Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 42, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 April 1893 — Page 3
mm
iSHlii
WHAT WILL IT COST?
AN ESTIMATE OF THE EXPENSE OF A STAY AT THE FAIR.
Booms 1'roia 30 Cents Day Upward—The Department of Public Comfort Will Look After Stranger*—Thousand* of Flags and
Banners—Iowa's Display.
Nearly every one is interested in knowing something about tbe probable cost of a trip to the fair, and a little information on that point will no doubt be of service. "How much will it cost to live in Chicago?" Is a question that is just now agitating a great many minds, and yet the answer is po simple aa to almost suggest iteelf. Briefly it may be put in these words, "As much or as little as you please." There is no reason why any one should submit to extortion of any kind, and those who come with ready made plans and have their rooms engaged in advance will find no difficulty in keeping within any reasonable limit they may set themselves.
The bureau of public comfort will furnish information about rooms, board, transportation and anything else that may contribute to the convenience of visiting strangers, and will assign to them rooms if they so desire at any price they may stipulate and in any section of the city they
80UVEVTR TICKETS.
may desire. The prices for rooms will range from 50 cents a day up. Here is the schedulo the bureau sends out to those seeking information: Singlo room, ouo bed, one person ....$1 to $2 CO Double room, ono bed, two persons.. 1 to 4 00 Double bedded room, two beds, two persons 2 to 4 00 Doublo bedded rooms, two beds, throe persons 2 to 000 Doublo bedded rooms, two beds, four pontons 2 to 800
These prices of courso do not include board. That can also bo arranged for if the applicant desires, but most people will find it nioro convenient to take rooms and eat wherever they may happen to be, at meal hours. Otherwise they may find tliey are paying for meals that they cannot eat with out a frreat deal of inconvenience.
When an application is made to the b» reau for a room, the applicant deposits pay in advance and receives a receipt and a notification as to the exact location of tin room to which ho is assigned. At the same time the landlord is notified that such a person will be with him on a certain date to stay a certain length of time. When the visitor arrives in Chicago, all ho has to da is to go at once to the address given him and take tho room assigned him. Ho has no bargaining to do and nothing to pay, tho landlord collecting his rent from the bureau with which ho is under contract.
One of tho mistaken notions that people not familiar with Chicago entertain is that it is necessary to live on tho South Side in order to be able to see the fair comfortably. All sections of the city are provided with ampla means of transportation, and it will mako comparatively!ittlo difference where a visitor may IKS located, so far as convenience in rencliinix tho exposition is con cerncd. In fnct, there is no reason why they should not room in Aurora, Kankakee, Joliet or somo other of the outlyiug towns away from tho noise and bustle of tho city, tuid yet quite as conveniently situated for visiting purposes as if next to tho gates of Jackson park.
There need be no fear of extortionate charges for water and conveniences at the
Eave
ark during the exposition. Many peopl" been not a little worried by the stories afloat in refe-renco to these matters. These stories were based on across misconception of tho concessions granted to certain exhibitors, and for a time it was not tliought necessary to contradict them because of their manifest absurdity. They did so much harm, however, that President Higinbotham finally "jumped on them with both feet," as i,t were, and effectually stamped them out. Thero will bo plenty of free drinking water, free seats about the grounds and buildings and free toilet couvenienoos and also free medical attendance for emergency cases provided by the managements In fact, pretty much everything will l* freo after ono lias purchased one of tho pretty tickets of admission and presented it at ono of tho gates, except the special attractions of tho Midway plalsance, the Colorado cliff dwellings and the Eskimo village,
Down in tho southwest corner of the IlorticuhunU building more than 100 men and women are at work making flags, banners and drajH'des for the different buildings. They have been hard at it ever since the beginning of last November and do not expect to uo through with their labors till the eve of he opening day. They have transformed hundreds of thousands of yards of buutiug into •he fluttering emblems of nation -, 1 power that will float from thousands of mrstson the eventful morning of May 1 ami into ba. acts and draperies that will decorate niche, gallery, dome and pinnacle until the completed whole shall bo alight with the glory of contrasting colors. Other thousands of yards will bo used up before they have carried out the plans prepared for their guidance, and the decoration of the World's fair buildings will mark an epoch in the use of bunting.
GLDireS or ILLINOIS' UCfLDIXa. People who imagine that all the artistic talent of tbt* country i* develop*! in the "effete east" need to pay a visit to the Iowa state building, off in the northeast comer of the fair ground*, and submit Its interior to A critical inspection. The decorations are quite as Ingenious as they art* Corn, wheat, millet, grapevines* sr.«l gmfst* have been worked into picture*, cqiitmas, panel* and designs that awadmimblocoimlerfdu of this painter's Art*
C. T. UAXTEE.
YOUNG MEN TO THE FRONT.
The Assistants Selected by the President to Help Secretary Carlisle. The new assistant secretaries of the treasury are both young men, William Edmund Curtis of New York being but 38 years old, while Charles S. Hamlin of Massachusetts is only 33. Mr. Curtis was born in New York city in 1855 and is the son of Judge
WILLIAM E. CURTIS. CHARLES 8. HAMLIN. William E. Curtis, who».vas effected to the New York supreme court in 1871, during the antiring excitement, and subsequently became chief justice of the supreme court. The son graduated from Trinity college in 1875, read law and Was admitted to t..e bar in 1877. He has ever since been in entive practice and is now a member of the firm of Stearns & Curtis.
Mr. Curtis is interested in several big business enterprises, being vice president of a chandelier making company and of a sewing machine corporation. He is secretary of the Democratic club and was one of the founders of the Reform club, besides being a member of other prominent organizations. Ho is unmarried.
Chark'3 Sumner Hamlin was born in Boston in 1861, the son of Edward Sumner Hamlin, a prominent merchant of the Hub. The Hamlins are an old Democratic stock and gained distinction in the Revolutionary war by the services of Major Eleazer Hamlin of Harwick. Mr. Hamlin graduated from Harvard in the class of 1883 and from Harvard law school in 18SC. He was an honor man in both classes. He formed a partnership with a son of Chief Justice Morton immediately on graduating and has since beeit engaged in active'practice of his profession.
He was nominated for the Massachusetts state senate in 1888, but was not elected, and was defer
w«d
also last fall when he ran
for secretary of state. Ho hns devoted a great deal of study to statistical and financial questions and has spoken in favor of tariff reform in most of the cities and towns of Massachusetts. He is a member of ma^y organizations in his native state and of tL Democratic and reform clubs in New York city.
MEXICO AND LIVERPOOL.
The Men Who Will Represent Us In Those Important Cities. Ex-Governor Thomas T. Crittenden of Missouri, who goes to Mexico as consul general of the United States, is by birth a Kentuckian and by profession a lawyer. Ho lives in Kansas City and represent"'! that district in congress in 1880, before he was elected to the governorship. lie
THOMAS T. CHITTENDEN. JAMES E. NEAL. achieved the rank .of lieutenant colonel in tho Union army during the civil war and has long been a prominent figure in the public eye in various ways, though probably he is best known through his pursuit and destruction of tho notorious Jesse James gang of outlaws that terrorized Missouri for so many years. His method of securing the extinction of the gang by bargaining with Bob Ford, another notorious desperado, to kill Jesse James has been harshly criticised, but Mr. Crittenden still considers the plan he pursued justifiable mid is proudof the fact that tho gang was broken up during his term in the executive office.
James E. Neal of Hamilton, O., who has been appointed consul to Liverpool, was chairman of the Democratic state committeo during tho campaign which resulted In Governor Campbell's election and probably owes his consulship to that fact, since it is said the president appointed him at Governor Campbell's request, backed up by Senator Brice, Mr. Neal is one of Ohio's Democratic leaders, and when young man was speaker of tho state house of representatives. He has never before held a federal office.
TO HONOR ERICSSON.
New York's Trlbnto to tho Inventor of the Monitor. How the American people delight to honor their dead heroes, though reluctant and slow in doing them justice when living, is well illustrated in the case of John Ericsson, the inventor of tho famqps Monitor, For years Ericsson had a claim of about $15,000 against the national government for services rendered prior to the war, and 30 years or more ago the court of claims decided that the debt was a just one, and vet today it remains unpaid, several successive copgr^gses having refused io make any appropriate KRICSSON'S MONXME^. for the purpose. Yet when it became a Question of sending his lifeless body home to his native land congress cheerfully spent upward of $100,000 and devoted our warships to the service.
Just about that time, too, the Now York legislature appropriated $10,000 to build a monument in his honor, which will soon be un veiled on the historic Battery arnyjl t^e ^thundering of the cannon of the mighty ships of war assembled in the harbor for the Columbian naval review. The civic authorities will be on hand, and tho Odd Fellows and the Swedish societies will participate in tbe programme, and there will be speech making and a. dinner and a ill in the evening, -£U«i American.1? will s! -.? the world la their own inimitable fashion how they honor the man they would not pay.
The statue to be unveiled is the wtjrk of Sculptor J. Scott Hartley. It of broc*e ami is overS feet in hrl it, weighing 1,300 pounds. Tbe pedestal feet high, of granite, with polished panels and a rough, unfinished*
A Tender Hearted Jlaitlffi
The mastiff in this picture, children is a perfect terror, I have been told, to all tramps, cats and fowl, bat he has a kindly heart, as the following will show:
Some time ago a fowl belonging to the dog's master bj" some mischance broken leg, and after it had been carefully bandaged by its owner the bird was allowed to go about the yard again. Immediately it hobbled up to'the mastiff, ignoring the fact
that he had a special fondness for poultry as food, and instead of pouncing upon the bird and taking its life away the dog sh'owed the utmost consideration and anxiety to befriend the crippled bird, and in dog language Invited it into his kennel. The dog and fowl became fast friends, and it was quite a common sight to see the mastiff walking about with his winged companion perched upon his back after the fractured leg had been entirely healed,— Christian at Work.
It is not years that make us old, bu suffering. A week of pain draws moro lines upon the face than a year of bappi neas. VIAVI brings hea aitb nrings happiness.
Mrs. Drexel's Dasrmar Cross. The Dagmar cross is now owned by Mrs. Joseph Drexel of New Yor'i. It is a very beautiful cross in enamel, about IX inches in length and an inch in width, being a facsimile of the original, which is preserved in the old Northern museum at Copenhagen Its workmanship dates back to the beginning of the thirteenth century, and it was found in the grave of Queen Dagmar at Ringsted in 1635. Being holiow, it is supposed to contain precious relics. Duplicates of this cross were made for Dr. R. Shelton Mackenzie, late of this city, and for the Princess Alexandra of Denmark, for a wedding present on her marriage to the Prince Of Wales. The princess' cross was attached to a necklace of 118 pearls and 2,000 brilliant and rose diamonds.
The court jeweler, Cristensen, in Copenhagen made the facsimile cross for Dr, Mackenzie, a copy that is said to be scarcely distinguishable from Unoriginal. The face of the tiny cross is what is known as a Breton cross—that is, at each corner is rounded disk instead of the bar end. These medallions, for such they make in goldsmith's work, although very massive in a stone cross, are the field in the Dagmar cross for lovely enamel figures of Christ, the Virgin, St. John the Baptist, St. Basil and St. John Chrysostom.—Philadelphia Ledger.
Fits—All Fits stopped freo by Dr Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after tbe first day's use. Marvelous cures, Treatise and ?2.00 trial bottle free to Fii cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phtla., Pa.
Ten Hoars' Sleep For Women. A physician who is a specialist in nervous diseases says that women should sleep at least nine hours at night and one hour in the daytime. Perhaps you Say it is quite impossible for you to .sleep, even though you lie down, in daylight. Possibly you will not the first few times you try it, but keep up the practice, and soon your eye3 will close every day at a certain time and you will be drawing in great drafts of nature's own invigorator—sleep.
Women Make Dynamite.
Making dynamite is strange oocupation for women, yet they are largely employed in it in many European communities. The manufacture of dynamite for beneficial use in mining and engineering work, as well as for military purposes, is carried on largely in almost every part of Europe.—New York Journal.
It Is Foolish
To send for the doctor every time you don't feel just right. My doctor's bill was over a hundred dollars a year, which made a pretty big holo in my wages. For tbe past two years I only spent ten dollars, with which I bought a a dozen,bottles of Sulphur Bitters, and health h'as been in my family since us iug them.—ROBERTJOHNSON, Machinist.
The King's Fool.
The fool kept by the king Was quite a stupid bore, Although at everything
His majesty would roar. "There's nothing tn his chaff," Said he, "to cause me mirth. Bat still I have to laogh
terre HAUTE SATURDAY" EVENING MATT,, APRIL 15,1893.
To get my money's worth." —St. Nicholas.
"Golden Medical Discovery" euros those diseases which come from blood impurities—scrofula and skin diseases, sores and swellings.
But does it? Its put up by the thousands of gallons, and sold to hundreds of thousands. Can it cure as well as though it bad been compounded just for you?
Its makers say that thon&ands of people woo have had Tetter and Salt-rheum, Eczema and Erysipelas, Carbuncles and Sore Eyes, Thick Neck and Enlarged Glands, are well to day because they used it.
Suppose that this is so. Suppose that a quick-witted man was far seeing enough to know that to cleanse tbe blood was to cie&nse the life. Suppose th^ by many experiments, and after many failures, he discovered this golden key to health and that his faith in it for you is so strong that you can go to your druggist, boy a bottle and if it don't help you, yon can get your money returned—cheerfully. Will you try it?
The remedy to have faith in, is the remedy the makers themselves have faith in. Ltwl Family Xfdiclne Moves Ui*
'f.pi
mm
lisssi
Bowels
ivach day." Most peppte need to use it*
Why Will You
Allow your health to gradually fail? If you are closely confined indoors with little or no exercise, and desire good health, 'you must take care of yourself. Use
Sulphur Bitters, and you will have a sound mind and a strong body.
Anybody Can Arrange This Corner. Every household needs a lounging place, and the following plan can be adopted wherever a restriction in funds would place a regularly made sofa out of reach:
Buy an ordinary cot with woven wire springs. Cut off the legs two inches and remove the head and footboard. Buy a hair mattress to fit and cover it with cretonne, buttoning it down at intervals of four inches like a cushion for a seat Tack a box plaited flounce of the cretonne around the edge of the cot on the four sides. Finish tie top with narrow gimp. Make four or five feather pillows two feet square, and cover them with material that will contrast prettily with the cretonne. The result of these simple directions will evidence the truth of my M\OT»in rr n»lr
opening remark.
Having formed a row of "frogs" from om end of their village to the other, the boj bej^n to jump in the usual agile way of the plaj'ers of the lively game. As soon as tin line is in motion, a mo3t tremendous sound startles the village. The oldest inhabitant can hardly "hear himself think," but he knows that the noise is not thunder—it is only the rattle of the boys' wooden shoes as they strike tbe hard brick paved street, Harper's Young People. -i
The following item has been going the rounds of the press, and as our druggists handle the goods, it may interest our readers:
Having had occasion to use Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, it gives me pleasure to state that I found it to be the best medicine for a cough I ever used in fact, it cured me of a cough tbat had baffled several other cough medicines. N. BURNETT, Ataliesa, Towa. April,
Lucy's Suggestion/
Uncle William was talking with Lucy, his little niece, about a present. He wished to know her mind upon a certain highly in teresting subject, but preferred to get at it indirectly. "Now, LTICVS said he, in a'casual man ner, "if I were going to buy a doll for a little girl, what kind of a one do you think she would like?" "Oh, Uncle William, answered Lucy, with undisguised interest, "there is nothing like twiusl"—London Tit-Bits.
Oscar Wilde was once asked by a woman the best way for a stouc woman to dress. "Tell her," was the autocrat's reply, "that the most becoming thing for fat is drapery." Don't be afraid of fullness, but use it with discretion.
$25,000 in Premiums.
Offered by Liggett «fe Myer* Tobacco Co., of St. Louis, Mo. The one guessing nearest the number of people who will attend the World's Fair gets §5,000.00. etc. Ten Star Tags entitle you to a guess. Ask your dealer for particulars or send for circular. H-
Wurranted Against Breakage. Clare was perched upon the fencepost, swinging her chubby legs and singing at the top of her sound little lungs. "Be careful, Clare," said I as I passed by "you might fall and break your bones. I'm afraid you'll get hurt." "Oh, don't be 'fraid," she answered reassuringly "I did fall down yesterday already, and I never even cracked."—Kate Field's Washington,
Farmers in Marin county, Cal.. are complaining of a weed which the cows eat and which gives a peculiar taste to the milk, so much so that in some districts the milk is unpalatable.
Mm Dorit Understand. No man ever suffered a single pang like unto won\an.
Women, therefore, gladly turn to a woman for sympathy, counsel, and help in their peculiar troubles.
Lydia E. Pinkham deserves the confidences showered upon her by thousands. Her
Vegetable Compound has done
women than an remedy,
The ^reat
Cause of woman's misery is in her womb. Lydia E. Pink• ham's Vegetable Compound goes direct to the source of trouble, drives out disease, and cures backache, fainting, despondency, bloating, ovarian troubles, and leucorrhcea.
I would have been in my grave if I had not taken Mrs. Pinkham's medicine." Hannah Hyde, Bethel, ItidJ&t
All draggfet* tell it. Address in coafideaoc^ ITCU E. PXKKIIA* LLTO. Co.. LTW, MASS. MRS. TWC TAV»V PJILM 25 COStM.
W,H
l|tlf it®
IHWHWH
1
Ol why was pain ever Invented sighs the weary sufferer. Because the race would have been extinct long ago bad it not been for pain. Pain is nature's language of protest and adinon ishment. VIAVI is nature's own rem edy for woman's ill. Room 6, MeKee.n block. Free consultation. Ladles' only in attendance.
Dutch lioys and Their Wooden Shoes. There are many kinds of wooden shoes worn by the peasants in Europe, but none are more clumsy and heavy than the "kloompers" of the Hollar dex-s. They are boat shaped, with high wooden protections to the heels and a curious little upward twist to the toes, like the prow of a Chinese junk. But heavy and awkward as the shoes are, the Dutch children run about as lightly as if they were shod in Cinderella's glass slippers, and do not seem to object in the least to the clicking sound made by the shoes on the pavement. One of the most extraordinary sights in the world is a lint of little Dutch boys playing leapfrog in their great, noisy wooden kloompers.
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING.
Epps's Cocoa
BREAKFAST—SUPPER.
"By a thoiough knowledge of the natural iaw8whf tion aud Hon of the flue propertl. Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It Is by tbe Judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up uutll strong enough to resist every tendency to dlsenw. Hundreds of subtle mnlndles are floating around us ready to attack wherever there If- a weak point. We inny escape many a fat.nl shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame."—Civil Service Gazette,
Vide simply
wJlh
DAYTON, SPRINGFIELD.
-TO-
New York, Boston
I .A. ZEST ID TIHZIEJ ZEJ-^ST v'' VIA THE POPULAR -V'-:
P-irv
Jjake
Mjwasis®
free Guide to the City of Health
be furnished every lady who
if%41 be® fat her my if she mil apply
at room G.M?Keen Slock. Free consultation. Ladies only in attendance. yjAVI
I THE WAY TO)
boiling water or milk.
old only in half-pound tins, by grocers, laJAMBS EPPS St. CO..
beled thus: Homosopathio Chemists London, ^Sng.
ABSOLUTELY
No Change of Cars
FROM
ST. LOUIS, TERRE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI.
tJEAwH
fe
V'
?iw
siHBii
AFTER SIXTEEN YEARS OF SUFFERING. 7 CHICAGO, Sept. io, 1892,. The Viavi Company:
It! gives me pleasure to add my testimony in favor of your medicine Sixteen years ago this month, at the birth, of my only child. I was so terribly injured that I had not seen a well hour since until after using your remedy, which I commenced to use a little more than a year ago. I did. not expect to be cured short of a year and a half, but am happy to say that I found myself well at the end of nine: months. For ten years I treated with the best physicians, but they did me no good and could only advise me at theend to take good care of myself. My husband spent a small fortune trying to find relief for me, but in vain. The doctors called my trouble prolapsus, but I am sure it was a great deal more, as I was often confined to my bed for days at a time, unable to eat. I suffered terribly with my head and came near losing my sight. To all suffering as I suffered I will say that if you will use Viavi faithfully and persistently it will do its work
Shore am!
Dig T"j NewYork Central ROUTES. THE—
Shortest & Quickest Line
BETWEEN
EAST WEST
All trains arrive Slxtb Street Depot.
and Depart from
Berths in Sleeping Cars
SEC0REI) THROUGH TO
NEW YORK & BOSTON
E. E. SOUTH, Gen. Agt
KXCELSI0R
Painting.8 Frescoing.
Tinting:. j"
GEO. H. HUGHES,
i® III
^E^.3ST-£lC3-E». «, ,.„r
•#4SKS.VA»p».~.- -1 1«SW|
N. A. W.
HERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of an order of sale lsBued front the Superior court of Vigo county, Indiana, to me directed and delivered. In favor of Frances A. Houles on her complaint, against Patrick W. Stack, Mary A.Stack,TerreHauto Savings Bank and Origin B. fioulos also In favor of Origin Soules, on his cross complaint against Patrick Stack, Mary A. Stack and Terre Haute Savings Bank. I am ordered to sell tho following described real e«t,ate, situated lu Vigo county, Indiana, towit:
Forty-two and one-half (42}^) acres off of tho west side of a certain fifty-four (54) acre tract of land lying and being south of tho National road, off of tho west side of tho northeast quarter of section twenty-four (24) In township twelve (12) north range nine (t) west, and on Monday, the 17th day of April, 1893, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of snld day, at tho noith door of the court house, in Terre Haute, 1 will offer tho rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenauccs to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding teven years, to the highest bidder for caf.li, aud upon firiluro to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said Judgment and costs, I will then and there oiler tho fco-slniplo In and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy thesame,.
This 24th day of Mnrcb. 1808. •10 87 JAM lCW W. STOUT, Sheriff.
Martin Bollinger, Attorney,
1
309% Ohio Street.
jq-OTlCE TO HEIRS.
State of Indlinu, County of Vigo, in the Vigo Circuit Court. May term, 1898. No. 2290. Martin Holllnger, administrator of the estate of Anna Brnxwell, dccea^d, v». William Braswtll et ol. Petition to sell real 68t&i0t
He It known. Mint on tho 24th day of Mnrch, 1893. it waK ordered by the ourt.that ilK "l"i lc notify by publication wald William bru»we»i, Matilda Walelwr. .Mary Hlgglnf, John Blancluird aud Allen Jllanchard, who art* implendcd with Martin Brju»W«ll ot nl HH non-resident defendants of fix- ypndetn of this action against them. HWES
Said defendants are therefore heifli, notified of the pendency of 9nld action against them and that the same will stand for trial May 8tli, 189:{. the same being May term of sairt court In tho year 1893. 40 HUGH P. ROQUET, Clerk
Martin^Holllnirer, Attorney. 300% Ohio street. DMINISTRATOR'S BALK or REAL EH-
BPS*»==, TATBjff/ sy-ws*- ff Notice Is hereby giventhat by orderjof the
A
Vig® Circuit Court the undersigned as administrator of the estate of Lucy Church, de.309% Ohio street
Lprivate sale, on
ceased,I will sell atmy office,309% In the olty of Terre Haute, At prlv
vate sale, on
"MondVy, the 24th day of April, the following described real estate in Vigo county, Indiana, vlz: Commencing lit In the centei of the National road, 1532-UO chains north of
the southeast corner of thesouthwestouartcr of section Twenty-six (28) township Twelve (12) north, range Ten (10) west, thence southwest »long the center of tbe National road 4 55 100 bains, thence south 6 chains, the no© east 4 25-100 chains, thence south to the seotion line, thence east 10 chains, thence north 19 57-100 chains to the center of tho National road, thence southwest along the center of tbe National to the place of beginning, containing
21road
50-100 aores more or less.
Terms
of sale—onc-thlrd cash, one-third In
six months and one-third In twelve months,, the purchaser giving notes secured by mortgage on the nremlses for deferred payments.
MARTIN
"I ..!
HOLL1NOER, Administrator,
ch 24,1893. 4t
THE OXJID -E&IELX-A-IBILIIE
J-.R3.-RI UJJOJ
SfcamiDyeiWorks
has made great improvement*, owing io Increase of btw«neMj and Is now pre-
U!
'trjhfi'Obfr
