attempted to get there, the champagne on the floor soaked through their thin slippers, and they were elbowed and sworn at by the "perfect ladles" who claim that title in the Metropolis. Women were sick-drunk on the stairs they reeled around and were excessively undesirable objecta for the eyes of respectable—mind, I say respectable, not fashionable—women to look at. I should much sooner take a young girl to a place like the Mabllle In Paris where the lino between the different kinds of women is distinctly drawn, than to a public ball In a large city. It is possible that they may be all right In tho smaller ones, but it is impossible to count on who will be there in any town with over fifty thousand inhabitants.
YOUNG WOMEN IN THE DANCE. We are very apt to forgot the effect of exquisite music, beautiful gowns, the close presenoe of a well-liked man upon a young girl: we take our rosebuds, we throw them Into tho glare and glitter, and then we wonder that they darken a bit and that they never blossom forth as purely as we had expected they would. Do I disbelieve in dancing? In general dancing, most decidedly. Do I disbelieve in round dancing? Except just in the home and with a man who Is well known to the girl's mother, again most decidedly. There are hundreds of beautiful square dances—dancos that teach graceful movements, and that make a woman carry herself well—dances that teach men courtliness. When the minuet went out, men forgot to make an obeisance to women, and when the waltz came in he gave her a nod as he passed and a lift of the hat that was no special trouble to him. Then, too, If they want something livelier, there Is always Sir Roger de Coverly, or the Virginia Reel, which everybody can dance, and which at its worst degenerates into nothing more that a romp, and romping seldom leads to wickedness.
INFLUENCE OP THE WALTZ.
Round dancing is pre-eminently selfish in the days of tho minuet, in the long lines of Sir Roger de Coverly, everybody was considered, but with the waltz came Beau' Brummel and his impertinence, the beau and his boastfulness, the masher and bis vulgarity, iand the dude with his inanity.
THE BONNET THAT MBN LIKE. The coming bonnet is a subject of feminine interest, but the staying one appeals very much more to mankind. If there is anything under heaven a man loathes worse than getting up early in the morning, or going to bed early at night, it is to be walking with a woman who is never quite certain as to whether her bonnet intends to remain on her bead or to take wings unto itself and settle in an ash barrel. The chances are she objects to pins In the first place, and the other chances are that if she approves of bonnet pins she doesn't know bow to place them. You cannot wear your hair low and pin your bonnet to fit without that bonnet rising in rofcklng horse fashion and giving you a distracted appearance, and you need not rely on strings to keep your bonnet on your head. If you wear your balr low you have got to have a small pad of false hair, which you lay right on the top of your head, fasten down securely, and when your bonnet Is put on, stick .your pins through it then, and then only, are you safe, and then and then only la the man of your heart certain that your bonnet is the prettiest he has ever seen, because, as be emphatically put* It, "it stays on."
NKW SHAIKH L.X COLOR*.
Among the very latest colors rfre a "jgre^n that give* you a beam.fal oom-pk-xi n, beji'it lfnl in the sense of being df)-.irible as an advertisement, before certain liver pills are taken and a crim-
Hoa sf ale that the average brun. tf ,• -k K,«.k ai.J the average blonde ,r ilk' And yet women wear both tin-v color* and make positive that most clever and true French saying, "Time are no i^-ly women there aw only wr.min who do not know bow to look
)k
on" of vtiail
-cr V» if v*?i to 1 -,vid K. Hii'. t:» .t
-V i„r l)
PXCil-it.
'WVvry woman sirl»-di- i}jWW i» thi-i pr*:?-^«»ior» will :nana2 |,r ritf,
Jm r.
A pr"irsffr!r: dra'A ii
d. b• vol
il.il! V. Ill
mUuire oi
-•®I8
BAB.
ifVho! hfOOfbttlil J« .iieai:.ut r,or«c-H, «f*d the men
the box are In mournis?jr yon see a
be«*a lae ii| pair of soft brown ej looking out upon of him yon yon dai ty »nof mbrio v- in'i 'y-t inthst sre le
\jr*.
out driving
1M 1 sirv and UUTse*
v.?.*''*
j'' 4'
