Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 72, 29 January 1912 — Page 4

FAOE FOOTS.

THE XUCmXOND PAIVLADIUSI AND STJX-TEXEGRAM, MONDAY JANUARY 29, 1012.

Pvbllsaed and wn4 by fee

. PALLADIUM fRINTINOOa leeued Every Bvwtas Bx"ept Sunday. Ocriee Corner North Sth and Aetreeta. Palladium and Sun -Tel egress P!r Bualaeea Office, IMC News Departmailt. Hit. RICHMOND. WDIAMA ' ItaMa a. UIMCRIITIOK TKRMS la Richmond 91.00 par roar sn advance) or 10a pay will RURAL ROUTS M M On a roar. In advanoe Alv Mnnlki In mjtwmmfiM .... X. SS Ona month. In aoanco i Addreee changed aa oftoa aa deal red; both bow and old addraaaaa Biaat be ukacrikan will nlou reanlt With order, which . ahould ho give far a peeiriea term; nana will not do n" od until payment la rlm wail aiinanRTPTirKfl Ona year. In advanra If ? Is months, in ad vane.. .se una month, in advance Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poet offlee aa aocond olaaa mall mat tor. Now York Representatives Payne ft Young, S0-S4 Woat 13d street, and 11 Woat 12nd street. Now York. N. T. Chicago Repreaen tat Ivee Payne A Young. 147 -lit Marquotto Building. Chicago. 111. Beetles. The finroa ml circolati oontained la the AoeorialWe rafort only ara guaranteed. texa tf kssskn Aivertssrs No. Wailafcefl 1 . 1. 0I MASONIC CALENDAR Wednesday, Jan. 31. Webb lodge, 'o. 24, P. & A. M. Called meeting, vork in Fcllowcraft degree. Thursday, Feb. 1 WayneCouncil, No. 10, R. ft 8 M., Stated Assembly. Saturday, Feb. 3. Loyal Chapter, No. 49, O. E. S., Stated Meeting and Social. The Snake btene. ' In most accounts of snake charming In India the snake stone play an Important part When the charmer Is bitten the atone Is applied to the bite and la supposed to aid In his recovery Writing In the London Field. Lieutenant L. Mackenile gives some notes on two of these atones, which be had the opportunity of seeing. They were triangular In shape, flat and rounded, with smooth polished black surfaces The are aald to come from the hills of Tibet and to be the solidified saliva of the markbor. This animal Is spoken of la Lieutenant Mackensle'a noto a the "Persian snake eater." Its sallrn ta thought to contain an antidote to anako poison. Ihe markbor is a ape cits of wild goat found la India, Tibet tad Kashmir. , Jean of Are's Ball. Ia the cathedral church of Notre Dame, Parts, there Is a bell which dates from the days of Joaa of Aro"the blessed bell" which sounded the tocsin when the Maid of Orleans sp-, peered la August 1420, and Paris was besieged by the English. This historic bell, referred to by Vctor Hugo In "Notre Dame ds Paris." was given to the cathedral In 1400 by Jean de Montalgn. It-wis rtfounded In 1638 sad then rebantized under the noma at Em manuel Louise , Tberese in honor of Louis XIV. and Marie Thereas of AustrianLondon Qlobe. ' Ha Knew Jim. iStm had made an unsuccessful attempt to conquer the world and came back to . the Tennessee town dirty, worn out and hungry. "Uncle John." be said melodramati ejnlly, "I came home to die." ;No, dod gast you." said unsympathetic Uncle Jim. "yon cams boms to ejatr Success -Magazine. I It Surely Wl)l "And yon like chicken. 8am Y !r"Ueer 1 certainly does, boss." i "And you get 'em once In awhile?" "Ob, sure, boss, 1 gets 'em." - "How do you get 'em. Sam?" "Well, boss, you know dat ol' sayln. Ixve will Had the way.'" Yonkers Statesman. GUOIOUSBITS OF HISTORY A ROMAN TRISUTS TO LIN COLN. By A. W. MACY. . About a year after the death , of President Lincoln there wsa found In the basement of the White House a Urge stone with . an Inscription, In Italian, of ' whlah this Is a translation: "To i Abraham Lincoln. President for . the ascend time of tho Ameri. r ssn Republic, citizens sf Rem ! present this stone, from tho , wall of Servlus Tulllue, by . which tho memory of each of , thees bravo sssertors of liberty .may bs aseoetateoV No ona f about the Whits House knew anything about the stone, or had over heard of It. No en ! remembered having heard Llni eeln speak of It It seema that after hlo re-election these Ro : man patriots, wishing to show ' their admiration of hla character and their appreciation sf his work, took this atone from tho f,wal of tho wlso and luet aid , Roman emperor, had tho In. esrlptlea. placed upon It. and aant M klna m -!- - tv.iimvnilli It la believed that In order to avoid oetoHety, and In keeping with hla madsst nature, he quietly placed the stone In tho bassmint and aald nothing out H ta any ona. It may now bo seen In the custodian's room of tho Lincoln monument at SpriaallslsY where R was pissed by direction of eengrseo. CecTrlcht, XtU. ky jassah B. Rewktaj

7y Tlid Anorhliooj aj AlaT , ( l 1 leaa Advertisers has ea V J iTh J aad eortifiod to

Who is Going To The Legislature? Who is going to the legislature from Wayne county? ' There would probably be mors Interest taken la who goes if the nominations and elections were held oa the eve of the meeting of that body. . There is no doubt that usually a man who rune for the legislature Is as little considered as any officer that ws elect particularly at nomination time. When the water works question la considered we may bewail the fact that there is no public utilities commission. When the election of a United States senator la on hand in the legislature we may commence to talk about the direct election of senators. When a congressman or a governor la put upon an unwilling constituency we have about the lack of good primary laws. When the legislature refuses to respond to what we may think is public sentiment a lot of us wish that there were a statewide initiative and referendum law. By the same token when a new constitution Is mentioned to take the place of the one now existing, and law suits aa to the procedure, squabbles over the legality and the like come up, an initiative and referendum clause would help quite a lot as it did in Oregon where the people have remade their constitution as the necessity presented itself. Likewise when a city administration takes it into its head that it is more wise than the unwise citizenship which placed it in office, people become interested in commission government, for by that means star chamber sessions over franchises are rendered useless for the people have the last vote on their own franchises, leaving the officials in the position of executives anxious to be sustained by the same citizens who elected them. These things we say are apt to bother us and interest us at any other time than the right one. Consider the ways of powerful selfish interests: What does a public service corporation do when the candidates come out it demands at once to know where the man stands. Sometimes the public service company has no need to ask for it knows that the gentleman In question can be "handled." If those citizens who profess themselves interested in their own welfare would take this sort of thing to heart they would see that under the present system the time to put a man on record is when he comes out. If a man voluntarily obligates himself in good faith to carry out certain pledges and fails he may be as unpopular as Mr. Taft and others who have tried it. The people of Wayne county have a way all their own of attending to such cases. Keeping public promises is now regarded as mighty good policy in this neck of the woods.

Who will be a candidate for the place to be filled in the 1913 legislature? It may not be very long until some one announces himself for the place. The salary is not commanding, the expenses of being elected hardly more than balance. It seems to us that Wayne county will be missing a chance if it does not send a man to the legislature who is dependable and progressive. It is. certain that public utility questions, city government bills, matters of state-wide importance of a progressive character will all come up. Who ia going to the legislature?

SEE THE FUNNY SIDE. Uea Your Senae of Humor Whan Dietreaaing Situation Aries. Humor proves to be the saving clause of many a distressing situation. The trouble with most of us Is that ws take our troubles altogether too seriously. Ws fail to see the funny side of things that for the moment concern ua, even though we are quick to grasp It when we are mere onlookers. In the face of gathered clouds that asem to shot out the sunshine forever It Is not a bad idea to remind ourselves that this old mother earth baa been revolving on her axis for countless ages, that generations of men have corns and gone for 'thousands of years and that the march of human progress bss gone right along In the forward direction despite what seemed to be occasional setbacks. "Laugh and the world laughs with you." There is humor In nearly every situation If we can only see It from the right angle. Those of us who try to smile In adversity and think how much more laughable it would be if conditions were reversed at least feel toss uncomfortable over it and take pleasure In looking forward to the time when the shoe will be oa the other foot-Omaha Bee. Hanged In Yellow Ruff. Aa Instance of a fashion being extinguished by exhibiting it on a criminal was seen in the execution of Mrs. Turner, who was hanged at Tyburn Nor. 15. 1015, for being concerned in the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury. She waa the inventress of yellow starch, and Lord Chief Justice Coke in pronouncing sentence told her she had been-guilty of the seven deadly sins, snd as she was the originator of yellow starched ruffs and cuffs so be hoped she would be the last to wear them. He gave orders that shs should bs hanged In the garb ahe had made soj fashionable, ana sne was the last to wear It London Chronicle. Veleanie Glass Mirrors. Ancient people polished obsidlum, commonly known ss volcanic flats, snd used It ss a mirror. The woman that owned a mirror in olden times wss considered belonging to the nobility or tbs vulgar rich.

IYSPEPSIA, MS, SOIE'ESS, HEARTBURN, OR IHOIGESMJ riili PROLIPTLY VANISH.

Your out-of-order Stomach will feel fine in five minutes. e Every year regularly mors than a million stomach sufferers in the United States, England and Canada take Papa's Dia papain, and realise not only immediate, bet lasting relief. This harmless preparation will" digest anything you oat and overcome a sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach five minutes afterwards. If your meals don't fit comfortably, or what you oat Uea like &lump of load In your stomach, or if you have heartburn, that ia a sign of Indigestion. Get from your Pharmacist a So-cent ease of Pape'a Diapepsin. and take a dose Just aa soon aa you can. There

RIDING A CAMEL

A Strenuous Task That Premetee a Love of Walking. Riding a camel Is by no means aa easy or enjoyable method of locomotion, according to the description glron by Mr. M. J. Randall in hla book. Sinai In Spring:" "If aaked 'How do you ride a camel T I reply invent as many attitudes as yon can and employ them all In turn; adjust and readjust tbs rugs andcush ions on which yon sit; ride straight; ride crooked; ride with stirrups mads of rope; ride without them; bitch first your right knee round the front pommel, then your left knee; stretch your self wide legged over the saddlebsgs regardless of the firearms, dates, crockery, etc., which they contain until nature commands you to make s less obtuse angle: ride side saddle, if you can persuade your Bedouin that it is possible to do so without prejudice to the camel. Ride bow you will and when you will, but above allwalk. Not only is the sheik himself glad at your suggestion, but not otherwise to mount for awhile, but It Is a lesson In graceful riding to watch him perched up there, heaven knows how. in some oriental way you have never dreamed of, and It ia a lesson in courtesy to mark bow at every turn of the road be offers to forego bis pips of peace chibouk and post of comfort and descend to the sand, leaving you to incumber his beast of burden." Slameee Drug Storoa. A Siamese drug store is a curious place. Almost all of the drugs on sale are in a crude form, and the shelves and pigeonholes that line the sides of the shop are filled with billets of wood that are supposed to bs medicinally valuable. Then there are heaps of bones of many kinds of animals, the skulls of monkeys, tho claws of the tiger, horns of buffaloes, tusks of elephants, etc., tied with straps into bundles. In addition, you will find packages of snake skins, bodies of insects and many familiar spices, such as cloves, .allspice, nutmegs, cardamom seed, etc. These latter are in large open boxes and give s balmy odor to the atmosphere of the store. It is proposed to erect a statue of Joseph Priestly, at Birstall, near which b was born in 1733 will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with add, no stomach gaa or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling In the stomach. Nausea, Debillating Headachea, Disiness or Intestinal griping. This will ail go, and. besides, there will be no sour food left over In the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape'a Diapepsin is a certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it takes houd of your food and digests it Juat the aame aa if your stomach wasnt there. Relief in five minutes from ' ail stomach misery Is waiting for you at any drug store. These large 50-cent caaea contain more than aufficient to thoroughly cure almost any case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion or any other stomach diaor-

ir. ....

Get Right With God

Address cWKvered at Keswick CcAveztfioa by Rev. F. S. Webster, oa Psalm 139 HE teaching of this paalm is that all our secret thoughts are spread before the Lord like an open book, and there ia not a page hidden from him are you glad it is so, or does the knowledge of God's penetrating eye fill you with discomfort and alarm 7 The psalmist waa not afraid of God's knowledge of him. He opens this psalm by dwelling upon It; be closes by returning to the same truth. and inviting God to make special search and inspection ot all his in most being. David waa sot afraid ot this scrutiny, because his whole heart waa set upon being right with God. The supreme Importance, the absolute necessity, of being right with God. We find this beautifully Illus trated in 1 Sam. 4:5. "And when the ark of the covenant of the Lord came into the camp, all Israel abouiedj with a great about, ao that the oarttrl rang again." There waa tremendous enthusiasm in the snout. The honor of the people was touched. They bad suffered a defeat, their patriotism waa fired, they were fighting for their homes and their fatherland, and their religious feelings were deeply stirred. When they saw the ark come Into their midst they made certain that God waa with them. The ark was full of sacred memories. It had wrought wondrous vic tories. Before it the water of Jordan had tailed, and the walla of Jericho bad fallen down. So they made aura that God waa with them, and they shouted with such a shout that the hearts of their enemies were filled with dismay. What came of it all? Nothing but disaster! The Philistines triumphed. The ark waa captured, and the reason was not far to seek Hophnl and Phinehaa were with the ark. How could there be victory in the open field when in the courts of the Lord's house there was open sin? The people were not right with God. and so the ark could not save them. They were not anxious, they were not prepared to get right with God. They were not anxious to find God's solution of their trouble, for him to show them what was wrong. They thought they would force the hand of God. They said: "It we get the ark into our mldat, God ia sure to fight for us and to give us tbs victory." They thought they would compel God to give them the victory, although they had not humbled themselves to give him the glory. But they were mistaken. God is a holy God. He will not allow hla holiness to suffer one single taint of dishonor. So he allowed the ark to be captured rather than support the people who were harboring sin and hiding iniquity in their hearts. Because they were not willing to be right with God, the ark could not help them. The ark would soon have overcome the Philistines, if Hophnl and Phinehaa and the elders of Israel had been overcome by it themselves. Gad's arm is not shortened; but if you have eome hoping to steal a blessing without mounting the steep path of personal repentance of deep conviction ot sin, of whole-hearted surrender to God. then you are absolutely mistaken. Probably some ot the people said: "Oh yes. the day of the ark la over;" and some say now that the day of the old-fashioned Gospel is over. It Is not so. The cross never ioses its power, but you can neutralize the grace or God If you are not willing to get right with him. If you will oast yourself upon him, expecting him to ssve, to cleanse, and to keep so thoroughly expecting him that if you fall it will be a matter, not only of shame, but of surprise, because your eyes are on Jesus. Hs has undertaken and you are trusting if you get into that attitude of xalth, then the healing and the cleansing come, and the keeping ia maintained, and the heart la purified. Then there is nothing "common" or unclean about your life: it la ail sanctified, and you are right with God. God knows all about you,' and loves you in spirit of all he knows. London Christian At the End. Whatf We are going to be through this Ufo before very long. The longest life Is short when it is over; any time la short when it is done. The gatea of time wlU swing to behind you before long. They will swing to behind some ot us soon, but behind all of us before long. And then the important thing will not be what appointments ws had, or what rank, or anything of that sort not what men thought of as, but what ho thought of us. and whether wo were built into hla kingdom. And If, at the end ot It all, we emerge from life's work and discipline, crowned souls, st home or anywhere in God's universe, life will be a sue- . Prof. B. P. Bowne. Divine Thought. . Tho human mind ia made to be irradiated with the divine thought, as the diamond Is made for the light. The central forces ot our lives are these thoughts and wishes and purposes of ours. Rev. Wash. Gladdea, Unitarian. Colnmbue. O. TRAIN THE MIND. If we work upon nsarble it wfl perish, i we work upon brass wis efface ft, 2 we res they w3 crumble into dust, but i we work upon awmortal nsnds, 2 we imbue' meat with principles, with the m-t (est of Cod and love of to si Webster.

TO

f

Though you may read thla right aide up There Is another way about; When, ao you smoke, or eat, or sup, Those simple stanzas you may flout Ah. well, tho world will wag along! Men will take pen and ink to writein cadence tender, or full atrong. In motor mild or full of might. Tho veree ia ready hand on hilt That tells of brave old days agone. Although it has a Uvoly lilt You may peruse It with a yawn, To tost tho poetaster's art In silver dawn or ebon night Tho aong that bubbles from tho heartIt Is not always gay and light. To enow the dream a that fancy brought In language thrilling, tense and terse. To limn tho figures of his thought When one would do a clever verse, The trouble Is whore to begin. One may not a 1 way a spread his wins.; Tho muoo la hard to woo and win Perhaps you care not for auch things! To make the rhyme and motor blend. Though pen and Ink be used in vain. Those versos road from either end: This loading fact must bore remain. Though here your carping gaze you cast And though you wear a critic's frown. You could have road tho first verse last. Tou might-have road thla upside down. Coal. Coal, like gold, diamonds and other luxuries, is found in mines. It is a brunette lignite. It is several thousand years old. Its manufacture began Ions; before the conservation of forests waa considered. Coal is the result of trees and ferns and flowers and grass and things getting entangled with the carboniferous era. and be will explain that It is charged oa your bill, pro rata. Coal is regulated in price by the law of aupply and demand, euphemistically speaking. It increases in price ten cents per ton per month during the summer. There is no way to utilise coal ashes. If there were, we would have to pay tor them or return them to the coal man. In the United States coal goes into the furnace; in Alaska It goes into politics. Gas is made from coal; also coal tar. From coal tar we derive many medicines, which are sold at approximately the aame price aa coal. Ask your coal man what he thinka of the carboniferous era, and he will explain that it is charged on your bill, pro rata. Coal makes heat, also heated conversation. Coal mines are located along railwaysusually where the haul will bo long. Coal ia measured by the ton. A ton of coal weighs almost as much as a ton ot feathers, but does not last so long. Eggs. The egg is a perishable commodity. When it is over two years old it can only be served in an omelet. In the early days, before modern science had made auch rapid strides, we got fresh eggs. Eggs two days old were given to the poor or thrown at a mark. Nowadays more eggs than ever are laid, but for some reason it is not thought, wise to let us have them fresh. They are put in cold storage until they ripen. They are then sold to us as fresh eggs, twenty-four hour eggs, strictly fresh eggs, and so on down to eggs. The next step will be to preserve the cackle of the hen on a phonograph record and throw in a cold storage cackle with each egg. The Chinese eat eggs that are very, very old but they know it. So do we but we pretend we do not know it. We cling to faith in our fellow When It Began. "Adam, dear," said Eve one morning in Eden, "I wish you would take this leaf down to that maple tree on the Euphrates snd match It." Naturally, this was along about the falL Just So. Though Arnold Bennett win not tell The deep impressions he has of ua. So long aa all hla hooka will aell Tho chances are that ho will love us. Ten Bailing vessels, eacn a century or more old, still are In service in Denmark'a merchant marine. CmraESTmSFILLS

Heart tbHeart TailiB. Bjr CSV? IN A. IfVB.

CLEOM AMD L Claon hath a million acres; Not a one bar I. Qoon dwoUoUi la a palace; In a cottage 1. Oeon hath a dozen fortunes. Not a penny 1. Tot tho poorer of tho twain Is CI eon and not 1. Oeon. true, posaesaeth acres. But the landscape I. Half the charm to mo It yleldeth Money cannot buy. Charles Mackay. One day last summer 1 stood In a beautiful park drinking in the beauty of the landscape. A stranger paused and feasted bis eyes on grass and foliage and flower, and I knew by the rapt look on his face what waa hla keen enjoyment. But Cleon was there. A rich man rode in his carrlsge and gazed wearily ahead. Ills thoughts were not of the trees and the birds, but ot his stocks and bonds, of hla per cents and discounts, lie did not even see the park. The driver, whose eyes glowed as be looked about him, owned more of that landscape than did the rich man who paid big taxes to keep the park. He was poorer of the twain. Two women with jaded faces lolled In their limousine. As they passed they talked of yesterday afternoon's game of bridge whist and of how Mrs, So-and-so "cheated ahnmefulty." They barely glanced nt the stately trees and the lovely flowers. They did not possess the park. And I said to myself. "These have a mania for possession, it Is true the millionaire tor his acres, tho women for their Circassian furnished chambersbut they own nothing worth while." Said Robert Louis Stevenson: "If we were charged so much s head for sunsets or if God would send round a drum before the hawthorn -comes In flower, what a word wo should make about their beauty V Because we cannot buy the sunsets and the spring mornings and the autumn afternoons and the scent of the glorious outdoors we are apt to esteem them too lightly. There are Cleoas wbo care not for landscapes, but for acres; not for beauty, but for possession. To him wbo can see and love the won der and the beauty, to him Half the charm It yleldeth Money cannot buy. Christmaa Merriment.. ' "So you persuaded old .man Grow Che- to have a Christmas tree?" "Yes. But I'm afraid It will be a failure. Ho is too practical In hla Ideca. Ho Insists on giving his eldest son a pair of mittens and a crosscut aw.M Washington Star, --v--I,; Synonmys. The French Canadian always has trouble with the aspirate "th." At debating club in the province of Quebec members were required to draw a slip from a bat and debate upon the subject they received. A young countryman arose. "I have drew the word 'bat I must told you dsre Is two, tree different kind of bat. Dere is de pat wot you play the baseball wit, de bat wot fly In de sir at night and also de bat where you take de swim." Success Magazine. After the Honeymoon. "Anyhow, Jack, you cannot say that I ran after you at the time of our marriage." "Yon never spoke a truer word, Maria, but neither does the mousetrap run after the mouse, yet It catches It all tbe same." Begy's Mustarine Best remedy on earth for sprains, lameness, sore chest, lame back, neuralgia, toothache, painful bunions and callouses. A big box for 25 cents. Just rub It on, that's all. Will not blister. Be sure It's Begy's. For sale by Leo H. Fihe. PUBLIC SALE The undersigned will sell at Public Auction on the farm known as the Berheide Farm, now owned by C. T. Wright, one and one-half miles southwest of Richmond on the Ablngton Pike. Wednesday, January 31, 1912 Beginning at 10 O'clock The personal property as follows: 4 Horses 4 Four good horses. 12 Cattle 12 Twelve head of cattle, three good milk cows, and 7 head brood sows. Grain 1500 bus. corn and 400 bus. oats. Hay and Straw 7 tons ot timothy hay, 5 tons of clover hay, and 6 tons of oats straw. Farm Implements of all kinds, harness, rubber tire carriage, rubber tire buggy, two farm wagons, butchering utensils, and many other articles. 57 bus. of Apples. Terms of Sale All gums of $5 and under, cash; on all sums over 3 a credit of nine months will be given purchaser giving note with approved security, 4 per cent off for cash. CT. WRIGHT J J. H. DHUMFIEL D. C. BROOKBANK, Auctioneer. JACOB HAN ES, Clerk. Ladies of Elkhorn Church will furnish lunch.

The Hunting Hern. The exact period ot the introduetk& of the bunting horn Is unknown,',' but tt was certainly In use on the continent ot Europe earlier than the thirteenth century, tt was about tu.s period that tbe Instruments in use ceased to be the boras of the ox or the aurochs and were again made metal, like the ancient military trumpets of the Greeks and Romans. In tbe fourteenth century they were made sometimes ot ivory and even of crystal "gamy d'argent emallle."-Belly's Magazine.

RHEUMATISM Any kind, also Liver, Kidney, Lumbago. Stomach and Blood Diseases. CURED by Denns Sure, Safe and Speedy Cure. Only 25c. ftg At Druggists or by Mall 5JJ(J.Denn'a Rheumatic Cure Co.. Columbus. Ohio For Sale by A. O. Luken ds Co. Political Announcements REPRESENTATIVE. LEE J. 'REYNOLDS, of Wayne County. Candidate tor Representative, subject to the Republican nomination. HARRY GATES, of Richmond, candidate for Representative, subject to the Republican nomination. " PROSECUTINQ ATTORNEY WILL W. RELLER, Candidate tor Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. RALPH H. HUSSON. Candidate tor Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. DENVER C. HARLAN. Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. GUS HOELSCHER. Candidate tor Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. GATH FREEMAN, Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject tc tbe Republican Nomination. COUNTY TREASURER. DANIEL B. MEDEARIS, Center Township, Csndidste for County Treasurer, subject to the Republican Nomination. . NIMROD H. JOHNSON, Wayne Township, Candidate for County . Treasurer, subject to Republican Nomination, THOMAS I. AHL, of Wayne Township, Candidate for Treasurer of Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination. HOMER SCHEPMAN, or Wayne Twp Candidate tor.. County Treasurer, Subject to the Republican nomination. FRANK B. JENKINSON, of Boston Township, Candidate for County Treasurer, subject to the Republican Nomination. MONT TORRENCE, Candidate for County Treasurer, subject to Republican Nomination. COUNTY RECOROER. JOHN DARNELL, Candidate for County Recorder, subject to the Republican Nomination. . JOHN C. KING, Candidate for County Recorder, subject to Republican nomination. BENJ. F. PARSONS, Candidate tor County Recorder, subject to the R ' publican Nomination. JOHN E. PELTZ, Candidate for Recorder of Wayne County, subject to .Republican Nomination. COUNTY COMMISSIONER. THBO P, CRI8T, Western District. Candidate for County Commissioner, aubject to the Republican Nomination. J. F. GROVES, Candidate for Commissioner of Wayne County, (Western District), subject to Republican Nomination. ELIAS M. 'HOOVER. Western Dis tiict, Candidate for County Com missloner, subject to tbe Republican Nomination. HOMER FARLOW, Eastern District. ; Candidate for re-election, subject to tbe Republican Nomination. SHERIFF. ALBERT B. 8TEEN, Candidate for reelection for County Sheriff, subject a the Republican Nomination. Special Price on CANDIDATE CARDS HOWELLS PRINT SHOP o IS So. 11th SL Phone 106d e o We Carry the Union Label e mm r w .;; rwiztH OU lucu iue Ready Money To clean up your little outstanding bills and start the New Tear with but one place to pay. come to us; we will loan you what amount you may need and you can pay us back in small weekly or monthly payments to suit your income. All transactions strictly confidentlaL CalL write or 'phone and we will give your wants our immediate attention.

TOe Efeyrtrr tf Ttei ftesr