Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 229, 25 June 1910 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM,- SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1910.
. News of Surrounding Towns
MILTON, 2ND. Milton. Ind., June 25. Misses Dorothy Hoehour and Catherine Snyder are visiting relatives and friends at New Castle. Mr. Hart Is having his new tenant house on his farm occupied by Mr. Allison near Cambridge City, painted. Lafe Cross has the contract. Mesdames Lycurgus Beeson and Benton Wagner were calling on friends In Cambridge City yesterday. Miss Anna Bella Clifford of Dublin was giving her music lesson to Miss Olive Bryant yesterday. The letter "B has been found on oats in this vicinity. Charles Knauf here, and his brother Louis Knauf of Cambridge City were walkin wes of town and saw a field of oats on Mrs. Martha Lee's farm which is rented by O. B. Bryant. They examined the oats and finding the letter on it brought some of it home. The letter B Is plainly discernible. Several of the M. E. church people after prayer meeting Thursday evening quietly repaired to the home of Mrs. . E. B. Newman and Mrs. Mary Noll and rendered a beautiful song just outside the door. Those in the company were Mesdames C. H. Pinnick, W. L. Parkins and Maude Ball, Messrs. W. L. Parkins and son Lloyd, Earl Murley and Harry Borders. The music was soft and low and vibrated on the .summer air with a solemn sweetness. Mesdames Newman and Noll greatly appreciated the compliment as they are both deprived much of the time of getting out Born to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hutchinson a son on Wednesday. Mr. Pearson who was the guest of his daughter, Mrs. E. K. Van Winkle and family returned to Newport Ky., on Thursday. Lacey Sipple will visit his brother, James Sipple at Newport, Ky. Mrs. Mack Beeson of Indianapolis, has been visiting Mrs. Ella Hoffman. Mrs. Mary Kimmer of Webster is visiting her father and stepmother, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cornthwaite. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Jones will entertain as their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Hardy and sister, Miss Sudie Hardy of Union City. D. H. Warren is much indisposed. Miss Anna Stanton who was he guest of Mr. and Mrs. William Ferris went to Splceland to visit friends and will accompany a cousin to Greensboro. Mrs. Murphy who visited her sister Mrs. Mary A. Wallace and family, returned to Indianapolis yesterday. uiriCDOTnuM iwn iinMuiiwiwimi iiiwt Hagerstown, Ind., June 23. Mrs.' Charley Allen spent the day Friday at Cambridge City. Mr. and Mrs. James Knapp entertained Friday, Mr. Berch Jones of Muncie. ' F. W. Addlngton has moved his pool tables to the business room of Mrs. Julia Werking on the South of Main street. The remains of John Smith who died at the county infirmary Thursday morning were - brought to the home of his sister Mrs. Newton Abrell, where they lay in state until Friday afternoon. A short service -was held at the grave at the German Baptist church. The deceased had been In feeble mind since a child. Mrs. Thos. Black a sister and her daughter Lola of Warren, Ind., attended the services. Edward Acres of Mooreland was varv nafnfnllv InlnrAtl Thnrarinv ovan. . j ...... J ... j u v.. ... ...... . a Ing in a collision with the automobile driven by Horace Hoover. Acres lost control of his motor cycle and run into the front of Hoover's auto. Both ma chines were damaged to a considerable extent. The motor cyclist al though not suffering any serious injuries, several stitches were taken on his limbs and they are exceedingly painful. The accident occurred about a quarter of a mile west of Hagers town. CAMBRIDGE CITY, IND. Cambridge City, June 25. The annual G. A. R. picnic will be held at Jackson park on the Fourth of July. O. A, Sommers of Kokomo, will deliver the address. The officers of the county organization are as follows: President, Claud Kitterman of Cambridge City; vice president, John Mark ley of Richmond; secretary, William Mathews of Centerville; treasurer, John Dynes of Centerville; chaplain, Rev. R. E. Hawley of Cambridge City. William Vanmeter of Thare, Kan., FARMER'S WIFE HAD HEAP TO DO Mrs. Shepherd Was in Bad Shape When She Could Net Stand on Her Feet Durham, N. C "I am a farmer's wiic," writes Mrs. J. M. Shepherd, ol this city, "and have a heap to do." "Four months ago I could not stand on my feet, to do anything much, but at this time I do the most of rev work. I took Cardui and it did me more good man an tne doctors. "You don't know half how I thank you for the Cardui Home Treatment. 1 wish that all women who suffer from womanly trouble would treat themselves as I have' Ladies can easily treat themselves ?t home, with Cardui. the woman's tonic. It is easy to take, and so gen tic in i'.s action, that it cannot do anything but good. Being composed exclusively of vegetable ingredients, Cardui cannot lay up trouble in your system, as mineral drugs often do. Its ingredients having no barsh, medicinal effects, and being nonpoisonous and perfectly harmless, Cardui is absolutely sale for young and old. Ask your druggist. He will tell you to try Cardui. Booca medicine Co., Charts dots Medicine
nooaa. Tean- tot SPttm wofcMcsafTitsiaisai iHswMi.oarsai.isi
and Mrs. C. C. Payne of Spencer, who have been visiting In the home of their sister, Mrs. Henry Frank of Brookvllle, are in Cambridge City for a visit of a week or ten days with their brother, James Vanmeter and family. O. E. White transacted business in New Lisbon Thursday. Mrs. Adelia Prltchard and Mrs. H.
A. Gordon and two sons of Pittsburg, who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Wlssler, went to Hagerstown yesterday to visit Mrs. Pritchard's mother, Mrs. Rebecca Fritz. Mrs. James Lear and daughter, Margaret and Mrs. Mary Ready of Indianapolis, enroute home from the wedding of a relative in Richmond, stopped in Cambridge City Wednesday to see old friends. Mrs. Lear and Mrs. Ready were -both former residents of Cambridge City, and this, was their first return in a number of years. Claud Kitterman and family spent Thursday in Indianapolis. Ml 88 Carlyle EHfrenderfer accompanied Mrs. George Doll to her home in Marion where she will spend several days. The reception tendered the Rev. and Mrs. George Gulchard, under the auspices of the adult Bible class of th Presbyterian church, was a most pleasant affair. A large number of persons irrespective of denomination, including the various pastors of the town, were present, to extend a kindly welcome. A musical program by the Misses Helen Doney, Luclle Petro. and Helen Fllby, added to the pleasure of the evening and broke the formality. The Misses Gertrude Routh and Daisy Ayler presided at the punch bowl. Ice cream and cake were served by ladies of the congregationMrs. Ellas Scott went to Jacksonburg this morning to spend Sunday with her son, John Scott. Mssrs. Henry Griffin of Connersville Frank Wlssler, the Misses Lena Luddlngton and Jeanette Vanmeter attended, a dancing party at Jackson park Thursday evening. The Rebekah aid society held an all day meeting at the home of Mrs. John Walter, northeast of town Thursday. The young ladies in the local telephone exchange formed a party to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alvln Culla of Richmond Thursday evening. Mrs. Culla, nee Nellie Ohmlt, was formerly one of their number. Miss . Grace Thompson of Fort Wayne is the guest of the Rev. J. A. Coffin and family. The ladies' aid society of the Baptist, church pleasantly surprised their pastor, the Rev. A. J. Slaughter and family at their home in ML Auburn on, Wednesday evening, the occasion beine the birthday anniversary of Mrs. Slaughter. The ladies took with them well filled baskets of eatables which formed a typical picnic supper. DUBLIN, IND. Dublin, Ind., June 25. Mrs. Abble Herbst is improving her residence on Foundry street, by the erection of a neat veranda. Silas Anderson of Hagerstown, was a Dublin visitor Wedneseday. Mrs. Glen Elliot and little son. of Mobile, Ala,, Mrs. Carl Trussler of Richmond and Mrs. Jennie Jones of Cambridge City, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Trussler, Thursday evening. John Funk of Richmond, spent Wednesday in this place. Miss Elsie Crull has returned after a few days spent with friends in Hamilton, Ohio. Miss Nellie Morris of Farmland, accompanied by Miss Mary Roberts, are spending some time in the home of the former's brother, Oliver Morris. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Mills of Chicago are rejoicing over the arrival of a daughter into their home. Four of the progressive women of Dublin have been making a critical study of birds in this section of the county and have been quite gratified by one of their number, Mrs. Ed Morgan, finding a tree swallow, the first of the species observed in this part of the country. Mesdames O. E. White. R. L. Steele, C. M. Baily, Elmer Wheelan. May Boden and the Misses Jennie McGrew, Elizabeth Wheelan and Rose Greisenger, of Cambridge City, spent Thursday evening with Prof. Lee Ault and family. Miss Katherine Hasson of New Lisbon, a graduate from the local high school, called on Dublin frfends, Thursday evening. The Misses Katie and Mabel Voris teachers in the Indianapolis schools, have returned to Dublin to spend the summer with their father. Prof. P. V. Voris. No Vowels In It. Many places have curious names, but apparently there is only one place which has a name without any vowels. That place is the little hamlet of Ws, near Paris. Ws being on unpronounceable name, the inhabitants of the hamlet have transformed it Into "D'TJs, but this change has not been, sanctioned legally, and on all the official records the name Ws still appears. The hamlet has 117 Inhabitants, and Its sole attractions are the Chateau d'Osny, which has been for many years in the possession of Edmond About's family, and the Chateau de Vigny, which is one of the best specimens of the renaissance style of architecture. Japan's Police Feres. Japan's police force was originally V. v most aristocratic body of the kind iu the world, its establishment was almost coincident with the emperor's decree forbidding ti.. wearing of swords. By a stroke of the imperial pen the samurai were deprived of cherished weapons l.y which the gentlemen of Japan had been accustomed from immemorial times to advertise their rank. So they went into the police, whore It was still possible to carry a sword. And a very formidable weapon it was then, being of the two handed variety.
Of Interest Jo
This matter must not be reprinted Without special permission. THE CELERY BED. . There is no relish for the table which is more delicious than crisp, nutty flavored celery from the home garden, the growing of which is in no sense a difficult matter. If one has not thought of the matter in time to raise plants from the seed, which require two or three weeks to germinate, they may be secured from a neighbor or market gardener. For early use there is no variety which is superior to the Golden Self Blanching, but any variety that one can get will do well with proper care. The important point Is to set out stalky, vigorous plants, taking care to prune back both top and roots at the time of transplanting. A simple plan for the bed is to remove about eight inches of earth from a spot In the garden which will be convenient for watering, say 4 by 20 feet, or from a still larger tract if more celery is wanted. Into the soil at the bottom of this trench should be worked three or four wheelbarrow loads of fine, well rotted fertilizer. The plants should be set six to eight Inches apart in the rows and the rows ten inches apart, enough to permit of frequent hoeing. Being set below the surface of the ground, the bed will not dry out rapidly, while the work of watering Is thereby greatly simplified. If there is no one about the bouse sufficiently strong m of arm to dig the trench the plants may be set on the level ground and given the same cultivation and somewhat more frequent watering than in the low bed. When the plants have reached a foot or fifteen inches the hilling process may be begun and five or six inches of the soil originally removed from the trench replaced, care being exercised to hold the stalks of the plants close together so as to prevent dirt getting Into the crown. Three or four weeks later, depending somewhat upon the rapidity of growth, four or five inches more of earth should be filled in about the plants, and under usual conditions this will give all the bleaching necessary. In a relatively short time after this second hilling the celery will be bleached sufficiently for the table. If any Is left at the beginning of winter the plants may be taken up with plenty of roots and the earth adhering and put in a box in the cellar, where they will continue bleaching and be crisp and tender until after the holidays. THE PRECOOLING OF FRUIT. Great benefit is expected to come to the fruit growers of the Pacific coast from the plants wbicn have been installed at several points in California and will shortly be erected at other points for the precooling of fruit destined for transcontinental shipment. In the past, even with the most careful refrigeration en route, both transportation companies and growers have sustained serious loss as a result of fruit spoiling in transit. In these new precooling plants, which are really mammoth refrigerating plants, whole train loads of fruit can be reduced to a temperature close to the freezing point in the course of two or three hours, artificial means being used to draw the warm air from and inject the cold air into the cars. Car loads of fruit made ready for shipment in this way are given the usual icing in transit, with the result that the fruit arrives at its destination in as nearly perfect condition as possible, the loss resulting from the fruit being in heated condition at the time of shipment as has been the case heretofore, being virtually nothing. The installation of these plants at important shipping points not only in the west, but in other parts of the country, will mean ! increased revenue for the growers of fruit and a greatly Improved quality for the consumer. THE BIG FREEZE. Harvest time alone will reveal the extent of the damage wrought by the fearful cold spell wbicb visited some . fourteen or fifteen of the lake. Ohio ! and Mississippi valley states during the last ten days in ApriL tit caught fruit trees of all kinds in full blossom or tender young fruit and not only seared and blackened these, but killed the new leaves and tender twigs of shrubs and forest trees and killed or greatly weakened the vitality of thousands of acres of newly sprouted grain and corn. Farther south, in the tobacco and cotton belts, the damage was enormous, the extent of which can only be determined later. To the west on the great plains immense damage was i done to grain and fruit, while fruit J growers in Utah and Colorado report j their losses at from 50 per cent up. j Those who are acquainted with the ! meteorological antics of the sections under the sway of the Medicine Hat weather hierarchy feared just such a contingency when the wires got crossed and April and May weather was dispensed all through March. However, it is too early in the season to lose courage, for nature may be exceeding kind the rest of the year. ""While dry Reasons have their drawbacks, it is a matter of common observation that the quality of both small gram and corn crops is better during sccb seasons than during those in which tiere is an excess of rain. That buttermilk can hardly be recommended as a healthful beverage which is got from creameries or private dairies in which the cream product is in part furnished by cows badly affected with tuberculosis. And what is true of the buttermilk holds true In even larger measure with the fresh milk from the same animals. If the piece of lowland dries out sufficiently so as to be put in fit shape as a seed bed by July 1 sorghum will give excellent returns as a forage crop. The seed should be sowed at the rate of a bushel and a half per acre. The crop should be cut at about the time of the first frost and put in large cocks In the field, where It may be left until needed. Sorghum does not pull heavily on the soil and may be grown on the same land several seasons with good results. The California poppy, which grows la greatest srofcsloa on the Eadfic
the Farmers
coast, esliibiis ai.'s uu oibtr flowet pure yellow and orange colors, the outer portions of the four petaled flower sbowins the former color while the inner porticos. nar the center, show the latter color with reat purity. The flower has a spread of from one and a half to three inches, while the leaves, although larger, closely resemble those of the eastern wood flower the Dutchman's breaches. As a result of spraying experiments carried on In some of the niid western states iron sulphate bas beeu found effective in kllliug wild mustard as well as d:indetious aDd a number of other weeds. From seventy-five to a hundred pounds of the sulphate should be dissolved in fifty-two jjailons of water and this sohitiwu applied with spraying outfit in the shape of fiue mist. The younger aud more tender the weeds sprayed, the weaker the solution which will ueed to be used. . Sixty per cent of the money paid out in doctors', bills by girls and women could be put in the bank if mothers would acquaint themselves aud their daughters with the simplest laws having to do with the proper care of the body, including the need of fresh air and deep breathing, wholesome food und its proper mastication and digestion :iu! I he taking of sufficient sleep und rest. Dope and drugs and often surgical operations are at best but a makeshift and seldom go to the seat of the trouble, a change in the habits of life being the thing chiefly needed. The hist annual report of the president of the American Jersey Cattle club contains some interesting statistics relative to this popular dairy breed. It shows :u Increase in registrations during the past year of 18.079. an increase of 24 per cent over those of the year preceding, while the number of transfers recorded was 21.930. which was au Increase of 29 per cent. From the time of the organization of the club. April 1. 1SS3. to April 30. 1910. the total number of animals registered has been 329.t71. The club has plans under way for a still more thorough advertising of the merits of the breed among dairymen of the country. The work in many a borne would be immensely lightened were some plan carried out by which .an abundance of water could be available under pressure. In towns this problem is easily solved by tapping the city water main. On farm or ranch it means the installation of a pumping plant and tank of good capacity, together with necessary plumbing to send I he water where it is needed. The same system can be used to carry water to tire barn aud feed lots and to the garden patch in case water is needed for irrigation. The writer is firmly of the opinion that a water plant of the above description would be worth going into debt for. as would be true of a kitchen stove or a cream separator. Having moved recently from a state In which the meadow lark is held in high regard as a destroyer of insect pests and as one of the earliest harbingers of spring, the writer has beeD interested iu making comparisons with its far western cousin, which is a dweller the year through in the valley where the writer lives. While the western bird shows a greater variety of characteristic sougs. none of them seems to possess that marvelous flutelike sweetness of the one song of the eastern lark, some bird authorities to the contrary notwithstanding. In appearance both representatives closely resemble each other, the male bird in both instances having the bright yellow throat with the black crescent. That the farmer is jockeyed a good deal in the grading of the grain which he sells has been suspected for some time past, and this has reference to practically all cereals iu which grades are recognized. One of the big terminal elevators In a Minnesota city, the destination of the wheat shipped from the small local elevator, took in In the course of one .rear 3.000.000 bushels of No. 1 wheat. 4.000.000 bushels of No. 2 and aoOO.000 bushels of No. 3. This wheat must have been subjected to some marvelous process of improvement, for when this total of 15.000.000 bushels of wheat was forwarded there were 8.000.000 bushels of grade No. 1. 4.000.000 bushels of No. 2 and 3.000.000 bushels of So. 3. This kind of skullduggery probably passes under the name of business, but in reality is wholesale robbery, and it should be viewed and treated as such. " The practice of clipping off the wings of Leghorn hens to keep them from flying over a sixteen foot fence has been in vogue for some years, but not until lately hare we seen the same plan suggested for keeping queen bees from leading new swarms away from the apiary. There are tricks in all trades, even the bee business. Few of nature's agencies prove un mixed blessings. Thus the bee. everywhere recognized as a most valuable aid in the cruss fertilization of many kinds of fruits, is the chief distributer of the germs of the blight which bas wrought havoc with apple and pear orchards in many sections of the coun try. getting hold of the germs from hold over cases of blight from old oozy Infections In the orchard or in nearby hawthorn or service berry shrubs. The balklness of the mule is proverbial, but the western mule seems to have the trait unduly developed, if an instance can be credited that was related to us by the owner the other day. This one was a bunch grass ani mal from eastern Oregon. He balked on the road while his owner was try ing to fetch him over the mountains and couldn't be budged by any force or persuasion that could be brought to bear. He kept this t for five days and nights, finally dropping dead from sheer exhaustion without having taken a step. Hogging down corn Is an economical feeding practice familiar to dwellers in certain sections of the corn belt brief a, turning the &Psa into, small fenced
portions of a ueitiuf uuuure corn and letting them eat it at wilL A Colorado sheep grower seems to have adapted this idea to sheep and beets and last year harvested twenty acres of beets by turning sheep into small patches of the field set off by hurdles. They ate tops, roots and all. the only assistance received being a loosening of the deeper rooted beets with a spading fork The feeder commends the plan as a successful one.
While the tomato will produce some fruit of fair size with little or no attention, very satisfying results in the matter of an improvement in the size of the fruit can be had by thorough and frequent cultivation and a pruning of the vines so that they will set fruit on but three or four leaders or branches. When this plan is followed it is well to stake the plants in an upright position, using a strip of cloth to fasten the vines to the sakes. Should fruit of exceptional size be desired this may be brought about by still further restricting the number of tomatoes allowed to ripen. While housewives are generally of the opinion that it is more difficult to make good bread from soft than hard wheat flour, the following recipe gives excellent results: One quart of wetting, including one cupful of soft yeast. Add two level tablespoonfuls of salt and three aud three-quarters quarts of sifted flour. Mix and knead fifteen minutes, let rise, mold down, let rise again and put in tins. Let rise again and bake. The above recipe gives equally good results with hard wheat flour by reduciug the quantity of flour to three quarts. With this recipe one can start a batch of bread at 6 iu the morning and bake it with the dinner fire. Several points have been pretty well learned about f enceposts seasoning them, their durability, etc. Among these are that the post timber should be cut during the summer or early autumn, that the bark should be peeled off at ouce so that the drying process will be hastened and that if possible from eight months to a year should elapse between the time of cutting the posts and setting them in the ground. More recent experience proves quite conclusively that giving the butts c the posts a bath of hot creosote will increase their life from two to three times. Whether such treatment would pay in any particular case would depend on the price of posts and the cost of creosote. As a result of using seed of poor vitality many a corn -grower is just now confronted with a stand of corn so poor that it will hardly pay him to give it the care it should have during the remainder of the season, and naturally he is looking for a. substitute. While buckwheat, cowpeas. soy beans and sorghum may prove the most desirable substitute crops in certain sections, millet will likely prove most satisfactory In a majority of Instances. Of the three varieties of millet common, Hungarian and German the first is considered best for, a forage crop, while the last will give the best results in a seed crop. The chief objection to the Hungarian millet is that it crosses readily with the common wild foxtail, a near relative of the millet family. The common millet and Hungarian will do better on light soils than the German variety. With all of the millets which are intended as forage crops it is Important to cut before the heads have passed the dough stage. The North Dakota experiment station, which has been investigating millet as a forage crop lately, recommends one feed of properly cured millet a day for horses and two feeds for other stock as a stimulant tending to produce a healthy physical condition of the animals. In feeding value millet is less palatable than timothy hay and inferior to it in nutritive qualities. VULPINE SAGACITY. Tha Tals of a Fox From ths Wast Coast of Ireland. It has often been said that the fox Is the most cunning of all animals, but the following story of vulpine sagacity seems to require some credence. Some fishermen on- the west coast of Ireland were in the habit of going to a small island a few hundred 'yards from the mainland in quest of bait. The island was inhabited by large numbers of rabbits and could be reached at low tide by wading, the water then being only a few Inches deep. One morning they went in their boat quite early, it being high tide, and on landing saw what seemed to be a dead fox lying on the beach. The fur of the animal was all bedraggled, and he seemed to have been drowned. One of the men. remarking that his skin was worth something, pitched him into the boat. Procuring their bait, they returned to the mainland, and then the man who had possessed himself of the fox seized him by the tail and flung him on shore. As soon as the animal struck the beach be picked himself up with considerable agility for a dead fox and shot off like a flash along the cliffs, while the men stood staring at one another In mute astonishment. The men concluded that be had crossed over to the island during the night when the tide was low In search of rabbits and. finding In the morning that he was cut off from the mainland, counterfeited death, with the expectation of thereby procuring a passage to the shore in the boat, an expectation which was fully realized. London Globe. Ramsses I. Barneses L was the first king of the nineteenth dynasty in Egypt and ruled for a brief period about B- C 1335. Beyond the fact that he waged war la Nubia, where be left an inscription and constructed some of the buildings of the Karnak, little is known of his reign. His mummy was found in 1SS1 at Deir-el-BahrL His son. Set! I built the Memnonium at Kurnah in honor of his father's memory. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
JILTED FOR PRIEST
So Hungarian in Dayton Fatally Shoots Himself and Kills Sweetheart. HE WAS MADLY JEALOUS Dayton, O., June 25. Enraged because she had jilted him and eloped with a Hungarian priest, Jolm Domonkos, aged 2S, a peddler, shot Mrs. Mary Illes, aged 22, in the head, at her boarding house on Dakota street, inflctlng wounds which were instantly fatal, and then fired three bullets into his breast, just above the heart. Domonkos had been in love with the handsome young woman before her marriage tollies, and when he learned of her elopement with Rev. Adan Bleisz and her return to Dayton he made repeated attempts to see her. He called at the Dakota street house anc, under the pretense of desiring to pay a debt he had owed. hei. succeed ed in passing to the kitchen, having convinced Mrs. Steve Szova, who was in charge of the house, that his mission was one of peace. Scarcely had Domonkos entered the kitchen until several shots rang . out and the frightened occupants rw. to the kitchen, where they found Mrs. Illes in the throes of death and Dom onkos apparently dying from self-in flicted wounds. In his hand he held the revolver. From the appearance of the wound Coroner Swisher is of the opinion that Domonkos placed the muzzle of the
AYER'S MAIR VIGO. Stops felllns Mali An Elesjant Dressing Destroys Dandruff Makes Hair Grow
oesnot (Color the Dileiir
Composted cf Sulphur. Glycerin. Quinto. Water, P&r.uaie. Atk your doctor
DENNSYLIA IT LINES 30-DAY ROUND TRIP LOW FARE TICKETS To New York City Atlantic City, Cape May and other Ocean Resorts Daily until September 30th, inclusive DIRECT ROUTE OR VIA WASHINGTON WITH STOP-OVERS Colorado and Paciric Coast North Michigan Resorts Tourist Tickets on sale daily duricg the summer, minimising the expense of a delightful vacation outing on the Great ' Lakes and in the Northwest and West. Long return limit To Niagara Falls Annual Low Fare Excursion, August 23rd. Round Trip f 6.50 from Richmond To the Seashore ' August 4, $16.00 Round Trip from Richmond to Atlantic City, Cape May, and Right Other Resorts Fourth of July Excursions July 2, 3 and 4, consult agents for particulars. Full information about fares, routes and other details will be cheerfully furnished on request. Call on or address C. W. Elmer, Ticket Agent, Richmond, Ind.
JORDAN. M'HANUS & CLAKCDARD FUNERAL DIRECTORS & ERlBALfJERS. TELEPHONE 2175. PARLORS 1014 MAIN 8T. Automobile Service for Calls Out of City. Private Chapel and Ambulance.
EMORY IS NOT ONLY POPULAR IN RICHMONDBUT IS KNOWN FROM COAST TO COAST.
I Uncle Wasi
Anther
'A
Do you like refreshing short stories?
Then the charm of Uncle Wash's story telling will lure you back to his "shack" time and again. The book contains 32 narratives of delightfully humorous adventure and of that splendid period "befo' de wah" when Uncle
Wash served the "quality.'
One story,"S& Caline's Enticement" is alone worth the price of the book.
$1.50 . wi. r JOBN C WINSTON
revolver close to her temple and fired the fatal shot, while he tightly clasped his victim in his arms. At the tiem of the commission of the crime, Deputy Sheriff Pat ton was serving on Steve lUes. the woman's husband, an answer and cross-petition to his divorce suit, which he filed soon after his wife disappeared. Mrs. Illes was arrested a few days ago while in the office of her attorney prepaiing her defense and was charged with liv
ing in an illegal state with Rev. Biles, the pastor of the Hungarian congregation in West Dayton, and who had hitherto borne a fair reputation. BHess was caught In Mrs. Illes's room by the latter's husband. After being given a sound beating the minister departed, sans many of his clothes, out of a side window, and fled from the city. Whether the woman left with him or joiaed him in Grand Rapids, Mich., is not known, but they were traced to that city, and Bliess is now supposed to be In Hungary, Domonkos was removed to the St. Elizabeth's hospital, and though he temporarily Improved, his recovery 1 not expected. LETTER LIST. Ladies List Mr-. M. Arnold, Mrs. W. A. Arnold. Mrs. Mary Breese, Mrs. J. E. Carter, Mary Coughlin, Margaret Fowler, Mrs. Bessie Hornety. Lillian Hills. Minnie Miller, Clara Strough. Mary Emma Smith, Mrs. Marie West. Gentlemen's List J. L. Allen. Roy M. Dean. Abe Greenburg, E. H. Hurst, Homer H. Harris. Roy Jackson. Verling Kingley. Murray Luzader. Sol Miller, Haskel' Macklin, Eddie Newman, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Richards, E. S. Shldeler, Clinton Standish (2). Drops Geo. Morgan. Foreign Joan Groumpos Package J. R. Summers, Edith Thomas. J. A. Spekenhler, P. M. Sooium Cklorid. Capsicum. Saac Alcohol. hU opinion of lucil a hiir prcparaliaav Out Now
Ms StoFSes
By Jthn TrotwMd M tf"Tht Bishf Cmntmvn by
CCNsXPANT
