Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 67, 28 January 1913 — Page 6

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SU X-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY,.! AN VARY 28, 1913.

PAGE SIX.

SOL DNS FROM

F SH1VELY ACT Will Support that Public Utilities Bill or any Other Bill which Measures up to Its Standards. (Continued from Page One) our representatives to do something for us?" Senator Fleming raised the point that Barker was not speaking to the subject, and after a demonstration from the gallery on what the speaker -was saying Senator Fleming interrupted him, saying: "If I want to be entertained I will go to a show. This is a meeting on this bill, and is not for a show." Gallery Voice Interrupts. A voice from the gallery interrupted, Baying, "It is a meeting of the people." Mr. Barker proceeded again, saying the people's property has been stolen from them, and again Senator Fleming asked him to state specifically what property had been stolen from the people. Some one suggested from the gallery that the streets had been stolen, whereupon Mr. Fleming recited some: thing of the history of street railways Jn Fort Wayne, his home town. He said he had resigned from the directorate of the street car company there after losing $50,000. and that the company never had paid a dividend, although it had added millions of dollars to the value of property in Fort Wayne A man in the rear of the chamber asked him "On how much watered stock?" "Not one penny, sir," exclaimed the Fort Wayne senator. "I asked this gen tleman his politics," Mr. Fleming continued, referring to Mr. Barker, "but he did not answer my question; I assume he Is a Socialist." Mr. Barker interrupted again, denying he was a Socialist. "Then I respect you more for it," Mr. Fleming added. Barker then declared that shortcomings in the present system could be remedied by the single tax idea. WHEN YOU ARE BILIOUS. Food ferments in your stomach when you are bilious. Quit eating and take a full dose of Chamberlain's Tablets. They will clean out and strengthen your stomach and tomorrow you will relish your food again. The best ever for biliousness. For sale by all dealers. BOWLING NOTES Y. M. C. A. Standing. W. L. Pet. Neffs 12 6 .667 Millers 10 8 .536 Hares 10 S .55i Harlans 10 8 .556 Weeds 8 7 .53 ? Gentles 4 17 .195 The Gentles won two games from the Millers on the association alleys last evening. Hughbanks, of the former team, secured high score with 191 and also high average with 156. Score: Millers. Lange 106 121 137 Buhl 144 112 97 Miller 1S1 133 165 Sprouse 122 146 17C Blind 117 134 112 620 646 6S7 Gentles. Gentle 175 166 112 Hughbanks 147 VJl 129 Henley 131 146 156 Lybolt 142 163 133 Nusbauni 98 149 117 693 835 652 Animal Speoies. Geologists declare that in prehistoric times there were on this planet 31.000,000 different animal forms. Naturalists have classified 312.000 species, and there are now 470,000 forms, of which 60 per cent are insects. A GOOD BREAKFAST Some Persons Never Know What It Means. A good breakfast, a good appetite and good digestion mean everything to the man, woman or child who has anything to do, and wants to get a good start toward doing It. A Southern man tells of his wife's

WAYNE

AVOR

"good breakfast" and also supper made out of Grape-Nut6 and cream. He says: "I should like to tell you how much good Grape-Nuts has done my wife. After being in poor health for the last IS years, during part of the tinw scarcely anything would stay on her stomach long enough to nourish her. finally at the suggestion of a friend she tried Grape-Nuts. "Now, after about four weeks on this delicious and nutritious food, she has picked up most wonderfully and seems as well as anyone can be. "Every morning she makes a good breakfast on Grape-Nuts eaten just as it comes from the package with cream or milk added; and then again the same at supper, and the change in her is wonderful. "We can't speak too highly of GrapeNuts as a food after our remarkable experience." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They re genuine, true, and full of human Interest. . (AlTtrt:umBt) ,

GEORGE

A Painting Genius Who Is Little Known, but Who Ranks with Bundy and Connor in Local History. Mistaken Notion of the Province of Art Criticism.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. Mr. George Baker, of this city, a native genius and a painter of extraordinary power and charm, has, in the window of the Starr Piano Company, two pictures of the winter landscape which display his talents at their present climax. For Baker's art is, or should be, a series of climaxes. Snow is not often depicted to the layman so realistically. What is snow, as seen by the artist, is not always the enow seen by the average observer. There are all sorts of tints and nuances of light to the painter of the snow covered landscape that are not visible to the ordinary. And the very essence of the painting art is to interpret what is seen of the artist in terms intelligible to the onlooker. Baker does this. All the beauty of the snow is there but it is the beauty that all see. And it is painted with unerring abandon. Here is an artist who should have a big public. Obscure and unknown he would rank many an artist of reputation. He possesses a technique peculiar and individual. An exquisite color sense. And an immense virility in handling. Eside from Bundy, now living, and Connor, dead, this city has produced no one to equal Baker in pure painting gifts. For two years he did not touch a brush to canvas.-' Last Spring he returned to his brush and palette. And recently he has been painting industriously. He will be represented in the coming Herron Art Institute exhibition in Indianapolis. It is a thousand pities that this town does not encourage art by buying pictures. That is the thing that tells. It is the criterion by which the art spirit of a community may be judged. And, measured by this rule of one, this town has no art spirit. Else she would not permit native genius to languish. What is a dramatic criticism? The average person will say "It's a roast." That is the average person's notion of any sort of an art criticism. Or a criticism within the domain of the arts. Whether the fine or the associated arts. "Criticism" is defined, generally, as j something adverse. ! When the truth is a criticism can ' be favorable or unfavorable. i "The play the picture the opera," j what not, "was criticised," may have been said. With that the general interpretation is unfavorable , or what is termed in the vernacular, a "roast." i The truth is that there are certain ' traditions, canons, rules for a dramatic criticism, let us say. They concern the "dramatic unities," in the first place. They look to the mechanics of the play. To the characterization. To the plot. To the exploitation of the whole. And to the human medium through which the meaning of the playwright is filtered. Also to the ethical significance, if the production can be brought into the ethical plane. That is, if it is of sufficient importance to be considered from the ethical standpoint. All this is put into the dramatic critic's pot to boil, so to speak, and the essence of the whole is skimmed off and served up to the former's public. There is nothing funnier to the average newspaper person than the idea that the public has of his relation to the paper and through the paper to the public. There is an idea current that the newspaper sends its representatives out on slamming expeditions to rout out unpleasant things about people and institutions. That the paper or its connections take out private grudges in the columns of the paper. That wherever you can work in a "roast" there is where you marathon to the presses. When the fact is that the rules of the average paper are strict in this regard. Generalizations must be adhered to. In the news columns. Editorial comment and special feature articles give more latitude. Personal responsibility is held to in these departments from the fact that they are more intimate in character. That they are either the utterance of the paper itself or of a writer whose name is attached to the article. On the other hand, facts are desired. Accuracy is the first requirement of the well regulated newspaper and personal bias is not permitted to color the record of an event. Dramatic criticism Is better known to the general public than the commentary on any other of the arts. Since the theatre appeals to the greatest number of people. Many persons have the notion that it is the province of the theatrical writer to frequent the amusement places with the expectation of "roasting" everything in sight.

MONDAY & TUESDAY 2 REEL FEATURE

BAKER

When there is nothing the average , dramatic critic wants to see more or j looks for harder than something that can be commended. But the dramatic art has been so stultified, so thrown out of joint, so debased, so smirched by its unworthy deflection and exponents that it is not always possible to find it. And the public is largely responsible for the status of the theatre. The stage reflects life in more ways than one. And its character is determined by that of its patrons. All the managers want is a hint as to what the theatre-goers in their tur" ?nt' t . I And the latter gets it. ; So that it is really the taste of the 1 day that is exemplified in the playhouses. i The curious phase of the dramatic critic's activities is, however, that if he does not "roast" a nroduction or play he is at once accused of laying down before the managers. Of being in cahoots with the latter. And, for a consideration more or less on the side, boosting their busl-; negg ( The one surmise is, generally, as mistaken as the other. The honest theatrical writer neither makes a practice of "roasting" or "boosting." It is his desire to get at the true inwardness of the attraction on the boards and then comment upon it as intelligently as is possible to his mentality, education and experience. There is nothing to be gained either by the public or the exponents of an art by indiscriminate lauding on the one hand or unheeding denouncement on the other. Why is a thing good or bad? That is the question to answer. In as far as there is anything either wholly good or bad. In the writeup of an exhibition of pictures, in instance, that paper's clientele in which the notice appears should have a discriminating opinion by the person writing the latter. Simply to huzza whrough a column or two means nothing. To bombard with critical missies through the same space means as little. Nothing is unqualifiedly perfect or imperfect. And if that portion of the public which attends plays, concerts, the opera and art exhibitions and which has not been instructed as to the peculiar canons which govern the creation and exploitation of any of the arts exemplified in the presentation, has no accurate or informing commentary what is gained by the presentation? Absolutely nothing. Or at least very little in the enlightening of the public. If, for example, a certain picture in any current exhibition in this city, should seem out of harmony with the painting ideals and practice, and this column should make what seemed an intelligent comment to that effect, thi3 should not be construed as a "knock." Neither should an attempt at an analysis of the lack in a play seen on the local stage be interpreted as a "roast." There is always a standard. There is always an anchor. And the work of art or attempted work of art must be seen and heard frim this vantage. Death by Boiling. In old England, before the law was passed which prohibited "cruel and unusual forms of nunishmeht." murder ers were often condemned to death bv boiling. In such cases the victims were chained in large kettles of cold water, which were gradually heated until it caused the flesh to drop from the bones. The last English victim of the "boiling death" was one Rouse, a cook, who. it was alleged, bad killed seventeen persons. A Bad Egg. "Owens is trying to strike every one he meets for a loan. He's a bad egg. that fellow." "Why do you call him that?' "When he's broke he makes the fact deucedly conspicuous." Boston Transcript. No Deception. Toff You told me that horse was free from faults. Why, It's blind. Dealer Blind? Well, that's not a fault. That's a cruel misfortune. San Francisco Chronicle. oooooo BORRT o o The body is nerer at rest. Every seven original cells have been broken down - - o o o o o o o o o o o o o o THIS process is a necessary grind of life's cog wheels or cycles proceeding rapidly while we work bard with brain or muscle and stowing down while we rest or sleep. Thus the chief factor in this constant chance this death and birth of the tism. is the bleed.

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From Chas. Reade's Famous Novel

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Home of the Mirror

RICHMOND MAY NOT ENTER NEW LEAGUE However, Independent Base Ball Will Be Played

This Season. SIGN LESTER CLARK Organization to Be PermanentMeeting Will Be Held Tonight. In case Richmond does not get into a good circuit this year, independent baseball will be played in this city during the coming season. Baseball lead- . . rs of Richmond met and organized and are laying plans for a baseball team to represent this city next summpr Officers of the organization stated today that through a change in the j ownership of the shares of the ath letic park, the same men that own the ba8eball team own tne pVk. They ... , expect this change to make the organization permanent. Committee to Manage. Lester Clark, who played with Richmond last season, has been signed and appointed field manager for the season. Instead of the team being managed by one person as formerly, the management will be in the hands of a committee. These plans will be formed in detail at the meeting of the organization tonight. George Brehm stated this morning that efforts are being made to organize a league embracing New Castle, Muncie, Indianapolis, Rushville and Richmond. He said that unless the circuit is satisfactory to the Richmond managers, they will not enter the team in any league for the season. The officers of the organization are Harry 'Pathties, Pres.; George Reid, Vice Pres.; Walter Steinkamp, Secy.; Charles Eubanks, Treasurer. Jimmie Braxton, managed the team last season. SCIENTIFIC PUZZLES. Some Queer Things One Learns In the Study of Chemistry. Every one knows that the diamond is only charcoal crystallised, but there are a great many othei things in nature that, though possessing widely different properties, are composed of exactly equal quantities of the same elements. The white of an egg and rattlesnake poison are formed of Identically the same amounts of the same elements. The oil of roses and common coal gas are each formed alike, both being composed of four atoms of hydrogen and four atoms of carbon. Sugar and gum arabic are likewise brothers of the same weight and texture. All the hydrocarbons, known to science as a combination of sixteen atoms of hydrogen and ten atoms of carbon, are alike In their composition. To enumerate some oil of orange, lemon, cloves, ginger and black pepper. The suggested explanation of these peculiarities is that the atoms are'plao ed differently toward one another in the molecules of the different substances. Other things just as peculiar are evident when certain substances are unit ed chemically. Thus hydrogen gas. which is odorless, and nitrogen gas, which is also odorless, when united go to make ammonia, which has a very strong odor. Copper, which has no odor, and zinc, which also has noue. w,len melted and mixed to give us 1 br8- Produce a substance with a very characteristic one. -Chicago RecordHerald. An Easy Tongue For Poesy. Burns, of course, is untranslatable, for when he attempted common English be was commonplace. But he took his opportunity with the Scotch poets who have the delightful language that has no consonants. You can rime anything with anything. Scotch is the easiest language for rime. Among the most beautiful of Bums' poems is "Mary Morison," with Yestreen when to the trembling; string The dance went through the lighted ha To thte iny fancy took Its wins; I sat. but neither heard nor saw. But saw doesn't rime with ball unless you speak Scotch and omit the consonants. Yon will perceive that a Scotchman cannot belp writing poetr when be can make anything rime with anything.--Loudon Chronicle, AGAIN oooooo o o o o o o o o o years we are practically bora again. Our thrown out and replaced by new ones. IN anaemic ("thin blooded) people, those who are pale and puny, or those who carry the sign of poor, poisoned blood in pimples, blotches or boils upon their body we know the cells of the body are not getting sufficient oxygen carried then by the red-blood corpuscles. o o o o o for trial box of tablets. 5f Screen:

WAITRESSES HIRED Girls Will Serve at Hotel Hereafter.

Hereafter the Warden-Westcott hotel will employ only girls to wait on the tables in the dining room, according to Harry Barrows, manager of the hotel. Mr. Barrows stated this morning that the management wished to try this plan for the hotel and that the change would probably be permanent if it proves a success. He stated that all the hotels under the Ward en Hotel company's management were using girl waitresses and the plan had proved successful in every case. Ne gro waiters will be discharged. Ten girls will be employed. Vicarious Candy. . A gronp of children were playing in s gutter. A passerby walked slowly, watching the active preparations of a "little mother." aged about seven, who was marshaling her charges into order, apparently in preparation for some urban excursion. Something had gone wrong, and one small kid was howling. "Shut your noise. Tommy Higgins. and be good this minute:" admonished the motherlet, with a promissory smack. "If you don't stop like I tell you I'll leave you right here in the mud gutter. You can't go wid us till yez closes yer noise and be's a good boy. Do you know where we're goin'? Well, we're goin' in the next block to the candy factory to smell the candies cookin". And do you yer know what they're makin' today? Well, it's chocolate creams and pep'mint." New York Press. Monkeys Are Fighters. "Most persons will guess lions or tigers are the most dangerous animals to train." said an animal trainer, "but they're wrong. Give a lion one good licking and he'll remember it. He hits back only when his man is down or has his back turned, but a monkey will fight against any odds, and you never can tell when he'll hit back. Even a medium small monkey can strike a blow that will reach through a coat, vest and two shirts, and he leaves a nasty wound. The most daring thing I ever did was to go into a monkey cage and take a baby from its mother. The ordinary house cat is the most stubborn animal under training, but the monk is the most dangerous if you work the larger kinds." New York Sun. Mildly Censuring Him. "My goodness!" she says, with a pretty scowl. "I think a girl would feel dreadfully foolish if she proposed to a man." "i should think so, too," replies the diffident youth. "But then I suppose there are some girls who are just simply compelled to do the proposing." she sighs. After an hour's consideration of that remark he realizes what she really means. Woman's World. Diplomacy. Mrs. A. That cook was awful, and I am glad she's gone. Mrs. B. Did you discharge her? Mrs. A. Oh, no: I wished to avoid a scene. What I did was flatter her so about her cooking that she thought she was underpaid and left. Boston TranscriptCITY ADVERTISEMENT. Department of Public Works. Office of The Board. Richmond, Ind., Jan. 21st, 1913. Notice To Contractors: Notice is hereby given by the Board of Public Works of the City of Richmond, Indiana, that sealed proposals will be received by Jt, at its office, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., on Monday, January 30th, 1913, from purchasers of the street sweepings, derived from the paved streets and alleys of the city. The city will collect the sweepings daily, weather permitting and will deliver them to the purchaser at any point within the city limits desired by him. The purchaser must provide a lot on which the sweepings may be dumped and stored without making any nuisance to the public or the neighbors; or he shall provide duplicate wagons, and meet the city teams at the place of delivery, and exchange the empty wagon for the loaded one; meeting teams promptly so as to cause no delay to the city teams. Bidders shall state the price per cubic yard, which they offer for the sweepings. Payment shall be made every month, for sweepings obtained the previous month. The bidders, in submitting proposals to purchase said sweepings, must accompany each bid with a certified check in the sum of $100.00, as evidence of good faith that the successful bidders will execute, within ten days from the acceptance of proposals, contracts and bonds satisfactory to the said board to take and pay for said sweepings, as above stated. A failure of the successful bidders to enter into such contracts and bonds upon the acceptance of such proposals will forfeit the checks and the) sums of money payable thereon to the city as agreed and liquidated damages for such, failure. The Board of Public Works reserres the right to reject any or all bids. B. A. KENNEPOHL, FRED R. CHARLES. "W. W. ZIMMERMAN.

GEO QGBQ uQEKP j

" ' AESCHYLUS. T Curious Fate That Overtook the Fa ther of Greek Tragedy.

Aeschylus, the celebrated Greek t dramatic writer, is universally refer red to as the "father of Greek tragedy. Horn of a noble family at Eleusis, in Attica. 525 B. C. at the age of twenty-four he first presented himself at the festival of Bacchus as a competitor for the public prize and fifteen years afterward gained his first vietory. The pre-eminence which he thus ; acqulred was successfully maintained i till 40.S B. C, when he was defeated in a similar contest by his younger rival. Sophocles. Aeschylus, mortified at the indignity he thought this put upon him, quitted Athens and went to the court of lllero, king of Syracuse. Of the remaining period of his life but little known, except that he continued to prosecute his favorite pursuit, and lhat his residence in SKily was of some duration may be inferred from the fact that it was sufficient to affect the purity of his language. The thirteenth and last victory of Aeschylus was gained in 45S B. C. On the manner of his death, which was singular, the ancient writers are unanimous. While sitting motionless in the fields his bald head was mistaken for a stone by an eagle which happened to be flying over him with a tortoise in her bill. The bird dropped the tortoise to break the shell, and the poet was killed by the blow. Aeschylus is said to have been the author of seventy tragedies, of which only seven are now extant. THE PRICKLY PEAR. This III Natured Fruit It Remarkably Tenacious of Life. The prickly pear is said to be so tenacious of life that a leaf or even a small portion of a leaf, if thrown on the ground, strikes out roots withiu a short time and becomes the parent of a fast growing plant. Mischievous though the African prickly pear may be. it is not without its good qualities. Its Juicy fruit, though rather deficient In flavor, is delightfully cool and refreshing in the dry heat. of summer, and a kind of treacle is made from it. Great caution must be exercised In peeling this curious fruit, the proper way being to impale the fruit on a fork or stick while one cuts it open and removes the skin. The Individ nal who undertakes to pluck this treacherous fruit with unguarded fingers meets with an experience he does not soon forget. Concentrated essence of stinging nettle seems all at once to assail bands, lips and tongue, and the skin, wherever it comes in contact with the ill natured fruit. Is covered with n group of minute bristly hairs, apparently growing from It and venomous and irritating to the last degree. In dry weather these spiteful little stings do not even wait for the newly arrive! victim, but fly about, light as thistledown, ready to settle on any one who has not learned by experience to give the prickly pear bush a wkle berth. RHEUtlATISEl DR. WHITEHALL'S Rheumatic Remedy For 15 years a Standard Remedy for all forms of Rheumatism, lumbago, gout, sore muscles, stiff or swollen joints. It quickly relieves the severe pains; reduces the fever, and eliminates the poison from the system. 50c a box at druggists. WW fa For A from Triml Bom. Dr. WHITEHALL MECRIMMK CO. 253 N. Main St., South Bend. Indiana. NOTICE. State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss: James M. Sheffer vs Frank Sheffer, et al. Wayne Circuit Court, January Term, 1913. No. 16256. BE IT KNOWN. That on the 20th day of January, 1913, the above named Plaintiff, by his Attorney, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court his complaint agaist said Defendant in the above entitled cause To Quiet Title, together with the affi davit of a competent person, that said Defendants are not a resident of the State of Indiana. SAID DEFENDANTS. Mary Stephens and Stephens, her -husband; Luella Cooper and Joseph Cooper, her husband; Thomas Hollett. Sr., and Hollett, his wife; John Hollett and Catherine Hollett. his wife; Albert Hollett and Minney Hollett, his wife; John S. Hollett and Miriam Hollett, his wife; Narcissa Jones and Andrew J. Jones, her husband; Thomas Hollett and Pannelia Hollett, his wife; Oliver H. P. Hollett and Mercy Ann Hollett. his wife; I.ydia Ann Hartup and Thomas Hartup, her husband; and the unknown heirs, legatees, devisees and next of kin to Thomas Hollett, Sr., and Hollett. his wife; of John Hollett and Catherine Hollett. his wife; of Al

bert Hollett and Minney Hollett, his wife; of John S. Hollett and Miriam Hollett, his wife; of Narcissa Jones and Andrew J. Jones, ber husband; of Thomas Hollett and Parmelia Hollett, his wife; of Oliver H. P. Hollett, and Mercy Ann Hollett, his wife; of Lydia Ann Hartup and Thomas Hartup. her husband; each and all deceased, therefore are hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against them and that unless they appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of the said cause, on March lath. 1913. a day of this Term of said Court, which was begun and held at the Court House in the City of Richmond, on the 1st Monday of January. 1913, said Complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be taken as true, and the said canse will be beard and determined in their absence. WITNESS, the Clerk and the seal of said Court at the City of Richmond this 20th day of January , 191. George Matthews, I SEAL Clerk. WILLIAM A. BOND. Attorney of Plaintiff. jau 21 28- leb t.

IS CHOSEBJIS HEAD

iJudkins Elected President of Company by Council. (ralladium Special) CAMBRIDGE CITV. Ind Jan. 28 John W. Judkins. Progressive representative from Wayne county to the legislature has been chosen as president of the local water works com. pany by the city council. M. H. Gaar was elected secretary and Walter Waddell, treasurer. An attempt Is being made to furnish pure water to all con sumers. Lucky Man. lie a former suitorl So yon ere married after all. You told me once that you never intended to lelong t auy mau. She Well, that remark ari l holds good "But your husbandr "Oh, he belongs to me." AHHOW COLLARS WITH CI OSE FIT! T NO TON WINTONJKis. ADRIAN 2 la. 2 forage. Cleett. PMfcody Co. CITY ADVERTISEMENT. Department of Public Works. Office of the Board. Richmond. Ind.. Jan. 20th, 1913. To Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given by the Board of Public Works of the City of Richmond. Indiana, that on the 16th day of January, 1913. they unanimously adopt ed Declaratory Resolution No. 89 1913, To open and extend an alley 12 feet wide from South I" to South "J" street between South 10th and South 11th street, by the condemnation and appropriation of sufficient lots and lands for such opening specifically des cribed: Beginning at a point 120.73 feet cast of the Southeast corner of South 10th and "I" street; thence east 12"; thence south parallel with the east - side of South 10th street to the north line of South "J" street; thence west along the north side of South "J" street 12'; thence north parallel with the east side of South 10th street to the place of beginning. Excepting so much of the above described strip of land as has already been dedicated to the public use, as shown by a plat of such proposed opening now on tie in the office of the Department of Public Works of said city. The property which may be injuriously or beneficially affected by said proposed opening of said alley, are part of lots 8. S. 12 and 13 Clearer' out-lots. AH as shown by plat of suchterritory now on file in the office of the Department of Public Works of said City of Richmond. The Board of Public Works of said city has fixed Monday February 10th. 1913, as a date upon which remonstrances may be filed or presented by persons interested in, or affected by, said, proposed opening ss above described and on said day, at 9 o'clock a. m. said board will meet at Its office for the purpose of hearing and considering any remonstrances which may have been filed or presented, and for the purpose of taking anal sction thereon. Such action shall be final and conclusive upon all persons. B. A. KENNEPOHL, FRED R. CHARLES. W. W. ZIMMERMAN, Board of Public Works. Jan. 212S. NOTICE. state of Indiana, Wayne County, ss: Clayton A. Miller vs. the unknown, heirs, assigns, legatees and devisees of George Vlnedge, deceased. Wayne Circuit Court, January term 1913. No. 16266. Be it known, that on the 22nd day of March, 1913. the above named plaintiff, by his attorrey, filed In the office of the clerk of the Wayne circuit court bis complaint against said defendants in the above entitled cause together with the affidavit of competent person, that said defendants are not a residents of the State of Indians. Said defendants. the unknown heirs. assigns, legatees and devisees of George Vlnage. deceased. The unknown heirs, assigns, legatees and devisees of William B. Thompson, deceased. The unknown beirs. assigns, legatees and devisees of Alfred Vinnedge, deceased. The unknown heirs, assigns, legatees and devisees of Ebeneser Chessman, deceased.1 The unknown heirs, assigns, legatees and devisees of Alexander McAllister Vlnage, deceased. Richard Elsbury and the unknown heirs, assigns, legatees and devisees of Richard Elsbury, deceased. The unknown beirs, assigns legatees and devisees of William Culbertson. deceased. The unknown beirs, assigns, legatees and devisees of Thomas N. Culbertson. deceased. Mason. whose given name Is unknown, widow of James L. Mason, deceased, are therefore hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against them and that unless they appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of the said cause, on March 22nd. 1913. a day of said term of said court, which was begun and iield at the court house In the City of Richmond, on the first Monday of January, 1913, next, said complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, win be taken as true, and the said cause will be heard and determined in their absence. Witness, the Clerk, and the seal of said Court at the City of Richmond this 27th day of January.. 191 3. (SEAL) George Matthews, Clerk. BENJAMIN F. HARRIS, Attorney of Plaintiff

Boaid of Public AVorks. jn 21-1

jan 2S-feb 4-lLi i I