Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 165, 22 April 1909 — Page 4

FACE FOUR.

THE IlICmiOJTO PALLADIUM AND , SUIf-TEXEGIlAM, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1C00.

Pfcailah4 an b n the "'..;"

rAuutDzuit ntnmiHi oa

Ins and

A streeta.

day

OMJee Corner Kerta ttm Hem Fhaa 1111.

RICHMOND. JHDIANA.

W.

.........

MTO MUM.

. ; UBSCRXFTIOir TBRXa I Wthmonl fiM par year ln advance) ar Its pir whL MAIL nrMCKXPTIOKfl. fee rear, la advaaee ......... ...$. fuc aaoatcs. In advance l Oa ssoatn. In advance rural Roirraa On year, in advance Ii-M 81s months. In advaaee l-M One saoaUb In advance M - Address eeaaared aa oftan aa deatred; lata new and old addresses must ba Sivaa. . Subscribers will please remit with order, wbtah should ba glvan (or a pacified term; name will not ba entered until paymant la received.

Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poat off lea aa second claa mall matter.

HM iiiiui Yh association) of AaMcicen

(Naw Yark City) aa

sat esrtttle tatba abaalatlaa

r t Skis sasnutles. Oaly Ua Oma at

la tta

AaM0w4a4taHL -

f

Items Gathered in From Far and Near

The Relic in Its Shrina.'

From the Philadelphia Ledger. Danger of injury' is not the strongest

objection to sending the liberty hell across the continent. That is to be considered, but there are reasons

enough why the bell should' stay at

home without imagining possible perils. It should stay at home because

it belongs. here. It derives its slgnifi

cance from its association with the old state house, where it should remain

enshrined. People come from all parts of the . world to visit Independence Hall. They have heard of the old bell and look for It there. The shrine of liberty, seems to have lost one of Its Jewels when the bell is not there. To take it away is to desecrate this national sanctuary. There is scarcely more reason for lending out the bell for exhibitions elsewhere than : there w-- "l be for a similar misuse of the table on, which the Declaration was signed or any similar object of parotic interest.' Their Interest comes from and belongs to the place.

GET TOGETHER! There are several factions in tha republican party, hare ... at this time. To recognise them aa an evil is but to begin to remove them. Therefore we do recognise them recognize them for what they are A MENACE TO THE PARTY AND THE MOST SERIOUS DANGER OF A DEMOCRATIC ADMINISTRATION.

From the Dayton News. Mr. Payne will now find out just how far Senator Aldrich permitted him to go in the matter of making a tariff bilL

' Gov. Marshall.. From the Indianapolis ' News. Seems as It about everybody in Washington not only knew that Gov. Mar-

interest in that fact. Umpires Ready. From the South Bend News.-Umpires In the several leagues report that they have been in training all winter and are ; Impervious to anything but hat pins.

1 Has a Grouch. From the Galveston News.-rlf his picture Is anything like him, the Sultan Abdul Hlmid looks like a man whose breakfasts have disagreed with him for forty years.

Nevada. From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. In March two mining camps in Nevada produced over $2,000,000 gold. At this rate the state may hope before long to have the population or two or three city wards.

1 A Champion. From the Kansas City Journal. As an "undesirable person" Castro is entitled to the championship belt. Probably no other man ever had so many big doors slammed in his face. Ever Thus With Critics. . 1 From the Buffalo News. The most clever critics of the Payne bill are among: those who have nothing rational to offer in place of Its sections.

And Boston Wen! " From the New York World. The president and vice-president attended a Washington base ball game yesterday. .. This is not to be exclusively a gold administration.

TWINKLES

. The Serene Scorcher. "So that policeman held you up again?" "Yea." answered Mr. Chuggtas. "I think It's a case of professional jealousy. He's annoyed because my automobile can go faster than his bicyate," '-ivi-s ?

, An Ideal of Success. The hope some men' day by day . Most eagerly pursue Is to stand forth with lots to say . And nothing much to do!

At the Game, "Charley, dear," said, young Mrs. Torkins, "I am learning a lot- about base ball. 1 can pick out the umpire vary time." - . -Oh. Tou can!" "Yea. He'fl the gentleman with the tfaroelia waves on his chesL" .

- "Don brag 'bout what you used to Ca,N m-14 Uncle Eben. "Lookln back

You know as well as we do that there are men in the party hundreds of men who will swallow neither Zimmerman or Gordon. Many Zimmerman men will not vote for Oordon either at the nomination or at the election because they say that Gordon is a personal 'enemy of their personal friend Doc Zimmerman. And the Zimmerman forces can not bring themselves to nominate the man whom' they regard as a personal enemy of their friend. They will bolt the ticket first. Then you have a democratic administration. And there are just as many men who are against Zimmerman. There are just as many men in that camp who will bolt the ticket. Then you will have a democratic administration.

A VOTE FOR GORDON OR ZIMMERMAN MEANS A AGAINST PARTY HARMONY, THEY BOTH MEAN A DEMOCRATIC ADMINISTRATION.

VOTE

When you hear the older men say, man who have voted for Dr. Zimmerman in the past, that, Dr. Zimmerman is hurting the party, or that, "Doc ought not to have run." that is a party reason which haa nothing ' to do with the other objections that men of another class have raised. ' It is a party feeling which has nothing in common with personal reasons. It expresses the fear that Dr. Zimmerman will bring on party disruption and a democratic administration. THE PARTY DOES NOT WANT TO GIVE THE DEMOCRATS THE ADMINISTRATION SIMPLY ON PERSONAL GROUNDS.

The same thing applies to Gordon. There are any number of men of the party who have worked hard for it, who will not vote for his election. There are men who have been in the party since the beginning, who will not stomach him when the time comes for election. These are the men who are insistent in the idea, which we share, that the party should be built up from within. These are the men who fear a democratic administration in the case of Gordon's nomination.

WHEAT KIIIG VVflS VERY MUCH PEEVED Enroute to New Mexican Ranch He Gives His Opinion of Reporters BEING PESTERED TO DEATH

NONE OF YOUR DAMN BUSINESS," HE YELLED AT A SCRIBE WHEN ASKED WHERE HE INTENDED TO GO. Trinidad, Colo., April 22. James A.

Patten left at $ a. m. for Vermejo

Park, N. Mex. to rest on a ranch. Pat

ten is worn out and fatigued and was in a disagreeable humor. ' When in

terviewed in. his car, he replied to all inquiries by saying, "None of your damn business." He also said: "I have been 1 pestered to death by re

porters since I left Chicago." He re

fused to ' discuss the wheat situation and when pressed for information he grew angry and ordered the reporter

from the train!." "It is none of the public's business where, I am going, or how long I .intend to say. That is

all I will say; get out!"

The so-called "independent vote'' in this community is nothing but men who havs bolted the ticket. They demand a candidate to vote for, when the time comes for his election, who is worthy of the party. If such a man is furnished they will stick by the party.

The candidate before the nomination is only responsible for his own candidacy. Afterward, the party must win or lose with the choice of the party. The day is over when men go into a voting booth without thinking. The men of the party are worried today.

The men are thinking and thinking hard. They are thinking that the primary should select a man who can be supported. They are thinking also of the sort of man the party should be responsible for. They want the best administration that a man who can be elected can give them.

These men are thinking, too, that Mr. Deuker has not shown the aptitude for centering the strength of tlie party as a party around him. They 'are thinking that men will not unite oh him as some, thought perhaps they might j

These are the worries of republicans who are thinking. They want a good mayor who is a republican. They do not want to disrupt the party. , Such thinking has in mind the requirements for office the past records of men the honesty of men in -public and private life the fulfillment Of promises and the effect on the party. Such continuous thinking on the part of men of the party must eventually lead to one conclusion. The question is, who is the logical man for the party as a party the party as party men and citizens the logical man to unite on considering both the past and the future, j V.'IS IT NOT FAIR TO SUPPOSE THAT THE MANY MEN WHO HAVE PURSUED THE SAME COURSE OF REASONING HAVING THOUGHT OVER' THE SITUATION, WILL UNITE FOR THE GOOD OF THE PARTY AND FOR THE GOOD OF RICHMOND? THEN THEY WILL ANSWER THE QUESTION WHO IS THE LOGICAL MAN?

on de pas' foresight."

bound to show a lack of

The Bright Side. i "Does Mr. Stormington Barnes try to look on the bright side of things?" asked one actor. ; "I should' say so," answered the other. "He's never content unless he is staring the spotlight right in the face."

Alertness Required. . To talk about the weather Is a gift that some despise. 'Tis assumed that anybody Can be ready, if he tries, With remarks on ."fair or clouqy" And the threats on "rain or snow' Which, if not entirely novel, , Are distinctly apropos.

COMMITTEE MEETING -j v- snaanana-aBaa '

Republican Candidates Will

Draw for Places This Evening.

quite

And yet the shifting climate. While you murmur "It's

warm," May leave you looking foolish. As it bursts into a storm. It isn't everybody Who ean learn to do the trick; . When you're talking of the weather You must say it mighty quick!

Late Society

A very pretty social function for Wednesday evening- was the "card company given by Mrs. W. L. King at her home,' 21 South Eighth street. The house; was decorated with spring flowers and ferns. There were guests Nearly 120,000, infanta under a year old die every year in England. Only 100,000 of these are victims of the ignorance and carelessnes of their mothers. for Six tables. At the close of the game a luncheon in three courses was served. Candles with tinted shades were used in appointing the table. The guests were: Miss Laura Schats. Mrs. Leo Fihe, Miss Clara Luken, Misses Katherine and Esther McKone, Mrs. Edward Schalk. Misses Alice and May Griffin; Miss Grace Smith, Mrs. Harry Smith of Springfield, Ohio, Mrs. John Harrington, Misses Alice and Anna Harrington, Mrs. John Harrington, Jr., Mrs. Conroy, Misses Margaret, Nellie and Catherine Conroy, Mrs. Timothy Harrington, Mrs. John Collins, Mrs. Charles Morris, Mra. John Foley. Mra. Frank Highley, Mn. McDonald and 'Mrs. Arnold Klein.

HOT SESSION EXPECTED

The candidates for the republican

nomination at the primary, May 3, will draw for places this evening at

the Pythian Temple. A few still have to sign their pledges and pay their as.

sessments. Dr. Ferllng. chairman of

the city committee, is expecting an in teresting meeting this evening.

THE CONSULTATION.

What

She

CITY IN BRIEF

; Mortgage exemptions filed at Forterflelda. x-2t

Her Sieter Heard Whan

Listened ta the Doctors.

One of two slaters who lived togeth

er was suddenly taken with a lung at

tack she feared was serious, says the London Telegraph. She therefore sent for a specialist and asked her doctor

to meet him. Talking over his coming

with her sister. , she said: "Mona.

wish I could know Sir Henry B.'s real opinion. Neither he nor Dr. M. will tell ns if there is anything really

wrong, but I would much rather

know." ' ,

Her sister replied: "Do not worry.

dearest Yon shall know everything, for I will go down to the dining room and stand behind the big oak screen

and listen to every word they say

"And will yon be sure to tell me.

Mona?" . - . . - -

' "Yon may rely on me, dearest. I win

tell yon every word." "Even If I am not to get well?"

Even than, dearest," promised the

loyal Mona.

The hour for the consultation arriv

ed, and the; sister went to the dining room and, standing behind .the great

oak screen, ensconced herself and pre

pared to listen.

By and by the two doctors were heard descending the stairs, and a moment later they cam Into the room. Walking over to the fireplace, the specialist sank lata an eaay chair and the local doctor sank into another. Then

followed a moment a silence, broken by

the specialist, who leaned a little forward..;;'' 'M:-

"My dear MV ba said alowly as he looked across at bis colleague, "of all

the ugly women that's the very ugliest

woman I've ever seen In my life.'

"Is aser replied the local doctor.

-Ton wait nattl ywra seen

WHEAT TAKES A FALL.

Chicago. April 22. Bearish reports

on the crop situation and a renewal

of the report that Patten had aband

oned the market today caused a sen

sational break in the grain pit and

pandemonium on the floor. July op

tion broke down to $1.10, May op

tion tumbled from $1.25 to $1.21V.

July wheat broke three points to

dollar eleven this morning before the bulls could muster enough strength to

check the decline. It later reacted

one point. Panicky scenes prevailed

NOW AFTER COTTON. New York, April 22. James A. Pat

ten. wheat king, is turning his atten

tion to cotton. , His brokers have al

ready secured a hundred and twenty

thousand bales with profits now ag

gregating one million. They have

orders to buy more on all soft spots.

BRIDE-TO-BE IS

ONLY J6YEARS OLD : tr, 4.:

Dora Albertson Will Marry a

Van Wert Man.

A marriage license has been issued

to Archie Raymond Borland, of Van

Wert County, Ohio and Dora , Alber son, of this county. The girl is but

sixteen years old. The consent of

John : M. Albertson, her foster father,

to the marriage was given.

WAS SHOWN SIGHTS

am a ana a a, m

h oo seven i aken uut tor a

Carriage Ride to See Mombasa.

LEAVES FOR PEACH RANCH

Mombasa, April 22 Roosevelt was

an early riser this morning. The Dar

ty was shown the sights of the citr

in a carriage. This afternoon he de

parted on a hunting trip to the Peach

ranch. . ,., .......

GETS SWEET ON TAFT.

Washington, Jtpril 22 Miss Lucy

Lee of Great Neck, L. I., the mysterious woman in blue who gained notorietyby. persistent pursuit of Roose

velt during his administration, tried to see Taft today. She was escorted

to an outgoing train. .

TO THE VOTERS OF THE CITY OF

RICHMOND:

I have decided to announce myself

a candidate for councilman-at-large subject to the republican nomination

Having a business requiring much of

my time, it will be impossible for me to make a personal canvass of the

city.- I therefore take this method of asking the citizens of Richmond for their support. . My record as council

man of the 6th ward and as city clerk is known to all and on this I base my

claim for your consideration. My en

deavor in the past has always been

to serve the best interests of Rich

mond and this I pledge myself to do

at all times. GEORGE J. KXOLLENBERG.

Says Many Men Need Prescription

It is claimed to be a blessing; to those who are physically impaired: gloomy, despondent, nervous and who have trembling- of the limbs, diuiness, heart palpitation, cold hands and feet.

insomnia, fear without cause, timidity

in venturing- ana general inability to act rationally. By preparinsr the treatment at home secretly, no one need know of another's trouble.' ; . . If the reader decides to trT it. set three ouncea of ordinary syrup of aarsaparlUa compound, and one ounce compound fluid balmwort: mix and let

stand two hours; then vet one ounce

cempouna essence caraioi and one ounce tincture cadomene ramnonnf

(not cardamom); mix all together.

In". wtm ana m leespooniui az

Heart to Heart 7 alks. By EDWIN A. NYE.

Copy iM. 1908, by Edwin A. Nye

HUE VICTIMS OF A BRIEF CYCLOIIE

TEE SOUL CT GOC5NZSS.

There'a a eon! at eweaeaa In

evil. 8ti lraapaara. ,

Xerxes, the great Persian, triad to

Impose his oriental cirinxatkm on Europe, and. he might have succeeded but for the Greeks. .

In beating back the hosts of Xerxes

the Greeks exhausted themselves. It

was their last great fight for a new

civilisation.

When Xerxes put his vast army en war footing be organized an effec

tive commissary department. Among other things Xerxea carried a large

amount of alfalfa for horse fodder.

The seeds of the alfalfa were scat

tered far and wide, and for hundreds

of years Europe . baa used this rich

forage. Todsy this great plant Is

making the transsaisstssippl region a

rich one.

And thus is there a soul of good-

sees even In war. .:

Thousands of men who fought un

der Charles Martel f 'the Hammer") died, and women were widowed and children orphaned. Bnt . Europe was saved from the Mohammedan Invasion. '

And so of calamity. :;.i Out of the Charleston earthquake

came the red flower of. reunion.

The destruction t of San Franrisco

moved the world to swift sympathy

and gave It a new dispensation of Anglo-Saxon energy;

Wind and tidal wave wrought awful

havoc at Galveston.' Tex. But out of

that chaos came the Galveston form

of city government, which, modified

by "the Des Moines plan." bids fair to solve the problem of municipal government in America. . .

And so on through history. The worst the elements can do, the

worst that men can do, all things of evil, appear to be overruled by some great law of thn survival of goodness.

Taking a backward glance through the whole story of man colored now with the red blood of war. now black with hate and now white with fearup from it, all. out from It all, shines the soul of goodness. Arid so of individual history. Out of your failures and fallings have come to you strength of character and sympathy for other souls and the wisdom of righteousness. The race Is traveling, slowly and palnfuHy. but traveling toward some "faroff divine event.' Shakespeare saw in these things th soul of goodness. Some of us see is them the God of goodness.

Is Estimated Today That Property Loss Equals $5,000,000. 10,000 ARE UNEMPLOYED PEOPLE OF CLEVELAND WHEN THE STORM STRUCK THE CITY THOUGHTTHAT THE END OF THE WORLD HAD COME.

Political Announcements

Advertisements in This Catena Cssf Ten Dollars for mtt Offices Except ComneOmc Which Are Ftte Dollars

She Wanted a Title.

A title gives the right to embroider

a coronet on the body linen. It is pleasant In a railway train to pour scent on a coroneted pocket handkerchief. La Marechal Mel thought so. I dare say. In the summer of 1859. II or husband escaped the carnage of one of the battles fought that year la Lombardy. He also assured asalnst heavy edds and the terrible blunders of the general staff victory to the French. Ills wife was with bim when his marshal's baton was brought In with a letter from Napoleon III. Nlel thought Mme. Nicl would have melted into tears from Joy. Instead of that her mouth felL "You are marshal, you are." she said. "That does not make m duchess." London Truth.

, i Quite Sufficient. Mrs. Jones (Inspecting a milliner's wlndow)r-I don't see what It Is that keeps those women's heads turning around all the time. Mr. Jones Why. my dear, just a bonnet Itself Is sufllrlent to turn any woman's aaad. Lip plncott's Magazine.

Cleveland, April 22. Deaths from yesterday's five-minute cyclone, now number nine. Harry Bender, who had a skull fractured, died today. Today's estimate of the damage approximates five' millions of dollars, with very little insurance. Probably ten thousand men have been thrown out of work. The storm yesterday consumed only

five minutes In passing a given point.

but during that brief period it was as dark as night, hail battered in win

dows, lightning set fire to hundreds of buildings, one-fifth of an Inch of rain fell, and the wind, which reached a

velocity of sixty-six miles an hour, rased buildings and chimneys, tore otf

roofs, laid low many telegraph and tel

ephone lines, and ' demoralised traffic upon steam and electric railways. Warning of Storm Given. As early as ten o'clock storm warn

ings were given . out DT the local weather bureau. The squall started in

Indiana and gained force as it traveled rapidly eastward It had gathered full

force when this city was reached, and

passed over Lake Erie a few miles east of the city. One of the dead is an unidentified young woman, who was thrown Into a pond at Wade Park by the force of the wind and drowned. A man was hurled to death from a crane, another

was killed by a flying timber, and a

boy met his end in the falling ruins of St. Stanislaus Catholic church, whlen was demolished with a loss of $100,000.

At least four persons were injured in

the ruins.

The loss was especially great to

school property. Twelve school

buildings were damaged. Many pupils had remarkable escapes, but none was

seriously hurt. The Dike. Walton. Fairmount. Scranton. Old Mayflower, Clark Avenue. Downing, Pearl Street,

Milford Gilbert. Rice, and Giddlngs school buildings were damaged. The roof was lifted from the msln building

of the Case school of Applied Sciences,

and buildings at Adelbert college sus

tained damage. ' '

Fifteen men were hurt at the plant

of the Wellman-Seaver-Morgan Engineering company, and four men were Injured by the falling of a roof at the plant of the Standard Tool company. Machine Plant Is Unroofed. At Wellington, south of here, the wind unroofed the plant of the American Machine company, partially unroofed the Big Four freight station, and knocked chimneys down and otherwise damaged about fifteen houses. When the storm struck Ashtabula, one man was killed, a dozen persons Injured, and heavy property damage re-

(suited. The plant of the Ashtabula

Foundry, company - was ' wrecked, the roof blown from the Lyceum theater, and barns and outbuildings demolished. Electric traction was tied up by debris tossed upon the tracks.

FOR MAYOR.

HZNRY W. DEUKER 1 a candidate for mayor, subject to the Republican nomination, ' . SAMUEL K. MORGAN, candidate . for Mayor, subject to the Republican nomination. , EDWARD H. HARRIS Is a candidate for Mayor, subject to tta Republican nomination. FOR CITY CLERK. BALTZ A. BESCHER is a candidate for the office of city clerk of Rich- . mond. subject to the Republican nomination. FOR JUDGE OF CITY COURT. LUTHER C. ABBOTT Is a candidal for Judge of the City Caurt of Richmond, Ind subject to the Republican nomination. COUNCILMAN-AT-LARGE. MATT VON PEIN ta a candidate for 'the office of Councilman-at-large. subject to the Republican nomination. FOR COUNCILMAN. JESSE J. EVANS, candidate for Councilman for Second Ward, anb-, ject to the Republican nomination.

MACOTH CIDERS.

re-SI-

Butler (to a friend who smokes in the home of a rich man) How does it come that you are smoking cabbage leaf clears here In the bouse? Friend I must, so that when my master returns be will not think that I smoked so many of his imported brands. Meggendorfer Blatter.

Quits' In CharaeCeK

The late William TerrUs, who for many years wss Invariably the hero in the dramas produced at the Adelphl theater, London, seems to have been in nice accord with the characters be played. One day. writes Ellen Terry in her book. "The Story of My Life." be came Into the theater soaked. "Is it raining. TerrissT ssked some one, who noticed that be was wet. "Looks like it, doesn't itr said Ter riss carelessly. Later it came out that he had jumped off a' penny steamboat into the Thames and saved a little girl's life.

The Esparto Who Prsapsst and Dig Fee Prebietoria Crsatyrss. Ma math miners are experta who know where t prospect for mammoths and how to dig tbssa oat, even as the mlBdac asglssar know where

IO prospect nr bitt aaa amw w - tract it la the wast, la Alsaks aad la Siberia mammoth mlasrs are always at work. Taay are always earthing creatures that died 10a,aoo years ago. Siberia was the masnsaath'a true ham. Siberia 10089 years ago waa on luxuriant forest. Bar th for covered beasts, with their tea feat

trunks aad their

swarmed. Them moved a barrier

berla and th

low lying fs

their snlmsl

killed. The first of the

mammoths waa fsaad ta 1TS3 by aa Eskimo Tttlagar aa th hawks of th Lena. It waa lanbaC3edla a vast cak

they feasted oa th WSjIttS-yaat aid

flesh, and then they said th

Only th

tovr of th

seam reached that

after a jommay af 7JSS& mttes. H

took th bones hack to

where yon

day. He bought th task from th ivory traders aad fixed than -em th

skeleton, aad th

his find Is atSl a hot 1

mammoth miaara af ear day.

Ma Ufa was

It la inexplicable

mistJc carpers who ara hit all the minor chsra

pedal oa can fall ta as S3

the nnmistakabJ si

th reddening dawa of a

th social yeast. Aad iapsrlsffly

tra in matters pertaining ta

There is no doaht that th

standards of crlma hav urabiy raised of bit.

man can do almost anything

away with It, presided be cam

the sympathy of th

era and pay.ths experta. Ah,

who can say that all this d

make for the general uplift? csa we hop to realise th

things of life antn crlma haa mad perfectly safeT Life.

day la

ait&la

Nowadays a

aad get

writ-

not

Bow hatter

When th composer Salllvaa

knighted om on aaked him why ba, and aot als collaborator, W. 8. Gilbert, waa cbosea for this honor. I dout exactly know." said Sir Arthur, "but I suppsss her atajsaty did It to make th paaishmcnt ft th crime." '" PALLADIUM WAflT AOS. PAY.

To Get a

Glance at the picture. It brines to mind the instance of many successful man's life. You may be a yocjns man or woman who has just come to the city from the country, from college, from another city or you may already Eve here. Yea have heard or lrnownof the tramp, trnrop, the cold, dacouraxins .words of employers "We don't want anybody now," and the the. If you want a job and want it at once insert a tittle Situation Wanted" ad on our Oassfiril page or ran over our "Help Wanted" ads. Employers read the former and use the natter. You get in touch with those who want help. . Not necessary to go to expansive employment stncsis Your small Want Ad.wd coat but a few cents. Surely worth while' to test. Mote fiiirg Its.

airtfilaudi WaS 1 aaSSAMaalAjr BT VOUTO

I Of MS

hSm. SRaoaaie '"H

EXAMPLES

Jhrtarta SoaaaMaaUOjii 1 1 Qaffi ?jter

ml taTtt) twajgja).

T?w rrriv cm ACTION either in eettin? stnemritm. a rwrdticn. buvfcr? CT ss3-

mr i gjjityr rar sf lv-r Titvr imre-tmr- m ire Mir m if fl WANT read CT USZ

the qarffrd psge of tbia psper. v A Newspsper is net kept it is resd end studied AT ONCE. For IMMEDIATE results make no mistake. USE and READ frost dqy to day the different rhrsficstjons cn our Went Ad Pce.

aaar a anna man one at nimt.

-1.