The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, April 12, 1911, Image 5

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    XIIE CITIZEN, WKDNKSDAY, AI'llIL 12, 1011.
A-CENT-A-WORD
VOH SALE.
FOR SALE Six-room cottage with
small orchard, located in village.
Edw. O. Bang, So. Canaan, Pa. 23tf
UNCLE JOE STRAIN of Columbian
Wyandots. Eggs Tor hatching and
stock for sale. My birds are breJ
from New York, Chicago, Boston and
Scranton winners. Correspondence
solicited. Joseph Stephens, Box 5-B,
White Mills. Pa. 23tf
FOR SALE CHEAP Two carpets.
Inquire at Brady's drug store. It
A labor and a woman saver He
gent Rotary Vacuum Cleaner. Sold
r rented. MclNTYRE. 29eol2
LIME-SULPHUR SOLUTION, Pyrox
and soluablo oil for spraying or
chards, also big line of sprayers at
Murray & Co., Honesdale, Pa. 21tf
LEGAL BLANKS for sale at The
Citizen office: Land Contracts,
Leases, Judgment Notes, Warrantee
Deeds, Bonds, Transcripts, Sum
mons, Attachments, Subpoenas, La
bor Claim Deeds, Commitments, Ex
ecutions, Collector's and Constables'
Sales, Tax Collector Warrants,
Criminal Warrants, Etc.
SAP PANS, BUCKETS AND SPOUTS
at prices lower than you are ac
customed to pay. See Murray Co.,
Honesdale, Pa. 21tf
HARNESS, COLLARS, STRAPS,
work and all kinds of horse goods
can be found in good variety at
Murray Co., Honesdale, Pa. 21tf
FOR SALE Kelly & Stelnman
brick factory building, including en
gine, boiler and shafting. Inquire of
J. B. Robinson. 60tf.
TWELVE CLOTH TRESPASS no
tices printed for $1, at Tho Citizen
ofilce, six for 75 cents. Name of
owners, township wherein land Js sit
uated and law pertaining to trespass
ing, printed thereon.
BIG ASSORTMENT OP WAGONS
now ready for your Inspection at
Murray & Co., Honesdale, Pa. 21tf
FOR RENT.
FOR RENT A modern house and
improvements with garden on
West street. Inquire Joshua A.
Brown. 29tf.
FOR RENT Five rooms and bath
on second floor, 1019 Court street.
Inquire Bentley Brothers. tf.
FOR RENT A ten-room house with
all modern improvements, includ
ing electric lights, situated on River
street. Inquire of Jacob Demer,
642 River street.
A SMALL STORE, in Liberty Hall
building for rent. Inquire Bent
ley Brothers. tf
JllSCELLANKOUS.
MAN WANTED To work on a farm.
Need not be experienced. Call at
Wm. Everly's, Lakeville, Pa. 27t3
MR. WINT, tho piano man, will be
in Honesdale the week of April
17. Write or phono to Hotel Wayne.
WANTED 1000 watches to repair.
Promptness and satisfaction guar
anteed. ROWLAND, 1127 Main
street. 24t3.
FOR THE LANDS SAKE, USE
BROOKER'S FERTILISERS! We
are in a position to furnisn reliable
fertilizers at interesting prices.
Murray Co., Honesdale. Pa. 21tf.
WANTED Ono or two pleasant
rooms, in private house, centrally
located, suitable for muslc-studlo
and living rooms; with or without
board. Address, stating terms. R,
Citizen office. 2t,
LOCAL NEWS
The commencement sermon to
the High school graduates will be
delivered by Rev. Father J. W. Bal
ta in St. Mary Magdalena's church,
Sunday, June 11.
Fifteen persons united with tho
First Presbyterian church, Rev. W.
H. Swift, D. D., pastor, last Sunday
morning upon profession of faith, at
the regular communion service.
There will be special Easter services
meit Sunday morning and evening in
tme First Presbyterian church.
Leslie Brader, captain of the
Honesdale Base Ball team, who suf
fered a fractured thumb last week,
is very hopeful of being on the base
kail field when the season opens.
His doctor reports that the injured
member will be nicely healed in six
weeks. This is encouraging news
for tho fans of northeastern Pennsyl
vania, who recognize In Brader a
very clever player.
At a convention of the dele
gates of tho Modern Woodmen
tamps in Wayno county, heldrecent
ly In Odd Follows' Hall, Honesdale,
Edward Reid, White Mills, and Her
bert Hlller, Honesdale, were elected
delegate and alternate respectively
to tho state convention of Modern
Woodmen at Lancaster, May 3.
White Mills was selected for the next
county convention.
The following program will be
rendered at the High school on Wed
nesday at 2:30 p. m.: "St. Cecilia,"
Bertha Flora; Recitation, "Ode to St.
Cecilia,", (Dryden), Lucy Lowo; "In
cidents fn Life of Mozart," Clara
Relf; "Story of Tho Magic Flute,"
Mary Ripple; Declamation, "Alexan
der's Feast" or "The Power of Mu
sic," (Dryden), Anthony Fritz;
"Biography of Wagner," Bessie Cau-
fleld; "Loiiengrln, Dorothy Weir;
"Story of Tanhauser," Marguerite
Uoran; Declamation, "Walter Von
Der Vogelweid," (Longfellow),
Louis Dein.
This is Holy Week In the Catho
lic, Episcopal and Lutheran
churches.
Tho Methodist choir will bo en
tertained at the parsonage next
Thursday evening.
Board of Trade will meet Friday
of next week Instead of this Friday
because of Holy week.
Tho Honesdalo Nntlonal Bank
will be closed Friday, April 14, Good
Friday, a legal holiday.
The Golf club will have a card
party at the Lyric Theatre on the
evening of Tuesday, April 2F.
Judge Charles B. Staples,
Stroudsburg, will hold argument
court in Honesdale, Tuesday.
Otto- G. Weaver bid in the per
sonal effects at the Commercial Ho
tel at a sale conducted on Friday.
A marriage license was Issued
Friday to William J. McLaughlin and
Mrs. Harriet W. Cody, both of
Keen's.
Mrs. William Sell pleasantly
entertained the members of her Sun
day school class last Thursday even
ing. A marriage license was Issued,
Friday, April 8, to Floyd O. Rolston,
Fallsdale and Miss Louise E. Gaston,
Tyler Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tamblyn,
Carley Brook, announce tho engage
ment of their daughter, Nellie J., to
Mr. Walter J. Kimble, Sag Harbor,
L. I.
On Thursday of this week, Mr.
and Mrs. John M. Lyons leave for
Buffalo, N. Y. Before returning
homo they will visit friends and rel
atives in Rochester and Corning.
A marriage license was issued,
April 6, to Bert Heerdegen, Torrey,
and Katherine Rutiedge, Calkins.
On tho same day they were married
in Honesdale by the Rev. J. B. Zwel
zig. Mrs. Rose Cantwell, Carbondale,
announces the marriage of her sis
ter, Miss Beatrice Farrell, to Wal
ter Roy, son of Edwin Lawyer,
Honesdale, which will take place at
St. Rosa's church, Wednesday,
April 19.
The announcement that Miss
Stella Vanaan, Carbondale, will bo
one of the soloists for tho Easter
Sunday program at the Episcopal
church comes as a delight to many
people of the Maple City. It will bo
remembered that Miss Vanaan acted
In the same capacity last year and
greatly pleased the congregation,
she being the possessor of a soprano
voice of exceptional quality.
Judge A. T. Searle left to-day
to hold court at Ilarrlsburg, during
the week. Next week he goes to
Easton, where he will preside at
Common Pleas court for Judge
Henry W. Scott, who is a hospital at
Baltimore, Md., recovering from the
effects of an operation. The follow-1
Ing week he will go to Susquehanna I
county, where he will hold court at j
Montrose for Judgo Ralph B. Llttlo.
Sunday, April 9, being Palm
Sunday, was appropriately observed
in tho Catholic, Episcopal and Luth-1
oran churches of Honesdalo. In St. i
John The Evangelist R. C. church,
at the High Mass, 10:30 a. m. there
was the "blessing of the Palms." In
St. John's Evangelical Lutheran
church the pastor, Rev. C. C. Miller, a i
class of twenty-four catechumens
were confirmed at tho morning ser
vice. Pursuant to instructions from
tho Postoffice Department and with!
a view to reduce the hours of Sun
day work to a minimum, tho follow
ing schedule will be observed at the
local office on and after April 1G,
1911: Main lobby open all day. Gen
eral delivery and stamp window
open from 9:45 to 10:15 o'clock a.
m. Carriers window closed all day.
One collection from street letter
boxes located on Main street only at
5 o'clock p. m. Malls received at
10:15 and dispatched at 7:15 p. m.
as usual.
A postcard received from a
subscriber shows a picture of the
Wanamaker store, the largest build
ing In the world devoted to retail
commerce, covering a full city block
of 480 feet square, reaching 12 stor
ies in the air 247 feet and two
stories underground, containing 45
acres of floor space. The subscriber
asks the following pertinent ques
tion Do you suppose this store
would have ever attained these di
mensions had the trolleys come in
only to tho railroad terminals threo
blocks away? Trolleys pas3 on threo
sides of tho store. The lady writing
this, by the way, is anxious to build
a summer home on a Honesdale
street where tho trolley lino may
eventually pass. The trolley has no
terrors for her.
At a regular meeting of Oslek
Tribe, No. 318, Improved Order of
Red Men, Thursday evening, Deputy
Great Sachom J. F. Conkling,
raised the following elected and ap
pointed chiefs for the coming six
months: Sachem, Ed. S. Isbell; Jun
ior sagamore and senior sagamore,
George L. Schott and Arthur J.
Benny; prophet, Harry Cross; chief
of records, Eugene C. Babbitt, one
year; keeper of wampum, Arthur M.
Leine, one year; trustee, Frank
Schuller; first sannap, Chas. L. Dun
ning; second sannap, William Ba
rter; warriors, Frank Schuller, R.
J. 'Miller, Joseph Bodie, Jr., Frank
Starks; braves, Walter Moules,
Frank Jenkins, James Silsby, Frank
Vetter; guard of wigwam, William
Schloss; guard of forest, Goorgo
Blake.
At the annual meeting of tho
First Baptist church, Twelfth and
Church streets, Rev. Geo. S. Wendell,
pastor, Wednesday at 7:30 p. m., In
tho church parlors, these officers
wore elected: Trustees, for one year,
E. II. Cook, F. H. Trask, F. P. Kim
ble, Esq., Walter Kimble, F. II.
Stephens; deacons, for two years,
Walter Kimble; for threo years, F.
H. Stephens, Wlllard NIold. Georgo
P. Ross was re-elected clerk; F. H.
Trask was chosen as treasurer aud
Miss Llbble Mills as financial secre
tary. The receipts for the year end
ing March 31, were 1200. For
benevolent purposes, vSG was raised.
The year Just closed has been an un
usually prosperous ono, and tho con
gregation Is making rapid forward
strides under the energetic leader
ship of Pastor Wendell.
Prof. H. A. Oday conducted a
common school examination at Can
aan Corners Saturday.
District Deputy Grand Sachem,
John F. Conkling, Hawloy, officiated
Thursday night at the raising of the
chiefs recently telectcd by Oslek
Tribo No. 318, I. O. R. M., of Honesdalo.
J. A. Brown, of the firm of Men
ner & Co., Is In New York, securing
the late styles for summer.
IIUMHU UKHHNK'S SPEECH.
(Continued from Pago Four)
strlctlon and on the ether hand for
the extension of the power of the
slave-holding states. On the plat
form adopted by tho Republican
party at tho Chicago convention Lin
coln had been nominated nnd elect
ed. He and the platform on which
he stood had been bitterly assailed
by the slave-holding power, and af
ter the election the storm of the
campaign grew into the tempest of
rebellion. The South would not
concede the right of tho majority
of the states to control the policy of
the United States, and one after the
other, tho Southern States, by action
of their state conventions, seceded
from the Union. At the time of the
inauguration of Lincoln seven of
those states had already gone out,
a confederate Congress had conven
ed and Jefferson Davis had been
elected President of the Southern
Confederacy. Rebellion had been
fully determined on. Secession" was
an accomplished fact. Even then,
by the declarations made in his first
inaugural, Lincoln sought in a con
ciliatory way, but with a firmness of
which he was always capable, to stay
the destroying hand of the South.
Ho said:
"In your hands, my dissatis
fied fellow countrymen, and not
in mine is the momentous issue
of civil war. The government
will not assail you. You can
have no conflict without being
yourselves the aggreBsbrs. You,
have no oath registered in heav
en to destroy the government
while I shall have the most sol
1
emn one to preserve, protect
and defend it! I ani
loath to close. We are not
enemies but friends. Though
passion may have strained it
must not break our bonds of af
fection. Tho mystic chords of
memory stretching from every
battlolleld and patriot grave to
every living heart and hearth
stone all over this broad land,
will yet swell the chorus of the
Union when again touched, as
surely they will be by the beti
ter angels of our nature."
First Act of Rebellion.
But it was all without avail. Lin
coln's broadiuinded and conciliatory
words were accepted by the South
as the gage of battle thrown down to
them. Indeed, as a matter of fact,
the first overt act against the fed
eral government had already occur
red. In Charleston harbor on the
South Carolina coast wero three fed
eral torts, Moultrie, Sumter and
Castle Plnckney. In command was
Major Robert Anderson, himself a
Southerner, but finely loyal to his
government. Tho hostile attltudo of
the South Carolinians so admonished
him that on the night of December
2G, 18G0, he spiked the guns of
Moultrie and transferred his force
to Sumter which could be more eas
ily defended. Tho uproar through
out the South was tremendous. They
declared that Anderson should re
ceive neither reinforcements nor
supplies. Buchanan, vnclllntlng and
temporizing, was finally prevailed on
by those who desired to preserve the
Integrity of the Union, to come to the
relief of the garrison at Sumter, and
a vessel, the "Star of the West," was
sent with supplies. As tho ship ap
proached Charleston harbor she was
iired on by the South Carolinians and
compelled to withdraw. Had there
been a man in the presidential chair
at that time with a spino in his back
and red blood n his veins, war would
have begun at once. Tho entire
sterngth of the government would
have been put forth to relieve Fort
Sumter. But Buchanan, temporizing
with the South, agreed that so long
as the fort ronialned free from at
tack ho would make no further ef
fort to provision or reinforce it.
Things wero In this condition when
Lincoln took tho reins of govern
ment on March 4 th. It was apparent
that matters could not go on in this
way. Lincoln was in a quandry. He
could not relieve Anderson without
inaugurating civil war with all its
burdens and its horrors. Ho could
not withdraw Anderson from Sumter
without breaking faith with tho peo
ple who had elected him and violat
ing his conscience nnd his oath. Ho
decided to provision Sumter. On
March 29th he called his Cabinet to
gether and presented tho situation to
them. All the members agreed with
him except Seward and Smiiu, and
immediately orders went out to pre
pare an expedition to sail on April
6th for the relief of Anderson. Tho
governor of South Carolina received
notice from tho federal government
on April 8th that an offort would be
made to supply Fort Sumter with
provisions only. On April 6th the re
lief expedition sailed from New York,
and on April 12th the bombardment
of Fort Sumter began. Tho con
federate states having seceded from
the Union and Fort Sumter being
in their territory uiey determined to
oust tho federal forces and take
possession by force of arms. Major
Anderson refusing to withdraw or
surrender, they bombarded tho fort.
They fired an tho soldiers of the
United States. They shot down the
American flag from tho ramparts.
They began ono of tho most tre
mendous and terrible wars In all
history. With his little garrison of
hair-starved men exhausted, tho Hag
down, me fort on fire, ho was com
pelled to succumb. So the war was
on. Tho South was Jubilant because
the blow had been struck which
they believed was to rolease them
from the Union. The North was
thrilled with surpriso, with indigna
tion, with a hot desire to restore the
prestige and retako the property of
mo union.
Lincoln's Course.
Lincoln no longer had any doubt
as to nis courso. un Aorll 15th he
issued a proclamation calling for
75,000 militia. The response to the
call was Immediate and enthusiastic.
Many states sent moro than their
quota. Troops to tho number of
91,816 came in answer to tho call.
There appeared no longer to bo any
division of sentiment In the North.
'J ho destruction of ort Sumter had
unified tho people. Stephen A.
Douglas who had fought Lincoln
and his policy for years, now went
to him and offered his services.
Greeley, Everett, Beechor and many
others who had been advocating tho
theory that tho errlug sisters of the
South should be permitted to go in
peace, now folt and declared that the
day for compromise had passed, that
thenceforth tho iron hand should
rule. A great wave of patriotism
swept tho country. Public meetings
were held. Funds, supplies, assist
ance of all kinds were offered to the
government. The loyal heart of the
North responded with a will to tho
attack on Sumter. Before the first
of May there wero 20,000 troops in
Washington, and soon the govern
ment was turning away great bodies
of volunteers who offered their ser
vices. Galusha A. Grow wrote to
tho War Department on May 5 beg
ging that Pennsylvania volunteers
over and above the state's quota
might not be refused, but received
and hold in readiness In the state.
CI row's Letter.
"You have no conception,"
ho wrote, "of the depth of feel
ing, universal in the northern
mind, for the prosecution of this
war until the flag floats from
every spot where it had a right
to float a year ago."
Tho Possible Result.
I have tried to recall the condi
tions as they existed in that April of
ilfty years ago, and to picture feebly
the sentiment, tho patriotism and the
action of tho North. And the point
I wish to reach is this: What would
have been the result at the end of
llfty years, had there not been this
public sentiment, this burst of pa
triotism, this outpouring of men and
money in support of tho great pres
ident, for protection to the flag, for
tho preservation of the country.
Without the sentiment of the people
of the North back of him all of
Lincoln's efforts would have been
unavailing. Without that free-will
offering of men and money, the
South would have accomplished Its
mistaken and misguided purpose.
The Southern Confederacy, starting
with seven Southern States, adding
four more when Sumter fell, would
have gone on grasping for more and
more, encroaching continually on the
North for the enlargement of her
territory. The citizens of the bor
der states would have been in a con
tinual turmoil. Their people, divided
among thomselves, would have form
ed a zone of continual disturbance
stretching across the entire conti
nent. And if the seven or eleven or
any number of the Southern states
might withdraw from the Union and
set up a government for themselves,
so, with equal right and ' authority,
might any number of the western
states. Let once tho principle pre
vail that any stato might, on her
own motion, dlssolvo her relations
with the United States as a body, and
political anarchy would soon ensue.
Any difference that any state might
have with tho federal government,
or any pretext for a difference,
would result in her withdrawal from
the Union. The same thing would
have been true later on with tho
Confederate states. And it is a
remarkable fact that in the constitu
tion adopted by tho Confederate
states, no provision was made for the
withdrawel of any state; a virtual
acknowledgment of the principle
that the union of the states must of
necessity be Indissoluble, in order
to preserve tho Integrity of the body.
So that tho great principle for which
Abraham Lincoln contended, for
which tho soldiers of tho North
fought, for which thousands suffer
ed and died on tho battlefield, in
the prisons, in tho hospitals, In the
camps of the south during those
four terrible years, was not primar
ily the freedom of the slaves, or the
restriction of slave territory, or the
protection of government property,
or that any political party might
prevail. It was for the basic idea
that the union of states once formed
and organized Into a federal body
could not bo disrupted against tho
will of that body.
Other Results.
If, fifty years ago, the right of
secession had been conceded what
would have been the situation to
night? There possibly would have
been a group of states in the north
east still retaining tho name and or
ganization of the United States of
America. There is every reason to
suppose that there would have been
a group of confederated states In
tho west known possibly as the
Western States of America. It is
also reasonable to presume that there
would have been a group of the
mid-continent states known as tho
Middle States of America. Perhaps
all these would have been again sub
divided, each with its separate or
ganization and laws, with its own
policy and rules concerning the"
great national problems of tariff,
transportation, foreign relations, cur
rency, etc. And suppose, what is
most unlikely, that we wero all liv
ing at peace with each other, think
how we would havo been hampered.
There would havo been no great
government to maintain order and
equality on this continent and to
protect tho American people from
foreign aggression. There would
have been no uniform system of
banking and currency by which
every man's dollar Is equally good in
New York or San Francisco, in
Maine or Florida. There would have
been no great railroads binding east
and west together, nnd north and
south, and doing moro than any
other agency to make of us all a
homogeneous people, with common
Interests and common causes and
common ambitions. Thoro would
havo been no common laws, no uni
form courts of Justice and no power
of a great government behind them
to protect every man in his rights
and assuro him of life, liberty and
the pursuit of happiness. Mora
than nil else there would have been
no one flag, symbol everywhere of
tho same liberty and the same law
no ono flag to which every man
could appeal, to which every man
could doff his hat, for which every
man from tho lco-bound hills of
Alaska to the Florida everglades,
would feel In his heart and mouth
and oyes a thrill and touch of
pride and loynlty wherever ho saw
it floating in the sunshine. Ap
plause. Reason For Gratitude.
My friends, if there Is one thing
above all others for which every
Southerner ought to fall on his
knees and thank God for tonight, It
Is that when Sumter fell, Abraham
Lincoln had wisdom and courage
enough to ralso up as army to meet
force with force; it is that in the
breasts of tho men of the North
thero was sufficient love of a great
country to lead them to shoulder
arms and follow her flag to death
for her preservation; it Is that after
four years of a terrible Civil war,
the South beaten, starved, exhausted,
saw her great general Lee at Appo
mattox on the twelfth of April forty
six years ago, surrender the army
of Northern Virginia to our great
general Grant, and so bring tho con
flict to a close. For because of these
things and these things alone, it has
so transpired that every citizen of
the United States, be he Northerner
or Southerner, has a country and a
flag to which no country or flag on
the face of the earth Is superior in
strength or wealth or glory or that
moral force which makes a nation
mighty. Prolonged Applauso.
WOLF PROWLS AT DOOR OF
HOUSE.
Continued from Pago One.)
Treasurer Wright could see no
way of violating the provisions of
House bill No. 1, which says that
representatives shall be paid their
salary of $1,500 for the session in
three equal parts, In January, Feb
ruary and immediately before ad
journment. The state treasurer, deeply moved
by the appeals made by very many
members, some of whom even hint
ed that unless they could exchange
their due bills for the "long green"
the state nnd organization would be
without a quorum, finally decided
that "necessity knows no law." He
let it be known that he would ad
vance to such members as would ap
ply to him his personal check up to
$300.
FOR COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT.
To the School Directors of Wayne
County:
I hereby announce myself to you
as a candidate for the office of Coun
ty Superintendent of Schools.
CLARENCE H. PENNELL.
Uswlck, Pa. 29t3
A glance at Our Window
will tell you what's an ap
propriate EASTER GIFT
Just give it a little glance.
ROWLAND, Jeweler.
1 127 Main St.
BUY YOU
EAST
Fancy Mixtures with full cut Knickerbocker Pants,
Coats cut full and stylish, double-breasted suits
with two pair of Knickers of the same material in
all new Spring shades, size 9 to 16 years $2.98
Russian and Sailor Blouse, a large assortment, ixz
to 10 years $1.98 and $2.49
Boys' $5 All-Wool Blue Serge Suits, Double
Breasted and Norfolk Coats with two pair of
Knickerbocker Pants; Double-Breasted Suits of
fancy mixtures made of this season's latest fabrics ;
gray, brown and fancy mixtures, all sizes, 8 to 17
years, special at $349
100 special school suits made of Cassimeres and
Tweeds at $M9
Enterprise Clothing House
A. W. ABRAMS, Prop.'
Hart Schalfner & Marx Clothes, Stetson Hats, Douglass Shoes.
Notice for Convention of Krhool 1)1.
rectors to Elect County
Hiipci'lntcmlcnt.
To the School Directors of Wayno
County:
Gentlemen: In pursuance of tho
forty-third section of the act of May
S, 1854, you aro hereby notified to
meet in convention, at the court
house, in Honesdale, on the flrst
Tuesday in May, A. D. 1911 , at 1:45
p. m. being the second day of the
month, nnd select, viva voce, by a
majority of the whole number of
directors present, one person of lit
erary and scientific acquirements,
nnd of skill and experience in tho
art of teaching, as county superin
tendent, for the three succeeding
years; and certify the result to the
Stato Superintendent, nt Ilarrlsburg,
us required by the thirty-ninth and
fortieth sections of said act.
J. J. KOEHLER,
County Superintendent of Wayne
County.
April 6, 1911. 29eol 3t.
COPYRIGHT
YOUR EASTER HAT
if bought at Rickerts'
will be correct, for we
have a hat for every
face. The individual
ity of the line is a
feature.
Foster Building.
ER SUIT
BOYS' $4 DOUBLE
BREASTED SUITS WITH 2
PAIR OF PANTS, INDIVID
UAL STYLISH LITTLE
MODELS - - - $2.98
Every boy wants a new
suit for Easter for that is
the day above all others
that he likes to look smart
and dressy. Come to-morrow
and select from this
various stock.