Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 231, 28 June 1909 — Page 2

-rue XUCmiOND PAXX ADHTXX A2TD STJNjTELEGJIAII. ZXOXDAY, JUNE 28, icoo.

IDtSIIDIDJIB' PLEIJTY OF BOTH

Two Automobiles and Eight Horces Are Mow in the Candidate's Barn. . HE MAKES UNIQUE TRADE RECENTLY THE REPUBLICAN LEADER "SWAPPED" FIVE COLT8 AND TWO HORSES FOR A LIFE 8IZED BUZZ CART. : Five colts and two mares was the price recently paid by Dr. W. W. Zimmerman for a new automobile. Dr. Zimmerman now ' has an excess of horses and machine. He possesses sight horses and two automobiles, which he keeps In bis barn., back of his residence. Seventh and North A streets. Dr. Zimmerman, who is the republican nominee for mayor, is not decided which Is the cheapest, but he te a lover of both, fine horse flesh and the smell of gasoline. . - Promising Animals. ' .The horses which he traded for 'the machine, are considered ' very ; prom ising. The colts have been trained and show indications of making good on the track. Their sires are the best horses la Eastern Indiana, according to reputation. The two older animals, which figured In the trade, are brood mares of much value. HAS A NEW AIRSHIP I Texas Man Builds One on Entirely Different and Better Lines. MADE OF STEEL TUBING Can Antonio. Tex., June 28. J. W. Oman, the designer of aa airship which will prove somewhat of a new departure will In a few days leave for St. Louis and Dubuque, Iowa, to place orders for the construction of his machine. The motors will be purchased from a firm at the latter place Oman's air ship differs materially from the aeroplane of the Wright brothers and the gas bag type. - It will be sole to raise ' straight Txom the ground , without any Initial start by means of two helicopters placed above the car. These will have a lifting capacity of C.OOO pounds. Instead of being built on the usual propeller type, they are fashioned after the wheels of a turbine and nave spaces In which the air 3s compressed under them by means of rapid revolution. Flight in the atr will be obtained "by means of am aeroplane and two propellers in the rear of the machine. . The inventor Intends to trust to power only and will construct his machine of steel tubing and aluminum. Ills motors will have 115 horsepower. The nature of the machine will make ft possible to alight In water as well as sa land. This is one of the conditions imposed by the United! States Cpvsrnment for machines Intended to be csefl In the naval service. Mr, Omasa intends to compete for the prison of the Fulton Centennial exposition ax New York. HW& HIS WIFE faxrwlcih, 17 T... June 28. Angry at Tola wife because she bad left him, Alfred Sexford of "Davenport; near here. Shot Thar five' times xilllng ner, and Chen committed suictde by shooting blmsett The woman left his home tns) iseek ago, returning on Saturday fa ttxt IiufJbandls absence and temoyIns fhs furniture. Bexford followed liar to the home of friend end "killed her, 7i???:?:S. :v " f finiEO WITH HEftT , inikejlbarre, "Pa., June 38. Rushed ttsxtj . miles in swift automobile that he might he given medical aid. Arthur Jones, of Noxen. who cut his throat after being, driven Insane by its ties, died today, , ill ill 1E1II tforwiffi. jt. fH June 28. The ufhoritles Of Broome and ' Chenango counties Sieve a due which will, they ttlak, 1d to the' arrest of William fjepn, the suspected Chinaman in the 3Jge$ murder mystery ' A woman, who, she police think. Is no other than iieon 4isgutsed in female attire, registered at the Greene snd Chenang fprks hotels on Saturday as Mrs. A. mlth of Syracuse, and Mrs. r Hadley uf Utica, V.- The , women yesterday Started 0 walk ipBlnghamton. ftHnft Mm tarrtt tX June 8. The fC'ZZt Pw&W arrested here b Cr rls, aged ten Tears, who tp m fcglcs oday in the

Christy Malhewson

-S?w Christy Mathewson, the Giants' star and doing better work than at any

piidc nnnoo rRiiCQianTMr -

uUUu UIIUI L UnlilLu j Reds Jump on Chance's Men And Were No Less Than Six Pitchers. RESULTS OF OTHER GAMES

NATIONAL LEAGUE. : Won Lost Pet. PittBDUrg.- ..' 42 14 .750 Chicago .... .. ..37 21 .638 New York .. .. .. .. .31 22 .577 Cincinnati ......... 31 28 .525 Philadelphia . '. i . . . . . 25 30 .455 St Louis .. .. .. ..34 24 .414 Brooklyn ...... ... .20 36 ' .357 Boston ..15 40 .273

AMERICAN LEAGUE.

Won Lost Pet. Detroit .. .. .. .41 20 .672 Philadelphia .. .. .. .. 33 24 .579 Boston .. .. .. ..34 25 .576 Cleveland .. .. .. .31 27 .534 Chicago .. .. .. .. .. .26 30 .464 New York .26 80 .536 Washington .. ..20 S6 .357 St. Louis .., .. .. .. ..20 39 .339 ; -"-'. sssssssiast . AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won Lost Pet. Milwaukee.. .. .'. .. -.37 31 .544 Indianapolis ...... ..37 33 .529 Minneapolis .. .. ... ..36 32 .529 Louisville .. .. .. .. .34 34 .500 Columbus ....... 34 35 .493 Kansas City .. .. ..31 33 .484 St. Taul .. . .. ..29 32 .475 Toledo.. V. .. .. ..29 . 37 ,.439

RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. Chicago 13; Cincinnati 27. St. Louis 81; Pittsburg 57. : American League. Chicago 0-5 ; Detroit 1 3. St. Louis 63; Cleveland 0 1L ' American Association. Milwaukee 1: Indianapolis 7. St. Paul 2; Columbus 1 (12 inn.) Minneapolis 0; Toledo 1. Kansas City 2; Louisville 4. Chicago, June 28. Cincinnati won both games Sunday by pounding Chicago's pitchers all over the field. The locals did hut little with Gasper and Fromme, making only ten hits in the two games, against twenty-five for the visitors. Six hits were bunched off Pfelster In the fifth inning of the second game. . Six double plays were made hy. Cincinnati, coming at times when chances looked good for Chicago. Scores: First Game. R.aH. E. Chicago ..1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 01 4 1 Cincinnati 1 0 0 0 4) 0 1 0 02 11 1 Overall, Brown and Moran and Archer; Gasper and McLean. Runs Evers, Bescher, Egan. Twobase hlts-rBescher, : Evers, - McLean, Sheckard. Hits Off Overall. 10 in 8 innings; off Brown 1 in 1 Inning. Sacrlfice hits--Sheckard 2, Mowrey. Sacrifice fly Hofman. Stolen bases Egan Bescher. Downey. Double plays Egan to Hoblitzel; Tinker (unassisted) ; Downey to HoblitseL Left on bases Chicago 4; Cincinnati 8. Bases on balls Off Overall 2; off Gasper 2. First base on errors Chicago 1; Cincinnati 1. Hit by pitcher Br Overall Bescher, Struck out By Overall 6; by Gasper 1. Time 2:00. Umpires Bmslie and O'Day. , Second Game, ChicaS? ,,0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 03 6 4 Ctndnnaiti 000050 U 03 i 1 Plelstex, Blfffnbp&aa, Ragan,

Is Shown in Action

G f ( 4 twlrler, who is now in pink of condition time during his baseball career. Fromme LOST A HARD GAME Horn Pitched Winning Ball for The Grays, But Could a Not Win. n WAS A 1 TO 0 CONTEST Cambridge City, June 2S. Although "Casey" Horn of Richmond pitched very classy hall for the locals, they lost through poor base running to the Taste Tells of Indianapolis by the score of 1 to O, yesterday afternoon at the local park There was a fair sized crowd in attendance who had a very gloomy aspect 'when their favorites lost through Inability to play the bases properly. ' "Casey" showed signs of again being in as good form as he ever was. He allowed but four hits and struck out a like cumber of Taste Tells. It Is Uery probable that he will be used regularly In place of Conner. Score by innings and batteries are as follows: C. C.........0 O O O 0 o o o o-o 2 T. T... ...... 1 OOOOOOO O-l 4 1 Horn and Jones; Giflin and Dunn., Umpire, Goar. """" BEALLVIEW OUTFIT WOII THE CONTEST Found the Freight Office Squad Easy Money. Murphy, pitcher for the freight office of the Pennsylvania railroad, was found opportunely yesterday , in the game at Beallview with the latter aggregation, and the freight office team was defeated by the score of 10 to 5. Advantage was also taken of the loser's five errors. Score: R H B Beallview.. .. .. .. .. ..10 10 3 Pennsylvania.. .. .. .. .... 5 7 5 X Y Z'e Are Winners. In the eleven Inning contest at Athletic park yesterday afternoon between the X. Y. Z.'s and the Nationals, the former team won 3 to 2 HEIRESS IS TO WED Boston, June 2S. Miss Elisabeth Kohl of Brookline, heiress, will become the bride tonight of Henry B. Whittier, a dry goods salesman. Fifteen years ago society was surprised to learn that Miss Kohl had married Joseph Morris, a blacksmith in a" Roxbury 6hop where she used to get her horses shod. ' h PLAT COPY FILED A copy of a plat of the Kemper addition to West Richmond has been filed with the county recorder Tns addition s located on South TTest Fborth trsst bttfsa 2

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BUSINESS HEAVY AT CITY COURT

Fines Were Handed Out With Impartiality and One Acquittal Made. PUNISH TRAIN JUMPERS ALVIN MeLEAR ACTS AS HIS OWN ATTORNEY AND WITH AID OF SEVERAL WITNESSES PROVED INNOCENCE An nausany large bunch was np before Judge Converse In city court this afternoon. Fines were handed oat liberally, bat in one case where the judge did not think the evidence was sufficient an acquittal was registered. V ; Train jumpers had better beware. Judge Converse has released several boys for the practice and has given warning that no .further leniency may be expected. But this . fact did not seem to bear on Paul Craig, aged 17, and Charles Morrison, aged 1& Saturday afternoon they jumped a train and were seen by Panhandle Patrolman Burns. He pursued them and copped them. Both entered pleas of guilty in court and each was fined $1 and costs. The boys admitted they knew that to jump trains is an offense against the law Used "Got a Job" Plea. Harry Steinour drew $5 and costs for public intoxication and previous conviction. He wanted off on the "got a job" plea, but the court couldn't see things that way. Alvin McLear appeared ts his own attorney and with an army of witnesses secured a judgment of not guilty of the charge of intoxication. MsLear was arrested while asleep In a street car at the car barns about 12:30 o'clock this morning. He said he was tired and went to sleep when on the oar so that he did not awake when it reached its destination. He had wit nesses who accounted for his whereabouts until he took a 10:45 o'clock car for home and all said he was not under the influence of liquor. , t Lewis Campbell, who has been weighed in the balance and found wanting until the scales of justice have rusted through, was fined $25 and costs for public intoxication and previous convictions. He , was released after arrest Saturday noon upon hla promise to leave the city. Instead he continued his boosefest and was taken In about supper time. The police have tried every scheme with , Campbell tmd he has broken every promise. . ' HEW MUSIC BOOKS FOR THE SCHOOLS Board of Education This Morning Decides to Change The Course. BOOKS ARE MORE MODERN BOARD ALSO CONSIDERED THE ADVISABILITY OF INCREASING PAY OF SOME TEACHERS NO ACTION TAKEN. At a called meeting of the school board, this noon, a change was made in the 'music books, now In use In the Garfield and common schools. Other matters were also considered. Including the Increase in the salaries of a few of the common school teachers, but no final action was taken. A few minor changes in the original plans of the high school building have been ordered. Th New Books. In regard the change of the music toxt books, supervisor of music, Will Earhart stated that It was done be cause the books were more modern and better arranged. The board on his advice contracted for the "EleanorSmith Music Course ' Books." These books will take the place of "The Modern" which has been used in the schools for a number of years. Old school books may be exchanged for the new ones, the publishers re deeming the old books, as follows: For coruse one. 15 cents; for course two, 18 cents and for course three 24 cents. The price of the new books is as follows: Course one, 25 cents; course two, 30 cents and course three. 40 cents. "The Lyric Song Bcikw by H. W. Loomis of New York ty was also contracted for. It will be used in the Garfield school. The list price is 5 cents. Pupils in this school who have old books will continue to use them, only the new pupils, pur chasing the new book.. The board bought a number of copies of "The Laurel Music Reader," composed ny W. Lv Tomllns for supplementary work at Garfield school. SAVED HIS FAMILY 8wampscott, Mass.. June 28. Oscar D. TJpton saved the lives of his wife sad ten months old baby this morning by lowering them from s second story window with, a piece of rope made of some bedclothing while tongues of flames and clouds of smoke enveloped and sarrounded them. -. The family was aroused by their pet bnlldog, which barked sad seised the clothes oa their bed and nailed st Cem with bis teeth sntU TJpton

fceprrsgnt, OH. by O. P. Putnam's seia. Published eaSar arraBgemeat with O. P. Putnam's seas, New York and La-tOoa. OODT sad X started to hunt over the great ta ble-laad, and led oar stoat horses up the mountaln-skle, by elktraUa ss bad that they bad ts climb like goats. An these elk-trails have one striking peculiarity. They lead through thick timber, bat every sow and then send off short well-worn branches to some cliff-edge or jutting erag, commanding a view far and wide over the country beneath. Elk love to stand en these lookout points, and scan the vslleyt and mountains round about. Bine grouse rose from beside our path; Clarke's crows flew past us, with a hollow, flapping sound, or lit In the pine-tops, calling and flirting their tails; the gray-clad whisky-jacks, with multitsdlnoos cries, hopped and fluttered near us. Snow-shoe rabbits scuttled away, the big furry feet which ttre them their name already turning whits. At last we came out on the great plateau, seamed with deep, narrow ravines. Beaches of pasture alternated with' groves snd open forests of varying else. Almost immediately we beard the bogle of a bull elk. and saw s big band of cows and calves oa the other side of a valley. There were three bulls with them, one very large, snd we tried to creen op on them; bat the wind was baiislng sad spoiled our stalk. So we returned to oar norses. moantea them, and rode a mile farther, toward a large open wooden s hlU-sble, When within two hundred yards we beard directly ahead the bogle of a ball, and palled op short. In a moment I saw him walking through an open glade; be bad not seen as. The slight breeze brought us down his scent Elk have s strong characteristic smell; It Is usually eweet, like that of a nerd of Alderaey cows; bat Is old bans, while rutting. It Is rank, pungent, snd lasting. We stood motionless till the boll wss oat of sight, then stole to the wood, tied our horses, snd trotted after him. He was traveling fast, occasionally calling; whereupon others ta the neighborhood would answer. Evidently he bad been driven oat of some herd by the master bun. He went faster than we did, snd while we were vainly trying to overtake nlm we beard another very load and sonorous challenge to ear left. It came from a ridge-crest st the edge of the woods, among some scattered clumps of the northern nut-pine or plnyon a queer conifer, growing very high on the moaatains, its maltlf orkec trunk and wide-spreading branches giving It the founded top, and. at a distance, the general look of an oak rather than a pins. We at once walked toward the ridge, op-wind. In a min ute or two, to oar chagrin, we stumbled on an outlying spike bull, evidently kept on the outskirts of the herd by the master bulL I thought he would alarm an the rest; but, ss we stood motionless, be could not see clearly what we were. He stood, ran, stood again, gazed at ns, and trotted slowly off. We nnrftea TorwSrd as fast as we dared, and with too little care; for we suddenly came ta view of two cows. As they raised their beads to look. Woody squatted down where hs wss. to keep their sttentton fixed, while I cautiously tried to slip off to one side unobserved. Fevered by the neutral tint of my bncaskla ImmJag-shlrt, with which my shoes. Iscgms. and soft bat matched. I succeeded. As soon ss I was out of sight I tan bard and came up to a hillock crested wtth plnyons, behind which I judged I sboaM find the nerd. As I approached the crest, their strong; sweet smell smote my nostrils. In another moment I saw the tips of s pah? of mighty antlers, and I peered over the crest wtth my rifle at the ready. Thirty yards off. behind a clomp of playeas, stood a bags ban, his head thrown back ss hs rubbed bis shoulders with his horns. There several cows around him. and on me Immediately, sad took alarm. I fired Into the bull's shoulder. Inflicting a mortal wound; but be went off, snd I raced after him at top speed, firms; twice into his flank: then he stopped, very sick, snd I broke his neck with a fourth bullet. An elk often hesitates In the first moments of surprise snd fright, snd does not get really under way for two or three hundred yards; but when once fairly started, he may go several miles, eves though mortally wounded; therefore, the tranter, after his first shoe should run forward as fast as be can, and shoot agate and again until the quarry drops, In this way many animals thst would otherwise be lost sre obtained, especially by the man who has a iepeatlng rifle. 1 The elk X thus slew was s giant His body wss the else of a stem's, snd his antlers, thong not anusoally long, were eery massive snd heavy. He lay In a glade, oa the edge of a great cliff. Standing on its brink we overlooked a meet beautiful country. the home of all homes for the elk: s evergreen forest broken by park and glade, by meadow and pasture, by bare hill-side sad barren tsble4sad. Some five miles off lay the sheet of water known te the eld banters ss Spotted Lake; twe or three shallow, sedgy places, and spots of geyser formation, made pale green blotches en Its wtndHlpplsd surface, far to the southwest ha dsrmg beauty and majesty, tns grand domes and lofty spires of the Tetens shot tots the bine sky. ;-vr,-r:: . Thst night as eat asere night afterward, a ban elk whistling to wttSsbi two or drefl yarSs cf f tcsis, txl tflti to Jota ts tarn tsrd. Ths gsesn had set CO X csiBctCCStL E3t sre "',L'

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the iTigat tn I2e "rutting seasoTt T where undisturbed they feed freely In the daytime, resting for two or three hours shout noon. Kext day. which was rainy, we spent tn getting la the sutlers and meat of the two dead eft: and I shot off the heads of two or three bins grouse on the way heme. The following day X killed another bull elk. following nlm by the strong. not anpleesing. smell, snd hitting him twice es he ran, at about eighty yards. Bo far X had had good luck, killing everything X had shot st; but now the lock changed, through no fault of mine, as far as X could see, snd Ferguson bad his la ntngs. The day after I killed this buU hs shot two fine mountain rams: and during the remainder of oar bant he killed UTS elk one cow. for meet snd four good balls. The two rams were with three others, all old and with fine horns : Fergneon peeped over s lofty precipice and saw them coming up It only fifty yards below him. His two first snd finest buns were obtained by hard running and good shooting: the herds were on the move st the time, snd only bis speed of foot sad soundness of wind enabled btm to get near enough for a shot One herd started before he grot close, snd be killed the master bun by s shot right through the heart as It trotted past s hundred snd fifty ysrds distant. As for me, during the next ten days I killed nothing savs one cow for meat; snd this though X hunted hard every day from morning tin night no matter what the weather. Our 111 success wss In part doe to sheer bed lack; bat the chief element therein wss the presence of a great banting-party of Sbosboos Indians. Split Into bands of eight to ten each, they scoured the whole country oa their tough, sure-footed poutee. As they slew whatever they could, but by preference cows snd calves, and ss they were very persevering, but also very excitable and generally poor shots, so thst they wasted much powder, they not only wrought havoc among the elk. but also scared the survivors out of all the country ever which they hunted. Day In snd day out we plodded oa. In s hunting trip tns days of long mo notony In getting to the the days of onrequlted ton sfter It has been reached, always far outnumber the red-letter days of success. Bat It Is just these times of failure that really test the hunter. In the lent run, com mon-sense and dogged perseverance svatt nlm more than any other quali ties. The man who does not give up. but hunts steadily and resotstely through the opens of bad tack until the lack turns. Is the man who wins success In the end. After a week at Two-Ocean Pass, we gathered our pack-animals one frosty morning, and again act off across the tnountalna. A two-days Jaunt took us to the summit of Wolverine Plnyon Peak, beside s IttOs tarn; each nMralng we found tts ear face skimmed with black lea. for the nights were cold. After three or four days, wo shifted esmp to the meuth st Wolverine Greek, to get off the grounds of the Indians. Ws bad srn our last etk-ssoat that tnerntne when we were within a couple of hours Journey of our totended haltingplace, Woody and I struck off on foot for a hunt Just before sunset we came oa three or four elk; n spike bun stood for a moment behind some tlkca evergreens a hundred yards off. Guess ing st his shoulder. I fired, snd hs fen dead after running a few rods. X had broken the luck, sfter ten days of in Kext morning Woody snd I, with the packer, rode to where this elk lay. We loaded the meet on a pack-horse, snd let the packer take both the loaded animal and our saddle-horses back to camp, while we made a bunt on foot We went op the steep, forestdad mountain-side, and before we bad wattced an hour heard two eft whistling shesd of us. The woods Were open, snd quits free from undergrowth, sad we were able to ad vases noiselessly; there wss no wind, for the weather was stiu. clear, and cold. Both of the elk were evidently very much excited, snswerlng each other continually: they had probably been master bulls, bat had fseessss so exbaustad that their rivals hsd driven them from tbe herds forcing them to remain In seclusion nntn they regained their lost sfjoagin. As we crept stealthily forward, the calliag grew louder snd louder, ontfl we could near the grunting sounds with which the challenge of the nearest ended. He was In a large wallow, which was slso a lick. When we were stin sixty yards off. be beard us. and rushed out bat wheeled and stood s moment to gsse, puasled by my buckskin suit I fired Into Ms throat beeehta has neck, and down he went In a seep. Buebing ta sad turning. I eaUed to Woody, "He's a twelTe-potntsr, but the boms are small r As I spoke I heard the roar of the challenger of the other bun not two hundred ysrds shesd, ss If la defiant answer to my shot , " Banning quietly forward, I speedily caught .a gllaipes of his body. He wss behind some 'fir-trees shout seventy ysrds off. snd I could not seswtlcb way hs was into tbe patch of fbie. staling high, to Hy slm was true, asd the huge beast dowu-hSI through the erer putSa himself oa sis fare legs for tfts en or twenty rods, his hind ousrtsrs tracing Badsj t orward. I broke kts nock. Xa antlers were the finest I over got A couple of whisky-Jacks arpeared at the first of thettZe wnhtaefir of the tin tat: ttty fcZowsd tss a ss be mcsl t grtit 3 ZZ O nz3

sTsa gaounia brooi&irst;

team of bleed that u sprinkled over the greea herbage. These two bolls lay only s couple hundred yards apart on a broad gai trail, which was as well beaten as a good bridle-path. We began to skin out the heads: asd as we were sfcfcg wo heard another ball challensiag Car v the BMwutala. He nearer, and as soon as we had oar work we grsi trotted toward aim aloag the tralL He was very noisy, uttering hla loud, singing challenge every minute or, two. The trail was so broad and firm that we walked ta perfect sBence. After going only five or six hundred yards, we got very dose Indeed, and stole forward oa tip-toe. listen tag to the roaring music. The sound came from s steep, narrow ravine, to one side of the trail, and I walked toward it with my rifle at the ready. A slight puff gave the elk my wind, and bo dashed oat of the ravine like s deer:' but be was ealy thirty yards off, and my bullet went into bis shoulder ss hs passed behind a clump of yejaagtarace. I plunged lute the ravine, scrambled oat of it end raced after btm. In a minute I saw him standing with droop. Ing head, and two more shotstfinlshsd him. He also bore fine sutlers. It was s great piece of tack to get three such fine bulls st the east of half a day's light work: bat we bad fairly earned them, hsrtng worked hard for ten nays, through rain, cold, hanger, snd fatigue, to no poroses. Tast-evcning my home-coming to camp, wtth three elk-tongues and a brace of raflsd grouse hung st my belt was most happy. : '. ,; . BARIIABOJETS Cflll Assistant Superintendent of Reformatory Is Given Dismissal. BRIBERY CHARGE IS MADE Indianapolis, Juno 28. Superintendent W. H. Whittsker of the ladlaaapolls reformatory at JeffersoaviZs, today reported to Governor Marshall that hs hsd demanded and received the resignation of U. N. Barnard, assistant superintendent of the tastitatlon. The resignation Is said, ' by Whittsker to bo on account of the Irregularities discovered in the Bsrnsrd administration, and corroborates rumor a received that Barnard kas been receiving money from prison contrsctors. Whtttakor also ordered the con tractor, whose name Is not green to leave the institution and sot .to return. The Incident will sot interfere with the Inquiry which the governor baa set on foot tattoo. . FOR FII1E ESCAPES The school board has ordered Ct erection of fire escapes on? the following buildings: Warner, Eeventh. sad North C streets; VSJle. South roarteen th end C streets; Whitewater." North Thirteenth street: Baxter school . West Richmond, and Fairview sctocl building. Th escapes wars or&rJ placed on the buildings by Ctate rbo Inspector Blskely. The bosrd has contracted with T. Roche of Indianapolis snd already three of the escapes have bean Eisoad In position. Mr. Blakely'S orders wero mads be-' cause ho bellves no school bulldlns is safe aniens It has two stairways or two ways of exit There was but one stairway in each of the above tssitloned buildings, slthouxh t2 stairs are very wide. HDD GIVE!! OIK The state railway commission today sent to Prosecutor Lsdd complaints Zl violation of the fall crew law by the Pennsylvania Rsilway eoaapsny. Tns prosecutor will be applied with the names of witnesses snd cossplstnaats as well ss instructions -co prosecute. It Is claimed the Panhandls has been requiring Its train crews to work overtime, or operate trains without the number of men required by taw.' Aa' attempt to' locate Prosecutor . lsdd this afternoon wss unavailing. It Is expected he will take up the esses' ss soon ss possible snd enter prpsecu-, Uon. ' MCDl Oil JtO Although the postal receipts of tae. New York office for the month of. May amounted to fl.SM.211.g4. yet the per cent of increase of haotaosi during the month over the months of 180 snd 19C3 loss than the increase ta per cent cf gain of the local ofiosu show that tbe New York 12.3 per cent over May 1003 aad 2.73. over the month of May. 1SOT. The per cant of gain of tns toesl oCSce Is 112 per cent over Usy 1CC3 gad saa over 12sy, 1907. ; GOES TO LA CALUL Mrs. Henry Jones fcft EL. far a short visit wtth her set XL Jssss sad fccttr of tlxlXca. Kr. ts C2st fa the XX. 6 XL wss, exs d ta

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