Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 October 1908 — Page 4
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GREENCASTLE r HERALD
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, J9og
Mrs. Sarah Bioknell is on the slek R. L. Cooper and family will leave list. soon for Houston, Texas.
The Elks will dance at their hall tonifiht. Alva, son of S. W. Erwin, is quite ill of fever. E. A. Hamilton waa in Ladoga on business today. Miss Nell Heber of Bainbrldge visited here today. Mrs. J. F. O'Hair of Hrick Chapel visited here today. Miss Alma Higert spent the day in Indianapolis today. Mrs. Otis Hendren is visiting relatives in North Salem. Miss Effrey Voliva spent the day in Indianapolis today. Mrs. Grant Scott spent the day with friends at Ladoga. Mrs. Windsor of Roes, Ills., is the guest of the Misses Ames. John Oakley was called from Roachdale today on business. Mrs. M. Croaks of Carpentersville visited Mrs. Sarah Ricknell today. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cawley spent the day in Indianapolis today. Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Reed of Kansas are visiting Dick Duncan here. Joe McCray and Otis Browning were down from Roachdale yesterday. Mrs. Martha Allen of Indianapolis was the guest of Mrs. P. P. Huestis today. Mrs. Johnson of Greenfield, Ind., is the guest of her daughter, Mrs. J. B. Nelson. Clyde and Clarence Buis left this morning for Nevada, Missouri, their new home. Mrs. W. P. Ijedtietter attended the Steeg-Ixing wedding at D 1apolis today. Miss Mary Vogel of Argenta, Arkansas, is the guest of the family of Daniel O'Connell. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Young of Carpentersville visited Grcencastle friends yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ferrand of Brick Chapel are visiting friends f n Emporia, Kansas. Miss Lydia Williams has returned from Michigan where she has been visiting her sister. Mrs. Macy, who has been visiting relatives in the city has returned to her home in Cloverdale. Mrs. J. L. Randel attended the wedding today of Miss Eda Steeg and Dr. Long at Indianapolis. Mrs. Ilibbs of indianapolis, is expected to come today to be the guest of Mrs. Florence Dunbar. Samuel Judy who has been quite ill for some time past is reported as in a very critical condition. Mrs. Albert Daggy attended the wedding of Miss Eda Steeg and Dr. Long at Indianapolis today. Perry B. Moore of Bloomfield was here yesterday on his way to his farm in Cloverdale township. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Stover and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Miller of Franklin Township were in town today. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Allen went yesterday to Muskogee, Oklahoma, on the Home Seekers excursion. Mrs. Charles Edwards of Roachdale is here with her aunt, Mrs. Sarah Bickncll who Is quite ill. W. T. Besser and Dan Besser went to Marshall, Ills., this morning to attend the funeral of Milo Janney. Dr. and Mrs. Hawkins are in Indianapolis today. They will see "The Lion and the Mouse” this evening. Miss Dorothy Williams went to Marshall, Ills., this morning to attend the funeral of Milo D. Janney. Mrs. G. W. Bence and daughters Era and Edna attended the SteegLong wedding at Indianapolis today. Mrs. Amos MeCalip, Mrs. Bogle and Miss Mabel Wolf all of Brazil are guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Vermilion. Mrs. Dills and daughter living north of town went yesterday to Muskogee, Oklahoma, on the Homeseekers excursion. Mrs. Margaret Cooper and son Chaunce went today to Roselawn for a visit with Mrse Cooper’s daughter, Mrs Henry Hillls. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Bruner of near Fern left yesterday for Houston, Texas. They will stop off for a few days with friends in Arkansas. Mrs. V E. Cox and Mrs. Clawson of Attica, who are guests of Mrs. Mary Little and Mrs. Bowman here, spent the day in Crawfordsvllle.
Dr. Hope of Coatesville was in town today on business. Mrs. Chittenden and Mrs. R. V Wright spent the day at B1 Hawk yesterday. Dr. U. A. Wright of Mt. Meridian has a severe case of diphtheria. Dr. Wright contracted the disease while treating a patient. Miss Mary Knippenberg who is well known to many Grcencastle people is to ho married at Indianapolis to Mr. Page Chapman of that
city.
Mrs. Grace Cotton anti son, Martin went to Staunton today to attend the celebration of the eighty-sixth birthday of Mrs. Cotton’s grandmother, Mrs. Rebecca Jones. Mr. and Mrs. Harris w'ho have been with their daughter, Mrs. Otis Hendren since Mr. Hendren’s death, returned today to their home in North Salem accompanied by Mrs. Hendren. Miss Boss Llewellin of Salem, who lias been the guest of Dr. and Mrs. W. W. Tucker left yesterday for Indianapolis where she will study music. Miss Llewellin was formerly a student in the music school here. There will be a called meeting of the W. C. T. IT. in the assembly room of the court house at 1:;50 o’clock Thursday afternoon. The meeting hour is changed from 2:30 to 1:30 on account of meeting a speaker from out of town. Mrs. James L. Randel. Mrs. W. P. I/edbetter and Mrs. G. W. Bence and daughters. Era and Edna, went to Indianapolis today to attend the marriage of a daughter.of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Steeg, formerly of Greencrotle. Milam Morrison of Cloverdale and Aliss Cecil Hepler of this county were married here this afternoon at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Etter. The bride is a sister of Mrs. Etter. The Rev. W. E. Gill of Cloverdale performed t.ho ceremony. Through a misunderstanding the name of Lawrence Browning appeared as the subject of a surgical operation yesterday. The item should have read Lawrence Bryan. The operation which occurred on Monday afternoon was performed by Dr. Noble of Indianapolis assisted by Dr. Gillespie and Dr. Sudranski of this
city.
DEATH OFDePAUW ALUMNUS
CONTUVltKD FROM PAGE ONE. and it took him over the United Slates. His services were of great value to the Government. At the time of his death Mr. Lynch was altout 70 years of age. He leaves a wife, who is a sister of Maj. Wilbur F. Hitt and George C. Hitt of this city, a daughter, Mrs. Gertrude L. Springer, wife of Chaplain R. W. Springer, United States Army, and a sister, Mrs. W. F. Masson. Denver, Colo. The body of Mr. Lynch will brought to Indianapolis for burial at Crown Hill where his father and mother are interred, but no definite arrangements have yet been made for the funeral.—Indianapolis Star.
•X* •> REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS * •X* •X' X- -X-X-X-X-* •X**X~>*X~X W -X**X~X Central Trust Co., of Greencastle to Eli C. Rrattain, land in Washington tp $1100 Theodoria Sutherlin and husband to Lora Grimes, lots in Westland, 200 Clinton F. Modlin and wife to C. W. Grantham, land In Jackson tp 100 Mary O. and Jennie Kelley to Michael C. Kelley, land in Greencastle tp 1400 John W. Trotter and wife to Jessie Britton, land in Jackson tp 3700 Cornelius D. Disney and wife to Jessie Britton, land in Jackson tp 2300 Robert E. Williamson and wife to Delana E. Williamson, land in Cloverdale tp 250
•M> v* ❖ MARRIAGE LICENSES •> •X* *x~x*x~x~x~x»x- x-x-x^x-x-! 1 William E. Morrison and Cecil Hepler.
When Sammy
Turned iieiective i
By Mabel Herbert.
r Copyrighted. 1908, by Associated j [ I llerury Pn-ss. I
Raised upon a diet of Biblical literature until he had passed his eighth year. Sammy Temple took eagerly to the nickel novels when at last knowledge of their existence was communlc.alcd to him. First he likisl the - i.'i ics of men who sailed strange craft l:i the sky above, the earth below or in the waters under the earth. Later these were an naught lieside the hold detective who could arrest a band of counterfeiters single handed and who ran murderers to earth just to keep in practice for greater things. Captain Beggs, the solitary town constable, at once became a more important figure than Ben Dwyer, who ran the single engine which constituted the motive force on the Utile branch line. Sammy had liked to dream of the day when he should he an engineer, too, and would have charge of the great Iron steed. He had planned to sneak past the switch at the Junction some night and run down the main line clear out to California, or maybe to Mexico, or up to the goldfields of Alaska. A fel low could go anywhere on an engine
like that
But after “The Roys’ Own” and the detective books the engine, tied to Its iron roadbed, seemed tame. Dwyer was deposed from bis pedestal, ami Beggs was installed thereon, although he was only u constable, which Is not at all ’Ike a real detective. Detectives are people who tell constables when the latter have the right prisoner, and lie looked forward to the day when he could show his badge and say to Captain Beggs: “Ollieer, there stands the man who killed Cyrus Blake. Arrest him!” He was ready to bet that old Beggs would be surprised, and how the other fellows would stare! But mean while there were oppor tunitics to do a little detective work about the farm, and Sammy became
THEN CAME MOUfi CAItESSES ANP PLKADINO. vastly Interested in the movements of I > ne Ryder, one of the summer boarders at Cassell's, who would stroll ostentatiously toward the village, only to he seen returning from the opposite direction an hour or so later. This action was suspicious. Detective Samuel took the trail, and, like the huiiiau bloodhound that be was, lie shadowed the suspect. It was rather disconcerting to have Ryder turn after a mile or more had been covered and rudely command him to be on his way. Ryder even called him “little boy." Sammy’s heart rose hot within him, and he assured himself that Ryder must be a very desperate criminal. But practice makes perfect, and the time came when Sammy learned to maintain a safer distance between him self and the object of his suspicions, and at last lie tracked 1dm to his lair. The lair was disappointing. It was not a cave reached through a cunniugly hidden trapdoor. It was not even a rude shuck such ns the one In which Billy, the Silent Sleuth, found Pete Pomcro, the head of the train wrecking band. It was Just a little nook In a bend of the creek, with a fallen log for a seat, and with his own sister Lucy sitting there apparently waiting for the arrival of the desperado. It was rather disconcerting to find one’s own family mixed up in such affairs, but duty Is duty, and Sammy wriggled as close ns he dared and listened to the low murmur of conversa tlon. It all seemed absurdly simple. Ryder was not planning a burglary. He was kissing Lucy many times, and between caresses they were discussing how best to approach her father on the matter of their marriage. Judged by the stem, unyielding standards of Joslah Temple, Ryder was far too gay a young blade to lie trusted with Lucy, who was destined to marry a minister when her father could find a minister of whom ho could fully approve. Lucy feared to let Ryder speak to her father lest she be forbidden to see or speak to him. Ryder, on the other hand, was urging her to consent to a test of fate. “I feel like u scoundrel meeting you 4n the woods this way,” he urged. “If
your father * n his consent. then wo Lucy shook I Ismay. “I couldn't do cried. “It would break father's j.t.” “Better his heart than yours,” sug gpsted Ryder selll-lily. Then came inot esses and pleading, and Sam my, tircsl of smb talk, wriggled softly through the brush and headed forborne. lie had liccn wasting all his time on a pair of silly lovers when he might have lieen better occupied with his books.
As he turned Into the yard his father called to him from the porch, “Did you read your chapter of Josephus?” Sammy’s face grew long with dismay. Josephus was dull reading for a ten-year-old, but it was a duty, like watering Hie stock and feeding the chickens. In his eagerness to trail Ryder ho had forgotten all about It. “What were you doing?” continued the old man. “I was down by the creek,” explained Sammy uncomfortably. “And what were you doing down there?” came the prompt question. Sammy was no George Washington, but the habit of truth was strong with In him. “I wanted to see what Dave Ryder was doing down to the creek,” he explained. “And what was he doing?” asked the elder. “Kissing Lucy,” was the startling response. and the old man sprang from his chair In sudden anger. Bit by bit he forced the frightened lad to tell all he could remember of the conversation. lie found relief In the statement that Dave wished to marry Lucy, but bis lips tightened angrily as Sammy explained that they both feared to broach the subject to him. lie nodded approvingly over Dave’s reluctance to do his courting clandestinely and again at Lucy’s refusal to consider an elopement. Sammy was startled when the Inquisition was conclude! at being released with only u mild reproof for not having read bis Josephus He scampered around the corner bf the house in a spirit of thanksgiving at getting off so lightly. When he had gone Josiah Temple re sinned his seat and (lie contemplation of the dusty road that ran, a river of white, tietween tie* holds of grain. It was Mrs. Temple’s favorite obser ration that “you couldn't count on Joslab's moves no ifiore'n you could on a hens’," and now Ibis contrariness was working In Lucy's favor, "ad Ryder boldly demanded Lucy’s li.ig I in mar riage the refusal would have been prompt and emphatic. It was beenqsd Ryder anticipated a refusal that Josh i called to him as tin young man wn* plodding along tin road, having n •nlo Ids appearance through a bit of Woodland half j mile beyond Hie place of the tryst. Ryder turned l’i at the Temple gate wondering If pc- haps, after all, Lucy had spoken in spite of their decision to let matters root awhile. He stood at the foot of (be s-'cps and doffed his hat In respect to tin- other’s age. “When I was s. Ind,” said Josiah, with a tv inkle in his eyes, ”it was proper t< call on a ymuiv lady at her folks’ an not go sneaUli g off Into the woods. You e’n come or tonight if you want to. I’ll tell he’ to expect ye.” Josiah watofied Dave leave the yard after an unlnttullgiblo jumble of apolo gy, thanks and explanation. ’’I fooled > ’ ■ 1 exulting!.! after the ivti And he la igh the Joke was on Ryder
Whitt er’s Pot of Butter. Once at file close of the midweek xprvi held In the Friends’ meeting house Mr. Whittier '.ras Inquiring where he cc uld get some fresh made butter. The next morning he received a pot of the very best butter that Pond Hills could produce. The sender Friend Rufh Challls, was rewarded by one of those spontaneous poems with which he was wont to “burden” hie friends. TTie original copy of the poem hangs upon the wall of the home of Ruth t’hnllis’ granddaughter, who treasures the note, given In payment of her grandmother's pot of butter, as not redeemable In silver or gold: "Words butter no parsnips," the old adage says. And to fill up the trencher Is better than praise. So trust rne. dear friend, that while eatins 'by butter The that.ks that I feel are far more than I utter. Kind Prhvtdence grant thee a life withou> Ills. May the cows never dry up that feed on I*ord hills. May the dream never fall In thy cellar so cold Nor thy hand lose Its cunning to change It to gold. Thrice welcome to him who, unblest with a wife. Sits and bungles alone with the ripped scams of life. Is the womanly kindness which pities his fate And sews on his buttons or tills up his plate.
And So She “Didna.” Perhaps it was because he waw Scotch that his temper was quick, hut whatever the reason, he lost It during a rush hour at the little country station where he was employed ns porter, and he told one lady near by that she could go to—well, a place not down on the time table. Quite naturally, she complained to the station master, and It was he who sent Sandy into the waiting room to apologize for his strong language. He found several ladles there, and, not being sure which was the she with whom hts business lay, he asked them all around whether he had told her to go—there. The Very last one answered yes. “Weel,” said Sandy, ”ye needna.”— Llpplncott’s.
• A NICE BIT OF : ...NECROMANCY.: ••••••••••••• [Oritlratl The first prestidigitator ' attract wide attention in Ai rica Signor Blitz lu If a cei turj igo. Blitz was giving exhibitions all over the United States, and since amusements were then by no means as common ns today all heard of him if all did not see him. After having exhibited everywhere In the eastern stales he decided to go overland to t'alifornla. Loading his contrivances in a couple of “prairie schooners,” as th< - «agoi - were called, lie set out from the Missouri river to cross the Rocky mountains. One day the little caravan came upon a man who was crazed with distress. He hud been traveling with his wife and two children in a single wagon. For some reason lie had left them for a few hours and when he returned found his wagon plundered of its contents, his stock run off and his wife and children missing. He knew they had been carried away by the redskins. The next day Interns were seen at a distance. Blitz told the man, whose name was Rodman, to ride out and tell them a great medicine man traveling across the country would like to give them a display of his powers. Of course to go to the Indians was the next tiling to going to certain death, hut Rodman was in hopes that Blitz might help him to regain his family and took the chances. He learned while among the savages that they held his wife and children captives, though the savages did not know they belonged to him. The marvelous will always interest the superstitious, and the Indians sent Rodman back to invite Blitz to their camp. Blitz improvised a stage with the necessary appurtenances, and the redskins squatted before it. An interpreter stood ready to repeat the sorcerer’s words in their own language. Blitz took a small Iron cube with a ring for a handle sind lifted it with his little finger. Then he said that he possessed the power of depriving a man of his strength and invited any savage to come up on to the stage and submit himself to this test. The chief himself, the biggest and strongest Indian pres cut, stepped up, evidently confident that no man could lake away what he was so proud of. Blitz asked him to lift the Iron weight. He did so, giving a grunt, as inttcli as to say: “Do you .nuke spoil of me? (live me something heavy to lift.” He set the weight down. Blitz made a few passes along bis arm and told him to lift again. This lime the Indian failed to move it. He struggled desperately, all the blood in his body getting into his face, but to no purpose. The weight was immovable. Then lie turned away muttering and did not sto|i till he had got behind the awe stricken Indians. The weight was connected by wires with a powerful magnet, the current being turned on or off by a key under Blitz's foot. Blitz next took up n pistol and invited the chief to come back anil kill him with it. The chief, in hopes of redeeming himself before his warriors, returned. Blitz offered him a cup with leaden bullets in it and asked him to take out one and mark it so that he would know it again. The redskin did as he was to'd. Blitz took the bullet, put it in the pistol, cocked the weapon, handed it to Hie Indian, stood off at the other end of the stage anil told him to fire. The Indian took a sure aim and fired. Blitz put up his hand, caught the bullet in his fingers and tossed it back to the man who had fired it. The chief, astonished, stood mute, but when Blitz told him to look at the mark on it and he • that It was the bullet he had chosen he was dumfounded. This is a common trick, the bullet put in the pistol being of clay ground up powder by ramming It down. It is sub Stltuted for the leaden one by sleight of hand. Then Blitz told the chief he could shoot his Mood on to a board without hurting him and fired a wax ballet at him filled with bis own blood. It broke against the hoard, spattering the Mood, By tills time Blitz was a wonderful medicine man to the savages and was ready for the business he had come for. An assistant bnmlngnd his eyes, and Blitz told the audience that he saw In one of the tepees a white woman anil two children. He ordered them to bring forth their prisoners at once or he would call dow n fire from the clouds to consume them. The chief called a powwow of his principal warriors. The white men saw them arguing and ges tieulating, hot could not understand what they said. Some were doubtful of Blitz having this power, while others claimed that a medicine man whn could do what he had done could do anything. While they were consulting Blitz discharged electricity, making a brilliant flash. Away scampered the Indians to the tepee where Rodman’s wife and children were held prisoners and brought them to Blitz. Blitz had told Rodman to keep out of the way lest if his family recognized him it might destroy the Indians’ faith in his miraculous power. When the ter ror stricken woman and her children were brought forward and surrendered to white people their astonishment was as great as the savages’ at Blitz’s mod Icine work. Blitz would have fright ened the Indians Into paying for Rod man’s property, but thee had no mon ey, and what property they could give was of little value. So the sorcerer elded to get the captives away without delaj Hi* gathered his contrivances, put them In bis wagons and drove off the savages watching him in wonder It was not till they were out of sight that Rodman was permitted to em brace his family. F. TOWNSEND SMITH.
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Sworn Semi-Annual Statement t
OF THE
Centra! Trust Co. OF GREENCASTLE, IND. To Auditor of State, Close of Business Sept. JO, IOdn
RESOURCES
Loans Overdrafts Bonds’ Furniture Advances to Estates Due from Banks and Trust Companies..
Total..
$l9r>,HtK).(K) 3.29 89,|0o.oo 500.00 471.4s 29.212.01 $265,146.78
LIABILITIES
Capital Surplus - Undivided’Proflts Demand Deposits Time Deposits (itiardian&liip of Estates Total
• $25,000.00 . #,000.00 • 8,385.35 . HI.408.79 • 79,925.14 . 00,427.50
$265,146,78
| R, L, O'Hair, -Pres, S, A. Hays, V. Pres. J, L, Randel, Sec, •X~X"X"X~X~X~X-X~X"X-X~X-X<“X~X~X~X*X).X~X~X..:..:........-.. J .
CITY WATER IS PuHE
Prof. W. M. Blanchard of the university today finished an analysis of the city water. Prof. Blanchard finds that the water Is pure.
Woman’s Curiosity. “Woman’s curiosity,” said Mr. Fletcher, "is a quality of mind beyond human understanding.” "Yes," said Mrs. Fletcher. “What made you think of that?” “ fhe fool actions of a woman that I saw downtown today. She followed a man ton blocks just to get to read a placard that was fastened to his hack. She spotted him at Thirty fourth street. That was really the end of her trip I made that out from something she said to another woman who was too fat to join in die chase—but when she caught sight of that flaming red poster tied to die man's back her curiosity got the better of her and sho sot out after him. He led her quite a chase across town and downtown and hack again, but she never weakened. She tagged faithfully along in Ids wake, and finally she got close enough to read that notice." Mrs. Fletcher reflected a moment. “What did It say?’’ she asked. “It advised her to get her teeth pulled somewhere on Sixth avenue.” Mrs. Fletcher thought again. “Where were you nil the time she was trying to find that out?” “Me?” said Fletcher. “Oh, 1 was following the woman. 1 wanted to see If she finally caught up with the man.” —New York Times.
The Porcelain Secret. The porcelain Industry of Germany Is comparatively young, says tho Berlin Morgen Post, and its development was Lipid. Although it is generally believed dint tho Chinese kept their processes of t lanufacture secret, Julian’s trnnslations of the! olui' ous encyclopedia show tbut Ibis is not true. All who could have read die work might have known also the porcelain secret. But evidently no German fathomed tho mechanical mystery until the apothecary’s apprentice Boettgnr, 200 years ago, made die first German porcelain at Dresden. Some years before he had attracted attention by proclaiming the discovery ot a method of changing base metal Into gold. King Frederick I. gave him orders for the precious metal, which the sixteen year old inventor could not execute, and in fear he fled to Dresden and became a subject of King August the Strong. While endeavoring to make gold he discovered the porcelain secret and Inscribed his door dins: “Into a potter was changed by Almighty God a man who thought he could make gold.”
A Puzzle In Figures. Take any number of three different figures, as 4,1, under it place the same figures in reverse order, subtract the lesser number and you will find that the middle figure of the result Is invariably 0. Why It Is so is something that only the most learned mathematical scholars can explain. Here Is our case worked out: Taking any number, say 471 Reversing figures 174
Bubtractlng, we have a?
I ttrther still, we can now reverse this number 207 in the same way and add the two numbers and the result will always come Big;). Thus:
Taking
Reversing
ror
Adding, we have 10S9 Why should the answer always come out the same? Here’s something for you to work over.
Map of Greencastle. A new map of Greencastle showing Interurban lino and station, new Carnegie library and new Big Four line, printed on good paper at the Herald Office for ten cents.
•x-x~x~x-:-x*^<~:~»-x~:.v:-:-x^m ❖ WANT AI) COLUMN ** *C For Kent—7 room house just oast of W. L. Denman’s residence. Phone 389.. 3t63b chg Money Lost—Roll of bills lost Tuesday. Liberal reward for return to this office or telephone 5 1 fi 3t63 For Kent—G room house, 3 blocks from public square, electric lights and furnace. Inquire at 201 x. Jackson St. jiCS
Lo * t —Roy’s glove Indian stylo, two flags on cuff. Leave at this office or call phone 193. Rh
Rooms for Rent—One nieo]\ furnished room, with bath, electric lights and furnace. G29 E. Washington st - 3tCl
Lost—Pair of eye glasses Finder please return to this office and receive reward.
WANTED—Girl to do general housework in small family. Call on Mrs R. J. Gillespie, west Walnut street tf
•x~x-x~:~x~x~>*xx~X"X~x~:~’"W"> •» « •> LETTER LIST. •> ❖ •> «X“X~X":«X"X"X~X*X":~X*-:"M":~»* The following list of letters remain unclaimed In this office. Dated Wednesday, October 7, 190S: Henry Criss, Mrs. Mary Grime, Thomas Harvey, James W Jacobs, Mrs. Grace Kirtley, Fred Leibtag-2, Miss Betta Michael, Mrs. Bessie J. Oswell, Chas. Schoeig-2, Miss \delle Wilson. Elsworth Woods. In calling for the same please say “advertised,” and give date of list. J. O. DUNBAR. P. M.
HERALD Want Ads Are Read By All The People—Try One
F resl) 9 New Sauer Kraut IN BULK AT ZEIS & CO. S
Phone 67
