Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 170, 16 July 1906 — Page 2
Page Two.
rhe Richmond Palladium. Monday, July 16, 190b.
r ... Tvncro Christianity IT eg: an. : The bills of Bethlehem ore full of cares, naturul and artificial, and many of them have historic slgnlflcance. There is the milk grotto, In which ioseph aud Mary. are. said to have concealed themselves before their flight Into Egypt ts escape the evil designs of Ilerod. The snowy whiteness of the soft chalk out of which it Is hewn la aacrlbMl to the spilling of a few drops of the Virgin's milk when she nursed the Infant Jesus. Another grotto is pointed out ns that In wh!c! St. Jcroiuc for more than thirty years led the life of a lirrmit wlien bitter factional dismiHions had forced bim to leave Home. On a. western hill a rock strewn plateau, around Vhlch stately terebinths stand guard; marks a place where the ancient Hebrews brought their unerluees unto the Lord It is a solemn place, well fitted to excite devout thoughts a place where a man might well keep communion Vith bis Maker. In its broader feature Bethlebem Is almost unchanged since the days of David. Four Track News.
VfK' hl" Hnnft. ' Those wlio would like to make cheese on a very small scale ure often troubled to get proper rennet to produce coagulation of the milk. A scientist says that if the leaves of the common butterwort are placed in a strainer and the milk fresh from the cow is poured over it the milk will soon Income thick and has a most delicious flavor. The yellow bedstraw alno possesses the properties of curdling milk, and the natives of Cheshire prefer it as a rennet to all other sorts. The leaves and flowers are put iu the strainer, and the milk is slowly poured over them. The flower beads of the garden artichoke also possess the property of coagulating milk. .In view of the carelessness sometimes noted in people who prepare rennet in the ordinary fashion this vegetable rennet is worthy of attention. The leaves, properly cleaned and prepared, would" lo very much safer and more hygienic than animal substances which may go through chemical changes that tin fit them for food.
Old Statues. Herodotus makes Solon tell Croesus f several men happier than he. Two brothers, Cleobis and BIton of Argos he said, when oxen were lacking to draw their mother, the priestess of Hera, to the temple several miles distant, harnessed themselves to the cart. When the mother, proud of her sons and moved by the plaudits of the crowd, bad prayed to Hera that her sons might receive the best gifts the gods bad to bestow, they lay down In the shade of the temple and never waked. Herodotus says that their statues' were sent to Delphi. Homolle found at Delphi two statues practically Identical, of finest archaic work, made early in the sixth century C C. Since one of them bore the signature of an Arglve sculptor, Polymeries!, In archaic letters, we may believe that the story of Herodotus is based on fact and that wo have before us today the Identical statues. -Cha utauo uan. Hall Em Oat. De Style Gotrox gets bis chauffeurs from France. Where do you get yours from? Gunbusta From the station house generally. Woman's Home Companion. 0
Taking advantage of Clark's weak
ness, the Fairvlew team hammered
in five runs in the second inning cf
their game with Liberty yesterday, securing enough runs to make victory
certain. The final score was S to 2. The Liberty team was here not long
since and in a twelve inning con
test defeated Fairvlew, therefore the
victory yesterday was a most welcome
one.
Fairview played a good game in the
field, being considerably strengthened by Kelly at shortstop, who picked up
several mean grounders and otherwise played his position in a manner
to hold up the infield. Wilcoxen
pitched good ball for Fairview, but Blair, who followed, did even better. He did not allow a run and but two hits in four innings. One of the features of the game was the fielding game-' of OToole, in center field for Liberty.
Next Sunday Fairview will play the
crack semi-professional team from Germantown, O.
The score follows:
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ES
TATE.
Daniel Moss, vs. Hannah L. Collins,
et.al.
By virtue of a certifed copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk
of the Wayne Circuif Court in the
cause wherein Daniel Moss is plain' tiff and Hannah J Cillins and Eliza beth A.' Luken3 are! defendants, re quiring mo to make ie sum of Twen
tyflve Hundred andf Seventy Dollars
(J2.570.00) with inttf est and costs, I
will offer far. sale atf public, auction to the highest bidder Iu the 7th day of August,' 1906 at lOf o'clock A. M., at
the door of the Courthouse in the City
of Richmond, Wnfne County, State of Indiana, the retf s and profits for a
term not exceeding seven years ot the following descrilf d real estattf in said County andfstate, To-wit: Lots One (1), Two (2)1 Three-(3) and Four (4) in Hannah, If. Collins' addition to
Earlham Height laid out In Fraction
al Section (lm (1), Township- Thirteen. (13). ItLfee Two (2) West. If such' rents and profits will not sell for
a sum sufficient to pay and satisfy
said decree, interest and costs, I will
at the same tlmo and place offer for
salo at public auction the fee simple
of said real estate, or so much there
of as may.be necessary to pay and satisfy said decree, interest and costs, said sale to be made without
any relief from valuation or appraise
ment laws. ' Dated July 14. 1906. Richard S. Smith, Sheriff, July 16-23-30
Nort is Th6 Tine...
WW
to hai
season
to 411
I 6
Local
porting i!WS General
UNCLE SAM'S FA EMS.
TAKING LAND FROM THE INDIAN
TO MAKE THEM.
TURN TABLES OH
LIBERTY T
AM
AMERICAN ASS'8
CLUB STANDING.
:airview Team Takes Advantage of Clark's Weakness and Win Victory.
HANNA WENT IN TOO LATE
PITCHED GOOD BALL FOR VISIT-
ORS, BUT HIS TEAM MATES COULD NOT OVERCOME THE LOCAL'S BIG LEAD.
Liberty AB R H FO A E H-una, ss. p. . 5 0 2 3 "3 1 Duvall, lb, c, . 4 1 1 12 0 0 Gates; c, lb., .3 0 1 f. 2 0 Histed. 3b 3 0 1 0 2 1 J. Clark, 2b ... 4 0 1 2 1 2 A. O'Toole, cf . 4 0 0 2 0 0 Moore, rf 4 1 1 0 0 0 J. O'Toole If . 3 0 0 0 0 0 D. Clark, p. ss. 3 1 0 0 4 2 Totals .. ..33 3 7 24 12- 6 I Fairview. AB R II PO A E Weaver, lb ... 4 3 2 10 1 0 Schattell, 3b . . 5 0 2 3 0 1 Brokamp, cf . . 4 0 1 0 0 0 Engelbert, c .. 5 0 0 10 2 0 Kelly, ss 5 0 1 2 3 0 Kuhlenb'k, 2b 4 1 0 2 0 1 McNally. rf ... 3 1 0 0 0 0 Miller, rf .... 1 0 0 0 0 0 Schissler, If . . 4 1 1 0 0 0 Wilcoxen, p .. 3 1 1 0 3 0 Blair, p 1 1 0 0 3 0 Totals 39 8 8 27 12 2
Score by innings:
Liberty 00210000 03
Fairview 15010010 xTwo base hits Brokamp, Duvall.
Base on balls Clark 1; Hanna 2;
Wilcoxen 3; Blair 1. Strikeouts Clark 1; Hanna 5; Wil coxen 3; Blair 6.
Left on bases Liberty 7; Fairview
8.
Double plays Blair to Weaver to
Engelbert.
First base on errors Liberty 1;
Fairview 5.
Inninss pitched By Clark 2: Han
na 6; Wilcoxen 5; Blair 4. Hits Off Clark 5; Hanna 3; Wil coxen 5; Blair 2. Time 1 hour forty minutes. Umpire Alexander and Johnson. Attendance 2,000.
Won. Lost. PCt. Columbus 53 34 .603 Milwaukee 47 3G .568 Toledo ..44 37 .543 .Louisville 44 39 .530 Minneapolis 45 40 .529 Kansas City 35 45 .457 St. Paul 32 51 .385 Indianapolis 30 51 .337
SPLIT EVER IB
DOUDLE
HAD
AT MINNEAPOLIS. R. H. E Minn .. 02001000 14 S 1
Tol.. .. 10000101 03 8 4
Gehring and Yeager; Hyatt, Suthoff
and Land. Umpire, Longley.
Cincinnati Loses First Game
to Brooklyn Team, but Takes Second One.
CHICAGO GOT CLOSE GAME
AT MILWAUKEE. R. H. E.
Mil 0 0001000 01 1 1 Col . ..011.01 000 03 5 4
Goodwin and Beville; Flaherty and
Blue. Umpires, Sullivan and Egan.
AT ST. PAUL. R. H. E.
St. P 1 0 0 1 0 0 4 x C 8 1 Lous 0000021 0 3 5 2
(Called eighth inning.) Batteries Pruitt and Drill; Kenna
Steelier, Shaw and Stoner. Umpire
Owens. .
SCHULTE'S HOME RUN WITH
TWO MEN ON BASES GAVE CUBS A NICE NEST EGG NEW
YORK ADDS ANOTHER.
NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING.
Won. Lost. PCr
RAIN AT KANSAS CITY. Kansas City, Mo., July 15The
American Association same between Kansas City and Indianapolis, scheduled to be played here this afternon was postponed on account of rain.
Chicago . . New York . . Pittsburg . . Philadelphia Cincinnati . St. Louis . . Brooklyn . . Boston . . . .
. . . D 1 ...50 . . .50 .. .40 ...34 ... 30 ,...29 .27
24 27 2S 40 47 51 4S 59
.703 .699
.641
.500 .419 .370 .375 .313
Ilovr Red Men of the Kiowa, Co-
manchr, Apaolie and Other Tribes
Will Be Compensated For Lands
Owned hy Them Soon to Be Opened.
There is an old song that used to be
quite popular in days gone by and
which contained the words, "Uziele
Sam la ricli enough to give us all a farm." The giving away of farms has often been done at the expense of the Indian. Sometimes the Indian has been paid for bis lands; sometimes be has been tricked out of them. In most
rases, whether he has been paid for
them or not, he has got the worst of the deal.,' In the act recently passed providing for the opening up to settlement of 505.(00 acres of grazing lands belonging to the Kiowa, Comanche and Apache tribes it was provided that
noue of the; lands should be sold for less than $3 per acre.
At llrst the Indians concerned were
opposed to the1 plan to open up their lands, but since they have come to understand the fact that their funds
would be largely . increased by the
change they have adopted a favorable attitude toward it. Chief Quanah Par-
Giants Won Game.
The Giants defeated the Dayton
Tourists yesterday by a score of 12 to 7. The Giants scored enough runs in
the first inning to win the game. After that it was a good contest. The
Muncie Shamrocks come next Sunday for a game with the Giants.
Tigers Beat Beallview. In a hot game of base ball the Rich
mond Tigers swatted out 14 runs to the 12 made by the Beallview team of South Richmond, yesterday afternoon. Stolle and Linneman were missed by the Veallviews. The feature of the game was Sudhoff's home
run for Beallview. The score:
R. H. E.
Tigers . 20220011 614 8 6
Beall. .. 00330030 312 11 8
Batteries Beallviews. Sudhoff,
Temme and Cutter. Tigers Campbell, Coover and Carr.
Hits Off Sudhoff 4; off Temme 4; off Campbell 4; off Coover 7. Innings pitched Sudhoff 5; Temme 4; Campbell 4; Coover 5. Two base hits Beallviews 8; Tigers 4.
The Hilly Mick. An old time way of proving one's right to the payment of mouey loaned was by tally sticks. A plain stick was usdd, and when a man loaned a sum a stick was broken, and the creditor and debtor each took a part. "When the time for payment came the man who had the stick which fitted exactly to the stick held by the creditor received the money. Two sticks never break in exactly the same shape, so there ws never any dispute about who had a right to the money.
MRS. BLOOR'S WORK.
Hew She Assisted In the Jiow Famous PocklnKlonn Investigation. Mrs. Ella Bloor, who furnished evidence regarding abuses iu Packingtown, Chicago, during the investigation made by Messrs. Xeiil and Reynolds, was commissioned to gather such evidence by Upton Sinclair, author of "The Jungle." Mr. Sinclair had been Invited by President Rodsevelt to assist the commissioners in their exac ination, but on account of the pressure
a s
re ycjr suits tor anv
in the year made.
you can save trcm 25
per rent, on each suit.
Stilts at S26
16 Suits at $22
and be convinced, as
seeing is believing. James Scully . 923 Main St.
MRS. ELLA BIiOOIU of literary work be was unable to do bo and asked Mrs. Bloor to act in his place. She and her husband both spent several weeks among the packers and obtained many startling" facts as to conditions existing iu Packingtown. Mrs. Bloor saw the women who work iu packing houses in their homes, and her husband met the men in saloons and other places, and by doing detective work in this way they elicited Information which could not have been obtained had their mission been
l known. Mrs. Bloor. who has been as
sociated with Mr. Sinclair in sociological Investigations before, devoted her attention especially to the insanitary, depressing and demoralizing conditions under which employees in the packing houses are said to work
Their Reward.
Dr. Strachan, bishop of Toronto, was
waited upon by two churchwardens
who complained that their clerg3-man
wearied his congregation by repeating the same sermou. He had preached it
twelve times. The bishop asked fo
the text. Neither of the churchwardens could remember. "Go back," said the bishop sternly, "and ask your clergyman to preach the sermon once more and then come back and tell me the text." SIRES AND'SONS.
Cincinnati 2; Brooklyn 4, First
game.
Cincinnati 9; Brooklyn 4. Second
New York 8; St. Louis 3.
Philadelphia 3; Chicago 4. Ten in
nings.
Publishers' Press
Cincinnati, Ohio, July 15. The Brooklyn Nationals broke even with the Cincinnatis in a double header
today. The visitors bunched their
hits in the last two innings of the
first game, winning by a score of 4 to
2. The home team won the second game easily, 9 to 4. goring five runs
in the third inning. Score:
R. H. E.
in u u t ij u u j. u u 2 t t
Brook .. 00000002 24 11 1 Ewing, Wicker and Schlei; Scanlon
and Bergen. Umpires, Klem and Car
penter.
R H.E.
Pin inriniir v a i o
Brook 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 004 8 2
Frazer and Schlei; Eason and Ber
gen. Umpires, Klem and Carpenter.
HOME RUN WON GAME.
Chicago, July, 15. Schulte's home run in the seventh inning today in the
game between the Cubs and the Qua
kers with two men on bases and
Taylor's hit in the tenth inning won
the game for the Cubs by a score of
4 to 3. The game was hotly contest
ed all through the ten innings. Phil
adelphia could not find Jack Taylor's delivery, getting only seven hits in
the extra inning game. The Score:
R. H. E.
Phila . 011000001 03 7 3 Chi .. 000000300 14 10 3
Dooin, Duggleby, Richie; Taylor
and Moran. Umpire Johnstone.
BATTING RALLY IN NINTH.
St. Louis, July 15. A batting rally
in the ninth inning gave the New
York Nationals the victory over the St. Louis today. Druhot hurt his arm in the ninth today, and Beebe,
who relieved him, was wild and hit
hard. Score:
R. H.E.
N. Y. .. 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 4 7 9 0
St. L. .. 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 3 11 1
Batteries Ames, Wiltse and Bres-
nahan; Druhot. Beebe and Marshall
Umpires Emslie and O'Day.
George A. Ilearn of New York has et askle $100,000 as a permanent fund for the purchase of works by American artists. Ben Pitman, whose system of shorthand is used more than any other in the United States, is still living in Cincinnati. He is eighty-three years Jld. Sir Ralph Payne-Galwey, a baronet of Yorkshire, England, is believed to be the best archer in Europe. He has frequently shot an arrow a quarter of a mile and struck the center of the target. The largest individual maker of clothespins in the world is Lewis Mann of Bryants Pond, Me. He started with a capital of only $400 and bought an old disused mill. He has amassed a comfortable fortune In the business. Sir Wiliiam Crookes, vhe British scientist, was one of the earliest amateur photographers, eagerly experimenting with the camera as long ago as 1S55. In those early days he was always saying to bis wife. "Sit." And she used to reply, "It sounds like a hen." Walter Wellman, who is to make an attempt to reach the pole In an airship, will start In August. The gas bag of the ship will be 164 feet long and 52t4 feet in diameter. The ship will weigh 2,SG0 pounds and the motors and fixings 7,500 pounds. It will carry a crew of five men. Attorney General Iladley of Missouri is still extremely youthful in appearance. Some time ago a veteran Missourlan came In and inquired of the prosecutor for Attorney Iladley. "I am Iladley," he was Informed. "Say, sonny," flared the caller, "you may be Hadiey, but I guess my business is with your pa." Robert A. Smith, who has been reelected mayor of St. Paul, Minn., has served six or seven terms In that office, five of them consecutively. Mayor Smith, is seventy-eight years old. not a youngster as mayors go, and as, besides his various terms as mayor, he has filled other offices, a good part of bis life bas been officeholdlng.
SIRES AND SONS.
CHIEF QCANAH PARKER.
ker of the Comanche tribe and Chief
Lone Wolf of the Kiowas are among those who favor the sale of the lands.
The bill originally fixed $1.50 as the
minimum price for an acre in the sale, but President Roosevelt refused to indorse it unless this minimum price
per acre was raised to $3.
Chief Quanah Parker is one of the
most influential and progressive In
dians in the west. His mother was Cynthja Anu Parker, a white woman.
who was stolen as a child from her
parents. The story of her capture, her
life among the Comanches, her marriage to a chief of the tribe, her recapture by the whites and her preference for the people of her adoption forms
one of the most romantic tales of the early days of Texas. Chief Parker was
born about 1S54. He has been a valiant
advocate of the rights of his father's
race and has leen talked of as a senator from Oklahoma.
Tie chief smokes his pipe of peace
not in a tepee, but ou the veranda of his residence, a structure of some pretensions, and he has many men, both
Indians and whites. In bis employ. He
has thousands of head of cattle, and
ids extensive lands are all inclosed by neat fences. The chief has bsen called
Mayor McClellan of New York has taken to old fashioned quill pens in
signing public documents.
Seeretarj- Shaw has a number of push buttons on his desk, including one which rings when he finds his visitor
to be a "crank."
Dillon Wallace, the explorer of the
Labrador wild, bas arrived in New York from Quebec. He is the first man
that ever carried the mail from Fort
Chimo to the steamer at Eskimo point.
Representative Brownlow, who intro
duced the bill to provide for federal
care of Andrew Johnson's grave, is a nephew of "Parson" Brownlow, who
described Johnson as "the dead dog In
the White House."
Professor Milne, the famous seismol
ogist, was the first man to drive a golf ball across the Victoria falls, on the Zambezi river, this being done during
the recent visit of the British associa
tion to South Africa.
Higher Walton of the Darwen division of Lancashire, England, can boast of a unique record. Out of a possible 42o votes 420 were recorded for him, and of the five missing voters one was
in America, one in Canada, one on the
6ea and two sick in bed.
Joseph Chamberlain, the English statesman, will have two notable celebrations the coming summer. On June 17 he will have completed thirty years
of continuous representation of Bir
mingham in the bouse of commons, and
on July 8 he will reach his seventieth
birthday.
James n. Vassar, who has been connected with the United States subtreasury at Boston more than forty years and nearly that length of time
in the important position of specie clerk, is the most remarkable and ac
complished coin expert in America and
has few if any equals in the world.
Accurate tab bas been kept on Baron
Rosen, the Russian ambassador, since
he arrived in Washington, and nobody
ever saw him without a cigar In his mouth or in his hand Just ready to be put into his mouth except when he was at a state function or dining, and then he always smokes between
courses.
KIOWA SQTJAW AND PAPPOOSE.
an "Indian millionaire," but it is said
that the amount of his wealth is prob
ably not in excess of $100,000.
The lands of the Comanches, Kiowas ind Apaches which are to be opened for settlement are in Oklahoma. Other Indian lands are also to be thrown
open soon, and these are located in
Montana and Wyoming and form part
of the reservation of the Shoshone,
Flathead and Crow tribes. About 1,000,000 acres of the Crow reservation in southern Montana and abouttbe
same amount of land in the Shoshone
reservation in Wyoming are to be made ready for white settlement,
while several hundred thousand acres
will be opened In the Flathead reservation near Missoula, Mont. On the lat
ter reservation the government has al
ready been at work converting the land into productive ranches by artificial irrigation. The Crow Indians are in the main industrious and are noted as 6tock growers. They are abso engaged in agriculture and for the purpose of irrigating their land have constructed a ditch which supplies 100,000 acres with water.
MODES OF THE MOMENT.
!
Patent nljthts.
Every patent contains a grant to the
patentee, hla heirs or assigns, of a
right to manufacture the article speclated durine the term of seventeen years.
Scalloped linen niching Is a novelty. Steel beaded purses are the thing for the gray gown. Paquin green Is a dark, heavy looking leaf green, almost thdxxOoT of ivy. Velvet ribbons of all olors and widths are to be a great deal used this summer. X pretty feature of muslin gowns is the prevalence of little linen Jackets to wear with them. Mohan iu its soft, improved quality and lovely colorings is one of the best
possible choices for a princess dress.
tfta mi
.ANtgelable Freparalionfor A'
simiiating the Food andBegul
ling me btooatfis andl5owls
Fromotcs Dicslion.CttcciTur-
ness and Rest-Contains nifliicr Opium.Morpliine norIuyral.
rsOT AAIiCOTIC.
CTyat;M SeetLjftx.Seiuta iiockclU SUtsinu ,rrd Jhlyjri-rrwit -1)1 (artui) Mirtn .) - hihteyfmm flavor:
In
mm
1 1
if MB
m 1 1 -j
I I
I l! J
- i4
i a
For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Apcrfecl Remedy forConsbp-i-fion.Sour S to rnach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsioas Jewrishness find Loss of Sleep.
Facsimile Signature ot NEW YORK.
AW
1 yvr ' l( ip In JyP Use y For Over 1 Thirtv Years
!DACT COPY OF WRAPPER. M
E. If. SPENCER j WATCH ESs: 6 LOCKS : JEWELRY I
Watch, Clock ami Jewelry Repairing a Specialty. 704 MAIN STREET. -
' i
! CUT PIICBTAS J AT NEFF yNUSBAUM'S j ----- inn ------- s---s-l
1"7
s
The season is here for buying
ontas Coal
WE WILL TRY TO MA WITH US O
"O YOUR INTEREST TO FIGURE
KIND OF FUEL.
WE DO JOT 'SUBSTITUTE
RICHMOND COAJL GO.
Office with Union Ice Co., Cor. West Third and Chestnut Sts
PHONES-Homo 941-Ktll 10 R
z Quick DeliK&ry...
r i O 0
0
VEGETABLES GROCERIES ,
W SPECIALS
New Potatoes, nice llnMflarge $1.2a bu; Green .Beans, home grown, 10c M pk; lVy largo Pineapples, 20c size, 15c: Plenty of Celery, CucurabevJr Radishes, Onions, Eeets, Peaches and
Flums. Everything in season.
HN many cases means disappointment your groceries fail to arrive when they -wety promised. We make a specialty
of prompt delivery. Phone uy your trial order your next will
be permanent.
FINE FRUITS FRE
F
s
19 Lbs. Granulated Sugar $.00
OPEN IN THE EVENING. ;
1029 Main.'
0
Bp-BJB1BjMHr pgJi BJBJJJJSJJBSJJJiSJJJJSBJJJM
WANTED. WANTED Young man for office work. Address in own handwriting, "Office" care of Palladium. d-lt WANTED Good strong boy. Apply Palladium office. I4-3L WANTED Housecleaning to do or plain sewing. Call at rear of No. 331 South 9th street. l4-3t. WA.NTED A Girl fori housework, 408 S. 15th. I 26-tf WANTED A girl at 44 South 8th SL for housework no -fashing. 20-tf
FOR SALI
Richmond property! a specialty.
porterfield. Kelly BWck. Phone 22V., FOR SALE Columbia Seed Wheat, Agnes Gaar, Farm, R. R. No. 5. 15-7t FOR SALE Cameras, 5x7 Cycle Folding Camera, 6 holders. New 4x5. Success Magazine, New. Both excellent, also dry plates and Tripods. E. V. Campbell, 732 Main. 14-3t "V FOR SALE Lot 27 Bliss addition, West Richmond. Inquire 326 N. 14 street. 13-lwk. FOR SALE A splendid 1 acre tract with good brick house of S rooms,
barn and finel orchard, situated 10
eastern part of th Lock Box 68 city.
an improved
city. AddresJ
Everybody Woodhurst, 913 431. i
uys property from
Main St Telephone juneS tf
FOl RENT.
FOR RENT Furolshed room, 121 N 10th Street. io-2t RENT Furnished rooms at the Grand for gentlemen only. tf FOR RENT A flat of 5 rooms, cen trally located. Call Dr. Walls. 21 S 10th street. tf
LOST. LOST A bead purse, between Coun try Club and 5th and South C. Sts Leave at 311 N. 0th street. LOST Sunday afternoon a lady's black pocketbook with chain and s small one inside and a white hand kerchief. Return to 404 South Stfc street up stairs. Lost betwees Kinsey street and West Pearl street 15-3t
FOUND. FOUND Gold watch fob. Call at In terurban Station, South. 8 street-
