Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 52, Number 47, Jasper, Dubois County, 26 August 1910 — Page 3
INDIANA HAPPENINGS Newsy Notes of Interest from the Capita and All Around the State.
MS VERY Iii
IN
Indiana State Board Shows Developmemnt of System.
HISTORIC BRICK
IS PRESENTED
THE ENORMOUS BRICK WEIGHS
TWENTY-FIVE POUNDS.
DR. OLINER FAVORS MUSEUM
Piece Taken From Great Wall China to State's Collection Through Former Resident's Courtesy.
of
Light Men Fear Public.
The advisory committee of the In-
dlann Eioctrlc Light association, which
closed Its two days' meeting at Indian
apolis, was authorized to decide
whemer the a- soclatlon should co
operate with other public utilities' or
ganizations in seeking to have enacted a law at the next cession of the legis
lature, creating a public utilities commission. Sentiment throughout the
meeting of the association was in favor of the commission, but it was foared If the association introduced a
CARE COSTS MANY MILLIONS bill of its own. the public might misvoll www I I, n T'i i. nmmlt i tili nrnh.
ably will lend its support to any meas-
tir that pmlmdlca nrinclnles which the
Report Shows Total of 549 Penal and eloctrlc nghl raen fln(1 wm tend to Correctional Institutions, Homes conserve their interests. The advisory and Hospitals First Rank committee was given full power to In Crime Prevention. act.
Municipal ownership In Indiana was
in.u.nnnnii. The crowth of public donounced as a failure In a paper
. haritles and correction in Indiana Is read by R. A. McGregor of the Conuell 6ot forth In a pamphlet Just Is- nersville Light. Heat and Power com,,pH bv tho Board of State Charlltes. pany. The burden of his remarks was
The development of tho system of that there never would have been a .i.ia. otntP exnense is graphi- demand for municipal ownership had
. illly shown In a chart. not some contral station companies. n. nNnr) nt outdoor noor ro- having no competition, undertaken to
. " !, nrritnrlnl override tho nubile will. Mr. Me
lier was raaue uuuui ........ - ... . . Kovernment In 1795 and In 1799 the Gregor said the central station com-
system of farming out tue poor io iu vy ... - -----
lowest bidder was begun. In 18ZI tue jnero in no iunBr tuu bik Lf" -J -J , -tMihed.The ency. ho said, to disregard tho public
.t wna nutnhllshed in welfare. On the contrary, he declared, r ... Annthor hriek was taken
1S44 nnd tho school for the blind in there Is more of a disposition to do nnd wefe carrled to Peking 1S47 their duty by tho public, realizing that Rnd u,ence m 8aQHebags to Manila. Tha nPit vear the first provisions the public "is boss of tho ranch." The whoro a Chinese servant threw them over undertaken by tho state for the speaker declared It has been dem- Qn d wlln 8Uch force lhat l ilfde liioTtbetnhoBrOiiMtnMl that municipally owned wore broken . u was npparent SSl wm Published in 1S8S. tho Cen- plants cannot be operated successfully act WM maIlcloua. tTl bostlt I in 1S89 and the Eastern in competition with privately owned The brlck wUch a sald t0 have Inl qoXern hospitals in 1890. The plants, as they are often involved in hßQn sun.drJ(di formed a part of tho IlosDltal for the Insane politics and graft and cannot be con- parnpot noar the HadaMIng gate, which
at Madison will receive inmates Aug. VT" ". rviAV,. dl
pose of their plants.
Tattoo Suggested for Army Horses
THWE 3 ON1Y
ONE OWrCTlON TO TMS TATTOOIRC TliFY PUT IT
AA ,
w
Indianapolis. An enormous brick, weighing approximately twenty-fivo pounds, taken from the Great Wall of China by Dr. Robert Todd Oliver, examining and supervising dental surgeon of the U. S. army, but formerly of Indianapolis, was presented to the Indiana Stato museum, through Governor Marshall, by Dr. Oliver, who has been visiting in Indianapolis. The brick was taken June 16. 1904. while a British expeditiou to which Dr. Oliver was attached, wa3 en-
camned within the shadow of the
ASHINGTON. Army horses are to become tattooed animals if
a suggestion made by Capt. Casper H. Conrad, Jr., of tho cavalry arm. is adopted. Captain Conrad is detailed for duty in the quartermaster's department, and is recognized as an expert
on horses required for military use. Horses are now being purchased by members of the quartermaster's department, who are making their selections in various jjarts of the country-
The success attending this effort
has been very gratifying to the quar
termaster ceneral. who has estab
lished an army remount system, with
a view to Improving the cavalrymounts and the horses furnished to the field artillery- When a young horse is purchased in any locality to be sent to one of the two army remount depotsat Fort Kecgh, Montana, or Fort Reno. Okla. he is marked with a
numeral. Tho mark lasts about four 1
months, when it becomes obliterated, and it Is necessary to apply another.
SPARKS FR0M LIVE WIRES Officials of Donver, Col., declare that health-seekers ere largely responsible for the high suicide record in thcity. Late reports from the""provlnce oi Baridelle Puglie. in Itly, show that 33 persons have died from cholera siaee the ' break some time ago. Adam J. Swope of Kokoma, Ont I a new claimant to part of the estate of
CoL Thomas 11. Swope. the murdered ' lndependenceN(. milllonlare. Deputy Sheriff Fred Relske of t Granite City, ill., jshot and killed j Samuel Morgan by mistake and nar1 rowly escaped violence from a mob.
f In f mllUirm nf Pennsylvania freight
tna. at Plymouth. Ind., the tracks of
. . . y.-ttrx- and it tDe Pennsylvania, vanuaua auu d?lJ??lZ ?!e7'Zi Erie & Western railroads were blocked
It Is Captain Conrad's idea that a y - ...ea a.. cin,ilnn Mild be Governors or their representatives
accomplished by applying a mark to , from nine totemountaln states met at
A third marking takes place when th
horse is sent from the army remount
the hrside or the upper Hp of the Salt Lake City to outline plans i nhorso. Ho has devised an instrument ' by the rights of these states to their
f,- ,! .,mov nnd sucrcsts the use I natural resources may be preserved.
of India Ink. with the result that the It is believed that the R. J. Reynolds numeral adopted will be Indelible. Tobarco company of Winston-Salem. This will require, of course, a regular N. O. has bought all or nearly all the system of marking so that there may ; 1S09 pooled crop of the Burley Tobac-
be no duplicates. By this means a horse accepted for military service will keep Us number. It may be necessary to have legislation to prevent
tampering with the designation or ma
co society, amounting to 120.000.uu pounds. The marriage of the Baroness Vauchan. widow of King Leopold of
I Belrfum. to Emmanuel Durieux. took
king use of a similar mark in the case , piace at Arronville. France, near Balof horses not used In the military ( un court, the residence of the barservice. oness. Captain Conrad's quest is expected j counsel In London. England, repreto lead to several Important acquis!- j senting Dr. H. H. Crippen. who is actions during the coming year. By this j cused 0 wife murder, has begun conmethod the middleman Is avoided, and j tempt proceedings against the Londoa horses are obtained at a much lower j Cnr0nlcle because of certain alleged price tiyin under the contract system. , ODjectionabiQ statements. Besides, there is a better opportunity Insantv. due to cigarette smoking, of selection, and controversies are gssgned bv a coroner's Jury In avoided which so often have prevailed i w h, rton D. c yeSterday as tha
between tiie government represent- wmiam t rarvel's having
15
tives and the contractors who fail to j
comply with specifications in tho de
livery of military animals.
dashed his eleven-months-old baby
I against the wall, killing it. Theodore Roosevelt will deliver an
T . T . ,1 r- T address agust 31 at the dedication of TTr! Sam Sc TO I GST the iJnen UOOr 1 John Bro?m park on the site of the
In 1SG7 tho first provisions wore mado for tho soldiers and sallcra. thoir wives and orphans. Tho Soldiers and Sailors' Orphans Home at
KnlKhtstown was
the Soldiers' Home at Lafayette
1S9C. Dependent children were cared for in privnte orphanages from 1S75 to 1SS1, when county orphanages were established. Dependent children were placed under the supervision of the
is the portal of tho famous Ku-yuhg-
kwau pas through the Talhlng mountains, situated about fifteen miles north of the little walled town of Nan-
kow. The Inner wall, from which the . p. rnit6i states Is to test the sin-
f a a im .
Bovs Now Friend of Aley,
Robort J. Aley. stato supennionueni , . k y,kpn-was built In 542 A. I .... r,t ,nH Tnnnn In their
built in 1S71 and of public instruction, has approved a D by Eraperor Wuting Of the Wei recent clalm o adherence to the open
ln resmuuon auupwu u auv.- dynasty. Fifty tnousanu men were door ooUcy in China made recently co
trustees of Howard countj, wnereoy n ernpjoyed m Its construction. , lncjdent with the signing of the new Is provided that teachers ln the public Mark Thistlethwaltc, socrotary to ! tPeaty by the Czar and the Mikado. It schools of the county shall not count Governor Marshall, accepted the brick J . b announced at the stato de-
an aosence againbi uj - on behalf of the governor, it came takes a day from school to attend tho from We8t Pointt y., where Dr. Oilstate fair, which will bogln after the Ter naa been located since 1904. The it i -... cKmiiii nrn onened. . t , . ... i
t ioeo i iinrior Rate supervision and further provides that the teachers a,most fecL Boln bricks wore ln 1SS9 and under state superUslon lo aUund ihe J nrosented to
in 1897. In 1900 and under siaie su
pervision in 1897. 1909 provisioBs wero mado for licensing maternity hospitals and baby farms. The School for Feoble-Mln'äed Youth3 was created in 1S79, tho new school In 1S90 and the Institution for rv,,i-Xflf,,1nr1 Wnrann in 1901. Tho
i rvuic-'tin." .
shall urge their pupils
fair. 4 Tho nxtinri nf tho trustees." said
Mr. Alev. "Is along tho line of recent
activities of tho state board of educa- j
tion In seeking to Interest tho pupils
of tho common and high schools ln ag
riculture and manual training. A day
mended and the second presented
tne museum at West Point.
STATE NEWS IN BRIEF,
Columbus. Andrew HawkTns, twen
ty-two years old", a
partment that the government win nress at onco for recognition from
these two powers of the railroad concession recently granted by China to
on Ennllsh-American syndicate
This is the concession which Russia
blocked with an emphatic protest last
winter. Since then the negotiations
Iiatp boen In the statu quo. Now they
are to bo resumed at once. The gov
rnment la to find out whether or not
doserter from I Russia and Japan Intend to bar the
was arrcstoa T-nifpd states as well as otner powers
iMtiii ot th fnlr if be is I . ? . . . tin- . . . ... 1.
Ä -nero ho was turned over to fiable ohjecüons to the admission of
. i T-iii inr itiiixu Lxiau uvi'v...'v - ... . 1 1 1 . n Anthn.itiao hi Irin .i A . I n r. . n ritf nnn Tipiti
t...nl)nl o TJr..lfVvlllo 13 in UrOCeBS Ol . . . , .,.. .l,.,, I U - OlUCr usuuus w "...w
- being abseht irom scnooi. i erection. trustees of the stato would take acoutdoor poor relief has been unüer 8imnar to that taken in Howard stato supervision since 1895. Tho CQunt .. Board of Stato Charities was created R FeBieI.( assistant adjutant by an act of tho General Assembly in . f tho Indlaria 0. A. R-, has
n. , r .nnK' .hurltin . .
who enlisted In the army at Indianapo- 4T I7 1 lis a-few months ago. deserted in "ir; T pp( n Wor QI1 tiie UplUIIl XLVIl Rhode Island and went to Brown coun- Will Lead Kl YV dl Uli -
of O.aawatomie. which was
".Vhen the recent convention be-; h,,h. for the Btat . o Kansas by the
tween Russia and Japan was sprung ,vman. xtellef corns of the G. A. R-
on the world American diplomats ex- . . nll n.rtar nlvidend.
pressed litUe surprise. The govern-1 Directors of
ment has believed from the first there : t. ctmnt' a., mmn,nv declared a
is a secret article in this convention . n.,rll,rir rfirdnd of six dol-
whlch has not been made public. It 13 , . jlg oae million shares.
felt the unpublished portion Is an Rockefeller's portion of this
agreement on the part of the two aa-; n.620.000.
Hons to support each other in barriag , old-fashioned Arkan-
other nations from the territory in . . Rli(,onA
question. The tatted SUtes latends feaelon the Negro Business to force Russia's hand and d? & Jn New york cUy and whether such a secret 5 exJf?' - vowed that be wouldn't change places The concession granted to the English-, . novt. He is said
American syndicate was for the con-, iiooo.000.
ZSiS'ol A Cherry U1L) widow has accused road line. English capitalists were io j vm,ii ntntiv nf
furnish tbe Jf s -d mate were io be built in America, , hory. and declared In court that There Is one drawback to the sija. mmoy frQm faer tlon from the standpoint of th gov- hosbflB(1.5 eMatB sho win USQ to buy ernraent,- England for some unknown , roIver wlth whlch to kill the i. -vaninir Tier anthuslasm a
i traruu, m w.....-c- man
The focr-year-old daughter of Mrs. Theodore Lewis was killed, Mrs. Lewis Injured. Mrs. Clarence Manley received a broken arm and Mrs.
re io "- -Charles John and tho chauCeur keep Manchuria open with equal op- automobile
in which they were riding struck a telephone polo and was overturned at Kenton. O.
for ihn ioint undertaking cooled per
ceptibly after Russia had entered an objection. Diplomats seem to think it quite llkelv that tho United States will have to make the fight single-handed
to
wrtunlty to all nations.
ty, but later he came here and took
employment in tho Mooney tannery.
Charles Sipes of Brown county discov-
1S89. The boards of county cnur.v. . nm n,flr,sted in the action of the r", 7 a , ffi,n
in 1199 -d uniform state institutions blld - - -- - hoards established in 190. schoola can be at lho alr on the J The correctional Bytemnd!aaa wmaoiay taowa aa Old Soldiers Vo lumhus -JohS R. Shelton. seventy nlao has been under tho supervision of Arinda the Board of tho Stato Charities since da- rear- old and rs A'lnda
...-.A I ... . i iinn HiiiV'Liii trcT. n ciu j
its creation. Until lSz convicw Arranfle institute Visus. . " t. . .... ..... Rtate ,, lead na.
BUimnu- ... , .. . , I "7 . nrnmlera.
i t means of
WINS BOAT RACE
rnnflno.1 in local lulls. In that year nr m,bert J. Aley. state
the Stato Prison was erected. In 1860 t0Ildent 0f public Instruction; Elmer this Institution, locntod at Michigan Q uunneU, assistant, and John I. City, was divided and the Southern Hoffinann, deputy, expect to visit 79 Prison established at Jeffersonvllle. Qf 92 COUnty teachers Institutes The Southern Prison was changed into year Those Institutes which It tho Reformatory In 1897. Tho Michl- w,u bo necessary to omit wero visited gan City prison, which was called tho lafit year aithough a number of those Northern Prison after 1SC0. became v,glted i&st year will be visited again mrnln the State Prison in 1897. A de- . , voar.
" . ... i i . . . i
nfflrp. Tho counlo were married on : 1 tions in the fight against promlscu
ous opium traffic at a cornerencs iu be held at The Hague in September, according to statements of authorities in Washington. Tho conference was made possible through diplomatic correspondence with the Interested powers by Secretary Knox. The nations represented will be tho United states. Great Britain, Germany.
the 6amc day of tho week, at the same
hour, by tho same Justice of tho peaco and In the samo place as were David
Fisher, seventy years old. and Mrs. Eliza Roberts, sixty-three, who were married and lived together but 24 hours. i Brookvllle. Charlie Wells, an
oomnmit. while starting a balloon
partment for tho confinement oi m- Tho sUto board of caucauon u : - " Diunccd i Frtmce Italy Austxia-Hungary. Por"Tw Schoo, FUMHd owe, 'Äü SÄ ,00. H, P-ncr. Art NJJU-d - P-
Its origin to an act of 1868. The Girls' f teachers. In many cases tno uaras. rau .TLim w :lAxron-a PHnn was estab- ?! f , ti nlace during the fall by attempting to catch him. Wells
r,;; w. .ml. school rr I::?::::,' (Mfthm are In train, wrist was dislocated and he was
JI8UUU III loto, uuw .i uulU iuirai'tv"'" '
In-
rectional department lor wie u - to be absent eiiaer irom uw. - -- . ; t ...
tho
institute. The absenco from tho experienced balloonlsts from Clncln-
"PfJortn nnnnnrl In 1908
Juvenil courts wero .created In lnBtUuto affects their salary under the natl. O
1903. adult probation courtH in 1B07 state iaw. Some school corporations iwv-u . .. ..,! 1.ma hv I . i av mnrhnn In RChOOl I er On
ana supervision oi vniu Uavo oucrcu w v, ,7V... , , wara WPM.kPd at Greens Forks the Judge was begun In 1909. I the additional amount they would I ha Ura n r wrecked Rt Greens
The work of tho conference will foiJow along lines suggested by tho Internatlon Opium commission, which met last year at Shanghai, on the inof this country. Tho fight
against the promiscuous use of the
. . . t-i on ton1, i Amrr nnri nrner nartuuw " -o
Hicnmonu. iuo - ... , mnAa br
a west-bound local freight In International uu . "
international agreements
.vK rhtrh oDlum producing coua-, riAnrUUN
tries will protect, by means of government supervision, ports where the , American Yachts Finish Ahead of the importation of the drug Is prohibited, j Spaniards in Third of Sonder SeTho first realization of the serious-, ries Off Marblehead. f h nnlnm traffic so far as the
United SUtes is concerned came when jiarblehead. Mass.. Aug. 20 The
the government started to put uiu Harpoon, owned Dy u. t. Aaams, n., Philippines ln order. An attempt to wou the third Spanish-American sonregulate the unlimited trade thore, der yacht, race off here. The Beaver called for the appointment of a com- ;j ramutes behind, and the Cima mission. The commission In tracing minutes, all three Amoriean boats tho many Americans engaged in the being well ahoad of the Spanlirds. opium trade found that the United . States, with some 200.090 American Overdose of Morphine Kills, users of smoking opium, to say noth-, N.ew York. Aug. IS. Albert Spies, ing of the Chinese users here, pre- owner and j)ubllsher of the Foundry sented almost as serious a question eW8f a trade paper, and formerly as the Insular possessions. Since that edjtor cf Casslcr's Magazine, is dead time tho United States has led the h,s home In jereey City, from an fight among the powers against the overdose 0f morphine. He was fortydrug, j üght years old. About a year ago a law absolutely j prohibiting tho Importation Into this j THE MARKETS. country of opium for any except medl- j clnal purposes was passed. But there . ocKil'lh l are now about 1S0.0OO Americans using H Ho . . w 5io io
the drug, and in spite of the prohibl-1 Hhp ...... --v ?g XJ2
tory statute about 6S.000 pounds of fiSÄ IS $i gi smoking opium U smuggled Into this gogg;-;;;- 3
country annually.
. tnnoi I . .j .iinitir tVio institute
Thpro are o4 penai ana curium i receivea ioj nntui"o ti, ,i. tJSSSS. hornL ,oraduU,.orPh.n.' Ttot as a Po.sU.lo r jtt-d. JZZllSXSJ&Zt I
j Capital a
SI u s
2t Ö R aft a VAS it
institutions, nomcs ioruuuHs,iH""- inat us iuw .. nv,,i thlr lives es-
total population of
the foul condition of IId i creek, which Is said to bo
Cat
tho
In 1909 was 19.052. Including those
aka 1,1. n nriiln tmatees and those 1 cri,i nav for Veterans.
" . . i... . t mr ....nn r-u-ll U'nr roclments
rSmSrSÄ To hold rcunlons-at the breeding ground changes In tho state. There Is np- slat0 ho0 durng tho weok of too In- .S
proximately one public charge for ev- dlnna Btate fair. The old sowie w... man , . a 1)1 on rt Stern n pomlrry seven voters in tho state. Allow- bc BdmIUed free Tuesday. Septembe hoa, ,led bj - SI mon B st.n, , prol
ing lor tnoae wnu ..- - tuu n .,,.,., ,h virtuos of mosoulto
UUV.IUCU w -
mm
hftk'r I I
I Uirr I I Dil mt I
I RVE-No. 2 Weitem
Iii -n t. U TfAüw r-
üui ii 5,-"-,-v' o j cinavGO.
that the belloverwore short hair. Im- CATTLX-Cbicc Bmvw.... Ij oo gf , , . ClMlce Bf Cows ? r
r-mcs Plain to Fancy 4 TO m 4
a... . ... .v.. niiarirnn i! i . ...i tn inn ni i iihj I ut ucu.
po ä in s l utfonB oV Indiana falla un coburnT a valiant soldier and oil. offldTniltrlam n upon a comparatively few mon. The promlnent In Indiana politics for a poured into tho offondtas stream .n total cost of maintaining the public in- nurober of years. lhl7 tJLrf at the Rock Utuüou alono in 1909 was $3,429,- Tho Womana Relief corps meets BJ'o-1 af r? 0f - . l.. t ihn etntn houBu: One family have offered a rewaru oi
.1 ft.IVJ.
-aepiuiu".-' " ,- nn arr0f nf ii man seen at
Hundred and Twenty-m.ru u.jw- . mmngtrtttA
fantry. September 12 ana a, n room feeness .u. u 1- Thirteenth Indiana cavalry, Sep- of being the murderer of Philip Rock ?" jt Thlrtv-thlrd In- He Is believed to bo an Italian named
iemOr 1., :. ...., .1 J...4n nr mit
Septemoer n, room j riCK i-euoui. uiuuuuvuuu
on the trail, but tne man aum. ua stoppod at night because of tho fear for the Uvea of members of the hunt-
ine party. Citizens criticize the coun
ty commissioners for not offering a reward for the arrest of the man aad
are soliciting a fund to assist in thr
search for Üae fugitive.
rnn rcclment.
AnmMnt Gnn.
RS- seventh inuiana rt-fcu" v
For Labor Men Only. IT. S. Jackson, chairman of the Democratic etate committee, and Myron Kin, secretary of the committee,
sented him nn invitation to come to tember II. room 11; Slxt.cigh;h Indl
Indiana next fall nnd make Democratic ana regiment, a ep speeches. Mr. Gompers told them he and Soventy-nlnth d "g"enJ; Intended to make some speeches in In- September 21. room dlana on behalf of labor candidates, Indiana cavalry nd the Tfalr tj-thlrd but that ho would not como here un- Indiana infantry will servo luncheon
dor the ausniccs of any political party, at the state house.
THE increased attention which the suffrage causo is attracting in w,cMnHr,n has astonished tho old-
timers whose remembrance of tne small body of women who called upon the Committee on Privileges and Eloctlons at the convening of every now congress Is tho last impression of a few plucky women leading a desperately forlorn hope. Time was when the woman who had cuffrago leanings was afraid to avow thcra in Washington, and when It was thought exceedingly couragous of such well known society leaders as Mrs JohnB. Henderson and Mrs. John R. McLean to entertain Miss Susaa B. Aathoay, the ost famous apostle of the cause of toman s rieht. Bef ,a 0,6 rigbt- af . , to the ballot was supposed to imply
possible frocks, a man's hat and other
cranky accompaniments of "queer views."
Tlmn has chanced all mat. ine
T..r TT4ft-s 5 CO Ö5M
4M it 7 50
HOOS-Irlra?. Hfavy ....... 8 20 !
Time has cnangea an tnau t no ( uum Weight uutcnem j -? women who compose the committees . RlVfy' &i H which have appeared to domand tha fTT T. .'7. a & 27 . .. . , r t tvi rvni t TT! V 9 ti 30
vote at tne mst isw itui ; '' - "w - Suif? zu
gress havo been modlshly gowred. rSTÖ3ESr'bi!i'.:!""'. O m attractive and in most instances so- FWUR-S it
rr-l. .. . (t,. tf IIAJO'
clally prominent
ballot for woman baa swept the coun
try to such an extent that many of the senators and representatives of the present congress are avowed sympathizers and not a few of them have put themselves on record as favoring suffrage. The "votes for women" agitation is now discussed openly and sympathetically at many a Washington tea table presided over by a hostess whose social prominence is undisputed and whose graces and talentt are distinctly of the most feminin klBd. It is not safe to scoff at woman surfrage anywhere in Washington now, for too many racmbars of the set which Is really influential have developed leanings of that kind.
am
2H
Senternbr.
0te. seftmur
MIL-WAUICIJE. rJrn. Spt?nar & f 3srutiril aAWit
Kye KANSAS CITY.
GUAlN-WhMLt. No. 2 Hard i W O 1 0
Oat.. Xo. 2 White Ttya
ST. U3Ü13. CATTL.B-Natlv Sie 5j W Tra.t Steers i
?nic TAikrt-a .............. 8 4o
nwu Hntchr .. 5HEBP NäU-m
OMAHA. CATTLKr-Nntiv Sterr..... U T btooken and Fder.... Cows and HUer......... I? HOOS-Heavr SHEEP Wether w
25
so
S EO
3 75
7
SS 20 m s S a 1 4X !? E TS VW S M (H
