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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1887)
THE DAILY HERALD, PL ATTSMOUTI T, NEBRASKA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 18S7. ftlje piatt0inoutl), Pailn flcralli KNOTTS X3EO S., Piabllahers & Proprietors. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. I-'or'Hupieiiie .finite, kiAMUKL .MAXWELL. Fur I'nlvcMity I:khIs. J) It. I J. II. DAVIS, . dh. oi:ok(;i: koi5i:kts. l"(.r Jurlci" f Si :iiiI .1 inllciiil Dintlict, HON. SAML'KL M. CHAPMAN. HON. ALLKN W. FILLI). REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET KorTrrasiin-r I). A. CA.Ml'KKLL. I'm Clrik JHItD CUITCHFIELD Kor ltecorili-r WM. II. TOOL. For .Juiiit J CALVIN I iUSSHIJj. For iiiieri:itwiiloi.t of l'ubliv Instruction 1IAYNAKI) SPINK. i-Slit-riir J. C. KIKKNHAICY. Hor CI:rk of l:str ict Court H.J. STIC EIGHT, For County Commissioner UEOKC1E YOUNG. ForJSurvi'J'or A. .MA DOLE. For Coroner 1IENKV i;EClv. The Republican State Platform Tli rwiiiiiilic:ui party of Nt-bnuka. while OTt-r c-.i' efnl of property right, ami. holilin no yiii)athy with those who would Willi llieeom uiuii'if tliviile. or with tin; aiiaieliists destroy ir;i.-its Us determination thai the. great rail way corporations of tins state winch Hold re lat ions of closest interest to the people shall bo the fairly paid servants of the sta'e and not i . i-i. i. .ff i :.. lirt nia; crs. 1 u- woi k m it-iMiunc uiiitun m thu state and u.itioii shall continue until all cauc of complaint of cxorhitant rates and unjtiit dlsi'iiiimiatlon in lavor ol individuals ol loenlilie i-hall ce isij to exist. Assiuiiirir the lesponsibilit v. which fairly belongs to it, of I ' .-.I ..11 I ..... . 1 ....... . I I.I 4 navuiir or Joiaicu uu it-Kisin ion hhiiwiiu lo railroad cnt rol and the creation of those Hi bnnals nr;couiiiii.-'sionH which have; been en jiblrd to iriappiu with corporate power, the re publican party will see to it that by a 1 needed wiilariruitient-i of power these commissions, na- lioual iiml state, shall be armed for hat tie and or victory . While favoring such c autre in th cunsiitat io:: of this etate as will permit the railroad commissioners to lie elected liy th ptopl. it hereby voices its confidence in the list tn;j board of transportation, and commends its liu'-ls lo olitaia lor iseprasxa the same tariff of rates for freight and earriimu of pas- BenjjT.s as i accordMl to neighboring states bluuiany cir.Miiiistanced. It is trrossly unjust uuij a previous wrong that Nebraska should pay more for the transportation of her products Ati.1 me cai liaiie of hwr supin ire than her neih b jrs. Itwa, Minnesota and Dakota, with its 4 uno miles f easily const meted and cheaply maintained lines of railroad and the republi- ans uf this state will not cease th ir efforts until all wrongs be righted. W ivallirm our aiiheranee to the American sr.le'n of tariff, under which, with its broad p'roiectiou of American labor, our country lias prospered bevoud any other, as the business of the country now demands revision, the re publican, alive to the demands of rery mate rial interest, will see to it that such revision slml! be mad'' at the earliest practical day. We condemn the action of the democratic ma jority in conunss in that, after repeater! pledges of tarill reform, it Ins utterly failed, while lning a lar.ro majority in the house of represruf a'iTt-. where t trill hills must origi nal, to bring about such reform, w hich must coin frio the party tliaf has ever been the friend, of the American laborer and producer. The grateful tha.iks ot the American people aro due to lho?e who defended the union in the Ijtewar an 1 we are in favor of providing nuitabla pensions for soldiers and sailors who wer disabled iu its service or w ho have since, without thir fault or vice, become objects of public r private charity and to the widows a1"' rr.Ua, of Ihose who fell in its defense. Woheartily sympathize with the acbition aint rifort of the patriots of Ireland in their enderiTor to obtain for their country the bl-siiig.- of free institutions and local self j.jvwriimenl. We recognize in t haiies Stew art rarnelland the Kt. lion. Willi.in K. (Jlad nroiie worthy cli;iniion? of the fuiiJaniental priwlnals of the Declara'.iou of Indepen dence, We coudemn the action of the president in hi attempt to return the trophies won by kravery on the field of battle. We condemn the narrow, intolerant and par tisan action of the democratic party in exclud ing from the privileges of state citizenship the half mil.loa .people of Dakota, foIcI v on the un manly and indefensible ground of it difference in political views. JS'ot content with their ef forts to exclude the negro from the elective frauchUtt, they how seek to proscribe an intel ligent, pros'ierous ami patriotic people because oft lie! r poll I icul opinions. We view with alarm th-i abuse of the veto ower py the president of the United States, A pow-r from the use of which Kngland sv reigas have abstained for two centuries; a ower ued but dx times during the first forty ears of our national government, a power by the people intrusted to the president for the urpo-e of prs venting liastv legisl -tion, has bv tke present incumbent of th-u i.tliee been rscd o thwart the welt ascertained will uf the peo ple aid to resist their repeated demands, lie lias, in one-half of a. single term of ofiice. used the power more t hues than all the predecessors combined, lie has sought by all the prece dence use of extraordinary power, to const i tuf himself a co-ordinate branch of the na tional legislature, lie has lreiuentlv eer ied tins one man power'' by the cowardly method of th "pocket veto" bv which import aut measures have been defeated without suiy r.-asoti being given for withholding its ap proval. Vote for J. C. Eikenbary for sheriff, lie will servo you ivell. Vote for Judge C. Russell foe county judge. A better judge can not be had. The uncrowned rebel kins of Dixie, will be abroad in his dominions this week. The planes and mountains of Georgia will ring with the old rebel yell , this week. "The only living ex-president" will be in Georgia this week. He will make a few remarks, and it will be interesting to note the cordiality of his reception, contrasted witli that accorded to 3Ir. Cleveland. The New York Produce Exchange votes to-day upon an important matter, namely, the establishment of a clearing house s3-stem for the settlement of differ ences in transactions in grain. This is a system, the adaptation of which, progress ive members of the grain trade have loi sought to secure, but up to the present in vain. The plan does not embrace a sys tem of contract clearances; it will only simplify the work transacted by it. The plan seems to promise a useful and even a necessary advance in the business of the exchange. LiKi'TKNsxr Di'.nwoody of the Signnl Service, who for a number of years has J taken an active interest ill developing the State wtather-Herviccs, lias recently accomplished it 'uood piece of work in securing Hie adoption of n uniform system of Hunimuriziiiir and tabulatinir tin: data published monthly in the various state bulletins. Hitherto every state has had pretty much its own plan, and the change to n sinirh form of statement cannot fail to lie advantageous to all concerned I he reports of it t teen sUtc weather-serv ices are abstracted in the last monthly wertlier-revi' v of the- Signal Service. S:i Wf. Ji ixn: Cooi.kv, who has traveled throughout thu west, when asked who he thought would be the next presidential nominee of the republican patty said that all (lie delegates in the republican state, judicial and county conventions are strongly in favor of the renomi nation of Jam ;s G. Dlaii e, and Mr. Cooley says he would like to see the ticket of ' "Blaine and Mandcrson." Mr. Man- derson is more popular with the old soldiers than any other man in the west and would strengthen the ticket. The judge is strongly in favor of holding the next national convention in Omaha, and thinks without a doubt they will get it there. A Vigorous KIC. Mmc'iiester Press: It docs not mat ter a 1 trass farthing what their "exam inations" show. AVhat we know, und what every person knows who has tiny business to do through the mails, is that the service is utterly demoralized; that never before was it so inellieient nnd un certain, and that it is a fact that nobody can place the least dependanee on g t ting their mail matter with an' regu larity, or in any sort of time. Tin? com plaints of the failure of the postoliiees to properly attend to the business of the country are. universal. They come from all quart'-rs, and from men and news paper.! of all parties, and shouts of "You lie," and calling vile names, by th i post master editors, do not alter the fact.. RanchingSn South Ainarica. In there were forty-one million sheep in the United States, seventy two millions in Australia, and one hundred millions in the Argentine Uepublic. We have two-thirds of a sheep to ev ry inhabitant; in the Argentine Uepublic there are twcntv-flve sheen, toeverv man, woman, and child. We have fort- mil lions of horned cattle to a population of sixty millions; the Argentine Kepubhc and Uruguay have thirty-eight millions of cattle to a population of four and a half millions. Iu Uruguay, with a pop ulation of live hundred thousand souls, there are eight millions of cattle, twenty millions of sheep, two million horses, or sixty head of stock for each man, wotnnn. ami child. Fifteen million dollars has i?en niTcstcii ni wire tences in Uruguay alone, and more than twice ,as much in the Argentine llepuMie. In cither of the countries a cow can be bought for hye dollars, a steer fatened for the mar ket for ten or twelve dollars, a pair of oxen tor tweutv-ii ve, dollars, a sheep lor tifty or sixty cents, an ordinary working liorse lor eigne or ten dollars, ami a roadster for twenty-live, a mule for fif teen dollars, and a mare for whatever her hide w ill bring. Mares are nevtr itrolctn to saddle or harness, hut are dlowed to run wild in the pastures from the tim3 they are foaled till they cease to be of valus for breeding, when they are driven to the saledcros, or slaughter houses, and killed for their hides. A man "vyho would use a mare under tin- saddle cr before a wagon would be con sidered of unsound mind. There is a superstition against it. Wir.i.i.uf L cutis, iu llurpti's Jfayaziw- for November. Dakota. Whether admitted as one, cr two states, there arc many reasons why the people should not longer be deprived of the - right to manage their own affairs. These are words of the governor of Dakota in his annual report of the con dition of affairs in that territory, anil they call attention to one of the most scandalous acts of oppression ever perpe trated on. an intelligent and progressive people. Dakota, according to the Gov ernor's report, had a population of 5(58, 477 when tiiat document was prepared. It will undoubtedly have 000,000 by Un tune that congress organizes. Yet it is safe to say that that body, as in the past three or four years, will refuse to admit it to the privilege of statehood. At the present hour it has more inhabitants than Maine had in ISsO, although that com monwealth v.-as the twenty-fourth in that respect in that year among the states. Fourteen states at that time had each a smaller population than Dakota has to day. The eon.bincd population of Xevc da, Delaware, Oregon and Colorado at the late.-t national census was taken was more than 100,000 under that of Da kota at the present time. If Dakota's inhabitants were divided up numeiieally at this moment they would make four states as populous as Delaware was :i. anl el jven s ites :rs populous r.f Nevada. Doth of thesi commoiiw.-alths nssisf in the election of a r resident and each has three members of the national legislature. The former privilege is witheld from Dakota, anil it is permitted no voice in the making of the country's laws. Dakota's appeals for admission have been treated with contempt by the democratic majority in the popular branch of-congress for several years past, and they probably will be during the next two years, simply because the re publicans are in a majority in the terri tory. For outrages scarcely more arbi trary and despotic than this the thirteen colonics rose in rebellion and shook off the British voke. S7. Louis (J tube Dttii. A Rampant . Theorist. Tidbits: Wife Where have you I teen all day f Husband -In the beer saloon around the corner. Wife What were you doing there, I should like to know Husband -Talking with other social ists. Wife Oh! Well, have you dicided how to escape from this blighting pov eityi Husband Yes; we are going to make farmers pay a line for every hour they work. THE HEIRS OF MILLIONAIRES. IIow tlie Lines of Inheritance are Car ried Along. When Jay Gould stepped lightly out of his oflieo in the Western Union building tho other ufternoon there was a smile on his face fcueh as had rarely ever been seen there be fore ho beeitnio the grandfather to the heir of his son George's fortune. Tho recent ap jtearanee of that youngster gave hope to tlie founder of the GouM dynasty that his mil lions would descend in direct lino down at least to the third generation, from whence tho lino of inheritance may yet ho carried along through generations yet unborn. It used nl ways to bo said in olden times when millionaires were so few ns to number but three or four in the whole United States, the grent fortunes in this country were pretty suro to le dissipated by the sons of tlie men who gathered them, and that there was no chalice of the growth of hereditary wealth under the leveling influence of democracy. IHit wo can now see tho New York inherited fortunes, not few in number, that have been firmly held through three or four generations, and bid fair to continue far iieyontl the heirs now ou the stage. The foundation of tho biggest fortune in Anieiien was laid three quarters of a century ago by Cornelius Vnn derbiit, who was even then tho captain of a petty fleet; and the millions of the commo dore descended to his son, AVilliam II., in whose hands they doubled, and by him they were bequeathed to AVilliam K. and his other children, several of whom Lave now posterity who are reasonably sire of inheriting it in duo time. Too foundation of the gigantic fortune of the Astor family (at least $100,000,000) was in t hi.; city 100 years ngo by John Jacob Astor, who transmitted it io Lis heir, William B. who transmit f.d it to his heir, John J., who some -ears ago. turned over the keeping of it to his heir, William W., to be transmitted in course of time to his heir," already on tho stag" heir of the fifth generation since the origin of the Astor fortune. These are the most familiar examples of hereditary fort lines in New York, though the list might bo extended to the Do Peysters (whoso estate dates before tlie revolution), the Rhineland- ers and many others. as ror me lortunes now in the second gen eration and hastening to tho third, they are too numerous to mention. So it is an error to suppose that the sons of the rich are always sure to bo spendthrifts who will dissipate their heritage. It is a fact, on the contrary, that in' the cases referred to, as well as in others that might be spoken of, tlie original inheritance iias been vastly increased by each successive generation. The head of the Astor family today if we regard William W., who manages tho property, as the real head is a shrewd business man, always enlarging the estate; and the same tiling may be said of William K. Yanderbilt and of others in the line cf niillionaircism, including George Gould, tho son of Lis father. Jay, and the fa'her of Lis son, Jay. John Swinton in Kansas City Times. A Hint to Sleepers. It is perfectly true that no one over heard of a snoring savage. In fact, if the wild man of the woods and plains does not sleep quietly lie runs the risk of being discovered by Lis enemy, and the scalp of the snorer would -con adorn the belt of Lis crafty and more silent sleeping adversary. In the natural state, then, "natural selection" weeds out those who disturb their neighbors by making night hideous with snores. With civilization, however, wo Lave changed all this. The im pure air of our sleeping rooms induces nil manner of catarrhal affections. Tlie nasal passages are tlie first to become affected. In stead of warming the inspired air on its way to tho lungs, and removing from it the dan gerous impurities with which it is loaded, tho nose becomes obstructed. A part cf the air enters and escapes by way of tho mouth. The veil of tho palate vibrates between the two currents that through the mouth and tho one still passing through the partially closed nostrils like a torn sail in tho wind. The snore, then, means that the sleeper's mouth is partially open, that Lis noso is par tially closed an-1 that Lis lungs are in danger from the nir not being properly warmed and purified. From the continual oieration of these causes the increase of impure air in sleeping rooms and . permitting habitual snorers to escape killing and scalping some scientist has predicted tbat in tlie future all men (and tLo women, too) will snore. It goes along with the decay of the teeth and bald hcadedness. Fi reside. Myth of tlie Oklnagen Indians. Mr. A. S. Gatschet publishes an interesting myth of the Oiduagen Indians in The Globus, lie relates Low tho animals climbed on u chain of arrows to Leaven in order to obtain the fire. Tlie bird Tskau made a strong bow of tho rib of an elk which Le killed by eating its heart. 1 hen Le killed the coyote with Lis arrows, but tlie latter was revived by the fori. Then lie shot one arrow into the sky. The next arrow he shot stuck in the end of the lir.st one. Thus Le continued until a chain was formed reaching from heaven to earth. Ail animals climbed up this chain, and the beaver obtained the fire. An analysis of this interesting legend shows that its elements are found among a great number of tribes of the Seiisb. lineage and among their neighbors, but it seems that tho myth of the ascent to Leaven is characteristic of Seiisb. mythology. Gat schet tries to interpret tLis legend, and thinks bird Tskan represents tho moon, the coyote tho sun; but this seems improbable, as the mytli is extremely complicated, and is probably de rived from a great number of sources. Ifc is desirable tbat ue mythology of the native tribes of the upper Columbia should be col lected systematically, for the analysis of tra dition is one of the most important methods of studying the history of the native races and the psychology of nations. Science. A SALTER KRAUT MILL HOW THE POPULAR EDIBLE PREPARED FOR MARKET. IS Immense Proportion of the Itusinesii in Chicago Cabltao Knlhliii a I'loli table Industry Tho Cuttluc; of the Cabbugo. In the Tank. 9 ,;If you want to know Low saiuT kraut is made I'd lietter explain from tho beginning," said Mr. Johnson. ''Kxpcrienee has taught mo that instead of raising cabbage plants hero iu glass Louses in winter tirii'? it is cheaper Mid better to raise them in tho south from the seed and then transplant them to Illinois when the weather becomes warm enough. Tho plants uro more Lardy, Inrger, and 1 can get tht'in set out several weeks ahead of the hothouso growers. Wo have nearly i!,(HK acres of land in Tennessee, Flor ida and Illinois on which we grow nothing but cabbage. Wo plant tho si ed in Tennes see in March and then transplant the plants in car loads to Florida ami Illinois, 'i'here are from iioo.Ooo to Ooo.ooo plants in n. car load. .Sounds big, but it's true. The cabbage planted in Florida from Kept, lo to lec. 1 ripens from Feb. 1 to June 15. Wo have had new cabbage as early as Christmas down south, but that's unusual. Hero we plant from May to July, and llio cabbage is rio from August unlil frost comes. October is the big month." 'Do you rstis'j a!! your own cabbage.''' 'Don't begin to do it . We buy over$rO,OO0 worth of cabbage every year from farmers around hero and those in Iowa. There fire live car loads of Iowa cabbage standing on my sidetracks wv:. I,"o; Iowa cabbage usu-. ally is not as good as Illinois, but this year it's better because they've had more rain there than we've had. Farmers for miles around bring their cabb-;;e to us. See thiit string of wagons along thai street," end Lo pointed to a row of wagons loaded with cabbage like so much hay. After the lir.st wagon load of cabbage had lwen weighed it was hauli-d to a large, long building, two stories, or really one and a half btories m height. Tlie sides w ere 'pi n, and with a pitchfork the cabbage was tossed into the upper flour j'i.,t Jii;e hay is put into tho mow. liut insteaa of l ing .scattered over the floor tho cabbage is piled up in a .' pace altout fifteen fee! in width, a board nailed up to tho inner rafters preventing it from going farther. After the cabbage was unloaded tho driver took from a lower platform a load of cores and outer leaves of cabbage. This is fed to their cows, .'in 1 is said to do them as much good as tho saner kraut does human beings. 'We'll go inside now and Vil show you where t hose cores, and cabbage loaves come from," said Mr. Johnson, leading the way. Hail I known what t was 1 would have gono there first. Hanged around the room, to call it that, at equal distances apart, were thirty- two girls working as l,u :ily as bees. In her right Land each girl held an instru ment which can bo th -s ribi-d as a Luge "cheese trier," one of those things vi.u stick in cheese, give it a twirl, and then pull it our, to test it- lmteyness, you Know. Well tnose giril treated tho cabbage like one would chee-e, Drawing one down from tlrs pile with a spita- f ill little dig she'd thrust tho knife into tho side of the core, give her wrist a couple of twists, and the whole core would come out as nicely as could be. Ihey were very expert at it, and could core G V cabbages an hour with ease. After tho core was removed, with three or four blows witli the knife tlie outer leaves of tho cabbage would bo whipped tiff with all the worms, dirt and insects, and shoved into a trough, from which thev loh to tho platform described before. At the same time tho clean head of cabbage was thrown back of them ou to a 'nig, broad platform, running tho whole length of tho room. On this platform were half atloxen women armed wiitu nav rakes, a no ns mo caitoago was thrown on to it the women pushed it lo the center of tho floor, wh-.-re lour men took it and fed it into a machine somewhat re sembling tho stones of a grist mill. A very interesting nnd important part of sauer kraut making is the cutting of the cab bage. As wino depends greatly on for flavor and quality, so does sauerkraut depend upon the maimer in which the cab bage is cut. To be firm and crisp, yet tender the cabbage must, be cut in long thin slices. To chop it up line, as could be dono much easier, would practically bo to spoil ir, or render its value much less. After exiieri menting for over iivo years a knife was in vented which does the work in tho most sat isfactory manner. By means of a shaft in tho center it is made to revolve very rapidly, and eight knives slice tho cabbage as neat as a butcher could a steak. Tho knife can cut meat, too, as some of tho operators have found out to 'their sorrow. This wheel of knives is about thirty inches iu diameter, and will cut from 5'.,0 0 to iJO.OoO pounds of cab bage a day, depending on tho skill and energy of tho feeders. Four feeders work, although only one can feed if desired. The Lead of cabbage is laid on the wheel and tho pressure of the hand causes it to disappear iu a few seconds. Be neath the wheel is a V sh'aped chest or box, into which tho cut cabbage talis. When it is full a big truck, holding -100 pounds of cab bage, is shoved under ir, tho right side of the chest is pulled back, and the cabbage falls into tho truck. Tho girls who cut the cures from the cabbage stand on a platform raised about three feet from the floor below tho one on which tho cabbage is unloaded. When one of tho trueks is Ailed it is puthc-d along a gangway by two lusty young men and into a big building 50x1 S4 feet. This is called the packing house. Kevcr having seen tho vault of a brewery, I can't say it l.-ioks like one, although I judge it dors. It is filled with huge tanks u feet in diameter and 10 feet deep. There arc twenty-eight tanks in this building and t. n tanks in an adjoining building Sx'.W feet in dimension. Each tank holds 400 barrels of sautr kraut, worth nearly $4,000. Thus tho thirty-eight tanks, if only filled once a year, contain 10.'J,f:;.'0 worth of sauer kraut. in tacn nnn are two nig, strong men wearing long rubber boots. When a truckful of cabbage is dumped into tho tank thev tramp it uown. The object of this is to break tho fiber sufHeientiy to Jet out which is plentifully s action at once. Iu iiitate fermentation, sauer kraut are cab tLe water, so the salr, thrown over it, will takt other words, it is to fai Tlie sole ingredients of bage and salt. H ornis and insects might im prove the flavor, but they are religiously ex cluded. It takes saur kraut from two to four weeks to cure or ferment, defending on the temper ature of tho cabbage when put in and tho at mosphere afterward. It can be kept ns long as desired, and, like wino, improves with age. But it is not kept m tlie tanks. After fer mentation it is plaeeu la barrels - homing thirty-two gallons each, and Leaded up as tight as an oil barrcL Then it is shipped in any quantity desired all over tho country. "Hassler" in Chicago Inter-Ocean. Facts Concerning Strawberries. Strawberries are said to be particularly wholesome 03 a corrective of tho conditiou produced by malarial disease. The white of on eg? contains as much food as twelve pouadd of 6ttawbemes. --Chicago News. mr vTtfFTiTi'rrv j lujf For the next ii-w be had for S1.10 wet !vs choice ol' lots in r urcliMser half cash, t lie oilier half in one year; or, one third casn, bal ance in one ami tw years: or s'J5 cah. remainder in month- I v i ii t ;i 1 1 in hi f t(,l) u" - residence worth and out lurtlier NOW IB to select your residence lot: contemplate luiiii will convince the residence locality substantial class Iiul;' at once, most scpiit in t he cit v boast lor the year IS -'7, are now beiii.n constructed in handsome addition. Beau In m tfT -OF BESOBX ""Tv Vvr -pT" "PI 3 "TnTTH"1 Kfaa nunrWi -i i ! n it n iiim t imr'm if n 11 n iiii mjum around and through the entire tract. Any one desiring to construct a cottage or a tious residence in touih Park, can examine a of plans of the latest style of oltice. i 113 one tesiriu to to purchas'in-;-, will be drive South J'tirk i kss lli.-n three i'.-rti It cte.i be reticlted convenient! or south on 7th strctt. y CALL ON R. B fr r. f3 te '&3 a FZtO U2Z. FBEM J -V U U U te mr ? fcj ik Have anj-llnag yow w.int from a tv passenger CARRIAGES FOR SHORT STAPLE always kept ready Cal or tigl.t carriages, pall-hearer wagons iil everything tor tuneraU lurnished on short notice. Terms c-ish V fill Trtrv","rira' ifi ,nrr i' iinnt South Park ,,J0 in cash; or one- ma y nay alJ niv - tiint o io'i 1 1 1 to construct a upward ... i .A Is will i ie l; i c j i i i w i iMi leration. consul THS TIMli even though you should not One vibit t South I'twk ii al that it is tlie most desiraino and we will add, that tlie mosL ol' buildings ol which Hattsniouth sriacle 1 rees MOST- TIOM inore preten larirc selection residences by callinir at our propcrt3' with a view examine n' to t lit is oS' :t milt either Chic pari-: iVolil Alio or at our expense. th.-; Op' -ni JIoiioC. I.ineoiii Avenues, HI ies, a v V V. Vi (' 11 li -J ii 9 WiS ry' 3l 4. -v A-?- ttTV or i.m: P MUnPKY & CO. 3 U MSSsSL, v. v; ' .'- cart to a i LEASURF AND DRIVES, can this