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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1888)
). r 3S 2sT O T 1 3 B HC 8. Publishers & Proprietors. THE PLATTSMOOTJl HERALD In piitrllslied e-ry evening excfpt Ktinriny nd V--kly every 1 hur.Hiliiy iiioriilug. fi?ls teretl at I lie potitofTlce, riaUMiioulli. Ntbr.. t nTrid-cU)t matter. Oiilce comer of Vine unl yiltb street, ieleiiliuuo No. M. TMUI rOK UAILV. One copy one ear In advaice, by mull oo Ouerupy per inontli. t'yruriler fx One copy ierweek, by earlier 13 TKRMS roR WKKKLV. One eopy out) year. In adviinco $1 .V) OuecopyiU luoulttf. In advance 73 Tiik Hkii.U.D has a Hplmditl lot of thoroughbred poultry in ajili-jie order for tomorrow they are nil IIunNon ' Lirda and jdinie crowers. If our man should bo deflated our readers will tind them loaned to tlie Jourwl und llicy will be awful Hick birds but wc dont cxject to loan litem. t: desire to iiiiike cuioii:ii men: ion oi me HjMenui'J service Mr. .loim a. na vies lns rendered tho cause of rejmbl:- Citnism in Cass county this cuiiijeiign and Mr. Dav.es has loyally responded to cverr demand made upon him and has proved hiiiifclf an entertaining public speaker of far more than average ability. Mr. D.iyies h.n a bright future before him ami Tiik IIi.uam h i.s a warm place in its heart for the young gentleman. BMBrSSBNMBMSMMHBWSk 1 ins itilul il iy n J;jn ll irriioiis day in Nebiik i nnyw iv; and ;ilthu-h we know our r-id-rs will not b: liiin sr i r local n-w. i in-: 1 1 :i: a r.i win not de sert tin? I.iiniii 's oi our voters wl:ere we arc in th ; h il.it of miking our evening calls. I'olities have been tlie all absorb mil topic lor so Ion:; a inn-; it will le a relief to be permitted to enter th? larger ami wider field of puhlic titTiirs where th newspaper of today properly belongs. The Heuai.u has endeavored to discuss the political issued of the campaign, which closes today, fairly and conscien tiously; wo know we have been houet in our sentiments, and wo have at the same time endeavored not to make the policy of our party a hobby which would become: threadbare before the campaign cioSLM. isow u is over, and we propose to devote our energies to the advance ment of rlattsnuutii aud the interests of Cass county. 0.ir c ty paving for this year isuluist completed; great imnrove- mont has been made by grading and building up defective streets aud the universal comment of .strangers to our city is favorable to it. Plattsm juth h is now reached tlu point where she can al most claim with exact truth to be a city of 10,003 inhabitants and her future growth is assured. We can afford t bury the old feeling of local and section al prejudice which h is been forced on our people by the everla-iting county seat contention and, we advise our mer chants and business mm to discourse that unmanly sentiment in the future. We must all pull together for 'SO ami ere '90 has coma btatid as the third city in Nebraska. We must have the 31. V. If. It. this next year we will h a ve it a net we must be in shape to improve by ii and take advantage of it. Hurrah for rlattsmouth and ch? I'lattsmouthsonian of the future. A ware of kleptomania is passing orer New York city. Every day the advertise ments cry aloud for the "lady and gentle man who took a gold headed umbrella" from one of the theatres, or for "the ladr who borrowed a canary, blind in one eye, from a bird shop. The dry goods stores axe the scene of most of these pilfering. "Few of them become public, said the mannger of a leading house, "and we suf fer few losses In the end." "How do you avoid themV" "To begin with, almost every real klep tomaniac in tho city is known to tih. Many of thorn move in tho best society. Wc Instruct our girls to keep a strict watch on them, nnd if they tak any tiling from tho counters, wo bend a bill for it to their friends." "Why should not their friends return the articles?" "Sometimes they do. As a rule, how ever, they pay and say nothing about It." "Do you meet with any serious cases?" i Know a lady who In church is liable to purloin evou the ornaments of the al tar, und another who, at table, if she can find nothing more attractive, has been seen to lilj her j-ockets with bread crumbs." "What lo kleptomaniacs usually steal?" "Anything that flitters. A binning object is always thu first to draw their at tention. Photographs, too, have much i l:o f..;nic influence. Wo liavo hornet imc.- jihiscil an entire stoc-k of some actor or ii 1 1 I ks, ior u horn there was no pari :eu- c:nq to ms. Oit of the alienees wake me a sobs', Ueautlf ul, sad, aod noft and low; Lot tbe loveUese mui;ic sound alons;. And wtnfc each coio witl wail of woe. Vim and : our Aa hojx-'ti l.ut tear. Out of tbe slieueea v. uLo me a hymn. Whose soundM arc hku bhudowisoft and dim. Out of tho BtlllupKs of your heart A thouMaod hoii'H are Mltviilog ther Wake me a mod if, thou child of art I The txjuz of a ho(e lu a Inst despair, lurk aud low. A ehunt of noe. Out of the stillness, tone by tone, Col'l us a fuow lluket low (is a taoan. Out of tho tlarkneKH flash mo a ong, Urilitly dnrk and darkly bright: Ijet it 6wee; us a lone Ktar sweeps a!ontr Thy in-t.tieal shadows of the id'ht. Hitiji il swert. Where notlihii is drear or dark or dim. Aud carta sou;; soars iuto heavenly hymn. lather ityun. inr demaiid, nnd have found it long after .:.:! s in tho possession of a kleptoma nia,:." "Is kleptomania moro common at one o:isii tiian unotlierV" V gem-rally look for it in the fall. ,t is lik-j uriy other form of lunacy." ' l said a physician, "it is a kind of ':ii::ey. ro:l a inucii abused kind uf lumrev ..jMieitiies are SLi.jeet to it. t'er- -. .i i ii.. i i i , .--.1 iiii :u)i;riiiiLi!y b.iapea nanus jro i;i.j: (l to it. JSoiiso mani:iea who are In ni:J Kj'rnarii in tiicir lucid monj--nts e tije impulse to beereto the ir food or . t-U-ul hi::ail objects ill tho iisylum. " r :- l of a man v.-iiu would not cat . ; !-is io:l v :.a stolen; of u dor? i i nii i i.ia neip si;'iinj ironi ins ;'ii ii;.:. of a clerg"!n:su win) urlihU d in :i.. :.i i.? bits ot ea::-.?'e. a:ul i :. man '..n. i t the point of death, iole the &a:iir x el confessor." ;.: there ho an epidemic of kIepto:::v MICKEY'S CHICKENS. :':oi'!v. If yo-.i -.i to an asylum i:i l:.-nlt!iat iiie vear is noted lor '.!:; i::a Iness. j .ioilier for eriiriip.al ss. Lunaev lias ccles of its own ev Vork tJraphie. " i l v .. ;..; was in t!: l.r.bit of f;.!;i'v . i.e. i t.e. .: j t..e miii, i::h. ik;s . t:? i.Ii v.'.: i.il.l l lh; hwbit, would i ii i iii o! ic t.ivi rsi.-.t i;.-oi-i;ini'. One : t:- .ii, l.ij le.ther snid to hiui - fat. you k-il out of LeJ e-rJUu " :. ; ', i." s :i 1 Put: "it was thc , I .; 1 -.-..;;.! ii to. see. aiil the pil en l.ie liin-r by I ho t-iJe of liie ....i i .r.;- Vi ii "ry. tiie.'V" asked Lis -,.i T. i Pat u x.'.-is iius or i:i Lis iiio:J? :Mni 1 Cuiiiiil.t t no iiio'." Iiio:i Iviio.v 2Iui7 to tVrile. Scooter 1-v tin) wav. I hear new !eporter vor. t hat ...i, liiirh.sriTt'd the i !- r il.L' Aniener.n v hanijuoodlo t darned coyote couldn't write. ! iii :::i :.rtie!e j.hy!:t f!d fieas lev's : !' oes, c::d diJ:i't call them o:.:o. 1 v.u!d a let that go, but v try ii. xt day ho described our lead ;;i o: .-;-'h recent iiupru-taiion of canned ::d never .said a word about i(: l'.'.a: bivalves." I toil you them :cr:i fellers dou't know how to write ,uuJ I'JnHish. New Vork Tribune. r. "Laundered" the Correct Word. A correspondent is informed that laun dered, not "laundried." is the correct form of the past tense and past participle of the vern launder, if there were a verb "to laundry," the formation "laundried" miht bo proper enough. Dut there is no such verb. Launder holds the field as the verb, according to Webster, and must con trol. There is a noun launder, from which both the verb launder and the noun laun dry appear to be derived. Baltimore Sun. NO V EMBER CLOTHING. Proper clothing for November include suit, firm woolen textures next the skin. If some of the various varieties of health wjar cannot be obtained, a good eubsti tule may be found in vests and pant imdj of pure flannel. Looseness of lit u essential; for in buch pliable folds a. these cfarments are lorct-d into by pres sure of outer garb, body heat is entangled as in a net and retained, while outbid' cold is barred entrance. Iy paticnt often say to me, "Doctor, I cannot Iwar wool next my skin. It causes intolcr.:bh : . . l . i - - i , ,, , - ileum" una is iincomioriaoie. er well," is the answer, "but try it just foi . i i , mcuiy unir ntiurs longer; ana it vmi an still restless you in ay change." Insid the given time, cutaneous nerves have t i. i . . . uevouie accuniouieu lt tlie liew-CoK'.er, and have welcomed him as a far better friend than the one set aside; and in n week the most delicate patient would not change back again at all. r 1 1 1 - r t . , . . iK-siuL' uiun.ionai warmtu, mere is an electrical action aroused by friction oi wool against human skin that promotes capillary circulation, keeps skin func tions going and largely contributes tt general health in that singular way which I have named for want of better term, vitalizing power. For electricity is clos. kin to life; how near, no one can tell. Dr. Win. F. Hutchinson, in The American 3I.:giziuc for November. and A fa rent's Lyeiiiiiful frankness. Stern mid commercially respected suceessfr.l parent to his young son: "iiy con, you are about to enter life. Remember what I say to you now. Iet it be buried deep ia your heart. Ie honest. Cheating mny pay for awhile, but in the end honesty is tho best policy." "Father, I think as you think." (Solemnly) "Think, mv boy! I know for I have tried both." Truth. is not at all What Am I To Do? The symptoms of biliousness are un happily but too v. (11 known. They differ in different individuals to some extent. A bilious man is seldom a breakfast eater. Too frequently, alas, he has an excellent appetite for liquids but none for solids of a inoniiiiir. I lis tongue will hardlv bear inspection at any time; if it ivhite and furred, it is rough, events. Tho digestive system is wholly out of order and diarrhea or constipation may be a symptom or the two may alternate. There are often hemorrhoids or even loss of blood. There may be giddiness and often headache and acidity or flatulence and tenderness in the pit of the stomach. To correct all this if not effect a cure trv Green's An just EJoicer, it costs but a trifle and thousands attest its efficacy. The Daily Herald delivered for locts. per week. The staudard remedy for liver com plaint is West's Liver Pills; thev never tisappi'iut you. o0 pills 2.c. At War ick's drug store. ritELd'E. How long tho big pine in Lindsley'a Wood had roared his basso profuiido in tho tempest and whispered his lullaby in tho breeze no one knew. How many clays had passed sinco L'rst tho sun tipped his crest with gold in tho morubigand bathed his branehes with ruddy lire In tho even ing had never even been suggested. How many wintry bhrnuds had weighed down his branches, or how many times ho had shed his coat, or how often ho had fdghed in sympathy with the funoral knell from fct. Mary's, or sheltered under his frrcat swaying arms tho play of lit tle children, was not efeii a matter of conjecture. Little Jjy little he had grown in stature, year by year his girth had increase! until ono morning it dawned upon him that ha was the king of tho wood. There were haughty hemlocks not far away and giant oaks, but not ono of these, for symmetry of btaturo, could comparo with tho big pine, .round bis great trunk in a green spiral there twisted an ivy vine, with lustrous leaves caressing tho pine's rough bark until its tender feelers reached the very topmost branches lanced by the sun beams. Tho dew fell upon tliu ivy nnd tho pine aliko and every morning the sun drank up tho pleaming drops. Far below tho piuo ran the shining river, and behind him lay h smiling meadow. His foot was buried deep in his own brown needles, and ...:b:.. it.. .1 i a m i i i i itiuii i ue sneuer or ins Kindly BhtiUt! u clump of laurel bashes grow. Hidden by the laurels lay a hollow hemlock log that had once been a stately trunk. One awful winter's night a tempest had slain the tree. PART I. Last spring, when the lingering snow in the hollows of the wood had melted and trickled down the rocks to the Iton dout creek, a staid and motherly par tridge built a nest in the hollow log and deposited within its cozy environment of leaves and pine needles thirteen speekled eggs. One day, far down tho dim aisles of tho wood bho heard tho sound of com ing footsteps. Tho partridge squatted closer down upon tho eggs, and no eyo but that of a fox could have seen tho dif ference between her brown back and that of the rotten loir. Her little heart beat. hard with excitement and fear, but tho palpitation failed even to stir tho soft leathers under her win;r. Her eves trlit- tered like twin beads as she peeped out of her hidiur place. Tho his nine saner a low soothing psalm and a chipmunk stuck his head out of a hole iu an oak tree near by. But above tho sound of tho osalin the footsteps were heard by tho partridge coming nearer and nearer. There were shuffling sounds in the dried leaves, and at intervals tho breaking of a twig sounded sharply through tho still :c J. iiicn lrom around the trunk ; ; hemlock which had tossed its n . . : in tho sunlight for forty year: . : . figure of a ineaking boy with u Lo.v held in tho hollow of h:'- 1 1 irlit vv . this time the partridge was stiv it he nest. Her neck v..;s outs.: t and every liber iu her little feathered body was tense v. itn excitemeut. JNearer and nearer en mo tho hoy, his eyes roving through tho wood iu search of a victim for his aiTow. Tho chipmunk ran down the oak and jumped upon tho locr in which tho partridge was palpitating. The squirrel's curiosity overcame its fears and. it stopped upon tho loir to catch a u li os oi Tno lutruuer into its sylvan retreat. The twang of a bowstring cut tho air and a wooden bolt with a shingle nail in its head shot by so ciose that its passage stirred the fur of tho squirrel. The squir rel whisked out of sight and the partridge, with a loud whir which startled the bov so that ho dropped his bow gun, flew into a laurel brake near by. FAKT II. ' The old Domhiick hen wanted to sit. She had tried to satisfy her natural iu stiuct in the wood box. When driven from this retreat bv Mrs. Finu's broom big :is . lie Lun By up Jd to the wants ef tLa L- i v . Corn and meal was alffys T.Ur bar beak, and water In an old tomato can stood so near that she did not hare to leave her nest. Evjry evening when he returned from school little Mike paid a visit to tho hen to teo bow she was getting along, and each time he came he lifted th" hen from the eggs to see if thero was life In them. This continued for three weeks, until one evening on oehlng tho collar door .he found two littlo ducklings with pieces of shell clinging to their baeks peeping In tho cellar. Tho hen was in a quandary. Tho partridge eggs beneath her were yet u hole, and she wa3 divided In her affection for the hatched and the unhatehed. She decided, however, to continue oierations on the partridge eggs, and a few days late? they, too, had devel oped into chickens. Tho whole Finn family wero so tickled nt tho result of the Dominick hen's efforts that they could scarcely contain them selves. Mrs. Finn insisted that tho brood should bo brought up out of tho cellar into the kitchen. Hero tho littlo part ridges hid behind the wood box in a fright ened covey They wero startled by tho least sound, nr.d whisked out of sight at tho raising of a ringer. "1'aix," said Mr. Finn, as he gazed upon tho bunches of brown feathers darling hither and thither over she Uoor. "thiin wild chickens bates the Dooteh for quick ness. LVgoira, but they're liy. Musha, but they hav' no tails!" j "Don't frcckon yersel'," taid his wife, j "they 11 hav foino tails gin six wakes." .Mickey was so tickled with his new charge that ho hated to go to school. Ono day ho put two of tho partridges in bis trousers pocket, and took them with him l.'iey goi out or ins iesit. when ho was called up to the spelling class, and created great excitement in the school. All the children left their seats and confusion prevailed until the wild chickens had ilown out of tho open window. 1'.i:t iv. And so tho sunspivr failed nwr.y into tho autumn. Aim inll breath be gan to kill the 1. : . : i !.::ds!ev's Wood Uy this time !!:. had become strong of win;' r.r.-l o j. .v. : ?r 1 heir native instincts mado .!io;-t ;.ri.r.-h!is into tho fields near bv. Finn v.;.s in a state of constant fear lest thov t.hould not come back, but every evening when tho pan of corumeal was set out iu the back yard the partridges and the ducks wero thero feeding amicably together. Thursday, Oct. 4, had been set apart as a day of feasting. Mrs. Finn had decided to kill six of tho partridges on the previ ous evening, and Mr. Cronin, tho ac cordion player, Mrs. Doolan and her boy Jack, Mike Murphy and his wife, who who bad never eaten the toothsome wild chicken, and Mike Welsh and tho sharer of his joys aud sorrows, had been invited to attend. It was decided after a long consultation between Mrs. O'Brien and Mrs. Finn that tho wild chickens should be served up in a pot pie with appropriate accompaniments of sliced potatoes, sweet marjoiy, thyme, onions, carrots nd other herb and vegetable delicacies. KIXALE. It was the twilight hour in the Finn back yard, when tho frogs were beginning to croak and tho whippoorwill over tho hill was piping his lay. Shadows of ih.v evening were stealing across tho sky. Paler aud paler grew the clouds, and nv'.r against the horizon the outlines of Linis ley's wood wero fading against tho east ern sky. Mrs. Finn aud her bov wero sitting on the doorstep watching the r , tridges eat their evening meal and I-':. to oegui mo slaughter ot the innocents for tho morrow's potpie, when across the meadows intervening between the shanty uud tho wood thero came a curious muf- oed sound. "Fhwat is that?" said Mrs. Finn. "Its niescl doesn't know," replied jjiicKey. Again the sound came over the wide reaches of meadow land. It attracted the atteution of tho partridges. They lifted their heads from the pan of corn meal and clustered together. The sound was like soft beating on a muffled drum. There was a sudden movement isong the part ridges, then as ono bird they rose into tho air with a whir winch startled Mickey and his mother to their feet. Huddled closo together in a bunch, which coulc have been covered by a quilt, the part ridges Hew. Thero was a fleeting glimpsi of brown feathers, a rush jf beating wings and tho shadows of the wood closed over the fleeing birds. Mickey looked at his mother in wild e3"cd astonishment. Then he managed to stammer out: "M-m-mother, tho ould chicken called tho little wans, an' they've gone home!" Ernest Jarrold in New York Evening Sun. t f t '.0 .1 " : i ; V,' U vv 1 ti f-1 Uf tl hi w mi r Ma, mm Mil JCAV'y jjat kiuvtv it ? Of course yon do aitdyuiv will want warm Underwear , Blankets, etc. O V U 11 Line is Unsurpassed by any other line in th n city. . I h a n dsom e AlllKTY tf i' ;t asonablc Dress Goods, llroad- ietltt, Cloths, Treeots, etc , cloths. In Hi Com forts n b. lio in Blankets, Flannels, Bed :V :, Ballings, Hutf yen wilt Y WUi 01 in , 'inn pa pay yon il is net rcji ( I looktnLi onr di jfi rent l)c- orcr before jnirchasi n i. It will MYItJVd RUGS and a Handsome Line of Car pets, Ma its, Floor Oil Cloths, and Linoleum at Low Prices. 1-4 Ut 'Logic is Loaic " m.ic . tue casj oi our iricuu 3IcKay: lis stid to himself in his resolute way, HiAl a cougri wtucli was growing; from ba I to worse 3Iast be cured, in spite of a slender purse An oceiii voyage was out of the question A Florida trip a useless suggestion; Yet till he wjuldn'tf His money hi pai-.' For tin "G !den Me Iical Discovery by Dr. Piercj made; And s sound as a nut is his htalt.i to day uL gic ii loji J, that's all I say.' S50O It e ward. We will pay the above reward for any case of liver complaint, dyspepsia, sick aeactache, indigestion, constipation cr Tostivenes8 we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liyer Pills, when the directions are stnctlv complied with. They are purely yeg; table, and never fail to irive satisfaction. Large boxes containing 30 sugar coated pills, 25c, Por s-.i!r by all lru agists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The eren- nine m muf icture-1 only by John O. We & Co., W. Mtlison St. Cbicago.and Sold by W. J. Wam'ck. sho nestled in Mr. Finn's old felt hat. Here, too, sho was foiled in her purpose by a pailful of cold water, which percep tibly dampened her enthusiasm and her feathers. Still sho persevered in her efforts at propagation aud was found late in the afternoon, after drying herself in tho sun. trying to scratch a holo in the best quilt upon the parental Finn bed. To this Mrs. Finn objected with a broom and a malediction. "Ye ould blatherskite!" said she, bring ing the broom down upon the bed. for the hen wasn't there when tho broom camo down. "Musha. but I'll wring yer neck wid me fist whin I lay me hands on ye! Phy don't ye g' out an' play marvels wid th' gravel stones 'stead o' fooliu' wid me quiltV" The old hen wandared around the yard disconsolately. Life had no charms for her in her uneasy condition of mind. Be sides, there were no eligible places in the yard in which to carry out her designs. Her miserable condition provoked the sympathy of littlo Mike, and he decided that she should have the pleasure of setting on a nest of eggs if he could by hook or crook procure them for her. For two days, after school hours, he searched the borders of Brown's pond for duck eggs, and was fortunate in finding two. These were stowed away in an old hat in the cellar, and the hen, with a glad cluckle of content, settled herself upon them. That afternoon ho went hunting in the woods. part nr. Whe n ihe partridge Hew off her nest little Mike examined the hollow Ipg and found thirteen speckled eggs. Warcu and smooth they felt in his palms. Fold ing them close against his breast to pre serve the heat, he started on a run for home and dashed into the cellar. His eyes danced with self gratulation as ho said: "Shoo, Nanny, be qniet till I giv ye some more eggs aall hatch out wild chickens." The hen squawked a gentle protest against being disturbed ana then scttlod down to her work again. Daring thi period of larebatioa little Mike attended A Fortune in Titles. Speaking of titles, I encountered tho other day a man who has copyrighted tho names of twenty-eight plays or rather, twenty-eight names for plays and has never written one. He is a journalist of literary aspirations and with an especial leaning toward the stage. Whenever a good title occurs to him ho immediatelv takes out a copyright on it. Ho has hail opportunities of selling one or two of his titles for round sums, but he has thus far steadily refused. lie is considering, how ever, an offer of several humlred'dollars for one of his twenty-eight titles from a manager who wants it for one of those bodge podges of specialties which now oc cupy the stage so largely. Look Layer. 1 h B-J Cl ft fa t-j ;a f j 6v H r ft w is ( m J tT rz i VJ' a m M U ft tl va v-t mm wSLV;! ism "We coir. i:u tn ( Vr 1 it 1 SPECIAL La j PRICES, I ana Extra Good dies', Children's and Miasch' Seal Plushes, Short Wraps, Cloaks, Newmarkets, t?4 "Wlien tlie Coldest Day Comes. The coldest day will fall Ixtween Jan. 20 and CO, according to Gen. Greelv's pre diction. According to his explanation tho coldest day does not occur at the winter solstice, but somewhat later, since tho greatest cold must bo experienced at that time of tho year when the amount of heat received from the sun becomes equal to that lost by nocturnal radiation. As might be expected, tho coldest day fzXLa earlier in the southern part of the" coon try than in the northern. Chicago llcrtld. Other Tiran Til fi T L j i l 3 - s Mil Mr HV 1 lfliiilUiU, jJllJOlJ In all varieties. Our Winter Goods Sick Jjian t 1 in A Neetlcd Zcapetos. Lady (to Bridget, with cards) truce you to sty, iinatret. to tny ono that ciLod that I vrca too LI to be seen? Bridget Yis, but Ehtu e, Diia, I f org it hit intirely, an', ch, mum, they do have such beautiful fall suits on. Sick Lady (.rousing herself) You may say to the ladies, Bridget, that I will ta down at once. Icw Vtik Sun. very complete. Kemeniber offer a Special i rv lOPerC Better Way cf Pultius It. A colored brother recentlv. hi contra dicting what another colored" brother liad Etated, said: "Brother Moderator, that 13 a matter of wrongfulness of stateiiic-nt." An original way of putting it, traly. In stead of declaring that any given declara tion is falao let us hereafter say it is -ft matter of wrongfulness cf statement." V.'e thank the colored brother for tho ex pression. Louisvilla Dccorder. On All Weok-n Underwear, A Call Will . Convince 1 Licli US j .ctKV It n IX temV' ' ulium) hmi:-m 11, . JT'-rVJiV i 11 11 You, eni Discount j it ti 1. ii X i i 1 1 s )