Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 15, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 October 1895 — Page 3
TO HEAR HER SING.
To «ee her perfect head thrown back, While from her lips (the daintiest ever kiwed) There ripples forth a melody so fw«, Bo joyous and so glad, the happy birds
Are moved to wonder on tho maple tree Just at the window, where she aita and sings, ^Ebrself the sweetest among all sweet thlngal
The little Psyche knot of golden hair— I wonder oft if angels wear theirs BO— The soulful eyes uplifted—I am sure Not angel, woman, St. Cecilia'a self
Could look more fair or more divinely purel The bunch of lilies on her girlish breast Show scarcely white against her bosom's snow— ]fot with an odorous sigh they closer cling, (}lad to be near her, glad to hear her sing! —Nannie L. Hatter in Southern Magazine.
I
SNARED.
In those benighted days now gone forSver, gone to the ilurk Plutonian shore Whence there is no returning, when all /Unmarried women were catalogued as "old maids" and despised accordingly, there •t
lived a widow, the mother of an only ,f child, and that child a daughter. And then, as now, the number of daughters outnumbered by a great many the number of sons born to man, and for jthe latter there was a great scramble, for as the lesser could not equal the greater number many were fated to get left, and the doom of the "hindmost" was oven than well understood, and as a plague all sought to avoid it.
Andtho mothers were as one with their daughters. Combined were they both in the pursuit of husbands for the maidens, /that the reproach of the unwedded might not cling unto them.
Therefore it behooved tho mothers to make tho most of their daughters, to shake well their napkins, each and every one, lest perchance eomo hidden talent lay unproductive therein, and to emphasize any good points whatsoever of which they might be possessed, that they might overshadow and leave In the shade the daughters of their neighbors, for such are the ways of women when aiding high heaven In the occult rites of matchmaking. I Buteheu, ehue and alas! In the daughter of the widow thero was naught to make much of. neither was there anything whatsoever to emphasize.
For so deficient was tho damsel in all personal charms and the beauty which, though but skin deep, yet sufficeth to turn the head of ninn and inflame his heart /with the unquenchable passion of love, so meager of figure, both physically and financially, that those given to levity and the speaking of idle words, for which nevertheless strict account must be rendered hereafter, dorided her and jeered at her among thomselves, oalling her in contempt, calling her in tho pride of their greater possessions, "tho widow's mite."
And it coming to tho ears of the widow her heart was exceedingly sad, even as her brain was puzzled to know what to do as she contemplated her daughter and the situation, for verily sho realized that the maid, being like unto her fathor's ^people, was indeed bankrupt In all gracos save that of virtue atone.
Now, virtue alone—that is, virtue without a dot—-is dead, and it availeth nothing In tho matrimonial market where the sponduiix taiketh, proclaiming In a loud voice the morits of its possessors, and it tnhanceth their attractions a thousandfold, rendering even the most ordinary of asp cot more dazzling than the sun at noonday.
Whllo It were better for the portionless maid had sho been born a man, for he hath but to choose, and, behold 1 with the shekels of his brido shall his coffers be filled to overflowing, and the faino thereof shall extend through all the land.
Now, the mother of tho widow's mite, being a woman and sorely distressed, gave ear unto a voice that whispered to her and was guided by it, for she recognized it as tho voice of her coiaborer against the peace of man,
swhen
it spoke to her saying:
"Arise, O woman of little gumption, and go you into the presence of the confirmed bachelor, evon him who, because of tho hatred he beareth to woman for the evil she hath brought upon man in that through her ho must toil and labor all tho days of his life, is called tho misogynist, and deceive him as you know how. "For he who seeketh not must be •ought, as tho Usher soeketh tho flsh in tho sea and tho hunter pursueth the nimble hare. "From tho hardost rock the water gusheth forth most freely. "Seek you, thoreforo, his assistance oven to the fulfillment of your laudable desire, and remember the more difficult tho deed tho greater tho reward and the, glory thereunto.
However, bo not downcast and let not your soul bo troubled, for all mon are woak, and the weakest are they who are vain of their strength, for he who la Invulnerable llveth not. "And I shall bo with you even to the end, lost perohanoo his Inokprovail against you."
Having spoken thus, tho voice oeased And was silent. Then tho widow hustled that danger might not bo courted by dolaying. She clothed henieif in twilight tints of mauve and amethyst, bound her waist with a
gis
irdle of jet and her hair with a band of same, for she still lived with the dead, juid saying no word of her scheme to any ono sho set forth to do as she had been commanded.
But coming to him to whom she had boon sent, uncovering her faco, for it was fair to look upon, she opened her mouth and spoke, and tho man was much bewildered by her words, for the unexpected bad happened, for which he was not prepared, aud at sight of her his strength seemed to oose out at his finger tips and the memory of his hatred to depart from him.
And tho voice of tho woman was as gentle as that of the dove, though her words were tho words of the serpent.
And the wprda were these: "Suff«arpH*\a little that I may tell you tho meatrtng of my coming unbidden bofore you. "tflmMfcho,object of my seeking you may £ot remain likldou nn^} a matter of oonjecturo I, who love truth And candor, will avow at once that I am she whom men hold up to scorn nfiBd derision as the scheming mother.
But I scheme not as she who alms through artifice and fraud at the securing of a husband for her daughter who otherwise would remain in stock until the day of tho last Inventory. "But rather that my child that I love, the only one tho Lord Intrusted to my tare, may not be taken from me and brought to dwell In the land of the itranger out of my sight fore verm ore. "But, on tho contrary, my wish Is that he who la to bo her bridegroom may not continue to live afar off in foreign lands and seduotive oitfos, but to banish the love of travel from bis heart, oease roaming the world over, both land and no, and to ootne near, even to the homo of his fathers, and settle in p**' Jd harmony
iSiS
among bis kindred and hers ere he olairoeth his bride. "Now, In this you can aid me If you will and do no Injury to any oue. For
Javlng
ou are free to come or go as you listeth, no wife or sweetheart to demand the why or the wherefore of your actions, you who loveth no one, but rather judgeth woman to be a snare and a temptation, which judgment la just in many eases, oan, by simply appearing in publlo places, at the plays, at the games and various other entertainment# and tournaments With my daughter, who Is young and as good as she la beautiful, and whom I also shall accompany, set in motion the tongues of the gossips and cause them to oarry tales and rumors thereof to the ears of him who thoughtlessly tarrleth in distant climes and who, the spirit
4 4
at
And inasmuch as she was the truthful and candid woman whom he had thought did not exist and whose non est-edness he had long regretted, the misogynist yielded himself to her plans, for susplolon was lullod within him.
Then, coming to see the girl, he was well pleased with her, for she was well behaved and not overbold. Moreover, he knew she had found favor in the eyes of another, for he believod sho was betrothed and about to be wed, and the approbation of one man goeth many loagues in forming the favorable opinion of his brother concerning woman.
For if one man wants her so also doth another. Whereas if no man wants her, even ho who thinks ho wants hor wants her not.
Then, after many days had gone by, days of great hope and rejoicing for the widow—for all things were coming her way—and days of speculation among the gossips as to what manner of witchoraft was employed by the mito to ensnare the confirmed bachelor, the misogynist, who, withal, was a man of consequence and honor, having lived long In tho land as one whom the Lord loved and to whose estate much of the yellow dross of commerce had attached itself, the truthful and candid woman again spoke to him, saying: "Rejoice with me and be glad, oh, good and faithful friend, for our plans have borne fruit, and our banners are crowned with victory. "Then rejoice, I say, for tomorrow the bridegroom cometh, he and his attendants full twoscore strong, that the occasion may not lack eclat, and the festivities will take in many days. Through your generous aid and co-operation this happy day hath boon hastened, and now all that remaineth for you to do to fill the measure of your graoiousness is to give away the bride, and, in sooth, I say to you it can be done none too soon, that entanglements may be avoided, for truly the girl holds you very dear in her affections."
And the words of the widow smote the man heart and soul, for it went grievously against the grain to be thus summarily shunted off to give place to another, for the oommand, "Thus far shalt thou go and no further," was not given toman, and farther he would go, fared he better or worse.
Therefore, though he uttered no word, he swore an oath that sizzled in its fervency, declaring to all things both high and low that when the morrow came with the laggard bridogi-oom he'd find never a brido waiting to receive him, but instead the tidings of her marriage to him who bad been known to all as the confirmed bachelor, for that very night would he floe with the maiden to tho inviting shores of an adjacent land where all obstacles In the way of sudden and unpremeditated marriages are swept away that lovers may be expeditiously launched headlong on tho turbulent soa of matrimony.
Hal A little plotting on his own hook would he do and surprise them all. And It was done even as he said.
But, alas I the surprise was in store for himself alone. Thus Is told and recorded the story of the marriago of him whoso title and condition matrimony changed from that of the confirmed bachelor to the confirmed misogynist on account of the deoeit practiced upon him.
For In those days, for tho Bake of food and raiment and a shelter for her head, many things wero done by woman and accounted "womanly" which now she who is emancipated would look upon with horror and scorn to do, hor bloomering, bicycling and balloting craze notwithstanding.—Chicago Tribune.
Dingbat*.
Dingbat Wo bad almost forgotten the word. H. L. N. recalls it to our memory, and now It dings and dings like a joy bell in tho night. 'Dingbat Is common in western Massachusetts," says H. N. "Tho first time I heard it was about 80 years ago at a dinner tablo In Easthampton, from a lady 91 years old, perhaps a little weak mentally, saying, 'Julia' (hor daugthor), 'toss me over one of them there dingbats.' The daughter Immediately passed her a plate of biscuits with a very hard baked brown crust. She took one, remarking, 'I guess thoy came over in the ark.' When I later attempted to eat one, It struck me (tho idea, not the dingbat) that the namo was a very good one, for if one had been 'dingod' at me and had 'hatted' me on tho head I should not be here to tell the tale."—Boston Journal.
Brain* In the Finger Hp*
It may not bo so generally known that recent post mortem examinations of the bodies of the blind reveal the fact that In tho nerve# at tho ends of the fingers well defined cells of gray matter had formed, Identical in substance and In cell formation with the gray matter of the brain. What does this show? It proves that a man oan think not alone in his head, but all over his body, and especially in the great nerve oent«rs like the solar plexus, and the nerve ends, on the palms of the bands and the soles of the feet. The coming man will assuredly perceive and think in every part, from his head" down to his feet.—'Arena.
Not a Bombardment.
Klssam—Has hor papa over fired you? Biggins—He has never resorted to bombardment. Ills tactics aire more in the nature of a passive blockade.
"How 4s that**1 "When I call to see his daughter, be retrains in the parlor during the whole of tt» interview."—Detroit Free
i1" i"?
jealous?' hav
ing been aroused, will, through fear of losing the Idol of his heart, out short his vain wanderings and hasten hither to claim his own and abide with his own.
Therefore despise me not beyond measure, I pray you, but rather conspire with me, but without my daughter's knowledge, that these things may be brought to pass, for otherwise tho light of her countenance will Illumine my life no more at all. I "And now that I may not weary you with much talking or oonsume your time with Idle words, but rather that you may fully consider the things I have spoken, 1 take myself hence."
THE QUEEN USES THEM,
TERRE TT ATJTE SATURDAY EVENING- MAIL, OCTOBER 5,1895.
WHAT ONE OF THE HIGHEST OFFICIALS SAYS,,
Queen Victoria Uses Proprietary Medicine—And What Is More They Care Her,
Too—Other Crowned Heads Use Them Also and Get Well—People Have High JBxamplet in Using These Remedies,
There never was a time when patent or proprietary medio!nes were so popular and so widely used by everybody as at present.
Years of experience have demon strated the great benefit of these remedies. They cure hence la not a mat ter of wonder to learn through the most direct and reliable offloial sources, that In her recent illness, Queen Viotorla, the great Queen of England used and was greatly benefited by such a remedy. Other orowned heads have undoubtedly done the same. Thus we see that the wisest, those with ihe best opportunity to judge, and rloh in unlimited resources, are convinced of the curative qualities of these medioines. With ability to procure the best medical talent in the world, this renowed Queen preferred a genuine remedy whioh bad cured so many people, whose testimo nials she had read.
Among all those which rare genius, after .long years of study and experi ment, has discovered, there is none equal to Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy,
Kings, queens, noble and peasant, th»' high as well as the low, alike employ and are cured by this grand remedy, es pecially at this season of the year, when the blood and nerves require this puri lying and invigorating medicine. Let others follow these illustrious examples Don't make any mistake. Take Dr Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. It is this you nged. It is thit* which will surely make you well and strong.
Mrs. Charles H. Heaton, residing at 143 State street, Montpelier, Vt., is or the very highest social position. She says: "Tw^ years ego we had a terrible experience with La Grippe, and by over work in taking care of roy children and the results of the disease I was left in a very exhausted condition, in fact was nearly prostrated. I was so weak that upon the least excitement I would feel nauseated. I was as near nervous prostration as anyone could be. "Someouo recommended Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy to me and I immediately began its use. I am happy to say that it completely cured me. I think it is the best medicin« I ever knew of for any form of nervous or chronio disease. I have recommended it to many and shall do so upon every occasion."
If ydu are nervous, weak, tired, sleepless, if you have headache, indigestion, kidney or liver complaint, poor blood and weak nerves, you can surely regain your health and be as well as you ever were by taking Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy.
The strengthening and curative powers of this remedy are wonderful. Use it and you will be made well and strong. It is the discovery of Dr. Greene, the most successful specialist in curing nervous and chronic diseases. He oan bo consulted by all at his office, 35 Wesc 14th street, New York City, free, person ally or by letter.
II®
Of Contemporaneous Human Interest,
Angustin Daly has given one phrase to American literature that, whatever may be its defect as a logical statement, has taken suoh deep root in current English that it is doubtful whether it oan possibly be eradicated, and probably never will be dislodged. The phrase is, "Of contemporaneous human interest." Mr. Daly employed it originally in describing one of his adaptations of the playbill The literary critics scored the phrase unmercifully at the time and tried to ridionle it out of existence, but it seems that despite the irresistible conclusion that no play could possibly possess any interest for trees or cattle as distinguished from "human" creatures Mr. Daly had filled a long felt want with it, for it is now met with increasing frequency. Doubtless every one who uses it does so under mental process charging the responpibility on Daly, but it is one of those winged phrases that drops in like an old time friend whose olothes are not above criticism.—Washington Post
An Animal That
With the single exception of his dog, the sportman is probably the only animal now living on the earth that hies. All others are extinct.
Even the sportsman never hies except in print of in manuscript intended for print, and even then, our observation would appear to indicate, he hies more frequently in the manuscript than in the actual print
Other creatures, quadruped or biped, simply go—walk, run, travel, make a break, skip, scoot, slope, set out, light out, peg out, mosey, as the New York police say, get a move on themselves, or, in the classic speech of the Bowery, chase dereelfs. But the shooter hies him on the field, and the angler hies himself to the stream. There the one sees hip dog freeze into a statue, the other catches speckled beauties, and neither ever eats his dinner or supper, but invariably does full justice to it—Forest and Stream.
Bells.
In many homes the musical chimes of the Japanese gong sound on the air far a dinner calL Some chatelaines prefer a set of Norwegian cowbells for the same office. These are bung across the doorway on a straight cord. A second cord is then ran through the bandies of the bells and hangs loose to be polled when the gammons is sounded.
S^IPf^'V
THE NEW WOMAN PICTURED,
Composite Picture Embracing Features of I Docen Famous Reformers. Herewith is presented a picture of the new woman, the well worn phrase being used rather in a Pickwickian sepse, as none of the women whose features are included can fairly be called new so far as years are concerned. In the matter of representing the advanced ideas of the sisterhood all are new, the name of each being known wherever the English language is spoken. The composite face is a strong one, wbich is not to be wondered at considering that it embraces features of the following famous women: Frances E. Willard, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Lady Hen
ry Somerset Annie Besant, Anna Shaw, Belva A. Lockwood, Mary E. Lease, Lillie Devereux Blake, Sarah Grand, Mary Livermore and Mrs. E. B. Grannis.
These women believe that nature fully intended the female sex to be equal in all respcots with the male, and they have devoted lifetimes in the effort to make others, especially the men, believe so too. These women believe that, as they constitute quite an essential element in a world which is kept peopled by a reproduction of the species, they should have just as much to eay abont governing themselves, just- as many opportunities for mental advancement and for earning a living, as men. They do not totally disapprove of tho "old" woman, the woman who nursed you when you didn't know where on earth you v?ere or what business you had there the woman who soothed you when you were consumed with the dgony of cutting your first teeth, the woman who has been and will be your refuge through life.
The most utter novice in composite matters of this sort will detect at once the intellectual features that make the countenance of Mrs. Stanton instaptly attractive, mingled with the resolution and enterprise of that forceful western citizen, Mrs. Lease. The picture is printed only to shov? what an intellectual looking person the new woman is, and what little chance there is, judging from facial indications, that she will ever languish in the royal struggle for the liberty of her sex.—Chicago Chronicle.
,y The Revival of the Motto.
''The motto, whose revival is noted in the above title, is the expression in architecture of some sentiment to the place to which it is applied,,^nd eternal is its significance, writes Alice Graham McCollin in The Ladies' Home Journal. It is more frequently and more noticeably in domestic architecture than elsewhere that the motto is found. Scarcely a country house of sufficient size to boast a hall and fireplace but announces in soript or text a weloome to all guests or some appreciation of the comforts of its four walls. The favorite place for this motto is over the fireplaoe, either above or below the mantel shelf, and of all the old ones, "East or west, home is best, with its variety of expressions, is the favorite. A man's house is his castle,'' "Homo is the resort
loV0t of
^oy'
of
Peac6"
^A man's best things are nearest him," "Our house is ever at your service," "Yon are very weloome," "Take the goods the gods provide thee"—any one of these will as appropriately welcome the stranger as the friend.
A
Woman's
A well known sculptor, George Wade, has been giving his opinions as to the artistio value of a woman's throat In a model, Mr. Wade says, he requires a long neck, but not too upright, the line from the head to the shoulders to be gradually curved, the head thrown back and the neck itself to be well rounded. A "scraggy" neck, unless the set on the shoulders denotes a remarkably distinguished air, cannot be considered beautiful from a sculptor's point of view, nor a badly set neck, however well rounded. There are three women in London society whose necks Mr. Wade considers beyond reproach. These are Princess Maude of Wales, Lady An nes ley and the Marchioness of Londonderry. Of course, when the Duchess of Leinster Was alive her neck and shoulders were the admiration of every artist in the kingdom.
fp!
_____
& The word sunny borrowed its original significance from astrology. It described a person born under the influence of the sun, this luminary being supposed to exercise a beneficial influence on the Character
at
the individual.
It is said' that fie car she -who admits the possession of a secret has already half revealed it Certainly it is a great deal gained toward the acquisition of a treasure to know exactly where it is.— Simma
Yon cannot be well unless your blood is pure. Therefore purify your blood with the beet blood purifier, Hood's SarwaparlHa.
Rhenmatlim Cored In a Day. "Myrtle Cure" for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically cures in 1 to 8 days. Its action upon tbe system is remarkable and mysterious. It lernovea at once the cause wad the disease immediately first doee greatly benefits. E. IL Bindley ft Co., Terre A Black and all druggists. **T. F. Anthony, Ei}Po«!
Postmaster of Promise ht one bottle of
CSty, Iowa, says: "I bought one bottle of •Mystic Caw' for Rheumatism and two doses of it old me more good than any medicine 1 ever took.,' Bold by £. H. Bindley Terre Haute, Cook, Bell Black and all druggists.
PROOF
isrosmvE
THAT LTDIA E. FIKKHiWS YEUET BLE COMPOUND
Eg Dally Caring Backache, Dizziness, Faintness, Irregularity, and all Female Complaints. [SPSCIAI. TO ova umr SSA9KBS.]
Intelligent women no longer doubt the value of
Ly&la E. Pinkham't
ttons, weakness of the stomach, indigestion, bloating, leucorrhosa, womb trouble, flooding, nervous prostration, headache, general debility, etc. Symptoms of
Womb Troubles
are dizziness, faintness, extreme lassitude,
udon't
care," and "want to be
left alone" feelings, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the blues," and backache. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will correct all this trouble as sure as the sun shines. That 8 Bearingr-Down Feeling, causing pain, weight, and backache, Is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances It acts in perfect harmony with the laws that govern the female system, Is as harmless as water. It is wonderful for
Kidney Complaints
In either sex.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Liver Pills work in unison with the Compound, and area sure cure for constipation and sickheadache. Mrs. Pinkham's Sanative Wash is frequently found of great value for local application. Correspondence Is freely solicited by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Cb., Lynn, Mass., and the strictest confidence assured. All druggists sell the Plnkham remedies. The vegetable Compound in three forms, Liquid, Fills, and Loaenges.
CONSUMPTION
To THE EDITOB—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have consumption if they will sendme their express and post office address. Kespectfully, T. A. Slocum, M. C.,
No. 183 Pearl Street, New York.
BLANK BOOKS
The most complete stock of il? fe*.
Of every description in the state.
Special Ruled Ledgers. Patent Flat-Opening Books. Lowest Prices.
J. R. Duncan & Col,
660-662 Wabash Ave.
JpELSENTHAL, A. B.,
Justice of the Peace and Attorney at Law, 36 south 8rd street. Terre Baute, Ind.
••••••••I
1118ISI
V-P
Vegetable
Compound. It speedily relieves irregularity, suppressed or painful menstrua-
Ton will never see these prices made again.
VandaliaPennsylvania
Atlanta, Qa. and Return
On sale September 15th to December 15th Inclusive good to return until Jan. 7th, 1886.
and Return,
.HIGHEST CASH PRICE PUP FOR
Alsc) Tallow, Bones, Grease
OF ALL KINDS,
At my Factory on the Island southwest of the city.
Harrison Smith,
5
Office 18 8. Second 8t.,
TERRE HAUTE, IND, Dead Animals removed free within ten" miles of the city. Telephone 78.
GKATKFOLCOMFORTING.
EPPS'S COCOA
BBKAKFAST—SU PPJBtR.
laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the line properties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Kpps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors'bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up uut.il strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point, we may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame.f,-Clvll Service Gazette.
Chemists, London, England.
Established 1861. Incorporated 1888.
Cliffc & Williams Co.,
Successsors to Clift, Wllllan.s&Co.
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass,
1
I''-,-,}" Paints, Oils AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE, "Mulberry St., Oor. Ninth. J. H. WDUUAMB, President.
J. M.
wm
|18 60»%
On sale September 16tb to December 15t h, good to return twenty days from dat6of sale.
!IU
r&s
I
Clctt,Sec'y
it
A
Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-pound tins, by grocers, labelled thus: JAMES EPFS & CO., Ltd^ Homcepathio
MAJTtTFACTUHJSRSOK ,,
Sash, Boers," Blinds," Etc.
y? AND DBALBBS IN ..
and Treaa.
C. & 33. X. R. K'-lfl "f Reduced rates to all 'ft'
lUfflmer Resorts
Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, North and South Dakota.
Tickets on stale to Sept. 80th, good returning Oct. 31st, 1895. Passengers have an opportunity of going via Steamer from Chicago to all Lake Michigan and Lake Superior points and returning vfa rail, or if desired can go aud return via steamer or rail. For furtper Information call 011
J. R. CONNELLY, Gen. Agt,.," .' 656 Wabash Avenue.
T)E. L. h! BABTHOIiOMEW,
DENTIST.
Removed to 671 Main t. Terre Haute, Ind
wmmM
on
If you want a Buggy, Phaeton, Carriage, Bioad Wagon,
Cart, 6f Set of Harness, don't let the 30 day limit pass.
1 41
—'*1
It *.ourt House. 5 S'"l
One Square West
Opposite Bauormeister & Busch
&
1
hi
