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ALBANY WEEKLY HERALD: SATURDAY JUNE Io,
* i'‘j
THE HOME IN THE CITY.
Drawback* to Ufa In tho Fashionable Flat
In the Swell Part of a Town.
Small house orflatl. This is a ques
tion which has been interesting the
middle class paterfamilias. “But
there are advantages, you must al
low, in a flat. We can get along with
•only one girl, and thus save kitchen
squabbles. There are no stairs, halls,
cellars, furnaces and sidewalks to
■care for, and when the building is
heated by steam there is only the
Idtohen fire to supply with fuel."
“I always want to smile when that
■old plea about stairs comes up, for in
case of small children there are cir
cumstances arising every day which
will necessitate going up and down
stairs, even if your suit of rooms is
all on one floor. I know one family
where the wife actually suffers for
-out of door exercise because she
-dreads going up and down the stairs,
“She isn't obliged to. She can take
the elevator.” “It is a great mistake
to conclude all flats are supplied with
-elevators. One of the finest buildings
put up within two years in this city,
to a high toned neighborhood, has no
elevators, and I could mention others.
As for the cellars, they are there, and
the worst of it is you have no idea of
their condition. You cannot make
sure, as in the small house, that they
are all whitewashed every spring and
that all the corners are free from
filth, and as for the furnace, the heat
is seldom right. Your rooms are
either too hot or too cold, unless the
janitor is more of a model than I have
ever found. In the small house you
make sure of better light, better ven
tilation, more sunshine and, best of
all, more freedom.”
Leaving out these physical consid
orations, the small house in the city
-comes nearer the true ideal of a home
thui the flat Edward Everett Hale
■writes, "No home is a real one which
has not windows on all four sides."
It seems to me Mr. Hale does not al
low sufficiently for that living con
sideration which goes far toward
making a home of even a basement,
but certain it is that the more win
dows the more beautiful the abode
for the to be home. It is a pity that
through unavoidable circumstances
the word home in the city has not
that significance it has in the coun
try. Through continual movingB
home associations are. constantly
broken. “Do you own your house?"
asked one friend of another. “No
fashion in houses, or rather in-local!
ties, changes so often it is not desira
ble to buy in the city. We have moved
twice simply on'account of the chang
tog neighborhood, though we liked
the house in each case.”
This hardly accords with Henry
Ward Beecher's idea of a homo,
which could not be perfect until
aweetened through and through with
the experiences of the soul itself.
With a strong desire to establish u
real home with an individuality of
its own,-many of these unfavorable
■obstacles could surely be removed,
but do you not know women who
shoulder the responsibilities of im
mense houses, burdening themselves
with all the worry of letting out
floors for the sake of living in a grand
suite of rooms in a tony quarter rath
er than living in a small, unosten
tatious house in a quiet street?-
Brooklyn Eagle.
WHCN A WOMAN 18 IN DEBT.
If Bhi. Owes FIvo Ceuta, It Worrlee Bar M
Mach *. a Larger Sum.
The financial transactions of many
women M6 conducted after a plan
which the! mind of the average man
finds difficult of comprehension.
Debt reBts upon their minds with a
weight that is apt to be in inverse ratio
to the amount involved. Five cents
weighs as heavily upon their con
sciences as (5, but when the obliga
tion mounts into the hundreds or goes
entirely past their power of liquida
tion the burden becomes light as
summer air, and they cast it aside
jauntily. It is in small matters, how
ever, that their peculiarities are most
noticeable. Men make merry over
(heir ways at the soda fountains and
the fashion of half a dozen of ‘them
walking to the counter upon tho
suggestion of one and taking n
Dutch treat”—each paying for her
own glass. Their fashion of disput
ing over the question os to which
shall pay the fare when “two or
three are gathered together" on the
cars has also served to point many
jests.
But there is a phase of the matter
that has escaped the critical mascu
line attention. These same women
who may accept tickets and candy
and car fare and lunches at the hands
of men with no oppressive sense of
obligation Whatever have a very dif
ferent feeling when another woman
pays the bill. For some mysterious
reaBon they cannot bear to be in
debted to other women. “What do
you think of this?” said a well known
Indianapolis lady a day or two ago.
“I was on an Illinois street car, and
next to me was Mrs. with her
armB and a shopping bag full of pack
ages. The conductor was coming,
and she was about to lay down her
bundles and explore the depths of
her bag for a nickel, so to Bave trou
ble I paid her fare. She thanked mo,
and I thought nothing more of it till
this evening, when her servant came
to my door and handed me I cents
which Mrs. said she owed mo,
For a moment I felt dreadfully in
sulted and was on the point of send
tog back a sharp message, but I re
flected that she probably meant no
offense. But if she had paid my fare
I never would have dreamed of re
turning it, and what would she have
thought of me? Just think of a man
sending a message to his neighbor to
pay a 5-cent street car debt I Cer
tainly we women are rum ‘cree-
turs.’ "—Indianapolis Journal.
■mr
' The Age of Publicity.
Old time privacy got a great blow
when a Paris mob pulled down tho Bas
tille. This is the age of publicity, and
we have reason to rejoice atit. "Think,"
wrote President Eliot the other day,
"how all sorts of abuses and omelties are
cheoked-and prevented by the publicity
of modern life—a pnblioity which do-
lends on the universal capacity to read."
t ia true enough that so great an advan
tage has not been won without a good
deal of accompanying detriment. Private
life is pried into far too much for tho
edification of a servants' hall society.
M. Taine's desire for seclusion was prob
ably an outcome of personal tempera
ment,-but justification oould be found
for it, if that were necessary, in the
abuses of the confidences of other men
Newspapers every day meddle with
matters that it is a needless cruelty to
touch. Tho greatest journals in New
York invited their readers the other
morning to discuss with the federal
authorities whether and how often a
bride's wedding dress had been worn.
Coroners subject the sanctity of dend
clay to brutal violation and publish re
sulting surmiseB which it was villainy
ever to have made. So the snnshlno
sometimes scorohes and withers plants
that are not fit to bear it. Nevertheless
without sunlight there can be no whole
some life.—Harper's Weekly.
PURSUED BY A PAPER BAQ.
Excltln* Itun of an Old Sqntrral IFho W»
Ileal JokM«
Civil Survive Reform.
Civil service reform is moving on sure
ty, It would be expedited if thote who
believe in it would live up to it. As wo
Not Used to Practical _
“In, Memphis,” said Charles F. El-1 bare said i*fore, onVtroubie Utha't pciv
mire of Union City, Tenn., to a re- pie are good natured, and when their
porter, “there is a little park called friends want places under a new admin-
Court square situated to the center Istratioo—that is, places not vacant and
of the city. The park keeper told [only to be made vacant by the demands
me that there were over BOO sqtdr- of the office seekers—theso good natured
rels th« made their nests in the big. people allow themselves to become part
shady trees.' I of the pressure for tho places by tbelr
, “They afford boundless amusement recommendations and solicitations. It
to the children and to the weary foot ‘ 1
i t _ i„ it,. viftw.Tr I powers m if the whole country roso up
^ 1 ^ r l P .v?* and domanded.not civil service reform,
rest. One day I bought a bag of pea- but , n the clyl , ae rvice.
nuts, and while I sat down on one of rhet9 la TOch a thlnff M ra ,hi n g a ra
the seats eating them the squirrels f orm ahead of publio opinion and thus
gathered around me like blackbirds I injuring tho reform, and there are many
would flock to a cornfield immediate- positions which are political in the true
ly after planting time. sense and should be taken possession of
"I concluded to try an experiment, by the purty of tho majority after every
I blew up thepaper bag, tied a string election. But it is tho duty of every citl-
oround it about 6 inches long, and *en to do his share In eliminating not
to the other end fastened a 'goober,' only the spoils system, but tho spoils
and threw it on the ground. Tiiere idea, from politics;-to pres, upon tho au-
was an old bobtailed squirrel-the ‘ ho ?Me» ho necessity of continually ex-
father of the flock-that tackled it. suiTiuttide otZ
He picked up the‘goober’ between oUallfled ft iervlo8- y or , t la „„ exaggora-
his paws and started ™ °P«“ the Ition to say that the evileof the spoils sy.-
shell when he discoyeredtnat there t em are illustrated in every sinistc *% a-
was a string tied to it. Then he be* reer f n (he history of modern American
gan to run, still holding the nut he- politics; every disgraceful "success" is
tween his teeth. to be laid at its doors; every corrupt
“He jumped off about BO feet and ring'has here its origin. It is the menace
We take first plsoe, as easily
room suits holdlhe leading pos!
the household outfit. Our‘C
Walnut bedroom suits of tin
ten, or sb many pieces as
you
A Feat In Ourin|. . _
In all branches of sport beating the turned his head around to see if tho and enemy of honest administration in
- bog and string were Btlll behind, every community in tho country; it de-
They were. grades our legislatures, state and ua-
"WeU sir you should have wit- tional, and the cbubo of good govern-
nossod the actions of that squirrel “« nt triumphs only when this pernicious
after he saw that the hag stSl pur- «• thw * rted or overcoine.-Cen-
sued him. Up a tree he went; down ™ fjr ' — -
one side and up another, away he to BIew u p cyei-mu.
went. After he had chased himself | Dir. O. R. Carpontor has evolved a plan
Strike the
previous record is a performance of al
most everyday occurrence, and no mat
ter how excellent the achievement it is
not likely to remain long unchallenged
and unconquered. The establishment of
a new kind of record, although not strict
ly within the realms of aotual sport,
cannot therefore fail to interest that large
class of speculators who are ever ready
to discover something new on which to
stake their spare cash. A wealthy young
' Cuban recently made a bet with the carv
er of one of tho leading night restau
rants on the Boulevard—the wager be
ing for 1,000 francs—that the latter
would not cut and mako 2,000 complete
sandwiches in 34 hours.
The carver won the bet easily, accom
plishing the feat in 10 hours and 40 min-
utos, demolishing SO hams in the opera
tion. This huge mass of sandwichos was
divided among the principal hospitals of
Paris and the environs, among whose in
mates the unexpected advent of such
tasty morsels created unfeigned delight
—Paris Cor. London Telegraph.
Soldiers* Dlsguiit of Cards.
Miss B. asked General S. of Louisi
ana if it was true that many of our
Bolid citizens, while soldiers, regard
ed card playing and petty pilfering
as among the accomplishments of
camp life. General 8. replied; "A
base libel, madam—a calumny. True,
they never left a friendless chicken
to nod on its uncomfortable roost;
never suffered an overburdened ap
ple tree to break down from its load
of fruit; never removed a bee gum
until the shades of night made the
removal more to the comfort of the
bees; never permitted the lacteal
fluid to sour in badly ventilated milk
houses, and never—no, never—left n
wounded shoat to bleed its young
life away by the roadside, and as for
cards we give you our word that
before the battles of Seven Pines, of
Perryville, of Murfreesboro, we saw
cards strewn all along the road, so
great was the soldiers’ disgust for
card playing I”—Confederate War
Journal.
Texas la a Great State*
If the entire state of Texas were
planted with com and the hills were
two feet apart, and the rows were
three feet apart, and if every man.
woman and child in the state of Con
neeticut were set to work in the field
to hoe the corn, and each person were
able to and did hoe two hills in five
minutes, It would take this army of
laborers 7 years 280 days and 7 hours
to hoe every hill of com in tho state,
laboring continually day and uiglit
305 days each year.
To those persons who have novel-
stopped to consider how great u
country they are living in these fig
ures may he of interest. The man
who fears that he could not elbow
his way around in the crowded west
without chafing the nap of his coat
sleeves may gather some solace from
the statement that the entire living
population of the globe, 1,400,000,000
souls, divided into families of five
lemons each, could be located in
Texas, each family with a house on a
half acre lot, and there would still re
main 60,000,000 vacant family lots.—
Kate Field’s Washington.
Tlie Heart of Robert Bruce.
When Robert Bruce, king of Scot
land, lay upon his deathbed in the
year 1329 he remembered that li--bad
registered a vow to help wre.-i the
Holy Land from the heathen Turks.
It was clear that the time for fulfil
ling thisyvow had passed, but a new
thought presented. Why not have
his heart removed and sent to Jeru
salem for burial ? To make the story
short: This was decided upon, and
Sir James Douglas was commissioned
to carry it in a silver urn "to a place
as near as possible to where the 8a
viour was crucified” and there bury it.
Arriving in Spain, Sir James, with
the precious relic 6trung to his neck
by a chain, was killed in a battle with
the Moors. Sir Simeon Locard re
turned with the heart to Scotland
and deposited it under the altar of
Melrose abbey, where it now is.—St
Louis Republic.
Admission Foes at the Biff Fair*
The disappointment which follows the
myment of a quarter to see the block-
ike but highly scented Eskimos illus
trates the great ruling principle at this
show, which is that the beet that Is to be
seen is whafis seen free of extra cost. If
the Eskimos, the Irish village, the animal
■how, the Turkish town and that sort
of thing are worth 25 and 60 cents each
to a visitor, it is certain that the great
exposition, common'to all for one admis
sion fee, should bo rated at a thousand
dollars’ worth of sightseeing.
The wonders of every avenue of indus
try and the treasures of every form of
art from all over the world uro all to bo
seen for a half dollar paid at tho outside
is. The things that cost extra are
very closely like the sideshows of the
circuses and the dime museum exhibits
of tho Bowery. Thoy ore genuine, and
those in the Bowery are faked—that’s the
main difference.—Chicago Cor. New
York Sun.
—An odd decoration on the jet bon
nets is a long pendant on each side
that, when the bonnets are tied in
place, gives absolutely the effect of the
old-fashioned and very ugly jet ear
rings. It is a little curious that there
always seems to be a desire to revive
ugly fashions.
An Iron Theater Curtain.
An interesting development in the
use of theater curtains, especially
against the spread of fire, is now seen
in many theaters. Mr. Charles J.
Phipps, F. S. A., the architect, for
instance, has always contended that
the value of tho proscenium wall in
theaters was nullified by the large
opening on to the stage being left
open and free from any protection.
The difficulty was to construct a rigid
curtain that would withstand tho
action of fire on either side for at
least a quarter of an hour or twenty
minutes. A curtain on the principle
of a revolving shutter had been tried
in London and tho provinces, but Mr.
Phipps was the first architect to in
troduce into this country an iron cur
tain that formed one unbroken divi
sion between the stage and the audi
torium and all practically welded in
one piece.
A curtain of this kind which costs
somewhere about £G00 is erected at
the Prince of Wales’ theater. It is
constructed upon an iron framework
with sheets of boiler plate on either
Hide, the curtain being thus a double
curtain with an air space between of
about five inehes. Thirty-two feet
wide and about 30 feet high it is
raised by means of hydraulic rams
on either side, the apparatus being
worked by a small lever on tho
prompt side of the proscenium. The
time taken in coming down is leas
than half a minute. When the curtain
has descended, it rests upon a solid
wall of brickwork, cemented over and
brought up level with the floor of
the stage. It weighs some six tons.
—Million.
A belt that is much fancied is
rather broad one of white ribbon
dra’/n through a silver buckle;
course the ribbon has to be renewed
At once, and In this aiise to
buy. We can mWt tour ideas
either in 1 utility, solidity, or ole
Wu know we’vo got what you
you know it; everybody knows
knowledge don’t amount to an]
unless you acton it.
Come, look, and buy. You v
bedroom In a house as well
parlor. We can fix you out
■peots. Our stock Is more tl
gant; It Is solid, durable, up
style,' and surprisingly
te In stook a i
about 10 minutes he stopped and I by w hich approaching oyolonss can be /I INI
sort of turned his head around slow- bombarded and many lives and thon- m m " mm
like to see if the bag was still there, sands of dollars' worth of property
It was. Then he Btarted again, and saved. Dr. Carpenter says that the great
of all the running I ever saw that Mississippi and Missouri valleys corn-
squirrel did it. He moved about pose the oyolone oenters of the conti-
among the branches and limbs like a non*. His plan is to have stations where
streak of lightning. 1 can be trained to watch for a com-
“Ftaally, out of breath, he stopped l»« ‘^sUr ond then destroyit before it
again, and the expression he wore ““^ty by exploding it with
on his face seemed to indicate that to°nm-mlTthe
he was saying to himself: 'Well 5&V£
whatever you are, you are not to it oomin|r Tha to^i, wemla haT , to
now. I guess Fve got you. Bu> ba|nt tat0 tha olou4 aotM ,tiflcany, of
when he turned his head around and 000rie> and therefore men should be
saw that tho bag and string were traihed to the service. I would have the
right there he fainted dead away,!'— station attached to the weather bureau,
Exchange. | which would aid in getting advance in-
... formation of. cyclones. Strong marine
Bravery of the "Red Dog.” of Aria- | glaU es 00nM bo naed at Dight by watcb .
in I
price. We have
ine of
modcri
lylig
The quality of courage possessed meD| 8nd an alarm oould be given In
by hunting dogs of Asia appears in a pi.hty of time. My method would of
marked difference of habit from that oourse be of no nee in hurricanes, but I
noticeable to all other carnivorous am fully convinced that my theory is a
beasts. As a rule, each ferocious ani- good one for cyolones and well worth a
mal has its natural and favorite prey, | trial,”—Cor. Pittsburg Dispatch,
which may vary to different localities,
hut is to each case the easiest and most 1 change* in th* cimr«h.
profitable victim. Tigers, for _ in-1 Tbo New Jersey stato Epworth league
Consisting of Furniture, Stove
ery, Cutlery, Table Linens, J
ens, Mattings, Floor Oil Cloth
Carriages, Willow Chairs, 1'
Easlos; In faot, everything to
Dp a H(
With. We will sell on easy I
on the Installment plan to suit
oomc. Yours Truly,
Scboolmarma Pestered by Mice.
Innocent little mice have nausea such
a commotion among the lady teachers of
the new Noisor school at Bethlehem that
a strike is hinted at unless the directors
go gunning for the pestiferous boasts.
Although the building is new, p large
number of mice frolio about oh, every
floor, and the schoolmarms are in con
stant terror. Feminine eyes glance nerv
ously about beneath desks, and nervous
hands twitch close to the skirts to hs
ready for a retreat in case a bold mousie
scampers her way.
The pupils, especially the boys, whose
sense of humor Is bettor developed than
their veneration, do not hesitate to scare
the bothersome mice so they will run
toward their teachers. The question is
so grave the school board will take
action, it is said, to abate what the
pretty girl teachers say is “a horrid nui
sance.”—Philadelphia Record.
stance, are cattle slayers or deer kill- convention, at Its session in Newark, de-
era just as cattle or deer happen to nounced the race track legislation, pro
be most abundant in their district. tested against the opening on Sunday of
Leopards prey on goats, sheep and, the World’s fair and declared unanl.
when they can get them, on tame mously that it discouraged the use of
dogs; wolves on sheep and cattle, t**" 50 ?- .... .
stoats or rabbits and hares, and wea- The ®® T - H t 8, 8 P rtn 8? r of
selsonrats and mice. Bit, though K ■P«» lrin « ,or the Newark dl,triot,
the jungles which they visit abound „■ . . . . .
in defenseless animals, the wild dog m Tl
. . *• i, ii i a 1.V, mourners uunclicn, &nd l0t ub not con*
does not limit h»s attacks to these. tlnue ln ths 1)roaent formal way , Talte
The packs deliberately pursue and down advertisement of the under
destroy both the black and Himalay taber tbat la on tbe fr jj nt p f our
an bears and the tigers, affording per- churches and put in its place the inscrip-
haps the only instance in which one ti 0 n, 'I am the resurrection and the life.’
carnivorous species deliberately sets "Take away the little Bign with ‘M.
itself to hunt down and destroy an- E. Church’on it and place one 20 feet
other. From their rarity, the unhab- long across the front of the edifice hav-
itated nature of jungles which they ing the words ‘Central Methodist Epls-
haunt and their habit of hunting at oopal Church'in big letters, every word
night—which a probable suggestion spelled out. Let’s have some sensation-
makes the basis of the early legends “I 1 "? Jo cope with the devil’s plans of
of the demon hunter and “helloquiu”' work -
layer & Ci
SPRING
CLOTHI
lilV
We have received our 1
Full Li
at a time when the "red dogs" still I
remained in Europe—observations of
their habits are rare.—London Spec
tator.
People of Britain In Thin Country.
There are (181,000 natives of Ire-, - - - , Yr ,
land in the chief cities of the United ^8“ act 1 nee , rl y- r “ throu ^
Decani* Crazy From Quitting Tobacco.
There was a lively time on a Pullman
car on the Southern road last night while
en route from New Orleans to this city.
At Chattanooga ’William C. Blackburn
of this city, a porter on one of the cars,
of i
States, 207,000 natives of England ^ ITonn
a kb nnn V/«*ir tho poBBengers out of their wits. At one
Chili to Chicago In a SS-foot Boat.
An eccentric navigator named Bosman
proposes to make a trip from Valparaiso
to Chicago in a 22-foot boat and has ac
tually sailed away from Valparaiso on
his long voyage. He comes via Panama,
whence his craft will be transported to
Colon by rail. From Colon he will em
bark for Chicago by way of the St. Law
rence river, and if he does not come to
grief in his perilous undertaking expects
to arrive in Chicago about the middle of
June. Mr. Bosman appears to forget
that the Hudson river and the Erie ca
nal furnish him a much easier as well as
shorter route to the great city of the
marvelous show, and the dangers of the
longer St. Lawrence route should not be
deliberately courted.—Panama Star and
Herald.
th N6 T ^° r k. time betook aUthe mo^sy out^f Ms
and Philadelphia have the largest pocketa gnd threw , t out of J the
proportion of Irish born inhabita nt a He finu n y becara0 so violont that it was
Baltimore, St. Louis and Cincinnati naoeaaa , y to chain him in an apartment,
have the least. There are more Eng u pon arriving at the Grand Central
lishmen in Philadelphia than there depot ho was taken to police heodquar-
are in New York. In proportion to tars, from which ho was sont to tho city
the whole population, there are more hospital. The only explanation of Black-
natives of England in Pittsburg than bnrn'B strange conduct wavthat' he had
there are in New York. They are been crazed by tobacco. Some time ago
least numerous in New Orleans. The he was an inveterate user of the weed,
census returns less than 800 natives but stopped suddenly. Yesterday he took
of Scotland in New Orleans. Boston »*>ig chow of tobacco before lie began to
has 4,500, Chicago 9,200 and New | crazy.-Cinoinnatl Enquirer.
York 11,000,—New York Sun.
Long and Slim. Also full lit
and Youths Clothing. ~
STRAW
OP LATEST STli
Pine Shoes of heat quallt;
some line of
NECKW!
••Woman*' Better Than “Lady."
There should ho a new distinction
established which would show that u
The Power^of Taffy.
Judge Duffy—How did you come to I la^iTa woman Vho"is of no uso to
.a;. 10.1"-= l the -’ worldi Uowever great a necessity
Inauguration Hotel Rates.
‘I only lately learned, and that by ac
cident," said a society woman, “how
deeply my husband and I were indebted
to Washington friends who entertained
ub at a certain hotel for tho inaugura
tion. We had a nice suit of rooms tbat
were not magnificent, and those dear,
generous hosts of ours paid for them at
the rate of $100 a day.”—Philadelphia
Press.
steal this lady’s pocketbook?
Prisoner—I did it to get even with
her. She stole my heart the mo
ment she looked at me with those
lovely eyes.
Lady refuses to presB the. charge
and the case is dismissed.—Texas
Siftings.
Fine line of Gents’ Purnisl
We are offering all the a!
goods at remarkably low fig
will pay you wpU to call ai
them. Come around and ' "
you buy or not.
look
The New York Herald ha6 made an
Interesting discovery—a soprano who
can sing D above the high D, and sus- |
tain it, and who has a range of 26 notes.
The possessor of this wonderful voice I
she may bo to Bociety. The woman,
like the man, should be satisfied with
the appellation which conveys a flTTI TRR Xt Til
meaning that tlie narrower word \JUlUill «■ U Vi
cannot furnish. Woman is by far
the more respectable and dignified
title.—Milwaukee Journal,
86 BROAD STRI
Or No Use.
Miss Elder—I’ve quit keeping my
birthday.
Miss Gaskett— So have I. It gets
fs Miss Ellen Beaoh Yaw, a young I away from me.—Detroit Free Press,
lady 22 years old. She can sing one | |J(( BBWSBD!
S. B Bhown, Ed. L Wight,- A
President. V ice-Pres.
That old wasp-nest In Hawaii has
been touched up again, and trouble is
brewing. It seems that Minister
Blount has informed the annexation
ists that if the royalists attempt to Re
instate their Queen the United States
will not interfere. This and other
things has served to bring about more
or less excitement, though no very
not'e higher than Lucrezir
who had the highest vocal range hiirli grade bicycle and far ahead in
OF ALBANY,
' • 3*
very often. One cannot wear white serious trouble is expected for some-
unlesB it is immaculate. I time.
, . _ , high grade bioycle , , , ,
any singer recorded by history. One --looks.” People who know bicycles
of the most singular things about Miss buy Columbian, and are satisfied with
Yaw’s phenomenal v«ice is that a ^ ^ve ^‘Temtat
singer possessing such a hign range I « lnner tube”-rno cement; corrugated
could be able to sing in her lower two-inch tires. “Hartfords” at $105
register with almost the breadth of a and $120; are worth at least $50 more
and she doubtless has a.
Opened business Apr
PAID UP CAPITAL,
future before her.
est prices.
2-dawlw.
Cash deposits
drafts: Exchange 1
current rates; money
proved time papers,
solioited.
bou