Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 19, Number 48, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 May 1889 — Page 1
'r- i., "l«
j£ «t'
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
Notes and Comment.
5 Terre Haute for Terie Hauteans The consolidation scheme is a good one. •. .«•
An army officer went insane' over billiards. He should have Jpnftned his operations to the jack-pot. ,|
Brazil, Paris andaeveral other neighboring cities Wp tore for oil. Their enterprise in (obit cotri mended.
New will be known to posterity as the lost magnificent city of unfinished monuments in the world.
Terre Haute awoke one morning to find herself famous and perhaps very rich if the oil holds out and natural gas isstruek.
A little gas town of 1,200 iouls stole a large manufactory from under the wing of the capital city? tj^ip wpek Poor old Indianapolis.
The eight hoor law is supposed to be in force in this State, yet there are few manu factories or other plants that observe its provisions.
Suppression of news because it was calculated to advertise the interests of a rival city, is the policy, apparently, of an Indianapolis paper.
The dreams of many aman In Terre Haate are filled with the clink, clink, clink of the drills pounding away the rock iu the direction of oil.
Greencastle was tho first city in the State to take advantage of the new liquor law. Retailors license was fixed at 1250. Oreencaatle has set a good example.
It is now positively asserted that Montana went Democratic on account of heavy rut nit oa oleatl'on day. The weather is blamed for every offense in the oalender.
Lightning Is playing havoc everywhere and but a small proportion of the oflice seekers have been struck. An office seeker need not be provided with a lightning rod.
Fanny Davenport has married another of hor leading men. The other "leading man," Mr. Price, had to give way to tho present leading man. Will he in turn have to go, too?
If the miners and operators do not reach an agreement before long, the question may be settled as far as this city is concerned by the discovery of natural gas and more oil.
The religious mania is extending. A well known lady of Nebraska City, Neb., has become insane, imagining herself to be Christ. Sohwelnrurth plays the role better. He doesn't get crazy but has all the good things of life in abundance.
Indianapolis wants free gas. In the course of 90 days the capital city may then become a subject of Terre Haute and then have free gas* for the article will probably be found in some of the half hundred wella that are be bored here.
Dr. L. B. Staley, near Vincennes, ws* thrown from a horse Thursday and had an arm broken. Within two years he has had both arms broken twice, each leg broken and also his collar bone.— [Indianapolis Sun.] Must be "the boy from Xenla."
ANew Jersey young man went craay the ot&er day over his good fortune In being admitted to practice law. If he meets with no greater success than some r* er young men hare done In that pro&~*jlon, there wiU be little for him to go cnuty about.
Jealousy often proves an incentive to greater eflorjs. EvansviUe is insisting upon wells being drilled for gas or oil. The eight of Terre Haute in clover provokes the populace to such a pitch that an effort wiU be made to find oil which has suddenly given this city such a preetage.
The fight over New York's centennial did not end with the celebration. The battle
vrm
'^S
renewed after the festivities
had ceased. The claim is made that the committee cleared f10,000 and a demand haa been made to furnish an itemised account, and thai the money he turned over to the permanent arch fund.
Blue Mound, ItU ha* tried the plan of electing a postmaster by popular vote, only th*e who voted for Harrison were allowed to participate. There were two candidate* and out of a total of 378 votes cast one received a majority of *, and he will be the paataMtor tor the next fonr year*. Why isn't that a good way to do it.
-tESML1»'
*•!'",. *dl •.
Vol. 19.-No. 48.
TH,E_MAIL
4
Oil's well Chat ends in a wellis the cry of our enthusiastic citizens. •.. Harrison is said to be a sound sleeper. It is the office seeker who walks the floor. ...*. fTarHSOtt is a lover of base ball, yet the office hunters do not appear to make home runs very rapidly.
1/1 44
mi
.,*, —if TCA.
iSf"4- j,
.0£w*iv3j5f MHi xfiS%*"&fV 4#"^-ssl
John L. Sullivan says tea is good for the nerves. He prefers fire water, however, to the tea. _____
The sweet girl graduate is considering her essay, and her young gentlemen friends are saving up thei spare change for bouquets, etc. & "Curly Beloo" and Mrs. Jim Brown Potter s?ere hissed iu Chicago. Even Chicago sickened of the Garter divorce case and Curly's connection with It,"
The mayor of St. Louis was in Chicago this week and received an invitation to annex to tho big city by the lake. St. Louis papers claim he was there to look over the feasabilifcy of a plan
*0
Chicago down to St. Lonis.
W*
'Variety seems to be the spice of "flfftewspaper's life. Elliott F. Shepard of the New York Mail and Distress, as contemporaries speak of it, prints a column of sporting gossip next to a column headed with a scriptural passage
The press of the Wabash valley is to be commended and thanked for the manner in which the oil discovery has been announced. The press has felt an interest in the find and has proved itself friendly to Terre ^aute. Such kindness should not be forgotten. The firmness of the neighboring press is in striking contrast with the Indianapolis paper, claiming to be metropolitan, that refused to publish associated press reports of the oil discovery.
Billy Stout proved himself well named —he was too stout for his opponents. He was re-elected superintendent of police and Dan Murphy will hold down the captaincy for another year. There were rumors that an effort would be made to overthrow the high salaried heads of the department. If such a scheme really was to have been hatched it died in the incubator. The police board was favorable to the present regime and the council fell in line with it Now then, Mr. Stout and Mr. Murphy, enforce the cow ordinance.
There will be a large number of special preminms offered at the fair. Atpong them are:. Range by C. C. Smith for bread, flour by W. K. Kidder «k Sons for same, $5 by Riddle, Hamilton fe Co. for cake, diamond ear-rings by j. Bernhardt for best, place of embroidery, Townley Stove company will give a Dover egg-beater for largest dozen eggs, a fine butcher knife for largest watermelon, a White Mountain apple-parer for three varieties of apples, fine toilet set for layer cake, fruit and jelly press for five glasses of jelly, brass bird cage for knit or crochet lace, set Rogers' silver spoons for patch-work quilt, embroldlng scissors for tidy, Queen Ann teapot for painted placque, registering money bank for cakes by child, set laundry irons for sewing and staghandle knife for work by boy. Premiums will be given also by Froeb&Co., F. Seeburger, C. Wahler,
J.
H. Briggs,
and others. E. M. Watson will give a set of single harness as prize for a slow mule race. A wedding will be arranged to take place at the fair, and
J.
N. Hick
man, George Zimmerman, Myers Bros., and T. Stahl will give their premiums to tho bride and groom. Mr. T. L. Durham offers $100 for a race by Grimalkin 00Its at the fair of *90, and a stake of $200 will be made np for tho purse fur the race.
City Engineer Simpson was decapitated at Tuesday's meeting of the cltv council. His head was cut off so speedily that the unfortunate engineer did not have time in which to say his prayers. The action of the council was unlooked for, and friends of Simpson say unwarranted, but the Democratic council marked him for slaughter and the work was done with the greatest serenity and without oompunotions of conscience. The removal was occasioned by Simpson incurring the displeasure of the Democratic council men. For the past year the council has been tinkering with the sewer question. The readers of The Mail are familiar with the various phases of the question. Engineer Simpson prepared the plans and specifications of the sewer, but his idea of things did not fit those of the Democratic majority. The offended council men nursed their wrath until an opportunity was offered to vent It on the engineer. Tuesday night was selected for the execution. Councilman Hertwig offered a resolution declaring the office of city engineer vacant. The sewer scheme bad just failed Simpson had fathr-rd it and why not sentence him to .ith because of the l.iiinre' The resolution carried unanimously and Don M. Roberts was eh ni to the vacancy -by a «rty a .-•!«.
to.'
u:uon of "a-!
rt- is
son jf Dr. W. H. wayman, about 22, r«n-i -an*, rat t3 RoS'*Polytechnic. stUuUou within a mnth. He *ono tj the brightest students of fcH cU-s. {tfofeMOI* Of tV -^-^1 Vdj young fb^rta* to Be baa tn-oa eour ^e tieering and la prw unoed fill the position. !MKra» -:.ml appolntmefit of .-.r. *. jr-nqp
in or, ic :it to Uk*
Bab's Babble.
HOW 8H® WOtJtD DRKS8 AND
BATH
TRAPFrWUR OF FASHION.
IMP v* tt^pondenee.l
remove
—•n
1 1
New York, May 21.""'
ed by a diamond buckle/ mentous period, when telling her of his, love, ner raven
mmm
WHAT I WOULD
j, ...'._
TERRE HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 25, 1889.
WHAT A PRETTY YOUNG WOMAN Wnedvyou can think of to make it go WOULD DO IF SHE WERE AT.OUNG MAN.
SPEND Til®
DAT—WHAT sua WOtTLD NOT BELIEVE—
AX
IDEAL FBMXNUXE ESTIMATE—HOW WOHBK SHOULD WEAK THEIR HAIR A HINT TO THOSE WHO FHECKI.E IS SUMr MKR—A
FOR THE
SKIN—
BMABT
a uii ui tr
silver ett*edon it, but whi«h'«o««tN [whet* the book is bidden and wont
suggest that the family spoons had f^en melted for that purpose. Then I would attend to business. I'd make my bets on some of the dark horses, I'd watch the ticker, and I'd go down to see some fellows, three or four of them with titles to their names, who, like me, bad been drawn to investing their money into land on which the sun shown all day, the grass never grew, the water never ran, and our cherished cattle die of starvation and thirst. We would have to consult about this, so we would go to Delmonico's to do it.
HOW I SHOULD DRESS.
When it was time to dress for the afternoon I should put on a pair of light plaid trousers, not too big a plaid, a white waistcoat and a dark cutaway coat. I should stick to the lawn tie, having a fresh one, of course, but I should put on a silk hat and wear tan-colored kid gloves. I would make a call or two, that is, if it were after four o'clock, because the chances would be that the women were out driving, and I should not be bothered with talking to any of them while my pasteboards would announce my politeness. After a spin in the park it would be time for me to dress for dinner, and then I would put on my black cheviot dress suit, wearing a white waistcoat and a narrow lawn tie, looped, of course, by'myself. My shoes would be a bit lower than those worn during the day, and the buttons in my shirt and at my waiet would be of plain white enamel. My handkerchief would be of fine white lawn, hemstitched, and my initials upon it in white thread. It would be kept in my pocket and not spread across the front of my shirt as if I wanted to hide a spot or a darn.
HOT
.«»n begins to smile upon you it leaves an impression—it is an impression—that 3rtu do not fancy* and you use every
away. Be wise in your generation, and Vith the exception of taking very good care of your skin, let the freckles alone. Yon may be induced to do this when you are toW, as a grandmother did a party of young girls, that they ought rather to be proud of, than worried about their freckles, because mankind always claim that the girl who freckled was lovable. The very best thing to use for ^'ou face during the summer weather is the cosmetic which was known before the days of Cleopatra, it is called Virginal Mitk, and is made in this way: "To a quart »f rosewater, add, drop by
The heroine of the old novel, at whose feet we prostrated ourselves, was depicted, attoqjgie time or other, asking a milk-white ste&Mrobed in aioug hahit|drop, an ounce of tincture «f benzoin, of black velvet and w^tetogan enormoftA black hat with long, ^tC^-ies
cIa8^
'the^oj
Algeenon was.
invariably feH down. Those th#5 a soft towel. Now don't do as many a days ol raven tresses, and I grieve to say —hair-dye—of flowing skirts for riding habits, and women catching their feet in them and having their backs or legs broken—we have changed all that*nowc Not only when riding," but at any time* when Algernon is telling his love, would it be most unpleasant for the maiden's, hair to tumble down her back—flowing locks are only approved of on the stage* weeds in a flower garden, like those Algernon, above all others, likes bis jsweetbeart'8 hair to be tidy.
HOW WOMEN SHOULD WEAR THE HAIR. To be smart, after the English fashion* vour hair must be tidy, well-brushed,: brushed until it has a gloss that is da* lightful upon It, then plaited in on$ braid and either looped and tied with a black ribbon, or else twisted in a knot and pinned closely to the head. The bang is short, and while it is fluffy, it must not extend far do^'n on either side, the hair there growing as nature intendedit to and being brushed to the back. "IF I WERE A YOCNO MAN."
I
would wear in the morning a light gray rough suit, so light that it seemed almost white, a white lawn tie knotted by myself in the puffiest fashion, and fastened with a pearl pin. On my head would be asnuff brown derby—the color the Prince of Wales likes—on my feet black silk stockings and patent leather shoes, and in my hand a natural wood stick with a handle that had a bit of
suck
witn a nanuie
stirring it constantly." When you want to use it, 'throw enongh in the haudbtteda to make the water the color of H^im.milk, and thon bathe your face thoroughly with it, dabbling it dry with
donkey has done and go and getbennine. It's Uncture of Benzoin that you want and just reiiiember, especially during the summer, that your face is not made of buckram^ but is a tender skin ind should be wiped after its bath with a soft, rather than a harsh, towel. If the 'piea of the faihlly, who are so rough skinned that beards grow on them like
broem-like cloths, let them have the ex elusive use of them. If your skin is harsh and dry try
using
tell.
BKLIKVK.
When I go out would wear a silk hat, and if I were going to the theater with ladies, light pearl gloves with heavy black stitci^ng on the back. Broadcloths? Oh, smart dress clothes are no longer made of broadcloth, but of the rough black cheviot that is, after all, more economical, inasmuch as it does not grow shiney. My boutoUniere?
Well, that would be given me where I d»ed, and I should not wear It unless it were an orchid, a spray or two of lillies of the valley or a few violets. After dinner? Being in the swim, I should drift a* with the other fellows, hav*nough not to drink too much, to ve that the ballet is all that it not to imagine that every woman I mei v-as inloveivifb me, rsur to believf systrin that uld break
Th.-it what would happen i: W«»VKX A*r» FflliWM* -c'.r:
With ttw1 early s-nirimT S »na«» from iunurM* of Wmon. It
is r. On the Tf v.
SUlTr.i r« A:.,
Ui'V .w UK
.. -{t.-i.: a
•I,
Uioft. It's
n, and
HOW TO BE SMART.
The gingham gown is to the mankind bein& ignorant, sweet simplicity and doesn't know' ti it is mounted on silk and is quite as costly as a woollen one would be.
To be smart, you must sit up straight in your victoria, and not loll in one corner of It. .e
Your shoes must shine, even if you haven't time to cultivate your intellect The outside world only sees the brightness at one end.
You must wonder if really nice people ever did wear diamond earrings except at balls.
You must wear your gloves ueitber too tight nor too loose, but to fit. And if you want to achiove the very height of smart indifference, you must languidly ask the sister of the man you are going to marry "what his first name is?" BAB,
DANCING ELEPHANTS.
4-PAWS FAMOUS TROUPE OF ALMOST HUMAN QUADRILLE PACHYDERMS. Adam Forepaugh, Jr's. troupe of quad-rille-dancing elephants have been the sensation of the season. Nothing like these marvelously trained beasts has ever been seen before. The evolutions through which they go, with an evident appreciation of their importance, and the constant intelligence which they display, provoke admiration for the genius and tireless patience which have brought their reasoning faculties into play. In order to illustrate to what perfection elephants can be trained, young Forepaugh has selected eight mammoth trumpeting pachyderms, four males and four females, all answering to Shakespearian names, and to make the quadrille more lifelike each male elephant has a "lady" partner. There is Othello and Desdemona, Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet and Ophelia, and Antony and Cleopatra. These gifted elephants go through a quadrille with the same ease and grace as the most skillful lover of Terpsichore, bow, promenade "forward and back,*' "balance to partners," and "chesses" ic a way that Is as wonderful as it is ludicrous. These marvelous elephant's, together with Adam Forepaugh, Jr^. $50,000 troupe of trained broncho boms "Eclipse," the equine aerlalist the great Forepaugh areulc exhibition of sensations! aad the istory-depicti ng
-how .Whi'-h c\hii'it at T'-rre S *r« rf!ay, June
:h,,' Ttte tint M-* .r .5'Ink* Lhir- TSmw ivrk
\190
1170
iJoaGUbett
a wine glass full
of glycerine in a warm bath according to a noted beauty a few baths of this sort ought to make the skin soft and white? ft 5 A BATH FOR THE SKIN.
Way back in the time of the Stuarts, and indeed, in the oldest toilet books, there is mentioned a bath that will give tone to the skin and keep It in proper condition. It is very simple, consisting of merely tepid water in which has been put half a pint of pure vinegar. The ladles of the olden times did not disdain to have their books of cosmetics and each generation of lovely women wrote in the family book about that which had tended to make her most beautiful, so that the coining beauties could read, learn and inwardly digest. It is said Cleopatra herself wrote a book on the arts of toilet, and I have been frivolou? enough to think that the Sphinx knows
and soul-stirring reproductions of life twenty-five. 'The inclination seems to np« iho plains, with Dr. Carver, the be to procure land north ani northeast famous traveler atsd itfie-wh"i, an'I of ty. It la believed 4hat th• ffr*ii hundred »uta, aold'**r*, c,w!'oye n^-i osv-p-j- i* *«•••»ti..u vvitl be seeii wttfc. fdiJ t" 1" ]"High and Wild IV. 4 «':«.» u." 1, K^ry oi.#".a*i|»a to accept it aft* feet lUW*. that nt-st.iter oil nor iras nan be fotind ber.
Oil and Otherwise
•&
During the past week there has Mien the same activity regarding oil that has characterized the city since the discovery nearly three weeks ago. Time will not be lost in ascertaining the field. Each company and every one interested is pushing forward as rapidly as possible and there is one general scramble for oil territory. Land Is being rapidly leased and optioned and it is gratifying to note that Terre Haute capitalists are securing most of it.
In a day or two more drills will be set at work in a half dozen wells. The Kittser company's plant near Sycamore and 14th streets, will be ready for operations by Monday. The derrick has been erected and, the boiler placed in position fjie machinery is the same that was used at the Diall well. The apparatus has been put in readiness for drilling at the Exchange well near Tenth and Chestnut streets. The apparatus is here for about 10 other wells and during the next week preparations will be made for drilling. A half dozen new companies have been organized during the past week and more are talked of. Many are still willing to subscribe stook in new companios. More attention has been to securing lands this week than to the organization of companies.,
The scheme, referred to in The Mail of last week, to form a combination of local companies to drill up the territory about Terre Haute and locate the field was fav orably regarded by many of the interested parties. However, none seemed to take the initiative step looking towards the establishment of-jsuch a combination and in consequence Nothing has been done. It is probable that no pool can be found. There has sprung up a feeling that in the event more oil is struck the proper thing to do would be to combine interests and it is not improbable that such a compact may be intored into when there area dozen or more gushers in and about Terre Haute.
It possesses many advantages over the seperate operations of the various companies. There is a decided desire to withstand the outside influences which will be brought to bear in the event an extensive oil territory is found to exist. The capitalists and tho men of moderate means who are investing in oil stock have the interests of this city at heart and propose that it shall realize as much out of oil as possible. They are to be commended for their enterprise and 3u14 b^ eneouraged in every way. ey are sailing under the motto: ••Terre Haute for Terre Hauteana," which isn't a bad one. J?
Terre Haute isn't a pauper city by any' means. There is a plentiful supply of capital here and almost any quantity can be commanded. It is stated quietly that a movement is on foot to organize a company with very large capital stock. It is proposed to form a tank line and take care of the oil when it is found. One of tne drawbacks to the finding of oil has been the difficulty which would be encountered in making shipments. To obviate this it is proposed to build as many tank cars as will be needed. Such cars are expensive but those who favor the scheme are of the opinion that a company could secure any quantity of capital that they desired. A large refinery is also suggested, to which the product of all the welis could be piped and refined for shipment. Inasmuch as It will require several months to drill to the oil stratum there Is ample time in which to organize and get ready for operations. Nearly every one dreads the Standard Oil company and are afraid of being gobbled by It. Concerted action is argued as the only method of preventing outside corporations from control ing the oil territory. •mZj.-.,.
There is some talk of forming an oil exchange at the Terre Haute house or National. Every evening dozens of oil men congregate about the corridors and talk oil. There are more strangers than ever in the city. Many of those who were first to arrive are still here and others have constantly been dropping in to look over the field. During the day they can be seen driving in nearly all directions from the city. Some of them have been making a study of the surface on foot. One expert from Pennsylvania, who has been successful in business, has been making a careful survey of the country fo* miles surrounding the city. He dfirries a, compass and made mfbute notes of the surface indications, being careful to note the classification of the rocks, direction of strata*, etc. He has been doing his work quietly and many wauld nut suspect him of being an oil man with a large fortune. Among the visitors are quite a number of young men wh* attract attention. Several are beardl and have perhaps not reached
Jjvitvl thf rivf-r. Siw i! w.-t, ivȣ ^trm-k
I
jif
r..'-r of
th«* Tiv
si1
«--r
'1
«sacl. 5 r. .....ing '.at "atioo. Jt'.ryi*
#.r5'^V::,
vm
f"!
1
--«r at
corn ed
th«
tJus Thrlie to
j- rt .-»m is i'(tras rinortfwml
S- ~t W 1
and east of the city. High hopes are based upon the finding of gas. It would' give the city a boom such as it never had before.
In speaking of leases, a home capital* Ists said that the owners of land had. stiffened in their terms, and it is now a difficult matter to reach a reasonable agreement. They show a disposition to hold their property and await developments. Some Imagine that their land possesses untold wealth and they are inclined to retain it rather than permit capital to test It and develop it If oil or gas is found. The home parties, however, have less difficulty in leasing than strangers. It would soem to them to be to their interest to lease to Terre ITaute companies rather than to foreigners. The terms being offered are reasonable and property owners should not be too unreasonable in their demands. One lease was taken on a tract of land ly a home company at 60c per acre annually,, drilling to be done at any time, the owner is to receive in the event oil is obtained. This is an exceptionally good lease for the company.
One prominent home oapitaliat has been endeavoring to lease territory all week, and has only succeeded In securing several small pieces of land. He ispersonally acquainted with nearly everyone about the city, yet this did not enable him to secure leases. He wasmet nearly everywhere by a positive refusal to lease or the terms asked were too high. His efforts were not attendedwith any dogree of success, and he was* considerably disappointed in the disposition of nearly everyone to hold their leases at such terms that no one can afford to aocept. A prominent farmer, in speaking of leases, said that not a day has passed since tho oil discovery that has not brought one or more oil men tohis farm to make a proposition to lease. Some days there were as many as four or five differenjjpartios who desired to get a lease. He has thus far refusod all of them. It has been suggested to those who will not lease on any terms that a sign be put up: "This farm can not be. leased."
The large tanks at the Vandalfa gravef pit have been completed. Oil was pumped into one of them and it Is now full. The others will also be filled. The well continues to flow when permitted to do so at Its usual capacity. There has been no apparent dimlnufciop sbtps the well settled down to business. The flow Is so large that the question is notv, what to do with tho oil? It finds ready sale but the company has had no way of shipping it at a small cost. Orders have been given to the car works to build a number of tank cars? -and work will be pushed on them. They will be ready in a few days. It is then the intention to ship the oil to tho large markets. Each tank car costs about $700. As many will be built as will be needed, cf*
Experiments are being made by which the oil can be converted into fuel gas at a small cost. One manufacturing establishment has purchased a number of barrels and one of their expert workmen! is conducting a series of experiments* A small apparatus was constructed and It worked admirably besides producing results that were not looked for. Th». test was so encouraging that a much' larger plant is being constructed and within a few days a thorough and a. practical test will be made of the new process
4
WAN1ED TO KNOW
If It is true Jimmte Russell intends* sending a company on the road' next, season.
Why more fences are not torn dowxt* and the cow ordinanoe rigidly enforced* How Tom Kinser placated the neighhood surrounding his oil well when they kicked against the drilling.
If Dave Greiner has a sure thing on the postofflce. If the Gazette has become reconciled to* the appointments brought about by Chairman Paris' trip to Washington.
If the new base ball league will "bust" before the season is half over. If the home oil companies will oombine.
If Engineer Simpson wss ousted because he had several Republicans under him.
The next surprise the council has in store for the people. If the defeat of the sewer scheme waa not a plain back down.
If there is a better hustler than Sam Sam Young as a theatrical manager. Who the oil men were who drove about the streets in a fine turnout with one of the wheels squeaking for oil.
Why the excursions to this city, that have been suggested, would not be enterprise and afford the city some benefit.
The next company that will strike oil. Why lckf Mart Diaii cannot locate a vwell or '.
W, T. ffcmnfa. the parachute jumper,, an fwf-n-j'/ii at Sullivan lsat tir lay. Tin- bailoon came down in rorntiehl and ivm«t broU- t. b*''k the -ity i«y
.t
laif?
Nineteenth Year
rmr -rho ref'i-ed trfve it
iin!'•-«* j.Hi'l for l»i- trouble. He v. butrefn-« I. ,\f»«ri-n-wrangling the farmer coin* prmiii*'
1
for the $8.
