Bloomington Telephone, Volume 8, Number 23, Bloomington, Monroe County, 4 October 1884 — Page 3
Bloufliington Telephone BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA. WALTER a BBADFUTE, - - Pobusbma
Mas. Bklva LocKWOOiy, aaotlier candidate for the Presidency, rides a bicycle. A female President astride an altitndinous wheel, spinning over the asphalt pavements of Washington, might not be an uninteresting spectacle. IiAST year 971 fatal mining accidents were registered under the coal mining act ckf Great Britain, against 876 in 1882; loss of life for the same years, 1,064 and 1,12ft. There were twenty five explosions of fire damp last year.
attended with a loss of 134 lrres,against
thirty-five explosions for 1882, with a
loss of 250 lives.
dees come, to move the people from the places where disease has broken out, and then to cleanse.
Jambs Gordon Bxkkett has a great
er number of houses awaiting his occu
pation than any other American. He
has one in Fifth Avenue and another in
Fort Washington, and then his rooms at the Herald establishment are a snug
place for a bachelor. His Newport villa is always in readiness and he has
also a fine establishment in Paris
Washingtoh Wells, a man of 70, born of colored Barents in Warren
County, Virginia, visited Hagertown,
McL, recently, and was an object of in
terest, from the fact that his skin has
changed to that of a white man. The
change commenced sixteen years ago, and has now progressed so far that the color has disappeared from nine-tenths
of his person. His case has puzzled the medical fraternity. . " 'i The richest farmer in the world the richest man with forming for his chief or only business died two months ago at Buenos Ayres. His name was Nicholas Anchorena, and his executors report as belonging to his estate 1,710 square miles of land, 152)00 cows, and 410,000 sheep. He owned much other properly, acd the total value is given as 2,400,000. He inherited 200,000 from his father thirty years ago. Wood pavement is to be given up in , London, and the old Macadam system restored 3 The former is said to have not onlp failed to realize the expected advantages, but has led, according to Proi. TyndalTs report, to serious affections of the eyes and lungs; that is, by continual watering, the wood became saturated with street filth, and then, under the influence of the hot sun, gave forth a pernicious species of dust. Tmcnew Italian war-ship, the, Buggiero di Lauria, will carry four 100-ton guns, ten four-ton guns, t twelve large mitrailleuses, and two guns of fifteen centimetres at the bow and stern. Her
engine will be of 5,000-horse power Her .keel was laid in September, 1881, and she will oost 20,000,000 francs. She is named after a .celebrated Calabrian Admiral, the first of whose many victories was the battle of Malta, in 1283L A mah who has been forking in the harvest fields at Solaro, California, has created considerable stir among the cats and people of Fairfield, and he is under arrest on the supposition that he is crazy. Every eat he could lays fymds on 'he would, take to some secluded spot, cut its tail and legs off and then zip out its liver He offered $5 each for black cats, and $2.50 each for other varieties. When arrested and searched $54 was found in his pockets, besides a large number of cats9 claws, legs, ears, livers, etc. At a wedding breakfast in England recently one of the bridesmaids expressed a wish to see that mystic document, a wedding license, which she had never beheld The request occasioned a fearful discovery. The clergy had quite forgotten to ask for the license; the bridegroom had left it to his "best
.If 1a lA. -3 ILL 11. - 4X A
u jmuimuv , Mm hub we 'oesc had forgotten to da Of course
the marriage was no legal marriage at all The wedding party broke up in dismay, and the ceremony was performed again the next day. Fhahcis Scott Rev; the author of the "Star Spangled Banner," who was a native of Maryland, ad died in Baltimore m 1843, at the age of 64, is to have an expensive monument in Golden Gate Park, Ban Francisco, the trustees of the James Lick statehaving decided toexpend $60,000 for that purpose. It is an interesting coincidence that a grandson of the poet, Mc James & Key, who resided in Boston several years ago, and is new of Btoekbridge, should have painted a picture of the Golden Gate which took first prize at the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition. Florence Niohxihuie says : "Our whole experience in India, where cholera is never wholly absent, tends to prove nay, actually does prove that cholera is net communicable from person to person. The isolation of the sick can not stop the disease, nor quarantine, nor cordons, nor the like. These indeed may tend fatally to aggravate the disease, directly and indirectly, by turning away our attention from the only measures which can sipp it The only preventive is to pat the earth, air, water and buildings into a healthy state by scavenging; limewashing, and every kind of sanitary work; and, if cholera
An interesting exhibition of stock raised under the hygienic rays of light through blue glass windows is to be made at the Philadelphia Agricultural Fair. Heifers, colts, pigs, and poultry, will be exhibited to demonstrate the extraordinary developments which have been achieved . in raising farm stock under the influence of the associated blue and transparent glass. The owner claims that a colt under these associated lights, now three and four months old, has obtained a developement of bone, muscle, and form which will compare favorably with the majority of colts of five years of age.
An incident in connection with the
cholera epidemic, which mixed death-
and greed in an unpleasant manner, comes from Mimes. Near this place a peasant woman died of the disease. Her husband, who was well-to-do and miserly at the same time, sought to avoid burning her clothing by selling it He therefore hastily placed the clothing on a wheelbarrow and started toward Qette, with the intention of disposing of it before the authorities could prevent him. On the way he was attacked and was found lying across the barrow, his body twisted and his face contorted by the death agonies of the fearful disease. A cakpentek in Centra Mexico earns from 60 to 75 cents a day ; a mason the same ; a common day laborer from 25 to 50 cents; a farm laborer who works by the month from $2 to $5 a month and "found. n They work from daylight to sunset, with half an hour at 9 o'clock and again at 3 for breakfast and supper. These hot re are very long, but they take it easy, stopping every little while to smoka their cigar ros, and accomplish less than an American laborer will in six or seven hours1 work. Their earnings are barely sufficient to keep them in food and clothes of the coarsest kind, with an occasional "rear over for the bull-fight at Pulke; but they are the happiest people on the face of the earth. Among the Six Nations Indians the receiving of a white man into their confederation is a matter of great pomp and jubilee. They consider such a course an acknowledgment of the superior nobility of the red man. Charles W. Hutchinson, an ex-mayor of Utica, New lork, has been adopted, recently, into the Seneca tribe of Indians. He
goes by tne unpronounceable name,
signifying corn-planter. As the Indians regard maize as their principal article of food, and give several corn
dances in thanksgiving of their crop, the selection of this name implies high
honor. Gov. Squires, ol! Washington
Territory, accompanied the Mayor and
a large party of Uticans to the Onondaga Indian reservation, headquarters for the councils of the Six Nations, where the adoption of ex-Mayor Hutchinson took place. There was music by the Indian band, a nude Indian performed pagan rites, speeches by dusky sachems, a big powwow and dance, and Charles W. Hutchinson tecame a Seneca Indian of the Wolf clan.
SATAN BUILDS A CASTLE,
The Dayton Democrat describes at length a singular case. A' few nights ago a young man by tjie name of Clark lost his leg in a railroad accident Since the amputation he has suffered acute pain at the knee, and declared that his leg was being twisted and cramped in the box in which it was hurried. To satisfy his - son, and determine whether the position of the limb in the box corresponded with the peculiarity of pain, or whether it was a simple hallucination resulting from excited and deranged nerves, Mr. Henry Clark, the father, went to the cemetery to disinter and examine the leg. As the men at the cemetery reached the box and commenced to work it up out of the ground the sufferer turned to his friends and told them what was being done at the grave. He felt the jar of the box, and the pain it caused. Out of curiosity, accurate time was kept at
the bedside of the sufferer and at the
cemetery, and the changes described by tiie young man corresponded almost to a second with those reported, at the cemetery. The limb was found in the cramped position described, and he told his mother and attendants of the suffering he experienced while straightening out, and the relief experienced. When it was accomplished he dropped into a refreshing sleep. It is a curious and interesting case, and the full statement of facts should be seoured.
The Foolish Peasant A Peasant who was Being Pursued by a Wolf managed to Escape by Climbing a Tree. The panting Wolf looked up at him and called out : "How contemptible in you to take advantage of my inability to climb trees! If there was any man about you, you would give me a fair uhow!w "But you intend to Eat me!'1 Protested the man. "Suppose I did. Wasn't I willing to give you the same chance ! Come down and be a mux t" Thus . appealed to the Peasant descended and the Wolf made short work of him. Moral When you get ahead of t faro bank put the money :in real estate. Free Press. We abe linked both to the past and future, and our duty to the former, well fulfilled, will best fit us to discharge our duty to the latter.
The Legend or KlieingralfenBtein The "Bofiiffe of the Right aiuX the Home or the Old Aivheml , Faust. There are charming drives in the vicinity of Kreuzenach, and authentic history enough, to say nothing of the legends, to make the Valley of the Nahe as fascinating as that of the Rhine. We drove to Ebernburg, at the confluence of the Alsenz and the Nabe, wound up through its queer little village on the mountain side, and came to the old castle of Ebernburg, once the stronghold of Franz ven Sic kin gen, the doughty free lance and free-thinker of the Reformation. This old Herberge der Gerechtigkeit (Refuge of Right), as it was called, is now a half-ruin and a restaurant. From it ia a view of singular beauty pretty village, bristling cliffs, a iiappy valley, wooded bights and ruins of the middle ages. On the one hand rise the porphyry walls of the Rothenfels, 1,000 feet of bare red wall, with little vineyards growing in ledges at its feet, and a few flowers and plants fringing its summit, where the earth has accumulated. At sunset the coloring is very beautiful, the rock growing violet and crimson, and the hills beyond taking on a purple haze below the golden sky. And opposite, on a seemingly inaccessible height, is the ruin of Bheingrafenstein. This cradle of a powerful family stands also on a porphyry pillar, 500 feet high, rising sheer from the Nabe, a steep pathway being its only means of access. It is the most audacious castle I've ever seen, and how it ever was constructed, I cannot imagine. It dates back to the tenth century, some authorities claim to the eighth The popular legend is that the devil himself built it, and I believe the popular legend. One of the old Eheingraves looked oft upon this strange, column-like pile of rock, and one day he remarked that he wished he might build a stronghold upon it, even if he had to call upon Satan to help him. Satan being conveniently near at the time, appeared, and promised to build a burg for him before the next morning, stipulating that he should have for his own the first male who looked from its window. The neit morning, when the Bheingraf took possession with all his train, he saw Satan perched on a pinnacle looking forward with grim delight to his payment. But the wary old graf was quite prepared. He had dressed up a gray jackass in a monk's form, pulling the gray hood over his long ears, and thrust his head out of the window. Satan swooped down upon him and drew him forth, to drop him at his first cry of anguish, and to leave the place in a great rage; and it is said he never came back. For the poor jackass who fell 500 feet into the river, there is not a tear shed in history. There was another personaere who
came to the castle Ebernburg on Franz von Sickingen's invitation, and was in the beginning of the sixteenth century rector of the Kreuznach Gram
mar School, Dr. Johann George Sabellicus Faust Goethe's Faust Faust lived and worked many years in the old town, his alchemy and magic the wonder of its citizens, his knowledge of the occult powers of nature their admiration, till at last his impostures brought them into such a rage that they drove him from the place. Margery Deane, in the Boston Transcript "She Was tiratefuT" Miss Oldmaid is not one of those young and trusting lambs which fire the heart with love, and sting the soul with deep and wide longings for matrimony, but she has been waiting for an occasion to get in her work in a matrimonial line, for lo these many years, and the other day, something happened to fill her with boundless hope and render her confident of a glorious fu- ' tare of wedded bliss. She improved the opportunity, but success, so far as heard from, has not perched upon her banner. She had fallen into the Mackinaw, while fishing along its gravelly shore, and the pellucid waves had closed over her for the third time, when a young man jumped in and pulled her out, being materially assisted by his New Foundland dog, which swam around in the water and barked vigorously, while his master was rescuing Miss Oldmaid. When she was sufficiently recovered to talk, she kneeled at his feet and cried : "Oh, Pinfeather! I owe my life to you, who saved it. Long have I stood aloof from you, and seemed cold and reserved, but now, dear Pinfeather, I am yours, whenever you say so." "Miss Oldmaid, you do me too much honor," said Pinfeather. "Your sense of gratitude has led you to speak extravagantly. Go dry yourself, and you
will soon feel better' "No, no, nor she cried. "I am in solemn earnest. Your noble sacrifice of a new Sunday suit for mo, commands acknowledgment that cannot yield to cold formality. I am grateful to my rescuer, and am at last willing to feed his hungry soul from the store-house of my affections." 'Here, Ponto " called Pinfeather. "Wh wh what do you mean?" gasped Miss Oldmaid. "Why, Ponto rescued you from the surging flood, and if you want to feed anybody from the store-house of your affections, just toss him a few bones' and then Pinfeather cruelly sauntered away men always saunter, under such circumstances in fact, there is much reason to doul t that he would have got away at all, if he had not immediately taken to sauntering, and the store-house of her affections was vacant. Through Mail. Desdemona's Bed The position of the bed, (which for all purposes of the scene would be altered with advantage to the side of the stage,) by which Othello is constrained to turn his back to the audience while addressing Desdemona if she remains in it, has, we suppose, induced Signor Salvini to make her come from the alcove and speak the greater part of the dialogue standing in frrot of it; an alteration of the stage tradition which hurts the effect of the scene and is untrue to the intention of Shakapeare, who makes Othello tell his wife that she is on her deathbed, and in reply to his furious command, "Peace, be still," receives the answer, "I will, what is the matter?" with which the poor woman cowers down upon he pillow like a
poor frightened child. Indeed, the whole scene loses its most pitiful element by allowing Desdemona to confront Othello standing, instead of utterin g her piteous pleadings for mercy in the helpless prostration of her half-recumbent position; although we have no doubt that amosit powerful effect might be produced by any actress equal to the situation who should herself rush from the bed to Othello's feet as she utters the piercing denial: ''No, no, no; send for the man and ask him." Fannie Kemble, in Temple Bar. A flay to Keep the Children Quiet.
"I wish there was some way to keep those children quiet on a rainy day or when it is too warm for them to be out in the sun playing," said a weary mother the other dap to her friend and neighbor. MI always notice what little trouble you have with your children, although you have three more than I have; and I thought perhaps you could tell me how you managed it" "A very easy matter, my dear," replied her friend. "Children must be amused, or they will become cross and naughty; so would you or L Suppose we were doomed to stay all day, or half a day, in one room, were not allowed to read, write or sew, could only sit on certain chairs and handle certain articles, there was no one to talk to or nothing but a game of solitaire for us to play. Why, we'd be almost crazy. Any one, man, woman, or child, in good health, must have something to do during their waking hours. Yet how few mothers try to furnish this something to the busy hands and active brains of the little ones. You notice children out in the street or garden. Are they ever stiil or quiet? No. It i true, they find amusement in the most trivial things. Now I have thought about all this, and have fixed up one room in the house, the play room, exclusively for my children.1" The room is the large one on the top floor. It is all I had to spare and as I could not afford good carpet, I painted the floor and left it bare. A poorjarpet would be worn out in six months. In the winter the i voni if heated by a little circular stove, and over this is put a wire screen, so there is no danger of the children burning themselves. The walls are painted a delicate gray, with a pink border, and I have a wainscoting that is one of the chief charms of the room. u What is it? Well, I collected all the pictures I could out of magazines illustrated papers, etc. , and pasted them on the wall from the floor almost as high as the mantel. Pictures of animals and birds, and those of child-life, are, of course, the greater number. I put the colored prints down near the surface, so that the smaller children could enjoy them;, and they are pasted on so nicely that tearing them is impossible. "Then," continued this nice little mother, I have five boxes in the room, all of different sizes. These boxes have
covers that fasten down, and are padded on the top, with a flounce around the edge, sc that when the box is closed, they have the appearance of little ottomans. Each child keeps his playthings in the box, and it is his particular property, A nursery rug with all kinds of animals cut out of the cloth, with the name embroidered underneath, is among the furnishings of the room. "My children amuse themselves for hours in that room, with only excursions now and then to the kitchen for something to play 'tea party' with, and I flatter myself that tbey learn considerable from the pictures, as well as neatness and order with their playthings." New York Morning Jour nal Lire in a Russian Produce Social etiquette is excessively rigorcui in Courland. Stiff bows form the nearest approach to cordiality, ever permitted between young unmarried persons of opposite sexes. They have few opportunities afforded them of becoming intimately acquainted. Even the dance gives little facility for the growth of friendliness between the sexes, as it is customary for the cavalier to quit his partner immediately on the conclusion of the raise or polka, having conducted her at once to her chaperon. Smoking occupies the leisure moments of the gentlemen when at the ball, while feminine small-talk engrosses the ladies. This formality pervades noble circles in all their ramifications. For girls, constant supervision from the moment of birth to that of betrothal, is the rule ; for boys the code is less s trict. Were an unmarried lady, much more a gentleman, to take a seat upon a. sofa, crach an act would be considered a flagrant breach of good manners. Indeed, when an evening
party takes place, the hostess usually seats herself in state in an inner room, or at the upper end of the assemblyroom, and there receives her guests. Married ladies are invited to take their places near the hos'ss, while unmarried ones withdraw to the outer circle. The cotillion is the chief dance of the evening, and generally concludes the
ball. As thi dance is the only one that affords much scope for flirtation, it is always watched with interest by the dowagers, and woe betide the hapless maiden, who chances to draw particular attention upon herself while taking part in its complicated measures. In singular contrast with all this 4 tedious and, in many respects, mischievious restraint and formality, is the freedom permitted to young couples from the moment of their betrothal. After that ceremony, mawkish sentiment, ridiculous demonstrations, and general absence of good taste and delicacy, mark the behavior of Brautigam and Braut. Billing and cooing, mingling of hands, twining of arms, caresses which ought to derive their highest value from thr sacred privacy Avherein exchanged, all this is apt to render life a burden to the relatives of the high contracting parties ; but it is not too mucty to state that these very public manifestations usually cease with the brautzeit, and the blissful pair soon settle down into prosaic complacency. In some parts of Northern Sweden it is considered a crime to dance Saturday night, while every Sunday night may be spent in dancing. The Sabbath commences at 6 o'clock p. m. Saturday and ends at 6 o'clock p. m. Sunday.
GETTING UP IN THE M0RMISU
When we consider the great improve
ments that have been made m hotels the past fifteeu years, the wonder is that no inspired person has devised a scheme for awaking guests who desire to take an early morning train, without waking everybody on the same floor. There seems to have been no improvement made on waking people, in the past thousand years. At the ancient lloman hotel the porter pounded on the door of room 240 with his knuckles, or an iron key, or anything, until the galoot that wanted to be called had rolled over and yawned a few times,
and answered, "hello, when the porter would yell, "It is half past four," and the guest would say "all right," and get up and fire himself into his pants, hit the water pitcher against the wash bowl with a sound that would go through the next half dozen rooms, grab his gripsack and go out into the hall and slam the door, and go down stairs whistling, "Its five o'clock in the morning." And the same thing is done now, only the parties make more noise, and the guests swear a little. Every other guest, for half a block each way, is awakened, and is mad. It is singular, but when a porter attempts to awake the man who is to be called, that man is the last one on the floor that wakes up. Everybody else hears the noise, but the man that ought to hear it dreams on in blissful ignorance that a panel is being kicked out of his door, and when he does wake up he is always mad, though he has nothing to get mad about. It is the other guests that have a right to be mad. Everything about the first-class hotels of the present day is perfect except the method of awakening early guests. That is still as great a nuisance as the old-fashioned candles, and the insane rule of paying in advance, that once molested some of the best guests. A guest at a Chicago hotel, who had been awakened hundreds of times when other doors were being pounded on, wanted to get up at five o'clock in the morning, and he decided that he would not cause all the other guests to be annoyed, so he told the clerk he was going to hitch a rope on to his ankle when he retired, and throw the end of it over the transom, and wanted the porter instructed to pull on the rope at five o'clock until he got an answer, and not pound on the door. The clerk said that would be all right, and the man retired. The clerk told a party of young men boarders of the singular request of the guest, and they thought it very original. They went out to the theatre, and got full of wine, and when they passed the sleeping guest's room at one o'clock in the morning, and saw the rope hanging over the transom, they thought it would be no more than right to see how the new idea would work, so four of - them took hold of the rope and began to pulL They heard a heavy body seem to be walking over the foot board of the bed, on its back, heard sheets rip and night-shirts tear, and they kept pulling and the heavy body struck the floor and a voice began to swear and yell "murder" and "fire," and they pulled away, until the heavy body seemed to be climbing up the door feet first, on the inside, and the voice said "All right, I am up," but they kept pulling until one leg of a man came over the transom, but the other leg was kicking the door, and the voice was using language that was not admissible in polite society. The men then tied the rope to the door knob and retired to their rooms, leaving the man hanging head down with one leg out in the hall. The man yelled until the watchman came, and he thought it was a case of suicide, and he cut the rope and the heavy bocfy fell to the floor, when the clerks and manager of the house, and several porters were called, and they bursted in the door and found a badly used up guest, grabbing at blankets and sheets
to cover himself, and swearing his back was broke from sliding over the foot board. An explanation was had, and it was believed the tipsy young men had done the deed, but when they were called they were asleep and the next morning they claimed that they had retired as usual at 9 o'clock in the evenins?, and were innocent of anything on earth. The guest remained up until 5 o'ejock, and used arnica and things, gave the rope to the porter, and said after this they could pound on his door and wake up the whole house if they wanted to. However, somebody oug t to invent a scheme by which one guest at a time can be routed out, without spoiling the sleep of a hundred. Peck's Sun: Some Queer Customs in Mexico. Some of the customs of Mexico amused me vastly. They always raise the price when you want anything in large quantities. The Mexican Central Road wants a quantity of ties, and the. contractors went to a Mexican and ordered 10,000 on trial. The ties were found to be suitable, and then they ordered 100,000. .Then the man doubled
the price. They tried to argue the matter with him, but he said if they wanted so much more work of him they had to pay more. Another funny incident, which was related to me by one of the parties concerned in it, was about a judge. His signature was wanted on a certain paper. In the ordinary course of law six months would have elapsed before he signed the paper. A great deal of money was involved in the matter, so the interested persons went to the judge and made him a proposition. "If you will sign this paper at once, said they, "we'll give you $5,000, and not a living soul shall ever know it"
Not a living soul?' he asked.
No, not one
Well, answered the judge, "make it
$6,000 and I shall not care a blank who knows it" Correspondewfce New York Times. Planning a Farm House. If I were to plan a house, I would begin with the kitchen. That should be the first room in the house, and all others should be made tributary to it. After all other rooms were arranged for, what was left should go to make up the state parlor. Eben E. Bexford9 in Western Ploughman. Diogenes lived in a tub. He probably did not advertise.
The Indiana University.
BLOOMINGTON,
IND
College Year begins September 6th. Tuition Free. Both sexes admitted on equal conditions. For catalogue and other information Address, W W. Spangjb, Lekctel Mow. Secre ta ryf President
R. W. AilERS,
J. H LOUDEN
LOUDEN- MIEKS, Attorn es at Law, LOOMIfTGTON, INDIANA.
Office over National Bank.
W. P. Eogebs, Jos. E. Henlev. Rogers & Henley ATTORN1ES AT LAW. Bloomingtox, - - Iot. Collections and settlement of estates are made specialties. Office North east side of Square, in Mayor
building.
nvStf.
W. Friedly, Harmon H. Frledly. FKIEDLY & FRIEDLY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Offiec over the Bee Hive" Store B looming ton, Indiana Henry L Bates, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER Bloomingtoit, .... ... Jbn. 3T Special attention given to soleincr and patching.
C. R.
Worralt,
Attorney at Law & NOTABY JPTJBLIO. Bloomisgton, - - - - - Ikd. Office: West Side over McCallaa . 1 ORCHABD HOUSE S. M. ORCHARD, Proprietor. The traveling public willind firstclass accommodations, a splendid Sample room, and a Good table. Op-
day or week t28 NATIONAL HOUSE East of the Square. LEROY SANDERS, Proprietor.
BLOOMINGTOX IND. This Hotel has just been remodeled, and is convenient in every respect, Bates reasonable. 61 C, Vanzandt, Un d e r t ah on DEALERS IN Metallic Burial Caskets, and Case Coffins, &c. Hearse and Carriage furnished to order,
Shop on College Avenue, no? th
md W. O. Fee's JSuilUiog. ulS Bloomi ngton , Indiana. RESIDENT DENTST
DfJ. W. CHAIN
4
Office over McTad CosJ Store loomington Iud. All work Waranted 17ft
W. J .Allen, JCT DEALER IN f HARDWARE, Stoves, Tinware, Doors, Sash, Agricultural Implements. Agent for Buckeye Binders, Reapers, and Mowers. Also manufacturer of Van Slykes Patent Evaporator. South Side the -Square. . BLOOMINGTON, IND. THE BEST AND CHEAPEST WATCH i REPAIRING'''
GO TO JOHN I. SMITH,
This work is mad s special t
by. him and much care is taken that all work is satiafkctorly done.
