Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 203, 29 June 1912 — Page 6
PAGE SEVEX ?AGE SIX THE KICH3IOXD PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGKAM, SATURDAY, JUXE 29, 1912.
JJjLAJDIUM ASUN-TIXEGBAM, SATURDAY, JUXE 29t 1912.
fs NOT YET NOMINATED
(Continued from Page One) jgation for which I am authorized to speak is not. willing to participate in he election of any candidate who is Iwilling to violate his pledge to this convention and take the nomination at khe hands of Mr, Murphy. "The Democratic voters who in structed us for Clark, instructed us with the understanding that he was a progressive Democrat. "lie is," shouted a chorus of dele gates. "He's a better Democrat than you," came another shout. "Mr. Clark represented an appeal for support on no other grounds," Bryian continued. "They contended that Mr. Clark was more progressive than Mr. Wilson, and indignantly denied there was any connection between Mr. Clark and any reactionary within the party. "On no other condition could Mr. Clark have received a majority of votes in the Democratic delegation from Nebraska. Thirteen delegates from my state are prepared to carry out their Instruction. Some of the delegates, I can't say how many, because we had no chance to talk will not participate in the nomination. "I Bhall withhold my vote for Clark as long as the New York delegation Is instructed for him. "I shall not be a party to the nomi nation of any man no matter from what section he comes unless he is absolutely free? "He must be a candidate of the peo ple for the people and by the people. jXow having explained the position taken I now announce my vote for Wilson." Before the vote was announced GoviFir.or McCorekle interrupted. After iuiet ensued he said. "Do you intend 1o support the nominee of this convention, if he is elected by the help xjf the New York vote?" asked McCorTt.'e. Bryan answered. "If we nominate candidate who is under no obliga tions to these influences, I shall offer a resolution providing that he shall se lect a campaign committee who shall shoulder the embarrassment I have tuffered from these influences. 'I refuse to be a party to the nomi nation of a candidate and refuse to support him after he has been nomi nated over my opposition, just as the law distinguishes between the lawyer who defends the man after he has committed the crime, and the lawyer who conspired with the men to commit a crime." The hall was thrown into confusion. John B. Knox of Alabama said that the convention had something else to do besides listen to Mr. Bryan. After an hour's interruption the poll of Nebraska was taken and they proceeded to vote. THE NIGHT SESSION. BALTIMORE, June 29. The dawn, 4ull and gray, was flirting with a new Vky of action at 3:05 o'clock this morn- , ing - when the Democratic national '.convention dropped the curtain on the most sensational political fight ever ; seen in a great national gathering with ; no one of the candidates before the convention within sight of the presidential nomination. It was agreed that the combat should be resumed at one o'clock this afternoon and after a brief period of sleep, the leaders on all jp'des were again at the hand to hand struggle, preparatory to the renewal of I hostilities when the gavel dropped in the afternoon. The early morning encounter was the story of a stampede that failed the narrative of a running, beautifully manaped attack and defense. It brought Cbamp Clark to the possession, on jene ballot, of a majority of the convention, but it failed of its purpose ithe shaking loose of the bulldog hold that the Wilson men held on their nest fc-gg strength. To keep the record straight and "have a homing point for mental calcrlations, one must hark back a couple cf hours to pick up the essential facts that when the sixth ballot was taken i t 9:42 o'clock last night, the first of the night work, Wilson showed a total strength of 304 votes. This is of chief importance because of what followed In the early hours of the da v. Jumping to the close of the fight to make the connection plain, when the twelfth ballot had been duly recorded end the tired delegation had gone to bed, Wilson had in his total column the identical 354 votes with which he Eiarted the night. Lively, Bitter Fight. . . The remainder of this story is the tale of a rapidly running fight lively end bitter that took place in the early hours of today. Every shade of its Lmultl-colored setting is touched with the most brilliant light of the individual color. Flags, music, men frantic with enthusiasm, hope and fear, women dizzy with the excitement of the morning and expert leaders running at full tilt from delegation to delegation to tighten the guy lines of the several elements, all combined to make a rcene that no person who saw it will ever forget. It was 19 minutes, after midnight The eleventh ballot had been started. Hardly had the 24 votes of Alabama been placed mechanically in the "Underwood" column, before it was evident a ferment was in progress. Roger buluvan of Illinois, was making a personal round of the delegations. He etopked long enough at Pennsylvania. He even sought William Jennings Bryn for a talk, and Bryan immediately Ror up ana went to tne Aew York delcgfctlon wiiere he talked with Charies F. Murphy. - Connecticut had wavered In her decision and had asked to be j-asEed. Massachusetts followed suit, j frtit ataospbAf was fuli of uncertain- j
ly. McGraw of West Virginia joined in the party calls that were being made on the delegation. Openly before the press stands he arranged with (.eorge Fort Milton, the Tennessee editor, to send thirteen delegates over to the Clark column. Nellie Bly Plays Part. Then came a rumor that Bryan's friends were preparing to send his name into the contest and that a demonstration was on tap. .Nellie Bly, the noted newspaper woman, went forth to verify the report. With woman's wit she' asked Bryan if he expected to make a show and (htm getting little satisfaction, suggested: "Suppose I start a demonstration for you?" Either Bryan saw through the ruse in the question or he was astounded by the proposal. He quickly flushed and replied: "If you do, I will leave the hall." That was all the newspaper woman wanted; merely to know where he stood. New York was reached in the balloting while the floor work of the leaders rtogressed. The delegation from the empire state was on its feet, eagerly
caucusing. All eyes went to the spot ii the center of the hall. The hands of the clock dropped to nineteen minutes after midnight, the clerk called: The state of New York: Chas. Murphy advanced to the center of the aisle. A buzz of conversation Flopped. "Mr. Chairman," began Murphy, "The New York delegation has polled. It stands eighty-one for Clark." He rever finished that sentence for half f.r hour. In the meantime there was action of the most thrilling description. McGraw's West Virginia fighters plucked their standard and started a Clark parade. North Carolina, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, Kentucky, Montana, Kansas, California, Illinois, New Mexico, Washington, the District of Columbia, Massachusetts and Rhode Island joined the procession in the order named. A mighty cheer marked the making of the Murphy announcement and the blarting of the parade. The entire convention, delegates, spectators and. police guards were on their feet and on chairs. Men scaled their hats over the assemblage as small boys would throw chips at play. The gallery became a moving, waving mass of humanity and of flags. Clark Demonstration. Six men bore a huge flyer with the word- "Massachusetts" on it around the hall. A picture- of Clark, larger than any barn door in his native state, was carried by a dozen men. The band, hardly able to make a dent in the din, broke into: "Every time I come to town. The boys keep a kickin' my dawg aroun'." The banner bearers who had jumped into the demonstration with Clark banners that had ever been in evidence in the convention, began cake walking down the center aisle to the country dance music. The dance started a yelling contest. California's great blue, white and gold banner was borne in through the rear of the hall. The entire shouting, howling, Clark-mad crowd went around and around the hall, and then climbed up the steps to the chairman's desk, planting their banners and state standards about Ollie James. Every one of the executive officers on the stand seemed to favor the proceedingsc and helped it along. The sergeat at arms beat time for the cheering, and Ollie James smiled his largest fourteen foot smile. For twenty-two solid minutes the outbreak continued. The Wilson host, stunned by the sudden switch of New York, sat dazed for a moment, and then every worker among them flew to the other delegations, as men along the Mississippi upon the time of a flood fly at midnight carrying sacks of sand to protect a threatened levee from a dangerous break. The flood was at its crest. It was sweeping down on the Wilson ranks with the avowed purpose of demolishing them. The question was, could the Wilson forces so protect its levees that they could stand the strain. The score stood, with the addition of New York to the list, Clark 407; Wilson, 138; Harmon, 33; Underwood, 84; Marshall, 31; Bryan 1; Kern, 1; and the call was not halfway down the state list. The anxiety over the exact situation aided the sergeant at arms to get a semblance of order. Wilson Makes Rally. He pleaded and pounded, demanding attention. Curiosity to know what was coming got the upper hand of enthusiasm for what had already gone before and the delegates paused in their wild riot. The clerk, with the entire house under intense nervous pressure, said, inquiringly: "New York, 81 votes for Clark?" Murphy was in the center of the aisle again. He took up the incompleted sentence of the half hour ago as though he had never been interrupted. "One for Underwood, eight for Wilson." Again he was stopped by a wild demonstration which was based upon a New York delusion and a snare, for hardly had it died when the cool Murphy continued, without breaking the tone of his disconnected response, "Under the unit rule, ninety for Clark." Had a fire engine hose turned an ice water stream on the Wilson host the effect could not have been more startling. Had a man dropped a powder magazine in the act of exploding into the Clark camp the result could not have been more suddenly violent. The one groaned and hissed; the oth er cheered until the building shook. Four minutes of boisterous cheering and of agonized "booing" followed. Then the roll was picked up. and everybody hung upon the call to see whether the Clark flood was going to wipe away the Wilson plantations. Evidently the Wilson workers sha struck pay dirt on their hasty rounds for Oklahoma first blocked the flood. When her name was called at 12:45 o'clock a delegate started a speech TVs bars concluded," he began.
"that Clark is the party's choice." Alfalfa Bill There. There was a roar from the floor. Men climbed in their chairs again. But Alfalfa Bill Murray, the lengthy leader of the Wilson side, was instantly in the breach. He climbed high above his fellows, draped his grotesque figure about the standard of his state and shouted: "We came to this here convention in two sections. We stand now just where we were when we came. We don't join Tammany." "They stopped Alfalfa Bill with a wild storm of cheers that instantly progressed to a Wilson demonstration. By nearly ten minutes it eclipsed its preceding rival in point of endurance. It was the first sack of sand thrown upon the Wilson levee to stop the incoming rush of the angry m ighty Clark tide that threatened to stampede the convention and make the "noun' dawg" song a national air. The sack of sand worked perfectly. Alfalfa Bill Murray had checked the stampede. The conservative ranks had suffered chiefly from the switch to Clark. It wiped out the Harmon vote, it took a cromp in the Underwood balance that did not weaken the situation for the Alabama man to any considerable extent and left the Wilson strength practically unimpaired. After the tenth ballot the tide receded somewhat and it became evident that no nomination could be made during the night and a hasty agreement was reached to adjourn. As the delegates went from the hall there was much discussion of a compromise candidate with Kern's name prominently before the delegates. Mayor Gaynor of New York was also mentioned, but
there was no decided drift in his di rection. SIGN A JW PLAYER Murphy to Play Outfield for the Locals, Sunday. When the Quaker City lads face the Middletown aggregation tomorrow at Athletic park one new face will be teen in the local line-up. Murphy, who hac been playing with Dayton teams, will be in the right garden in place of Wollenhaupt, who will be released oy Manager Braxton. The Richmond team is now in third place in the K. I. O. League standing smd in case fate smiles the right way tomorrow will step up into her former place next to the'leader. The Quaker youths have been practicing considerable during the past week and are in good condition. In case the weather is favorable one cf the largest crowds which has visited the Athletic park this season is expected to witness the contest tomorrow. Both teams are striving to obtain tomorrow's game and the result will give ene or the other teams a good chance t'j go up to the top of the league standing. NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD There were 62,543 working women organized in Italy. There are now fifteen trade union members of congress. A new weekly labor paper will soon be issued in Toronto, Ont. In New York City, 80 per cent of the factory girls get less than $6 a week. A referendum vote has been ordered by the Coopers' International Un ion on the proposition of establishing a home for aged and infirm members. Plans have been started by farmers throughout Kentucky to form a cooperative chain of stores for the purpose of reducing the high cost of living. Sheep Herders union of Butte, Montana, is sending out an appeal for moral and financial assistance in the work of organizing the sheep herders of the country. The two factions of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers are considering a proposition which, it is believed, will bring them together under one head. A new organization, to be known as the Embroidery Workers' International Union, of America, has recently been formed and will include every worker employed in the embroidery industry. A state federation of labor has beeni organized in Louisiana with a membership of twenty-seven unions. Action was taken applying for a charter from the American Federation of Labor. By an overwhelming majority the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America recently voted to re-affiliate with the building trades department of the American Federation of Labor. A recommendation that the universal eight-hour workday at a minimum wage of $4 a day be established in Massachusetts will be made to the council of stationary firemen's unions, which meets in Brockton in July. The paper manufacturers of Holyoke, Massachusetts, recently voluntarily granted an eight-hour day with no cut in wages. The majority of the employes in the paper mills formerly worked eleven to thirteen hours per day. The Ohio State branch of the Journeymen Barbers' International Union of America will continue its present fight against Sunday barber work, and introduce a bill into the general assembly providing for a State license for barbers. Adding Insult to Injury. "Why am 1 gloomy 3" demanded the undesirable suitor whom she had heartlessly ignored. "Isn't it enough to make a man gloomy to be cut by the one he loves best? "The idea!" exclaimed the heartless girl. 1 didn't even know that yoo .shaved yourself." Catholic Standard and Times.
THE LIBERTY BELL
Favors For Fourth of July Feasts. PATBIOTIC FAVOR BOXES. A charming and unusual luncheon plan is a Liberty bell table, the idea beginning with the flowers and extending to favors and all minor details. The centerpiece, by way of a change, might be a hanging one, a bell formed of flowers and depending from the chandelier or by ribbons from the ceiling. Again, you could have the conventional low bed of flowers and Just above this one of the silver Liberty bells in papier mache which come for holding candy. Have this swung from the chandelier or from the celling by ribbons and fill it with favors to be distributed after the luncheon, or you can fill It with sweets and have as favors little chocolate or silver paper Liberty bells, with the names of the guests written upon them in icing or red ink, as you choose. Replicas of the old Liberty bell can easily be made provided one can construct the frame of wire by covering the frame with paper which has been dampened, then molded into shape. The outside is afterward tinted in a dull bronze, with the date 1776 across the surface in gold lettering. However, these trifles are so inexpensive that it would be a waste of time for any one to try to make them at home. There are any number of variations of the articles typical of Independence day shown in favors which will not only add interest but attractiveness to the Fourth of July entertainment. Useful Traveling Suit. Scarlet or green silk is introduced in smart touches on the black aud white tailored costume, as evidenced in this X - JS." PEPPEB A&D SALT COS TUMI. good looking suit of black and white check, which has a collar and enffs of black satin faced with apple green. The Key. "And where, my fellow citizens," appealed the political speaker, "can we find an instrument so fit, so delicate, so adjustable and at the same time so unassuming and popular that it will unlock every department of state for the benefit of the people?" "The hairpin r shrieked an enthusiastic suffragist in the audience. He Knew Toe Much. A curious Malayan legend says that in olden times the waters surrounding Singapore were so infested with swordfish as to make it impossible for the fishermen to pursue their daily task. A boy advised the rajah to let down into the water freshly peeled stems of the banana plant, and, this being done, the fish imbedded their swords In the steins and were easily killed. The boy genius was considered a danger to the throne, and be was execntetl lest be grow up and become a conspirator.
L J (s
GARFIELD TO GET ROUSING WELCOME The Gennett Theater Will Be Packed to Hear Progressiva Leader Speak. On Tuesday Wayne County will set the pace for the progressive movement in Indiana. James R. Garfield, former secretary of the Interior under Theodore Rooseclt, son of President Garfield, member of the committee of eighteen entrusted with the plans for a new Progressive party, will come to Richmond on Tuesday at 1:10 to confer with the progressives of this county. Or Tuesday evening he will address t he mass meeting at the Gennett theater which has been called for the purpose of repudiating the action of the National Republican Committee in riding over the expressed will of the voteis and for organizinz some means by hich the progressive can vote for progiessives in this state and nation. On his arrival he will meet with the committee or arrangements and with the men of the new' organization all o'er the county. Until then the people of Indiana will have to mark time. Garfield will lay before the Indiana ITogressives the final deliberations of the progressive committee. The following day these pians will le taken up by the conference which Edwin Lee, former state chairman of the Republican party, has called to meet in Indianapolis. The local committee on arrangements has been more active in perfecting the organization all over the county than at has in spending money for the lavish display that is usually associated with political movements. They feel that as the money for the organizations will not be borne by the corporations of the country that this would involve an actual waste of money. They take the position that only those who care more for principle than for red fire along the line of march will be interested but at that they are confident that the Gennett theater will be packed after the interest shown
earlier in the week. Letters have been received from all ever the district announcing the readi ness of progressives to join with the Wayne county men. There is no doubt now that the new party will have plenty of followers. The committee has had liO difficulty in getting men all over the county to take up the movement to the extent of organizing the commities. On Tuesday when the names of the uen who have volunteered to help the movement along are published it is certain to make an impression of sta bility, according to those who have been canvassing the county. Many farmers will be in town from f.ll over the county. In every community the feeling has run very high and is only counter balanced by the people in Richmond who believe that a third party is necessary in Indiana to get progressive measures through the legislature. This sentiment has grown since the Baltimore convention has been in progress. : The Masonic i Calendar Monday July 1, 1912, Richmond Commandery No. 8, K. T. stated -con ciave. i l Tuesday, July 2, 1912,. .Richmond Lodge No. 196, F. & A. M, 'stated meeting. Thursday July 4. 1912, Wayne Council, No. 10, R. & S. M., stated assembly. A Blunt Critic. A famous art expert was talking at a dinner in Philadelphia about some of Sargent's cruelly realistic portraits. "Sargent once painted a Philadelphia woman," he said, "and when the work was finished the lady's coachman called for it. As the coachman was studying the portrait Sargent said to him: " 'How do you like itr "The man answered thoughtfully: " 'Well, sir, ye might have made it a little better lookin. mebbe; but it ye had, ye'd have spoilt it "Washington Star. An Architectural Affectation. There Is a "Mvtval Vnited Insv ranee" building in Philadelphia, a "TeTtonia" building in New Orleans, a TTibvne' building in Chicago, and several "clvb bulidings in New York and Boston, but this fact is due rather to affected scholarship rather than to wrong font stonecutters. Christian Science Monitor. At Red Gulch. "Mr. Mayor, we've got a horse thief in jail." "Well, keep him there." "But for how long? He's an expense to the town.' "Oh, hang the expense." So they did. Kansas City Journal. Anxious to Be Missed. Ran ta way I'm going to leave the stage. Friend You'll be missed if yon do, old man. Eantaway That's just the reason I'm retiring. I'm tired of being hit. Good breedic? is the result of much good sense, some good nature and a little self denial for the sake of others. Tkr Twilight Of rjffe. The masdea of the stomach ia H are era not strolls' or active as ia youth and ta erst Itieoce old people axe vctt subject to constipation and indigestion. Jiaar seldom bava a bevel movement witbont aid. at any. lso. baee inirilnasam eractariona of g-aa from Jiestemacb after eatiaa-. AH this can be trxnAid by tbe aae ef Dr. CaJdwetf's Syrnp Fepsav a-hicb pennaneatiy reroutes tb boweU so that assases come aatanUy. and so strengthen tbe stomach that food is dig-estnd wit boot discomfort. Drcrrist sen it atSB cents er C a aZ bottle.
The
Scrap Book Storing Lean. A Memphis character well known about town as brilliant, but boozy, was persistent in bis applications for loans and extremely careless about repaying them. Several years ago this man tiad induced a local bank to loan him f40 and had given his note therefor. At the end of each three months he Invariably apieared and asked that the note be renewed, and as there was nothing else to do the bank always renewed it. One day be went into the bank and said to the cashier: "I'd like to renew that paper of mine you have here." . Certainly," replied the cashier. "I'll fix it up for you." The cashier made the proper preparations for the renewal, and as he was fixing up the paper he said: "Say. the directors were talking about this paper of yours the other day. They decided they wouldn't charge you interest oa it any longer." "That's very considerate of them," was the reply. "1 am glad to hear it. I am under obligations to them." "No." continued the cashier. "We're not going to charge you interest: we're going to charge you storage!" Saturday Evening Post. The Book ef Years. In lep 1 turned the votume of my yttn. The leaves were many, rough and soiled and marred. And here and there a line was blurred and scarred Where to erase it I had tried with tears. No page was perfect, but through all there ran Fair lines and many spaces white and clear. Ah. small they were, the blotted lines too near. But each showed where a higher thought began! Unknowingly I traced these pages Interlined. I thought them but loose leaves soon torn and lost. I knew not then the tears which they should cost When in the western sky my sun declined. Could I but write them now how fair they all should look When the great angel comes to close and seal my book! Ninette M. Lowater. Wit That Wen. When the late Stilson Hutchins owned two newspapers in St. Louis he kept standing along the top of the editorial page of each, "While the Dis patch and Times are under the same proprietorship, they are under distinct and separate management." One day be learned that Stanley Huntley, author of the "Spoopendyke Papers his correspondent at Jefferson City, had been celebrating unwisely. He telegraphed, dismissing him, and signed the message "S. II." Huntley replied: "I was gay last night and am sick today. My condition of today and my condition of last night, while under the same proprietorship, nre under distinct and separate lnanagenient." Hutchins wired back, retaining Huntley and raising bis salary. He Got ths Room. In "Coal Oil Johnny's" flush times he went to a hotel and registered, but the clerk would not give him a room because he bad no baggage. Johnny was not going to be stopped by anything like that. Although it was well along In the evening, he went to the house of a trunkmaker and woke him up. He made him a dazzling offer, and the dealer came downtown and opened up. Two expressmen were dug up similarly. The oil prince Fortunatus then went back to the hotel and said, "I want that room; also I have twenty trunks, and I want them all delivered in my room immediately." A Little Previous. , During the latter part of the war between the states Basil Gildersleeve lay one day apparently at the point of death, surrounded by several members of his family. "Brother," he murmured faintly, "I have, at most, only a few days to live, and when I am laid to rest I want you to have my new pair of boots In the closet yonder. I paid $250, Confederate, for them, and you are sorely in need of a pair." Instead of the expected burst of gratitude, there was no answer. Racked with emotion at the thought of his great loss, the brother was evidently too much overcome for speech. "Brother," persisted the future "immortal" weakly, "you mustn't have any foolish sentiment about those 1 toots. I will never be well enough to wear them again, and it would be pure extravagance to bury me In them." Still, the brother, his face flushed, his heart too full for utterance, made no reply. "Won't yon promise me to wear the boots after I am gone?" Gildersleeve pleaded. "Basil." stammered the other, crimsoning with confusion, "I've got 'em on now." Mark Twain's Mission. Mark Twain did not cherish a fondness for the average office boy. He had an idea that the genns was Insufferable, and inTariably when the humorist sallied forth into some business office there was immediate armed hostility between him and the boy. One day Mark went to see a friend at his office, and tbe office boy on guard, in icy tones, said: "Whom do you wish to see? Mark mentioned his friend's name. "What do yon want to see him about?" came next from the boy. Mark Twain immediately froze np. and then with a genial smile be said: "Tell him. please. I want to ask his hand in holy matrimony. Temple ef Bena: Don't call Brooklyn the City of Churches," says a globe trotter who Is equally familiar with tbe Iludson. the Ehine, the Ganges and the Nile There is a city in India which is looked upon as "holy by Buddhists and Brabmas which might dispute the title. Benares has about 2,000 temples, and in these and fixed in the narrow streets where tbe public is free to worship are about 500.000 idols. According to Hindu belief, it is the gate of paradise, to which all who dwell within its walls enter immediately. New Tork Tribune.
Ocean Cannibals.
Such fierce carniTorous fishes as exi In the depths cf the ocean are an known at the surface. There is a "black swallower" which devours other finny creatures ten times as big as it self, literally climbing over its victim, first with one Jaw and then with the other. Another species is nearly all mouth, and. having no power of locomotion. It lies buried in the soft ooze at the bottom, its hesd alone protruding, ready to engulf any prey that may wander into its cavernous jaws. Then is a ferocious kind of shark resembling a huge eeL All of these monsters are black as Ink. Some of them are perfectly blind, w hile others bare enormous, goggling eyes. No ray of sunlight ever pierces the dark, unfathomed cares in which they dwell. Each species is gobbled by the species next bigger, for there is no vegetable life ta feed oa. Spare Moments, -gfryy MAN'S JUDGMENT. Each man in his sphere, however narrow or extended. wiU find that his feOoMr men weigh his character and his abilities often and unconsciously stamp him with their estimate and that the average resultant of these frequent averages is just. Cm rterrepoot. STOP PAYING RENT! New 5 room house, cement cellar and walk. 2 kinds water, electric lights, etc., north-east, near car line, reliable party can pay $50 cash, balance $15 monthly like rent. See me at once. 121 So. 13th St Phone 1730. TURNER W. HADLEY AOs K, Bn FOR SALE ORPINGTONS C. Buff Hens at V .00 Each. Also j . . . cheap. A. E. Schuh. Richmond, Ind. FOR SALE ROSE AND SINGLE COMB RHODE ISLAND REDS EGGS FOR HATCHING Phone 2511. PRIZE WINNING 8. C. W. ORP- e) INGTONS Five Ribbons and 7 Specials on 7 birds. Book your e order for eggs. Some extra good pullets for sale. Also S. C B. e) Minorcas. Milton Poultry Yards, e Milton, Ind. e White Wyandotte Eggs FOR SETTING e 50c and 75c a Setting e e I am importing my roosters from e) the East from a 250-egg strain. e C. E. 8AINE, e Phone 2484. 1230 So. I St. FOR SALE 2 PENS WHITE- WYANDOTTES e Phone 4155 e RALPH COOPER, e R. R. No. 3 e Sure CURE for GAPES in Chicks and Turks Geo. Lane Phone 1851. 715 N. B SL . Use Globe and Purina SCRATCH FEEDS For Sale at e e W B. GARVER'S e 910 Main SL Phone 2198. e FOR SALE EGGS From Thor- e oughbred INDIAN RUNNER DUCKS, 50 cents per setting; S4'00 per 100. e MRS. ALBERT SWAIN, e Fountain City, Ind. S. C. Buff Orpingtons Cook Byers Martz strain. Eggs, e e Pen No. 1, 2J0Q; Pen No. 2, $1.50 per setting. Good hatch guaranteed. Richmond show, 1912 e e 9 entries; 6 prizes. e J. W. RETHMEYER 355 Richmond Ave. e THIS WEEK Three Pieces Popular Music for 25c WALTER RUNGE 23 North 9th Street RAIGHEA Sapcrtenr Elcetff e Fixtures) Dtrcet From nsacer te Craighezd tlS Mala St. Plauablaa eTtElectrle Co. FLOOR SHINE MOP For Sale At rfinii7T?a ronrruv m
W 1 1 it
