Lebanon Daily Reporter, Volume 25, Number 246, Lebanon, Boone County, 16 July 1917 — Page 5

a

Classified ADVERTISING Eafc 2e Per Word, Had Issue. Ns Advertisement Takes fo Less Than lUc.

FOR SALE ;6r SAI.iI.An auto trailer. Phone 5'8-Y. 25 It OR SALE OR TRADE Motorcycle. 417 boutli Knot street 7-14-2t OR SALE Late cabbage plants, flat, dutch aim drumhead bv 1,000

1'

r 100. Oak Kill cemetery. 7-11-lltt OR SAl.E-One Hall safe. good as I.ebanon Ice Cream Co. 7-12-tf. UK SALE Kgii.,h bull pups. Sec .aicrehant Policeman Beaman. 7-lu-2t )K KA LE Fifteen head" "of hh.iatf weighing around 100 pounds. C, Rominc. Phone Hazelrigg. 7-10-31 oil SALE One vTonTlwhcr l.r.nri n..- n...l n. .....1. ove. 515 Wcsi Washington street. 7-lB-2t. "3 "wanted 'WANTED MALE AND FEMALE t'uvip a intii;.t !arn $100 monthly corresponding for ewspapers; $40 to $50 monthly in part time; experience unnecessary; o canvassing; subjects suggested, end lor particulars. National Press !ureau. Room 1019, Buffalo. N. Y. I 4-l!7-6-mos. UANTED-('I1 false "tooth. ' Don't mattor if broken. I pay $2.1 HI lu 15 per set. Send hy parrel post and cccive check by return mail. I.. Maer, 2007 S. Fifth Street, Philadelphia, a. . 7-14-121 MANTED Fireman at T. rL, 1. and " E. power station, 21c per hour, bone 726. 8-2D-tf. -.'ANTED One girl" to work in finishing depart inent. Inquire at u M. Co. 7-11-tit ANT'S) To " borrn w I .yilO on first mortgage on small farm. See i'harles Cunningham. 7-l'l-2t. Ml ANTED To buy second-hand fire ' f' proof s-ifc. E.in Powell ;it 95. JANTED-Fo'ur r"oom for" ' light housekeeping. id have heat. 7-M-2t.

f "F03 RENT room houe, bath, P toilet, 2'-t block from square, jlfveal ft Company. 6 ltf. SrORRENT Corner "room Colonial f Theater building. Phil AdN r or N'eal ft Co. 7-7-6t rt)A RENT N :w5-"wim bungalow, f mmlern. Call 'fit or 233. TOR REN i Furnished room7 ' -ll Indianapolis avenue. .Mrs. A'ia Mitchell. 7-l-6t

LOST lOS'f Wednesday, pel dog, while and brown English huildng. Reward for return tn 71(1 N. Lebanon St. OsT A ciosed-faee ladies' watch Thursday evening clone to p'iblic tuare. Return to Reporter office, lirv.-ard. 7-lt-3t OSr Mascnic slipper pin with inttiala G. V. on bte-k, about a week itfro. Phone 374. Mrs. I:na!d Bytd. OS Ai.N'ew pair of shoes, black u ith white top Saturday. 'Phone H.Mi. ii. C. Shoemaker. 7-li-2t.

I Piano Tuning

Player Piano Tuning, Piano Repairing In All Branches , W.W.STEVENS U E. Side Sq. Thone Zo Your Used Furniture Taken as part pay on new goods at JONES & PERKINS Phones 18 or 184 mH:c::F.STrnJ5Pf.LC

How aa Arr,t;ica So'Jier In France Took on Chains By F. A. M1TCHEL

Guilford kid lived la Paris Mreral yean when Ut pan-European war broke out Bo at once enUsted lu the Foreign legion and went to the front with the American corps. lie was a handsome fellow and bad a whining way with him. Women were easily attracted to him. There waa an audac.iy alwut Dim that took well with them. One day Guilford waa knocked seuseless by tbe bursting of a ahell. He waa carried to the rear on a atretrber to a field hospital and put In charge of a Red Crone nurae. Coming to himself aiddenly and seeing a beautiful face bending over blin. be threw bia arma around the woman to whom It lieionged, drew ber quickly dowa and kbuted her. Aa nva aa hit arma were loosened the nurse arose and without a word left him. Rut she sent a anrgeon to Mm. who examined him aiM found he was In nowise Injured eicet for the shock he bad received. Within an hour he was up on bis feet, going to rejoin his command. Guilford ilid not forget the fac of the nurse nor the look she gare Km as she rose and left hlru. Me whs ery min h flidinmcd of himself. The nurse had beeu ready to succor blui; he had letilrnrd tlie care she would have bestowed on him t.y liiMiltlng her. lie could have cut off the arms he had ihrown around ber; he could have hllKhiod the lips he bad pressed upon hem. tluilford was struck again, this time not Hh sort dirt Ibiiiun up by a lmrtina shell, but by alirnpnel. As lin-k utni'd line It. he was placed i secoml ijme iimler the .are of the nurse who hud attended him before lie l-e. oiil7.ed her at once, hut w hether she recognized hliu he could not tell. he rcwialcd him with that iniiaavvc loik usual to those ais-uvtonicd to see sufTerui.'. Iirought restorntivis ns the surgeon dire. te. and othemhie nihiltred to him. A imniter of sl-'k and wonmleJ men were utxItT h'T can-, apd she trente l all nlll.e. Hullford rp el(-d his share of her attention nr.d no more. He wishisl to apologlie for his action toward her when he bad come nnder her '-;iie I efore, but she tare hliu no opportmii! v- ihut U. she ket such P nsonc flint he wns itnaile to brenl; tlii'"i'4i it. He said something aliout li.Klnu U- ii In, I. Med to her for kind, ue-s on ifcf.'rnier o.s :islnn. hut while he n kiii iiig It be sceiiKl to he tlihikiniaoout somethirig else. Itefore he could make up his mtod to break through hev res4rve mid express bis penitence shift s-- transferred to nnother want. iullfonl received letters uecessttntIng his presence iu America, nnd since it W3M not prohnhlf that he would lie Rt for ftiiif a cam f.ir a long while he suc.-eeded lu getting a discharge. I'.croie f r.sdng the ocean be resolved to Hu l the nni-se whom he had treated so wrongfully and ak her forgiveness liieiefor. tiiiliford made Inquiries for her and v. is told that she had leen worn out t.y a long period of nursing and had gone to her borne in Paris for a r-'t. f; jir,,r 1 learned her address. Intend Ins to pi to see her and get tbe burden licit nc.s troubling him off his mind. He dre:nlet putting an ocean lietween bun Hiot the only worisn who bad h"n toward blin whaf; That was the trouble with blui, T was In the dr.rk as to her treatment of him. How singiil-ir that she should have treated him exactly the aatue aa huiidreila of others who bad not ofTended her! As soon ns be arrived In Purls he ttsik a conveyance and told the driver lo tiike him to the address that had lieeii given hlru. Wont was his surpiise to be drlveu to a handsome nwl-'Icie-e lu the most desirable pat of the dwelling portion uf I'nris. Ix-nvlncthe cab he !'H!tcd at tlie bouse atid wanted to get hack Into the cab. It hail not .s'-urred t him that the woman who hail lieen urn-sing soldiers might be an aristocrat. The fact only made him fee! the more culpable. flow ou!d he, an American, fs.e a 'adv. irfTlitilsi of rank, whom he bad trated as If she had l"-eri a barbarian? Hut lie was resolved that he would not leave France wllbout setting hiiuseif lii:lit with ber. He sent up bis card, on which, was written 'One who has ir:i ive.l your kind altentloiia lu a Held hospital." Wh.;." su.iiselle came donn to un t the cs,,.t she stood for a moment on the threshold reganliug blin. Again that Impassive Irsik. Then she ailinnced into the room, "wkbI to him ceieiiMwhiiisly and asked blin to te seated, lie slke of tbe good work she hud done at the front: of the wor fellows Mho bad en benefited by her tet-'ler care. He ctmunenJi'd her eieciaily that she, a lady anrruudisl by siiiiiorts In a splendid home, one win. would grace society, should have assumed the duties of a nurse for luen brought In frm a bnttlelleld. A! this be co'ild say. (hough every word seeaicl like lend d h encomiiiu.it served only to make Ida offense eiu the greater. She listened to praise, but never for a moment did she rciai fron that "itttet dignity of a high Iwrti din.e. When Guilford eciuld endure It no longer, be rose l go. StandInc mute Ijefore ber liefore learlng. stiddenly a fKt up pteodlag bnrat forth. ' "Pardon ." ge said, almost Id a wnlL 1 Wiln smile she tint ont her Imnd. i;uip nil hn not vet rctumevl tn Acer!. ' ti.w.ie n he never will re run, lis has Is'Mime (nr. alive ef

FORBIDDEN FRUIT By wILLARO BLAKCI4AN

My father died whea I waa twelra years old, leaving tns a food property In the care or my unci, John Brouga. Mia name abonld have begun with a "ti," for ha waa tba fruffsat apokea man I aver knew. I waa seat to bonrdjbg school till I was seventeen and then to college. Upon graduating I received a letter from my guardian uncle to come to bla house. When I reached It, leaving tba auto In which I arrived with my band baggage. I aaw looking at ma through aa upir window a youog girl evidently about seventeen, tbe aaeetest faca I had ever seen. I waa thrilled at the Idea of being in a house with such lovely creature, being .: aga to b easily struck by a pretty girl. On entering tbe bona I saw another face, tbe antipodes of the first It was that of my uncle. Bla fare was square, his mouth curved down at the comers, bis eyes set deep In his head and overhung by beetling brows. "How old are you'" was bla first remark to me. "I will be twenty-two next September" "Hy the terra of your father's will you are to have $10,000 the day you are twenty-two yeara old; IKMliO the day yon are twenty-five and th balance when you are thirty. In the mat ter of marriage, you can't take a wife of whom I do not approve. Yon rosy live In this house with me, as long as you like, but I have a warning for you. I have a ward who has been left tn my nr hy her father who waa a tseiom friend of mine. FTe left her a fortune with the provision that she si, .mid ,ol Inheiit it If She llia.i'icd without my consent, and her father ' barged me lo bring about. If possible, a marriage with a young man who Ir part owner In certain property which will fall to her I . are iiothlug about the wife yu select except this girl. In her ense It la hands off." With the iast wonla my uncle looked at uie so savagely that I believed If I r.iarrlrs! his ward there would be In Unite trouble. This gave me deep con em. for It struck me that tlie girl I had seen nt the window was this same ward, by whom I was already stricken. My nucleus bsrk proved worse than his bite-that Is, on all subject except my Interfering with the plaus laid down for his ward, of course the forliid'b n fruit nas altogether too tempting for me. and ( ssn learned that she had received a warning siniilnr to mine, which had a like effect on her flirt onr guardian seemed slncularly iso to the Interest with which I and Kdith Kferllng Inspired each other. At any rate, he made no effort to prevent our lielng much together. We o, played tennis and r'1 Vt on horse back together without a word of re straie-e from blin. ' Edith and 1 tnlkisl over his octlon. or, raiher want of action, and came t tho conclusion that since by the terms of our Inheritances he held the wr.lp hand of us be did not projiose to Interfere nllh our tcniirary relatlous. When the tlnn for action came we would feel his jsiwer When September came and with It a legal set for lne I received flo.msi of my estate. Nothing could have licen more adverse to the plans laid down for me and Kdith Sterling. Tbe po session of this money brought with It an nddtl temptation. I sounded Edith to learn If she would give up her for tnne for mo and tnis first payment of my itrimony. which, If 1 defied my citsntlan. was all 1 could hope for Khe was not only willing, but engT tn do so. I should nd have peruiltted this, but I was young and d.s'ply In love. Indeed, 1 felt guilty In having suggested sin h it thing, and found It difficult to loiji my tun le in tlie fa'-e Th's feeling was enhanced from the fact that his harshness w-as all on the surface, nnd was often used to lender more effis.tlve certain bnrsts of humor. Well, the Inevitable result of putting two youngsters of opiioslte es under the same roof forbidding them lo lore each other, followed. One morning I took Kdith out to ride, and driving to a town across the border of the state we were married. I telegraphed my uncle of the fact, and ew-aaed his refdy. It was very abort, simply, '"Shall expect you for dinner.'' "Which means," I suld to Kdith. "If you, too. choose to give up wealth for love, it Is no concern of his." We reached my uin-le's bouse half an hour before dinner. He was not at home, hot existed soon. When ha airHcd be found us lu the library waiting for him. He shsik bands enrdlaliy with me and kissed Edith, then led the way Into the dining room. The moment we entered It botb Edith mid myself were astonished. It seene-d to have been set for a wedding feast. A bottle of champagne was In a cooler beside niy ioet eb-fr ?.r5 as so ai as wo were served with food It was uncorked, and our glassea being Riled uiy lin.lc nilved bia glass, "To the folly of youth," he sold. 'Those ho put you two under my management found one who, undep landing these snuie follies, has been well able to cniry out their designs. This marriage was plajiued for yon Itmg ago. and wheu I cjuseiiied to be your guardian 1 consented oub; on conlilllou (list 1 should have tny own way aa to bringing you two together Had 1 told you that you must inarrv, you would here tinned your barks ou each other. V heu I told von yon should nt marry, with the gicualtv uf ench )nisc a fortune. 1 drove jou Into rachoiuei

Ginaiottiz

Women of Nw York East Side to Appear.Befcre Congress. (Ha tktt strrsnfl'iaul . Ccri-irr.l WASHINGTON, July l.-TIm hunger cry of Now York's Ghetti will be heard in the halls of congves,!, in the offices of the food administration and perhaps in the White House itself. Senator Gore today arranged a hearing before the agricultural committee for seven women of the east side; Herbert C. Hoover planned to receive them personally and Representative Jeanette Rankin soughoj an audience for them with President Wilson. The women will be brought to Washington by Miss Helen Todd, an cast side worker, as soon as the audience with the president is ar.-anged. Thiy are uneducated, typical women of New York's congested foreign districts. Some were leaders in tlie bread riots and received their on'y training as speakers iu thie demonstration. They will tell official Washington the .ufTerings the high food prices have brought on them and plead for inimodintc relief. The purpose in bringing these women :o Washington is three fold. Misa Todd explained today. First, to humanize he government in its dealings with tlie people during the war: second, to convince Mr. Hoover that the east side women n.uit have iood before they an save it and. third, to urge speedy pustuigc of the food control bill by showing that serious disturbances in (lie poorer districts may result from further delay. s THREE LOST LIVES iN S. Slate Department (lets Word of Destruction of Vessel by Subsea. I : Inr JnfTaalinloi! .VMM A'rrlr .) WASHINGTON. July IU. The state department today was advised the sinking by a submarine of the American steamer "Grace," owned by he Standard Steamship corporation, 15 Whitehall street, New York. The (ubnuirinc was not seen, but the wake )f the torpedo was visible. Three lost their lives when the ship vent down--VanWyko and Anderson, liiens, and E. J. Karrcll, of New Jersey, an American citizen. Vive thers were injured by tire from explosions of the cargo of petroleum, ncluding two members of the armed ?uanl, Hugh Donnelly and George vVilf-'oit. The other three injured were The injured men have been landed -ind are in hospitals. The rest of the survivors have been landed in tafcty. CARD OK THANKS. To neighbors, friends and ail who o kindly assisted in the hour of bereavement when our mother, I.ida A. f.'ory, pained away, we wish to express our most sincere appreciation. The children. HE I 'REAM SOCIAL. The lailies of the U. B. rhurrh will have an ice cream social on the lawn if tlie church Wednesday evening. In cae of rain the festival will he held in the church ba.-rf-ment. 7-lb'-2t Card of Thanks We wish to thank the neighbors ind friends for their kin '.wa during the illnesH and death of our biuther Marion DeWitt. Brothers and .Sisters. W. 0. Coiy and family of Indianapolis, were ir. the city Sunday to attend the funeral of Mr. Cory's mother ory, of Elgin, III., who was here to attend the funeral of hi mother, Mrs. I.ida A. Cory, returned to his home this evening. C. C. Cory and wife of Springfield, Ol.io, who were called here by the loot, of M- Ctj'; mother, Ictunud to their home this afternoon. Soils and Crops, A close siudy of soils and crops allows tint the relation la purely natu ral. In that crops showing preference for a certain soli Is due entirely to the demand of these crops for a di-fl-nire amount of water and warmth. J'leutfoud Is a secondary, consideration, and a tltla can easily be sup. piled by niau the problem Is solved. Varisbts Tides. On tha Wa-l Anstrai. an coast the pics are so viinsbls that It Is not an ln.-.iliPol slpliv to see eel uu5i r,(: , - ; : ! f . .iO II. e tl ' t

SALS

Now is the time to buy. Those who. buy nov will urely profit. Within sixty days from now you wiU look back at the pi ices we re quoting during this July Sale and regret that you did not buy more,

CHILDREN'S DRESSES, 49c. Up to $1.49 values. Sizes,- 6 to 14 year. Made of percale, gringhams, galatea and . romper cloth. None sent on approval; none exchanged ; no 'phone orders.

LADIES' WAISTS, 88c. 51.25 quality. White organdies and voiles, large collars, lace and embroidery trimmed, long sleeves.

LADIES' FIBER BOOT Blick, white, pink, blue.

LADIES' SILK WAISTS.

$3.50 Crepe de Chine Waists Wash Silk Waists, $2.25 values ......

SUMMER DRESS GOODS. 40-inch Printed Voiles, 1 Q per yard J. HI 25c, 2!)c and 35c qualities, all on one table; all nt the same price 1 flrt

per yard

CORSETS, 79c. Now is your opportunity to buy a corset for hot weather. Every corset on sale is guaranteed rust proof. ' All sires. Values up .o $2.00.

LADIES' PERCALE HOUSE DRESSES, 59c.

Dark or light colors, ties. None exchanged, 'phone orders. BY JACK VEIOCK. (8y t nrcrsatejsal .Ym Hsrvtee.I NEW YORK, July IS Ever see an unassisted triple play? If you have, you ate one of the very few fans in the vast army that folloys the national pastime who has been fortunate enough to witness a three-ply killing unaudited. The unassisted triple play is just about as scarce as the fuzz on a billiard hail, and you'll admit that ia "some" scarce. In the many years that baseball records have been kept, there have been tea unassisted triple plays recorded, and only two of the ten were made in the major leagues. Th,3 record of ; unassisted triple plays came in for a lamping recently when l'hil Cooney, second baseman of tlie Omaha (Western League) club, pulled off one of the triple killings unassisted In a game at Denver, Cooney was playing second baie for the Omaha club, and there were nwa on both first and second when he caught a line drive. He tagged the runner who was coming from first base when the ball was hit, and" then hepped hack as, econd in time to rttire the lunner who had left that station for third base. Records show- it to be the first triple play unassisted that has ever been made in the Western League, and the tenth In the history of baseball. Cooney's play wax also the first to occur in fiv years, the laxt being mada by Player Foreman, at Kankakee, HI., in 1012. Paul Mines, of the olu Providence (National League) club, was the tirat player in tha history of the organized game to pull off an unassisted triple play. 'His histnry-roakinf play was made at Providanca way bk in May 3? JHoS. and there lnp4 g period of twenty.our years beore tha aecend umusitd triple play went on record, 'tarry 0 Han in f , XocK -'-r i.t.s-ii'-rn Leag'te) club, made the seeof1 pi.v nt ui kiiut ft Jerev Ci'c ' i,ii I .' cwie "jo a t'ji

ISportsl ij PLAYING THE FIELD j

HOSE, 2Sc. No 'phone or-

$1.98 $1.49

Up to $1.19 qualiNo refunds. No

T layer to pull off the play. Rail made his unassisted triple play at Cleveland in July of 1909. TRIPLE STEALS SCARCE, TOO. Tlayera Miller, Cruise and Lonf of the St. Louis Cards, pulled off a triple steal at Boston this season, which caused a Bcantown scribe to dig into the records of the National League. Said scribe found that it waa the first triple steal aver made in tha eld league and tha fourth made in the history of major league baaebalL So the triple steal ii even more scarce than the unassisted triple play. The American League records show that three triple steala have been made by ita playera. The first on record in the younjer circuit occurred in 105, when Sugden, Fadden and Barkett, of the Browns, worked a triple theft on the Athletics. In ID08 Oldnng, Coombs and Davis, of the Marks, scored a triple steal against Washington. Tha third in tha American League came in HI 6, when Johnson, Auatin and Sialer, of the Browns, pulled the play against Detroit. SATURDAY'S RESULTS. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Indianapolis, S; Minneapolis, 3. St. Paul, 4; Louisville, 0. Kansas City, 9; Toledo, 2. Milwaukee-Columbus (rain). AMERICAN LEAGUE. Chicago. 4: New York, I. Boston, 4; Detroit, 1. Cleveland, 7-0; Washington, 5-3. r.nla.Mplua-St. Louis (rain). NATIONAL LEAGUE. Brooklyn, 5-1 1 Pittsburgh, 3-0. New York, s-4; Cincinnati 0-7. Boston, 3-3; St. Louis, 2-2. Chicago, 3-3; Philadelphia, 2-3. SUNDAY'S KKSULTS. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Minneapolis, 2-3; Indianapolis, 1-4. Louisville, 5-U; St! Paul, 0-3. Columbus, 8-6; Milwaukee, 2-0. Kansas City, 10-2; Toledo, 9-4. , AMERICAN' LEAGUE. Now York. 4-3 f Cleveland.. 0-2. Detroit, 7; Philadelphia, 1l . Washington, 8; Chicago. S. Boston, 4-6; bt. l.oui. 2-,'S. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Oiien date.

BUNGALOW APRONS, 55c Dark or light colors. Made of. Scout percale; cut full 57 inches long. We reserve the right to limit quantities. No 'phone orders. i MISSES MIDDIE COATS, 88c. ' . Made of mercerised poplin ; blue or black striped. Absolutely fat colors. Long ilecvM.

CHILDREN'S RIBBED HOSE, 25c Black tfr white, fine ribbed; have linen heels and toes ; size 6 1-2 to 9 1-2. PONGEE SPORT SILK, 49c. Plain or with sport stripes, dots and figures. Up to $1.19 qualities. ECONOMY SALE OF DOMESTICS. Fruit of the Loom. Bleached Muslin, IF(limit 10 yards) per yard XtlVr Crash Toweling, unbleached, 16 "I OVl' inches, per yard Crash Toweling, unbleached, 18 1 inches, per yard AtlW American Calico, light colors, HV'it per yard , American Calico, dark colors, Q per yard Apron Ginghams, good quality, 1 A per yard Xvfl ECONOMY SALE OF CURTAIN MATERIALS.

36-inch Marquisettes, white, cream 1 D or ecru, per yard ::: w ;-; - AOU

36-inch Cretonnes, splendid assort- "J Q mcnt of handsome patterns, per yd A 7 v 40-inch Marquisettes, full mercerized double thread, ecru color only, worth 35c C A per yard, on sale, per yard "

Sal j

Craig's Store GROCERIES Arways in the Lead LEWIS & STORMS W. H. GREEN DJENTI5T First IfatfaasU Baa Bofialif Bawau Ms-14 rfcoa 1M DR. L, M. BEAVEN OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Famars State Bank Building 7 a. ai. to 8 p. m. PH0NK 264. COOK BY WIRE WITHOUT FIRE Interstate Tub. Service Co CADILLAC, PAIGE AND DODGE BROS.' CARS FIRESTONE AND U. S. TIRES ENGLISH AUTO AND TRACTOR CO. Jersey cow sale Snturdav. July 21 ii cv trrw - L-iuw a:

O0u

I ' '. s to. n i jer I's.-a