Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 161, 25 July 1908 — Page 2
I'AUE TWO.
THE KICII3IOND PALLADI UM AND SUX-TELEGRA3I. SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1908
eimsyivania
CMc&go Excursion Next Sunday $3.00 round trip irom Richmond. Train leaves 2 a. m. Pennsylvania Cincinnati Excursion Next Sunday $1.25 round trip from Richmond. Leave at 7 a. m. Niagara Falls Pennsylvania Over Lines Very Low Fare Tuesday. Aug- 18 Get details lrom Agt. C. W. Elmer (Pennsylvania Seashore Excursion August 13 Low Fare to Atlantic City, The New Cape May, and Eight Other Ocean Resorts Aik Pennsylvania LlnaTicket Agents for details POPULAR EXCURSION RATES Reduced Rates to Cincinnati Via the Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville R. R. 1.90 Round Trip to Cincinnati, on account of "Taft Notification Day. Selling DatesSunday, July 26, train lvs. 8.05pm Monday July 27, train lvs 5.15pm Monday July 27, train lvs 4.05pm Tues., July 28, train lvs 5.15am Good returning up to and including July 29th. Reduced Rates to Chicago Via the Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville R. R. 7 Day Excursion to Chicago, $6.75 round trip. Selling dates July 25th and 26th. Good returning up to and including July 31st. For Particulars Call, C. A, BLAIR, P. & T. A. Home Telephone 2062. POPULAR EXCURSIONS Via Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville R. R. $16.00 Round Trip to Old Point Comfort, Va. Two Excursions Wednesday, July 15th, and Sat urday, August 1st. Limit 15 days each. $16.00 Round Trip to Atlantic City Thursday, July 30th, via the C, & O. R. R. Limit 13 days. $6.50 Round Trip to Niagara Falls Wednesday, August 5th. Free Reclining Chair Car, Richmond to . Niagara Falls without Change. Train leaves Richmond 10:55 a. m. 12 days limit $16 Round Trip to Atlantic City Thursday, August 6th via The Baltimore & Ohio R. R. 15 day limit For particulars call on C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. Home Phone 2062, Richmond. Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction Co. Eastern Division (Time Table Effective Oct 27. 1907.) Trains leave Richmond for Indian apolis and intermediate stations at 6:00 a. m., 7:25, 8:00. '9:25, 10:00, 11:00,, 13:00, 1:00, 2:25. 3:00. 4:00, 5:25. 6:00. 7:30, 8:40, 9:00. 10:00. 11:10. . Limited trains. - Last car to Indianapolis. 8:40 p. m. Last car to New Castle. 10:00 p. m. Trains connect at Indianapolis for Lafayette, Frankfort. Crawfordsvllle. Terre Haute, Clinton, Sullivan, Paris
SULTAN BOWS TO THE WILL OF THE TURKISH PEOPLE
(Continued From Page One.) had succeeded in winning over 90 per cent of the Turkish army officers to their cause. Lact Straw Broken. This was cutting the ground from under the Sultan feet and the last straw was broken when the Sultan learned that the wild people of the Albanian country would support him no longer, but had joined the liberal movement and were calling loudly for constitutional reforms. Then suddenly the Sultan decided to bow to the Inevitable rather than face the alternative, a revolutionary outbreak throughout Macedonia. Up to the present day Turkey has been a theocratic absolute monarchy, subject to the direct personal control of the Sultan who has been at once temporal autocrat and recognized Khalif. or successor of the prophet, and consequently spiritual head of the Moslem world. This theocratic absolutism has been tempered not only by traditional usage, local privileges, the judicial and spiritual precepts of the Koran and its Ulemn interpreters and the Privy council, but also by the growing force of public opinion and the direct and indirect pressure of the powers of Europe. LAW ON RIGHT OF APPEAL IS NOW L (Continued From Page One) proportion of the property of the fu ture will be carried. President Has No Comment. Oyster Bay, July 25. President Roosevelt will make no comment on the statement of Judge Peter S. Grosscup of the Court of Appeals, re garding the president's pronounce ment on the decision of the United States Court of Appeals in revercing the $29,240,000 fine imposed on the Standard Oil company of Indiana. The Twilight Or litre. The muscles of the stomach ,n old afire are not s stronar or active as in youth and in consa. quence old people are very subject to constipa tion ana indigestion. Many seldom nave a Dowel movement without artificial aid. Many, bibo, navj unpleasant eructations or eras from the stomach after eating;. All this can be avoided by th. use of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which permanently regulates the bowels so that passages rome naturally, and so strengthens the stomach that food is digested without discomfort. Druesristb seU it at 50 centa nr 1 a large bottle. A Pleasant Summer Outing A cottage to rent on Crooked Lake at $1.00 per day; near good fishing ground. Well equipped for 9 persons. Also another cottage on Lake James, board, room and a boat, for $5.00 per week. A pleasant, retired place where launches pass hourly, SARAH SEGUR, Lake James, Angola, Ind. Your Vacation. Here's what you have been looking for. Plan your summer vacation now and join the Palladium Special Via the C, C. & L. R. R. For Niagar Falls, Buffalo, Lewiston, Toronto, Canada, returning stopping off at Detriot. &c. Only $10.25 for the Round Trip. JUST THINK OF IT. "Its Cheaper than Walking.' Through sleeping car and reclining chair car will leave Richmond on August 5th, at 10:55 a. m., running direct to Niagara Falls without change. This will be a personally conducted excursion. The Palladium invites you to join them. They have special rates from the leading hotels and you will get the benefit of this. Look at the route. Can you beat It? C. C. & L. to Peru: Wabash railroad to Niagara Falls: Gorge R. R. to Lewiston; Steamer to Toronto. Returning steamer Toronto to Lewiston; Gorge R. R. to Niagara Falls, rail to Buffalo; steamer Buffalo to Detroit; Wabash R. R. to Peru; C, C. & L. to Richmond. The cost of sleeping car, double berth, accommodating two persons, will be $1.50 Richmond to Niagara Falls. Make your reservation for sleeping car berth at once. For particulars write or telephone C. A. BLAIR, Pass & Ticket Agt C. C. &, L. R. R. Richmond, Ind. Home telephone No. 2062.
Affairs of the
The sun of the Canadian Indian, Longboat, has sunk to rest, but the sun of John F. Hayes, American, has risen and sheds its glory over American athletics. Yesterday Hayes won the great Marathon race in the Olympic games, finishing fresh as a daisy, while Dorando, the Italian, who led Hayes into the Stadium by one minute collapsed three hundred yards from the finish. Sympathetic officials helped the Italian over the tape, but he was disqualified and the event went to the Yankee. It was a clear cut victory. Had no assistance been rendered him Dorando would have remained prostrate on the track until Hayes had passed him and finished. Of the ten who secured places four were Americans, Forshay third, Welton fourth, and Tewanine, the Carlisle Indian, ninth. This was not all the American trlumpns yesterday. Only Americans will compete in the final of the 110 meter race today because all the preliminary heats yes terday were captured by the Yankees. Gilbert and Coqke. Americans, tied for first place in the pole vault at 12 feet 2 inches, while Jacobs, an American, tied with a Swede and a Canadian for third place. The American team WHO WILL WIN? NATIONAL LEAGUfc. Won Lost Kct. Pittsburg 52 35 .598 New York 50 35 .588 Chicago 49 35 .583 Philadelphia 42 38 .525 Cincinnati 46 42 .523 Boston f. 38 47 .447 Brooklyn 31 52 .374 St. Louis 30 54 .357 AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet. Detroit 53 34 .609 St. Louis 50 37 .575 Chicago 49 3S .565 Cleveland 46 40 .535 Philadelphia 42 41 .506 Boston 39 48 .448 Washington 33 51 .393 New York ..32 55 .368 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won Lost Pet. Indianapolis 60 41 .594 Louisville 56 42 .571 Toledo 52 43 .547 Columbus 53 46 .535 Minneapolis 50 46 .521 Milwaukee 46 54 .460 Kansas City 45 54 .455 St. Paul 31 67 .316 CENTRAL LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet. Evansville 51 37 .580 Dayton 46 38 .548 Grand Rapids 47 40 .540 South Bend ....47 41 .534 Terre Haute 44 41 .518 Zanesville 43 40 ?518 Ft. Wayne 44 42 .512 Wheeling 21 64 .247 RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. Cincinnati 3; Boston 2. Chicago 2; Brooklyn 1. 11 innings. New York 2; Pittsburg 1. Philadelphia-St. Louis Raif " American League. Detroit 4; Cleveland 0. American Association. Columbus 3; Milwaukee 1. Minneapolis 5; Indianapolis 4. St. Paul 8; Louisville 5. Kansas City-Toledo Rain. Central League. South Bend 5; Dayton 3. Wheeling 2; Terre Haute 1. Evansville 5; Zanesville 1. Ft. Wayne 5; Grand Rapids 4. GAI&ES TODAY. National League. v Cincinnati at Boston. Pittsburg at New York. Chicago at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Philadelphia. American League. Philadelphia at Chicago. Boston at Cleveland. Washington at St. Louis. New York at Detroit. American Association. St. Paul at Indianapolis. Milwaukee at Toledo. Kansas City at Columbus. Minneapolis at Louisville. Central League. Grand Rapids at Ft. Wayne. South Bend at Dayton. Wheeling at Terre Haute. Zanesville at Evansville. )iararlt aa a Dundy. A contemporary of Disraeli in his memoirs records this impression of that famous dandy's personal appearance: Usually he wore a 6late colored velvet coat, lined with satin; purple trousers, with a gold braid down the outside seam; a scarlet waistcoat, long lace ruffles falling down to the tips of his fingers; white gloves, with brilliant rings outside them, and long black ringlets rippling down over his shoulders. When he rose in the house he wore a bottle green frock coat, with a white waistcoat, collarless, and a copious supply of gold chains. Ca ait I on Jleceeaary. The young man moved a little closer. She moved a little farther away. "Why are you so cold and distant tills evening. Miss Pinkef" he asked. "I am not at all cold, Mr. Spoonamore," she answered, "but I am com pelled to be distant. My vaccination Is taking." Chicago" Tribune. Her Stronar Point. "Mrs. Wlbbleson Is a woman of strong points, isn't she?" "Well, rather. At the reception the other evening she gave rae a dig with an elbow that left no doubt in my mind concerning her strength of at least one of her points." Chicago Record-Hex-
Sporting World
in the l.fjoo meter relay race won its heat against the United Kingdom and Canadian teams and today will compete in the final with the Hungarian and German teams.. Teani representing the attorneys and police of Indianapolis will indulge in a little national pastime this afternoon. A team representing the Indianapolis society of professional pickpockets and highwaymen has challenged the winner. The German car in the New York to Paris race entered iicrlin yesterday and was greeted by a wildly bughouse populace. The American car has second place cinched. These contestants passed through the northern part of Indiana about three months ago. Minneapolis beat Marquard yesterday, making it five out of six from Indianapolis. Another jolt like that and "Ark" will get out his pile driver and beat the Browns into a jelly. A record breaking crowd greeted the New York Giants when they returned to the Polo grounds yesterday after a successful western trip. The Reds won a close game from Boston yesterday. Spade was in good form for Cincinnati and received excellent support. LAOS BOUND OVER TO JUVENILE COURT Boys Who Took Wheels Must Face Justice. James Jacona and Chatfield Baker, the two boys who were implicated in the theft of a bicycle have been bound over to the juvenile court. The lads stole the wheel a few evenings ago from the lot at Sevententh and Main streets, where the merry-go-round is located. They' admitted the theft. Jacona is an Italian, the son of Francisco Jacona, who is known as "Frenchy." THE SEISES DANCE. It la Reputed to Have Orlg-lnataA With the Apoatlea. At Seville, in Spain, the dances of the "seises" are gravely reputed to bav originated in the apostles having followed the example set by David and danced around our Lord after the last supper. While St. Augustine contemned the dance devotional, St Chrysostom is said to have taken part in it. and, notwithstanding a prohibitory decree of 692, it was exceedingly popular in Spain at the commencement of the seventeenth century. During certain ceremonies the seises dance dally before the high altar, of Seville cathedral in the presence of enormous crowds, including the archbishop and all the "Now," writes and eyewitness, "the dancing boys are dressed in the costume of Philip and Mary's days, with short capes, an abundance of streamers, plumed hats and white silk shoes. The or&an is supplemented by a string band. The old world air and song of the seises have been compared to the music of a comic opera. After sundry movements the castanets are used. "Now," writes an eyewitness, "the dance grows faster and more varied a chasse crolse Is succeeded by a circular figure, in which the dancers follow each other round and round, swaying their bodies as they sing rhymed couplets in the soft, slovenly accent of Andalusia. A DANGEROUS LIQUID. Hydrofluoric Acid la Moat Safely Kept In Golden Bottles. A gold bottle stood on the chemist's table. "In that bottle," he said, "my hydrofluroic acid is kept. Hydrofluoric acid is used in glass etching. The etching on glass thermometers is all done with it. It is colorless. It looks like water, but a drop of it on your hand would bore clean through to the other side like a bullet. Its Inhalation is sure death. "Hydrofluoric acid cau be kept safely in gold bottles alone. Sometimes bottles of india rubber, of lead or of platinum are used. None of these, though, is as safe as gold. "Even when' this acid is in a gold bottle precautions must be taken with it. It is volatile, and hence a paraffin covered plate must be clamped tight over the bottle's mouth; also the temperature of the room must not rise over 60 degrees or the gold bottle will burst. "This acid, whose 6ole use Is in glass etching, is probably the most danger ous thing in the world to work with The steeplejack, the lion tamer and the diver do not take their lives in their hands to half the extent the glass etch er does when, with his gold vial of hydrofluoric acid, he etches the scales of our thermometers." Philadelphia Bulletin. ABSURD CLOTHES. Cnnatlo Comment on the Style of At tire Afleeted by Man. "I like to feel clean," wrote George Bernard Shaw, the English dramatist. In the London World of Dress, "and my great idea of clothes Is that they should be clean and comfortable as far as such a thing is possible In London This, of course, excludes starch. 1 couldn't wear a thing which, after hav Ing been made clean and sweet. Is then filled with nasty white mud, Ironed Into a hard paste and made altogether disgusting. To put such a garment on my person, wear It, move in it, perspire in it horrible! "The shiny white tubes on the wrist, the shiny black cylinder on the head, the shiny white front to the shirt, the shiny black boot, the rain pipe trouser leg, the japanned zinc sleeve that Is your fashionably dressed man, looking like a cold blackleaded stove with as bestus fuel. The great tragedy of the average man's life is that nature re fuses to conform to the cylindrical ideal, and when the marks of his knees and elbows begin to appear in bis cyl
CONN WILL HOT . ACCEPT PLACE
Will Refuse to Run for Governor on Independence Party Ticket. NEAL DENIES ALL REPORTS CLAIMS THAT ELKHART MANUFACTURER'S NAME WILL BE PUT ON TICKET NOTWITHSTANDING CONTRARY REPORTS. Indianapolis, Ind., July 25 Whether or not C. G. Conn, millionaire business man at ElKhart, accepts the nomination for governor on the Independence league ticket in Indiana, will hrve to be determined by him. He is some where in California. Secretary Joe Reilcy, of the democratic state committee, said: "The report is untrue, and it will react, too, as the democratic leaders think that Hearst's followers are tr ing to frame up some kind of a scheme to weaken their ticket by bringing out an independent candidate.' Charles F. S. Ncal, of Lebanon, chairman of the independence party in Indiana, is authority for tho statement that Conn's name will be put on the ticket. Secretary Reiley cays that the democratic organization has positive assurance that Conn will not run on the Hearst ticket. He declares that Robert Proctor, chairman of the Elkhart county democratic committee, visited the headquarters and told him that Conn is not a candidate for governor, and will not accept tho nomination. Proctor was Conns manager in his attempt to land the nomination for governor at the democratic state convention. He is supposed to know something of Conn's plans. Reiley assorts that Conn himself has promised to support Thomas R. Marshall, democratic nominee for governor. "Conn will be making speeches for the democratic ticket withina short time," added Reiley. SERIES OF SHIPWRECKS. The Moat Slnnlar Chain of Marine Accidents on Record. The most singular series of ship wrecks on record began with the loss of the English merchantman Mermaid, which was driven on the rocks of Torres strait in October, 1829. The ofllcers and crew clung to the shattered vessel, which was held fast upon a sunken ledge, until, a few minutes before the doomed ship went to pieces, a passing frigate picked them up. The Swiftsure, as the latter craft was called, resumed her northward course, to be foundered In a terrific gale three days later. Her combined crews were saved by the warship Governor Ready, en voyage to India, May 18, 1830. The last named, overtaken by a storm, was Ustranded on a barren coast, her three crews to a man succeeding in reaching the shore. After staying a week on the inhospitable island they were taken off by the revenue cutter Comet, which a few days later sprang a leak and sank in spite of all efforts to save her. Fortunately a rescue ship was again on band, the four crews being saved by the Jupiter. Even then, however, the chain -of disasters was nofrtoroken, for the Jupiter just as she was entering the harbor of Port Raffle turned turtle and went down with scarcely a moment's warning. Her crews barely escaped with their lives, to be picked up by boat sent to their aid. Thus the crew of the Mermaid was wrecked five times in one voyage, that of the Swiftsure four times, of the Governor Ready three times and the Comet twice. The rescues had been purely accidental in every case, none of the ships having been sailing as a consort or even to the same port. Though the weather had been tempestuous and the escapes barely made, not a life had been lost Safe. In a mediaeval German tale it says that the parish council of a small village met one evening to discuss certain improvement in the water supply. In this debate the town's one watchman entered the room quietly, placed In a corner his lantern and spear and sat down to listen to the argument. Suddenly a councilman turned to him fiercely. "Fritz." he cried, "what are you doing here? Who is to watch that nothing is stolen In the village?" Fritz, with an easy smile, answered: "Who is there to steal anything? We are all here?" An Odd Rssic. One of the best known house in Northamptonshire, England, was designed to represent the days, weeks and quarters of the year. It has four wings, facing the four quarters of the heavens, to represent the four quarters of the year; 365 windows, one for each day; fifty-two chimneys, one for each week, and seven entrances, to repre sent the seven days of the week. Pretension. The world Is his who can see through its pretension. What deafness, what stone blind custom, what overgrown error you behold. Is there only by your sufferance. See it to be a lie, and you have already dealt it its mortal blow. Emerson. In England, under the Tndors. the man who gave to a beggar was fined and the recipient of the gift was pun ished. - - There is no medicine cars aad at Cm same time so pleasant to take as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Papain, the positive core for all diseases aristae;
"OLD SIXTY-HINERS"
TO MEET IN Plans for Event at Centerville Well Under Way. Plans for the entertainment of the veterans of the Sixty-ninth Indiana Volunteer infantry at Centerville. August 27 are well under way. The ; committee having charge of the ar-1 rangements is composed of Major M. j M. Lacey of Fountain City. John j Voss of Centerville and Adjutant eGneral Perry of Indianapolis. It is ex-; pected the "old sixty-niners" will have an unusually enjoyable reunion and Centerville will do its utmost to prove ! a hospitable host. ACROSTICS AND ANAGRAMS. They Have Been Known Sine the Daya of the Psaimlat. We find that the acrostic is the most ancient form of puzzling mankind. Acrostic is Grevk for a number of verses the first letters of which form a word, sometimes a name and sometimes a sentence. The final letter may form a word, or, as Addison tells us, the letters will even run down the center of the verses as a seam. The Hebrew poets often made their verses run over the entire alphabet. Twelve of the psalms are written on this plan, the most notable being the One Hundred and Nineteenth. This has twenty-twodi-visions, or stanzas, corresponding to the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet. Each stanza is formed of eight couplets, and the first line of each couplet in the first 6tanza in the original Hebrew begins with the letter aleph. the second commences with beth. the third with gimel. and so on through fhe alphabet. The English divisions of the psalms are called after the Hebrew letter that began the couplets. It was also customary to compose verses on sacred subjects after the fashion of Hebrew acrostics. This was done with a view to aid memory, and such pieces were called abecedarian hymns. The riddle is also of ancient origin. The Proverbs of th Bible, or sayings attributed to Solomon, are often in the form of riddles. Was it not the queen of Sheba who proposed riddles to Solomon? The Koran, the scriptural book of the Mohammedans, also contains riddles, as do some books now in existence, written in Arabic and Persian. The ancient Egyptians also propounded riddles, and one of the seven wise men of Greece, who lived in the sixth century B. C, was celebrated for his riddles in verse. Homer, the Greek poet, according to a statement in Plutarch, died of vexation at not being able to solve a riddle. In the middle ages riddles were encouraged for amusement on winter nights in the baronial hall and also in the monastery. In later days some of the most brilliant men of letters contributed to the list of riddles. The anagram, or transposition of the letters in words or sentences, was much In vogue in Greece In the olden times. The Caballsts, or Jewish doctors, thought that the anagram always pointed out a man's destiny, and if his name written backward or transposed in any way spelled a word with meaning they firmly believed It a revelation. The flatterers of James I. of England proved his right to the British monarchy as the descendant of the mythical King Arthur from his name, Charles James Stuart, which becomes "claims Arthur's seat" The best anagrams are those which have in the new order of letters some signification appropriate to that from which they are formed. When Pilate asked, "Quid est Veritas?" (What is truth?) he probably had no idea that bis question answered itself, but it did. The transposition made it. "Est vlr qui adest" (It is the man who is here). Anagrams were written as early as 250 B. C, and their name comes from the Greek words ana (backward) and gramma (writing). Where the Lady Was Gains. An official of a New England road told the following: The ticket agents in the Boston office of our road are greatly troubled by patrons who, when wishing to purchase tickets, lay down a coin- and neither tell where they are going nor Low many tickets they want. This necessitates one or more questions on tho part of the patient agent. One day s little elderly lady approached the window of the office, placing a large family umbrella on the slab. and. after fumbling nervously in her pocketbook, pulled out a quarter and laid it down without a word to the ticket seller. "Where are you going, madam?" asked the ticket agent. "Oh, I'm going to the doctor," was the tremulous reply. LEAVES CITY. George Sands Smyth, who became known during his short stay in the city by undertaking to promote a Fourth of July celebration, has left the city for Leadville, Col. Friends say Smyth's health Is impaired and he was compelled to Beek a more congenial clime.
REUNION
Dr. A. O.Martin, Dentist
St. Joseph's Academy, of Tipton will have a representative in Mrs. W. L. Berryman, in this city on Wednesday and Thursday, July 30 and 31, at the Westcctt HoteL This is a Boarding school for young ladies and children. Thorough instruction is given In all the English branches, art. music, elocution and modern languages. The school is thorougaly equipped with the latest sc'entlfic apparatus, library n4 lecture hall. A good school and terms reasonable. Apply to Mrs. Berryman, or send for catalogue to Sister Superior Tipton Ind
THE REAL THING is what you want when you need a good article and what Is there more needful or of more importance to have good than coal. It can't be too good as the more heat producing qualities it has the more economical it will prove. Try our coal and you will get the real thing at reasonable prices. H. C. BULLERD1CK ZL SON 529 South 5th Street Phone 1235 CITY'S OWN LAW IS PARTLY BLAMED FDR CONDITIONS (Continued From Page One.) scales. He watched the weighing carefully and saw that. the ice placed in his basement weighed just as ordered but it was weighed on the incorrect scales. It is likely that the city council win take up an investigation of th weights and measures ordinance and probably offer a revision to apply to modern conditions. WILL NOT HESITATE AT HOBNAILED SHOES Kingdon Gould Willing to Don Workman's Attire. ruruiu, v wiu., juij . ooung icir unbroken country along the Western Pacific railway In Utah, whero he will study geological conditions, Kingdon Gould spent a few hours in Pueblo last night. Upon bis return from Utah he expects to spend thirty daya In Colorado. Mr. Gould talked of his plans. "I Intend to spend the summer." he said, "studying geology under Trof. Kemp, of Columbia university. We shall knock about the mountains and learn as much as possible of the country. I will not hesitate to put on hob nailed shoes and overalls if I find it Is necessary In the work." MORE PATCHWORK ' DONE ON BUILDING Old Vaughan Block Undergoes Slight Repairs. More patchwork has been done on the Vaughan building at the north east corner of Main and Eighth streets. Some time ago a board fell from the cornice on the Eighth street side and the owner is having the cornice repaired so as to prevent the probable fall of the entire mass and injury to passers by. The building site is one of the most valuable in the city, but the structure has been patched up repeatedly. ADOPTION APPROVED. Ex parte proceedings for the adoption of Breatanna Muckridge, a minor, by Thomas Davis, were beard in the circuit court yesterday. The adoption was approved. NOTICE We wish to inform our old customers as well as new ones that our stock of woolens for fall suitings has arrived and is the largest we have ever shown. $15 or $18 will get a fine fall suit. See the new fall styles. EMMONS TAILORING CO., Cor. 9th and Main. For Cast Gold Fillings The linings of the suture. Colonial Block. New Phone 1637
(Ills.) Tickets sold through.
i filled, witn shame,?
from atomacn troooie. ins one is nrr raaa
j. ooable 50c aad L
