Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 339, 20 January 1908 — Page 4
TAGE FOUR.
THE KICII310ND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGlt A3I, 3IOXDAY, JANUARY 20. 19W.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AMD SUN-TELEGRAM. Palladium Printing Co., Publishers. Officej North 9th and A Streets. RICHMOND, INDIANA.
PRICE Per Copy, Daily 2c Per Copy, Sunday 3c Per Week, Daily and Sunday 10c IN ADVANCE ?ne Year $-3.00 Entered at Richmond, Ind., Postoffice As Second Class Mail Matter. That woman with the ever-smiling face -who is commonly supposed to lead a rosy existence and have no troubles, generally has as many trials and tribulations as any other woman, only she loesn't put them into circulation over the back fence or at the sewing circle. For a panic booster the old recluse who died recently at Eaton, and left a louse full of hoarded money, had all ether contestants backed off t he bench when it was found he had even concealed a fifty-cent piece in a ball of yarn. Samuel Hugg, a farmer residing tpear Princeton. Indiana, had a close fchave with what he believed was a panther, Saturday. As he lived to tell the tale, it is evident that the panther did not hug Iiugg. Skaters can not use Glen Miller lake fn account of air holes, by order of Park Superintedent Klopp. News Item. In other words, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of dredging and Undertakers' bills. Dog fights are more popular at Cornell university than Latin. That's rather funny for both subjects are Bomewhat similar, as the one is a dead language and the other generally ends with a dead dog. Maybe the Pennsylvania railroad is bo persistently anxious to get that Btrlp of land in Glen Miller as spite work for the buffets it is getting over the freight interchange question. Sure, there are eight candidates for congress in the Sixth district now, but when it is all over the consolation will be that there will be but one congressman to keep tab on. From the increasing number of local applicants for positions in the civil service, Richmond men leap to the fore as unafraid of being called mollycoddles. Secretary Cortelyou s declaration of sympathy for Senator Foraker shows where his sympathies would be if elected president of this nation. But just because prison life grew liair, on the head of a bald convict is tio sign that the front row at the theatre will be deserted. At Earlham College on Saturday, ixty students moved twenty thousand books into the new library. Where were the professors? Or in other words. Secretary Corteljou really does think he saved the trountry during the recent panic. Events of the Week Nothing of a stirring nature is promised in congress the present week. On Tuesday the battleship fleet will end its sojourn in the harbor of Rio Janeiro and enter upon the most interesting stage of its long voyage the one which will take it eventually through the straits of Magellan. Its jiext stop will be at Punta Arenas, within the straits, where the armada will rest for five days before it heads northward for Callao. In the voyage through the straits, Lieutenant Commander Cone's torpedo flotilla will for the first time join the big ships at sea. This will necessitate altering the original program of the flotilla, and its visIt to Buenos Ayres and Montevideo will be cut out. After leaving Rio Janeiro, probably no word will be had of the battleships until the report at Punta Arenas. In both Rhode Island and Kentucky the legislature -will continue their efforts to break the deadlock over the contest for United States Senator. The Kentucky legislature will resume balloting, and that of Rhode Island will meet on Tuesday, when it is expected that the long-existing deadlock will be broken and a senator named. The withdrawal of Colonel Samuel P. Coit from the contest is expected to result in the election of Senator Wet more. The North Carolina legislature will convene in special session on Tuesday for the purpose of consirierinR the railway passenger rate question, and to t-traighten out the complicated situa tion which has arisen there oer the 2',-4-cent rate bill passed at the last ses tion. Today in New York, F. Augusiu, Heinze, former president of the Mercantile "National bank of that city, wa? r.rraigued to formally plead to the re
THE ONLY EXIT FROM THE B0YERT0WN THEATRE WHICHPROVED TO BE THE DEATH TRAP.
fcr ST m il :&rjm v'Vrl m;!H
This is the narrow stairway, the only exit to the opera house at lioyertown, IVnn. It was here that scores of the victims were trodden under foot and trampled to death or burned. This was the onlv way out of (be hall, that held S00 persons.
on the hecks charge of overcertification of while president of the institution. In the French chamber' of deputies (his week. M. Jaures will interpellate (he government on its policy in the present interesting Moroccan situation, particularly with reference to its attitude in the contest between Mulai Hand, the rebel Sultan and Abd-El Aziz.
HEROISM
OP THE TELEGRAPHER IS REWARDED BY GIFT OP $10,000
Des Moiues, January 20 W. E. Gearhart, of Madrid, Iowa, a telegraph operator, on the "Milwaukee Road, 50 years of age and working on a small salary, is to receive $10,000 from the estate of the late C. C. Thompson, a Chicago banker and real estate man. Gearhart, while in the employ of the Great Western at Melbourne in 1889. saved Mrs. Thompson and her dausrhBRYAN IS TO ASSIST BECKHAM Will Speak Before lature. the LegisFrankfort, Ky.. Jan. 20 William Jennings Bryan has volunteered to come to Kentucky and help the Democrats win the United States senatorship. Ex-Governor Beckham received a letter from Mr. Bryan saying he would be here on Tuesday. No plan or program has been arranged for the day, but it is presumed Mr. Bryan will be asked by the legislature to make a speech before, he returns to Cincinnati Tuesday night. While nothing new has developed in the senatorial race since the adjournment on Friday, everybody is talking of the proposed combination between the Republicans and anti-Beckham Democrats for the purpose of ejecting State Senator Wheeler Campbell over Beckham and Bradley. WATSON MEETS WITH OPPOSITION Evansville Labor Unions Fight Nomination. to Evansville, Ind.. Jan. Jo. At a joint meeting of L'T of the labor unions of the city yesterday afternoon, committees were appointed to work in all the wards of the city on the day of the republican primary against Congressman James E. Watson, candidate for governor. They charge that he is unfair to organized labor. "Many coffee drinkers 'doctor' for nervousness, whereas a change to well made (boiled 15 minutes) POSTUM is all they need." There's a Reason"
The week probably will see the end of the court-martial of General Stoessel growing out of the question of the surrender of Port Arthur. The Canadian minister of labor. Mr. Leiueiux. will make in the house on Tuesday, an explanation of the agreement which lie reached with the Japanese government on the immigration question.
ter from being run over and killed by a freight train. Gearhart sustained a serious injury, but the incident had been well nigh forgotten when notice of the bequest came to him through a Chicago attorney. The accident took place in front of the Great Western Depot at. Melbourne in 188!). The rescue was made by Gearhart at the risk of his own life. CANAL DRAINED TO FIND BODY Remains of Missing Man Were Not Found. In order to determine to a certainty whether or not the body of Charles Johnson, the missing Muncie real estate dealer, was in the bottom of the canal, near Indianapolis, it was drained Sunday, but no body was found. B. X. Johnson, of Indianapolis, a nephew of the missing man, said that he would organize a searching party, which would scour the territory north and west of where they searched last week. Johnson disappeared from a sanitarium at Indianapolis two weeks i ago. Richmond police have, quested to make a search for been rethe man. NEGRO HANGED AND THEN RIDDLED Alabama Posse Metes Vengeance. Swift Dothan, Ala.. Jan. 'O. Cleveland Franklin, a negro, employed by a cotton oil company, was lynched here last night about S o'clock by a masked mob of 2ot angry citizens. The negro's body was riddled with bullets after it had been swung from the limb of a tree in the northern part of the town. It is said Franklin shot and seriously wounded A. C. Faulk, secretary -and treasurer of the oil company here Saturday night after he had been caught in the act of robbing the cash drawer at the mill. Graft In Old New York. The first use of the word "graft" in New York occurred 250 years ago. A j small stream that led from a swamp j through what is now Broad street was ; made into a ditch with the sides plank j ed to form what is known in Holland as a "giaft' or a canal. Three laborers were employed on this job by the burgomasters, and a committee of fiTe wis appointed to supervise their operation and see that they gaxe full value for their pay. The completed graft was turned over to the undersheriff with these orders: "He Is ordered to take good care and superintendence of the newly constructed graft aud also that the boats, canoes and skiffs be authorized to operate
OKLAHOMA TAKES NATIONAL LEAD
Desires Senators to Be Elected by the Vote of The People. COMMISSION APPOINTED. WILL VISIT ALL STATES IN THE UNION TO CREATE SENTIMENT FOR CHANGE IN THE CONSTITUTION. Washington, Jan. 20 Down in the new State of Oklahoma a movement of national significance has just been started in the direction of the election of United States senators by direct popular vote. , C. N. Haskell, the Governor of Okla homa, acting under authority of the' state Legislature, has appointed a committee of eight, four Democrats and four Republicans, of which he himself is ex-officio chairman, to travel over the country, visiting state after state, with a view to inducing the state legislatures to join in the call for the submission to the people of an amendment to the United States Constitution providing for this reform. The four democratic members are William H. Murray, speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives: Thomas H. Doyle of Enid. George H. Evans of Chickasha and Jesse Dunn of Alva. The Republican representation on the committee consists of Clarence Douglas, proprietor of the Muskogee Phoenix; John Threadgill, owner of the Tljreadgill Hotel of Oklahoma City; Thomas B. Ferguson, of Watunga and D. I j. Sleeper of Tulsa. This peripatetic, commission is to have all expenses paid out of the Oklahoma treasury, but the members are to be restricted to a total salary of $1 each, which means that they will prac- i tically give their time and efforts free; of charge. Clarence Douglas, the chairman of the Republican branch of the commission, is now in Washington and he talked interestingly of the proposition on foot. "There is no doubt," said be, ' that iT the people had a chance to express themselves, the majority in favor of changing the existing method of electing senators so as to provide for a direct vote would be overwhelming. Under the Constitution if two-thirds of the state legislatures petition Congress in favor of this reform Congress will have no alternative save the submission of the proposed amendment to be voted upon by the people. "It is the purpose of our commission to bring about concerted action of two-thirds of the state legislatures. If thirty-one states can be got into line the reform will be an accomplished reality. We intend to go about our campaign in a thoroughly systematic way and will visit practically all of the state legislatures, including that of Indiana. Necessarily we have undertaken a big task, but. we feel that we will have accomplished a great benefit for the whole Nation if we succeed." TIME IS THE TEST The Testimony of Richmond Stands the Test. People The test of time is what tells the tale. The public soon finds out when misrepresentations arc made, and merit alone will stand the test of time. Richmond people appreciate merit, and many months ago local citizens i publicly endorsed Doan's Kidney Pills; they do so still. Would a citizen make the statement which fol lows unless convinced that the article! was just as represented? A. cure thatj lasts is the kind that every sufferer. from kidney ills is looking for. Mrs. Edgar S. Mote, of IT North! Sixteenth St., Richmond, Ind., says: I "Some years ago my husband was having some trouble with his back. I There was a dull aching pain that bothered him most of the time. He was told about Doan's Kidney Pills and got a supply at A. G. Luken & Cos. drug store. After taking it he never again mentioned backache to me. He believed tha. IXian's Kidney Pills are a great remedy and has told several people of the benefit he got through using them." For sale by all dealers. Price .V) cents. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember ihe name Doan's and take no other. Dreams. Little Virginia, three years old, brought her mother to her nursery a few nights ago with heartbroken wails. "What is the matter, dearie? Why are you screaming so?" "Mamma, am I all here?" "Certainly you are all here, right in your bed." "But, mamma, feel of me; see if I'm all here. Are my feet here and the top of my head both?" "Certainly, Virginia, every bit of you Is here, tucked in your little trundle bed. Why do you think you are not?" "I dreamed," this with another great sob. "I dreamed I was a chocolate stick and I had eated myself.' Exchange. NOTICE. r-ythian Sisters will meet Wednes-i day afternoon, Jan. 22 at 2 o'clock to transact business of importance. 20-21 I. E. C. EDNA HOLLY. C. C. sleeping their 11 l.im. & L. ticket asrent will sell von car tickets to Chicago for! 1.". P M tiain.. Call. u.. JUiiS-tf
DYSPEPSIA-PROOF.
How Any Meal Can Be Thoroughly Enjoyed By Any Stomach. Men, as a rule, ars first Uiscovc; ud by their enemies. Their antagonists j turn on the searchlight, and the proof ! of merit will lie in being able to staad the flash. It was only in this way that Mr. White ever knew that dyspepsia was one of Mr. Black's worst enemies. Sitting face to face at a two-by-four table, he handed his afflicted friend the oill of fare; Oyster Cocktail. Stuffed Olives KoKton Ciam Chowder. Strained Gumbo. Sirloin Steak wit'a Mushrooms. Roast Beef Hash. Boiled Ox Tongue with Sauerkraut. Lobster a la New burg. Baked Pork and Means. Combination Cr.ib Salad. Hot Mince Pie. Pineapple Flitters. Mr. White ordered a "little of each." Mr. Dyspepsia Itlacjc ordered crackers and a glass of milk. "I bad such :t oig breakfast this morning." he said. "tha'. I'll just take a bite 'o keep you company." Hut Mr. White could not be deceived: "I am afraid you can't s'and the gleam, Mr. Black. Why don't ".i say you aave dyspepsia and be done with it? You'll always have that hungry look anyhow as long as you have dyspepsia. Now listen. My stomach was in just as bad condition as yours at one time. But now I can cat anything, at. any time. For instance, this clam chowder or sirloin ..teak or even the lobster would be just as welcom" to my stomach as your crackers and milk. You don't realize how this dyspepsia business is robbing you of your spirit, of your energy and ability to think quickly. I can't help notice it. You haven't the cheer and sociability you had three months ago. Now I'll tell you what to do." and thereat the cheerful Mr. White took a vial from his pocket and extracted a wee tablet. "There, there is a tablet that contains an ingredient, one grain of which digests :',,(H)0 grains of food. For even the worst dyspetic it's the only thing that really gives relief. The reason is it relieves the stomach of nearly ail the work it has to do, digests everything in the stomach and stimulates the gastric juice. I can't get aloti ; without them. They are Stuart's Dys pepsia tablets. ou can get them anywhere on earth for ilOc a package. Yes. it is true, Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets absolutely stop heartburn, nausea, indigestion, dyspepsia of the worst type, sour stomach, bloat y feeling and all eructations and irritation, and freshen and invigorate the stomach. They cheer you up, and make you get all the good there is in your food. You will forget you ever had a stomach to worry ou. Send us you name and address today and we will at once send you by mail a sample package, free. Address F. A. Stuart, Co., 150 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich. NEW PASSENGER CAR. Benjamin F. Freeble, auditor for the Monongahela. Railroad, a Pennsylvania line, has been granted a patent on a new style of passenger car which differs from any other passenger car ever built. He claims by using the new car the number of passengers injured in passenger train wrecks each year will be reduced to a minimum. The floor of the car will always remain in the same position, even though the car is turned over on its side or top. The intnior of the car is practically a rotary chamber set on substantial trucks. The exterior of the new car is the same as that of an ordinary car. While the railroad njen say that the steel passenger cars used on some lines have resulted in fewer accidents there is no way of preventing loss of life in case the car is turned on its side. After the Entertainment. . "She has a magnificent flat," one. "but it Is badly arranged. said The parlor is too far from the dining room.'" "The wall paper is beautiful," remarked another, "hut thf pirt'ires are abominable. It is a pity to ruin beautiful walls." "She has a lot of elegantly bound books." said r? Ill another, "but I'd be willing to wr.gr a five that none of the leaves are cut." "In other words," said the man who looks on. "she has been awfully good to us. She has taken pains to entertain us. Let us roast her." New York Press. Unloaded on the Ragman. Scribbles Congratulate rne, old man. I got rid of all my manuscript last week. Dribbles That's good. What did you get for them? Scribbles-tllow much do you suppose? Dribbles Haven't the least idea. Scribbles I got 2 cents a pound. Chicago News. Followed Instructions. Mudge This watch has been stopped for two or three days. Jeweler Lemme see it. There is nothing the matter with it except that it has not been wound. Mudge I thought maybe that was it. I remember you told me to wind it up just before I went to bed, and I haren't been to bed for three nights. Phy'olofly. A pupil in a school near Chatham square. New York city, thus denned the word "spine:" "A spine Is a long, limber bone. Your head sets on one end, and you set on the other." Lfpplncott's Magazine. Hard to Suit. "When your morher-in-law fell into the water, why didn't you help to get her out?" "My dear madam, you must know that nothing Pre erer doDe bas pleased ber!" Jndy. No arctic explorers have fever had colds until they returned to civilization. Then, one and all, they ar prostrated by severe influenza. PAULA Q1LIM WANT AD PAY 1
PATIENCE OF MEN III LEAD NOW TRIED
Governor-Hughes Is Contented to Float Along With The Tide. PRESIDENTIAL ASPIRATIONS NEW YORK GOVERNOR HAS NOT YET MADE ANNOUNCEMENT OF HIS 'NTENTIONS AND MACHINE MEN ARE WORRIED. New York, Januarv 20 Is Governor .Hughes willinir to nlxro bi im!itic:t! ; future in the keeping of the leaders of j jthe Republican party, and is he willing j i and ready to stand by the organiza j ; tion the machine, as it is so often j caueu m return tor what its captains do for him? If he is, these same captains say, there is no reason why he should not be the Republican noniI inee for the Presidency. But. they inIsist, he cannot afford to waste any time. Time is Hying. And he must be up and doing in the way of making known to the "right" people his true position. Or is Governor Hughes content to abide his faith in God Almighty, trusting to being a man of destiny, and that a loud cry from the nation will not only bring to him the nomination, but also land him in the Presidential chair in an overwhelming sort of way? That Governor Hughes has both his sharp, piercing eyes bent on the White House is a fact known not only to his intimates, but also it is equally known to those who do not share his fullest confidence. Up to close to the present time he was content to float along with the tide, trusting to "luck," which has been with him pretty much, ignoring the politician, and, what was worse, from a political point of view, putting the bars upon him. THE SKULL BANJO. Profcably ths Most Grewsom Musical Instrument Known. It is a well known fai t that through dire necessity the American Indian has developed remarkable skill. The ld stories of how these Indians made pottery ami earthenware by the aid of only the most crude instruments and of their methods of burning aud carving out the insides of the trunks of tree to make canoes are universally known. Hut even with all their skill the fact that they were a barbarous, uncivilized race cannot be evaded, as is shown by this grewsome instrument In the time of the early settlers of this hemisphere their acts of cruelty were without precedent in the history of the world. With tbese facts iu view we can easily understand how the "skull ban- j jo" came to light. It is known that In; the small country of Paraguay, iij the j east central part of South America.! the Indians who inhabited that place , were more than ordinarily cruel. They j were constantly engaged In warfare, ; and their primary aim when thus en- j gaged was to capture the chief of the opposing side. When captured, this I personage was carried to their camp j and there cruel 'y murdered, and it was from his body that this awe inspir-, ing musical instrument was made. j The instrument is made as follows: j The body is decapitated, aud tbe skull , Is then thoroughly dried. The one who ! is to perform the fert of making the instrument then cuts the top entirely ; off. Over tbe opening thus made a ! piece of skin taken from the body nn-, also thoroughly dried is tightly stretched in the manner of a drum. From the back of the skull the two femurs or the ' two bones of the leg which extend from the knee to the hip project. These bones have been so trimmed that they are of uniform thickness throughout 1 tbeir entire length. The upper ends of these bones are joined together with9 one of the ribs, also taken from that body. Then from the forehead of the skull to the rib which connects the two femurs a number of strings "are tightly stretched. These strings are likewise made from the skin of the victim, having been thoroughly drietlt stretched and rubbed with rosin. Rut this even is not the full extent of the grewsomeness of this instrument, for the skull is left so that the Jaws are movable. Therefore with each shake of the instrument the jaws wag, and with a sharp Jolt of the instrument the teeth come together with suap.-New York Herald. CAN YOU TELL? How many teeth have you? What are the words on a policeman's shield? How many buttons have you on your waistcoat? Write down the figures on the face of your watch. Which way does the crescent moon turn to the right or left. How many toes has a cat on each forefoot and each hir.d foot.' What are the words written or printed on the face of your watch? In what direction is the fate on a cent, ou a quarter and on a dime turned? What color arc your employer's eve j and the eyes of the man at the next j det-k? I What are tbe exact words on a two j cent stamp? In what direction is the j face on it turned? What is tbe same signed in facj simile on any one, tirj, five or ten dollar bill you ever saw? New York Frgs. 1st Tie Ktoasafh IisH-nnable T Aa op-rat oo lor tiie removal of the atorarh la a Chicago hospital reeentiy. promoted discussion tmoag tb ten-eons whether the stomach could be removed asd the patient be none the worse for It. Before the discussion bad weS lied ont. the catieat had died. It demonstrated ie could not live without his stomach. To keep he stomach in goou cocuitlon. and cure cvustittion. indigestion:, etc , ue the areat herb laxa le com pound. Dr. CaidwcU'& Syrup t-tmva
sea U at an tmu aad li a buUJs.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR REPRESENTATIVE. LEE J. REYNOLDS Candidal.- f..i Representative from Wayue Coun f. subject to ihf Republican Nond cation. i WALTER S. RATLIFF Candidate foi 1 State UeptcseiUatio, subject to ihf j Republican Nomination JOINT REPRESENTATIVE. . ALONZO M. GARDNER, candidal for Joint R'-pies.-ntatne, Wayne and Fayette Counties. subject to the Republican nomination. JUDGE CIRCUIT COURT. HENRY C- FOX Candidate 'or re election for Judge- of the Wayne Circuit Court, subject to the Rop.ib lican Nominal ion. CHARLES E. SHIVELEY. candidate for Judge of ihe ane Circuit Court, subject to the Republican Nomination. PROSECUTING ATTORNEY. CHARLES L. LADD of CentervilV candidate for Prosecuting Attorney of Wayne county, subject to the Re publican nomination. COUNTY TREASURER. ALBERT R. ALBERTSON of Clay township, candidate for Treasurer ot Wayne County, subject to Republi can Nomination. JEROME SHURLEY of Wayne Town ship, candidate fur treasurer of Wayne county, subject to Republi can nomination. COUNTY RECORDER. WILL ROBBINS of Vbington Town ship, candidate for County Recorder, subject to the Republican Nomination. BENJAMIN F. PARSONS, of Wau. township is a candidate for County Recorder, subject to the Republican Nomination. JOHN C. KING of Center Towushii is it candidate for County Recorder. subject to the Republican Nomina tion. FRANK C. MOSBAUGH. of Jackson township, is a candidate for County Recorder, subject to the Republican nomination. COUNTY CORONER. DR. A. L. BRAMKAMP, Candidate lor Coroner Wayne County, subject to the Republican Nomination. . COUNTY COMMISSIONERS. ROBERT N. BEESON, of Harrison township, is a candidate for County Commissioner to represent th Western District, subject to the Republican nominating election to b held in February. BARNEY H. LINDERMAN Candidal o for Commissioner of the Middle District, Clay Township, Wayne Count. subject to the Republican nomination. RICHARD A. DAVENPORT of Wayne township, is a candidate for county commissioner of Wayn county. Eastern District, subject to the Republican nomination. WILLIAM T. BLAIR or Green township, candidate for County Commissioner, Middle District, subject to the Ifc-puhlican Nomination. DE WITT C. JAY of Webster Township, candidate for County Commissioner of Middle District, subject to Republican Nomination. JOSEPH F. GROVES of Jackson township is a candidate for Com missioner ayuo i (iiiniy, Western District. subject to Republican Nomination. HOMER FARLOW of Roston Township, candidate for County Commissioner, Eastern District, subject to Republican Nomination. TOWNSHIP ASSESSOR. TOM J. GOLDING Candidate for Township Assessor, Wayne Tnr ship, Wayne County. Subject to th Republican Nomination. CHARLES E. POTTER Candidate fot Township Assessor of Wayne Town ship, Wayne County, subject to tlv; Republican Nomination. CHARLES H. BULLA Candidate lot Township Assessor of Wayne Towi ship, Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination. TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE. CHARLES L. WETTIG Candidate f 01 office of Township Trustee, Wayne Township, Wayne County, subj'-C to Republican nomination. THOMAS B. MARTIN Candidate f : Township Trustee of Wayne Tow:.xhip, Wayne County, subject to the Republican Nomination. JAMES H. HOWARTH Candidate f r Township Trustee. Wayne Tonthiii subject to the Republican Nomination. JOHN E. MOFFITT, candidate for of ftce of Township Trustee, Wayn Township. Wayn- County, subj'-ct to Republican Nomination. BEN H. NORRIS Candida'c for Tnis tee of Wane Township; subject ,r the Republican Nomina ion. i GEORGE W. COOK Candidal' f ;r Twnship Trustee. Wayti" Tow -.-ship. Wayne County. Itnii,. na. .V ject to the Republican Nominal i" ; GEORGE E. McCOY Candidal e f-r Township Trustee of Wayne Township, Wayne County, subject to the t- Republican nomination. JESSE D. BORTON. candidate for Township Trustee. W; yr." Townshi; . tiuii. Wayne Coi.iu . l id., subject to tli- Republican Nomination.
