Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 35, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 February 1897 — Page 1
70L. 27—NO. 35.
ON THE QUI YIYfi.
I*bGovernor
"Jimmy" Mount a coward?
Is he afraid to sign the bill reorganizing the police force in the city of Terre Haute -along with a number of other cities—bejf cause he will then have to appoint three I police commissioners in several cities of I Indiana?
1
That is the question that is agitating the minds of a great many citizens in the city •f Terre Haute. It has been reported this [veeek on good authority that the governor has decided to veto the police bill, and chiefly because he thinks the legislature
should not have taken advantage of him by changing the police control, especially jtaa he has expressed himself as being opposed on principle to the control of police forces by any other than the local authorial ties who have to pay the bills.
Until better informed Q. V. will not believe that Governor Mount will veto the measure that has been sent to him with 'the endorsement of the majority in the legislature. __
In this connection it is reported that the governor has decided to appoint a successor to the late James M. Sankey, and thus jrleave the Republicans in control of the police force, without putting the governor Wo the trouble of deciding between the large number of gentlemen who are candidates for police commissioner under the new law, as adopted by both the senate and house. This would result practically 'in leaving the police force as it is now organized, and this will never satisfy the people who foot the bills. If Governor
James A. Mount does this he will be practicaHy serving notice on the Republicans of the city of Terre Haute and county of Vigo that he doesn't consider it necessary for them to nominate candidates for city offices next May a year or next November a year, that he prefers, as the Republican governor of Indiana, to see these offices held by Democrats rather than Republicans. _____
If he vetoes the police bill and allows tho present law to continue in force, mak-
kmembers
ing it necessary to prefer charges against of the present force to get rid of them, he will say practically that he does not believe the testimony of twenty-seven of the thirty-eight county committeemen living in the city, when they say—as they have said—to him that the present control of tho police force must be changed. The Republicans have been successful in the county campaigns of the last two years' elections chiefly because of Democratic help. Jk.ny man who thinks the contrary is not onto his job. Many of these DemocratH who helped the Republicans out did so in order to put a quietus on the police Hf force as at present organized. If they de*Z cided otherwise they would have voted their own ticket on the majority of the offices. Hundreds of Republicans who do not ordinarily take much interest in eleotlons wont to the polls at the past two elections and voted, and induced others to vote, because they were interested in reforms in their own couuty. What will be the opiuion of these Democrats and the lepublicnns generally, if. after it has been juade possible for a change to be made, a
Republican governor has decided that he cannot undertake to interfere with the appointments of his predecessor? It will be such that will make it possible for the Dem I ocrats to swipe the Republicans off the face of the earth in the city elections next yfcar, as they would deserve to be swiped, if there is anything on earth that the Ixrd lespises more than a sinner it Is a coward.
If, with the power at hand to reorganize the police force, the Republican governor makes It impossible to effect a reorganization, Q. V. wouldn't give thirty cents for he nomination for the best office on the [olty or county ticket next year, and he [wouldn't accept It if presented to him on (a sliver salver. If Democrats vote the ReI publican ticket to get reforms that are demanded and then can't get them, will they I vote that ticket very long? If Republicans can't get reforms by voting their
1
own ticket and electing their own meu. is there very much Inducement for them voting at all. Not much, James A. Mount [will find out. if he vetoes the police bill
1
md will watch the vote In Vigo county in November next year.
If by any combination of circumstances is
made
"possible that James
A.
Mount
(should be a candidate for United States Senator in the year of our Lord 1899, it will be much more satisfactory for him to know that Vigo county will have two Republican representatives and a senator L'rom this county, with a Republican joint representative from iffo and Parke and I* Republican senator from Vigo, Vermilion and Parke than that those offices are lied by Democrats.
If Vigo county gives a Democratic majrity in 1S9S all these offices, except that [of hold-over senator, will be filled by 'Democrats. I*t Governor Mount figure i.m that when it comes to deciding on what [to do with the police bill that does not I meet the approbation of the home rulers it Terre Haute, but yet is acceptable to '.hem because half a loaf is better than fettbne at all. _____
Mr. M. C. Rankin, who is somewhat InI tenanted as a property owner in the neighI borhood of the proposed Ohio street openng, has the beat plan for that opening that has yet been suggested. It is pracleal, and does away with a viaduct or tunnel, lessens the expense to the railroad
1
company, furnishes the latter with trackage and depot facilities far better than now enjoyed, and necessitates but one or two tracks when the street is opened.
His plan is for the railroad company to
.r-m -nr-
purchase the vacant ground on the south of Ohio street, just east of Ninth-and-a half, or Canal, on which to move their present freight house, located at Tenth and Main, taking up all the tracks north of Ohio street as opened, between that point and Main, and putting in a curve to the freight house at Ninth-and-a-half and Ohio, the railroad company could use all the ground south of the freight house to Poplar street for trackage purposes.
The curved tracks could be run on both sides of the freight house, and into it, for that matter, better facillitieS for loading and unloading freight could be furnished than are now enjoyed, and the patrons of the road could get to the house without crossing the railroad, as they arq now compelled to do. This is an important consideration when it is understood that nearly all the patrons are now located west of the road and have to cross the tracks at Main street in order to get to the present freight house.
The carrying out of this plan would give the railroad company much valuable land fronting on Main, Ohio and Poplar streets, give them as good switching advantages as they now enjoy, and reduce the expenses of opening Ohio street materially. This plan is original with Mr. Rankin, and furnishes the best solution for the opening that has yet been offered. He hasn't had the idea copyrighted, however, and the city and the railroad are free to take advantage of it, as they should at once, and give the people of the east side the relief they demand and to which they are entitled.
Up tb the hour of going to press the board of control of the Plainfleld Reform school, with its "house fathers" and other minions of law had not succeeded in separating Mr. Otto Heinl, of th«« from the air of freedom which ue-nas been enjoying. s==i
FOR YOUNG MARRIED PEOPLE. A Few Rules That Followed Will Bring Contentment to Them.
Try to be satisfied to commence on a small scale. Try to avoid the too common mistake of making an unwise effort to "begin where the parents ended."
Try not to look at richer homes and covet their costly furniture. Try going a step farther and visit the homes of the suffering poor when secret dissatisfaction is liable to Upring up.
Try buying all that is necessary to work with skillfully, while adorning the house at first with simply what will render it oomfortable.
Try being pertUfc&f independent -from the first, and shun debt in all its forms. Try to cultivate the moral courage that will resist the arrogr :ice of fashion.
Try to co-operate chqprf ully in arranging the family expenses, and share equally in any necessary self-denials and economies.
Try to be cheerful in the family circle, no matter how annoying may be the business cares and the housekeeping trials.
Try to remember that it matters but little what "people think" provided you are true to yourselves, to right and duty, and keep your expenses within your means.
A Boy's Essay on Journalism. bright little boy who attends one of the j.tlanta public schools was told by his teacher a few days ago to write an essay on "Journalism," and the next day he handed in the following: "JournalisnV is the science of all sorts of journals. There is a heap of kinds of journals. Journals is good things 'cept when they is hot journals, and then they is just awful. My ma, she takes a fashion journal what is always full of pictures of horrid old maids with the ugliest dresses on I ever saw. The fashion journal is a heap gooder than the hot journal, 'cause the hot journal stops the train and the fashion journal starts it. The fashion journal don't stop nothin' but the broken window light and pa's bank account. "There is sheep journals and hog journals and brass journals, too, and pa has got a journal down town at the store and writes things in it about folks he don't want to forget. Then we had a woman't cooked for us named Salley Journal. She was the funniest journal I ever saw. She was a bald-headed journal. "They aiu't no more journals that I know of. "P. S.—I forgot to say that a man what puts grease on the car wheels is called a jou nalist.''
Something to Think About. Misers have lived l..1 hovels. Rich men have lived in dugouts. Poor men have lived in mansions. Men of shoddy have lived in palaces. By the house we live In so may we not be judged, but so will we almost always be reckoned.
Men of geuius may wear frayed panta loons and go with unkempt hair, but worn-out trousers and scraggy hair are not marks of genius, ft those things the tramps have also.
Many a clerk on his little pay is dressed better than his employer, but he is no less a valuable clerk for that.
There are branches from even the straightest beaten track of safety, but the law of averages accepted by the majority is less dangerous to follow than even the successful rules of exception.
The well-dressed man is more likely to be a prosperous man than the man of shabby overcoat, and the poorly dressed man Is more likely to be an unsuccessful th«n the man with the tailor-made clothes.
The beautiful office may be a den of swindlers, but it Is more likely to be the business home of profitable business.
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12 1$
TERRE HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 27, 1897.
ABOUT WOMEN.:
Mrs. Juliet V. Strauss, of the Rockville Tribune, is not very greatly impressed with the new styles for spring wear for the ladies. Concerning them she says: In glancing over the spring fashion plates, as what woman, no matter how busy, or how old, or how unhappy, will not glance one is impressed with the idea that the fashions are again becoming characterless. We have had an era of rather pretty styles for some time past, barring the exaggeration of the sleeve, but the tendency now seems to be to degenerate into silly and senseless ruffles and tight, crarnpy sleeves. Put a woman into tight sleeves, falling dawn over her hands, and finished by lace ruffles that nearly reach her finger tips, then put some puffs on her shoulders and a collar around her ears, edged with a ruff or frill, and you have about as uncomfortable, stilted looking a creature as can be found anywhere. The general suggestion is that she can't turn her head without breaking it off, and her arms look like those of an old-fashioned rag doll, which, we all remember, were more or less stationary in effect. In this poll parrot fashion there is little opportunity for freedom and grace of motion. The personality of the woman seems lost in a hundred suggestions which thrust themselves at us from her apparel, and we are constantly annoyed with the idea that here is a creature longing for the freedom of loose, easy garments, but, for the sake of fashion's whims, laced up and braced up into an artificial conglomeration of material, under which is a human body, all distorted from its natural inclinations, and a soul turned aside from development by the silly fripperies of life. And this is woman's error, and the thing she has to answer for. From the fig-leaf down to our present laborious system of hiding "our parent's shame, woman is blamable for folly amounting to positive wickedness in the abuse of the function of dress, entirely beyond the necessity, the beautiful 8 \d the reasonable.
Such progress is being made in the woman suffrage movement in western states as to greatly encourage the leaders. They say that the principle of equal civil rights for men and women failed by so narrow a margin at the election in California last November that they are encouraged to try again. The committee on constitutional amendments of the California senate favors the re-submission of the suffrage amendment of 1868, and the legislature is expected to approve the proposition. In poiiit of fact, 67,542 votes were cast in. California «t -the recent election far an amendment to the state constitution in order to authorize female suffrage 82,080 votes were cast against the proposition, and a much larger number of voters of California than were recorded on the question refrained entirely from voting on the proposition. This last fact is perhaps one of the most discouraging features of the case for the woman suffragists, because outspoken opponents they may hope to convince, but careless and indifferent citizens, who do not deem the question worthy of consideration, cannot be argued with to advantage. Nevertheless an affirmative vote of 57,000 in California shows that the agitation for woman suffrage has made considerable headway in that state as in the other Pacific or mountain states.
In Idaho the advocates of woman suffrage had a victory to their credit, for the proposed constitutional amendment providing for woman suffrage was adopted by 12.126 yeas to 6,282 nays. An appea' was taken to the state supreme court, which handed down a decision in December, saying that wh' it did not receive a majority of all votes cast at the election, it was carried by virtue of receiving a majority of votes cast on the proposition. In Utah, as in Colorado at Wyoming, there was full equal suffrage at the election last year, and women vd °d as well as me^ in these three states, Ml three of which, however, as some of the opponents of woman suffrage seem to take a sinister satisfaction in pointing out, went for the defeated candidate, Mr. Bryan. Woman suffrage is no new thing in Wyoming, which adopted it as early as 1870, when Wyoming was a territory. Kansas voted on the proposition of a constitutional amendment for female suffrage in 1894, and 95,000 votes were cast in favor of and 190,000 votes against the amendment, while 90.000 voters in the sunflower state refrained from taking sides in the contest.
It has been observable of late that in the eastern, middle and Mississippi valley states woman suffrage has been making little headway, whereas in the extreme western states the cause has been gaining ground rapidly. Ore explanation of this is that in those states in which woman suffrage has gained recruits the proportion of women is so small that male voters are assured of predominance. In Wyoming, for instance, by the last federal census there were 54 female to 100 male inhabitants: in Idaho there were 64 female to 100 male Inhabitants in Colorado the figures were58to 100 in California 78 to 100 In South Dakota 82 to 100, and in Utah 88 to 100. In Massachusetts and Rhode Island, on the other hand, the female population exceeds the male population by 5 per cent, and there are eight other states, New York among them, in which the number of female inhabitants exceeds the number of mates.
Of all the aimless, mischief-getting-into forms of existence, that led by the woman who boards takes the premium. There is something in the life that enervates the most ambitions, and perverts views and inclinations as nothing else has the power
•8S"*i',s?.-J-
to do. Boarding house existence is like looking through the wrong end of the opera glasses. It belittles everything. Now, we presume that all those men and women who have to make their daily bread and butter and stewed prunes, these latter being sample dainties of the boarding house of fact and fiction, by running a weak imitation of a hotel, will deem the writer unnecessarily severe. To theih we apologize for anything that may seem like a reflection on their method of making a livelihood, for of all hard ways theirs is the hardest, and we Hhve only the liveliest sort of sympathy for them. It is the people Whc*dwell with them we condemn, the women #110 prefer the gossiping and gadding of ithjs irresponsible day to day sojourn on earth, to the more exacting, but oh, so |nch sweeter, routinfe of home life, no matter how humble that home may be.
Of courtle just here we are interrupted by the Individual who always argues, who takes up the opposite side of any question,
regardlMS
of actual and honest belief, and
just argues for the sake of arguing. "Some people jjjannot afford to keep house," says this one. "More's the pity," say we, and also go on further and more emphatically to remark that these very economically minded^mes could keep house if they did not want to make a show out of proportion to their income. But, letting that pass and to go back to our original proposition, what a nerveless set of busybodies one generally discovers in the feminine inmates of a boarding house. The days come and go like the leaves in a copy-book, one set on the toodel of those preceding. A late breakfast, a loaf in .the general drawing room, while the bedchambers are put to rights later tete-a-tetes in the various apartments* desultory Shopping, naps and scandal ad libitum. How can anyone grow mentally amid the environment of such ah atmosphere. Ailments are exaggerated, private grievances aired, the quality of the butter ^nd the hour Mr. Bachelor came in lastf night being discussed with as mnch vigor as the Nineteenth Century Club put into its late caustic remarks on the subject of "culpable luxury." Is it any wonder that women with so little of real interest grow selfish and vain, become en|grossed in insignificant detail, and losfe tAwessence and sweetness of living? As for ttlldren brought up in such an atmosphere, we can only say that we pity them from our heart. Fancy entering upon the teal struggle Without the memory' of a childhood home to come as a green oasis in the desert of thought. This means a deprivation unspeakable. Therefore to 'theok'^^ytv&p) t^'bttttoWhe parents, who condemnation in no small measure.
CHILD AND MOTHER.
0 Mother-My-Love, if you'll give me your hand And go where I ask you to wander, 1 will lead you away to a beautiful land—
The dreamland that's waiting out yonder, We'll walk in the sweet posle garden out there Where moonlight and starlight are stream lng, And the flowers and the birds are filling the air
With the fragrance and music of dreaming. There'll be no little tired-out boy to undress, No questions or cares to perplex you There'll be no little bruises or bumps to caress.
Nor patching of stockings to vex you. For I'll rock you away on the silver-dew stream
And sing you asleep when you're weary, And nooneshall know of our beautiful dream But you and your own little dearie. And when I am tired I'll nestle my head
In the bosom that's soothed me so often, And the wide-awake stars shall einglnmy stead.
A song which my dreaming shall soften. So, Mother-My-Love, let me take your dear hand
And away through the starlight we'll derAway through the mist to the beautiful land—
The dreamland that's waiting out yonde —Eugene Field
FAMILIAR HOUSEHOLD WORDS. be me be. that collar button Did anybody see my hat Now I lay me down to sleep. Say, John, ain't you boys np yet No, you can't have any more cake. Oh, mamma, Willie's pinching me. Who the deuce carried off that paper Where's that half-dollar I give you last week
Yes, dear, #10 will do, but $15 wouh} be better. Oh, papa, make Dick quit calling me names.
Come on to your dinner before everything gets cold. Come, now, it's time for you young ones to be in bed.
Don't forget to order a load of coal sent np right away. Good gracious, how much money do yon want, anyhow
O'm sorry, mem, but I'll have to be after lavin' yes the day, mem. No, I shan't have any young man coin ing to see you until you are out of school. So there!
The Marriage Preliminaries. A spooning in summer, thinking in autumn, an engagement in January and a wedding In June-^thafc Is to say, three months of attention, three months of reflection, three months of adoration and three months of preparation. The happiest marriages seem to be begun and finished
within the year.
v..
Sis SO®"?.. *1
The Kiel canal is lighted over its 62 miles by electricity, and is the longest distance in the world lighted continuously in that way. There are 5,000 poles.
It has been calculated that the actual amount of salt contained in the ocean would cover an area of 5.000,000 square miles with a layer of a mile thick.
A fat man's club has been instituted in Paris with the novel aim of increasing the weight of the members les enjoining all the comrades sleep, eat and drink as much as po le
The following women are said to be the six wealthiest in he world: Senora Isidora Cousino, of Chili, 1200,000,000 Hetty Green, $50,000,000 Baroness Burdette-Coutts, $20,000,000 Mme. Barrios. $15,000,000 Miss Mary Garrett, $10,000,000 Mrs. Woleska, $10,000,000.
There has been a rivalry between dancing clubs at Anderson, Ind., in the matter of long waltzes. Probably all records in the state have been broken by Hugh Hays snd Miss Miller waltzing one hour and thirty-five minutes. Pearl Lee aud others fell from exhaustion.
A. A. Powell of Cincinnati is among the tallest men in the world, weighing 272 pounds, wears a No. 10 gloves, a 7% hat, a No. 12 shoe and is 7 feet 2% inches in height. Queen Victoria presented him with a gold watch when he was in the show business. He is now a salesman. His figure is perfectly symmetrical.
In one of the old London banks a box was recently found, containing money and valuables, which had not been opened or called for in 160 years, and which now remains without a claimant. Incidents of like sort are not infrequent in banking history, though there is no other recorded instance of a package held in trust remaining so long unexamined.
The obituary addresses delivered upon the occasion of the death of a member of congress cost the government a good deal of money. Usually 12,000 copies are printed, with a steel plate portrait of the deceased, fifty of which, bound in full morocco with gilt edges, are for the family of the dead congressman. The cost of obituary volumes in the fifty-first congress was over $50,000.
The Augusta, Ga., News tells of a woman in that city who has never been from under the confederate flag since it became "her flag." Whether walking, eating or sleeping, there is always oonfe^tcatjf^ over her head. While walking or^ streets there is always a flag in her and, no matter how many hats or bonnets she has, there is always to be found a flag pinned on the inside of the crown. On the* headpost of her bed is securely fastened a large flag of the confederate states. The flag is as necessary for her as three meals a day. She says she has never surrendered and never will.
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
A bachelor maid is a spinster who liveB in a city instead of a small town. No two thermometers ever had the same opinion about the weather.
Every man has a chance in this world, but it isn't always a good chance. A girl always remembers a thing by what dress she wore when it happened.
When a woman complains a good deal of cold feet, it is a sign she is an old maid. When you take a man's contentment away from him you can't add it to your own.
Compliments may be silly, but that man or woman never lived who did not like them.
Some women seem to think that a man ought to purr when he's comfortable, like a cat.
It's always the things we're not to blame for doing that we're sorriest about afterward.
The main reason why short skirts will never become popular with women is because then they couldn't wear out their old shoes.
You can't have your cake and eat your cake, but you can lose your temper and still have it.
Some men are "perfectly lovely," and others are so much more so that you never think of it.
A man who sits down with his knees tight together looks about as bad as a woman who doesn't.
A girl Is bound to have a wedding of some sort if she can't get a man, she says she is wedded to her work.
The really happy women in the world are those so situated that they are independent of a man or a hired girl.
The more a woman talks about the equality of the sexes, the less she likes to admit that she has to work for a living.
The main reason why women don't like old bachelors is because they always laugh when they tell them they ought not to be.
The difference between laziness and Inability to work is great, of course, bnt the practical results are just about the same
When a woman receives an anonymous letter, she regards it with scorn, of course, but she reads it with the keenest interest.
A woman is just as sure to hit her finger when she drives a nail as a man is to step on the soap when be gets out of the bath tub.
Lovers express willingness to go to the mruim ol the eMth for their girls, and there Is no doubt that If any one gave them the
TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR
money they would go, and leave their girls behind them. The aesthetic idea is that scented soap-i isn't worth a cent.
The old-fashioned dentist pulled teeth out. The modern dentist saves them, whenever it is possible—perhaps because he can make more money out of them that way.
Only a very economical young man would quarrel with his fiancee the week before the opera comes, with the intention of making up with her the week after it has gone.
If a woman would select a husband suited to her disposition as carefully as she matches her gowns to her complexion there might not be such a short path from the marriage altar to the divorce court.
AMUSEMENTS.
SCH1TI.TZ'8 COMEDY BOOM.
The opening of the Avenue Theater under the management of Lawrence & Rutherford, on Thursday night, attracted a good audience, which thoroughly enjoyed the performance of the Schultz comj pany. The members of the company are well known vaudeville performers and the entertainment they give is clean and inviting. The company will give the usual programme to-night, to-morrow evening there will be a concert at popular prices,. 10 and 20 cents, aud next week there will be a change of programme. The company is a good one, and the enterprise of the management in furnishing entertainment should be appreciated in a substantial manner by the public.
COMINO ATTRACTIONS.
The week of March 8th the house will be occupied by Prof. Cheever, a noted hypnotist, who gives a wonderful exhibition of this strange science. March 15th, 16th and 17th Oliver Doud Byron will occupy the house in a round of his popular comedy dramas. Other strong attractions are being booked, and the people of Terre Haute will not be totally deprived of amusements the remainder of this season.
A SONG OF HOPE.
The yesterdays we have always, To-morrows never come The bright to-day soon slips away
And brings the grave to some. Hope with a smile points on
th9
while,-.
Time heals the wounds of sorrow, And ere to-day has flown away We're looking for to-morrow—
We're lookingsfjqfr to^norrow.-^l
Tf life's a lie, a^bme^t Why. tt"tt
Hope points the-wisy ti^oSTJ thei Time brings surcease to sorrow, While shadows creep we^falkftsleep,
To wake again to-morrow— To wake again to-morrow.
Why should we fear each coming year, And wonder what 'twill bring? The flowers In fall heed nature's call
To sleep, but bloom In spring. Beyond the night there shines a light That earth sometimes may borrow .- At heaven's gates an angel waits.
To greet us there to-morrow— To greet us there to-morrow. Away with grief, the potty thief
That fills our lives with gloom Let's laugh at death who takes our breath And leads us to the tomb. If hope be right, beyond the night
We'll hear no more of sorrow. But rise again with elearer brain To greet a glad to-morrow—
To greet a glad to-morrow.
ItuslnesM and Advertising. A man can be a man without his clothes, but society reckons a man partly by his outside fixings.
A business may be a business without any advertising to it, but the immutable law of custom, before which men and nations rise or fall, has written in letters of unquenchable fire that men must advertise, and that by their advertisements so shall they be judged.
Until those words of fire can be quenched, no man has aright to practice or to preach an individual doctrine opposed to the rule of custom.
I will admit that the advertisement never brought a reply nor ever created curiosity, and yet I am willing to stake my reputation upon the assertion that, if the value of advertising was limited to the appearance of advertising, advertising would be necessary to proper conduct of successful business.
The man who advertises stands before the public in the full, legitimate and dignif ed prominence of one who is proud of his business, has aright to be proud of it, is doing a lot of it and wants to do more of it, and he is the kind of man that everybody wants to do business with, for just so long as the moth will be attracted by the candle light, so long will trade swarm around the advertising light of business.
George S. Zimmerman, for many years the stove business In this city, this week disposed of his establishment to a stock company called the Terre Haute Stove.and Furnace Co., of which the following are the officers: W. E. Eppert, president S. T. Mann, vice-president Herbert Brigggk secretary S. C. Brown, treasurer ana manager. The new composed of wideawake young business men. and The Mail wishes it success. Mr. Zimmerman will take a much needed rest.
Licensed to Wed.
Sam'l Haskell and Mallnda M. Davis. Dan. Sanders and Fannie Fleming. Edward H. Martin and Clara E. Whitesel. Tbos. W. Jones and Frances M. Keed. Geo. W. Marrs and Maggie Kelley. John L. Spark add Edith A. Evans. Patrick J. I)oberty snd Ella Moody. John M.Savoree and Ida Ma7 Van Gnnty. Wtn. T. Peters and Editb E. Pound. Neal P. Nnnley and Elizabeth Brads haw.
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