Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 2, Hammond, Lake County, 19 June 1907 — Page 5

Wednesday, June 10, 1907.

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES. PAGE FIVE.

Day's Grist in South Chicago

CHURCH SOGIETY GIVES FARCE

Young People Escort the Spinster Back to Fold at Windsor Park.

In all her glory, with bra3 Lands and headlines, accompanied by a host of young people "She" returned to her original surroundings last night at the Congregational church, Seventy-fifth Btreet and Marquette avenue, where several hundred people were present to watch her antics on the return trip. And who was "Sho." Why, It was "The Spinster's Return," presented by a cast of young people of the church and never was a comudy better appreciated. It was in truth a screaming farce and was successful from a theatrical point of view in the truest sense of the word. The amuseing experiences of the Spinster in question, were faithfully pictured by the young men and women in the cast and as each amatuer was well known to the audience, the situation was made all the more ludicrous. Fully twenty were In the cast and the scenery with the costumes worn by the young actors and actresses were up-to-date and were voted "the limit," by their friends in the audience. Popular demand makes it necessary for another production of tile comedy which will be given Friday evenin.

in Chicago and the promise of a liberal directorship of the gambling interests, the usefulness of the City of Traverse seems to be at an end and th; owners declare that because of the open town they have decided to put the ship out of commission for the remainder of the season. After fitting up the ship in grand style, the "White-Perry-Hyman syndicate found that Mont Tennes got in ahead of them and

the lid was lifted so that the sporting fraternity did not have to take a hard trip out on the lake to make a wager. They can now do it in an easy manner at the poolroom. It is sai.l that ail the old places are in operation in the big burg. However, Mayor liusse did not take the word for the closing of the enterprise, and has sent a letter to the authorities at Washington asking that they take action against the ship. He declared that the boat was in a common gambling business, admitted by the owners, and wants the license revoked. The way the situation stands between the gambling trust and the anti-

gambling trust in Chicago was shown yesterday when the Mont Tennes gang who have been fighting the Bud White aggregation sold their ship, the John R. Stirling. This boat was fitted up to contend with the Traverse if the

town was closed, but it was found that it was not necessary. It was sold yesterday to the Northern Michigan Trans

portation company. The sporting fraternity do not believe that the Traverse will be sold, but think that it will be some time before it is operated again.

SOUTH DEERINQ

OUT DOOR SPORTS ARE ARRANGED

Members of South Shore Country Club to Have New Golf Course.

Mrs. Dorsey

terday. K. S. Kdman Bt-rid, Ind. Mrs. Kf-lley

with relatives

shopped in Chicago yes-

spent Sunday at South

of Chicago is visiting on lloxie avenue.

Feiix Gulden of South Chicago, was a Soutli Dei ring visitor last evening.

E. S. Edman was in Chicago Monday and purchased a new driving horse and rubber tire runabout.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Quill of 10323 Muskegon avenue, entertained a party of friends at their home Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roberts entertained out of town friends at their home on Hoxie avenue, Sunday.

Several of Miss Cullen's pupils rep

resented trie Marsh school at the celebration of Flag Day at Jackson park

riday afternoon.

WINDSOR PARK

Misses Margaret Green and May me

Heelan attended a picnic at Cedar Lake Saturday given by the Western Electric

mployes i'f Chicago.

Mrs. F. Boyden entertained friends at bridge whist Monday evening at the Oaks hotel.

Mrs. T. J. Donnelly, 74?,o Coles avenue, visited her daughter, Mrs. O. George of Indiana Harbor yesterday.

Rev. Hugh J. Spencer of St. Margaret's Episcopal church officiated at the wedding ceremony of Mr. Shaw and Miss Stimmson, &901 Avenue II, Monday evening.

The n-w South Shore depot on the I. C. railroad is almost completed. The architecture is the same as that of the

houtti snore country club. The new depot is a decided improvement to the vicinity and cannot help but make a

very favorable impression on all visit ors to the Country Club.

The South Shore- Country Club has

just completed a nine hole goit course that promises to be the mecca of all

me iouoweis ot the game who are

members of this organization. This

course will be added to the amuse

ments which are now being opened for

the season to the members and is 2,300 feet long. It is situated in a delightful

spot and a new club house and caddy

room is being erected nearby. The course is an exceptionajly good one and has the distinction of being about

the only course in Chicago where the golfers can play half an hour after a rain storm. Resides the golf course, two new tennis courts are now ready and await the coining of the players. The bathing house is also open and the boats and sailing dories have been overhauled and are now in readiness for the summer fun. They are equipped with air chambers and are absolutely safe for old or young to operate and the racing along the coast ought to be keen during the coming summer days. Roko, croquet, archery and baseball will be some of the games that will tend to pass away a delightful day at the club. The members of the club have divided themselves into teams in the various sports and captains of each will be selected next week. Then will follow spirited club team contests and the start will be on for the season. Edwin F. llrown is secretary of the club and announces that everything is in readiness.

Stanley Easthope of Saginaw avenue is home spending several weeks with his parents. He has been studying at the Culver Military academy during the

past winter and will leave "Windsor

Park about July 2 to visit the James

town exposition with the students of

Culver academy.

Miss Dally of Bryn Mawr will leave the latter part of this month with the other members of her family for Seattle, Wash., where they will make their future home. Miss Dally has lived in this vicinity for many years and has been a teacher in the Myra

Bradwell school.

the woman s Home Missionary so

ciety of Seventy-seventh street Method

ist Episcopal church entertained the

mothers and Jewells of the Home Mis

sionary society in the church yesterday afternoon. A delightful program was given and ice cream and cake were

served later in the afternoon.

M OF TRAVERSE USEFULNESS ENDS

With Hand Books Untrammeled in Chicago, Pool Ship's at a Discount.

With the hand books running open

RUDOLPH HEUUNtiR CO. Manufacturers ot ftUII Work, Interior fin sh, Colonial Columns and Porch Material Local Telephone South Chlcafj 111 Chicago Telephone Lake Shore 450 9232 Harbor Ave. CHICAGO

Plioue South lliloaso 3!M3. MHS. IDA. HIUHES. HAIR DRESSING AND MASSAGING PARLORS. Wigs, Switches and Hair Goods to order Suite 7, Lincoln Huliaing. Olat Street and Commercial Avenue,

Miss Jlauel eoster Usmer will give

a piano recital in the Methodist Epis copal church Thursday and Friday

June 20 and 21 at 8 o'clock. This will

consist of a children's recital Thursday

evening and on Friday evening- the en-

semme recital ty :urs. usmer s more advanced pupils. Robert Sansone, the well known violinist, will assist. Miss

Anna Lank of the Sherwood Music

school will play the voilin and Miss Maud Webster will be the reader of the evening. It is anticipated that the recitals will be very entertaining. An admission of 35 cents will be charged for the ensemble recital and 20 cents

for the children's recital.

HEQEWISCH NEWS

Wm. Anderson Is reported very sick.

Miss Norma Sundberg was Chicago visitor Monday.

a South

Mrs. Claude Collins was shopping in

South Chicago yesterday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Swartz and daughter.

Bessie, left here today for Butler, Pa

Miss Pearl Miller and Miss May

Sundberg were at White City this aft crnoon.

Mr. and Mrs. E. Miles and son Palp!

have cone to Louisville, Ky., to spend

a week.

Will you be on the East Side tomorrow ? If bo, don't fail to atop for one of those celeurnted U3e dinner at the

: ST. ELMO HOTEL : : 0021 Dnlag avenue. Telephones: Olllce, 148; Residence 243, South ChicuKO. FRANK FOSTER ATTOKXEY AT LAW. Room 15, Commercial Bloci, S206 Commercial avenue, - Chicago, I1L Residence 9120 Exchange avenue. When in South Chicago stop at the .-NATIONAL : HOTEL Corner Commercial and Exchange Aves. Hoarders wanted hy the Day or Week. HOME COOKING MEALS 25c II Y WEEK $5.00. Hot and Cold Water. JBath

Mrs. Chas. Rinker and family started today for Indianapolis. Ind.. where they

will visit relatives. They expect to b gone most of the summer.

Mrs. Clyde Kistler was in Hammond

today visiting her sister Mrs. O'Conner,

who is in St. Margaret's hospital. Mrs

O'Conner, it is reported is gainin rapidly.

C. SIDLIN.

negewisehs leading dealer In Jew elry, talking machines and musical In

siruments. I carry a complete stock o

watches, jewerly and clocks at popula

prices. Lvery article guaranteed. Yo

can buy a talking machine for a small

payment down, balance, one dollar week. Buy Here and Save Money.

iiwra street, tor. Erie Ave, lleuewlsen.

Hugh Byrnes, sr., of Iloxi" sivemie, iied yesterday from New York for

reland where lie intends to visit for ome time.

Mrs. Martin of 10C."1 Hoxie avenue.

eft South Deering for New York where

lie will sail for Ireland on a visit to

ler old home.

Charlie Zevestroll was taken to the

Cook county hospital last Saturday for

nervous disease, which the youth has ecu suffering from for the past three

years.

A surprise party was given Sat-

irday evening in honor of Miss Josie ominski at her home, One Hundred

ind Eleventh street anil Lake Calumet.

The evening was spent in music and

dancing after which a luncheon was

served and all departed for their homes

wishing Miss Josie many happy re turns.

KENSINGTON NEWS

Herbert Kippen of Indiana s reported to be quite ill.

avenue

Mrs. McCarthy, Mrs. Murphy

daughter, Miss Nellie Murphy,

Chicago visitors yesterday.

and were

Slow Working Wtareri. There are weavers who turn out only one yard of stuff a year. They ara the Gobelin tapestry weavers, who work in the factory in Paris, which is owned by the French government. They average in the year only from one to three yards of goods, according to the fineness of the weave and the intricacy of the pattern. These weavers work at hand looms, where they put in the filling, or weft, with a shuttle held in the left hand. The back of the tapestry is toward them. A mirror shows them the other side. Baskets of wool in every shade or color surround them. They use 51,400 tones in all. Skilled as

these workmen are, their pay is no bigger than that of the ordinary American laborer. They get about $G0O a year on an average, or about $12 a week. These Gobelin tapestries, requiring years in the making, are of course very expensive. An offer of $30,000 wouldn't get some of them. New Gobelins you can't buy at all. The French government has them made to give away as presents to its friends people of power and position. New York Press.

India Rubber. Caoutchouc was introduced to Europe by M. de la Condamiue on his return from Peru in 1730. "It is," said Its discoverer, "a most singular resin, as much by the use to which it is devoted as by Its nature, which is a problem to our most expert chemists. It flows from a tree growing in several parts of America and is called caoutchouc by the Mainas Indians on the banks of the Amazon." Long before Charles Macintosh began to make his

waterproofs in 1S23 the natives of Quito were using the rubber for the same purpose as well as for boots and bottles and many other things. The new and mysterious material had a hard struggle for popularity in England. Dr. Priestley probably did more than anybody else to make its novel qualities known, for in 1770 he popularized it forever by showing school children how It could be made to efface pencil marks.

CALUMET Phone 2503

Mrs. Itebedeau of 11S4S Lafayette

avenue visited Mis. -Murphy ot uno

Hundred and Fifteenth street Monday

evening.

Mr. Donahue of Hegowiseh was the

guest of his brother, Mr. Donahue, of One Hundred and Fifteenth street Monday.

Mrs. Smith of One Hundred and

Seventeenth street, who has been at

the St. Francis hospital for the past

eight weeks, returned home yesterday very much improved in health.

Mrs. Triedub, who has been In poor

health for sorne time, was found dead

at her home in One Hundred and

Sixth street Monday morning, and as

the gas was turned on it is supposed

sho committed suicide.

Hurrah. "Hip, hip, hurrah!" is a modern phrase. The "hip" and the "hurrah" do not seem to have come together before the nineteenth century. In the eighteenth century hip amounted to just "hi," or "hello," while "hurrah" was then usually "huzza." It is liketho Cossack "Oral" but it is supposed to have been a German cry of the chase adapted by the German soldiers to war and borrowed from them by the English, perhaps first of all at the time of the Thirty Years war. "Hurra !" is said to have been the battle cry of the Prussians in the war of liberation (1812-13). Still, the curious fact that seventeenth and eighteenth century writers call "Huzza I" a sailors' shout lends support to the conjecture that It may really have been the hoisting cry, "Hissar '

Dowie and Ilia Mission. " The career of John Alexander Dowle Is one for thoughtful people to note

with more than passing Interest. This4

is a nation of Bible reading and churchgoing, and the manifestation known as Zionism is not explained by saying that Dowie was an arrant impostor and his large following made up of people taken unawares, lie succeeded in the shadow of prosperous churches. His converts could test the reasonableness of his bold claims by crossing the street to listen to established orthodox religious teachings. Probably the majority of them had heard all that the church has to say before they pinned

their faith to Dowie. It was claimed for Dowie that he reached men as the regular ministry could not or did not; that he covered a field in the work of uplifting a little higher in the social scale than that readied by the Salvation Army. When his fame was at its height the secular press hailed him as a preacher who succeeded because he preached the gospel of righteousness with convincing earnestness and tremendous force. This

view of it made him a

nour- Yellow Esrir Plums

financial disasters Involved are more Large Pails Jell

easily explained than his ability to Potatoes

draw men after him In his spiritual assumptions. The notion that material success is based upon some sort of secret manipulation instead of hard work and frugality easily takes hold

upon this generation. Dowie may nave been deceived in that respect himself, as he may at times have been deceived also with regard to his spiritual mission. The Christian world Ions considered Mohammed a conscious impostor, but impartial students of his career have reached the conclusion that at

times he believed himself called by God, and on other occasions the needs

of his people and his Influence over

them determined his course. But for

Mohammed another prophet and leader might have appeared. So Dowie's passing may clear the field for a regenerative work that Rhall be great in

magnitude and of a character to last.

t2)JL itdiiiaJkj Si

Thursday, JUNE 20th

SUPPLY 95 State Street

CO.

Strictly Fresh Eggs Best Dairy Butter Best No. 1 Hams No. 1 California Hams Sirloin and Porterhouse Steak

Good Boiling Beef

Best Navy Beans

Fancy No. 1 Canned Salmon

man for the Large Can Baked Beans

per doz. per lb. per lb. per lb. per lb. per lb. per quart per can per can per can per pail

23c 13Jc lOo 15c Sc eic lOc 8c lie 15c 75c

" per bu.

Pillsbury XXXX and Gold Medal Flour

2V2 lb. Sacks - - per sack 73c 49 " - " 1.45 98 " - - 2.8O

Illinois Patent and Everbest Flour

lb. Sacks

241 49 98

44

4 4

per sack 65c 1.30 2.55

Joseph Meyerlan of 112:?!) Curtis

avenue, died Sunday, June lb, l'JUi. at-

ler a Ions and painful illness. The funeral took place today from Holy

Uosary church at 10 o'clock. He was

taken to Mt. Olivet and buried. The

deceased leaves a widow and a and two daughters 10 mourn the of a devoted father and husband.

son loss

WEST PULLMAN

"Will Evans of Howard avenue Sundav in Elkhart, Ind.

spent

Mr. Lozier will move into the store vacated by S. J. Markham, this week.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Holmes had as their guest this week Mr. Grieves of LaGrange.

Mr. Baab of Butler street left Sunday for Detroit, Mich., where he went on business.

Miss Alice Cassidy and John A.

Sehork will he married at the Episcopal

church Wednesday evening-.

STONY ISLAND NEWS

George Whitehouse was a land visitor Tuesday evenint

tony Is-

Mrs. D. Beglay of BurnsiJe visited her mother, Mrs. Hogan, Tuesday.

Whistler a Brilliant Talker. Whistler was a brilliant talker and a great debater. I shall never forget my surprise when I heard him say for the first time, "Bacher, I am not arguing

with you; I am telling you. I never forgot the lesson. Later I found that

he had used this effectively in one of his letters to the London World when he said: "Seriously, then, my Atlas, an etching does not depend for Its Importance upon its size. I am not arguing with you; I am telling you." He spoke French fluently, German less readily. His Italian was very good, especially under excitement, though occasionally a French word slipped in unawares, udding to the picturesqueness. I recall that he considered Foe our greatest poet. Otto II. Bacher in Century.

EXTRA SPECIAL For Thursday Morning only, between the hours of 8 to 10 we will sell a Fine Sugar Corn for 4C pel" Call

Had Plenty of Confidence. Augustus Thomas, the well known playwright, was talking about first nights and the heartrending aniiety of them. "On my own first nights," he said, "I am a pitiable object, utterly without hope, convinced In advance that my play is bound to fall. At such times I often wish I had the self confidence of Charles Reade. He, after he had dramatized his novel of 'Never Too Late to Mend,' wrote on the margin of a certain passage, If the audience fails to weep here, the passage has not been properly acted.' "

A Representative House of Lords.

Flans to modify the composition of

the British house of lords will doubt

less be many, but should the one adopt

ed, supposing that reform is certain to go through, conform to the principles

already accepted by the peers the vote will be reduced to a fragment of its

nresent nroDortious. There are now

017 seats in the British upper cham

ber, of which number 549 are held by

hereditary peers of England or peers

of the United Kingdom, sixteen repre

sentative peers of Scotland and twen

ty-eight representative peers of Ire

land. The principle of selection hav

ing already been applied in the cases

of Ireland and Scotland, it would not

be an innovation to make it universal.

Representation according to population would reduce the importance of

England in the house of lords to a de

gree which would strike the masses as

radical. The present apportionment

would leave Scotland sixteen peers and

reduce Ireland's delegation to sixteen,

and the allotment for England and the

United Kingdom would be 113 peers

and probably some representatives

from the episcopal bench of bishops.

Politically the vote of tho house of

lords would not be changed. Unionists

now predominate, and Unionist peers would be chosen. If the reform should

go the length of providing for joint

sessions of the parliament on certain

questions, the lords, if disposed to vote together, could muster enough votes to turn the scale. If tha lords must go,

it is the wisest thing for them to save

their dignity by yielding gracefully the

main point and insisting upon a square

deal in the new line up.

mm

tfifl l 11

To the first Person cuessinsr

rect weight of this stone

cor-

Mr. and Mrs. Dardis left Sunday for an extended trip to Europe and will be pone about four months.

J

Y. SWARTZELL

Grocery and Meat Market JJ47-J263 Ninety-third Street. STONY ISLAND.

Ananias Handicapped.

"It alius was a mystery to me " said

Uncle Eben, "how Anania3 managed to git seen a reputation wifout bein' either a hossman or a fisherman." Washington Star.

Secret Remedies Prohibited. Two of the cantons of Switzerland the Valais and Jessin entirely prohibit the advertising and sale of secret remedies'

The First Jap Railway Train. The throttle of the first Japanese railway train was pulled by an American, Duncan McDonald, cow a veteran in the employ of the Southern Pacific. That was 35 years ago, says the Railroad Man's Magazine, on the occasion of the completion of the narrow-gauge line from Yokohama to Tokio, and McDonald had the honor of drawing the present Mikado, then a young man of scarcely 20. Old English Water Works. Tiverton has the oldest water works of any English town. They were made by Amicia, countess of Devon, in 1240, and presented to the town. The water is brought from a distance of five miles.

British Choral Societies. If in the pure artistic 6ense the British people cannot be said to be musical, there are, it must be admitted, individuals in multitudinous numbers who cultivate with eagerness both vocal and instrumental music. But there is unquestionably no people who devote as much time and earnest study and practice to choral singing as the

English, and this from the sheer love

of it. Edward St. John-Brenon In Strand Magazine.

Old Leprosy Laws.

In the earliest code of British laws now extant namely, that of Iloel Dha,

famous king of Cambria (the present

Wales), who died about the year 030

A. D. we find a canon enacting in

plain and unmistakable terms that any married woman whose husband was

afflicted with leprosy was entitled not

only to separation, but also to the resti tution of her goods.

Fooling the Boss.

Casey Ye're a har-rd worruker, Dooley. now many hods o' morther have

you carried up that laddher th' day?

Dooley Whist man; Oi'm foolin' th'

boss. Oi've carried this same hodful up an' down all day, an' he thinks

Oi'm wormkin'.

A Bancle.

Jones My wife is very shortsighted, you know, and has been so since her

girlhood. Smith (after taking a look at Jones) Oh, then, that explains er I mean If s of no consecraence.

Sena in sir .iww-w ,rrt, r '

Dept.

'A - -es. 'J, . .lift, r 7 tS " -i-.TV J i m. tKJr. m- I . 'J f . ( ' b

Contest Closes July 10 1907

Stone on Exhibition at Paxton S Baker Music Store

GOSTLIN, MEYN & CO. REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES 92 State Street, HAMMOND.

After writing her ninety-sixth novel

John Strange Winter confesses, "I am

now tired of writing novels." Evident

ly Mrs. Stannard, who was behind this

mannish pen name, failed to come in

on the "biggest seller" boom, for she

add pathetically, "But it does not do

to be tired of earning one's living."

It is not exactly because Uncle Sam

Is selling goods to himself in the canal

zone that our exports to Panama are now over a million a month, but a goodly slice of the bulk exported is bought by men who figure on the canal payroll. The national board for the promotion of rifle practice appears to be making progress at a pace to give antimilitarism a cMll, for somehow the grownup American boy dearly loves a gun.

! s S 4i ? 4 4i 4o 4t

) j 9 to t ? it,

$1500

If Mr. Cortelyou handles the treasury portfolio as weil as he did the others he may even get a chance to boss that Job ot canal digging on the isthmus of Fanama one of these days.

Japan's "floating exposition" is in South American waters. There are no rapid fire guns among the exhibits, and anyway the ship's not headed for San Francisco.

1 6 room cottage on Truman Ave. near Sohl St. 3 6 room, new, brick, modern cottages on Alice Street Easy Payments. - 2 6 room frame cottages on Sohl Street, In good repair and a bargain, at A splendid home in Homewood, 75 foot lot, 12 room house, modern conveniences throughout, bargain 1 5 room cottage, new and near Steel Plant and Conkey Avenue. Easy Payments 1 6 room cottage In West Hammond and Garfield Ave. 7 Acres Just south of city limits 1 block east of Homan St.

In add i; Ion to above, we have boosee and homes of all kinds and prices.

come and aee us. Open evenings and Sundays. In vacant property, we have abont 200 lots south of Conkey Avenue between the Monon R. R. and Calumet Avenue, at price ranging from $200 upward. We have re oently acquired 45 lots in Messenger's Addition, many of them on Calumet Avenue" which we are selling below current prices.

2500

1300

5000 13 00 1200 3000 If Interested

a v v

In New York they have organized, a society for the reformation cf salespeople's manners. A little sweetening shoppers tempers might help some

PETITION OF BANKRUPT FOR ITS DISCHARGE. In the matter ft Kast Chicago Hardware Company, Bankrupt. No. 365 in Bnkruptcy. District of Indiana, fs: On this 1st day of June A. D. 1507, on reading the petition of the bankrupt for his discharge, It is ordered by the court, that a hearing be had upon the same on the 2Sth day of June A. U. 19'J7, before eaid court, at Indianapoli.-;, in said district, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, and that notice thereof Le published twice in the LAKE COUNTY TIME.-. HAMMOND, a newsnar-er printed in Paid district.

and that all known creditors and other persons in interest may appear at the said time and place and show cause, if any thev have, why the prayer of the

said petitioner shouia not ue granieu. And it is further ordered by the court that the clerk shall send by mail to all known creditors copies of said petition and this order, addressed to them at their places of residence as stated. Witness, the Honorable Albert B. Anderson, judge of said court, and the seal thereof, at Indianapolis, in said district on the 1st day of June A. D. 1D07. NOBLE C. BUTLER. XScaL ul the CautUJ. Clerk,

PETITION OF BANKRUPT FOR IIIH DISCHARGE-. In the matter of William B. Davis, Bankrupt. No. 37 in Brankruptcy. ORDER OF NOTICE THEREON. District of Indiana, ss: On this 1st day of June A. D. 1907, on reading the petition of the bankrupt for his discharge. It is ordered by the court, that a hearing be had upon the same on the 2 sth day of June A. D. 1907, before said court, at Indianapolis, in said district, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, and that notice thereof be published twico LAKE COUNTY TIMES, HAMMOND, a newspaper printed in said district, and that all known creditors and other persons in inter st may appear at the said time and place and show cause, if anv thev have, why the prayer of the sai'd petitioner should not be granted. And it is further ordered by th court that the clerk shall send by mail to all known creditors eopb-s of sail petition and this order, addressed to them at their placed of residence as stated. itness, the Honorable Albert B.

Anderson, judge or saU court, ana tne seal thereof, at Indianapolis. In said district on the 1st day of June A. D. 1307. NOBLE C. BUTLER, XStaL &JU:&- COUSUJL Clerk.