Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 191, 24 August 1908 — Page 6

HIE RICHMOND PAL LADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGKAI, MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 190S.

PAGE SIX,

MINISTERS CENSURE nrrinrnn nr i i in

UMutHo Uf LAW

Springfield Divines Wrought

Up Over Recent Race Riots. TAFT SPEAKS HIS MIND. 4AY8 THAT SUCH RIOTS AS OC'.CUR RED AT SPRINGFIELD MAKE THE HEARTS OF EVERY GOOD AMERICAN DEAD.

are home from a year's stay at Biloxi, Miss. O. W. Fosdick spent Sunday with his family in this city. Bernard and Justin Roach of Richmond, are visiting relatives here this week.

' Springfield, 111., Aug. 24. "It seems

It me that this riot has come about

because there is a paralysis of moral

itenllment of the city. It has been brought about or rather it Is the elimination of a long series of schools if Instruction in which the chief tearfuerB and Instructors have been those highest in authority and who (have Inculcated the people with one Idea how to violate the law safely." The foregoing words, thundered

from Gib pulpit of aristocratic St. Paul's Pro-Cathedral, Sunday mornAng by the rector, the Rev. F. A. Drosifet, sounded the keynote of expressJon from the pulpits of Springfield Sunday-on the subject of recent riots. Nearly every protestant pastor of the clty voiced his sentiments on the subject. 1 While the ministers were denouncing officials in general, members of the 'police department were having a strenuous job holding down the "lid," 'which Mayor Reece clamped on the Scity Immediately after the outbreak, '.patrolmen were organized Into a "flyling squadron," following a battery of (telephonic complaints of "lid tilting" !ln various parts of the city, and a jtalf dozen arrests were made in short Wder.

.TAFT DEPLORES RIOTS. jUrges-QuIok Investigations and Con- ; victlons.

St, Louis, Mo., Aug. 24. G. W. San

iford of this city has received a letter

from W. H. Taft. which gives the Republican presidential nominee's views n the recent Springfield riots. The letter Is in reply to a query addressed v toy Mr. Sanford to Mr. Taft. It reads:

I have your letter of Aug. 15 in reference to the race riot at Springfield, 111. Every good citizen in the country must deplore the fiendish work of the

disgraceful mob that has brought the scity of Springfield to sorrow. Such !an outbreak of lawlessness and bitter

iTace prejudice makes the lover of his

country sad. It should nerve those in favor of improving the administration

of the criminal law to more earnest

effort, because I am confident that if all charges of crime were promptly injvestigated and convicted criminals l punished, there would be much less temptation to the formation of such conscienceless and cruel mobs as that .which ran riot In Springfield.

CAMBRIDGE CITY. IND. Cambridge City, Ind., Aug. 24. Mrs.

John Miller and son Charles are visit

ing in New Paris, O. Mr. Miller spent Sunday at Greenville. Mrs. Laura Richey visited friends in Richmond Saturday. Miss Edna Harter of Hagerstown, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Bent Wilson.

The Rebecca Aid society will meet

with Miss Minnie Marpb Tuesday afternoon. The Rebeccas will picnic at Jackson's park next Tuesday.

The Misses Vinton have had for

their guests during the past week Mr. C. H. Howard and family of St. Louis

Mr. Howard was formerly superin

tendent of the car works in this city

but is now president of the Common

Wealth Steel company of St. Louis.

Prof. W. J. Bowden and family attended the Richmond cbautauqua Sun

day.

Frank Ebert of Chicago is spending his vacation with his parents in this

place.

Mrs. John Scott, mother of Mrs. Ce

leste Bond, of North Front street, re

turned to her home Saturday, after a

several weeks' stay with her daughter

Mrs. Sylvester Harris of Richmond.

P. H. Zehrung and family spent Sun

day with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Zehrung

of Connersville.

Elmer Whelan and family were in

attendance at the chautauqua Sunday

Mr. and Mrs. John Coombs and son

Russell, were called to Hagerstown

Saturday on account of the death of

their mother-in-law, Mrs. Elizabeth Strickler. More than a hundred people from

Jackson township attended the Sun

day school rally at. the chautauqua Saturday. They were accompanied by the Cambridge City band. Mrs. Patrick Shirkey, an aged resident of this place, suffered a stroke of apoplexy, Saturday and is in a very critical condition. Mr. and Mrs. O. E. White were the guests of Richmond friends Sunday. John Jackson and C. H. Graver were among the number of those who attended to business in Richmond Saturday. All the teachers of our public schools are in atteilance at the county insti-. tute this week.

Takes Rest In a Palace Car And Uses Colors for Signals

I.

New York. Aug. 24. If you cal! ft j box are two uniformed men, who at-

restinsr Mrs. Leslie carter-rayne tena 10 tne sieenns ui-vi -

i i i

im-v. ,o or.rr-.pd it. It isn't ev- pret tJie signals nasnea m

I ill 11 JYO CMJ v. - v - J

could go through j lights from the jewel covered ringers

colored

erv woman wno

bankruptcy to the bitter end and

nourish her heartaches on the highway.

Mrs. Ieslie Carter-Payne took her rrow into the open rrnd she built

a home for it and it goes right around editor in his

with her, the traffic poUC3man winy-. signs:

nilly. Her rest means repose to her after labor, rest; b:it to Manhattan-

ites it means the newest freak think

on the avenue one of Du Barry s own

awakening dreams.

It is a huge yellow touring car, fitted for service in town and country. It is a rapid fire drawing room, with

c!l the accessories of the library, boudoir, and kitchenette. There is no pianola, no stock ticker, no telephone, no subterranean passage, and doorbells and sheriffs and landlords do not dwell in this home of the pursued traaedienne. There is freedom, however, from the daily worries that have clung to, clutched at, twisted, shaken, beaten, battered and sorely bruised the soul of the one time Belasco star. A unique weapon of protection is the spirit in the guiding of this phantom of escaping distress. Up on the

KILLED TWO BIRDS

WITH ONE STONE

or the bankrupt stage queen.

Machine, actress, colors and excite

ment all went up the avenue today

Then all went down and around the

bark, and a man who is a great puzzle

own country read the

"DOVE A pathetic hue, interpret

ed thus: 'Process server approaching on horseback full speed, please.' 'MAUVE Pull up for dog biscuit: the Pomeranian mustn't suffer. "A RAINBOW Hurry back; I utterly forgot Payne left him sitting in the gold chair in the hall.

"MAGENTA Lost $2 out of my vanity bag. "PINK My tea is cold. Stop at a

'near drug store for something else. "ORANGE Found the ?2. It was in my favorite book, 'Meditations and Dont's.' "TURQUOISE Payne is again missing. Keep a sharp look out, Broadway going south. "INDIGO Pass Belasco theater full speed. "WHITE Home, a perfectly good hotel, an entirely new address locality unknown.

But One Bird Had ShellFarmer Had Roast Swan And Fried Turtle.

EXPLA1NPHENQMEN0N

Appearances Indicate Stream

Makes Sudden Change in Current's Direction.

WAS A PRIMEVAL BATTLE.

CAUSED BY BACK WATER.

TURTLE CAUGHT SWAN BY LEG AND BIRD DRAGGED IT TO THE SHORE FARMER WAS ONLY ONE TO GAIN.

R1CHS0UAR

E TO

. HAVE HOME COMING Arrangements Made for Event Next Month.

MIND DERANGED BY SPRINGFIELD RIOTS

Decatur Man Detained for Insanity Dies of Apoplexy.

Overheard on the Street, Two well known men were seen laughing heartily on Main street, Monday. When asked the reason by the reporter they said their wives had used Easy Task soap, finished their washing by noon and for the first time In years sat down to a square meal with them on wash day. As leach had the same experience, they I were convulsed with laughter.

DUBLIN. IND. Dublin, Aug. 24. Miss Edith McConkey and Mrs. Cregg of Huntington, Ind., are visiting their uncle, George McConkey and family. Mr. and Mrs. John Champ spent yesterday at Cincinnati. Fletcher Sowers of St. Louis, Mo., is here visiting his mother, Mrs. Mary Ellabarger. Mr. and Mrs. John Miles of Germantown, are visiting Mrs. Dr. Champ and family. Miss Selean Hale of Indianapolis, is visiting her uncle, James Morris and family for a few days.

Richsquare, the Quaker neighborhood between New Lisbon and Lewisville will have its first home coming Saturday, the All persons who

have ever attended church or school there are invited to attend with their friends. Merton W. Grills graduated from Richsquare academy in 18!)1 and is to take part in the program, as is also Ben Parker, author and poet of New Castle. Professor Orville Pratt of Illinois, Miss Etta Butler of Lewisville and others. Saturday night's session is to be devoted to the literary societies, Richsquare having had a literary society continuously since j sr;. Mr. Grills has issued a small volume of his poems and stories as a souvenir of his first home coming, under the title "Alpha," which is just from the press. Mr. Grills will leave a few copies with Allen & Co., before starting for Richsquare.

Decatur, 111., Aug. 24. While awaiting an inquisition as to his sanity, Wm. Vest died of apoplexy yesterday in the detention ward. It is supposed

his reason was unsettled by reading

of the Springfield race riots. ( In June, 1893, Vest's life was assaulted by Bush, wandering negro, at her home near Decatur. With his neighbors, Vest came to Decatur and, abetted by a crowd broke into the jail, took Bush from the sheriff and hanged him to a telegraph pole oppo

site the court house. Yesterday, Vest, who had been acting queerly, armed himself and stood his family off with a gun until the sheriff's deputies captured him.

AHentown, Pa.. Aug. 24 Farmer Josenh Bennicoff of Iron Hill town

ship had roast swan for dinner today and will have turtle soup tomorrow as the result of a primeval battle that took place in his duck pond yesterday. Bennicoff was watching his young ducks and gosllns swim about the pond, when one of the latter suddenly disappeared witli a squawk of fright

and agony. Bennicoff realized at once that the robber was a turtle and he was trying to evolve some plan whereby he might get the reptile before the whole brood was stolen, when a splendid swan, the king of the duck pond, came majestically floating along.

When the great bird reached the spot I

where the goslin had disappeared it suddenly gave a terrific 'honk" and began swimming shoreward for dear life. Several times it was dragged almost under water, but each time, with flapping wings, managed to regain its poise. Bennicoff, heedful of the old saying that "a turtle never lets go till it thunders," knew that the reptile was caught, and so it proved. The swan readied shore and dragged Itself up on the bank with a ten-pound snapper hanging onto its leg. Bennicoff dispatched the turtle and then, finding that the swan had a broken leg and a broken wing, killed the bird also.

Muskogee. Okla., Aug. 24 -People

who live near Eufaula. along the banks of the North Canadian, often have seen logs and driftwood running

rapidly downstream until they reach

ed a point where they waver and top and then turn around and run back up the stream as rapidly as they had

gone down.

The confluence of the North and South Canadians is about five miles

east of Eufaula. ''"here is little fall

in either stream. When there is a big rise in the South Canadian and not a

corresponding rise in the North Can

adian the water rushes back up the north fork for miles, and has every

appearance of a stream that is run-1

ning the wrong way.

Nervous

Break-Down Nerve energy is tEo

force that controls the or

gans of respiration, circulation, digestion and

elimination. iWhen you

feel weak, nervous, irritable, sick, it is often bocause toti lack nerve

energy, and the process of rebuilding and sustain

ing life is interfered with. Dr. Miles' Nervine has

cured thousands of such cases, and will we believe benefit if not entirely cure you. Try it. -XI v narvoua KVStf m gava away

completely. and left b I of the grave. 1 tried rtlUod Phyi.r.. h.it rot no permanent raller.

NEW YORK GETTING

RELIEFJROM HEAT

Public Learned to Exercise

Proper Precautions.

SENTENCE SERMONS.

LEGENDARY DEVICES.

LIBERTY. 3ND.

Lftwrty, Ind., Aug. 24. Mr. and

PMra. H. B. Miller of Hazelhurst, Miss.,

are-guests of James Davis and wife. Charles Crist of Indianapolis, visited hom,e folks at Liberty, Sunday. J. H. Maibach and Mike O'Hair returned home Saturday evening from Niagara Falls.

Morris Burt of Fountain City, is vis

iting relatives here. Harry Hessler of Indianapolis, is lliom for a two weeks' vacation.

O. Wr. Hook of Georgetown, Ky., is

the guest of friends in this city.

Miss Lulu Barnard Is visiting rela

tives at Cambridge City.

' Harry Husted of Indianapolis, spent

Sunday with relatives here.

. Clinton Gardner and wife returned

korae Saturday from a two weeks visit

iet Washington, D. C.

Misses McClain and Lola Falls, of

Cincinnati are guests of Fred Goss-

-tnan and family.

Harlan Haworth of Indianapolis

epent Sunday with his mother and

8iatai tn this city.

Flnley Gray of Connersville, was a

jliberty visitor, Sunday. I R. A. Creek of Chicago, spent Sua day with his father, C. C. Creek.

John Hubbard, wife and son of Inrftanaoolis. are guests of J. C. Gilmore

'and family.

F. B. Husted and family spent Sun

day with relatives near Everton.

Burton Gardner of Washington", D.

C., Is here for a two weeks' visit with

Jiome folks.

Will Blum and wife of Connersville.

were Sunday guests of J. H. Maibach

and family.

Lee Sheard and wife of Oxford, vis

ited Wm Rldenour and wife. Sunday. Thos. C. Burnside of Indianapolis,

pent Sunday with relatives here.

Wate Barber of Indianapolis, is the guest of Bessie and Addle Rouch this

week.

Rev. Titus Lowe and family left this week for Pittsburg, Pa., where they

111 make their future home.

Moses Rariden and wife and grand

daughter, Ruth, are visiting Mr. and

lira. Allie Jones at Detroit. Mike Sharkey of Indianapolis, spent ; Sunday with Allie Roach and family. Mrs. Jamea R. Wilson and daughter

GREENSFQRK, IND. Greensfoik, Ind., Aug. 24. Charles Boyd of Hagerstown, has rented the Squires property and will move here soon. Mrs. Hollis Hoover has returned to her home in Hagerstown after a visit with relatives here.

Charles Land of Richmond was here

recently looking after his interests at; his farm north of town.

M. L. Osborne of Indianapolis was

calling on friends here Friday.

Davis and Kepler, south of town de

livered sixty-seven head of hogs to

Harris and Co., recently.

Mrs. Maraby Bennett $s the, guest of

relatives in Richmond.

Dr. W. W. Neff and family attended

the Sunday school rally at Richmond

Saturday.

The politicians of this locality at

tended the republican meeting at

Richmond last week and report everything in good condition from a republican standpoint.

Mrs. Thomas Tarkleson and chil

dren are visiting relatives at Middletown for a few days.

Elmer Martinson, who has been se

riously ill for about four weeks is

slowly improving.

James Martindale. spent Thursday

With his daughter. Mrs. Alphonse

Baldwin of Richmond.

Oscar Nicholson made a business

trip to Richmond Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Borton of Straughn

are guests of Will Roller's for a few days.

Mr. Watson, telepgraph operator at

Koland's, one and one-half miles west

of town, is spending his vacation with

relatives in Ohio.

George Davis is organizing a fishing party to go north and spend a few

weeks, camping and fishing.

Dr. D. Doyle is well pleased with his position at Madison, Ind.

FALLEN DIVINE

LARGEST STATIC MACHINE. Throws Spark Thirty Inches Long Owned by Physician. New York, Aug. 21. The largest static electric machine ever built is owned by a New York physician. It is six feet high over all, seven feet long and four feet wide and weighs 650 pounds. It has forty glass disks, each forty inches in diameter, of which twenty revolve, while the others remain stationary. It is driven by an electric motor of one-nuarter

horsepower, being first excited by a small auxiliary hand machine. At full speed, it may yield a spark thirty inches long and three-quarters of an inch in diameter. To fully excite the huge machine requires from five to ten minutes, the charge, however, being retained for as much as twelve to fifteen hours.

How Stranjre Anlmala Appeared Im Heraldry In Old Dart. Early writers on natural history subjects make mention of many strange creatures thwt never could have existed save in the superstitious mind of the age in which they wrote, and of the many that did exist the accounts of their structure and habits are so ludicrous that one may really wonder if it was possible, even in the middle ages, that people could be so credulous. Many of these strangely garbled records of the animal world were, no doubt, due to travelers' tales and probably had a certain foundation in fact, but it is difficult Indeed to account for the creation of Such things as the phoenix, the cockatrice, the wyvem, the griffin and the dragon. The belief in the existence of the unicorn may have originated from the fact of some of the earlv African travelers meeting with

certain antelopes that bad lost a horn, for it is a peculiarity with most antelopes that their horns are never shed and if injured or broken never grow again. The horn, growing out of the forehead, betwixt the eyelids, is neither light nor hollow nor yet smooth like other horns, but hard as iron, rough as any file, revolved into many plights; sharper than any dart, straight and not crooked and everywhere black, except at the point. Bartholomew asserted that there were many varieties of unicorn, and this would be feasible if tbis creature had been created from those horned beasts that bad accidentally lost one

of the horns. How the phoenix was called into being it would be impossible to hazard a guess. It was popularly supposed that there was only one such creature existing in the whole universe and that there was only one tree in which it built its nest. We find mention of the

phoenix as far back as Pliny, who says, "Howbeit, I cannot tell what to make of him; and, first of all, whether it be a tale or no, that is never but one of them in the whole world, and the same not commonly seen." In the fifteenth century we find Bartholomew writing of this Imaginary bird: "Phoenix is a large bird, and there Is but one that kind in all the wide world, therefore lewd men wonder thereof. Phoenix is a bird without make (mate and liveth SCO or 500 years. When the which years he passed she feeleth

her default and feebleness and maketu a nest of sweet smelling sticks that be full dry, and In summer when the western wind bloweth the sticks and the nest be set on fire with burning heat of the sun and burneth strongly." The bird then allows it6elf to be re duced to ashes In this fire on this point all the writers agree and in due course rises again from the ashes in

the full glory of renewed youth "and U the most fairest bird that Is, most like to the peacock In feathers, and loveth wilderness and gathereth his meat of clean greens and fruits." The basilisk, or cockatrice, was reputed to be some strange mixture of bird and serpent, able to slay with his breath and his sight, which power was accredited by some to dragons. WesSmlnster Gazette.

Cordova Writes Affinity Angering Her Father.

New York, Aug. 24. J. Frank Cordova, the unfrocked minister of South River. N. J., recently freed from the penitentiary at Trenton, where he served a commuted four year term for for deserting his wife and running away with Julia Bowne, a beautiful choir singer in his church has been seen in Philadelphia today. The former friend who saw him declared that Cordova is penniless and without work and that his mind is giving away. It was also learned today that immediately Cordova reached Philadelphia

from Trenton he wrote to Miss Bowne who is living with her father at

North Asbury Park, rearing the three year old boy of whom Cordova is the father. In his letter he said he was coming for her. but he received a reply from her father threatening to kill him if he ever appeared at North Asbury Park. The man who saw Cordova in Philadelphia wrote to some of the members of his ohf flock at South River declaring that the ex-minister ought to be examined to determine his mental condition.

No one Is defeated until he gives up. Hard times has a good many relatives. It is the twin brother of the blues. That man has failed who has not been able to keep a good opinion of himself. Self control will succeed with one talent where self indulgence will fail with ten. What the superior man seeks Is In himself. What the small man seeks is in others. There is no disgrace in unpreventable poverty. The disgrace is in not doing our level best to better our condition. Poverty itself is not so bad as the poverty thought. It is the conviction that we are poor and must remain so that is fatal. Confidence is the Napoleon In the mental army. It doubles and trebles the power of all the other faculties. The whole mental army waits until confidence leads the way. Success.

New York, Aug. 24. New York is

just now getting relief from an unus

ually torrid period. However the me

tropolis is learning to take hot weather more philosophically from year to

year, and there is less suaenng in

proportion to the density of the pop

ulation since the people most affected

by heat began to learn to drink water

even at the street fountains in moder

ation and to exercise other precautions. The horses are no longer driv

en to their work till they drop. They

wear straw hats often with wet

I rot o bad I had to tre wp,,'nT t,- i K.n r.klnz Dr. Mil

I was nch better, and I continued to improve until entirely I am In buatneaa aalr. and never ml portun,tV3torenU Myrtle Creek. Oroo. Your druoo' Dr- N?Tr Ine and wi authorise him to return pnie of tfret kottla (only) If It falla to benefit you. Miles Medical Co Elkhart. Ind

COUNTY FAIRS ARE

STILL PROFITABLE'

Henry

County Association Clears $1,500.

New Castle, Ind.. Aug. 24. Fifteen'

hundred dollars will be the amount, cleared by the New Castle Fair asso

ciation on this year's fair. The fair was by far the most successful ever

given in the county. The profit wilt

be applied to the outstanding debt of.

sponges in them and in front of the association, on which very llttla!

ounuiug ui wi o. it. v,. has been pal(j

tne engine nouses, anvers mop iu have their horses sprayed from time to time, so that they may cool their

blood and be better prepared to resist

the attacks of General Humidity.

OLD ADVISER OF THE

SULTAN IN ENGLAND

Turk Will Make That Country

His Home.

t

INSUR AN CE.REHl ESTATE:

LOANS, RENTS W. H. Bradbury & 8on Room a 1 and 3, Weaicott Blk

PURE CIDER VINEGAR. PURE WHITE VINEGAR. PURE PICKLING SPICES. The Best Is the Cheapest. Phone 2292. HADLEY BROS.

The llaael Tree. A curious survival of the days when the magicians of Europe sought indefatigabiy for the philosopher's stone is the superstition that attaches to the hazel tree. The old alchemists used to make their divining rods out of hazel twigs, and they fostered the belief that it would mysteriously direct its owner to hidden treasures, if it was manipulated with the absolute faith

that was required in all those occult enchantments of the middle ages. As time went on, the "rod of Jacob," as a branch of hazel was universally known, gathered new powers. Not only would it lead to the discovery of buried hoards, but it would also act as an Infallible agent in locating runaway servants and escaped criminals. It was a sure guide to underground springs as well, and was an unfailing charm against the lightning.

London, Aug. 24. Izset Pasha, the former Turkish official and adviser of the Sultan, who fled for his life after the constitution was proclaimed, arrived here. "Here I intend to remain, to make England my home, my country." Izzet's account of the Young Tudks' coup tells nothing, but he was impressively earnest in his declaration that both the Sultan and himself have always desired a constitution. Despite the fulfilment of their desires, Izzet rushed to England. He feared to land at Genoa lest his women

folks' dresses should betray his Identity, there being one or two men In

that city whom he feared. He sent his family to a place of safety, which he does not mention, and then came straight to London.

The '"L'L'oppina: Sex. The Englishwoman never knows when she enters a shop what she wants. She is swayed by Impulse, grabs wildly at everything she likes or thinks she likes and probably comes back and grumbles the next day. She is also completely lost if the shopwalkers do not dog her every footstep to implore her to "look at this charming toque" or condescend to "glance at this special line iu cheap skirts." But the American woman resents any suggestion that she does riot know what she wants, likes to be left severely alone and If Interfered with may abruptly leave the shop. Eut. while she is less irritating than the Englishwoman, she is far more exacting. London Express.

CnrlOM French Market. There is a curious old market near Taris in which everything is sold at secondhand. Working girls can fit themselves out there from head to foot. As a writer says: Mimi can sell her old felt hat and buy a straw one, exchange her old dress for a new one and, if she likes, buy a steak and a

salad for her dinner, a paper bg of fried potatoes, sweets and some flow

ers for her window. Democracy is king here, and no more attention is paid to the millionaire who is looking for

something marvelous which he may

pick up cheap than to the man with a wooden leg who wants a new boot in

exchange for a dozen sardine tias, five

glovej.and stocking SPECIAL TRAIN SERVICE.

T -f3 0 For Indigestion. Relieves sour stomach, palpitfction of the heart. Digests what you eat.

, Nothing letter for the boys thnn bread beat yn.Ul lledal Flour. SjkBacca.

The Old Great Kaatem. The last days of the Great Eastern were certainly sad, considering the purpose for which she was designed and the great work she did in cable laying. For some time before she was broken

up on the mud of the river Mersey, near Liverpool, she was on view as a show ship. One firm of Liverpool clothiers hired her for a season, and in addition to using her for its advertising purposes made use of her for catchpenny shows. In the large cable tank a circus was fitted up and performances given at so much a head, while other exhibitions of the Coney Island type were spread all over her deck.

To Greenville. Darke County. Fair,

via Pennsylvania Lines August 26-27 Train leaves Richmond 8:00 a. in. See Aeent Elmer.

augl9-21-21 24

MORE CONQUERING

HEROES ARRIVE

Three Olympian Athletes Re

turn from England.

.i

Moore & Ogborn;

Insurance, Bonds and Loans. Rssl Es

tate and Rtntals.

Both phones. Bell B3R. Horn rS89. Room 16 I. O. O. F. Bldfl. 1

SEE OUR SPRING LINE 0 f GO-CARTS HASSENBUSCH'S

NOTICE. We wish to inform our old customers as wsll at new ones that our stock of woolens for Fall Suitings has arrived, and is the largest we have ever shown, $15.00 or $18.00 will get a fine Fall suit, see the new styles. EMMONS TAILORING CO, Cor. Ninth and Main streets.

New York, Aug. 24. Three more of

the world's champions who scored at the Olympic games got home Saturday when the White Star liner Celtic warped Into her dick. They were Matt J. MoGrath, John J. Flanagan and Ralph Rose, the greatest weight tossers in the world. In company they had toured Ireland after the victorious American sweep at London and were received with great enthusiasm everywhere they appeared in the Emerald Isle. They have hurried home in obedience to Cablegrams to take part in the great public reception which la to be tendered to them and the rest of the team next Saturday, after a spectacular parade.

Special Prices on Our Display Stand Every Day. Backed Up With Four per cent Cash Coupons. PETER JOHNSON CO. MAIN ST.

Br. A. 0. Pilarlin, Dentist

For Cast Gold Fillings The fillings ol the future. Colonial Block. New Pnone 1637

The Eastern Eye. The eyes of the yellow people are not oblique, notwithstanding that they appear to be. The line adjoining the commissures of the eyelids divides the eye into two equal parts, and la exactly at right angles with the axis of the nose. It Is not always so: the exception Is much leas frequent than in the whites, for, as a general rule. It Is In the latter that the eyes are not at right engie? with the q,xis of the nose.

COR. 9m and MAIN STREETS. FURNITURE BEDDING PICtURES

Dun

WITH

L B. KNOLLENBERG 11 S. 8th St.

You Only Pay For Coal High grade, honeit coal that doesn't clinker, but makes a bright and glowing fire when you want one. If yoa haven't filled your bin for next winter's use let ua fill It for you at inmmer'i prices as coal will go up soon. H. C BULLERDICK & SON 529 South 5th Street Phone 1235