Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 34, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 February 1897 — Page 4
A
THE MAIL.
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
C- DPDDL.ESTON. T. J. PIEPENBRIHK.
DDDDLESTON & PIEPEMBRJNK,
PEOPEIETOR8.
PUBLICATION OFFICE,
New. 20 and 22 South Fifth Street, Printing House Square.
The Mail is sold in the city by newsboys and all newsdealers, or will be delivered to any Address, by mail, at the rate of SJ a year, 81 or six months, or 50 cents for three months.
.-Entered at the Postoffice at Terre Haute, Ind., as second-class matter.
BEE/'
SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1897,
THE MOTHERS' CONGRESS. We may soon expect announcement that the youngsters of this country have organized a National Association for the Suppression of Punishment of Juvenile Offenders. The children constitute about the only class of free-born Americans that hasn't a National Association. As has been well said, in an age of scientific co-operation no one can expect to pursue his or her calling in life successfully except as a member of a national association or congress. From the lawyers and doctors to the tailors and the plumbers, from the philologists to the dancing masters, the bankers to the stamp-collectors, each interest must have its annual convention, to make rules for individual conduct or to set forth the newest inventions and the most advanced ideAs. The National Congress of Mothers, assembled in Washington this week, marks the height of the ridiculous in national associations. The hundreds of thousands of mothers this wide country over who were not able to attend this meeting will no doubt be highly edified by •the announcement of the deliberations of Ahis assemblage, the principal addresses before which were doubtless delivered by women who are not mothers. Commenting on this the Philadelphia Times says
The old-fashioned idea that associated •the mother with the home has gone by with the spinning wheel and the quilting frame and the family fireside. The modern Cornelia, when called on to produce her jewels, must display her diplomas and certificates of membership in multifarious associations, and the young Gracchi of our day must be brought up on scientific principles. Motherhood, once a merely individual affair, has now become an organlied profession. A mother can no longer toe content with a knowledge of what food ia good for her children she must be an expert in dietetics instead of singing those thoughtless lullabies, she studies ""the value of music in the development of character," and the artless fairy tales of her own youth must be co-ordinated by comparative folk-lore and a knowledge of .the habits of "mothers of the submerged world," while the children's games are regulated not only by the mysteries of
Froebel, but by the "principles of physical development." Of course no mother can learn all these things for herself—not to mention the more delicate subjects touched on by the professional students of mater-nity-anti even her clubs and societies, her luncheons and teas and the associations for the worship of her ancestors, afford inadequate facilities for scientific study of her opportunities and duties. A national congress has thus become a necessity, at which the wise women and some of the leas wise men of the country may pour forth portions of their lore. We may look for great results from this movement. It is true that., measured by mere brutal statistics, American motherhood does not appear to have ln»en advancing rapidly of .lute. But the rarest jewels are the most precious, and with the scientific care be*towed upon their cutting and polishing our future machine-made Gracchi, like their mothers, must shine with an effulgence that will leave no shade of regret tor the home-spun, home-keeping mothers of the past
REFORMS IN INDIANA.
The Indiana legislature has taken a long iep towards practical prison reform by the adoption of »v bill which converts the southern prison into a reform institution. Under the provisions of this bill the southern prison is to be known as the Indiana reformatory after the first day of April next. All male prisoners between the nvces of sixteen and thirty convicted of any felony other than treason and murder in j.he first and second degrees a IT to be confined in the reformatory. Persons over ihirty years of age. and those convicted of greater crimes, are to be confined in the northern prison, hereafter to be known as rhe Indiana state prison. Reformatory nietlnxls are to to followed in the intermediate prison, and convicts who comply with the conditions imposed are to be paroled. Provisions are made for the transfer of prisoners to the prison in which they properly belong. There is no doubt but that prison reform has been made possible in this state by the successful manner iu which the southern prison has been conducted by the present warden, A. T.
Hert, of Brazil. Experts in prison management who have examined the workings of the southern prison under lt« present management are high In their praises of the manner in which it is conducted. Under th« new system adopted Mr. Hert's opportunities will be largely increased, and there is no question but that he will
r« that position, which he certainly Ue•servt to be. Another practical reform was cousins. n-d this week by the legislature by Jtv S«ivs«Ke of bill providing (or the care of orphans and dependent nnd n«*tk*cr-»-
improve them, and establish for himself a posed by ingenious Frenchmen are cerreputation as a prison reformer that will 1 tainly very startling. For instance one «ive him promineuce throughout the proposal is that a colossal jet of water country. That is. provided he is re-eK-ctx-d should be started, with an artificial egg large enough to contain several persons, which w»nld bob up and down, now soaring high in air, and again descending with an exciting rapidity, until its inmates had had enough and to spare of this pretty pastime. Another is that the third platform of Eiffel's tower should be brought
This bill authorises connt vco n-
tuNsioners to establish homes or to cuu-j into communication with the Place de la
tract with charitable associations for the establishment of homes and the care of dependent children. It gives such associations full power over the children after they have secured possession of them through court procedure. The bill was prepared under the direction of the state board of charities, and is undoubtedly commendable in every provision. One section of the bill provides "that from and after the first day of January, 1898, it shall be unlawful for any child between the ages of three and seventeen years to be retained as an inmate of any county poor asylum for a longer period than ten days, and it shall be the duty of the board of county commissioners of every county in the state of Indiana to make such lawful provision for such children as will allow full compliance with the provisions of this section." Much good has been accomplished by the board of guardians provided for in the different counties of the state under the present law, and with the enlarged powers them there is no question but that the efficiency of such boards will be increased.
A MINNESOTA newspaper has made a striking suggestion for legislators throughout the country, in the way of a state bureau of advertising. In speaking of the need of such a bureau it says: "Unscrupulous persons are found in every occupation but it seems to us that the worst flourish in the advertising line, because there is absolutely no protection to the advertiser. We therefore suggest to the honorable members of the various state legislatures now in session all over the broad land the establishment of a bureau of advertising, to be continued on the same general lines as the state bureaus of insurance. Merchants and professional men will appreciate a step in this direction. Thousands of dollars are annually stolen from the merchants of every important city in this country by itinerant advertising solicitors who are either frauds themselves or paid servants of fraudulent concerns. A simple system of registration would do away with this condition of affairs and save the taxpayers thousands of dollars now used to prosecute the army of peculating mendicants which infest the larger cities and extend their nefarious schemes to the neighboring villages." It is a strange thing that itinerant advertising agents can go into cities, large as well as small, and secure advertising for "fake" schemes, without any merit whatever, and obtain exhorbitant rates from business men who would be seized with paralysis if they were solicited to spend the same amount of money with a reputable newspaper of general circulation in their own community. There is scarcely a month passes in this city that some such scheme is not worked and every man who comes on such a mission goes out of the city with money in his pocket, money that is dishonestly earned, too. If value received was given there would be no right to ob ject. But it will require more than legislation to remedy such an evil as this. The business men who patronize such schemes will have to learn from sad experience that they throw their money away before such "fakirs" are to find themselves out ofjobs. They have been for years patronizing such institutions, however, and when the crack of doom comes they will still be patronizing them, so legislation on the subject will be time and money wasted.
WITH the sensational dissolution of the steel pool last week business in certain quarters has taken a boom. It has been a sayiug for years that when the iron industry is lively every other branch of business is also likely to prosper. From present indications the truth of this is again to be demonstrated. Orders for 300,000 tons of steel rails were placed last week and 750,000 pieces of print cloths were sold. The big rail orders were given because of an extraordinary drop in prices, and the big sales of print cloths caused a sharp advance in prices. The large orders and sales, though owing their origin to diverse causes, will have a similar effect upon business, for the rails are yet to be made and the cotton goods sold from accumulated stocks must be replaced by goods yet to be manufactured. Rolling mills and cotton mills alike will be furnished work for weeks to come because of last week's transactions. These are indicative of reviving business. The rolling-mill owners wanted to set their works in motion and they offered to sell at prices that attracted buyers at once and on a large scale. The merchants wanted print cloths for the immediate needs of their customers and they purchased at the current prices without waiting to see whether there was to be a new tariff bill or not. They determined to do business rather than wait and their purchases will set thousands of idle looms and spindles to work again. There is every reason to expect that the boom in steel mils and cotton cloths will quickly extend to other branches of production. Business confidence is just as contagious as business distrust, and business men in other lines are likely to catch it from those who make steel rails and cotton cloths. Those engaged in productive industries of every kind are just as tired of waiting for business to revive of its own accord as those who took part in the heavy transactions of last week, and they are likely to follow a good example by adjusting prices to present conditions and finding customers who have been waiting for a chance to make some good bargains.
THK Eiffel tower of the last Paris exposition created a world-wide sensation, but our World's Fair Ferris wheel surpassed it as MI engineering feat. Now the Frenchmen are cudgelling their brains to find some new feature to advertise their expo sit ion of 1900. Some of the novelties pro-
5
t.
TERRE HATUE SATtTRDAY EVENING MAIL, FEBRUARY 20, 1897.
Concorde, by means of a cable from which would depend a car, for the transport of passengers from one of these points to the other. One old woman wanted a gigantic umbrella to be attached to the top of the famous tower for the purpose of sheltering promenaders on the Champ de Mars from the raindrops when the weather was not propitious. Another has been brought forward, supported by upward of thirtytwo mining companies, to the effect that a big mine shall be dug under the Trocadero hill. Another is the construction of a globe thirty-three meters in diameter, which would give visitors a very fair conception of the salient features of the world in which we live. Then there are the inevitable captive balloons, which seem to have been greeted with some approval: and last, but not least, attention has also been paid to a project for lighting up the waters of the Seine in that part of Paris by means of colored reflectors and other contrivances The inventive genius of the French is likely to develop something wonderful for the principal feature of the great 1900 show, and the schemes above proposed indicate that the wildest imagination may hit upon what that feature will be.
A KANSAS CITY minister has started ft crusade against bachelors that is likey to lead to serious trouble once it becomes general. He has no use for the non-mar-rying men, and would t^x and legislate them out of existence. The preacher says that When a man is twenty-two and unmarried he ought to be taxed $100 when twenty-three the tax should be increased to $200, and after that it should be increased $100 each year until he is thirty, then if he is not married he should be put in the penitentiary. He adds that the average man who lives to thirty unmarried is not fit to marry a pure woman. There is no question but that bachelors should be taxed, if for no other reason than to reduce the taxes and therefore the burdens that fall upon the shoulders of parents of marriageable but unmarried daughters. But bachelors are not such terrible creatures the Kansas City divine makes of them. There area number of things in life for which they are useful. If there were no bachelors, heads of families would be deprived of a great deal of knowledge on how to bring up children properly, for it is a well known fact that those who have reared families do not know one-half as much about the proper rearing of children as a confirmed old bachelor, whose housekeeping equipment, if he had his way, would consist of an axe, a cat-o'-nine-tails, and a series of instruments of torture known only in the dark ages. The Kansas City preacher is all right on the tax question, but his effort to drive bachelors of thirty into the penitentiary would deprive the world at large of a great deal of useful information.
THE Social Purity League of Topeka, Kansas, has secured favorable action by the committees on public health of the present Kansas legislature on the bill which does away with a penitentiary sentence for men convicted of atrocious assaults on women, and substituting therefor a punishment that puts it out of their power to ever again perpetrate such a terrible crime. The society is composed of the most respected ladies of Topeka, and they have labored so earnestly for the bill that they claim enough votes in both houses to pass the bill, and have secured the promise of the governor to approve it if it does pass. They say it is a measure in the interest of moral reform, and that, following the lead of Kansas, ten other states will have the same law at the next session of their legislatures. In fifteen states, all southern, the death penalty is inflicted for rape, and if the Kansas measure becomes a law it is likely that the majority of the northern states will adopt similar measures. Crimes against women are the commonest committed, and are more frequent it seems in the southern states where the severest penalty is inflicted, and it remains to be seen whether the severe Kansas law will lessen the number of such offenses. No law can be passed too severe for the protection of woman's honor, and if the Kansas law will do it its adoption should become general.
IF every person in the state of Indiana who purchases proprietary medicines, and, as is true in the majority of cases, get9 the worth of his money, could be made to visit a physician and get a prescription for his ailings and pay for it, the physicians would no doubt be glad of the increase in their fees. The medical bill now before the state legislature, or at least that portion of it referring to the display on every proprietary article of the formula under which it is prepared, might just as well be entitled "An act forbidding the sale in the state of Indiana of any medicines except those prescribed by a physician who has complied with the provisions of this act." That is what it means practically, for if the owners of proprietary articles were to choose between publishing their formulas or leaving the state they would pack up and leave. The state of Indiana has not yet arrived at such a state of prosperity that she can afford to serve notice on foreign capital that we want to drive it out. The legislature of the state is not composed at
the sensible men it has thus
far given evidence in most of its work of containing if it permits such a bill as this to become a law.
THE war cloud that has been hanging over Europe for the past decade seemed more threatening than ever this week, as a result of the Grecian occupation of the island of Crete, where the Christians have been for some time in revolt against the authority of Turkey. War ships of the great powers put in an appearance at all the Cretan ports, but to the suggestion that Greece had better move slowly that country replied that she* was willing to abide by the consequences of her act. She has continued in possession of the Mand, has sent MI army of occupation there, and it is announced that if active opposition to the Grecian occupation is made the King of Greece will lead his armies In person. Greece with her 25,000 square miles, about two-thirds the size of Indiana, and a population of something over two millions, has defied the powers, and has possession of
Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. 25c.
Shultz's Refined Vaudeville Co. at the Avenue Theater, one week, February 35th. Popular prices.
Vick's Floral Guide, 1807. For nearly half a century this Catalogue of Flower and Vegetable Seeds, Plants, Bulbs, Roses, Grains, Potatoes, etc., has come as regularly as spring time. Here it is again to remind us that it's time to think about our gardens. This isaufe\contains half a dozen full page half-tone illustrations of Roses, Asters, Gold Flowers, Carnations and Tomatoes.
It seems full of the necessary information for either amateur or professional. Send 15 cents to James Vick's Sons, Rochester, N. Y., for a packet of either Vicks' Branching Aster, New Japan Morning Glory or extra choice Pansy and a copy of Vick's Floral Guide. If you state where you saw this notice you will receive a package of flower seeds free.
For Your Sunday Dinner.
Spring Lamb, Steer Beef, Sweet Breads, Pig Pork, Tenderloins, Spare Ribs,
Beef Tenderloins.
C. H. EHRMANN, Fourth and Ohio. Clean Meat Market. Telephone 820.
Cure Your Stomacli.
You can quickly do this by using South American Nervine. It can cure every case of weak stomach in the world. It always cures, never fails. It knows no failure. It will gladden the heart and put sunshine into hour life. It is a most surprising cure. A weak stomach and broken nerves will drag you down to death. South American Nervine will help you immediately. No failures always cures: never disappoints. Lovely to take. Sold by all wholesale and retail druggists in Terre Haute, Ind.
Builders' Hardware and Mantels at Finkbiner & Duenweg's.
Refined vaudeville one week at Avenu Theater, February 25th.
How to Get a Public Office. Many desirable offices are within the gift of the new administration. Those who wish to know what places can be had and how to get them, can obtain this information by sending 75 cents to Soule & Co., Washington, D. C., for the "U. S. Blue Book," showing all government offices and salaries with civil service rules, sample examination questions, etc. Under present laws women stand an equal chance with men for positions that insure a comfortable incomefor life. The "Blue Book" gives complete Instruction for office seekers of both sexes, and is besides a valuable book of reference much in demand.
To make your Sunday dinner complete, go to Fiess & Herman, 27 north Fourth street, where you will always find an abundance of the choicest meats of all kinds. They have also on hand
f. vr 1 'Ui &
an island that properly belongs to her, This complicates the European situation and only the most profound student of European affairs can even make a prophecy as to what the ultimate outcome of thi move will be.
MB. SOVEREIGN, leader of the Knights of Labor, has had his mouth ciosea ior some time, and has therefore not received the notoriety he so craves. To make up for hiB past quietness he came out this week in a declaration for a class war, in which he says he will not be found among the cowards. Mr. Soverign may be a brave man, but it is a sure thing that if such a war does come, he will be found where the most talking is being done.
No sooner had the war news been telegraphed from Crete than the enterprising newspapers printed pictures of the leaders of the Cretan revolution, some of whom probably never heard of a photograph or drawing. The enterprise of the modern newspaper is one of the wonders of the world.
CIVIL service reform may be all right in some respects, but when a man has to pass an examination in polite literature in order to get a job as driver of a two-horse wagon, as is said to be the case in some of the departments in Washington, itisabout time to draw the line on reform.
THE world will be wall rid of two arch fiends after the 20th day of March, for on that day Jackson and Walling, the mur derers of Pearl Bryan, will be hanged.
MR. MCKINLEY is understood to have 1,176 consulships at his disposal. There are 1,176,000 applicants for the places.
I
HHU^HWI-
of all kinds of their own junk*-. Telephone 252.
Relief In Six Honrs.
Distressing Kidney and Bladder die' nes relieved in six hours by the "New -at South Ameriean Kidney Care." This new remedy is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain In the bladder, kidneys, and every part of the urinary in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing It nTrrs immf
FFJ
Zttf Vg?x.\
THE
Assignee of the Terre Haute Carriage & Buggy Co. announces that their
CAT-
alogue for 1897 shows more stylish buggies and carriage's built in Terre'i Haute than ever
CAME
here from any "wheel center," Spenqyour money at home. Then you will got
BACK
AVEHIJE TIEIIE^TIEFC,. (BINPIJEY HAM,.)
rHWW:. t,
International Goods Show.
The New Store Holds its First Textile Reception Next Week.
Our exhibit of Dress Goods and Silks is of great importance. OUT* leadership has long been acknowledged and it is fully maintained in the preparation for this season. "Who eD joys the 1897 shows of textiles here has seen the richest collection ever Bhown in this city. Our west window hints of the show within. Many of the new fabrics are exclusively ours. Silk beauties are bewildering—a beautiful bouquet of the world's choicest fabrics. To all the exhibit you are more than welcome to enjoy it.
L. II.
BOOl
Feb. 2
COMMENCING
Thursday
Shultz's Comedy Bo$
And Refined Vaudeville.
J. W THE ROSCOES In their own creation, entitled Mixture Joe SANFORI) & JJALE llai Aiole.
Emperors of Music. -mix THE WINTERS
In refined singing and dancing.
Teddy THE VTZZXliDS Cry In up to date specialties. MISS FLORENCE TRESSLAR
In her bewindering serpentine danc Harvey HALE & HALE 1 Comedy sketch artists.
PETE SUN
Juggling Just for fun.
MISS ETARRIETTE McBRlDE Pianiste.
Admission 10, 20, 81
Free tickets for ladios Thursday. Scats sale at Bantin's Tuesday.
JJIRANK D. RICH, M. D.
Office and Residence 216 N. Sixth St. TERRE HAUTE. INO. Direases of Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat. Hours—S to 12 a. m., 1:30 to 4 p. m. 9to 10 a. m.
O. I). DAVIS. Attorney for Plaintiff. "J^OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. The State of Tndiana. Vigo Connty. Superior court of Vigo county, Decern! term. 1W.
si
J'
tely. If
you want quick re. Mid cure t1.1st is your remedy. Sold by all wholesale and retail druggists in Terre Haute, Ind.
\fiZAhJ]
Go.
narantee Extraordinary.
We positively guarantee The Crescent No. 1 nt $75.00 a better wheel than NINETY-FIVE PER CENT, of the so-called $100 Wheels.
We also positively guarantee tlmt the Crescent No. 1 cost more money to the agent than NINETY-FIVE PER CENT, of the so-called $100 wheels
We have figures to prove this
Geo. C. Kossell
Agent for STEARNS and CRESCENT BICYCLES, 720-722 Main.
STIMSON. STIMSON & CONIMT. for PUT. ^POTTCE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
State of Indiana, county of Vigo. in lie Superior court, March term. tSUT. No. SKI3. August. men holy, vs. Betsey Strader. Eliza June Strader. Susanna ^trader, John Strader. Elfsea Weed. Catherine I ickering. Charles Pickering, James Austin, Jane Richardson. W. H. Klansanger. Asa M. Black. Mary G. Zeiler. (f the aforenamed arc living, and if dead, their unknown heirs. Susannah Chambers* William L. Chambers and Charles Noble.
Be It, known, that on the 4»h day of February. 185)7. It was ordered lv the court that the clerk notify by publication said Eliza Weed. Catherine I iekerlng. Charles Pickering, June Richardson. W. H. Klansanger. Asa Si. Black, Mary G. Holler, if living, or If dead, their unknown heirs, as non-resident defendants of the pendency of this action against, t.liem.
Said defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said act ion against them and that the same will stand for trial on March 31st, 1807, the same being at, the March term of said court in the year 18!)7. [SEAI/] DAVI I L. WATSON. Clerk.
V-P
Tuesday, March 2d.
fh
No. 4161. The Wabash Savins*. Loan am Building Assfxciat'on of Terre iiautu. lud lana vs. Anna II. Kahll! and Thomas Kahili
Round trip tickets at £2 higher than the one-way rate to points In Alabama. Arizona, Arkansas. Colorado. Indian Territory. Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana. Missouri, Mississippi. Nebraska. New Mexico. Oklahoma. see. I ex as. Utah. Virginia and Wyoming. tickets to California tourists' points cheap rates on sale every day.
ADr YORK
V,
VandaliaPennsylyania
In going to Washington for the InauguraJ.I011 of President-elect Wm. McKlnley, it is the natural deslro of travelers to make the trip over the. most direct route and with lie greatest possible comfort.
The Vandalia-Pennsylvania
Short Line form an important link In the chain of rapid transit. Four (4) Fast Trains every day between Terre Haute and Washinjfton, 1). O. Togo over Uu?so linos you »iro sure to get the benefit of the low rates, and have at your command all the comforts known to modern railway science for enjoyable traveling. The very liberal rate, ono rare, $18.. ". for the round trip, is made for this occasion. Tlckots 011 sale March 1st. id, and 3d. good returning leaving Washington not later than March 8lh, 18SI7.
points at
For reliable information apply at city ticket office. 154 Wahash ave., telephone :I7 or Union Depot.
GEORGE E. FARRINOTON. General Agent.
msmoi or
SOCIETY
2s universally recognized an the most completa weekly newspaper In the world. It IISH more read— liar—varied, brighter and botter—than tiny OUHTIt!«iar excellence the 8oci«ty Journal oI America, and unique, )na«tnnch an ell Its matter is oriiduaK. The Havuterer dixcuwes weekly the doSmrs or society in New York and other lanre cities In Net Ik America and Europe. A (special feature of 1
OWM
TOPICS Is If* short stories. They are by the best writers of Europe and America always ntronir. clever, pretty and clean. The Financial Department la read by all prominent banker*) and rapltur— 1st*, and on guest lona of finance TOWN TO I'll HI
day are reviewed by The Onlooker. The lover or yport finds trreat Interest In "Afield and Afloatr Hport* on Land and Water." and The Veteran. I keep* yon Informed on RorNe-raefUK- TheFasbf article is of n*eat :nterett to the ladies. The mfttcellaneons liiatter of TOWIV TOPICS contistxoff poem*—clever and hrliflit, comic and tragic—hy t&» oent poeta burlesque*. Joke*, wlttlcimns, etc., ry the cleverest humorists of tho day. Price, IO cf*.
Tales From Town Topics
Staid ai Uhh, JM patrm, a Quarter!y Maeurlno of Flctfow. In Ita alxth year, lesned flrat day of
powl une, September and December. A complete novel hy some well-known author »ad* each amber: the remainder of the rolum»» KMiftlsta of stories, bsrlenque*, poeuifi. witticisms. He., from TOWS TOPICS, ao far bark as
»ke republic tioa fresh muting, in th ant, 92.00 per ytm.
Beit known, that on the 1st day of 1-Vb Porfl.OO.TOWI* TOPfCfifor three montB* rnary, 1807. said plaintiff filed an affldavi two bMk volume* of TALES FROM xWWlW in due for showing that i»ald Anna li. i- ®£—iH&ONU hill and T'"tnas Kahili are non-residents UM
ate or Indiana. OPICS /HEFU-V BONUST SI. non-resident defendants are here!
,rt in the year 1 DAVID L. WATSON. Clerk.
Marcb.
Price, SO
Special Subscription Offer.
PICS FREE—sBONUa or S t.OO. TOWN TOPICS for one year an| TALES FROM TOWJI
for
no* fi id Of the pendency of said JWtSonmpdnvt OWH TOPICS and TALES KBOM TOH.V tlx and that the same will stand for OP1CS, both publications for one year, and March 31*T.R 7 the sxunebeirii^t the Mar hfek, volumes of TALES FROM TOW SI term of said» ,rt in the year W.
asMo,mrttl»r dab subscription price, for
one yea« FROM
uric*, both publications:
mJt by P. O. Mon*y Order or New York Exlre to TOWN TOPICS, SOS 3th Avenu* York.
leuilt by P. O. Mon*y Ord
