Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 28, Number 30, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 January 1898 — Page 3
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FRIENDS OF HAWAII.
.VIEWS OF EX-MINISTER THURSTON AND SENATOR MORGAN.
The Tidal Wave From Japan—How Xto Annexation Wonld Add to Oar Naval Strength—The Prospective Trade of Six
Hundred Million People.
EX-MINISTER L. A. THUR8TON.
impressed me from the first, as I have said, to be a man of convictions, deeply imbued with a high sense of honor and moral worth. That impression was strengthened when we again met in this city.
Mr. Thurston makes no secret of his intentions here. He is here for the purpose of watching and fostering the cause of annexation, of which he has been the head and front during the past five years. Being here now in unofficial capacity, he can speak more freely than when holding au important position, and his views are given frankly and without reservation. They are the views of one who is perhaps better informed than any other man lining upon the condition of Hawaii and her prospective valuo to the United States.
After alluding to the fact, as a pleasurable coincidence, that his little girl was born on the very day of the establishment of the Hawaiian provisional government, Jan. 17, 1898, he proceeded to give me the gist of his reasons why the country of his nativity should become part and parcel of the Union. "In the first place," he said, "Hawaiian civilization, commerce, education and development are thq. direct products of Americau effort. Hawaii is a child of America—the one American colony beyond the confines of the Union. Honolulu, moroovwr, is the one port of the world where the stars and stripes floatover moro ships than all other flags combined. All that Hawaii is, has and hopes to be she offers to the United States without asking any guarantee in return or any pledges from our government. "AVo know that tho future of the islands, their development, their safety even, will depend upon the closest possible union with the United States. Personally we will not gain, but in the aggregate we will greatly benefit. Now, for instance, as a measure of protection, there is Japan. Reversing her traditional policy of ages, she now encourages emigration, particularly to our islands, and so rapidly have the Japanese come to Hawaii that they now number more than 25,000—the adult males of that nationality outnumbering those of any other. If wo had permitted this invasion to continue, which \vas to our islands as though a million a mon should enter the ports of the United States, wo should soon have been swamped beneath an oriental tidal wave. It was our effort to restrict this immigration—which was secured to the Japanese by treaty—that involved us in controversy with that government. Since their success in their war with tho Chinese the Japanese have become more aggressive, and it requires no prophetic mind to perceive what the result would be were Hawaii to be left alone. "The issue today, then, is not between the monarchy and the republic— that is now a closed
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observer
ti*
[Special Correspondence.]
WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.—Much has been said on the Hawaiian question, pro and con, bnt it seemed to me that even now a last word might find a hearing. So I sought out the two men who have done the most—each in his own way— to farther the proposed annexation of Hawaii, ex-Minister Lorrin A. Thurston and Senator John T. Morgan. I first met Mr. Thurston four years ago, during the stress of events immediately succeeding the overthrow of Liliuokalam, and when the prospects for his patriotic purposes were not so bright as now. He
question—but the
issue in Hawaii is the preliminary skirmish between the awakening forces and civilization in the east and the oiviibsa* tion of the west. The question is whether in that inevitable struggle Asia or America shall have the vantage ground of oontrol by holding as a naval station this key of the Pacific, as the Hawaiian Islands have been termed. Captain Mahan, for instanoe, declares Hawaii to bo one of tho most important strategical points in the world, standing alone, having and admitting no rivaL General Schofield said in 1875, 'The Hawaiian Islands constitute the only natural outpost to the defenses of the Pacific coast.' I might quote a dosen others to the same effect, but I Will merely remark that all authorities are agreed as to their strategic value to whatever power shall hold them, and to confirm this statement will submit the following table, showing why our islands have been called 'the crossroads of the Pacifici* The distance from Hawaii to San Franciaoo is 8,080 miles to Unalaska, Aleutian islands, 2,016 Sitka, 2,895 Vancouver, 2,805 Tahiti, 2,389 Fiji, 3,786 Samoa, 2,263 Auckland, New Zealand, 8,850 Yokohama, 8,399 Hongkong, 4,917 Nicaragua canal, 4,210. "It will nerhaps surpriao the ordinary
tb
a
fee told that Hawaii is near
er Unalaska than San Francisco, and that either is at a less distance than any other port in the Pacific. It is this contiguity to our own coast, together with the peerless harbors offered for our fleets and the possibility of impregna ble fortification, that constitutes the unassailable' argument for possession by the government of the United States. "On this question also all our great naval authorities are in accord. Instead of being an element of weakness, necessitating a large number of warships for. additional defense, Hawaii would addi immeasurably to our strength. Nearly all our great secretaries of state also have advocated the occupation of Hawaii in case of war with an eastern power—Webster, Clayton, Legare, Marcy—and 50 years ago it was declared that 'whoever holds Hawaii holds the key to the north Pacific.' -"Coinciding with this view and projecting it from the higher and broader plane of elevated statesmanship, Senator Morgan, whose advocacy of Hawaiian annexation has been strong and per*stent, says: 'The establishment of an outpost of the United States within the tropics and 2,000 miles from our coast challenges an inquiry whether snob a movement is necessary to the national welfare. For many years my attention has been strongly drawn in that direction, and I went to Hawaii to ascertain if my impressions were well founded.'
With a view of ascertaining if he had been correctly reported I called on the senator at bis fine old mansion on Four and a Half street and was admitted to an interview. Instead of the single question, or at the most half a dozen queries, which I originally intended to% propound, I probably greatly exceeded tho limit I had set myself, for the interview lasted more than an hour.
While expressing himself as charmed with the scenery of the islands, their equable climate and the amiable character of their people, he particularly emphasized their value from a commercial and strategic standpoint. "Their resources are so vast," he says, "that it would be a profitable investment for our government to purchase them at an expense of $100,000,000, though in point of fact we oan get them for nothing. But, valuable as they are to us in this material sense, they are still more desirable for other reasons. To the objection that the islands were remote from our coast he answered that they were all of 1,000 miles to the eastward of'the westernmost islands of the Aleutian archipelago and combined with these would give us practically the control of the entire American coast of the north Pacific. "The Hawaiian Islands are about 7,000 miles on the average from the Asiatic coast and about an average of 2,500 miles from the North American Pacific. South of the Hawaiian Islands the distance to any other island where available harbors are to be found is more than 8,000 miles. It is this peculiar isolation of the Hawaiian group that makes it so valuable as the only place where ships of war or of commerce can get supplies of coal and water or find a haven of rest and facilities for repairing. The great distanoe which intervenes between these islands and the coast of Asia makes them the most important and indispensable locality in the world for the promotion of commerce and the defense of the American coast. "A cruiser or battleship, with a ooal capaoity necessary for carrying her 5,000 miles, steaming at ten knots an hour, will exhaust her ooal in less than 1,000 miles by doubling her speed. With a supply of coal well guarded at Pearl harbor our warships and our merchantmen can cross the Pacific at maximum speed or concentrate at distant points at high speed, thus largely increasing their efficiency, while their adversaries, boing under the necessity of conserving coal or of risking the running out of coal away from their own ports, must move at much less speed# being thus placed at great disadvantage. "Finally there is the oriental question. We have seen the possible danger from Japan. China alone has an estimated population of 400,000,000—poor fighters, but good and industrious workers. Since Russia has reached out for her vast coalfields near the open sea and taken possession of Port Arthur, thus exciting the well founded jealousy of England and Germany, the prospective partition of China and the acquisition of Hawaii bear a relation to each other of more than local significance. Russia, England, Germany, France, are all after a market for their goods. Rather than give up the prospective trade of the 600,000,000 people along the Paoifio roasts they will fight. "Meanwhile, should either of those great powers decide to extend its sphere of influence across the Paoifio to our shores, the possession of Hawaii would be the first object they would see."
F. A. OBKB.
Queer Netting Place.
At Gran brook, in Kent, there ia a rifle range which has been used by the local volunteers for rifle practice, and at a distance of about six feet behind the targets there has been built a large stack of fagots which serves to stoo the spent bullets. Last year a pair nightingales 'selected the stack as the site for their nest, which they built in the interior at a distance of about 15 inches from the surface olipie front facing the targets, about four feet from the ground and Almost in a direct line with the center of one of the targets, which are constructed of canvas and allow the bullets to pass through directly into the fagots. In that situation the birds built tb4§ nest, hatched their eggs and reared their young literally in the midst of a storm of bullets, one of which ultimately proved fatal to one of the youngsters. -•-Knowledge.
The Normans who conquered England shaved the face and the back of the head, so that Harold's spies declared fcbup ett) an anay of monks.
Mjh
I'j
A YOUNG NATURALIST
HF. HAS THE FINEST COLLECTION OF EGGS IN THE WORLD.
It Has Been a Hobby All His Life—Hii Ideas of Natural History—Four Deadly Enemies of the Birds—A Collection oi
Shells. [Special Correspondence.! ALBION, N. Y., Jan. 17.—The boyish fancy developed by Walter F. Webb at the age of 5 years, and which has since become the absorbing passion of his life, has placed him in possession of the finest collection of birds' eggs in the world. The craze for collecting birds' eggs is a characteristic that most hoys have. The difference between Walter and other boys is that paternal lickings and maternal remonstrances alike failed to cure him of his weakness for robbing birds' nests, while instead of growing out of the fancy as he became older, it only took a stronger hold upon him. Very soon after beginning the collecting of birds' eggs, Walter was seized with a thirst for knowledge on the subject, and his parents, having by this time despaired of curing him of his queer fancy, concluded to humor him, and therefore purchased for him various bopks on the subject of natural history, and very soon Walter, forsaking all boyish sports, was buried in his books. It was not long before he had learned to tell at a glance just what species of bird would hatoh from the egg that he brought home. Then he arranged his collection, classifying the various eggs in their proper order, and, by the aid of the natural history books, ascertaining what particular eggs of birds common to the neighborhood were missing.
Then his boyish soul yearned for a collection of birds' eggs that would surpass that of any boy in the county and be the envy of every boy in Albion. He began to enrich his collection by writing to the dealers in natural history specimens and exchanging those eggs of whioh he had a superfluous stook for eggs that were rare to the neighborhood. He used remarkable skill in selecting his specimens and in discarding those that,were not of exceptional value. He followed his hobby persistently and consistently for ten years, and at the age of 15 found that he had acquired a knowledge of the subject of birds' eggs and a collection of the eggs them-
WALTER F. WEBB.
selves that promised to make bim a sure winner in the race of life. The story of how Walter Webb turned his love for natural history to financial profit shall be told in his own words: "As soozf as I had made known the fact that I was willing to buy eggs they began reaching me by hundreds. They oame in boxes, in barrels and in crates. I had just begun to earn my living a& a stenographer and typewriter, but I speedily dropped all this in favor of dealing in eggs. I soon had a very complete collection of the eggs, especially of North American birds. A few years ago I sold this collection for $600, and, putting this with some other money I had accumulated, I formed a partnership with another fellow about my age and went to the World's fair with a large exhibit of eggs, supplies for all classes of naturalists, fine shells and some specially fine taxidermy work that beat anything of the kind at the fair. We established a wholesale house in Chicago for supplying novelties and fine shells such as were sold on the World's fair grounds, and in two months of the fair sold $80,000 worth of stock. Our exhibit and work at the fair were made quite profitable, and since then I have devoted my time especially to handling fine specimens in all lines except insects and botany. ^"The study of natural history is "bound to grow in this country. The country is in many respects new, and as one goes west it is really surprising to see the change and how few students of natural history there are in comparison with the east Still it is a fact that the west is coming on fast, and it may be only a question of a few years when we will find collectors in most every town. "Even in the east we are young in the knowledge of the things around us. In England a large number of the counties have their natural history clubs, with clubhouses and museums, that are sources of great profit mentally to their members. There is nothing that I have ever discovered that will make a boy or girl or young man so extremely busy as the study of natural history. They never have time to go down town nights, to lounge at the theaters And dubs or for other recreation of that sort The fact is after they get started they find so much of real interest and the field so comprehensive and broad that they readily see they have got to keep at it and that they have no time to fool away. Their recreation will be
in the fields and woodland. With me it is one never ending study and school. Never a day passes bnt I find some new thing of real interest even among the tilings around me in my museum. Just now I am giving more time to shells-— land, fresh water and marine. In thi* 1 study one finds at once the work off a
TJEKBE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JANUARY 22. 18!8.
lifetime. I have selected one family only, the helix, or land snail. Mind, this is only one family out of hundreds that comprise the field of concbology. In this family alone I find at present over 6,000 described species on the earth, and it would take one many years to make a complete collection of them. "I wish to add a word about the study uf birds and eggs before closing and point out one of the foolish beliefs of many people in regard to the study of our native songsters. Many people think that the taking of birds' eggs works great harm to the birds. I believe so also, if it is persistently followed in the form of persecution, the way the killing of some of our Atlantio coast birds has in the past ten years, but I am firm in my belief that the egg collectors of the United States have never decreased the number of birds in this country one particle. If the birds have decreased, it has been from other causes, and there area hundred positive proofs of. this assertion. In the first place the English sparrow has driven millions of small birds in our oities and towns and around the farmhouses of the land from their favorite nesting places. They frequently persecute and drive away the birds when the nest has its fnll complement of eggs. Again, the pest called the cow bird, that lays in other birds' nests, destroys annually probably twice as many eggs as all the oolleotors of North America combined. Again, there are numerous other birds, such as crows, that almost,live on the eggs of such, birds as robins, chats, sparrows and the like during the nesting season. Also those large blackbirds in our evergreens in the dooryards annually destroy hundreds of eggs. Again, I have in my brief experience seen hundreds of cats roaming the fields and plundering the ground nesting speoies of their eggs. "These are onjy four causes I take the space to name, but these four causes destroy more eggs many times over than all the eggs that have ever been taken for scientific purposes and for the encouragement of the study of natural history and the enlightenment of mankind. It is well known that if a bird's nest is robbed, within ten days they have another made and a full complement of eggs, and it is really not a whit more harmful to deprive the poor cow of her offspring or the poor hen of her egg, that she thinks just as much of and has just as much affection for, as the native songsters. In the one case we take the eggs to satisfy the stomach, and in the other to elevate the mind and make our young men learn to think and^ be of some usefulness in the world."
BMM C. A. EMERY./*'?
A FLIPPANT HYPNOTIST.
ia 1
+$
He Claims to Teach the Art In One Lesson. [Special Correspondence
MILWAUKEE, Jan. 18.—The name of Professor G. W. Ferguson is not yet inscribed very far up on the rolls of fame, but he has succeeded in attracting the attention of the medical fraternity here fcapst remarkably. He was formerly a drawiiSg teacher in Sheboygan, but now makes a sufficiently good living by "teaching hypnotism in one lesson." He says it takes an hour to learn it and that his pupils become as expert as he
'Ss
So simple a proposition as this seems hardly worth public attention, especially as the professor himself declares or admits that "the hyimotism which I practioe has no baneful effects, and, what is more, no one can be hypnotized unless he wants to be." Yet several practicing physioians of Milwaukee have been moved to vigorous protest, and the district attorney has been appealed to to prosecute the hypnotic pretender. That official declined to move in the matter for the excellent reason that there is no provision of law under which he could act. So the indignant doctors made various affidavits, some of which read curiously enough, and applied to the health commissioner, Dr. Kempster, to interfere on the ground that "Professor" Ferguson was endangering the health of the community. Just how this could be accomplished by so very transparent a pretender as Ferguson is not clear, but the commissioner has interfered, and Ferguson is going away.
Dr. J. J. McGovern, one of the protesting physicians, swears that the practice of hypnotism is harmful, that the experiments tend to weaken the subjects, and that a suggestion of crime made to a subject may be carried out months afterward.
Dr. Samuel H. Friend also swears that the public exhibition of hypnotism is harmfuf to the community because the impressions produced tend to spread the idea that some men are possessed of a speyal force, when, in fact, the hypnotic state may be produced in any one by simply fixing the eyes on an inani mate object This, then, he argues in his affidavit, determines that no man has such a special power, and as a consequence any man who claims to have it or even suggests it through advertising is practicing fraud and doing harm by impressing fear, therefore making law abiding citizenship an impossibility.
To all this and more of the same sort "Professor" Ferguson remarked easily, if not flippantly: "The health commissioner is evidently a hypnotist. He can make people say what he wants them to. I might stay and fight him, but really it's eader to go elsewhere. Busi ness is good. I get $25 a lesson and give two or tjree a day, and Milwaukee is not the only city. There are others."
H. P. E.
Categorial.
"But what do yon mean by saying that the man was more or Iras intoxicated?" asked the lawyer. "Lemme see," said thfe witness as he scratched his chin. "I guess mean that if be had been more intoxicated be wonld have been drank: and if he had been leas he wonld hare been sober. How'll that do?''—Indianapolis Journal.
Drawing a Splinter.
Removing a splinter from a suffering hand may not be a nice and pleasant subject, but home surgery may sometimes give some one a feeling of heartfelt joy. The sufferer who illustrates the matter on this occasion was a carpenter. He was working at his trade at an institution over which the sisters of the Roman Catholic church presided. One day he broke off an ugly splinter in his hand and could not get it out. He went home at the close of his day's work feeling no annoyance from the wound, but by the next morning the hand was in a serious condition and so painful that working was as impossibility. On his way to the doctor's the carpenter stopped to tell the sisters why he must delay his work. "Let me see what I can do with your hand before you go to the doctor," said one of the sisters. The man demurred. "Yes," said the sister, with gentle insistence, "it will do no harm anyway." She quickly filled within an inoh or so of the top a rather wide mouthed bottle with steaming hot water, and as she held it another siqter pressed the inflamed part of the injured hand gently down over the opening. Such a peculiar sensation I It seemed to the man that his whole hand was being drawn with great force into the bottle. He would have taken it away, but the sister was holding it gently, but firmly. Then there was a feeling of relief. It seemed as if the inside of that hand had become liquid and was pouring its unpleasant oontents into the bottle. That was almost exactly what was happening, and with the liquid went the offending splinter. The hand was bathed and bandaged, and the carpenter continued his work without further inconvenience.—New York Times.
How Sugar Is Refined, hSifKk
The method used by the best sugar refineries is substantially as follows: The raw sugar is dissolved in large oisterns on the ground floor, enough hot water being added to produoe a specifio gravity of 1.25. The solution is then drawn through a connecting pipe having a coarse wire strainer into large pumps, by whioh it is pumped into the highest story of the building, usually the' seventh or eighth. It there passes into vessels heated by steam coils to a temperature of about 210 F. Mijk of lime is added to the solution in these pans for tho purpose of neutralizing any acid which it may contain. From these pans the liquid passes down to the next floor, where it' is filtered through a series of bags, each made of two thioknesses of cloth, an outer one of ooarse and an inner one of fine ootton. The bags are inclosed in boxes to prevent cooling. After leaving these the sirup is run through filters of boneblack, which absorbs all the coloring matter left in it. After leaving these it is pumped into vacuum pans, large vessels heated by steam and exhausted by airpumps. The pressure being thus reduced, the liquid is boiled at a lower and lower temperature until, at 140 degrees, evaporation is complete and the sirup rapidly crystallizes into sugar. This is the process by which the best white sugar is made, while poorer qualities are prepared by a method less complete.—St. Louis Republic.
His Attempt Was Void.
They had been having a discussion concerning the necessity or otherwise of purchasing a new silk dress in order to be on a level with the De Moneys next door. Banks had vetoed the purchase on the ground of extravagance and want of funds, and his wife was much put »"®gS!£/®SL iout. 4*tvi '. "Dinner ready, my dear?" he* asked in his most conciliatory manner. Her face had been like a stale thunderstorm ever since the disagreement, and Banks wanted to change it. "Yes," answered Mrs. B. shortly. "Must try again," said Banks to himself. Then aloud: "Ah, I'm glad of that, my love. I have what the poets would call 'an aching void,' Sarah." "You often suffer from headache," she returned in a cutting tone.
Banks drew his chair up to the table with unnecessary noise and refrained from further attempts at conciliation for the rest of the day.—Pearson's Weekly
"Our oaby was sick and we bought one bottle of Dr. Bull's£ough Syrup, and were well pleased with it. It did the baby a great deal of good. Wm. Thompson, McKeesport, Pa."
Ignorance.
Two country men went into a hatter's to buy a bat They were delighted with the sample, inside the crown of which was inserted a looking glass.
What is the glass for?" said one of the men. The other, impatient at such a display of rural ignorance, said: "Whi for? Why, for the man who buys the hat to see how it fits."—Pick Me Up.
Iff
How to Keep Cattails.
Cattails will keep for several years if they are hurq by the stems, head down until thoroughly dry. They may be dipped as soon as picked in a weak solution of carbolic acid to prevent insect from destroying them.—Ladies' Home Journal.
E
asy to Take asy to Operate
Are features peculiar to Hood's Pills. Small to size, tasteless, efficient, thorough. As one man
Hood's
said: You never know job have taken a pill till ft Is all over." 25c. G. I. Hood ft Co., ^^Illg Proprietors, Lowell, Mass. The only pais to take with Hood's SarsaparflJa.
WHY WOMEN LOOK OLD.
HANDYOUI
SOME WOMEN LOOK FRESH AND YOUNG AT FIFTY.
PillltSPffi
Others Appear Old and Dragged Out at Twenty-five—3ld It Ever Strike You Tliat There ^lust Be a Reason
4.
Sv\
5 1
"How old I look!" is what women say to their mirror. The passing years are not what make the average woman grow old in looks, but the condition of nerve weakness, poor blood and low vitality. Some women of fifty preserve the youthful appearance of twenty-five. The average woman of today, however, appears old at thirty, with dull, hollow-ringed eyes, thin, pinched, pale cheeks, -sallow complexion, dark or bloodless lips, the face lined, and the expression the opposite of vivacious.
With good digestion, strong nerves and good blood any woman can keep herself young, fresh and youthful appearing, and she can attain this much desired condition by using the greatest nerve and blood invigorator known to modern science, Dr. Greene's Nervura. It is positively astonishing what this remarkable remedy will do for women. It is almost a Fountain of Youth, for it renews and maintains youth by creating perfect and complete health.
Just see what its xise did for Mrs. Ormiston Frain, of 88 Park Place, Passaic, N. J. She says: ... "I feelil hiy duty to testify to the merits of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. Eight years ago I was taken very sick with pains in my back and lower limbs. I was unable to stand or to be about at all, and had to take to my bed. The doctors said I had womb troubles, and I kept changing doctors all the time but got no relief. One day when I was going to call in a new doctor, a friend called and asked me if I had ever tried Dr. Greene's Nervura. She persuaded me to buy a bottle, so I bought a bottle and after a few doses I could feel a change. By the time the first bottle was used up I felt much stronger and my pains didn't seem quite so intense. After a time I could walk a mile and very seldom lie down in the day time. As I grew stronger the pains gradually left me. I, sincerely recommend Dr. Greene's Nervura in all cases where a general tonic is needed, and as a blood purifier
All women should take Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy in order to attain health, strength and beauty.' You can consult, free of charge, Dr., Greene, 148 State St., Chicago, III., the most successful physician of the present day in curing disease.
pillllllllllIIHIIIIIIIIillllilllll'llllllll TAMPA
SS The SS QUEEN & CRE8CENT as Route jj~ 55 'In connection with tho South- 3. ern Ry. and F. O. & P. runs
a
Jdaily tnrouifh Pullman 1'alnco jj-js Sleepers. Cincinnati to Tampa 555 SS v^in 34 hours. 109 miles shortest 55 line to Florida points.
Orleans, making only one ^5: change of cars, Cincinnati to S55
•jjg Pacific Coast. S3
1 CHATTANOOGA S
S 3dafeji trains, 9'/t hour schedule "55 1 ,' fromTJlncInnatl. 10 hours from 25 Louisville. Only direct line 55 from Cincinnati. Superb Cafe, 25
51
fParlor and Observation Cars, ss SS Unsurpassed scenery en route. SS
I
ASHEVILLE
Only through cln
4
$ $
55
I JACKSONVILLE 1
55 5 The Florida Limited la a Solid 55 Vestlbuhd Train from Olncln- 55 55 natl. Si hours en route to nek- 53 55 son vile dally. Through Full- —5 55 4 mans also from St. Louis and 55 1 -Louisville via LexliiKton and 53 g— '--the Queen & Orescent. ggj.
I
NEW ORLEANS
55 New Orleans Limited, Through «sg Sleepers. 24 hours from Clncln* S5 —5 natl via the Q. & C. Route. Sunset Limited connects at New "55*
sleeper from ES-
Cincinnati and the North Is 555? .... via Queen & Crescent Route SS island Southern Railway. Elegant 52 jjg" 'through Pullman Drawing 23 22 Room Sleeper. 55 SS 255s'' S2 Winter tourist rates now in effect 25 SB from all northern points. SS 35 w. A. Becklkr. N. P. A.. :=5 25 113 Adams St.. Chicago. 25 2S K'' W. C. Risjsaksow,O.P.A., SS S Cincinnati, O. 52
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5,1
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REMOVAL.
A. Nisbet, Undertaker
Has moved his store to
103 N. FOURTH ST.
.One door north of Cherry St. klf •tHI
Y'.
'Jrr
ti-
The Perfume of Violets I
The purity of the
Illy,
I
the
jrkrw
of
the
Mod the flush of Hebe ootuoloe
I wondrous Powder.
roae,
ia
Possom
