Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 191, 19 June 1913 — Page 6

r

PAGE SIX TUB KlCHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, JUNE 19,

J ?

All the Latest Sport News

t LEAGUE STANDING ) ' NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Philadelphia 32 17 .653 New York 31 19 .620 Chicago 31 25 .554 Brooklyn 27 23 .540 Boston 24 27 .471 Pittsburg 24 30 .444 St. Louis 23 33 .411 Cincinnati 1 37 .339 Yesterday' Results. New York 7. Cincinnati 2. Brooklyn 8, St. Louis 1. Chicago 4, Philadelphia 0. Boston 2, Pittsburg 1. Games Today. Boston at Pittsburg. Brooklyn at St. Louis. New York at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at Chicago. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Philadelphia 41 13 .759 Cleveland 37 20 .649 Washington 30 26 .536 Chicago 31 27 .534 Poston 28 26 .519 Detroit 24 36 .400 t. Louis 22 40 .355 Kew York 14 39 .264 Yesterday' Results. Chicago 9, Philadelphia 5. Cleveland 4, Washington 0. New York 5, St. Louis 1. Boston 7, Detroit 6. Games Today. Chicago ft Philadelphia. St. Louis at New York. Detroit at Boston. Cleveland at Washington. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won. Lost. Pet. Columbus 34 24 .586 Milwaukee 38 27 .585 Minneapolis 32 29 .525 St. Paul 31 29 .517 Kansas City . . 33 31 .516 Louisville 31 30 .508 Indianapolis . ., 22 36 .379 Toledo 23 38 .377 Yesterday' Results. Milwaukee 10, Indianapolis 6. Columbus 3, Kansas City 2. Louisville 2, St. Paul 1 (13 In.) Minneapolis 4, Toledo 1. Milwaukee at Indianapolis, 2 games. Games Today. Kansas City at Columbus. Minneapolis at Toledo. St. Paul at Louisville. FEDERAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet; Indianapolis 25 15 .625 Chicago . 22 .16 579 Cleveland 19 17 .528 Covington 18 18 .500 St. Louis 16 20 .444 Pittsburg 13 27 .325 Yesterday' Results. Cleveland 5, Pittsburg 1. (No other games scheduled.) Games Today. Indianapolis at Chicago. Pittsburg at Cleveland St. Louis at Covington. CENTRAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Grand Rapids 34 21 .618 Springfield 32 23 .582 Fort Wayne 30 25 .545 Dayton 25 29 .463 Terre Haute 25 31 .446 Evansville 28 35 .444 Yesterday' Results. Dayton 6, Terre Haute 4. Evansville 9, Springfield 3. Fort Wayne 5, Grand Rapids 0. Games Today. Grand Rapids at Fort Wayne. Springfield at Evansville. Dayton at Terre Haute. Some People Like Streets Oiled Borne like a cool glass of beer the flavor and effect of Jung's beer is far more pleasing and refreshing. Phone 2185. J. F. Rowlett, Agt. C. 4th St., No 435 to 439. 19-20-21 THE MAN IN THE ORIENT. He Walks Ahead of His Wife to Guard Her From Danger, When husband and wife go traveling together In the orient the man walks In front, careless and free, and the woman walks behind, carrying the bundle. Therefore you 6ay: "The oriental cares not for his women. He despises his wife and uses her as a beast of burden." Most occidentals never get further than that But if rou are obierrvant you go out in the Jungle yourself, and you discover things. When yon walk abroad there are difficulties and dangers. The paths lire overgrown and thorny, creepers must be driven off, and buffaloes are ngly creatures. In the villages are village dogs which snarl and snap. Yon are a man, yet you will be glad of some one to go in front of you with a hatchet to clear your way. No woman would walk -in front, and the man must be free. Now you see the reason why the man walks In front. If you want to confirm it you inquire and find that this is true. Thus the Japanese, the Burman. goes In front of his wife for the same reason that the occidental goes behind from courtesy. If he continues to do so when It is unnecessary, as in towns where there are roads, it is because a convention once formed is hard to break, east or west H. Fielding-Hall In Atlantic Monthly. Financial success in raising pigs has been attained in at least two Irish co-operative enterprises. The Roscrea bacon factory is the most notable of th institutions.

MOTORCYCLIST TO

GET $125 AN Much Interest Manifested in First Annual Motorcycle Road Race. (Palladium Special) CHICAGO, June 19. There are few motorcycle racers who can earn $125 per hour. That, however, is what the winner of the First Annual National Motorcycle Road Race to be held at Elgin, 111., on July 4th, will receive for his day's work. The first prize in the race will be $500 in gold coin, and experts figure that better than a mile a minute speed will be averaged in the gruelling contest for gold and honors. Ray Seymour, the California whirlwind, himself a record holder of many marks, stated this week that he believed a speed of better than a mile a minute will be maintained throughout the contest. GIANTS THIRD VICTORY. CINCINNATI, O., June 19. New York succeeded in making it three victories over Cincinnati yesterday by winning, 7 to 2. Johnson was started as Cincinnati's pitcher, but received such a lively reception that he was pulled out before the initial inning had been completed. Demaree, the New York twirler, had Tinker's men at'his mercy at all stages except in the eighth, when he allowed two hits and a base on ball3 and two runs came across the plate. Score: New York. AB. II. PO. A. E. Bums, rf 5 2 3 0 0 Shafer 3b 4 3 0 2 0 Fletcher ss 3 1 3 3 0 Boyle, 2b 5 2 1 4 0 Merkle lb 5 1 9 0 0 Murray If 5 1 9 0 0 Myers c 4 2 4 0 0 Snodgrass cf 4 0 7 0 0 Demaree p 3 0 0 3 0 Crandall p ; 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 37 12 27 12 0 Cincinnati. AB. H. PO. A. E. Bescher If 3 3 1 0 0 Bates cf 3 0 4 0 0 Marsans cf 4 1 2 1 0 Tinker ss 3 1 1 6 0 Hoblitzel lb 4 0 9 1 0 Dodge 3b 4 1 3 2 1 Groh 2b 3 0 4 1 1 Clark c 1 4 1 3 2 0 Johnson p 0 0 0 0 0 Brown p . 2 0 0 2 0 Packard p. 0 0 0 0 0 Almeida 1 1 0 0 0 tDevore 1 1 0 0 0 JKling 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 9 27 17 2 Batted for Groh in ninth. tBatted for Brown in eighth. tBatted for Packard in ninth. New York 41000000 27 Cincinnati 00000002 02 Runs Burns 3, Shafer, Fletcher, Doyle, Crandall, Bescher, Devore. Twobaso hits Shafer, Meyers. Three-base hits Burns, Merkle. Hits Off Demaree, 8 in 8 innings; off Crandle, 1 in 1 inning; off Johnson, 3 (none out in first inning) ; off Brown, 6 in 8 innings; off Packard, 3 in 1 inning. Sacrifice hit Fletcher. Sacrifice fly Tinker. Double-plays Doyle to Fletcher to Merkle; Fletcher to Doyle to Merkle; Dodge to Groh to Hoblitzell; MarBans to Groh. Left on bases New York, 7; Cincinnati, 7. First base on balls Off Demaree, 2; off Brown, 1; off Packard, 1. Hit by pitcher By Brown, Shafer. Struck out By Demaree, 3; by Brown, 3. Tims 1:40. Umpires Brennan and Eason. ROUTINE OF THE BOARD OF WORKS Resolution for completed sidewalk cn west side of North Eighth street, accepted and primary assessment roll approved. Total cost $S51; cost to city, $50. Resolution for sewer in alley first north of Charles street between Boyer and Ridge streets, confirmed. Resolution for a seven foot cement sidewalk on both sides of North Fifteenth street from B street to C street, confirmed. Resolution for a cement walk on the north side of South D street from Thirteenth to Fourteenth street, confirmed. Petition for brick crossing at South Tenth and E streets referred to City Engneer. Petition for cement sidewalk on south side of North D street from Thirteenth to Fourteenth streets, re ferred to city engineer. Sheraton's Influence. Thomas Sheraton, although a cabinetmaker by trade, it is quite probable during his life in London, did not actually produce any furniture, as his time was too much taken np by his occupation as Baptist preacher, traetarian. drawing master, designer and publisher to bestow any attention on the manufacture or superintendence of cabinet work. His "Cabinetmaker and Upholsterer's Drawing Book" was published first in 1701 and again is 1793 and 1802. lie was possessed of keen critical insight in matters pertaining to high class cabinet making, combined with an excellent sense of proportion, sound judgment and purity of taste, and his influence on the style of furniture in the latter part of the eighteenth century was exercised through his designs and criticisms, which had no little weight with the cabinetmakers of his day. Suburban Life Magazine.

HOUR

of the Day

SPORTING NOTES (National News Association) CHICAGO. June 19. When President Murphy of the Cubs learned today that the New York Giants have purchased Rube Schauer, pitching sensation of the Superior Northern league team, he predicted promptly that the youngster would prove a "lemon." Scouts for the Cubs, taking a tip of Rube Waddell, were the original discoverers of Schauer, but when other magnates began bidding the price up Murphy backed away. The Giants are said to have paid $10,000 for Schauer, who is experiencing his first season in organized baseball. He will join the Giants August 15. ST. LOUIS, June 19. Eddie Murphy, the Boston bulldog, put up the best scrap of the year and showed the best form of any boxer who has appeared here this season when he met and conquered Harry Trendall in eight rounds last night. Art Maguire and Eddie Revoire went eight rounds to a draw in the semiwindup. POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., June 19 Indications today were that the regatta on Saturday in which six universities will compete will be close and the most bitterly contested in the history of the meets. . Cornell was looked upon a sure winner a few weeks ago. The Columbia performed some wonderful sculling stunts that made its crew loom up as a worthy rival. The trial spins of theWashington crew awakened the dopesters to the fact that the Seattle aggregation would be a strong contender. CALGARY, Alta, June 19. The trial of Arthur Pelky, the prize-fighter who was boxing in the ring in this city with Luther McCarty at the time of the latter's death on May 24, last, on charges growing out of McCarty's death, began today in the supreme court, Chief Justice Harvey presiding. The trial of Tommy Burns, promoter of the fight, has been postponed until fall. 1 HOT LINERS I I OFF THE BAT i Big Ed Wralsh aided and abetted by his salivary slants, yesterday accomplished one of the near miracles of baseball when he stopped the Athletics in their mad flight and enabled the White Sox to grab a 9 to 5 victory. Fans in New York have gone wild over the showing of the Giants in the last week, and the fact that four straight defeats handed to the Phillies has narrowed the gap between the two teams to 33 points has made the New Yorkers hopeful that their team will be roosting in first place within a very short time. "And, once they get there," the Giant fans will tell you, "it's all over but making arrangements for the world's series games." The Giants have hit their stride at last, which means that there's team in the old league that keep up the pace they will set. Temperamental Tillie" Shafer who is playing third for the Giants now, made a double and two singles yesterday, which added to tne nine other hits made by the Giants enabled them to win a 7 to 2 victory over the Reds. Johnson, the Indian twirler of the Reds, who made a line showing in the early part of the season, lately has been getting "hits" in large quantities. An odd happening in the National league has been that in the last three days the same four teams have defeated the same four opponents. The Giants have taken three straight from the Reds, the Dodgers three from the Cardinals, the Braves three from the Pirates and Cubs three from the Phillies. Ty Cobb got a single and a triple out of 4 times up yesterday, Joe Jockson went hitless after four tries. The spurt of the Red Sox has given them a firm grip on fifth place. A few more victories for the Bostonians and a couple of upsets for the White Sox and Senators will send the Red Sox into third place as they are at the present time only 16 points back of third place. We have started watch us go, is the slogan of the Red Sox rooters. And it might be an interesting sight after all. The Red Sox just now are 13 full games, a matter of .240 percentage points back to the leading Athletics. Sooner or later sport writers reason, a team must slump. If that's the case, the Athletics are almost due. If the Red Sox can utilize their wonderful hitting and pitching strength while this slump is on, they may be up within one hundred points of the leaders by the first part of July. The Dodgers got a little more batting and base running practice in St. Louis yesterday, having an easy time defeating the Cardinals by an 8 to 1 score. The Pirates lost again to the Braves yesterday. It was their sixth straight defeat. Now they are only 33 points ahead of he seventh place Cardinals. The Naps, accompanied by their bulldog mascot, called on President Wilson at the Whitehouse yesterday. He shook their hands and wished them "much luck." J. Collins, a rightflelder of the White Sox, "blew" himself ta a brace of singles, a double and a triple yesterday at the expense of Bender and Wyckoff, the Athletic twirlers. Four errors made by the Tigers at critical moments enabled the Red Sox to score a victory over the Tigers yesterday. The Other View. "We live and learn, quoted the wise guy. "Yes, until we are about forty, and then we begin to liTe and unlearn," supplemented the simple mus- Philadelphia Record.

LATE MARKET HEWS

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS Furnished by Correll and Tnompson. I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phono 1446. Am. Can 27 Ami. Coper 66 Vi U. S. Steel 53 Atchison 96 M St. Paul 103 Gt. No. Pfd 123t Lehigh Valley 151 N. Y. Cen 99 No. Pac 108 Penn 110 Reading 158 M So. Pac 95 Union Pac 146 Rumely . ., 20 CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT. Open Clos July 91 90 Sept 92 U 91 Dec 94 94 CORN. July 62 61 Sept 63 62 Dec 61 60 OATS. July 43 42 Sept 43 42 Dec 44 43 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, June 19. Hogs, receipts 21,000, market 5 to 10c higher. Mixed and butchers $8.40 to $8.70, good heavy $8.55 to $8.65, rough heavy $8.30 to $8.50, light $8.45 to $8.70, pigs $6.35 to $8.30; bulk of sales $8.55 to $8.65. Cattle, receipts 5,000, market weak, beeves $7.40 to $9.00, cows and heifers $3.60 to $8.20, stockers and feeders $6.50 to $8.10, texans $6.75 to $8.15, calves $8.50 to $9.75. Sheep, receipts 15,000, market steady natives and western $3.25 to $8.50, lambs $4.50 to $7.65. PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG, June 19. Cattle, supply 300, market steady, choice beeves $11.00 down. Sheep and lambs, supply 1500, market steady, prime sheep $5.60 lambs $8.25 down. Hogs, receipts 3,000, market active, prime heavies $8.70, pigs $8.90. CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK CINCINNATI, June 19. Cattle, receipts 1,000, market steady, choice steers $8.30, calves $5.75 to $10.50. Hogs, receipts 2,000, market slow, top prices $8.65. Sheep, receipts 1,000, prime $4.35, lambs $7.50 down. INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK INDIANAPOLIS, June 19. Hogs, receipts 8,000, market 5 to 10c higher, tops $8.70, bulk of sales $8.50 to $8.65. Cattle, receipts $1,450, choice steers $8.00 to $8.15, other grades $6.50 to $7.90. Sheep and lambs, receipts 700, market steady, prime sheep $4.25, lambs $7.00 down. INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN INDIANAPOLIS, June 19. Wheat, cash No. 2 red $1.00; Corn, cash No. 3 white 61c; Oats, cash No. 2 white 42Vic. TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, June 19. Cash Grain: Wheat $1.06; Corn 63c; Oats 44c; cloverseed, cash $12.50. RICHMOND MARKET PRODUCE. (Corrected daily by Ed. Cooper, phone 2577.) Old Hens, per lb 16c Old Roosters, per lb 8c Young Chickens, per lb. ...18c to 20o Eggs, per dozen 18c Country butter, per lb 20c to 25c GRAIN MARKET. (Corrected daily by Richmond Roller Mills, phone 2019.) Wheat, per bu $1.00 Oats, per bu 30c Corn, per bu 58c Rye, per bu 60c Bran, per ton $24.00 Middlings, per ton ..... $26.00 WAGON MARKET. (Corrected daily by Omer Whelan, phone 1679.) Corn, per bu 60c Oats, per bu 35c Timothy hay. per ton $14.00 Clover hay $10.00 Rye straw $7.00 Oats or wheat straw $5" Middlings $26.00 Bran $24.00 ! ! I MASONIC CALENDAR Friday, June 20 Richmond Lodge, No. 196, F. and A. M. Called meeting; work in Master Mason degree. Re-': freshments. 10,000 BARGAINS Generosity 5c CIGARs

MANY HORSES ARE ENTERED BY MOORE Judge William H. Moore, the noted American horseman, who has entered a string of forty blooded horses in the international horse show, which opens June 19 at the Olympia in London. Albert G. Vanderbilt and a number of other American millionaires will also enter horses. Wire Flashes (National News Association) NAPLES, June 19 Fire destroyed part of the arsenal here today with $2,000,000 loss. There were a number of terrific explosions when the flames communicated with explosives stored in the building. BERLIN, June 19. Aviation claimed I two more victims today when Herr Khaftel, a German airman, and a passenger named Girbitaz were killed during a flight over the Johannesthal aerodrome. VIENNA, June 19. Austrian jingoes are working to break up the Balkan league and are disseminating false intelligence relative to the relationship of the Balkan states, according to the local branch of the Pan-Slavic alliance. WASHINGTON, June 19. The biggest gathering of women vote seekers ever gathered together will be seen in Washington on July 30, when the affirmative report of the senate committee on woman suffrage will come up in the upper branch of congress for action. KANSAS CITY June 19. Managers of several manufacturing plants employing girls were called before the Missouri senate committee investigating wages here today to answer some of the charges made by girl witnesses who have been examined by the committee. CHICAGO, June 19. A fisherman who sat on a pier and watched William Gaines Jr., aged 8, sink to his death in Lake Michigan, was being sought today by the police of Evanston and Wrilmette, North Shore suburbs. CHICAGO, June 19. Mrs. Margaret Furnajik today did not realize that she had drowned her one-year-old baby boy and tried to cause the death of her two-year-old daughter. She was being held by the police of South Chicago pending an examination as to her sanity. CHICAGO, -June 19 Lizzie Silverman, aged 18, the only support of an aged mothert, today was making a valiant fight for hef life against almost certain death from bichloride of mercury. The girl swallowed two tablets. SPRING CHICKENS WANTED Highest market price paid for Spring chickens. Schwegman's Meat Market. 309 South 4th. Phone 2204. DR. E. J. DYKEIMAN DENTIST Hours: 8 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Evening by Appointment. New Phone 2053. 10th & Main Sta. Over Starr Piano Store. t Hadley's Grocery Try Our Coffee Roasted Today $ It Will Please You WANTED 15 laborers for concrete work. $2.25 per day. .City Light Plant. i1

If - ; V

53 Y $' 103 ; '01 ."'' 1 123 i I V 99 i V1V- ' jA 158 jT pP Mf?fr' ' I 14o , 1 20 $ i

These are regular 5c cigars. Good cigars at that. While they last 3 for 10c 8 for 25c Box of 50 for $1.50

ED A. FELTMAN Distributor 609 Main St.

BIG LINER ARRIVES New York Loudly Welcomes the Imperator.

(National News Association) NEW YORK. June 19. Amid a greeting of proportions commensurate with the size and grandeur the Imperator, the biggest passenger ship afloat, arrived in port today on her J uiaiuru i a . ;?ue rt-acueu quarantine last night but did not reach her berth until this morning. Other steamers in the bay almost cracked ; their sirens welcoming their sister. Vincent Astor's yacht Noma, with young Astor aboard, blowing an earsplitting blast, circled around th Imperator while young Astor stood on the bridge, waving his hat at the Titanic's successor. The roofs of the skyscrapers were black with people witnessing the spectacle. ENGLISH LINERS ARMED. LIVERPOOL. June 19 When the Cunard liner crack ocean greyhound ! Luistanla next sails up New York bay about the end of August black guns will bristle over her sides for all the) world as it was in the old days when Capt. Kidd and Henry Morgan made merchant shipping unsafe. In fact it has been more than a century since New York has seen an armed merchant ship, according to his records. It was not until today that it was learned that the Luistania is being armed in conformity with a recent British law. That is the reason the ship is being detained here as alterations have to be made to accommodate the guns. NEWS NUGGETS PARIS. June 18. Hundreds of persons saw a giraffe standing 15 feet high commit suicide in the Zoo here. The animal swung his neck violently several times against the wall, smashing his skull. FLUSHING. N. Y., June 18. Ministers here have arranged a vacation schedule to prevent a repetition of Ia6t year's trouble when there was none left to officiate at weddings and funerals. JAMESBURG, N. Y.. June 18. Peter Schweikert of this town, who had started to make a complaint because authorities failed to remove a pile of sand from the roadway, changed his mind about the matter when he was thrown from his motorcycle and saved from injury by falling on the sand. Exercise and Health. There was a bank clerk who saw the men of his own age losing health yeat by year through overwork. Indoor sedentary life sad lack of daily exercise. He saw them growing yellow and flabby and unfit and the spectacle didn't attract him. He decided that success had better come late or even not at all rather than at the price of a ruined body. Health became to him the choicest of tb mercies, the best ol life's comrades. TJp and away the person in health can dash to another job, to another clime, master of his fate. Ill health Is a chain that ties to tb dreariness of what Is nearest at band. After a youth of weakness and fatigue the man was happy In finding that an hour of exercise a day changed the aspect of the outer world and removed him for all time from the ranks of the unfit. Collier's. Sam S. Vigran's Specials FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY $1.00 America ALARM CLOCKS 65c $1.00 Men's Good Quality PANTS $1.00 $1.25 Matting or Rubber Cloth SUIT CASES 95c $2.75 Puncture Proof Non-Skid BICYCLE TIRES, each $2.25 $7.00 Canvas or Metal TRUNKS, full strapped $5.00 $2.00 extra quality HAND GRIPS $1.50 75c Men's Leather Purses 50c $15.00 Men's Fine Sample SUITS, big bargains at $9.50 SAM S. VIGRAN 6 North Sixth St Richmond's Reliable Pawn Broker Money to Loan on Diamonds, Watches, Firearms, Clothing. Musical Instruments or Anything of Value. BARGAINS IN UNREDEEMED PLEDGES. Give Us a Chance to figure with you. Examine our furnaces. We deliver the right goods, the right service, we spare no pains or effort to satisfy, and we do satisfy. PILGRIM FURNACE COMPANY 529 Main St. 714 to 720 So 8th Phons 1390 Phone 1685

WOMAN ARRESTED; HAD CELEBRATION Itinerant Pencil Vender Imbibed Freely in Cup That Cheers.

By way of celebrating her fifty-third birthday. Mrs. Ann Smith, an itinerant pencil vender, drank more whisky than was good for her. She had an attack of delirium tremens last night at Tenth and Mala Streets and her actions attracted a large crowd before she was arrested and taken to th Home for Friendless Women. She was fined $5 and costs in police court this morning. Mrs. Smith stated that she was 5$ years old Tuesday and that she and a girlhood friend met in Connersvilto where the birthday celebration started The jubike continued yesterday morning at Cambridge City and when the two were in a state of complete intoxication they became separated and Mrs. Smith came to this city where she celebrated alone. She hal a bottle of whisky in her possession when she was arrested. As a result of her failure to pay the ne. she was sent to the Home for Friendless Women for If teen days. More than five million dollars' worth of electrical goods was bought by Japan last year, most of it coming from the United States. AR.p.qw COLLAR. m 2 Uw 25 Cata Own, Tb4r A Co. Skins IFthe earning and saving of dollars is of interest to you, and V IF at the same time you have a desire to be well dressed THEN your thoughts should turn naturally an instinctively to this store. Look in Our Windows Will Tell You Why An investigation of our immense variety will convince you conclusively that liere you get QUALITY, STYLE, FIT AND SERVICE At $10.00 and $15.00 equal to any at from $5.00 to $8.00 more elsewhere. WE ARE IfERE TO PROVflT. Give Us the Opportunity. mem NOTICE. State of Indiana. Wayne County, as: Edward W. Con well ts. Elhubeth H. Tuomey, etal. Wayne Circuit Court, April term. 1913. No. 16434. Be It Known. That on the 19th day of June. 1913. the above named Plaintiff, by his Attorney, filed In the office of the Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court bis complaint against said De fendant in the above enUtled cause to Quiet Title together with the affidavit of a competent person, that aald Defendants are not residents of the 8tata. of Indiana. SAID DEFENDANTS. Elizabeth H. Tuomey. the unknown heirs, devisee . and legatees of Elizabeth H. Tuomey, deceased ; the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of Nathaniel W. Briggs, ; deceased; Elizabeth H. Briggs, the un known heirs, derisees and legatees of Elizabeth II. Briggs, deceased; Artemas Briggs, the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of Art em us Briggs, deceased, therefore are hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against them and that unless thy appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of the said cause, on August 11th, 1913, a day of this term of said Court, which was be

lyGI

C&2

gun and held at the Court House in the City of. Richmond, on the 1st Monday of April. 1913. said Complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will 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 19th day of Jane. 1913. (SEAL) George Matthews, Clerk. ROB BINS & ROBBINS, Attorneys of Plaintiff. 19-2-J.

J