Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 96, 21 May 1908 — Page 7

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THE RICIOIOXD PALLADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, 31 AY 21, 1903. PAGE SEVEN. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Wanted, For Sale, For Rent, Lost, Found, Miscellaneous, Lodge Notice, Cards off Thanks, Obituaries, etc.. 1 CENT A WORD. Situations Wanted, are Free. The f.larket P'ace of Richmond for buyer or seller. A trial will convince you that Palladium Classified Ads ..re result bringers. 1 INSERTIONS FOR TKE PRICE OF 5.

WANTED.

WANTED Pianast, singer and casUnier for Be theater. Apply by Iet ter giving references to Z. T., care Pas Sad hi m. WANTED -fl ill for general hoiiKework. Address "J. 11." tare Palladium. lit WANTED A girl at. 121 street; two in family. N. 10th 'Jilt W A NTED Sa 1 es m a n . Sell retail trade, $CT to .fHo per month and expenses or commission. Experience The Markets Chicago. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. By Corrtll and ThompsoE. Brokers. Eaton. 0.1 Chicago, May 21. Wheat. Open. High. Low. Close. May..... ..KM';. lCVs 11 l;n July : !1 : '.ft"Sept Si"h ST'i s:!s St-.H Corn. Open. Hi 511. Low. Close. fJuly Wi '"' ; Sept 64U l'.i 61V 04, Oats. ; Open. High. Low. Close. May o." 0.V4 .4.Ti July 4jfx 47 Wt 4ti-k (Sept 37? :i7i-s 37s 3P4 Pork. Open. High. Low. Close. July .. .$13.TO .''13.77 ?13.07 $13.72 Sept .. . 13.fT 14.02 13.f5 13.07 Lard. Open. High. Low. Closs. July . . . $8.fV5 $S.n 5S.55 $8.57 Sept .. . 8.70 S.7" 8.70 S.75 Ribs. Open. High. Low. Close. July . . , . 7.37 $7.42 $7.37 $7.42 Sept .. 7. 7.fr 7.i K 7.ij U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, May 21. Hogs, receipts 14,000; 5c highey. Left over 5,927. Cattle 3,500, strong. Sheep 7,000, 'steady. Hogs Close. Light $:.3ofi $3.70 Mixed 5.33 tfr r.7." Heavy fUlai r..72,2 Rough n.SO.'y 5.15 Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, May 21. : Wheat, 97. Corn, 73. . Oats, 53 ViTimothy, $12.00. Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. iBeet heavies $.-.5:(f? 'Good to choice 7A(a BEEF STEERS. Good to choice heifers.... (1.3310 jModium to siood stoers .. ;.::5(f (Choice i.) fancy yearlings 5.00(Lt BUTCHER CATTLE. ('Choice to fancy heifers.... r.aff (Good to choice heifers .... 4.50ft VEAL CALVES. jGood to choice 3o Fair to good . 2.00 & STOCK CATTLE. jGood to h'vy fleshy feed'rs 5.25f SFair to good feeders 4.75 'Good to choice stocirs 3.50 ft) :Common to fair heifers .. 4.00 SHEEP. ; Choice lambs 5.75 en Best yearlings 5.50 5.65 5.53 fi.73 6.75 5.75 fi.on 5.00 fi.50 5.25 5.50 5.00 4.50 4.63 6.00 6.00 Richmond. CATTLK. I (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) i Best hogs, average 200 to . 250 lbs 5.33'a Good heavy packers .. .. 5.10 a ; Common and rough 3.40'j (Steers, corn fed 5. now i Heifers 1.50 ,'Pat COWS 3.50;if Bulls 3.50 Tf Calves 5.00V Lambs 6.00 5.30 5.35 4.45 5.75 3.00 4.25 4.00 5.25 6.50 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Toting chickens, dressed, per lb..lSc 01d chickens, per lb 12U to 15c Turkeys, per lb ISc Ducks, per lb 15c COUNTRY PRODUCE. Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb 26c Country butter, per lb 15c Eggs, per doz 14c Richmond Grain Market. Wheat (per bu.) 96c 70c 47c 70c Corn (per bu) . . : Oats, (per bu.) . . Rye, (per bu.) (Bran (per ton) Middlings (per ton) . . .$26.00 . . .$2S.0O Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. W'r.r"; i T :hy Hay (ba'.edt $12.00 jTi'i othy Hay (loose) . . .$10.C011.00 ! Clover hay (baled) 510 Clover Hay loose) $9.00 Kixed Hay 10.00

unnecessary. Hermingsen Cigar Co., Toledo, Ohio. 21 -It WANTED -Solicitor Liberal compensation. Call at Singer store, cor. ."th and Main. -l--t WANTED A girl for pantry work. w'l'Ktcotf hot.M. i'o-at

WANTED See Morohead for profes sional vault cleaning. ::: Itiiiler Street. Phone ::177. may 1 5-t f WAXTED Youi carpets, ruga. upholsttry, ci'-atrcsses. et.. to clean hy our vacuum process. Richmond House Cleaning Co. Phone, Home 1916. Bell 'jySR. 22 tf V a T tl D Meii uj Lenrn bTFTTe? trade; will equip shop fcr you or Straw (per ton) .".00 Corn 1 1 er hu.j C to ic. Oats ( per bu. ) 17 to 50c Richmond Seed Market. 'Runce & Co.) Clover Seed (per bu $10.00 Timothy (per bu) $2.00 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg. May L'L Cattle Receipts light. Prime and extra. $7. down. Common and fair, $t.3o;.'a;.4. Veal, 6.75, down. Hogs Receipts 7 loads. Hogs, $5.95 down. Sheep and lambs Receipts 3 loads. Sneep, 5.25 down. Fair to good lambs $6.25 down. Spring lambs, $.".; down. Cincinnati Livestock. Cincinnati, May 21. Hogs Receipts 1.961, steady. Butchers, $5.65f 5.80. Pigs, $3.35 C-i 4.60. Cattle Receipts 271, steady. Shippers, $5.6" (if 6.50. Veal, $3.00'T 6.25. Sheep and Lambs Rect's 100 steadv Sheep, $3.35(?( 5.10. Lambs, $0.107.60. East Buffalo Livestock. East Buffalo, May 21. Cattle Receipts 200, steady: $7 down Veal Receipts 500: $6.75 down. Sheji and lambs Receipts 3.000. Sheep, $5.30 down. Lambs. $;..",u down. Hogs Receipts 20. Mixed and yorkers, $6.00 down. Pies, S5.-JO. Toledo Grain. Toledo, May 21 Oats 54. Wheat 9Si. Corn, 76. Clover (October) $7.55. Alsike $13.50. Rye, SOU. BELIEVES THAT MRS. IS L Laporte Resident Writes Charles LacJd. to Charles Way. of Laporte. Ind., a cousin of Charles Lack'., republican nominee for prosecuting attorney, has written a letter to Mr. Ldd in which I he states the impression prevails j among Laporte citizens that Ray Lam- : pnere is not guilty ot setting fire to j the Gunness home and causing the j j death of Mrs. Gunness. Way says the Laporte populace, does not think Mrs. j Gunness dead. Mr. Way was well acquainted with the woman and knew; her personally. He says she carried ' her money mi a belt r.bou her waist. : He states that much of the printed: matter about the erse is false and misleading. It is believed at I,a porta ' j that the teeth plates found in the j ruins are not those of Mrs. Gunnew ' j or if they are they were put there by j friends to throw searchers off the ' track and make them believe in her j death. DEATH DOES NOT INTERFERE WITH BANK New Paris Concern to Next Week. Open i The death of J. A. Peelle, of New 1 Paris will not interfere with the operation of the People's Bank of that ! place. Mr. Peelle was the sole owner ; of the bank. He died at the Reid : Memorial Hospital in this city, where ; he had been taken for treatment. The bank will reopen Wednesday of next ! week after the expiration of the delay caused by the legal proceedings. The heirs of the deceased will operate the ; bank. Under the provisions of the will ; of Mr. Peelle. his widow and M. H. ; Pence, cashier of the bank, are named ' as executors. Their bond was placed j at $150,000. I Haxxah: I Nothing better for tha bovs than bread j from Gold Medal Flour. Rebecca.

furnish positions, few wefka completes, constant rac'lce. careful Instructions, tools given, Saturday wages, diplomas grante,. write for catalogue. Moler Barber Collegfc. Cincinnati, O. tf FOR SALE, FOR SALE Double beam platform

counter scale. Call Bell phone ; :.ri. 2i-:;t ; FOR SALE -Good go-cart cheap. Ill j South 14th street. "O-Tt j FOR SALE- A car load of horses every Saturday and Monday at Ous Tauhe's ham. y-tf FOR SALE Cheap. " Lot "of ""heavy MUICIE IS PLEASED WITH ART EXHIBIT Pictures Being Shown There at Present Time Are of Unusual Beauty. FT. WAYNE IS INTERESTED. AFTER GOING TO MUNCIE TO VIEW THE EXHIBIT, IT WAS DECIDED TO INTEREST FT. WAYNE PEOPLE IN SIMILAR PROJECT. Mrs. M. F. Johnston, president of the Richmond Art association has returned from Muncie, where the local exhibit for this year is now on exhibition. She states that Muncie people are highly pleased with the exhibition and it is being attended by hundreds of people. This exhibition is of an unusually high standard and it is quite probable that the exhibit will be an annual event in Muncie as it is in this city. Mrs. Johnston states that there was a delegation of Ft. Wayne people at Muncie yesterday and they are so highly pleased that they informed Mrs. Johnston that they would make an effort to have the exhibit brought to Ft. Wayne. Mrs. Johnson says that the pictures can be sent to Ft. Wayne if the people there so desire. By arranging a circuit, composed of Richmond, Muncie and Ft. Wayne, the art association in each town contributing to the expense of securing such an exhibit, it would be possible next year to make the exhibit much larger than any ever held in this city. People from various points in the I north centra! part of the state have been attracted to Muncie and every day the exhibit is visited by one or more delegations. The fame of the Richmond p.rt show has spread throughout the state like the fame of the Richmond musical festivals and lovers of art in the gas belt are delighted at the opportunity of seeing the hundreds of beautiful canvasses. CROSBY TO ADDRESS Y. M. C A, DIRECTORS Boys' Work Topic of His Speech. F. A. Crosby. International secretary of the hoys' department in the Y. M. C. A. will be in this city tomorrow and in the evening he will appear before the board of directors of the local Y. M. C. A. and will speak on the needs, possibilities and benefits to be derived from systematic work with boys. Mr. Crosby has direct charge of the boys" work in Y. M. C. A.s in North America, west of Ohio. CITY STATISTICS. Deaths and Funerals. BOYLE David William, the ten months old infant son of Mr. and Mrs. David A. Boyle died early this morning. The remains will be taken tomorrow morning to Detroit, Mich., where services and burial will take place. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jacob "Wirt, 1622 North G street, a boy. ninth child. Diseases. J. Y. Morris, ager 32 years in the family of Eli Morris, 25 North Twelfth street, has typhoid fever. IS A GRANDPAPA. Benj. Drischel of this city is a grandfather. An eight pound boy has been born to Drischel's daughter, Mrs. Ohmit of Cambridge City. Benjy says ft makes him feel like joining a ball team to celebrate. If you are tronUled wh sick beadacbe. constipation, indigestion, off-nsive breath or any disease arising from stomach trouble, get a 50c or 51 bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. 1 is positively guaranteed to core yoa. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

oak display tables, extr; nice. Size ."j feet by l'J feet and 5 feet by S feet, j Also fire-proof safe, cheap. Also! large effice desk. Bankrupt stock ; of Big Store. Call at Coliseum fori inspection. 2')-7t !

FOR SALE OK TRADE Modern residence. Easy terms Phone FOR SALE-City real estate. Forterfield. KeKey B'.ock. 9-tf MISCELLANEOUS. FIRE IXSrRANCK-Richniond In surance Agency, Hans X. Koll, Mgr. 71t Main. mavu sun & thur tf GEO" M . Xi I : V E R Gen era 1 co n I rac t or , FOUND INJILL POOD Sweetheart Has Been Placed Undrr Arrest. Applefon. Wis., May 21. The body of Mrs. Carrie Shaw, a wealthy young widow of Hortonville, was found in a mill pond. Indications point to murder. Charles Abranis of New ljondon. a sweetheart and twenty-six, is un-der arrest. He is the last person seen with her. EATON WILL OBSERVE L DAY Arrangements for Event Completed. Are Eaton, O.. May 21. Arrangements have been perfected for the annual observance of Memorial day in Eaton. The members of the G. A. R.. W. R. C. and of Comnany F., O. N. G. school children and citizens generally will take part in the exercise., of the day. Preceding the usual services at Mound Hill cemetery, the members of the Grand Army and of the local military company will march to the West Main street bridge, where flowers will lie strewed upon the waters of Sevenmile creek and a salute fired in honor- o." naval heroes wlio have fallen. Immediately thereafter the procession will march to the cemetery, under the direction of Geo. W. Ixmgnecker, who has been appointed grand marshal of the day. Captain G. H. Kelly has been selected as master of ceremonies. CHILD STRAYED Police Asked to Assist in the Search. After it had been gone from home for more than three hours and its j mother had been unable to locate it, i a child of William Bentlage's, of South ; Eleventh street was restored to its parents mis noon. i ne naoe was found by a colored boy. The police had been asked to assist in the search. APPEARANCE OF SAVAGE IS TOUCHING Young Man Attends Mother's Funeral, in Custody. Centerville. Ind.. May 21. Probably nothing has occurred in this city in recent years to excite the general sympathy more than the visit of Rolla Savage here today. The boy came in the custody of the sheriff to attend his mother's funeral. At present Savage is serving a term of imprisonment at the Jeffersonville reformatory for grand larceny. Young Savage has manv friends here who regret the cir cumstances. He is not regardeu as ai bad boy. He was here yesterday aft-i ernoon to view his mother's body and had to leave her side to return to the county jail to spend the night. Newton's Apple. Voltaire Is the authority for the wel! known anecdote about the apple and Newton's discovery of the law of gravitation. He had his information from Newton's favorite niece, Catherine Bar ton. How much truth there is in the story will probably never be known It Is plausible and by no means improbable. It is certain that tradition marked a tre in a garden at Woolsthorpe, where Newton spent a part of the summer of 1GG6. This tree stood until 1S20. when, owing to decay, it was cut down. New York American. Gold Mtdai Dour make delieiou? baked Rhoda.

BODY Of WOMAN

Carpenter, and builder. Job work. Scieens and screen doors. Automatic nhone i","t. 2-:t

FOl'ND - Black Silk boa. at Mashniever's store. Owner call ' 11-1 1 I FOR RENT. FOR RENT House of five rooms. :,'J4 S. Mh. ll-it-l'; FOR RENT Furnistet rooms; also office rooms, with steam heat and bath, at The Grand, for gents only. FORTREXT 3 room flafTstiitahio for light housekeeping or business purposes, centrally located, over 71o E The Wonderful Feat of a Gaunt Kanaka Runner. BEAT HALF A DOZEN HORSES It Was a Terrific Test of Endurance, and the Sturdy Hawaiian Native Won Easily, Though Two of th Competing Horses Dropped Dead. "Did any of you ever hear of a thirtyfive mile steeplechase for man and beast?" inquired a California man In a party of turf followers when stories of queer bets and long shots were going around. "Well, there was an affair of that kind down in the Ilawailan bunch In the fall of 18S3. when that genial gambler, Kalaknua, was king of the Islands. There were no telephones joining the islands then, and state messages and mandates were carried by the interlsland steamers and delivered by Kanaka runners. These ruBiiers. could gallop all day, like American Indians In retreat or on tho trail, and they didn't know what getting winded or tired meant. "Kalakaua thought a good deal of these runuers of his. He maintained that they could go faster and farther than horses over the Hawaiian country. In this he was disputed by a number of the white attnehes of his court Kalakaua wagered $5,000 in gobs of $1,000 with five of them that he would pick out a runner from among the Kanakas who'd get from Hilo to the top of the burning lake of Kilauea. a distance of thirty-five miles, quicker than any horse and any rider could do the trip. They snapped the k'ug up at even money. It looked t they had the good end of It- Th ing and a big party from Honolulu sailed in one of the lnterisland steamers to Hilo, on the main island of Hawaii, to see the finish. "The king picked up a huge. lithe, sinewy Kanaka, a man about thirty years old, who had been employed as a runner on the Island of Maui for a number of years, to try the trick for him. Eight Kanakas made the start a-horseback. on native ponies, bred away back from western cayuses strong, sure footed, nippy tempered little demons, thoroughly used to the bad roads and the climbing. The king and his party had gone up to the Volcano House, at the top of Kilauea, In coaches the day before to be on hand to greet the winner. "Now. I understand that that road from mio up to the burning lake of Kilauea has been Improved since the time I'm speaking of, but it surely was a bad trail then. It was only wide enough for one wagon, and it was n forty-five degree affair in the climb ail the way up. The palms that lined the road used to get Blown across the trail by the score In big windstorms, and the coach drivers counted it a part of their business to jump from their seats every time they came to these obstructions and shoulder them out of the way. This work had all been attented to carefully, however, in advance of the race by order of Kalaknua. and it looked like a pipe for the cayuses. all of which had made the run up many a time. "Kalakaua didn't ask for any handicap allowance for his man. The run ner toed the scratch with the horses, and they got off together at the crack of t!" run. The horses distanced the runner from the .lump, and he let them distance him. He was dressed in a il string, and he just took up a steady lope and let the cayuses get out of his sight For ten miles the cayuses were so far above him on the trail that he couldn't even see them, but this Kanaka knew how to wait "The horses began to come back to the runner long before the Halfway House was reached, and the Kanaka was just galloping along at the beginning of the third hour, with The same big stride he had started in with, his arms np and shooting out in front of him like soldiers on the double time driil. There wasn't a pant in him when he fetched tip at the Halfway House. He stooped down there to a spring beside the road and took a couple of mouihfuls of water. The cayuses were up ahead a bit blowing their heads off. for they had been going at a clip that they had never been pushed to lefore. "The Kanaka headed the bunch a mile beyond the Halfway House, and it was a big romp for him the rest of the distance. He took a position for the remaining seventeen miles of the journey about a city block ahead of the writhing and panting horses, and he Just stuck to his lope like a man wound up. He never let 'em get nearer than a blk;k to him for the remaining three hour? of .the trip, looking bacj at them.

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IIP A MO T

Main street. Inquire P. W., care

I'aMamum. .-tr Ft R KENT -IPnduess root-is and Hats. Ft. VaVi? Ave. See Alfonls. ltl LOST. LOST I.ah's gold watch with beaded lob. Return to Ion Kinsey St. 11 It LOST Saturday night, a caril-casi1 i-tmTaininis thiee oi'.t1 dollar ttills in an envelope and a few eards. between Main and F on S. .uh street. Leae at Boston Store and receive reward. li'-Ht LOST Gold open -faced watch on No!andsfork. south of Grcensfork road. witn a j; j .. '.ii.e. V netl ouij three miles et remained t-fore the Volcano House was to be reached, the Kanaka took another driuk out of a spring and bgan to draw away. The Kanaka riders whipped and spurred their horses, but It was no good. The Kanaka runner disappeared out of their siicht on the tortuous trail, and when sir of the cajuises pulled up at the hotel veranda about three-quarters of an hour later 'the runner was sitting on the steps, fanning himself and drinking sakL Two of tbe berses had dropped dead in their final effort "The Kanaka made the thirty-five mile trip over sticks and atones on a miry road in G hours and 40 minuter, and he looked fit to run for his life when he got through." Washington Post. To say "every one is talking about him" Is a eulogy, but to say "every on is talking about her" la as elegy. Anonymous. CARNIVAL LIFE ATTRACTS YOUNG BOY McManus Goes After Young McLaughlin. Sergeant Dan McManus went to Kokomo today to locate a sixteen year old son of George McLaughlin of South B street. Young McLaughlin left the city in company with the carnival company which showed here last week. His parents desired his return and dispatched the sergeant to return him to this city. EVELYN THAW HAS AN EYE FOR BUSINESS Wants Things Fixed So She Will Get More Money. Now York, May It Is authoritatively stated that Evelyn, dissatisfied with her present allowance, will withdraw the suit for annullment of her marriage to Harry Thaw and ask the court to appoint her Harry's guardian with power to handle the estate, thus giving her the whip hand. Big Tips For Littla Favors. "It Is surprising," said a veteran Pullman porter, "how big a tip a porter sometimes gets for doing a Tery little thing." He added: "A passenger once tipped me extra because he said I did not leave his shoestrings coiled up Inside his shoes after I had blacked them. He said nothing made him madder than to slip on bis shoes in a hurry In a sleeper only to find that he had to take them ofT again because the shoestrings were inside. Ever since that time I have been careful not to leave shoestrings inside of the shoes I black, and more than one passenger has thanked me for tdng thoughtful. Bat it wasn't me that did the thinking. The tip d.'d that for me, and I never forgot it." Lealie's Weeklv. In the Right Direction. Bishop B'otnSeid was one of the many witty Englishmen whose good things have found their way Into a volume of reminiscences, "Leaves From the Notebooks of Lady Dorothy Nevil!." Pishop Blomfield was led into a controversy one time with a learned man as to the mental superiority of the east over the west, and his opponent as a j arting shot said: "Well, at any rate, you can't dispute that the wise men came from the east." 'Surely that was the wisest thing they could do:" retorted the bishop. A Futile Bosst. "Love me and the world is mine," he said. "What's the use of saying that?" she replied. "I've been loving you for weeks and you haven't even succeeded In getting a good job." Chicagj Reo crd-Herald. Marriage Is a lottery in which men stake their liberty and women their happiness. Mme. de Itienx. There Is no medicine so s aie and at tbe tama time so pleasant to take as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, the postthre core for all diseases arisisf from stomach trouble. The price is Tery reasonable SOc and 11.

Return to 103 N. 15th St. $10 Re-

ward. lf-7t LAUNDRY. We can help make you happy hon estly we caD. Richmond Steam' Laundry. FINANCIAL. MONEY LOANED Low rate, easy, terms. Thompson's loan and real estate aRcncy. Wide staira, 710 Main streu l!onds automaUo phone No, 2008. l-wed-thurs-frl-at-tf EVIDENCE AND THE CORONER DIFFER (Continued From Pago One.) like they had been started withiOlU Iater he saw a man coming from tha scene, and. though ho did not know him, he identifies Lamphero in tha county jail as the fellow who was running back toward town. Sine thea the lad has told a different atory ax 4 fixed a later tlme for this Important' incident When his ttentioa wti drawn thereto tho boy declined to explain. Tho body of Jennie- Olsen, who, ao cording to tho best Information obtainable by the authorities, must hava been murdered IKn-ember "Jrt, 1ft L anit buried in the barnyard, probably with tho mysterious "professor and hia wife, has been interred In tho Tattoo cemetery beside the body of Andrew Helgelein. THE ENCHANTED MESA. Story ef Qreat Disaster Which Wls4 Out tha Population. Tha atory of tha eaebanted met waa but a tradltiaa whea In 1341 tfaa Spaniards first visited tha paabla of A coma, la what la bow Valencia county, N. M. Powerful tribes Inhabited the region. Thesa tribes or nations, were constantly at war with each other, which account for tbe fortified character of tha villages of tba natives. The Que res, whose descendants now occupy A com a, bald this region and dwelt In small fortified towna, the capital of which waa A coin a. It'( was not. bowerer, the A com a of today, but a city perched upon the top of the great rock now called Ma Encantada. It was the magnificent city ot the nation, and' there dwelt the. (Teat men of the tribe, together with their families. ! The rock then, as now, was unseal, able, tare at the one point where narrow and precipitous trail Jed up the dizzy height While net the-aaost, convenient dwelling place, for neither) water nor vegetation waa to be fouadi upon the summit It t- aafe treat the attacks of foes. One man attbe top of tbe trail could defend. th Ity, against the warriors of the eatlreweaLi One day, while a large number oCthe inhabitants were at work In tbe fields on the plain blew or attending to the affairs of the tribe lipttte ariukafch' boring Tillages, setnetbtng Wttbla the rock or In the earth- beneath) a woke to life and motion. There wWa beav-i lng, a squirming and a ahtreriag ot, the great rock, and. with a, mSffety. noise, it parted In twain and arportio fell in fragments to tbe plaia below. Such persona as were carried Gvwn la the debris were crashed to death. A; worse fate remained for Chose left prisoners on tbe top ef the mesa 'for, that which fell carried away the Harrow trail, tbe only means of - asornt and descent The stranded" one perished from thirst and atarration. The present A coma family are tbev4eend ants of disaster. Ethnologist wfco'Ylaited the top of the rock some. years aga found unmistakable evidence that It had once been the site of habitation. The story of the disaster had prertout to that time been discredited and considered but an idle Indian legend. Tbe discovery of the ancient rolns, how. ever, seemed confirmatory of the tale, and it has since been credited. Denver Field and Farm. MRS. MARY WETTIG DIED CINCINNATI Was Apparently in Good i Health, Sunday. Charles Wet'ig. councilman from the sixth ward, today received notice of the sudden death of his mother, j Mrs. Mary Wettig, at h-r home la i Cincinnati. Mrs. Wettig frequently . visited hero and was quite well known. Mr. Wettig lo:s not know ; the cause of his mother's death. He ! saw her last Sunday and she was thea apparently enjoying the best of healthThe Great Blood Purifier. Fr sal by Leo H. Fine, T. F. ilcDonald an W. H. Sudhoff,