Montour American. (Danville, Pa.) 1866-1920, June 06, 1907, Image 3

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    WOMEN OF HOLLAND.
Dutch Fsminlne Co«tumee Are To»
Complex For Words.
The women's costume la a trifle too
complex tor verbal description, as
feminine belongings usually are, but
the white lace cap which covers the
head from eyebrows to nape of nock
and from ear to ear, curving out in
rounded wings on each side of her
cheeks, Is always a conspicuous and
Inevitable portion of a woman's attire.
It may jwisalbly be that on Sunday
this cap Is a trifle whiter or stlffer or
daintier than on week days, but the
difference is not very apparent.
The ladles assure us there Is a vast
difference in the quality of the net and
«he amount of handiwork employed,
but the lent* made no special note of
that. In shupe and outline the camera
finds great distinction between these
caps and those of Katwyk or Markeu
or Bols le I)uc, but between Sunday
and Monday caps In Volendam it re
oords none whatever. For the rest of
the costume feminine Holland asks
above all things apparently a very flat,
narrow chest surmounting enormous
hips, and Volendam is no exception
to this fashion rule. The invariable
black "best waist" of the elder women
Is usually brightened by a square yoke
of lighter color and material, and the
dark apron or oversklrt Is topped by
six Inches or more of gay plaid or
bright colored band worn over an un
derskirt of dull blue striped or black
material and uncountable petticoats.
About the throat a collar formed of
many rows of heavy dark red coral
beads is fastened by huge silver clasps,
and the number of rows, the size and
quality of the beads are matters for
feminine pride. Long hair Is not the
glory of women In Holland, save per
haps at Marken. It is usually hidden
and at Volendam Is out quite close and
entirely covered by a tight fitting thick
black silk cap concealed beneath the
nnowy white lace. The younger girls,
from the tiniest toddler to the young
melaje, old enough to wed, wear dresß
os aud caps the exact counterpart of
their grove mothers, no less full of
skirt or narrow of chest, but much
waver in color. A group of tiny maid
ens In a stiff iireeae on the dike resem
bles nothing more than a swarm of
butterflies.—Florence Craig Albrecht In
3crlbner*s.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
No small noise sounds as bad as that
made by squeaky shoes.
Lift any little woman's thumb and
you will find a man under It.
How few people are as polite to their
Mends as they are to strangers I
People seem to begrudge a preacher
*verythlng he gets except his vacation.
The child that is ruled by lore and
the child that has Its own way live at
the same house.
If you were a mind reader you would
Stun a lot of unpleasant tilings which
now you can only surmise.
The man who prides himself on being
a "great observer of little things" can
usually be relied upon for a few un
pleasant remarks.
Soon after a boy ceases to credit his
father with being the smartest man on
earth he imagines his father should
consult him on all doubtful issues.—
Atchison Globe.
Inflection.
The wife of an army officer at a
western post recently had occasion to
visit n small neighboring town to do
some shopping at what Is called the
general store. She was much enter
tained by the variety and antiquity of
the stock of goods, and as she passed
out her eyes were attracted by a pile
of mottoes, elaborately lettered and or
nately framed, the upper one being the
Scriptural passage, "Walk In love."
As she paused the clerk, a dapper
young man of more affability than ad
vantages. stepped forward with the
remark: "Them are the latest things in
mottoes. This top one i? swell to put
over a .voting lady's door—'Walk In,
love.' Lippincott's.
The Outc'or-r Ooy.
Let the boy lean) to hit the bright
spot with a rifle, and If war comes he
can hit the button on the coat of an
enemy the first shot and does not have
to be taught to shoot over again after
he enlists. If he is familiar with guns,
boats, water and the wild woods, he
will be handy anywhere, and you cant
lose him. Any boy who has got a fa
ther who wont do the right thing by
him and give him a chance to love the
woods and the water and the free,
clean air that Clod serves free, when
you get far enough away from man's
city can come along with me some
time, and I will show him how to have
the time of his life.—Outer's Book.
He'll Get the Girl.
Tommy Battles was turned down
when he asked Elsie's father for his
consent. The old man said that Tom
my was a good boy, but lacked per
sistency.
"What Is Tommy going to do about
tt?
He goes to the old man and nsks htm
for his daughter three evenings every
week.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
His Reformation.
"Yes," said the reformed cannibal
chief, "I used to eat every missionary
that came out here."
"That was before you got religion,
eh?" queried the new missionary.
"No; before I got indigestion."—Cath
olic Standard and Times.
Learning.
Roker— I won SSO from Bings last
night playing poker.
Joker—Why, does Bings know how
to play poker?
Soker—Not yet—Lipplncott's Maga
zine.
Why the Dial Has Sixty Divisions.
We have sixty divisions on the dials
of our clocks nnd watches because
Hipparehus, who lived In the second
century before Christ, accepted the
Babylonian system of reckoning time,
that system being sexagesimal. The
Babylonians were acquainted with the
decimal, but for common purposes they
counted by "sossi" and "sari," the "sos
wf representing sixty and the "saros"
Sixty times sixty—3,GOO. From Hip
parehus that mode of reckoning found
Its way into the works of Ptolemy
about the year 150 A. D., and on that
authority It has been perpetuated.
■<* ' t.M Hf r
ODD WAYS OF POETS.
Tennyson, Artistically Fastidious, Was
a Personal Sloven.
There la a sort of idea in the public
mind that the poet is what scientists
call a "fixed genius." that every poet
is the exact counterpart of every Other
poet. There is probably no class of
men In the world—if class it can be
called whose members differ more
widely in personality.
Pope, for Instance, was a miser.
Dry den, Sedley, Rochester and Shelley
seemed to have no use for money and
"splashed It about in the most Insane
fashion. Shakespeare was a keen man
of business. His contemporaries, Mar
lowe and Masslnger, did not leave
enough to have their bodies decently
burled.
Coming down to modern times, Ten
nyson was artistically the most deli
cate and fastidious of men. A mis
placed comma, an epithet which was
not the perfection of expression, gave
him nights of Insomnia.
Yet he was perhaps the most utterly
careless man of his generation regard
ing his personal appearance. Had he
not been carefully watched by his de
voted wife, he would have been quite
content to wear a suit of clothes until
It dropped off him bit by bit In obedi
ence to the law of gravitation.
A great admirer of Tennyson once
described his first meeting with the
groat poet.
It occurred at a roadside public
house in the Isle of Wight. The late
laureate was seated by the kitchen
fire, with a short black clay pipe be
tween his lips, burning grease spots
out of a pair of check trousers with
the point of a redhot poker.
It was probably Tennyson's "faculty
of silence" which helped him to secure
the friendship of the greatest talker—
In botli senses of the phrase—of his
generation, Thomas Carlyle.
Carlyle had occasional fits of silence,
and he and Tennyson would sit on op
posite sides of the hearth for six hours
at a stretch without exchanging as
many words.
At the expiration of such a period
of silent intercommunication Carlyle
would knock the ashes out of his last
pipe and remark with every symptom
of the keenest intellectual satisfaction,
"Aye. Alfred, mon, we've had a glori
ous nlcht!"
Tennyson's great and friendly rival.
Browning, was as different from him
tn tils personal peculiarities as he was
In point of genius.
He always looked as If he had Just
been turned out of a bandbox. Ten
nyson was one of the most silent of
men. Browning one of the most ebul
lient and loquacious. Tennyson was
pessimistic and somewhat morose.
Browning was always bnrstlng with
optimism and expansiveness.—Chicago
Inter Ocean.
ANCIENT ARMIES.
Ten thousand horse and 100,000 foot
fell on the fatal Hold of Issua.
The army of Artaxerxes before tho
buttle of Cunnxa amounted to about
1.200,000.
An army of Cambyses, 50.000 strong,
wns buried In the desert sands of Afri
ca by a south wind.
A short time after the taking of Ba
bj'lon the forces of Cyrus consisted of
600,000 foot. 120,000 horse uud 2,000
chariots armed with scythes.
Ninus, tho Assyrian king, about 220
B. C., led against the Bactrinns his
arrny, consisting of 1,700,000 foot sol
diers, 200,000 horse and 16,000 chariots
armed with scythes.
When Xerxes arrived at Thermop
ylae his land and sea forces amounted
to 2,6-11,610, exclusive of servants, eu
nuchs, women, sutlers, etc., In all num
bering 5,283.220. So say Herodotus.
Plutarch and Isocrates.
Why Paper Cuts.
Have you ever cut yourself with a
piece of paper? The edge of a piece of
glazed paper looks much like that of a
knife under the microscope. Of course
the little teeth have not the strength
of steel, but If the edge of the paper Is
drawn swiftly over the linger without
much pressure that peculiar property of
matter called Inertia comes Into play,
and the tender teeth will cut the flesh
before they are broken. Tho same prop
erty It Is which allows a candle to be
shot through a one inch plank or per
mits a bullet to pass through a pane
of glass without shattering It, leaving
only a clean, round hole.—C. H. Claudy
In St. Nicholas.
Lincoln and a Suit of Clothes.
On one occasion a Judge was 111 and,
being unable to sit In a case, delegated
Lincoln to hear the mattor. The ac
count of a guardian was In question.
He had paid S2B for a suit of clothes
for his ward and justified It on the
ground that it was a necessary ex
pense. Lincoln held against the guard
ian on the ground that It was an ex- I
travagant expenditure and In passing
on the case stated that he had never In
his life owned a suit of clothes that |
cost S2B.
Wasn't Sure.
"Remember," said the lawyer, "you '
nave undertaken to tell nothing but
the truth."
"I'll do my best," answered the ex
pert witness, "but I won't know how
far I have succeeded until I'm through
with the cross examination."—Wash
ington star.
The Doubt.
Borrows—By tho way, Knox, did 1
leave my umbrella at your office yes
terday? Knox You left an umbrella,
but I don't know whether it was yours
or not.—Exchange.
Thunder in September Indicates a
good crop of grain and fruit for the
next year.— Proverb.
A Quick Guess.
The small boy entered the shoe store
and appeared to l>e somewhat bewil
dered.
"What will you have, my son?" ask
ed the clerk.
"I—l have forgotten what I was
sent for," replied the boy bashfully,
"but—but it is something we have at
home every time ma goes into the
kitchen whLle the cook is there."
The clerk smiled knowingly.
"Oh, I see. You want spats?"
"Yes, that's It, mister," replied the
lad, his face brightening. "I came
after a pair of spats."—Chicago Nejm
ADAM AND EVE. _
The Forbidden Fruit, the Fall tnd the
Three Mystlo Qifts.
Many are the attempts to identify
the forbidden fruit Some say it was
the fig, others the grape, others, again,
the pomegranate, but the most "Ara
bian Nightish" description paints It as
an ear of wheat which looked like a
ruby and was as big as an ostrich egg
and grew on a tree whose trunk was
like gold, Its branches like silver and
3ts leaves emerald.
Our first parents were expelled about
8 o'clock of the afternoon of Friday,
the 10th of May, having resided in
Eden seven years, two months, two
weeks and three days. Adam was
banished to Ceylon and Eve t<> Mecca,
and they remained apart for 200 years.
Adam, according to some accounts,
spent half his time weeping, with his
face to the earth. Others less chari
table aver that his solitude was cheer
ed by Lilith, who resumed her former
relations with lilm.
Wlien he repented and rejoined Eve,
he begged that something might be
given him from the happy garden of
innocence which he had forfeited, and,
10, in answer to his prayer three
mighty archangels were sent to him,
Michael bringing gold, Gabriel frank
incense aud Raphael myrrh—mystic
gifts in after years associated with the
offering of the magi, whom early
Christian tradition identified with
Enoch, Melchlsedek and Ellas.
FLY FISHING RODS.
It Is the Weight Outboard From the
Hand That Tells.
Much pleasure will be found in buy
ing rods and tackle. If Inexperienced,
any old angler will rather enjoy help
ing you out, or you can goto a first
class shop, ask for a salesman who Is
an angler and tell him where you pro
pose to flsh. If economy is an object to
you, very fair working tools can be
had for a little money. It Is surprising
to handle some of the rods that are
priced at $5 to .$lO. I do not consider
weight In the scales of great impor
tance, as I like a good sized, comfort
able handle. It Is the weight outboard
from the bundle that tells. One of the
lightest rods I ever saw weighed eight
ounces on the scnles. It had a big, fat
wooden handle and substantial fittings,
but the rod proper was very light. My
individual preference in for a rod of
ten feet, but lots of men prefer some
thing shorter. I have seen good work
done with an eight foot rod, but there
is a great difference In the power of
rods of the same length. A tall, strong
man can handle a rod of great power
and with a suitable line bring out all
there Is in It. He may be able to do
this all day long without great fatigue,
while a weaker person would be hear
ily handicapped and tired to death.—
Forest and Stream.
Strange Freak of Memory.
There is a strange story of how
Sir Walter Scott, producing "The Bride
of Lammerinoor" during Illness, was
afterword found to have forgotten en
tirely what he had thus created. Ac
cording to James Ballantyne, "the book
was written and published before Mr.
Scott was able to rise from his bed,
and lie assured me when It was first
put into his hands in a complete shape
that he did not recollect a single inci
dent, character or conversation it con
tained. The original Incidents of the
story, which he had known from l<oy
hood. he still remembered, but he knew
no more about the story he bad writ
ten than he did before he began to
write or even think about writing it."
These facts were corroborated by Mr.
Lockhart, Sir Walter Scott's son-in
law and biographer, so that they are
placed beyond question.
An Earthquake In Persia.
Professor Vambury, the Hungarian
orientalist was in Shiraz, Persia, at
the time of one of Its devastating earth
quakes. The shook was terrible, throw- ,
ing great houses about like shuttle- 1
cooks and splitting the hills beyond the
town. When the very earth seemed in
process of disruption and men and wo
men were weeping and tearing them
selves In agonies of fear two mad fa
natic priests stalked through the tot
tering city oryiug aloud that the for
eigners sojourning in the place had
brought on the calamity. And the peo-1
pie took up the cry "The Frengis are
unclean!" and made a rush for the
house in which the professor had been !
staying. Only the entire collapse of j
tlie property adjoining beat off their at- )
tack and enabled liiin to make his es- j
cape from the city.
Dress Millennium.
When the dress millennium arrives
and every woman finds herself a thing 1
of Joy to look at, able to walk in com- j
fort and with,a pocket for her purse,'
It will be the result of an elementary '
training In dignity, comeliness and
common sense.—Reader.
i
Wanted a Second Trial.
"You were guilty of one matrimo-,
nlal mistake. I shouldn't think you
would marry again."
"Oh, but you know a verdict of
guilty usually leads to a second trial,"
replied the gay grass' widow.—Phila
delphia ledger.
Caustic.
"Yes," said the bride of a week.
"Jack tells me everything he knows,
and I tell him everything 1 know."
"Indeed!" rejoined her ex-rival, who
had been left at the post. "The silence'
when you are together must be op
pressive."
Preliminary.
Stella—l wonder why sentiment at- j
tacheg to a first kiss ? Bella—lt's like j
the first tooth. You've got to have it;
before yon get the second.—Brooklyn,
life.
Crossed the Border.
(Extract from a lady's letter)—We j
must have been traveling very fast, for i
In the morning all the people were :
swearing at us In German and early In
the afternoon they liegan to swear at !
us in Italian.—Simplicissiinus.
A Mean Cut.
Dora—ls it true that Jack is going to
;marry you? Flora—Yes, dear. Dora—
Well, you'd better make him sign the
ipledge. Flora—Why, Jack doesn't drink.
jDora— No, hut he probably will.—
Cleveland Leader.
hiJ ARGUMENT OF FORCE.
Napoleon Smashed a Vase, and the
Treaty Was Signed.
Early In April, 1797, the people of
Austria demanded peace with France.
Negotiations were begun In the vicini
ty of I.eoben. Bonaparte, in an inter
view with the Austrian plenipotenti
aries, said to them, "Your government
has sent against me four armies with
out generals, and this time a general
without an army." In the treaty
which the Austrian commissioners pro
jected the first article stipulated that
the emperor of Austria thereby reoog
ulzed the French republic. "Erase It!"
exclaimed Napoleon. "The existence
of the republic Is as plain as the sun.
This article Is only fit for the blind.
We are our own masters and shall es
tablish auy government we prefer. If
one day the French people," he con
tinued, "should wish to create a mon
archy, the emperor might object that
he hud recognized a republic." The
preliminaries were soon settled, Napo
leon signing for France, thus placing
himself on an equal footing with the
emperor of Austria. The formal treaty
known as Campo Formlo was signed
In October, 1797, Austria fulfilling the
pledges she had ulready given. The
Austrian plenipotentiary protested
against tli» distribution of the prov
inces beyond the Adige. Napoleon was
angered at this, and, seizing a vuse,
dashed it to the ground, exclaiming,
"If it is not so nrranged I will break
your monarchy as I have brokeu this
vase!" This argument of force, as
demonstrated to tlie diplomat was
convincing, and the treaty was signed.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION.
Don't Develop the M nd at the Expense
of the Body.
The man or wotuat. who would train
the mental faculties without any refer
ence to the physical shows a faulty
qualification for the work in which he
or she may be engaged. The mind
may be ever so well trained and stored
with knowledge of the books, but un
less there Is behind it u reasonably
strong body life runs the risk of be
ing a failure; if not that, an existence
of pain that serves as a limitation upon
its possibilities. It is a species of cru
elty to educate the mind at the ex
pense of the body. Better let a child
grow up into manhood or womanhood
with an Inferior education than with
a better education of the mind and a
body weakened in the effort.
The fact that so many men in this
country who have succeeded In bus I
ness and In professional and public
life have been the sons of farmer*,
whose early life has been spent out of
doors, has heen a sub)ect of remark.
May It not be accounted for on the
ground that In their boyhood their
physique was developed so that In aft
er life, besides their mental acquire
ments, they had strong Itodies with
which to do the work they have so
successfully performed? This Is not
only possible, but very probable. -
Knoxville Journal.
A Stolen Trade Secret.
The manufacture of tinware in Eng
land originated in a stolen secret. Few
readers need to be informed that tin
ware Is simply thin sheet iron plated
with tin by being dipped into the molt
en metal. In theory it is nil easy mat
ter to clean the surface of iron. Dip
the Iron Iti a bath of boiling tin and
remove It enveloped In the silvery met
al to a place of cooling. In practice,
however, the process is one of the most
difficult of arts. It was discovered in
Holland and guarded from publicity
with the utmost vigilance for nearly
half a century. England tried to dis
cover the secret In vain until James
Sherman, a Cornish miner, crossed the
channel, insinuated himself surrepti
tiously Into a tin plate manufactory,
made himself master of the secret and
brought It home.
Women and Jewelry.
"Women know a great deal more
about iiuying Jewelry now than they
knew twenty-five years ago," said a
Jeweler. "When I first started in the
business a clerk with a persuasive
tongue could talk a woman Into buy
ing most anything It wasn't safe for
her to step inside a shop unless she
had a man along. Now the average
woman knows more about Jewels than
the average man. Of course they can
be fooled—anybody can but an expert
—but as a rule she buys with a sur
prising knowledge of value, and her
taste in the cutting and setting la ex
cellent."—New York Post.
Brains.
"A man stood on his head twewhr
minutes in order to win a wager. He
died the next day."
"What killed him? Congestion of the
brain?"
"No; If he had had any brains he
wouldn't have done It." Cleveland
Tlaln Dealer.
Specified.
"When in trouble." said the cmlneal
lecturer, "refrain from worrying."
"But, doctor," asked a woman In the
audience, "how can we?"
"Anyway," replied the lecturer, "re
frain from worrying other people."
Worse Still.
She—You'll be glad to learn. deer„
that I've got out of visiting our rela
tives. Ho—Grand! Splendid! It hung
over me like a cloud. How did you
manage it? She Oh, I asked them
here!—lJfe.
Meeting the Situation.
"I wonder if there's anythiug seriou*
between that tall girl and the little
captain?"
"I think there is. She has had the
heels of all her shoes lowered."—File
gendo Blatter.
Cause of His Joy.
"What are you looking so happy
over, old man?"
"I am rejoicing over the iblrth of
twins."
"Great Scott! 1 congratulate your
"Don't congratulate me. Go and con
gratulate Evans. He's the lucky man.
I never did like him."—Philadelphia*
Enquirer.
His Attentions.
Nan—How attentive young Mr. All
gawn la to his pretty wife! Fan—l
don't wonder you notice it, but you
must have been misinformed. They
are not married yet. -Chicago Tribune.
THE COTTAGE.
It Bhould Be Without Sham Eleganos
and Elaboration.
There are cottages and cottages. Any
modeet, unpretentious house designed
on strictly economical Hues may be
fitly called a cottage, and It Is more
satisfactory to regard one's own sim
ple little abode an a well built, commo
dious cottage than as a small house of
comparatively cheap construction and
cramped dimensions. It is when glren
to the big swaggering seaside houses of
the rich that the term "cottage" be
comes a misnomer and an affectation.
To the mau of moderate means the
very idea of building a cottage rather
than a house carries with it a sense of
making a home within his means free
from vain striving for a sham elegance
and elaboration. The cottage which
apes the mansion is as absurd as the
affected and exaggerated dignity of the
pompous and undersized individual
who seeks to create an Impression out
of all proportion to his real importance.
Since Simplicity is one of the main at
tributes of a well designed cottage, its
charm and effectiveness must depend
upon the quiet excellence of Its propor
tion and the harmonious and unobtru
sive quality of Its coloring in relation
to its surroundings.—Robert C. Spencer
In House Beautiful.
MISLED BY PARROTS.
How Columbus Missed the Honor of
Discovering This Continent.
A flight of birds, coupled with a sail
or's superstition, robbed Columbus of
the honor of discovering the continent.
When Columbus sailed westward over
the unknown Atlantic, he expected to
reach Zlpnngu (Japan). After several
days' sail from Uomera. one of the
Canary Islands, he became uneasy at
not discovering Zipangu, which, ac
cording to his reckonings, should have
been 211! nautical miles more to the
east.
After a long discussion he yielded to
the opinion of Martin Alonzo I'lnzon,
the commander of the Pinta, and steer
ed to the southwest. Pinzon was guid
ed in his opinion solely by a illglit of
parrots which took wing in that direc
tion. It was good luck to follow in
the wake of a flock of birds when en
gaged upon a voyage of discovery, ac
cording to widespread superstition
among Spanish seamen of that day.
If Columbus had kept to his course,
he would have entered the gulf stream,
have reached Florida and then proba
bly have been carried to Cape Hat
teras and Virginia.
On the Bias.
"What do people mean when they
talk aliout tacking?" asked Bobby, who
had listened to a detailed account of
his sister's first experience in a sail
boat, but In much confusion of mind.
"Oh, you'll know when you're a little
bit oidar," said his sister, but the
small round face wore an expression
of Injury, and she had to explain fur
ther.
"Why, it's just turning halfway
round," she said, with slight hesita
tion, "and then—and then you sail on
the bias."
Old Age and Work.
Old people make a great mistake
when they give up work. Many men
who linve made a competency in busi
ness and feel entitled to retire from
active work And themselves declining
in health and becoming prematurely
old for want of occupation. In most
aged persons the vital functions con-
tinue in active exercise under normal
conditions, but if the regularity and
moderation of business life are depart
ed from trouble will surely follow
JKMZ* . AM*
The Home Paper
of Danville.
Of course you read
i »ii ii
THE nEOPLE'S
KOPULAR
I APER.
Everybody Reads It.
Publisher Every Morn: uxcept
Sunday
No. II L Mah« - "g'St.
SubsCi%;>lion 6 c.« J -. »* V' udc.
AERIAL TELEGRAPHY.
First Attempted by Amontons In the
Fifteenth Century.
One of the first systems of aerial
telegraphy was attempted In the fif
teenth century. The originator was
Amontons, at that time considered siuj
of the cleverest scientists of the world.
Yet you never hear the name nowa
days In connection with that of Morse
or Bell. However, Amontons develop
ed a system of signal telegraphy so
that a message could be sent from
Paris to Homo In three hours. Those
who assisted In the transmission of the
message along the line were unable to
tell the nature of the message.
Posts were placed from Paris ncross
the Alps at consecutive points, *-here
men were stationed with telescopes.
Different signals, representing com
binations of letters, were run up at
each post. The man at the other end,
seeing the signal, placed a similar one
before his post, and so the message
was carried to Its destination.
The key to the signal was known
only to those who sent the messages
In Paris and to the recipients a thou
sand miles away. Amontons was not
encouraged In his work by the puffy,
gouty functionaries of the time and
discontinued his efforts. Philadelphia
North American.
A Domestic Distinction.
"They say that your wife wears the
pants," commented the tactless friend.
"She does not," responded young Mr.
Enpeck with some spirit. "She merely
selects 'em."—Louisville Courier-Jour
nal.
Snilff!
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JOHN HIXSON
TO- Ut E. FEONT ST.
112 KSLLthbcouch
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1 Htt II
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No. ii E. Mahuninjt St..
A 7=