Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 127, 30 May 1906 — Page 3
The Richmond Palladium, Wednesday, May 30, 1905.
Page 3,
iVAGE LAW INTERPRETED
SEMIMONTHLY PAYMENTS E Stale Supreme Court Holds That Manufacturing and Mining Companlea Can be Made to Pay Their Men Every Two Weeks. The State Supreme Court yesterday upheld the constitutionality of 'the act requiring manufacturing and mining companies and firms to pay fthelr employes semi-monthly In law. ful money. A judgment for $118, as penalty (at the rate of $1 a day) for delay In paying a miner his wages and $50 attorneys fees, In addition to $58.99 of ' wages admitted to be due, was affirmed against the Seeleyvllle Coal Mining Company. The court declared the act not subject to the Infirmities for which the 'weekly wage law" was held unconstitutional. The court said of the law: "It fixes no price on any man's labor; 'it leaves the parties to do that. The requirement to pay wages at least semi-monthly only becomes mandatory upon the employer on the 'demand of the employe to whom the wages are due and owing. His right under the law to semi-monthly demand the wages then due him Is a matter wholly optional with him. In no manner does the statute require him to exercise this right against his own free volition. The assessment of a penalty for delay In payment which can in no event exceed twice the amount of wages due is neither excessive nor oppressive.' FIRST SENSATION ' OF THE ASSEMBLY vails and the name of the Rev. W. W. Lawrence is substituted for that of the Rev. John A. Burnett." It was. asserted after the session that the Rev. Mr. Burnett is a minister held in high esteem and the fact that he smokes was the only objection that could be raised to his selection as the general secretary of the Young Teople's Society. The action' was 'regarded as a most emphatic declaration of the belief of the church In general that the tobacco habit shall not be tolerated, especially in tho ministry. - Women as Djeacons.' There was another period of unusual interest In the session yesterday afternoon when the question of admitting women into full fellowship as deaconesses came up for consideration. Previous to the session of the General Assembly and in accordance with the order passed by the Assembly last year, this question was placed before the various Presbyteries the delegates to these presbyteries to It was announced yesterday that tli7 V UVU UVt 11 VXtiVlUH J wuuivu and that It stood 792 in favor of admitting the women as . deaconnes3e3 and 115 against. Under an established rule of the General Assembly that body must ratify any action of a majority of vote of the presbyteries unless there Is "some peculiar circum stance that will not admit of such ratification." Dr. J. C. Carson, of Xenia, O., made an address agarnst the proposition, basing his argument chiefly on the ground that in 187S the General Assembly had adopted a resolution to the effect that women could not be elected as deacons and that until this former action had been rescinded the Assembly could not act. Dr. Carson, however, seemed to represent a minority of the delegates for all other speeches on the point under consideration favored giving the women equal rights with men as regards the deaconate. The consumption of 'time in discussion had been so great that there was not an opportunity for the Assembly to pass finally on the matter and 4t went over until today. The Assembly will adjourn this afternoon. ROMAN MILLIONAIRES. VB Phenomenon of Mammoth For. tanea Not. a New Thinar. While. it' Is tiot a very tangible con tolatlon to "those of us who belong to the less favored class commercially, there Is at least a sort of historic comfort in knowing that the phenomenon of mammoth fortunes Is not a new thine. A magazine writer goes back to ancient Rom'ewhen there were no railroads oettrnst or corporations, and gives some figures on the Individual fortunes of'that day which might look attractive even to soma of our modern plutocrats. Seneca, the philosopher and author, was worth $17,500,000; Lentulus, the augur, $10,600,000; Crassus. the politician who formed with Caesar and Tompey the first triumvirate, had a landed estate of more than $3,000,000; the emperor Tlborius left a fortune of $118,000,000, which the depraved Caligula got rid of in less than a year. A dozen others had possessions that ran Into the millions. It Is true that .these Romans did not make" these fortunes In what we would call regular commercial operations. But they got the money, and they held on to it, which la about all that can safely be said of possessions that run into seven figures In any age or country. And, speaking of campaign contributions and so forth, Julius Caesar once presented the consul Paulus with $290,000 merely as a token of esteem and coupled with the hope that Paulus Would do the right thing in a certain political matter that was pending. The oKUun:ui v i -ucv.uic nun I and neither he nor Caesar suffered any In DODulaiitr. There , are many things under the sun that axe not new. Omaha World Herald. ' .
APPEAL fOR HISTORICAL DATA Indiana State Library Board Issues a Circular Letter Asking People to Assist in the Work of Collecting Valuable Material.
The Indiana State Library Boar,d of which Robert L. Kelly president of Earlbam college is a member has issued a circular letter appealing to the people of the state for aid in the work of collecting historical data. A copy was received in Richmond yesterday and is as follows: "Through the kindness and generosity of Mrs. Oliver P. Morton, the State Library has Just come into possession of letter copy books and despatches of Governor Morton covering a portion of the Civil War period. These do not cover the entire war period, but In many respects the most interesting and vital portion, and will prove very valuable as authoritative materials upon Indiana's part in the Civil War. "Mrs. Morton has had it in mind for some time to turn over these documents to the State, but for various reasons the transfer has been delayed un til the present. . She had fully appreciated the value of these papers, and had kept them for some time in the vaults of the Indiana Trust Company. "If all persons in the State having in their possession documents relating to the history of the State would follow Mrs. Morton's example, the State Li brary would soon contain a great wealth of valuable historical data. "The State Library, like every other institution, must depend upon assistance from its friends to make itself useful and in turn will be useful to Its friends in proportion to the support given to it. "Collecting historical material being one of the functions of the State Library, which is the Historical Liorary of the State, we desire especially to collect and preserve, to classify and catalogue alr-valuable historical material relating to Indiana in every stage and phase of her existence. It is necessary that this material be collected at the earliest possible date, as much of it is being wantonly destroyed, sold to Institutions outside the State or lost by accident. "Our history consists of all books and pamphlets written by citizens of the State or by any person concerning the State or any part of it; complete
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JAMES A. TAWNEY, CHAIRMAN HOUSE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE. The important appropriations committee of the house, of which Speaker Cannon was chairman for several years, is now presided over by James A. Tawney of Minnesota. He was born near the historic town of Gettysburg, Pa., nnd started life as a blacksmith and machinist. Later he became a lawyer, went to the state senate and then to congress. In the house he showed himself very Independent and for a time was classed as a Republican "insurgent." lie was an influential member even before his present committee assignment.
Paper ffanilkerrhlera. The paper handkerchief, unlike the paper collar, is here to stay," said a physician. "It has a good reason for Remaining, and that is what the paper collar never' had. The paper handkerchief comes to us from Japan, whore for centuries It has been in use. It is soft and thick and strong, and it looks like silk. It costs a cent less than the cost of laundering a linen handkerchief. The linen handkerchief, physicians agree. Is the most dangerous article in the human wardrobe. It swarms "with billions of germs of consumption and grip and pneunymla, and hence, instead of being laundered, it should be destroyed. But It can't be destroyed; it is too expensive. The paper handkerchief Is destroyed. It is thrown into the fire. The rarity of consumption In Japan is attributed, with eome show of Justice, to the exclusive use of paper handkerchiefs by the Japanese." New York Tress. Slmploa Tunnel Pomt Cards. Collectors of picture post cards will, be Interested in the inauguration card! Of the Slmplon tunnel. On the one side1 Is a design showing Labor pointing thej way to Commerce and Agriculture. Onj the address side is a frieee bearing ai laureated head and the inscription, "In ! labore pas." In the lower part of the! frieze are the words, 'Jnanguration of; the Simplon." Of this? card 500,000 ! copies will be struck and the block I then destroyed. Still Time. Burroughs Say, old man, there was a time when you promised te- share your last dollar with me. Rlchley That's all right I haven't got dovrn tx It yet Though the sun , scorches us sometimes and gives us the headache, we, do not ' refuse ' to acknowledge that we stand In need of his warmth. De lit-
single volumes or complete files of newspapers published in the State, especially the earlier publications; maps of any portion of any State; manuscript narratives; diaries; and any original document that may throw any light upon the history of any of the United States and particularly upon the history of Indiana or the Northwest Territory. We want pamphlets regardless of age or subject; reports, in sets or single numbers, of any society, secret order or institution; catalogues of educational institutions in Indiana regardless of date; minutes and proceedings of any church organization of any date or denomination; proceedings or programmes of any society or club. "Being ephemeral in form and usually thought to be worthless as matters of history, pamphlets are especially difficult to collect even In a very short time after their issue. In fact, however, pamphlets more than almost any other form of publication reflect the spirit . of their time and occasion and are frequently more valuable in reproducing the sentiment of their age than more pretentious publications and they are quite indispensable in a reference library where students, historians, biographers, seek most ardently what to others appear of little worth. "Help us to collect what may be collected and to locate what can not now be collected. "Old letters throwing any light upon the habits or conditions of life among the early settlers of any part of the State are valuable for historical purposes. Even private documents will be longer preserved and better cared for in the State Library than if kept in private hands. Every person who contributes such materials to the State Library will be rendered the most valuable service to his own and future generations. "It would be well for all our people if we could in some way prevent the destruction of any book, pamphlet or document without its first being referred to some one who knows whether or not it possesses historic value."
Tbe Rhinoceros. The rhinoceros is the thickest skinned quadruped, its hide being tough enough to resist the claws of a Hon or tiger, the Wow? of a sword or the balls of an old fashioned musket Coret. Women have worn corsets from the earliest times. The mummy of an Egyptian princess who lived 2,000 years before Christ was discovered in 1S72, and round the waist was a contrivance closely resembling the modern corset Karl's Wag-on. In Germany the star group which we call the "Big Dipper" is known as "Karl's Wagon." Ostrich Feathers. An ostrich feather if held upright will be 8 eon to be perfectly equal on both sides, the stem dividing it exactly in the center. In other feathers the stems are found to be more or less on one side. Jerry Butldlnr. In the early part of the last century a firm of contractors named Jerry Bros, carried on business in Liverpool, England, and earned an unpleasant notoriety by putting up -rapidly built showy but ill constructed houses, so that their name eventually became general for such builders and such work la all parts of the world. The Hebrew Span. The Hebrew span, often mentioned In the Scriptures, was 10.9 Inches and CKjual to three palms. : . ' San Francisco. The original Spanish name of San Francisco was "Mlsion de los Dolores de Nuestro Padre San Francisco de Asis," Just as Santa Fe's full name, as translated Into English, is "The True ClCr of the Jtolr .Faith ot St Fnuieis,"
GLEANINGS.
Korea la taking more to beer drinking than either Japan or China. There are caught annually on the German coast 10,000,000 pounds cf shrimps, most of which are netted at depths of thirty or forty feet. In order to put a stop to the practice of binding women's feet the Chinese board of education has issued an order prohibiting the sale of small shoes. Hungry vultures have attacked men and women in the valley of Coucbs, canton of Valais. A bull was so seriously Injured in a fight with them that It had to be killed. Exactly a hundred lives were lost in fires which occurred in London last year. Forty-six of the victims were under eight years of age, and fourteen were over sixty. In almost every instance the Are was due to carelessness and the lack of ordinary precautions. A British trades unionist has sued for an injunction to prevent the labor organization to which he belongs from levying assessments upon him under pain of expulsion from the union to pay the salary voted a labor member of parliament who belongs to a party hostile to that of the injunction seeker. THE ROYAL BOX. When King Edward was Prince of Wales he was known In familiar circles as "Teddy Wales." King Leopold of Belgium delights in a collection of ancient timepieces, one of the most valuable being a masterpiece which belonged to Marie Antoinette. The late Czar Alexander III. of Russia was once considerably embarrassed by a circus of performing fleas, sent him by Prince Henry of Reuss as a birthday present. The young king of Spain is an expert In the use of the sword. When a child he practiced with wooden swords with the young nobles of his court His marvelous ability was even then noticeable, and he is now considered one of the most expert of the royal fencers of Europe. What is undoubtedly the largest collection of picture postal cards In the world Is the property of the Prince of Wales' eldest son. The collection Includes cards from every country In the world and Is now growing almost too bulky for convenient handling, there being more than 10,000 cards. THE WRITERS. Jerome K. Jerome has the middle name of Klapka. Kipling was christened Rudyard because his father proposed to his mother on the lake of that name. H. G. Wells in his youth often wrote 8,000 words a day, but now he confines himself to 1,000 words 300,000 words a year two books. Mark Twain is very fond of collecting odd obituary poetry and has a scrapbook, which he prizes very highly, containing 3.000 specimens. The memoirs of General Kuropatkln, a work covering the Russo-Japanese war, are being published In Moscow under the direction of the author. The most remarkable thing about the career of Justin McCarthy is the tremendous amount of work he has been able to accomplish. Novelist, Journalist, historian, politician and party leader, he has found time to travel widely and to cultivate delightful social relations with most of the leading literary, artistic and political people of his time. THE AUTOMOBILE. An English medical authority says fast automobile riding has much the same psychological effect as getting drunk. Automobile temperance might not be a bad plan. Buffalo Express. A bill in the German reichstag provides that automobilists must pay life annuities to those dependent on persons killed by their motor cars or to persons permanently Injured by such accidents. It sounds like an extreme measure. But is it? New York World. Legislation respecting the automobile Is new and experimental, but brief experiment has demonstrated the necessity of broader public safety legislation, legislation that will cover all possible conditions, legislation that will protect the prudent automobillst and punish the reckless and negligent Schenectady. Star. CHURCH AND CLERGY. The Church of England has an income of $75,000,000 a year. There are within the United States today 199,553 religious organizations, with 30,313,311 members, an average of 160 members to a church. The Methodist church on John street a few doors east of Nassau, New York city, was the first Methodist church In America. It was of wood and stood somewhat back from the street It was built in the year 1764. In a recent speech at Taunton, England, the bishop of Bath and Wells said it was a sin for a man of leisure to take the Lord's day for pleasure, but a hardworking man who never had a chance for recreation except on that day did no wrong to take it then. POLITICAL. A politician in landing a job is very much like a woman in landing a husband. He puts in all his work before he gets the job and forgets to keep up appearances after he has It Atchison Globe. We have no word to say against politics. Only it need not absorb us completely. Those who are interested In other things and .who make a decent living by hard work can give too much time to politics that is, too much for their .own good. Indianapolis News. Ivy In En ir land. In England the ivy is considered an emblem of fidelity. In all parts of Great Britain the ivy grows with a luxuriance unknown in most other quarters of the world, and the tenaciousness with which its tendrils cling to rocks and walls is supposed to have originated the idea of the symbol. The Golden Eagle. The average golden eagle weighs twelve pounds, is three feet from the tip of his bill to the tip of the tali and has wings of seven feet spread,
THE HALL OF FAME. John Peruglni, for many years Identified with light opera as a singer, has become a Wall street broker. George O. Starr has succeeded the late James A. Bailey as manager of the big Barnum & Bailey chrcus. ne is a former Fhiladelphinn. President Roosevelt is sitting for a portrait In oil to be made by Irving R. Wiles of New York at the suggestion of the emperor of Germany and others to be placed In the University of Berlin. The Earl of Harrington was born sixty-two years ago and succeeded his father in the title in 1881. He is one of the peers who have dabbled In trade. In 1S94 he opened a fruit shop in Parliament street in London. The only negro officer of the army who is a West Pointer Is Charles Young, at present on duty as military attache at Port au Prince, Haiti. Captain Young entered the Military academy in 1884 and was graduated in 18S9. To Ralph Talbot, Jr., a second lieutenant of the Twelfth cavalry, belongs the distinction of being the youngest commissioned officer of the United States army. He was born In 1S84 and was commissioned five days before his minority expired. Richard Burke, the Englishman, has given up hunting and will sell his establishment and go to San Francisco to help in the reconstruction of his damaged property there. He Is part owner of many buildings in San Francisco .and is married to a wealthy American, Miss Donaghue. Bennet Burleigh, the English war correspondent, has about recovered from a long siege of pneumonia. Mr. Burleigh is the oldest of war correspondents now on the active list, hav ing first smelled gunpowder in the clvlt war over forty years ago. Since then he has served in half the countries of the world. M. Jusserand, the French ambassador, since his residence In Washington has largely added to his reputation as an orator. He has always been known rather as a profound scholar and student but In the speeches he has made in this country he has shown originality of research and a high degree of forensic ability. EDITORIAL FLINGS. If the earth must quake, why doesn't it turn In and rip a nice, wide crack across Panama? Richmond TimesDispatch. The Smoot trial has cost the government $23,000. Sometimes it takes more money to get a man out of the senate than it does to put - him in. Toledo Blade (Ind.). Some day somebody will invent a model street car, and then people will complain because it doesn't provide any place for anybody to stand up. Boston Globe. There Is a crying demand for reform of bridge rules. Like all other games, the howling need is for some rule by which the loser will not have to lose. Washington J?ost Indiana Dunkards recently decided that the telephone was a device of Satan. They must have been trying to get somebody when the wire was busy. Chicago Record-Herald. AROUND THE HOUSE. Soap and wood ashes are excellent for cleaning zinc tubs and pails. When laundering lace curtains if a creamy shade is desired add clear strong coffee to the starch. Sprinkle the matting " with Indian meal and then sweep it thoroughly, sweeping out the meal and the dirt with-it Whiting and sweet oil mixed to a paste and rubbed on silver w'th a piece of flannel will brighten it. Wipe with a soft cloth and polish wltb chamois skin. Widths of matting sewed together with a loose stitch, using carpet threau, makes the floor covering look neater and wear better than when staples are used to fasten it down. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Stolen sweets are often hard to di gest More men are wining to lend an ear than a band. After it is all over a man wonders why he was worried. It takes a born diplomat to observe without being observed. A whipping doesn't hurt a man so much as the thoughts of being whipped. No girl with a new engagement ring can understand why any one should want to wear gloves. Forgiving without forgetting Is a good deal like giving a receipt for money without signing your name to it Chicago News. OLD FASHIONED. What has become of the old fashioned woman who was accused of prinking? What has become of the old fashioned man who always asked his tall friends, "How is the weather up there T' What has become of the old fashioned man who said to a visitor when dinner was ready, "Set up and have a biter What has become of the old fashioned man who said in abusing a neighbor. "He hasn't the sense he was born with?" Atchison Globe. The wrong ouf neighbors suffer ought it seems to us, to teach them sweetness of temper. Sometimes a good dose of flattery will make a dark haired woman lightheaded. To get a clear Idea of vhat charity Is Just think of what quality you want used when your shortcomings are under discussion. Boyhood joy show up at forty bigger than they did at fourteen.
ho Liability in ban
where in California, German Fire of Indiana, as Insure in
Richmond Insurance Agency, Hans N.Koll, if gr 11 South 7th St Telephone No. 41.
4ECOIA Being a holiday our store will be the balance of the people, free to pay
Our store will be opened 'on Tuesday evening and we will delgrer goods
with our wagons until what orders you dinners are filled. Come as early as get the goods out. Store will be opened Saturday until business is completed. Following are our special prices for New Potatoes, New Peas and Green 55cts. Fine home grown lettuce per lb.
tOcts.
Green onions, Radishes and Pie Plant 2 iyTches for Sets.
nice Large Fancy Pine Apples lucts Bananas per doz 15cts. Sweet Sugar Cured Hams per lb 1! California Hams nice and sweet Country Bacon 400 pounds nice md pound. Navy Beans 3 quats with 3 stamps
Hoods Leader Coffie the bar for the money per lb 15cts Hoods Fancy Blend with23 sta-rps 25cts. . " Fresh Country buttejdr tb 18cis 2 lbs for 35cts. Fresh Country gathered eggs per doz 17cts. Santa Clause or Lenox Soap 8 bars for 25cts. Swifts Pride 9 bars for 25cts. Shirt Waists the finest line in the city and of best quality from $1.00 to $2.50, 50 stamps with each one. Jardiniers, Fancy Assortment no 2 alike, 10 inch in diameter 98cts each. See the new Log Jardiniers and' 10 stamps for 10cts. Pictorial Review Patterns. HOOD'S MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE Trading Stamps with All Purchases. Free Delivery. New Phone 1079 ; Old Phone 13R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. 411-413 Main Street.
LIZARDS OF BARBADOS. Tlier Can Clianare Color and Drop Their Talis at Will. The green lizards which swarm on every tree certainly have the hardest life of any creatures in Barbados, since their flesh is so delicate that everything eats them which can catch them. Cats, fowls, birds, monkeys and snakes all devour the poor lizards, which have only two methods of defending themselves, . both very Inadequate for the purpose. One is their power of changing their color, whereby they can appear bright green at one moment on the leaf of an aloe and then dark chocolate brown on a piece of damp earth. If this does not conceal them from their enemy they drop their tails. The caudal appendage jumps from the ground and makes a frantic dance all by itself, and if the pursuer Is deluded into seizing it the lizard avails Itself of the chance to escape and grow another tail. For the rest the poor lizards are harmless things, with pathetic eyes, in which lurks an expression of weariness and disillusion, as though they were as old as the world itself and bad found It all vanity and vexation of spirit They are fond of plaintive music and will enter at the open windows when a piano is playing and sit listening and nodding their queer flat heads and looking out of those wistful eyes at the player till he or she, If of an Imaginative temperament, might fancy she were playing to an audience of transmigrated souls. Chambers' Journal. NAVAL DISCIPLINE. PvnAahinenta That Are Meted Out to British Sailors. For infraction of regulations some curious punishments are meted out in the English navy. It Is an everyday occurrence, says London Tit-Bits, to see half a dozen sailors lined up on deck facing the paint work, holding their, hammocks on their shoulders. At first the hammock isn't heavy, but after an hour or so it drags on one's shoulders like lead. Besides, it Is not at all entertaining to stare fixedlyat a square foot of painted woodwork for "an hour or more at a time. Another punishment that Jack despises is bailing with a spoon. He is placed upon the deck, with two large wooden buckets, one filled with water and the other empty. With a spoon he must dip all the water from one bucket and transfer it to the other, being, meanwhile, the butt of his comrades' jests and jeers. Sometimes a delinquent is made to walk 6lowly backward and forward along the deck, nursing in his' arms a six inch projectile, weighing a little over 100 pounds. Once a sailor, who laughed at the stammering speech of his commander, was made to stand upon the forebridge. In full view of the ship's crew, and laugh for an hour and a half. Spitting upon the deck of a man-of-war is strictly prohibited. Cuspidors are placed at Intervals along the deck, and these must be used. Upon some ships, when a sailor Is caught spitting upon the deck, a small tub is strapped to his chest and he Is made to wear it Any one who chooses may use this walking receptacle. The offender thus punished rarely repeats his offense. The Remedy". "You're not In love, Robbie. You only think you are." "Well, how the dickens am I to find out my mistake if I am mistaken? "Oh. marry the woman by all means. Home Notes. A Distinction. Mistress Have you had any experience with children? Bridget Nope. I but they have had some wid me.
rrancisco OEny-
leaves the. In: ance Co. ly sound as ever.
home company.
flON DAY
closed all day as we wish to respect. have made for your Dentation - Day possible so as to give Ur s chance to on Tuesday evenjerg same as on that day, Tuwlay, Beans smatwneasure 15cts, per pk. anlbcts each. ( jsfTld cure per pound 11cts. sugar cured by the strip 10c ts per 30cts. He Knew. The first witness called In a petty lawsuit In Cincinnati was an Irishman of whose competence as a witness opposing counsel entertained doubt. 'At their instance there was put to him before being sworn the usual Interrogatory, "Do you know the nature of an tathr A broad grin spread over the face of the Irishman as he replied: "Indade, your honor, I may say that it is second nature with me." Harper's WTeekly. Variety. She Don't you get tired of this modern life, with Its heartburnings, lta longings. Its cruel disappointments. Its unutterable inadequacy? He Oh, yes, but always just about that time some new girl comes along. Life. Her fitatna. The Captain That's a handsome woman! Is she unmarried? The Belle Oh, yes! (Captain Indulges In pleasing reflections.) She's been unmarried several times! London Malt Glory is like a circle in the water, which never ceaseth to enlarge Itself till by broad spreading It disperse to naught. Shakespeare. Objects to Slipshod Eacltlh. " The well of Judge Bacon's court at Whitechapel Is to be a well of English undefiled. During a recent discussion with counsel on the absence of one of the parties to an action on a previous occasion this dialogue took place: Judge Bacon The defendant was. not present? Counsel No, your honor, he did not) turn' up. Judge Bacon What! "Turn upf Pray do not use such slipshod express sions! Counsel I apologize, your honor. should have said the defendant faile to enter; an appearance at your ceurtJ These are . high pressure days, and since your honor was at the bar w have no longer time to Indulge In pew feet English. Judge Bacon Oh! London, News. J It has gone out of fashion to boast of never reading ads. Those who do not nowadays are inclined to keep quiet about it, as they would about n. any other, personal shortcoming. t Dayton & Western Trie. Co. X r to ! DaytonOhio i f Wednesday, May 30 Beautiful Impressive exerelse ai foldier' Home. I BASE BALL4 DAYTON VS. arniniUrlttU. A Game called at 10:00 a. m., and 3:30 p. m. J
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