Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902, August 09, 1901, Page 8, Image 8

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OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD. FRIDAY. AUGUST 9, 1901
OREGON
Union Pacific
AND
TIME SCHEDULES
FKOH
bipabi Portland, Ore. abbivk
Chicago- Salt Lake, Denver, Ft
Portland Worth, Omaha, Kan
Special sus City. St. Louis, Chi- 430 p. m.
9 a. m. cago aud East,
Atlantio Salt Lake, Denver, Ft.
Express Worth, Omaha, Kansas
City, St. Louis, Chtoago 8.10 a. m.
9 p. m. and East.
St. Paul Walla Walla, Lewlston,
Fast Mall Spokane, Wallace, Pull
man, Minneapolis, fit. 7:00 a. m.
t p. m. Paul, Duluth, Milwau
kee, Chicago and East.
Ocean Steamships
8 p. m. All Sailing Dates subjeot 4 p.m.
to change.
For San Francisco Sail
every 6 days.
Daily Columbia River
Ex.sunday steamers. P- ;
8 p. m. Ex. Sunday
Saturday To Astoria and Way-
10 p. m. Landings.
Willatmtte River.
8 45 a.m. 4.30 p.m.
Ex. Sunday Oregon City. Newbe;g, Ex. Sunday
Salem, Independence
and way-landings.
Willamette and Yam
7 a. m. hit Rivers. ':3 J! m-
Toes. Thur. Mo., Wed.
and Sat. Ore(fon city, Dayton ,n(1 Fri
and way-landings.
.46 a. m. Willamette River 4ao p. m.
Tnes. Thur. Mon., Wed
and Sat. Portland to Corvallls andFrl.
and way-landings.
Leave Snake River Leave
Klparia Lewistoo
1:40 a. m. Elparla to Lewlston . 8:80 a.m.
Daily. Daily
72 Hours
PORTLAND to CHICAGO
No change of cars
For rateR, berth reservations, etc., call at ticket
office. Third and Washington Streets.
A. I.. CRAIG, O, P. A.,
Portland, Oregon
Pan-American
Exposition
BUFFALO, N. Y.
MAY TO NOVEMBER
Ask Chicago, Milwaukee &
Sr. PAUL Raiway about reduced
rates.
C. J. EDDY,
General Agent, "
PORTLAND, ORE.
WHITE COLLAR LINE
PORTLAND-ASTORIA ROUTE
STR. TAHOMA
Dally Bound Trips, except Sunday
TIME CARD
Leave Portland 7 A. M.
Leave Astoria 7 P. M.
THE DALLES-PORTLAND ROUTE
STR. BAILEY GATZERT
DAILY BOUND TRIP
KXCE1T MONDAY
VANCOUVER, CASCADE LOCKS
ST. MARTIN'S SPRINGS, HOOD
RIVER, WHITE SALMON
LYLE AND THE
DALLES
TIME CARD .
Leave Portland 7 A. M.
Arrlv The Dalles S P. M.
Leave " 4 '
Arrive Portland 10 "
. ' HEALS THE VERY BEST
H-8iindy Trips a Leading Feature
Imr-ThlB ltoute has the Grandest Scenic Attrac
tions cm artu
Lauding and office, Foot Alder Streot
BOTH rilUNEB, MAIN Sol Pol.Tl.AND, OllEHOU
E. W. CRICHT0N, As,t., Portland
ETHEL MCGUM, Agt., Vancouver
PRATHER & BARNES, Agts., Hood River
JOHN M. FILL00N, Agt., The Dalles
A, J. TAYLOR, Agt, Astoria
SOUTH AND EAST
VIA
Southern Pacific Co.
Shasta ltoute
Trains leave Oregon City for Portland at 7 .W am
9:22 a.m., aud 6;30 P. M.
Lv Portland 8:S0 A.M. 8:S0 r. M.
Lt Oregou City uitfli.M. l;lii, u.
At Ashland 12:65 A. v. 12:35 p.m.
" Sacramento 6:10 P. M 5:C0 a.m.
" San Francisco 7.4b f.M. 8:45 p.m.
" OKden 4:46 a. m. 7:00 A. M.
' Denver 9:30 A.M. 9:15 a.m.
H Kansas City 7:25 A H, 7:25 A M
Chicago 7:42 a.m. 8:80 a.m.
" Los Angeles 2:00 p.m. 8:05 a.m.
" El Paso 6:00 P. H. :00 p.m.
" Kort Worth 6:80 a.m. 6:80 a.m.
" City of Mexico 11:80 a.m. 11:30a.m.
u Houston 7:00 .M. '7:00 a.m.
New Orleans 6:?0 P.M. 6:80 P. M,
" Washington 6t)2a.M. 6.42 a. m.
New York 12:10 P.M. 12:10 P.M.
Pullman and Tourist Cars on both trains.
Chair earn, Ssoramento to Ogdon and Kl 1'asoi
and tourist cars to Chicago, St, Louis, Mew
vileaui and Washington.
Connecting at San Francisco with several
iteaniehip Lines for Honolulu, Japan, tutua,
t kUlppiuts, Central aud tn'uih America,
ee K. L, IIooPKNaAKni, agent at Oregon
City station, or address
C. H. MARKBAM, Q. P. A.,
Portland, Or
H HIS STEPS,
"What Would Jesus Do?"
By OHARLES li. SHELDOH.
Oopyrig?-'d and published In book form by
the Ac ance Publishing Co. of Chicago.
"Yotj know what I have come in this
rvening for?" the bishop was saying
sfter the friends had been talking some
time abont the results of the pledge
with Nazareth Avenue peopla
Dr. Bruce looked over at the bishop
and shook his head. j
"I have come to confess," went on
the bishep, "that I have not yet kept
my promise to walk in his steps in the I
way that I believe I shall be obliged to j
if I eatisfy my thought of what it j
means to walk in his steps."
Dr. Bruce had risen and was pacing I
his study. ' The bishop remained in the
Jeep easy chair, with his hands clasped,
but his eye burned with th'e glow that
always belonged to him before he made
mine great resolve.
"Edward" Dr. Bruce spoke abrupt
ly "I have not yet been able to satisfy
mjself, either, in obeying my promise,
but I have at last decided on my course.
In order to follow it, I shall be obliged
to resign from Nazareth Avenue
church."
"I knew you would," replied the
bishop quietly, "and I came in this
evening to say that I shall be obliged
to do thd same with my charge. "
Dr. Bruce turned and walked up to
his friend. They were both laboring
under repressed excitement.
"Is it necessary in your case?" asked
Bruce.
"Yes. Let me state my reasons.
Probably they are the same as yours.
In fact, I am sure they are." The
bishop paused a moment, then went on
with increasing feeling:
"Calvin, you know how many years
I have been doing the work of my posi
tion, and you know something of the
responsibility and the care of it I do
not mean to say that my life has been
free from burden bearing or sorrow,
but I have certainly led what the poor
and desperate of this sinful city would
call a very comfortable yes, a very
luxurious life. I have a beautiful
house to live in, the most expensive
food, clothing and physical pleasures. I
have been able to go abroad at least a
dozen times and have enjoyed for years
the beautiful companionship of art and
letters and music and all the rest of the
very best. I have never known what it
meant to be without money or its
equivalent, and I have been unable to
silence the question of late, 'What have
I suffered for the sake of Christ?' Paul
was told what great things he must
suffer for the sake of his Lord. Max
well's position at Raymond is well tak
en when he insists that to walk in the
steps of Christ means to suffer. Where
has my suffering come in? The petty
trials and annoyances of my clerical life
are not worth mentioning as sorrows or
suffering. Compared with Paul or any
of the Christian martyrs or early disci
ples, I have lived a luxurious, sinful
life, full of ease and pleasure. I cannot
endure this any longer. I have that
within me which of late rises in over
whelming condemnation of such a fol
lowing of Jesus. I have not been walk
ing in his steps. Under the present sys
tem of church and social life I see no
escape from this condemnation except
to give the rest of my life personally to
the actual physical and soul needs of
the wretcliod people in the worst part
of this city."
The bishop had risen now and walked
over to the window. The street in front
of the house was as light as day, and
he looked out at the crowds passing,
then turned, and, with a passionate ut
terance that showed how deep the vol
canic fire in him burned, he exclaimed:
"Calvin, this is a terrible city in
which we live. Its misery, its sin, its
selfishness, appall my heart, and I have
struggled for years with the sickening
dread of the time when I should be
forced to leave the pleasant luxury of
my official position to put my life into
contact with the modern paganism of
this century. The awful condition of
the girls in the great department stores,
the brutal selfishness of the insolent so
ciety, fashion and wealth that ignores
all the sorrows of the city, the fearful
curse of the drink and gambling hell,
tho wail of the unemployed, the hatred
of tho church by countless men who sea
in the church only great piles of costly
stone aud upholstered furniture and the
minister as a luxurious idler, all the
vast tumult of this vast torrent of hu
manity with its false and its true ideas,
its exaggeration of evils in the church
and its bitterness aud shame that are
the result of many complex causes all
this as a total fact, in its contrast with
the easy, comfortable lifo I have lived,
fills me more and more with a sense of
mingled terror and self accusation. I
have heard the words of Jesus ninny
times lately, 'Inasmuch as ye did it not
unto one of these least, my brethren, .
ye did it not to me. ' And when have I
personally visited the prisoner or the
desperate or the sinful in any way that
has actually caused mo suffering?
Rather I have followed the conven
tional, soft habits of my position and
have lived in the society of the rich,
refined, aristocratic members of my con
gregations. Where has tho suffering
come in? What haw I suffered for
Jesus' futfcvjf Do yon know, Calvin"
the bishop turned abruptly toward his
friend "I have been tempted of late
to lash myself with a scourge. If I had
lived in Martin Luther's tinie, I would
have bared my back to a self inflicted
torture."
Dr. Bruce was very pale. Never had
he seen tho bishop or heard him when
under the influence of such a passion.
There was a nuMen Bileuce in the room.
The bishop had sat down again and
bowed his head. Dr. Bruce spoke at last :
"Edward, I do not need to say that
you have expressed my feelings aleo. , I
have been in a similar position for
years. My life has been one of compar
ative luxury. I do not, of course, mean
to say that I have not hard trials and
discouragements and burdens in my
church ministry, but I cannot say that
I have suffered any for Jesus. That
verse in Peter haunts me, 'Christ also
suffered for you, leaving you an exam
ple that ye should follow his steps. ' I
have lived in luxury. I do not know
what it means to want I also have had
my leisure for travel and beautiful com
panionship. I have been surrounded by
soft, easy comforts of civilization. The
sin and misery of this great city have
beat like waves against the stone walls
of my church and of this house in
which I live, and I have hardly heeded
them, the walls have been so thick. I
have reached a point where I cannot
endure this any longer. I am not con
demning the church. I love her. I am
not forsaking the church. I believe in
her mission and have no desire to de
stroy. Least of all, in the step I am
about to take, do I 'desire to be charged
with abandoning the Christian fellow
ship, but I feel I must resign my place
as pastor of Nazareth Avenue church
in order to satisfy myself that I am
walking as I ought to walk in his steps.
In this action I judge no other minis
ters and pass no criticism on others'
discipleship, but I feel as you do. ' Into
t closer contact with the sin and shame
l lid degradation of this great city I
must come personally, and I know that
to do that I must sever my immediate
connection with Nazareth Avenue
church. I do not see any other way for
myself to suffer for his sake as I feel
that I ought to suffer."
Again that sudden silence fell over
these two men. It was no ordinary ac
tion they were deciding. They had both
reached the same conclusion by the
same reasoning, and they were too
thoughtful, too well accustomed to the
measuring of conduct, to underestimate
the seriousness of their position.
"What is your plan ?" The bishop at
last spoke gently, looking up with his
wnile that always beautified his face.
The bishop's face grew in glory now
livery day.
"My plan," replied Dr. Bruce slowly,,
"is, in brief, the putting of myself into
the center of the greatest human need
I can find in this city and living thera
My wife is fully in accord with me.
We have already decided to find a resi
dence in that part of the city where we
can make our personal lives count for
the most. "
"Let mo suggest a place. " The bishop
was on fire now. His fine face actually
glowed with the enthusiasm of the
movement in which he and his friend
were inevitably embarked. He went on
and unfolded a plan of such farreaching
power and possibility that Dr. Bruce,
capable and experienced as he was, felt
amazed at the vision a greater soul
than his own.
They sat up late and were as eager
nnd even glad as if they were planning
for a trip together to some rare land of
unexplored travel. Indeed the bishop
said many times afterward that the
moment his decision was reached to live
tne lire of personal sacrifice he had
chosen he suddenly felt an uplifting, as
if a great burden was taken from him.
He was exultant. So was Dr. Bruce
from the same cause.
Their plan as it finally grew into a
workable fact was in reality nothing
more than the renting of a large build
ing formerly used as a warehouse for; a
brewery, reconstructing it and living
in it themselves in the very heart of a
territory where the saloon ruled with
power, where the tenement was its
filthiest, where vice and ignorance and
shame and poverty were congested into
hideous forma It was not a new idea.
It was an idea started by Jesus Christ
when he left his Father's house and for
sook the riches that were his in order
to get nearer humanity and, by becom
ing a part of its sin, help to draw hu
manity apart from its sin. The univer
sity settlement idea is not modern. It is
as old as Bethlehem and Nazareth, and
in this particular case it was the near
est approach to anything that would
satisfy the hunger of these two men to
suffer for Christ. There had sprung up
in them at the same time a longing that
amounted to a passion to get nearer the
great physical poverty and spiritual
destitution of the mighty city that
throbbed around them. How could they
do this except as they became a part
of it, as nearly as one man can become
a part of another's misery ? Where was
the suffering to come in unless there
was an actual self denial of some sort ?
And what was to make that self denial
apparent to themselves or any one else
unless it took this concrete, actual, per
sonal form oi 'rying to share the deep
est suffering and sin of the city ?
So they reasoned for themselves, not
judging others. They were simply keep
ing their own pledge to do as Jesus
would do, as thry honestly judged he
would do. That was what they had
promised. How could they quarrel with
ie result? They were irresistibly com
ed to rfy what they were planning
'j do.
The bishop had money of his own.
Every one in Chicago knew that the
t.i hop had a handsome fortuna Dr
Bruce had acquired and saved by liter
ary work curried ou in connection with
his parish duties more than a comforta
ble coiupetenca This money, a large
part of it, the two friends agreed to put
at once into the work, most of it into
the furnishing of a settlement house.
Meanwhile Nazareth Avenue church
was experiencing something never
known before in all its history. The
siuii.'.e appeal on the part of its pustor
to bin members to do as Jesus would do
had created a st-nsation that still con
tinued. The result of that appeal was
very much the same as in Henry Max
well's church in Raymond, only Naza
reth Avenue church was far more aris
tocratic, wealthy and conventional
Epilepsy
I hi i 'i 1 1 ' j ill wi'BU ' . nay? mu.'J.'m
weakens the body and de
grades the mind. It raps
the nervous strength that
is the source of all health,
and perverts the functions
of every organ. Because
of its stubborn nature, it is
often called incurable. This
is not true. There is one
medicine that never fails to
check the nervous spasms
and give new strength to
the entire system.
"My little girl had epilepsy so bad
that in one day she suffered seventy
one fits. The doctors gave her up to
die, but I began giving her Dr. Miles
Nervine aud now she is perfectly well.
It took five bottles to effect a cure."
. Mrs. Adie Lewallen,
Siloam Springs, Ark.
Dir. Miles' -
is nervous irritation,
stoDS spasms, restores di
gestion and mental vigor.
Sold by druggists on guarantee.
Dr. Miles Medical Co, Elkhart, Ind.
Nevertheless when one Sunday morn
ing in early summer Dr. Brnce came
into his pulpit and announced his resig
nation the sensation deepened all over
the city, although Dr. Bruce had ad
vised with his board of trustees, and the
movement he intended was not a mat
ter of surprise to them.
But when it became publicly known
that the bishop also had announced his
retirement from the position he hacM
held so long in order to go and live
himself in the center of the worst part
of Chicago the public astonishment
reached its height
"But. why," the bishop replied to
one valued friend who had almost with
tears tried to dissuade him from his
purpose "why should what Dr. Bruce
and I propose to do seem so remarkable
a thing, as if it were unheard of that
a doctor of .divinity and a bishop
should want to save souls in this par
ticular manner. If we were to resign
our charges for the purpose of going to'
Bombay or Hsngkong or any place in
Africa, the churches and the people
would exclaim at the heroism of mis-
I sions. Way should it seem so great a
thing if we have been led to give our
lives to help rescue the heathen and the
lost of our own city in the way we are
going to try? Is it, then, such a tre
mendous event that two Christian min
isters should be not only willing but
eager to live close to the misery of the
world in order to know it and realize
it ? Is it such a rare thing that love of
humanity should find this particular
form of expression in the rescue of
toulst"
However the bishop may have satis
fied himself that there ought to be noth
ing so remarkable about it all, the pub
lio continued to talk and the churches
to record their astonishment that two
such men, so prominent in the ministry,
should leave their comfortable homes,
voluntarily resign their pleasant social
positions and enter upon a life of hard
ship, of self denial and actual suffering. '
Chirstian America I Is it a reproach i
upon the form of our discipleship that
the exhibition of actual suffering for
Jesus on the part of those who walk in
his steps always provokes astonishment, I
as at the sight of something very un- I
usual? I
Nazareth Avenue church parted from '
its pastor with regret for the most part, !
although the regret was modified by j
some relief on the part of those who had
refused to take the pledge. Dr. Bruce !
carried with him the respect of men !
who, entangled in business in such a
way that oblience to the pledge would
have ruined them, still held in their j
deeper, better natures a genuine admira- '
tion for courage and consistency. They
had known Dr. Bruce many years as a
kindly, safe man, but the thought of
him in the light of sacrifice of this sort
was not familiar to them. As fast as
they understood it they gave their pas
tor the credit of being absolutely true
to his recent convictions as to what fol
lowing Jesus meant. Nazareth Avenue
church has never lost the impulse of
that movement started by Dr. Bruce.
Those who went with him in making
the promise breathed into the church
the very breath of divine life and are
continuing that life giving work at the
present time.
It was fall again, and the city faced
another hard winter. The bishop one
afternoon came out of the settlement
and walked around the block, intending
to go on a visit to one of his new friends
in the district He had walked about
four blocks when he was attracted by a
shop that looked different from the oth
ers. The neighborhood was still quite
new to the bishop, and every day he
' discovered some strange spot or stum
bled upon some unexpected humanity.
The place that attracted his notice
was a small house close by a Chinese
laundry. There were two windows in
the front, very clean, and that was re
markable, to begin with. Then inside
i the window wuj a tempting display of
I cookery, with prices attached to the
! various articles, that made the bishop
: wonder somewhat, for he was familiar
by this time with many facte in the
life of the people once unknown to him.
To be continued.
EST
alia)
JJANK OF OREGON CITY
OLDEST BANKING HOUSE IN THE CITY
CAPITAL , I5O.0C0.O0
SURPLUS (20,850.00
Cbas. H. Cautieu, President
Geo. a. Harding, Vice-President
E. G. Caufield, Cashier
General banking business transacted
Deposits received subject to check
Approved bills and notes discounted
County and city warrants bought
Loans made on available security
Exchange bought and sold
Collections made promptly
Drafts sold available in any part of the world
Telegraphlo exchange sold on Portland, San
Francisco, Chicngo and New York
Interest paid on time deposits
c.
D. & D. C. LATOURETTE
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Commercial, Real Estate and Probate Law
Specialties
Office In Commercial Bank Building
OREGON CITY OREGON
(Js N. GREENMAN
THE PIONEER EXPRESSMAN
(Established 1865)
Prompt delivery to all parts of the city
OREGON CITY OREGON
COMMERCIAL BANK
of OREGON CITY
capital $100,000
Transacts a general banking business
Makes loans and collections, discounts bills,
buys and sells domestic and foreign exchange,
and receives deposits subject to check.
Open from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.
D. C. Laioubette, F. 1. Meyib,
President Cashier
J)ErOT HOTEL
Opposite Railroad Depot
New Management Home Cooking
MRS. SEOL, Pbop.
O. W. Eastham
O. B. Dihick
DIMICK & EASTHAM
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Commercial, Real Estate and Probate Law Special
ties, Abstract of Title made, Honey Loaned.
Reference, Bank of Oregon City
OREGON CITY OREGON
DR. L. L. PICKENS
DENTIST
Prices Moderate . All Operations Guaranteed,
Barclay Building Oregon City
! DR. GEO. HOEYE
DENTIST
, All work warranted and Batisfaotion guaranteed
, Crown and Bridge work a speoialty
I Caufield Building
OREGON CITY OREGON
DR. i'RANCIS FREEMAN
DENTIST
Graduate of Northwestern University Dental
School, also of American College of
Dental Surgery, Chicago
Willamette Block
OREGON CITY OREGON
E.
I. SIA8
WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY
Silverware and Spectacles
pANBx OREGON
(J. E. HAYES
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Stevens Building, opp.
OREGON CITY
Bank r Oregon City
OREGON
QEO. T, HOWARD
NOTARY PUBLIC
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
At Red Front, Court House Block
OREGON CITY . OREGON
C. STRICKLAND, M. D.
(Hospital and Private Experience)
8peolal attention paid to Catarrh and Chronic
Diseases
Office hours: 10 to 12, a. m.; 4 to 8, p. m.
Willamette Building
OREGON CITY
OREGON
JJOBERT A. MILLER
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Land Titles, Land Office Business, Conveyancing
Will practice in all courts of the state
Room S, Weinhard Building
OREGON CITY
OREGON
a Schuebxl W. S. D'Rsx
JREN & SCHUEBEL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Deutfd'tr 2ltDo!at
Will praotioe in all courts, make collections
and settlements of estates, furniih abstracts of
title, lend you money and lend your money on
first mortgage. Office in Enterprise building.
OREGON CITY
OREGON
S. J. VAUGHN'S
Livery, Feed and Sale Stables
Nearly opposite Suspension bridge
Frst-Class Rigs of All Kind
. OREGON CITY, OREGON
Free
Dinner Sets
The celebrated Semi-Vitreous
Porcelain hand-painted decoa-
tions, with gold trimmings give n
away Free to our customers.
We use these dishes simply for
an advertisement for our business.
The way to obtain them is easy.
Trade with us and get your friends,
to trade with us, and we do the
rest, by supplying you and them
with these dishes Free of Charge
KRAUSSE BROS.
Ladles' and Gents' Fine Shoes
HOTEL MONTEREY
NEWPORT, OREGON
Finest place in Oreeon to spend summer vacation
Safest beach for bathing. Beautiful grassy lawns
and groves. Table supplied with crabs, clams,
rock oysters, codfish, rock cod and best the market
affords. Furniture new and clean. No liquor.
Strictly first-class family resort. Prices to suit.
C. R. ELSWORTH, Prop.
h
A PERFECT BATH ROOM
essential to perfect comfort and health. Our
estimates on putting in Plumbing Work and!
fittings for large and small houses will be found
surpassingly low when quality of work and
material used is considered
We would be Pleased to have an annortnnltv
to submit figures.
F. C. CADKE
A
Fotografs
STAMPS
Drop in and see what
we have in the latest
photographs. We can
please all.
VIEWS
AAAAAAAAAAAAAA,
New Plumbing
and Tin Shop
A. MIHLSTIN
JOBBING AND REPAIRING
a Specialty
Opposite Caufield Block OREGON CITY
Wall Paper
Now is the time to buy your
wall paper and Murrow, the paper
hanger, will sell it to you cheaper
han you can buy it in Portland.
Drop a card in the postoffice and
have sample-book brought to your
house, or telephone Ely Bros.' store
J. MURROW, Oregon City
W. H. YOUNG'S
Livery & Feed Stable
Finest Turnouts'in Jity
OREGON CITY. OREGON!
Oregon City Junk store
Buys old rags, bottles, 1
old iron, rubber and
all kinds of metals.
Higest prices paid.
Sugarman&Co
Cor. Main and Tenth Sts.
WAI.TED. Capable, reliable pnrson In everv
county to represent large company of solid finan
cial reputation; $935 salary per year, pavable
weekly; 3 per da, absolutely snre and alieipens
es; eiraight,bona-fide. definite salary.no commie,
sions salary paid each Saturday and cxpeasi
money advanced each week. STANDARD HOUSE
34 Dearborn St. Chicago,
SHIRT WAISTS
This is the season for shirt waisis, and everv
woman ought to know wbt are the latest
styles and goods for this most necessary a rti
cle. We will send FREE to any woman who
will send us her name and address and a 2c
f Ta.m,t0 py Postage, a sample copy of
L ART nis n MODE," the finest fashion
of different designs, many colored plates, and
full information about dress
Single copiei 35o. each or 3.50 per year at
all newsdealers. Fjrear, at
MORSE.BROUO.HTON CO.
3 East 19th Street, . New York.
X
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