Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 292, 28 August 1909 — Page 4

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THE KICII3IONI 1'ALi.AJDIUil AKD SUS-TELEGKAM. SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 10O9.

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Published and owned by tb PALLADIUM PRINTINO CO. Issued T days ech week, evenings' and Sunday morning-.. Office Corner North th and A atreeta. Hone Phone 1 III. RICHMOND, INDIANA. Radetes) O. Leeaa.,,. Xntftot fSdltev. Cherie M. MerM., Meaaaev. W. R. Pawas4eae.....,..Newa Editor. . SUBSCRIPTION TERMS, In Richmond $5.00 per year (In advance) or 10c per week. , MAIL SUBSCRIPTION One year. In advance ........... .5. 00 Six month. In advance .......,. 2.60 One month. In advance .......... .45 RURAL ROUTES. One year, in advance .13.60 Six montha. In advance 1.50 One month. In advance .25 Addreaa changed aa often as desired; both new and old addressee must be given. Subecrlbere will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment I received. . Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mail matter. Items Gathered in From Far and Near Rtapaetability. From the New York Tribune. We are going to bring a new indictment against respectable men in politics. If It were not for the respectable men, bow long; could any corrupt machine last? If it were not for men who within or without politics have won reputations for cleanliness and probity, how long could political debasement be maintained? . If it were not for the men whom the people delight to honor, how could those remain in power who are covered with political dishonor? If it were not for the citisena of notable standing who have "fought the bosses," who have warred upon machines, who have gained fame for their independence, how could the bosses and , the machines continue to do business? If it were not for the constant supply of available candidates who , by universal agreement "cannot be controlled," how could the corru'ptionlsts keep their control over the rest of us? If good men would not be put up "to save the day for the machine," wherewith could it saved? If whitewash were not always at hand in abundancewhom would seoulchres ! deceive? It is common to Indict good men for their failure to take part In politics; we would also Indict them for the part they too commonly take, when they do take part -The Lazy Bug. From the New Orleans Times-Demo crat. There are phenomena connect ed with the raid of the lazy bug which the layman cannot understand and which the physicians probably com prehend dimly, despite their positive assertions Jn the matter. , The lazy man can be energetic enough, on oc casion. The weary tramp who refuses to chop wood for his breakfast has been known to do ten miles at a fast clip In the mere hope of getting a drink at the end of the walk. What renders the bug quiescent for tha nonce? Can his operations be controlled by a mere effort of the will? Or has he himself a partiality for "booze" which, induces him to suspend operations for the moment? These are questions the unscientific mind would like to see answered, before giving in Its, , allegiance unreservedly to the dictum, that laziness is always or even generally the fault of a little microbe shaped like a hook. 'la It a Sportt From the Indianapolis News. Those who ought to know insist that auto mobile racing is a god thing for the automobile industry, that manufacturers have learned much from, these contests. It Is said that many of the Improvements made In . the cars, lm provements that have tended to make them more safe even for the ordinary user, have resulted from the efforts to cure weaknesses revealed in such contests as those of last week. Of course, there are those who argue that the speedway Is a good thing for the city; that the races bring people and business here, as they do. But none of these considerations touches the question under discussion, namely, whether automobile racing is really a sport in any true sense of the word There could be tests which would try out a car in private. And as for the commercial , considerations, they ought not to weigh at all If It can be shown that these races, are necessar ily dangerous that Is, dangerous be yond other sports. . Out of the Way. From the ' Chicago ' News. One of the safest places from which to view an automobile race is the main deck of a capable balloon. - J On ths Move. From the Boston Transcript When Wu Ting-fang is not coming to the United States he is returning to China. TWINKLES (By Philander Johnson.) S The Modern Mrs. Ma'api-op. Isn't your husband something of an epicure?" "Certainly not answered Mrs. Surfrox. with ddrnlty. .vri trust the Iay-wU .ever cotao when he can

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" So that Is the way It Is done In Hamilton. The Anderson Company Is a local company which Is allotted "terrl- , tory." They always land the contract in spite of the earnest endeavor of the Barber Asphalt Trust to do business there. Thus proving without a doubt that there is no connection between the Barber Asphalt Trust and the local subsidiary company. But whe allots the territory? '

By the same process of irrefutable logic the S. S. Saxton Company has nothing to do with the Barber Asphalt Trust Mr. Saxton himself denies that there la any connection between the Barber Asphalt Company and his company. Therefore, fellow citizens, rejoice in the fact that you are doing business with a local company with no more connection than the Hamilton company has. Perhaps we may have as goo I luck as Hamilton some day. When "all the streets are paved with asphalt and no one shall say a word." " But who allots the territory?

We wonder how much territory the S. S. Saxton Construction Company has been allotted? The smaller the territory the greater the danger to Richmond. And for this reason. If the 8. S. Saxton company only has Richmond as its field of operations there will be a fight to the finish before that company lets go. But who allots the territory? It would appear from the situation in Hamilton . that the Asphalt Trust has some very strong and powerful friends in the "powers that be." Who pays for that friendship? It is not for love. The citizens of Hamilton pay in the long run. "And the property owners who pay , will not be given a chance to say a word, but will be asked to step up quickly to the treasurer's office and settle the bill." As it is in Hamilton, so will it be in Richmond. All over the country it is practically the same thing. The methods vary with the community. The guise, the dress, the habit these may indeed change. But there is one thing that does not change and that is the Asphalt Trust But who allots tha territory?

The advantage of a local subsidiary company is in the intimate relations that can be made with the local situation. What difference does it make to the Asphalt Trust whether it sells its goods direct or through some company that has the territory? The Asphalt Company sets the price and not all the Boards of Works, the newspapers, the property owners, and an indignant public can keep the price from being exactly what the Trust may declare. The subsidiary company has to make Its profit. But they make up for it when they get started. They can afford to put the price even below cost when they start They can make it up afterwards. They are doing it in Hamilton.

But say the asphalt people, we will have competition in our bidding! How much will you give for the competition between the Barber Asphalt Company and the S. S. Saxton Company. Who allots tha territory?

How much territory has the S. S. What is the connection between and the Barber Asphalt Trust? , Certainly the Saxton Company But that is the way .it is done. , Iwho allots the' territory? ? ' ';' ' afford to hire somebody to polish his flngerpails." An Evolutionary Extremist. "Do you believe In the Darwinian theory?" asked Mr. Wibbles. "I am inclined to go further than Darwin did," answered Miss Cayenne, "and believe that some members of our species have started on a return trip." Sorrows Unsung. The boy with green apples and peaches Inspires Oft-tibmes a compassionate ballad. But poeta have never yet sounded their lyres For the grown-ups who eat lobster salad. The Employer Problem. "So you have decided to try a new servant?" "No," answered Mr. Crosslots, in a tone of patient resignation. "The servants in our neighborhood have resolved to try new employers." Handling a Constituency. "Why don't you make haste to mingle with your constituents? Don't you know there is a great deal of criticism about your attitude on the tariff?" "Yes," answered Senator Sorghum. "But there is nothing to be gained by getting into a personal discussion. I'll just let them work up the argument among themselves, and : then step in as a peacemaker and referee." A Respected Mediator. My Uncle Jim will sit all day Beneath the leafy vine. An watch the children at their play Whene'er the weather's fine. Some say he's kind of indolent " But us that's fond of him Know ordinary work wasn't meant Fur folks like Uncle Jim. We've heard about the little lad Who watched the kittle steam. While people said. 'Ain't it too bad, The way he'll sit an dream!" Each planet's pathway, too, is mapped as plain as plain kin be. Because ol Isaac Newton napped Beneath, an apple tree. An so, we step on tip-toe when We see him dozin' there; We're sure some day his fellow men Will rise up an declare From hill to hill and town to town ' Their gratitude immense To Uncle Jim for sittin down And thlnkln' so ' Intense. Tommy Pop. what do men mean by circumstances over, which they have no control? ; Tommy's Pop Wives, my son, Philadelphia Record. . . ENJOY SUNDAY OUTING AT LAKE MAXINKUCKEE Excursion over Pennsylvania Lines, August 29. $1.75. Round Trip from Richmond. Special train leaves 5:55 a. m. aug24-27-28 PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.

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Saxton Company? the Andrews Company of Hamilton ' has no more than it has. ; t Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copy.ight, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye GRADUATED AT FORTY-SEVEN. A few years ago Dr. Osier was mad to ray that the average man should be retired at forty-fire and chloroformed at sixty years of age. An Iowa man refutes the Osier theory, ' About four years ago George C. White of Nevada. Ia., developed ar appetite for politics and was elected a member of the legislature, where b rapidly forged to the front. He was chairman of the committor on ways and means of the lower hous? and was regarded as one of the roost forceful members of the general assembly. While a member of the legislature Mr. White was also a student in the law classes of Drake university, at Det. Moines, and last spring be graduated.. But this is not all. He is going to Yale for two years, where, with bis Drake credentials, he can at the expiration of that time complete a postgraduate course. Then Mr. White will go back to hi home town of Nevada and open a law office. Now, mind you This man is forty-seven years of age! And when he gets through Yale he will be nearly fifty years old the age when some men begin to think of retiring from business. Mr. White is wise. Realizing a little late in life that be had missed his vocation, that be had made a false start be simply backed up and started over again. He discovered he had been "cut out" for a lawyer, but had been "spoiled In the making.", Very well; be would mace himself over. It Is safe to predict that with his initiative and nerve in taking up the study of the law at forty-five Mr. White will succeed in the practice of It. The fact Is most men grow old and die prematurely because they lose Interest In life.; Mr. White is as keen in his newborn zest for the law as any man of twenty-fire. His plans are projected far Into the future years, like a boy's plans. He will begin to live his real life at a time when most men begix to die. :N.;.;-',-,v i He does not propose that his life shall slowly dribble away drop bj drop. Contrariwise He prefers to go over the precipice with the full sweep of Niagara. If you would grow old rapidly and die early, mope In your chimney cornel and dream only the dreams of the past - If yon would live Ions, renew yooi youth. . , Hydrogen gas for ballooning Is obtained by an electric process.

IIEGROES KILLED

BY ANGRY POSSE - Armed Whites After the Shoot ing Pursues Wife of One Victim. ONE MAN HUNTER SLAIN ONE OF MEN KILLED, ESCAPED CONVICT, WORE STEEL dRE ASTPLATE AND RESISTED ENEMIES VERY FIERCELY. Soperton, Ga., Aug. 28. Two negroes lynched and a posse in pursuit of the wife of one of the victims; the killing of a prominent planter, a member of the posse; the probably fatal injury of the sheriff of Montgomery county and the wounding of four other members of the posse this was the result of one of the most exciting man hunts this section has ever known. Ben Clarke, an escaped convict from the Bibb county chain gang, was shot to death after a fierce fight yesterday and his body was burned. The negro had threatened to kill Nicholas Adams a merchant of Kibbce, "and a hundred others." John Sweeney, who harbored the exconvlct, was taken from a passenger train a mile from Tarrytown last night and lynched. The posse then set out in search o! Sweeney's wife who, it is said, was in the neighborhood. Intense excitement prevails throughout this section. James Durden, a prominent planter and , member of the posse which captured Clark; was shot and instantly killed. , The other members of the posse shot by Clark were Sheriff James Le3 ter, Walker Wimmons and three other men. The officer received an ugly wound In the breast The posse found Clark in Sweeney's house. Sweeney's wife was at home, but Sweeney was absent. The sheriff called on Clark to sur render. For answer he received a 44caliber bullet from an automatic gun Durden was shot and other members of the posse fell before the torrent of lead dealt by the negro. He continued to fire until his ammunition was ex hausted. He was then overpowered and his body riddled with bullets. He wore a steel breastplate that turned Winchester bullets. A pile of logs was covered with crude turpentine and the body cremat ed. In the excitement the woman es caped. - The events of the day fired the intense spirit of the posse, and it is said she can not escape the search that is being instituted tonight Sweeney was caught near here late yesterday ' afternoon. He was carried aboard a ' northbound train to a se eluded wood near Tarrytown. where his body was riddled with bullets af ter being swung up to a sapling. FISHES THAT ARE RACERS. The Tarpon, snarls aad Mackerel Are the Sveed Champion Study of the speed of fisbes is em barrassed by unfavorable difficulties. It is not possible, as with birds, to set up till poles at intervals of a quarter of a mile and. with the help of stop watches, time them as they go by. Nevertheless investigation of the sub ject goes to show that the mackerel, if not the champion racer of the briny deep, comes pretty near to carrying off the honors. Unquestionably it travels sometimes as fast as an express train at high speed say, at the rate of sixty or possibly seventy miles an hour. Other things being equaL the larger the fish the faster It swims. Just as the huge steamship is able to travel at a speed much greater than the little harbor tug. Undoubtedly the energy em ployed by a fish of great site, such as a thirty foot shark when traveling at its best gait. Is something tremendous, An ordinary tug, which represents a maximum of energy In a minimum of bulk, utilizes about 200 horsepower. Of course It Is only a guess, but It would not seem t bo over the mark to suppose that a seventy foot whale makes use of 500 horsepower when It propels Its huge bulk through the water at a rate of thirty miles an hour. A whale, which Is a mammal and not a fish, might be compared to a freight train if the shark Is a cannon ball express, but it can beat the fastest ocean greyhound In a speed contest. If there is a fish that can travel faster than a shark it must be the tarpon, which can probably "hit her up" to the tune of eighty miles an hour. If pressed for time. Generally speaking, it may be said that finny creatures which lire near the surface of the sea are swift swimmers, as compared with those that dwell In the depths. Thus the cod, which is a deep water species. Is sluggish and would stand no show at all in a race with the mackerel or herring. These latter, which are distinctively pelagic, depend for their living upon their activity In pursuing agile prey, and they must be, quick In their , movements in order to escape their own enemies. If the mackerel were as big as a good sized shark it would probably be the speed champion of the ocean. Isp fish Is better shaped for rapid going. Some years ago a yacht builder la New York constructed a sloop with a hull patterned exactly after the underbody of a Spanish mackerel. She was called the Undine, and, if tradition does not lie, she never was : beaten. - Like the fish after which she was modeled, she bad her greatest breadth of beam forward of amidships a decidedly novel Idea in boat building. One may say, indeed, that all modern water craft are more or less fishllke la their makeup: Trt. on the whole, it Is surprising that marine architects bare not striven more earnestly than, they have done to obtain hints from nature's own Il lustrations of aquatic .speed nrindnlesL Saturday Evening Pest

BUEKOS AIRES. A City With All the Finish of a Paris or a Berlin. Buenos Aires, the capital of the Argentine Republic. Is In some respects the most cosmopolitan city. In the world. No Important European nation but has contributed its capital and its people to the upbuilding of this great metropolis. It also has the distinction of being the second city of Latin population In the world, being larger than the largest cities In Italy and Spain. . There Is perhaps no city which exhibits a greater variety of pleasing contemporary styles of domestic architecture. The city council tries to encourage beautiful building by annually offering a gold medal to the architect who is found to bare planned the most attractive facade and by freeing from the building tax the building thus favored. The outward aspect of Buenos Aires Is rather that of a European than of an American capital. It has alt the finish of a Paris or a Berlin. The absence of the irregular sky line, caused in North American cities by the extreme height of some business buildings as well as the fact that the ground of the city is quite uniformly built upon, even in the more outlying regions, keeps the city from present

ing that unfinished appearance which , even our largest cities have. World . Today. SWISS TRAMPS FEW. A Poor Place For the Man Who Doesnt Want to Work. Switzerland is not a place for tramps, because the man out of employment and who makes no effort to find work is not tolerated for a momeut In that country. The district authorities will secure him a job at bard labor and little pay. and such an offer can be refused only under tbe penalty of going to a penal workhouse. These institutions are under military discipline, the work severe, tbe wages a penny or threepence per day. and release Is granted only upon tbe advice of those In charge. No difficulty Is experienced In determining between beggars and unemployed, because all legitimate la-i borers have papers given tbem by tbe district In. which they live containing information concerning the position they have held. In every part of Switzerland are established "relief in kind" stations for tbe exclusive use of respectable unemployed. .Only those are admitted who have had regular work during the previous three months and have been ont of employment for at least five days. These men must be on tbe lookout for work and accept any situation that is offered, because the chronic loafer is soon detected by tbe police and his papers are marked so that he can never again seek refuge in a "station." Exchange. "Old Hickory." The following story is told of bow General Andrew Jackson got his title of "Old Hickory." Captain William Allen, who was a near neighbor of tbe general, messed with him during the Creek war. During the campaign the soldiers were moving rapidly to surprise the Indians and were without tents. A cold March wind came on. mingled with sleet which lasted for several days. General Jackson got a severe cold, but did not complain, as be tried to sleep In a muddy bottom among his half frozen soldiers. Captain Allen and his brother. John, cut down a stout hickory tree, peeled off the bark and made a covering for tbe general, who was with difficulty persuaded to crawl under It. The next morning a drunken citizen entered tbe camp and. seeing the tent, kicked it over. As Jackson crawled from the ruins the toper cried: "Hello. Old Hickory! Come out of your bark and Jine us In a dr!nk."-Detrolt News. The Retort Erudite. A famous scholar, whose hobby was tbe derivation of words, bad occasion to store bis furniture while proceeding to tbe continent In quest of tbe origin of the term "Juggins." During bis researches in Berlin be received from the warehouse company the following letter: "Sir We hare the honor to inform you that the mattrass yon sent to our store bad tbe moth in it Since tbe epidemic would expose tbe goods of other clients to Injury, we bare caused your mattrass to be destroyed." The scholar replied: "Dear Sir My mattress may. as you say. bare had moth in It but I am confident that it had an e In It also." London King. A Good Listener. The Mistress Katie, yon should not talk so much. The Maid No. ma'am. "No. You should understand that It is your place to listen." "I do that, ma'am." "I never saw you when you were, then." "No. ma'am: you never saw me when I was listening because I was on the other side of tbe keyhole, ma'am." Yonkers Statesman. Reproved Again. I am told that there are some fine scores to the credit of Herr Bat on tap per." ventured Mr. Cumrox during a lull In the artistic conversation. "My dear." said his wife, "we were discussing music, not basebalL" Washington Star. An Optimist. "Pa. what Is an optimist?" "An optimist my son. is the msn who makes himself believe ft will not rain tomorrow because be doesn't possess an umbrella." Cleveland Plan Dealer. Electric engines will haul the ships through the Panama canal when the big ditch is completed. This will prevent serious accidents and collisions. The electric engines will run on specially constructed tracks on the bank. EXCURSION TO INDIANAPOLIS, AUGUST 29. $1.2 round trip from Richmond over Pennsylvania Lines. Special Train leaves 8:30 a. m, . r; - 24-27-28 PALLADIUU 17A?.T ADS. PAY.

IMIIIG 1 FIGHT Oil "HEAR" BEERS Strong Effort Being Made to Drive Them Out of the Indiana Market.

BARNARD MAKING TESTS HAS GATHERED SAMPLES FROM ALL OVER THE STATE TO AS CERTAIN WHAT IS CONTAINED IN THE DRINKS. Indianapolis. Aug. 2S. Another strong effort is being made by the temperance forces of the state to j drive the near beers out of the market This was tried when near beer first appeared after tbe local option law went into effect, bnt there was so much difficulty in obtaining convic tions in some of the counties, that it became almost impossible to do anything. Some of the courts held that it was legal and others said it was an illegal beverage. The ground of objection was that it was made of malt and this, it was pointed out. made it illegal because the law forbids the sale of spirltous, vinous or malt liquors without a license. On the other hand It was contended that the near beer was not intoxicating and that, therefore, its sale was not prohibited by law. The temperance people met this objection by saying that the law prohibited the sale of malt liquors, no matter whether they were Intoxicating liquors or not and that since near beer was made of malt its sale was illegal. Barnard is Working. In the last few weeks II. E. Barnard, state food and drug commissioner, has been making elaborate testa of near beer samples gathered from all parts of the state, in order to ascertain just what they do contain. The state board of health has not taken any stand one way or the other with regard to the question of whether sellers of near beer can be prosecuted for violations of the liquor laws, and the tests were not made with that end In view. The board Is not seeking to furnish evidence for prosecutions of these dealers. It merely wisbes to find out whether the near beer is a wholesome beverage and what it is made of. Mr. Barnard will make his report on bis analyses in the next issue of the Bulletin of the State Board of Health. The report will show that every sam ple of near beer except one which was analyzed by him contained malt or maltose. One sample, manufactur ed in Indianapolis, did not contain either malt or maltose. Maltose Is defined as being made by steeping barley in hot water and drying it in a kiln. It is a question wliether near beer made in this manner and br this process Is a malt liquor in tbe eyes j of the law, and this is a question that will have to be settled by the courts. - Used as Evidence. Mr. Barnard says he does not Intend to try to determine it It is believed, however, that when tbe temperance people get ready to make their fresh onslaught on near beer, which is in contemplation, ther will make use of the results of the analyses made in tbe state laboratory to show that near beer Is a malt beverage. They will also argue that since the near beer contains a small percentage of alcohol it is an intoxicating drink, and that, therefore, it is prohibited by the law in dry territory and cannot be sold by any person without a license. Mr. Barnard, however, contends that the small percent of alcohol contained in it Is not intoxicating or harmful, and that it makes the near beer a wholesome beverage. The temperance people, however, insist that the presence of even a small bit of alcohol for the purpose of preserving the near beer and keeping it from spoiling is a bad thing in wet territory as well as in dry territory, because it is sold to children as well as grown people, and that it may cultivate an appetite for strong drink. As to Social Clubs. Attorney General Bingham laTlobking in to the question of. the right of the social clubs to supply liquor to their members. These clubs have been formed in dry counties so that members may have a place where they can drink beer which ech member buys for himself direct from the brewery in case lots. Tbe club does not dare to sell the beer to its members or to any other persons, but a member may buy a quantity of beer and place It in the club in the care of a manager, and whenever he wihes a drink he can go there and get a drink of his own beer. , - r , Attorney General Bingham is not sure that a clnb can be incorporated for any such purpose. He says he doubts if a corporation has any right to undertake to get around the local option law In that way. and he pro poses to look up the law and probably he will file a test case in court to set tie the question. Such a suit would be one to annul the charter of a club Owing to the competition of electric lines and motor busses, the suburban traffic of the Great Eastern railway, of London, has fallen off at the enormous rate of 25.000,000 passengers a year. r Twenty million false teeth are sent to England from this country every year. c-:-- . ' : CHICHESTER SRLLS

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oid Seres asrSnS essssssBi eaeaaaeaemwa Caked Breasts, Tia ii TTliilis, sml si InTsi stVsi are instantly reUersd by Fareataat: Clem Thutlethwalte W. H. SadheS "Isn't it lovely, dear, that yoa dont near look your age 7 And you. dear, stay young lute a spring chicken." Kansas City Times. FINE FARM FOR SALE ON WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 1st, 1909, at two o'clock P. M.. unless sold at private sale before said date. I will offer for sale at public auction upon the premises, a fine eighty acre farm, with a good bouse and improvements thereon, located about three miles southwest of Centerville, Wayne County, Indiana. Usual terms. JOHN C HARVEY. Administrator. SHIVELEY 6 SIHVELEY. Attorneys. ROUflD TRIP TO CI NCI UU ATI Via C C a L D.Q. SUM AY AUQUGft 20 Train leaves Richmond 5:20 a. m. Returning leaves Cincinnati, 10 p. m. For additional information call . C. A. BLAIR, P. ft T. i, Home TeL 2063. Richmond. Suwtls .Positively.. SIS Vs!ss. NO uoaE NO LESS 710 4 FOR OALtZ a X all rtfee t city smltaMc sussl cejtalraesl 1 tor aareletalaa smsl cfclekca e rsdslafi f w. a. caAcstiaY a com 1 i 1 mm SAVestcertt Claest S zwissusrs i Q U A It E R O READ For smsIo kr oJl c . DR. L S. CHEN0WETH Dentist. Now on vacation; will be in New Offices in Murray Theater Bldg.. Oct. 15. Cor. 10th A Main Sta. PURE - CIDER VINEGAR WHITE VINEGAR WHOLE SPICES HADLEY BROS. Loyal MOOSE - Now Charter Members Accepted, f 5.00. "Moose" pay $7.00 a week, sick or accident; $100.00 burial fund. Free medical ati tendance for members and family. '- FINEST CLUB AND LODGE FEATURES. v Richmond. Ind. Headquarters, 33-24 Colonial Bldg-. Main and 7th Sts. Phone 2175. - . . ; Solicitors wanted; see Mr. : May. Call for beautiral . Free Souvenir. .

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DR. PARK DENTIST 12 North Testb S3.