Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 182, 9 June 1913 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, JUNE 9, 1913

2 RECORDS BROKEN IN GARFIELD MEET O'Neal Makes 120-yard Hurdle in 20 4-5 Seconds White a Star.

Two record 8 were broken in the annual track and field meet of the Garfield school on the public playgrounds Saturday afternoon when the Purples defeated the Whites by the score of 201 to 191. Two Records Broken. Neal of the Junior Whites lowered the record for the 120-yard hurdle, making the distance in 20 4-5 seconds. The previous record of 21 seconds was set by M. King in 1912. The record for the sack race held by Wilbur Kampe since 1911 was Bmashed by Butler of the Senior Whites, who covered the distance in 14 seconds. White Individual Star.

Albert White was the individual star of the meet, annexing 30 points. White was awarded the pennant which is given each year to the athlete winning the greatest number of points. Foster of the Junior Whites was a close second with 28 points. The next four individual stars were Nearon, 23; Medearis, 20 Y2; O'Neal, 17, and Kennedy 14. Girls' Competitive Games. In the competitive games for the girls, the Whites won all the contests, consisting of Folk dances, relay races and playground ball. This is the first meet in which the girls have been allowed to participate. For the PurpleB the Juniors won 84 of the total number of points, while the Seniors made 117. The Junior Whites contributed 118 to the White sum of 191. The Senior Whites added 73 as their share. The entire school is divided into two divisions, Purples and Whites.

The Seniors are those boys over 14 years, at the beginning of the term, and the Juniors are the boys under that age. Pennant Awarded. The pennants awarded this year in all branches of sport were: Junior Girls' Basketball, Whites; Senior Girls' Basketball, Whites; Baseball, Senior Whites; Track and Field, Purples; Playground ball, Whites; Girls' Athletics, Whites. These pennants remain in the school and are given to encourage athletics. The officials for the meet were Roy J. Horton of the Y. M. C. A., Referee; A. W. Clevenger and L. H. Lyboult, managers.

LEAGUE STANDING )

NATIONAL LEAGUE.

Won. Lost. Pet. Philadelphia 27 12 .692 New York 23 18 .561 Brooklyn 22 18 .550 Chicago '.. 24 22 .522 Pittsburg 22 23 .489 St. Louis 20 25 .445 Boston 17 24 .415 Cincinnati 17 29 .370

Yesterday's Results. Philadelphia 2; Cincinnati, 1. Chicago, 2; New York 1. Ten innings. Boston, 5; St. Louis, 3. No other games scheduled.

Today's Games. Boston at St. Louis. New York at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cincinnati. Brooklyn at Pittsburg.

SENATORS WINNERS IN 11 FAST CONTEST Local Team Defeats Lewisburg Nine by Score of 5 to 2.

LATE MARKET HEWS

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS

Furnished by Correll and Thompson. I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1446.

(Palladium Special.) LEWISBURG. Ohio, June 9. The locals lost a hard fought game to the

Richmond Senators here yesterday by St Paul

AMERICAN LEAGUE.

Won. Lost. Pet Philadelphia 35 10 .778 Cleveland 34 13 .723 Washington 25 21 .543 Chicago 26 23 .431 Boston 20 24 .455 Detroit 19 31 .380 St. Louis 20 33 .377 New York 10 34 .227

Yesterday's Results. No games scheduled.

Games Today. Chicago at New Ycrk. St. Louis at Philadelphia. Detroit at Washington. Cleveland at Boston.

AMERICAN

ASSOCIATION. Won. Lost Pet.

Columbus 28 Milwaukee 32 Louisville 28 Kansas City 28 St. Paul 25 Minneapolis 23 Indianapolis 19 Toledo 18

18 22 23 26 24 28 28 32

.609 .593 .549 .519 .510 .451 .404 .360

WANTED Competent House Man. 115 N. 10th. 31 tf

STUPP A STAR IN GAME JITH GRAYS Richmond Wins From Cambridge City Aggregation by 5-3 Score.

The Cambridge City Grays lost to the Richmond baseball team yesterday afternoon before a fairly large crowd at Athletic park. The score was 5 to 3. The game was lost by the visitors on errors, Richmond scoring three runs in the first ining without making a safe bingte. Slarp was given a base on balls, after Coblentz had fanned, and Dal reached first on an error, Slarp going to third. Another error placed Stupp on first, and two runs were scored by the local team. Stupp scored later. Richmond's other runs came in the fourth an sixth inning, Wollenhaupt making both tallies. A feature of the game was Stupp's lielding. The Richmond shortstop accepted every chance without an error, and in the latter part of the game Stupp jumped and caught a line drive that looked good for a safety. The pitching of Walters was as consistent as ever, and Kerlin for the Grays also pitched a remarkably good

game. Richmond was credited with

Yesterday's Results. Toledo, 10; Indianapolis, 6. Milwaukee, 4-9; Minneapolis, 0-0. Columbus, 9; Louisville, 4. Kansas City, 3; St. Paul, 2.

Games Totfay. Indianapolis at Columbus. Toledo at Louisville. Minneapolis at Kansas City. St. Paul at Milwaukee.

CENTRAL LEAGUE.

Won. Lost. Pet. Grand Rapids 26 17 .605 Springfield 27 18 .600 Terre Haute 23 23 .500 Fort Wayne 21 24 .467 Dayton 20 24 .455 Evansville 16 27 .381

Yesterday's Results. Springfield, 3-8; Dayton 2-3. Terre Haute, 4; Grand Rapids, 3. Fort Wayne, 9-7; Evansville, 3-8.

Games Today. Terre Haute at Springfield. Evansville at Grand Rapids. Dayton at Ft. Wayne.

FEDERAL LEAGUE.

Won. Lost. Pet.

Chicago 19 Indianapolis 18 Covington 13 St. Louis 13 Clevelandd 12 Pittsburg 11

10 13 14 15 15 19

.655 .581 .481 .464 .429 .367

Yesterday's Results. Indianapolis, 6; Cleveland, 2. Chicago, 9-5; Pittsburg 3-2. Covington 4; St. Louis, 3. Ten innings.

Games Today. Covington at Indianapolis. Chicago at Cleveland. Pittsburg at St. Louis.

Open Am. Can ...... .. 23; Ami. Copper .. .. , . . 67Ji Am. Smelters CO1 U. S. Steel 534 " Atchison 95

103

the score of 5 to 2. The consistent ! Great Northern Pfd 123 and timely hitting of the visitors Lehigh Valley 150 coupled with heavy base running en-; New York Central 98l abled them to get in the lead and stay Northern Pacific 110 there throughout the game. Score: I Pennsylvania 1084 R. H. E. ! Reading 156 Senators 10002000 2 5 13 2 ' Southern Pacific 92

Lewisburg..0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 02 6 3 , Union Pacific 1434

Batteries: Knight and Sullivan; Zeigler and Frantz.

CHESTER DEFEATS QUAKER CITY NAPS

feated the Y. M. I. Naps of Richmond here yesterday afternoon. DeArmonde.

Cars containing apparatus for diinfectinsr the clothing; and baggage of

score of 10 to 8 the Chester team de-!Ch8Ufr p,ay8 at Fountain Cny

who was on the mound for Chester. J passengers who have been exposed to struck out sixteen men. Next Sunday j contagious diseases have been put in-

! to service by an Italian railroad.

CITY NEWS IN BRIEF.

Rumely prfd ..

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60 53S 94 "8 103 H 122U 147 98

109U 108H ! 154 78 ; 91 78 1438 ' 43 !

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CHICAGO GRAIN

WHEAT.

July Sept. Dec.

Open . 90 ..89 . 914

58 564

CHICAGO LIVESTOCK

Sent to "Doghouse." Chester Smith and Frank Murrav

both colored, were find SI anr! rnefs ! CORN.

in police court this morning on the ' Juy charge of public intoxication. Murray j SePwas ordered placed in the "doehouse" I Dec

at the county jail. Smith at first ! OATS. pleaded not guilty to the charge of Jul' 38 public intoxication, but changed his SePl 37 a pleas to guilty when he was told that Dcc 38

he would be forced to wait until Wednesday for a hearing. Small Roof Fire. A small roof fire, the origin of which is unknown, was extinguished this morning by the hose companies in the rear of the residence of G. Thurman, 1515VS North A street. The alarm was sent in from the No. 3 hose house on North A street. The loss did not exceed $5. Fiftynine Animals Consumed. During May the bodies of fifty-nine

animals were consumed at the crema

tory. A totol or 609 cubic yards of gar

bage was consumed.

Close 90 "i 90 92 584 59 56? 38 38 38

INCENDIARY FIRE

IS INVESTIGATED

(National News Association) CHICAGO, June 9 Police and fire

department authorities today were in

vestigating an incendiary fire which

before daylight destroyed the lumber

yard and factory of D. H. Fritts and

Co. The blaze caused $100,000 loss. It started in three places simultaneously. The Fritts firm employs non-union labor and David II. Fritts told the police he had feared labor troubles for some time.

EXCESSIVE WEALTH

DANGEROUS TO MEN

(National News Association) CHICAGO, Ills. June 9. Excessive

wealth unfits a man for religion and

a man wnose income is $1,000 a day has a vision so warped that he despis

es his fellow men, according to the latest theory of Rev. Martin J. Mangor, pastor of the McCabe M. E.

church. A week ago Rev. Mangor said

in his pulpit that a man who earned only $1 a day could not be religious.

No present day rich man knows how

to administer his wealth," the minister

said.

CHICAGO, June 9. Hogs, receipts 53,000, market 5c lower, mixed and butchers f8.40 to $8.65, good heavy $8.40 to $8.55, rough heavy $8.15 to $8.35, light 8.35 to $8.55' pigs $6.50 to $8.30, bulk $8.50 to $8.60. Cattle Receipts, 21.000; market steady, beeves $7.25 to $8.75, cows and heifers $3.50 to $8.35, stockers and feeders $6.25 to $8.00, Texans $6.60 to $7.65, calves $9.50 to $11.00. Sheep receipts 15,000, market steady, native and western $3.75 to

$8.50, lambs $5.10 to $7.50.

PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK

PITTSBURG, June 9. Cattle supply 3,500, market strong, choice beeves $8.30 to $8.60, tidy butchers $6.50 to $7.00, veal calves $11.00. Sheep and lambs supply 13,000, market steady, prime sheep $5.50, lambs $8.50. Hogs receipts 9,500, market steady, prime heavies $8.90, pigs $9.00.

CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK

CINCINNATI, June 9. Cattle receipts 2,300, market steady, choice steers $8.40, calves $6.50 to $10.50. Hogs receipts 5,300, market steady, top prices $8.55 Sheep receipts 1,300, prime $4.60, lambs $5.50 to $8.40. !

ALEXANDER WINS CLOSE GAME FOR PHILADELPHIA

CINCINNATI, June 9 Alexanders excellent pitching enabled the Philadelphia team to win the opening game

of the series from Cincinnati here yesterdayby a score of 2 to 1. Suggs kept the hits well scattered and was given excellent support. Packard who twirled the final inning for Cincinnati, was wild, but managed to pull through the winning with-

only four hits, against six by the-out allowing a hit. Becker, Marsans,

visitors. Seven Richmond men were left on the bases, as were six of the Grays. Cambridge City made nine errors, most of which were made by McDonald at shortstop.

UNITED STATES HAS BEEN ONJGHT SIDE Minister Speaking at Hagerstown, Gives Reason For Victories.

(Palladium Special.) HAGERSTOWN, Ind., June 9. Rev. Truman Kenworthy, of Richmond, addressed the meeting of farmers and members of the congregation of the West River Friends church five miles north of Hagerstown yesterday at the Memorial day exercises. Graves of deceased veterans were decorated. Mr. Kenworthy spoke on International peace and the various wars in which this country has been invovled. He emphasized the point that this nation has always been in the right which accounts for its victories in wars.

A CALL TO BANKS (National News Association) WASHINGTON, June 9. The comptroller of the currency issued a call for the condition of national banks at the close of business on Jane 4.

Denver Js planning to hold a world's fair six or eight years hence.

Lobert and Magee carried off the hit

ting honors of the day. Score: Philadelphia. aB. H. PO. A. Becker, cf 5 2 2 0 Knabe, 2b 3 0 1 6 Lobert, 3b 3 2 3 2 Magee, If 3 1 1 0 Cravath, rf 3 0 0 0 Luderus, lb 3 1 13 0 Doolan, ss 3 0 1 5 Killifer. c 4 2 6 2 Alexander, p 4 1 0 0

RICHMOND MARKET

. PRODUCE. (Corrected daily by Ed. Cooper,

phone 2577.) Old Hens, per lb 15c

Old Roosters, per lb 8c Young Chickens, per lb. ...18c to 20c

Eggs, per dozen 18c Country butter, per lb 20c to 25c

INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK

INDIANAPOLIS, June 9. Hogs receipts 2,000, market steady, tops $8.75, bulk of sales $8.70. Cattle receipts 600, choice steers $8.15, other grades $5.50 to $7.75. Sheep and lambs receipts 50, market steady, prime sheep $5.00, lambs $8.00 down. S

TOLEDO GRAIN

TOLEDO, June 9. Cash Grain: Wheat $1.02 Corn ... 60 Oats 40 Cloverseed, cash ..$7.80

NINTH INNING RALLY

St. Mary's Takes Contest From Earlham.

St. Mary's, of Dayton, defeated the

i Earlham baseball team Saturday by a

score of 4 to 3. The Quakers held the Catholics down to two runs to

GRAIN MARKET. (Corrected daily by Richmond Roller Mills, phone 2019.) Wheat, per bu . $1.00 Oats, per bu 30c Corn, per bu 58c

, 0. nn I their own three until the last inning, Bran, per ton $24.00 . ... , TI . , , r-AAu :,c,. when Mahoney and Hart circled the Middlings, per ton $26.00 . . . !t .

uagg, auu oaixui s, luc .cclliuaiu pill 11er, allowed by seven hits to nine by Hart. The game was rather slow on account of a wet diamond, and contained little spectacular playing. The umpire. Shields, was a student, and his decisions were disputed several times. Score: R.H.E. Earlhom. ... 10000002 03 9 2 St. Marys.. 11000000 24 7 1

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WAGON MARKET. (Corrected daily by Omer Whelan, phone 1679.) Corn, per bu 60c

p i uais, per du oi

0 I Timothy hay, per ton $14.00

0 ' Clover hay $10.00 1 1 Rye straw $7.00 0 j Oats or wheat straw -15 a ?lr

"pARM JOURNAL ("cream, not skim milk") is the great little paper published for 36 years in Philadelphia by Wilmer

It is taken and read by more families than any other .1 1 I T T-4 1 Tk 1 . I, , . .

farm paper in the WORLD. Its four million readers (known as " Our Folks ") are the most intelligent and prosperous country 11

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The Farm Journal Booklets have sold by hundreds of thousands, and have made a sensation by revealing the SECRETS OF MONEYMAKING in home industry. People all over the

country are making money by their methods. POULTRY SECRETS is a collection of discoveries and methods of successful poultrymen. It jives Felch's famous mating chart, the Curtiss method of getting one-half more (oils than cockerels. Boyer's method of insuniui fertilliv.anJ priceless secrets of breeding, leeding, bow to produce winter eggs, etc. HORSE SECRETS exposes all the methods of "bish-

oping, plufnjf, cocaine and tjaxoline doping, and other

tucks of gyps and swindlers, and et

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Gives many valuable training secrets.

CORN SECRETS, the preat NEW hand-book of Prof. Holden. the "Com King," shows how to crt ten to twenty bushels more per acre of corn, rich in protein and the best stock-teed ing elements. Pictures make every process plain. EQO SECRETS tells how a family of six can make hens turn its table scraps into a daily supply of fresh eggs. If you have a back-vard, get this booklet, learn how to use up every scrap of the kitchen watte, and live better at less cost. THE "BUTTER BOOK" tells how seven cows were made to produce ball a ton of batter each yer year. (140 pounds Is the average). An eve-opener. Get it. weed out your poor cows, and turn the good ones into record-breakers. STRAWBERRY SECRETS is a revelation of the discoveries and methods of L. J. Farmer, the famous expert, in growing luscious fail strawbenies almost until snow flies. How and when to plant, how to fertilire, how to remove the blossoms, how to get three crops in two years, etc. GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your backyard supply fresh vestables and fruit, how to cut down your grocery bills, keep a better table, and get cash lor yonr surplus. How to plant, cultivate, harvest and aurket. DUCK DOLLARS tells how the great Weber duckfarm near Boston makes every year 50 cents each on 40,000 ducklings. Tells whi- ducks pay them better than chickens, and Just itOW they do everything. TURKEY SECRETS discloses fully the methods of Horace Vose, the famous Rhode Island "turkey-man." who supplies the White House Thanksgiving turkeys. It tells how to mate, to set eggs, to batch, to feed and care for the yonng, to prevent sickness, to fatten, and bow to make a turkey-ranch PAY. The MILLION EGG-FARM pves the methods by which J. M. Foster made over $18,000 a year, mainly front eggs. All chicken-raisers should learn about the "Rancocas Unit," and how Foster FEEDS hens to produce such quantities of eggs, especially in winter. DRESSMAKING SELF-TAUGHT shows how any intelligent woman can design and make her own clothes, in the height of fashion. The author has done it since she was a girl. She now has a successful dressmaking establishment and a school of dressmaking Illustrated with diagrams. SHALL I FARM? is a clear, impartial statement of both advantages and drawbacks of farming, to help those who have to decide this important question. It warns you of dangers, swindles, and mistakes, tells how to start, equipment needed, its cost, chances of success, how to get government aid, etc Thete booklet! are 6x9 htctus, and profusely illustrated. Farm Journal FOUR full years. fn- J1 ftfl witb any one of these booklet . DOUl IOr fl.VU Tat BsekUls an MOT ssU separately "lr witfc Fata JeansL Be sure to say WHICH booklet yem want.

What Our Folks Say Abort F. J. " "I have had more help, encouragement and enjoyment out of it in one year thaa I did out oTmy other papers in tea years," aas C. M. persoas. , " It is a queer little paper. I have sometimes read it through and thought I was done with it. then pKk rt up agaus and hud something new to uiteiest me," says Alfred Krogh. J "Farm Journal is like a bit of sunshine in our home. It is making a better class of people out of farmers. It was fine, sent me at a Christmas ptesem. and I tatak it the choicest pceient 1 cter received," sas P. R. UeVaUey. "We have read your dear little paper for nearly 40

ftow we don t he on the farm anv snore, yet 1 auu nave a

hankering for toe oM paper. I feel that I belong to the family, and every pare is as dear and familiar as the faces f olJ Iriends, say Mrs. B. YY. Edwards. "I fear I neglect mr business to read it. I wish It could be in the hands ot every fanner in Virginia," sa s W. S. CUna. "I live in a town where the vard is only 15 x IS feet, tnit I could not do without toe Farm Journal," says Miss Sara Carpenter. "I get lots of books and papers- and put them aside for future reading. The only paper I seem to have in my hands all the time is Farm Journal. I can't finish reading it. Can't row make it less interesting, so I can bave a chance at any other papers? " writes John Swa.l. "If I am lonesome, down-hearted, or tired. 1 ro to Farm Journal for comfort, neat to the Bible," says Mabel DewitU "Farm Journal has a cheerful vein running through it that makes it a splendid cure for the "blors." W hen cocaing home tired in mind and bod . I sit down and trad it and it seems to give me new in-spuauoa for life," ruts G. E. Haldermaa. "We have a brother-in-Iawr who loves a joke. We live in Greater New Vork. and consider ourselves qaite citified, so when he sent ua the Farm Journal as a New Year gift we nearly died laughing 'How to raise hogs' we who only use baron in glass jars! 'Mow to keep cows c lean' -when we ase condensed milk even for rice pudding! 'How to plant onions' whea we never plant anything more fragraiit than UImb af the valley. I accepted the giit with thanks, lor we are too well-bred to look a gilt horse in tlie mouth. Soon my eye was raaght by a beaabiui poem. I began to read it. then when I wanted the Farm Joaraal I found my husband deeply interested in an article. Then any oldest son began to ask, 'Has the Farm Journal come yet I He is a jeweler, and hasnt much time for literature; but we find so niurh interest and uplut in this fine paper that we appreciate our " Year's gitt more and more," wiitcs Ella B. Buikmaa, s "I received 'Corn Secrets' and 'Poultry Secrets. and consider them worth their weight in gold," says VV. G. NewalL. "What your Ege Book tells would take a beginner years to learn," says Koy Chaney. "Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on drickraising," says F. M. Wamock. "If vour other booklets contain as much valuable information as the Egg-Bonk. I world consider them cheap at double the price," says F. V. Mansaeld. "I think your Egg-Book is a wonder," says C. P. Shirey. "The Farm Journal beats them all. Everr issue has reminders and ideaa worth a year's subscription," write T. H. Potter. "One year airo I took another asrricultural paper, and it took a whole column to tell waat Farm Journal tela) la one paragraph," says N. M. Gladwin. "It oujht to be in every home where there is a chick, a child, a cow, a cherry, or a cucumber," says I. li. Bordua.

WILMER ATKINSON COMPANY, PUBLISHERS FARM JOURNAL.

WASHINGTON SQUARE. PHILADELPHIA.

Special Combination Offer Rural subscribers of the Richmond Palladium. The Palladium to Rural Mall subscribers Is $2.00 per year. If you subscribe now, new or renewal, we give you The Richmond Palladium for one year and The Farm Journal Four Tears, with any one of the Farm Journal Booklets.

All Fop

If you are now taking the Farm Journal your subscription will be moved ahead for four full years. (It you name no Booklet, the Farm Journal will be sent for Five years.) To get both papers fill out order herewith and send it to us, not to the Farm Journal.

Richmond Palladium, Richmond, Ind.

I accept your special offer. Please send me the PALLADIUM for one year and FARM JOURNAL.

Four years, with this booklet

My name is

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Address Are you now taking the Farm Journal?

(Write "Yes," or -No."),

Totals 31 9 2

15

Cincinnati. AB. H. PO. A. E.

Devore, cf 4 1 1 0 0, Marsans, rf 4 2 3 0 0 '. Bescher, If 3 1 3 0 0. Tinker, ss 4 0 5 4 0 Almeida, 3b 3 0 3 0 o' Groh. 2b 3 0 3 4 0; Clark, c 3 0 2 4 0Suggs, p 2 0 0 4 oj Packard, p 0 0 0 0 0Bates 1 0 0 0 o'

Totals 29 4 27 Batted for Suggs in eighth.

16

Philadelphia ... 10001000 0 2 Cincinnati 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

Runs Becker, 2 ; Devore. Two-base hits Becker, Lobert, Magee, Killifer. Hits Off Suggs. 9 in 8 innings. Sacrifice hits Hoblitzell, Knabe. Stolen bases Devore, Marsans. Double play Doolan to Lobert. Left on bases Philadelphia, 8; Cincinnati, 3. First base on balls Off Suggs, 3; off Packard. 2; off Alexander, 1. Struck out by Suggs, 1; by Alexander, 4. Umpires Klem and Orth.

Facts for the Ladies of Richmond There is 95 per cent of the ladies who know when their clothes are cleaned when they come back from the cleaner, where there is only 50 per cent of the men that really know. That is why we thank the ladies for the greater part of our success in the cleaning business. We want customers who know when their clothes are cleaned. D. M. WELLING

Special

Prices

For Mil

lis week

Ladies' Long cleaned and pressed

Coats, dry . $1.00

Ladies' Dresses, dry cleaned atndp:?!!!d. $1.00

Ladies' Skirts, any kind, dry cleaned and EZ(sm pressed OUC

Ladies' cleaned pressed

Jacket and

Suits, dry $1.00

Men's two or three-piece Suits dry cleaned and J- A A pressed tJ)XUU

Men's Trousers, dry cleaned and pressed 25 C

ALL WORK GUARANTEED. WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED

Rr

MO

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PHONE 1072

D. 3L WELLING, PROPRIETOR Office and Plant 711 S. H St.

Li