The Brunswick news. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1901-1903, November 23, 1902, Image 2

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SUNDAY MORNING. IN SOCIETY. Mis* Amelia Doerffingcr will return Bnortly ftotn Savannah. * • Miss Madge Yeung will leave Wed nesday to visit friends In Darien. • • Miss Stella Ponfleld will spend this week in Jacksonville, the guest of frier,da, | , 4 4 4 Mrs. Burwell Atkinson ins returned to Incashee from a visit to Mrs. (1, W. Blanton. ■ • • Mrs. W. If. DeVoe leaves today to spend a week In Jacksonville, tlio guest of relatives. • • ■ Miss Marie DoVoe was recently the guest of Miss Sallle Alktsn at, her home In IJrooklyu. • • • Miss llazlo Nightengale spent, some time recently with Miss Sallle Aiken in Brooklyn. * • • Mrs, T. B. Irwin is spending a few days with Miss Mary I,ilia Blanton, during the absence of Judge Atkin son. tan Mlhb Emma Williams formerly of Bruswlck, now of New York, will visit Miss Nellie Colesberry Inift winter. m • m Miss Mamie linns has fully recover ed from her recent illness and has re sumed her school at Camp Walker. • • • Mrs. W. S. Irvine will occupy tie home of Mrs. John R Price during her absence In Atlanta. • • • Mr*. C. P. Goodyear has been quite ill for several days as the result of a spraiuo ankle. • • Mrs. O. W. Blanton, Miss Ella Blan ton and Muster George Blanton loft yesterday to spend several weeks at White Springs. • mm Mrs. E. I, Stephens and Mrs. John D Tucker visited Savannah last week where they enjoyed a pleasant stay of several days. * • * Judge S. C. Atkinson and Miss Nel lie Atkinson spent Ihe past few days at Ineachee. the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Burrell Atkinson. • • • Mrs, W. H. l.eopold will arrive shortly from Savannah to spend the holidays with tier parents Mr. and and Mrs. F, j. Doerfllnger. * * * Mrs. John D. Tucker has returned to her home In Thomasville, after a pleasant visit to Mis. V. Jeffries. Mr. Tucker spent a day or two of lust week here and accompanied Mrs Tucker home. • • Mrs. John It. Cook and Miss Adn Cook will arrive shortly from Wor center, Mass., to spend Ihewlnter here. They will he at Mis. M. 0 Rowe’s during their stay. * • • Mrs. M. P. King and Miss Mat King have decided to remain several weeks longer In Savannah, when they are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. 11. It. Mnxey. They will return to Bruns wick after Christmas. • • • Mts. W. P. rcnlman expects to leave tomorrow for Savannah, where she Is to live in future, she will he pleasantly located on Huntington street. * • • The cantata "Tito Coming of the King’’ is progressing finely. Several rehearsals have hoon held and much interest Is being manifested by those taking part. The next rehearsal will occur Tuesday night. Miss Sarah Waldo, of Atlanta, who has been the guest of Misses Lucille and Leslie Butts during the past week leaves with them for Jacksonville to morrow where they will spend gala week with Mrs. Edwin Fleming. Miss Waldo will return with the Misses Butts and will again be their guest here. * * * Mr. Frederic B, (.’handler will assist the Presbyterian choir today. Besides the regular bass part he will sing two beautiful solos, and the choir is to be congratulated upon securing bis assist anee. • • • Mrs. H. S. Gould will entertain the officials of the B. & B. road with a delightful dinner on Thanksgiving day. It will be an old fashioned New Eng land Thanksgiving dinner. There wiP be everything pertaining to too trndi tional banquet, ev n to pumkin pies, and doughnuts. M s. Gould is noted for her charming hospitality and this dinner bids fair to rank with the sea son’s most successful entertainment. * * * JAPANESE SUPPER TUESDAY NIGHT. The Japanese supper t<> be given by the Ladies' Aid Society of the Cat ho 11c church next Tuesday will be a pleasant affair. The ladies in charge Will be in Japanese costume and the h- decoration* will also carry out the Japanese effect. -The bill of fare will Include oys'ers, turkey, chicken salad, beef ala mode, potato salads, cold slaw, celery, olives, pickles, coffee and cake. ~,nner will be served from 12 to 2 and supper from r. to 12 p. m. The public Is invited to attend. ... MUCH INTEREST AMONG THE GOLFERS. The golfers are taking on new life these mellow autumn days, and on the links almost every afternoon may be seen the most enthusiastic players, getting in practice for the winter’s sport. This absorbing and Interesting game should retain Its popularity ■’ luce it give:- lo its devotees not only amusement but the most healthful oi recreations, out door exercise. There are a nundior of good players in this city, and .ney enjoy their afternoon on the links very much. * 4 A LITTLE LULL IN SOCIAL CIRCLES. There has been a bill in the social eaycUos since the Waff-McCulloitgh wedding and the entertainments given in honor of the piincipals and attend ants brightened the. social world last week. Next, week promises a break in Ihe prevalent dullness, as there are to he several entertainments given in nonor of Miss Waldo, who is Ihe guest of the Mi sec Butts. There will also tie a german at the Oglethorpe. The "Street of the Nations” ruler the au spices of the Presbyterian Manse Cir cle will also be on the calendar and altogther the quiet surface of society will he pleasantly rippled to die great PK;aslire of those who complain of Its piesent. dullness. •- m r THE MANSE CIRCLE MEETS TOMORROW. Tne Manse Circle and all those in forested In the entertainment to tie given for the Presbvterian church in December are requested by Mrs Boll ing Whitfield, the president, to meet tomorrow (Monday) afternoon at the residence of Mrs. W. M. Tupper. at 3;3fi p. m. Tfte chairman of the vari ous committees and their assistants are urged to attend, as business of ini pordince will he discussed. The la dies have decided to give tins enter tainment the first week Iri December instead of the second ns was at first Intended. Tilts will necessitate extra work on the part of the ladies inter ested, and they are devoting them selves with a groat deal of energy and enthusiasm to completing the arrange iiients for the affair. • • • LITTLE FOLKS WERE PLEASANTLY ENTERTAINED. Miss Ethel Mason complimented a number of her friends with a delight ful party lasi Tuesday afternoon from four In seven, the occasion being her i-b'venlli birthday anniversary. The rooms were prettily decorated, and Halloween decorations and games were tW> features of the affair. Pump kins. jack o’ lanterns adorned the ve randa and greeted the guests with smiling countenances all over the house to the great delight o. tne little folks. The game of lining Ihe swing ing apple created great merriment, the prize having been won by Miss Winnie McKinnon. The ring was found by Miss Ramona Kay, the dime by Miss Irene King and the thimble by Miss Louise Baker. Delicious refreshments were served and at the close o. the af ternoon Hie little folks were taken to their homes in a carry-all, the ride being one of the most enjoyable fea tures of the affair. Those present, were: Misses Ruth Aiiin, Caroline At kinson, Annie Dean Atkinson. Louise Baker, Dorothy Burford, Katherine Buideli, M.'iuie Bun.uoy, Eva Cook. Jennie . ourier, Eloiso Carroll, Marie Everett, Irene King, Olivia Kay, lta inona Kay. May Joe ..ml, Winnie Mc- Kinnon. Marie Nightengale, Margaret O'Connor. Louis O'Connor. Bessie Scarlett, Catharine Stiles, Blanche Tait Edith Tait. Richmond Taylor. Marie Taylor. Sarah Verdery, Elizabeth Pen niman, Clara Wood. 009 s-uvnin qSIUBA *OIOB puts 8-1001,1 uuondiua uiHs 'eossesjp poo(q 'jo.wod Suqveq ssoiqopitu sij spioxo axies Kiqs oum amt!? uqj l &uos)od aqojo •jui put! .Saupiq ’snoiiiq (uiTxa of pasu u.iY s-iajiiH ouioaiM u.iu y. raiq paano o v||duioo tryqq.w ’a.\|tts •-■quay " noiqontf poqdda puti sj.Hiiq unoa’vi pan aq ]|pj stnqadoo, asu.t !u( poAOjiaq Aaej, uaouvo aiquanoui iMjnnouojd snnnop poos it:q.w qii.v pa.iajjns Suo; pq a.taqj nttnr pio uv A A\ ’tnaqtjJHa jo ’siraqoH A\ O isiSSrup Sq ua.v(B si aniotpaui nt aonn.v pit jiyjapnow u jo joout Snin-isjs •paano J®3ueo juajnjiA Out of Death's Jaws. “When death seemed very near from i severe stomach and liver trouble, 'hat 1 hail suffered witYi for vears,” vrltes P. Muse. Durham. N. C.. "Dr. xing’s New I ifo Pills saved my life ind v—ve perfect health." Best pills in earth and only 25 cents at all 'ruggists. Boh Boy Flour la good. CP I The Doctors and the Trusts. In Q rT'l O ! tiufiecuons on the Recent Cam* | /] ] I paid*!—Mr. Hubbard, Roycrofter Gar (is Letter ISpectal Washington Letter.] OFT of the burly burly of the cam paign if so quiet it campii gn may be said to bate had a bul ly burl.v attachment—then; was made Ilian,fest tin 1 truth of the old saying ‘ Many men of many minds" on the vexed subject of the trusts. Every one appeared to have -i remedy which he was anxious for the country to try. Dr. itoimerelt uuim- Ids diagno sis and preset’its and a remedy ’ public ity” which lias been much di -missed and much derided. "Publicity” did uot prove a winner. Then Dr. Jobn T. Morgan of Ala bama, a veteran physician whose bead Is blossoming like Um almond lx--, pre scribed for the patient. Dr. Morgan's remedy is “laxatimi," a i-aiicdy about who.-e constitutionality there are grave doubts. Dr. Serene E. Payne’s formula is "Let well enough alone,” and Dr. .Mar mis A. tiuiiun, ’raising" Dr. Payne at Ids own game, improved or enlarged the Payne formula into "Keep on let ting well enough alone.” Dr. Littlefield thinks a constitutional amendment is the sovereign remedy, and so on to the end of the chapter. When doctors disagree, what then? We are told that In a i *• ale if counselors there is wisdom, and we are also Informed that too many cooks spoil the broth, fjulen sube? Foraker Eulogizes Hanna. People it'll conclude that the day of miracles Is not passed when they learn that ill a speech at Cincinnati Senator Joseph Benson Foraker pionoinieei! a most glowing eulogy on Ids arch ene my, Senator Milieus A. Hamm. Most assuredly Marcus ought to sel up i.s a lion tamer If he has conquered Foraker and so thoroughly broken the spirit of the "Fire Alarm Stati-snian” as to ex tract an encomium from hlrn. How have the mighty fallen! Fifteen years ago, before Hanna was heard of oiil slde his own stale, Foraker not only held the center of the stage in Ohio, but constituted the whole show llis word was law with fho Bucke.vc Be pilhlleiins, and lie ruled them with a rod of iron At that time if any one had been culled on to pi--diet what Ohio Reptll Mean wo ’d reach the pr. s- Idem-.v the chalices me Lai to 1 that he would have picked Joseph Benson as the winner, for he was the darling of the young Republicans, the Pr nee Rupert of every campaign. But Wil liam McKinley grew apace, on Ist ripped the fiery Foraker and secured the greatly coveted plum. Senator Foraker had the empty honor of placing his great rival lu nomination. McKinley is 111 his grave. "After life’s fit fill fever lie sleeps.well.” and his faithful friend, Senator Hanna, who climbed into prominence solely because he was Mc- Kinley's sworn friend, apparently stands a belter show.of capturing the Republican presidential nomination than does Senator l-'oraker. When the latter, hrilliaut though lie Is and prom inent, thinks of what Is and then of what might have been he mint of all men most thoroughly realize what shadows we are and what shadows we pursue. A Good Riddance. All decent and self respecting Ameri cans will he delighted to learu that Wu Ting Fang, for many years Chinese min ister to this country, has been recalled. They will also he glad that the edict recalling him is peremptory, lie is di rected to return io China at as early a date as possible, the earlier the better, for he is the greatest nuisance, bar none, that lias infested and afflicted this country within the memory of the oldest Inhabitant. He has beeu lion ized and petted by society people be muse he talks pigeon English ami wears Ids shirt outside his pantaloons just ns one of the Four Hundred recently gave a swell dinner to a drunken chimpanzee at a fashionable watering place. Just why Wu has not been given his pass ports and ordered out of the country long ago is a mystery, which, like the peace of God, passetb all understand ing. lie has violated every rule ap plicable to foreign ministers, lie has gone about the country attending ban quets and delivering harangues on every eoneeix able subject. He has lec tured our women on how to rear cliil llreu. congress as to what laws it should eunet. preachers on what they should say from tlieir sacred desks and has assumed a swagger of omniscience ut terly disgusting to people of common sense. Mayor Phelan of Sail Francisco really rendered Caucasian civilization a service when he gave Wu's cue sev eral vigorous jerks at the Waldorf-As toria. Poor old Sackville-West was hurried out of the country sans eere monie because he had little enough sense to write a private letter to a mau in California advising him how to vote. Dupuy de Lome would have been mobbed for writing his idiotic and mali cious letter about President McKinley if the American people could have caught him. Even the stately and placid Washington ordered Citizen Genet out of the country for haranguing the populace on political subjects, but these were white men and for that rea son were not good "show properties” for the blase managers of society. They .were uot petted and feted and were per- initted to go their way. Wu, however, being off color, keeping Ins hat on where dee--! t white men uncover. lec luring everybody about everything, asking resp- viable .women inqii i tluelit questions as to the number of their children, has been a pelted darling of the hi.-li rollers. "Every do,: has his day." -aitii William Shakespeare. Wu has had lea. and for one I am I. -artily glad that it ts drawing to a close. Queer. There is no accounting for popular Whims, fancies, fads and tastes. The same public sentiment which condemns and taboos boxing ami dancing as athletic sports tolerates—not only tol erates, tail encourages football. Per haps there is not an autlii-utie ease on record where dancing produced a death, and perhaps no healthy man was ever killed in u prizefight, certain ly not in a boxing bout for points, but fatalisms in foot all are not unusual. Just why punching a fellow mortal with a padded glove is a mortal sin and kicking him to death a Justifiable pastime it would be difficult to ex plain on any ruin of common sense. We lay tin- nattering unction to our souls that we are vastly superior to tin- .... |) Americans I .era use we prohibit biiillightin: in which they delight, I.lit when was bull baiting pro din-live of anything so horrible as the death ot young Edward Schmidt at Staunton. 111.* The Real Thing. The tuft hunters and aristocrats of America are all In a feverish flutter lx-i unse the annouiu eineut is positively made that I. o|slid, king id’ Belgium, is to attend the Louisiana exposition at KL Louis iu thiil, Leopold rules over u buffer kingdom about us big as the average congressional district in Mis souri. He is merely a royal puppet, set lip by bigger potentates for their own convenience and pleasure, and Is per haps the greatest roue among the po tentates of Europe, which is saying a great deal. Ills outrageous treatment of Ids daughter should cause the door r.f every decent house in America to be shut in his face, but it will not be so. He will be bailed as a great personage, and the bouton will tear the clothes off each other in the insane desire to busk in one brief, halcyon, fleeting mo ment in the presence of this royal old rake. O temporal O mores! En Route. When the Boer war closed, it was given out that the British had com pletely won the hearts of their recent foes by the peace terms granted and that the Boers would .settle down at once into the most exemplary citizens and rejoice In wearing the Chamber lain yoke; hut, mirnbile dietu, it is now rumored that sedition is openly preached by certain still’ necked dent sens of those brave little republics and 1 1 mt hatred of Englishmen und of English dominion is part of the creed of the conquered burghers. So serious has the situation become that Cham berlain is going to South Africa him self to study conditions at short range. Wonder ii’ he ever reflects upon the loss of life and property his ambition cost the world? Work For the Worker. Mr. Elbert llubbard of East Aurora, N. Y.. is a bit of a sage who looks like William Jennings Bryan, wears a bunch of untramiueled hair, a blue flannel shirt and a pair of corduroy trousers, in this makeup there is noth ing to keep a healthy brain from doing good work; his dees it. He believes in the efficacy of hard work. He thinks that alleged curse through which man was condemned to earn his bread in the sweat of his brow to have been a disguised blessing. One clause of Uis "credo” declares that "work is for the worker.” Mr. Hubbard recently wrote an article for the Cosmopolitan in which he told a l.it of hmself, his work and something of that remarkable in stitmion built up by hiuOthe Koyeroft bookshop. Here are some stray para graphs from the article: XVhat have 1 done concerning which the public wishes to know? Simply this: In one obscure country village t have had soniathjnK to do with stopping the mad desire on the part of The young peo ple to pet out of the country and flock to the cities. In this town and vicinity the tide has been turned from city to coun try. We have made one country village an attractive place for growing youth by supplying congenial employment, oppor tunity for education and healthful recrea ting meeting places and an outlook Into the world of art and beauty. All boys and girls want to make things with their hands, and they want to make beautiful things. They want to "get along,” and I’ve simply given them a chance to get along here instead of seek ing their Jortunes in Buffalo, New York or Chicago. They hav e helped me and I have helped them, and through this mu tual help we have thriven in mind, body and estate. By myself I could have done nothing, and if I have succeeded it is simply be cause 1 have had the aid and co-opera tion of cheerful, willing, loyal and loving helpers, Even now as I am writing this in my cabin in the woods, four miles from the village, they are down there at the shop, quietly, patiently, cheerfully doing my woik. which work is also theirs. No man liveth unto himself alone. Our in terests are ail bound up together, and there is no such tiling as a man going oft by himself and corralling good. 4 • • * * 4 4 Hoodlumism is corn of idleness; it is useful energy gone to seen. In small towns hoodlumism is rife, and the hood lums arc usually the children of the heat THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NEJY*. citizens. Hoodlumism Is the first step In the direction of crime. Th° hoodlum ’3 very oftun a good boy who does not Kn > v what to do, and ho he d< -s the wrong tiling. lie bombards with tomatoes a good man taking h hath, put* Ucktam.s on window*, tif-s a tin can to the Ook a tail, u.kf,s tiie burs ufl your earn. ;;e wheels, steals your chick*-ns, arimx'S your horse blankets and scares old ladies Into fils by appearing at windows \v ■;>- peu in a white sheet. To war a mask, . a.k in aid demand the money in the f..r. ily ginger jar is th< next and n nun 1 c/o’utiou. The penitentiary y.wi a Tor tne hoodlum. To a great degree the Roycrof! shop has done away with hoodlumism i>i this vil lage. and a stranger wearing silk ht or an artist with u white unnbr- ila is now cuite safe upon our streets. Very na : rai -1 Jh oldest inhabitant will d< ny wi. it l ha ve said about Hast Aurora, ii< wil l.• 11 you that the order, cleanliness and beauty of the place have always exiti'-d. The change has come about so n&tWrally and so entirely without his assistance that he know* nothing about it Truth when first pr* sentedjs always denied, but later there comes a stage when the mail says, “1 al ways believed it.” And so the good old citizen* are induced to say that these things have always been or else they gently pooh pooh them. However, the truth remains that I introduced the lust he. iicg furnace into the town, bought the tin t lawn mower, was among the first to use * .ectrJcity for lights and natural gas for fuel, and so far am the only one In town to* use natural gas for power. V ntII the starling of the Roycroft shop there were no industries here, aside from the regulation country store, grocery, tavern, blacksmith shop and sawmill, none of which ente* prißes attempted to s ipplv more than local wants. There was Hamlin s mock farm, devoted- to raising trolling horses, that gave employment to Home of tin boys, but for the girls there was nothing. They got married at the first chant *-. Horn*- became "hired girls.’* or if they had ambitions they fixed their hearts on the Muffalo Normal school, raised turkovs, picked b'-rrh .sand turned every honest jh nny„ toward the desire to get an eduialion so as to become teach ers, Comparatively this cla-ss was small in number. Most of the others simply fol lowed that uwit fim and d* sire to get away out oT ihe dull, monotonous, :•<*t|. eg village and so. craving excitement, they went away to the cities and the cities swallowed them. A wise man has said thet Hod made the country, man the city an*i the devil the small towns, 'J he ;OU -ill y supplies the cjti.s US’ Uft ami w<rsi. \\ e hear of the few who suc ceed, but of tiie many who are lost in the maelstrom we kijow nothing. Sometimes in country homes it is even forbidden to mention certain names. "She went to the city, you are told, and there the history abruptly stops. My helper*, the printers, were about to go away to pas urea new. They were In debt; the town was small; they could not make a living. So they offered me their outfit for SI,OOO. I accepted the proposi tion. I decided to run the Philistine Magazine for a year, to Keep faith with tie- mis guided who had subscribed, and then quit. To Jill in the time we printed a book. We’ printed it like a Morris book, printed It Just as well as wo could. It was < old in the old barn where we llrst set up the Philistine, so I built.a little build ing like an old English chapel right along side of my house. There was a basement, and one room upstairs. I wanted it to be comfortable and pretty, and eo we fur nished our little shop cosily. We had four girls and three boys working for ua then. The shop was never locked, and the boys und girls used, to come around evenings. It was really more pleasant than at home. I brought over a shelf of hooks from my library, Then I brought the piutio, be cause th#* youngsters wanted to darn#. Tin- girl*-'brought flowers and birds, and the boys put up curtains at the w indows. We were having a lot of fun. with new subscriptions coming in almost every day and once in awhile an order for a book. The place got 100 small when we began to bind books, so we built a wing on one side, then a wing on the other side. To keep the three carpenters busy who had been building the wings I set them to making furniture for the place. They made the furniture as good as they could. Folks came along and bought It. The boys picked up field stones and built a great, splendid flrepffco© and chim ney at one end of the shop. The work came out so well that 1 said: “Hoys, hero Is a great scheme. These hardheads are splendid building material." So we ad vertised we would pay a dollar a load for nigger heads. The farmers began to haul atones. They hauled more stones, anil at lust they had hauled 1,800 loads. Wo bought nil the .stone In the dollar limit, bulling the market on bowlders. Two stone buildings have been built, a third Is in progress, and our plans are made to build an art gallery of the same material - the stones that the builders re jected. Sammy the Artist blew in on the way to Nowhere, his bapgage a tomato can. He thought he would stop over for a day or two. He Is with us yet. and three years have gone by since he came, and now’ we could not do without him. Personal History. Of himself Mr. Hubbard says inter alia: I loft school at fifteen, with a fair hold on the three TVs, and beyond this my education in "manual training" l ad been good. 1 knew all the forest trees, all wild animals thereabout, every kind of fish, frog, fowl or bird that swam, ran or flew. I knew' every kind of grain or vege table and Its comparative value. I knew the different breeds of cattle, h'orses, sheep and swine. 1 could teach wild cows to stahd while being milked, break horses to saddle or harness, could sow, plow and reap; knew’ the mysteries of apple butter, pumpkin pie, pickled beef, smoked aide meat, ami could make lye at a leach and formulate soft soap. That is to say, 1 was a bright, strong, active country boy who had been brought up to help his father and mother get a living for a large family. I was not so deus-T Ignorant. Don't feel sorry for country boys; God is often on their side. At fifteen I worked on a farm and did a man's work for a boy's pay. I did not like it and tol l the man so He replied, "You know what you can do " And I said, * Yes." 1 went westward, like the course of empire, and became a cowboy, tired of this an l went to Chicago, worked in a printing office, peddled soap from house to house, shoved lumber on the docks, read all the books 1 could find, wrote letters back to country newspapers and became a reporter; next got a job as traveling salesman; taught in a district school. And so the story goes until he sold out his interest in a soap factory for $75,000 and toured Europe. Then came the Hoy croft shop. Its success is com plete. The other day Hubbard re ceived this note with a life subscription to the Philistine: Your politics *eem9 a trifle scrambled and your theology no better, yet I have decided to chance your company for a limited time—say. ninety-nine vears. THOMAS BRACKETT REED. Nothing could be more characteristic ©f Reed than that note. AT THEGRAND The only Ht’raction at tlie Grand tills v will be "A Man From Mex ico.” winch comes on Thursday, Thanksgiving. and will give two per- Toi mincer, matinee and niglit. Thus- who haw seen "My Frrlenu *"lt\ >"/^?Sr ’ -orn India” thought It was funny, hut the Man From Mexico," is said to he one of the brightest and withal one of ine most enjoyable comedies before the ) —■lie today. It is of extremely i i:elcal style and one of those that \.aG V 'K. - 7 9 X rG p/,- j \ A, . x k w ■ -. )) }/ rrG, r- .>. A -AYU. ferAjsH'k 4AACT A T A: H *• tjj -■ - $ \ - 4: \ - tkfrh*. M; . . s:arts the laugh ai the beginning am. continues it. to the end. The cast, is said to I>e tlie strongest that has yet interpreted this bright comedy farce, which includes Misses Leila Shaw, \ inlet Milton, Fanny Fish and Messrs. . . '£9. a ' A f’v-•f-lD.’ ffc* v "V • a. x "a” “Ub ' ■ f•: . A -v-' . -a ' I . t'" Y t ' ' * Vl* L * i ' 1 - *P x 6-V ,T- -i ! * "’j ' I* i i g 1 f ! '-’'liy L, ; i \ f , l > :a : G - L. y A-,.*-;'.”--" Whitman’s Candy. MORGAN’S DRUG STORE. NOVEMBER 23. Leslie Morosco, Louis Peters, Kdu Warren, D. L. Fisher, George S. V Ostrand and others. Those who have troubles can . afford to leave them at home feu there is any one who really Uesir sure cure for the blues, they shoe not fail to witness Lie perfOrmanei ~ "The Man From Mexico’’. Jr is i funniest comedy seen since "The p vate Secretary. Air. Leslie Jlorosco will assume te leading part of Bepjamin Fft.zhew. .Mr. Morosco’s work in "The Wrong Mr. Wright and other-comedies will guar anlee him a hearty reception on toe occasion of his forthcoming visit ,to this city.