Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 273, 24 September 1913 — Page 4

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 24, 1913

The Richmond Palladium

AND BUN-TELEGRAM.

Publiihed Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Masonic Building. Ninth and North A Streets. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.

In Richmond, 10 cent a week. By Mall, In adranee one year. $5.00; six months, $2.60; one month, 46 cents. Rural Routes, In adranoe one year, $2.00; six months. $1.25; one month 25 cents. Kntarad at tlte Post Office at Richmond. Indians, aa Second Claaa Mall Matter.

Tree Butchery.. The tree butcher is abroad in the city. Pedestrians find him everywhere at work on our streets. He lops off a branch here, saws off a limb there and hacks and cuts to shape up the hapless tree to suit his fancy. He goes on the assumption that a tree is an inert and lifeless mass of wood which may be hewed out at a man's pleasure and cut up any way the saw chances to slip. The city is annually losing thousands of dollars in trees and nobody can tell how much in shade, beauty and property value. To have every street denuded of foliage would depreciate real estate values. To have decayed and broken trees along a city thoroughfare makes the town look bad and also tends to lower the value of properties along the street. When we consider howmuch our trees are worth to us it is strange that we have so long permitted any Tom, Dick and Harry to cut and hack them at his pleasure. A tree is a living organism, sensitive, complex, and responsive with a character of its own. It has its own laws of growth and development ; its own problems of adaptation to environment and its own foes to fight. A man must know the tree and understand the tree world before he is fit to undertake to trim or prune. We would not permit a man to operate on a horse without expert qualifications; why should we permit a tyro to lop off the branches of a tree without some knowledge of what he is doing ? Dr. John Davy, of lent, Ohio, the father of tree surgery, in an address at Dayton, Ohio, gave a very clear exposition of the tree nature and the proper way to handle it. "The atmosphere," he said, "is constantly filled with the invisible seeds of microscopic fungus plants. These seeds settle on trees. But the tree's bark contains a substance which renders it antiseptic, so to speak, and thus prevents the seeds taking root. "But it is different when the wood proper is exposed. In that case the tiny spores settle in the longitudinal cells, root and grow, and strike deeper and deeper into the trunk. After a few years the decay thus caused will eat its way out to the very tip of the roots. "The one way to guard against this when trimming a tree is to paint the exposed wood with a heavy coat of paint at least once a year for several years. This should be done at the time of cutting with special care, but with this precaution, that no paint is permitted to run over the exposed edge of the bark. If that is dope the bark will be unable to grow and therefore to cover the exposed wood which it will do in time. "If a branch breaks down under weight or is blown down by the wind and a split made, steps should be taken at once to fill up the crack and prevent the exposure of the wood." What we need is to have expert regulation of tree surgery in this city. The butchery that is now going on will not bring forth its fruit in denudation for years to come, but it will come. The city should not permit a limb to be cut from a tree unless under expert supervision.

Smiting a Bad Law. A rebellion against the exorbitant tax-breeding three mile road law has broken out in Fayette county, and an effective blow has been struck at the reckless and extravagant road building policy which has been fostered in that county by this statute. When a petition came in for a road in one of the Fayette townships a remonstrance was promptly circulated and signed by three times as many taxpayers as petitioned for the highway. And, as the Connersville News remarks, "with the petition dismissed, the costs of bringing it will devolve upon the original petitioners. These

I ECONOMY Missing her watch at Friends Sunday school, Sunday morning, Mrs. James Townsend started to hunt for it. Going a short distance to where she had alighted from a rig she picked up a lady's watch but found on examination that it was not hers. A few feet farther she found a second watch which proved to be hers. The owner of the first watch was Mrs. E. G. Hunt. Both timepieces had been lost when the owners stepped from their carriages. Miss Marguerite Sage, of Osgood, Ind., took the position as teacher of the fifth and sixth gTades in the Fountain City school Monday to fill the vacancy made by the resignation of Miss Nannte Crossen. Miss Crossen resigned because of poor health. Rev. W. M. Bailey, of New Castle, will fill his regular appointment at the Wesleyan church next Sunday. Benge Funeral. The funeral of David Benge was held at Hopewell Sunday morning at 10:30 o'clock. Rev. J. P. Chamness conducted the service. Interment was in Willow Grove cemetary. Warren Ewell, son of Rev. Ewell b.o waa pastor of the Fountain City

costs are chiefly the items of legal advertising, which are considerable, and the fees of the attorneys, which as an examination of the records of road petitions will prove, are always liberally large. It is estimated that the costs involved in the present effort will not be less than $100." The News has excellent grounds for its assertion that the costs "are always liberally large." That is the reason why the three mile road law is so very popular with a large number of attorneys. By remonstrating against numerous roads petitioned for under the three mile act taxpayers should not feel they are striking a blow at the good roads movement. They are merely remonstrating against a good roads policy which provides such improvements at the risk of forcing up the tax rate to an extortionate figure. When the three mile act is so remodeled as to provide the maximum amount of road building in any township per year, and provides a just method of making tax assessments for such work, then it can be employed as a useful agent in providing the various counties with modern highway systems. Richmond's "Live Wires." "Boosting" goes hand-in-hand with progress.

! In fact progress is ' Consequently any

valued citizens, for a community without a spirit of progress is a sorry place indeed. There are a few ultra conservatives in Richmond who know nothing of progress nor of boosting, but they are so far outnumbered by real "boosters" that the future of the city presents no problem to worry over. Richmond is proud of its "boosters," too, and only yesterday displayed some of the livest of its live wires to its neighbors. Everybody likes a "booster" it is abnormal not to and because two auto caravans full of them were out yesterday "boosting" for the Richmond Fall Festival gives assurance that thousands of our friends and neighbors will be the guests of the city during that big event. That means all these many guests will personally inspect the live stock and the products of the broad acres of Wayne county farm lands, the products of Richmond's many factories, and the stock-filled counters of its enterprising mercantile establishments. Strangers who flock to Richmond during the three days of the festival will return to their homes strangers no longer; they will enjoy the hospitality of our "boosters" and their visits to the city will be more frequent in the future. A host of our own citizens, always loyal to the city's best interests, will learn more about their home town through the festival displays than years of residence have made them familiar with, so they will become more loyal, enthusiastic citizens. Kindly charge, all of these benefits, direct and indirect, to the account of Richmond's live wires.

Turn, Fortune turn thy wheel and lower the proud; Turn thy light wheel through sunshine and through cloud; Thy wheel and thee we neither love nor hate. Turn, Fortune, turn thy wheel with smile or frown; With that wild wheel we go not up or down; Our hoard is little but our hearts are great. Smile and we smile, the lords of many lands; Frown and we smile, the lords of our own hands, For man is man and master of his fate. Turn, turn thy wheel above the staring crowd; Thy wheel and thou are shadows in the cloud, Thy wheel and thee we neither love nor hate. Alfred Tennyson.

DANGER IS THERE'LL BE ENOUGH. Chicago Record Herald. The champagne yield is poor this year. We may have a sane New Year's eve, after all.

NOT WHOLLY DENATURED YET. Boston Herald. The bulletins about the crippled stars of the Yale squad are proof conclusive that the football season is really open.

TUT-TUT NT ALWAYS SATISFACTORY. Cleveland Plain Dealer. The attempted revival of Esperanto suggests that the golf players and suffragist orators need a richer vocabulary.

M. E. church several years ago, was here Monday visiting old friends. The marriage of James Busby to Miss Daisy Dunham ocured last Thursday at the home of Rev. Elwood Davenport at Richmond. They will make their home here. Mr. Busby is the proprietor of a restaurant. Miss Mattie Kerlin, of Cambridge City, visited her parents Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Gardner Sunday. Frank Quinn, of Muncie. was here attending the funeral of his uncle David Benge and paid a short visit to relatives. Mrs. R. B. Dickinson and Mr. H. P. Clawson were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Keever over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Len Owerman. of Richmond, were the guests of J. J. Owerman and family Sunday. EAST GERMANTOWN Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kepler and family of North Cambridge City, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Kepler. Miss Emma Carpenter is seriously ill at her home. Mr. and Mrs. Kail Behr and baby of Indianapolis, spent the week end with Will Behr and family. Mr. and Mrs. John Boyd and family, of Capitol Hill, and Mr. Mathers

impossible without "boosting." city's "boosters" are its most

ENID'S SONG.

POINTED PARAGRAPHS

of Richmond, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Binkley. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Smeltz, of Lancaster, Penn., are visinting their amrt Mrs. Amanda Beck. Observe Anniversary. The Rebeccas obverve their Sixtysecond anniversary Friday evening. Miss Daisey Petty, of New Castle; spent Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Ehle. Mrs. Ray Doll and baby were guests of Dr. and Mrs. Farkln in i Dublin, Friday. j Mrs. Barbara Brown and Mildred j Stonecipher attended the funerai of i Mrs. Smith in Cambridge City Sun day. Will Tatman, of Indianapolis, is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kocher. Here From City. Mr. and Mrs. Will Beck, of Indianapolis, are visiting relatives. Frank Winter and wife spent Sunday in Indianapolis with his brother, J. H. Winter. Miss Genieve Jamison and Mrs. Ruth Halle and daughter. Katharine. shopped in Richmond last week. j At the request of the government of j China a Chinese student has been assigned as aid in one of the field parties of the United States geological j survey.

Should Milk of City

"Nothing can protect us from bovine tuberculosis except the thorough and regular use of the tuberculin test," said a local authority when interviewed on the question. "It is of the greatest importance to maintain the most perfect sanitary conditions about a dairy, of course, but that will not prevent tuberculosis infection in the herd or keep the tubercle bacilli out of the milk. The better cows are kept, strange to say, the more liable they are to infection and when once infected, it is almost impossible to free their products from the bacilli or poisons produced by the bacilli. It is another case where one ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." Only Safe Method. Mr. B. E. Powell, of the University of Illinois, emphasizes the futility of attempting to detect infected cows by any other method. "Undoubtedly a large percentage of the nleek-looking dairy cows we see are tuberculous in one form or another." "For peculiar reasons," this expert goes on to pay, ' the worst affected cow is often the healthiest in appearance. Therefore any attempt to select the tuberculos of the herd by external examination is condemned to failure." Nor is pasturization of infected milk reliable, according to federal authority. Jos. w. Sohereschewsky of the public health and marine hospital service, who says. "Pasteurization is insufficient for complete sterilization of milk." Rosenaus' View. And Prof. Milton J. Rosenau, formerly of the same department but now of Harvard University, says: "Pasteurized milk must be handled as carefully as raw milk, if not more so. Pathogenic bacteria grow more readily in heated than in raw milk. The 'germicidal' properties of milk are destroyed by high heating, and finally the surviving bacteria do not have so hard a struggle for existence in the heated milk. It must not be forgotten that pasteurization kills only the major portion of the nons-pore-bearing bacteria, and that a large number of micro-organisms remain and, if permitted to grow and multiply, they may occasionally produce undesirable qualities or perhaps poisonous properties in the milk." Pasteurization is a method of sterilizating milk by a hetating process in which the fluid is raised to a temperature of 140 degrees and kept there for twenty minutes. Precautions must be taken to insure complete and rapid cooling afterwards or the process will defeat its own purpose. Because of the technical skill required for perfect pasteurization it is seldom used properly. In many cases the milk is permitted to cool too slowly permit ting the bacteria unusual facilities for growth. Danger In Milk. Some germs of the most virulent type are sometimes not destroyed at all. Among these is the bovine tubercle bacillus. And this bacillius pro pagates so rapidly that one or two left alive will repopulate a quantity of milk in a few hours. "Pasteurization should always be used a precaution against tubercle infection," says one authority, "but it is by no means infallible and should not be entirely depended upon. The tuberculin test is the only safe means." Neither is a mere laboratory analysis of milk and feces satisfactory, according to Dr. Mohler; only 40 percent, of tuberculosis cows will expell bacilli so as to be detected in that manner. Koch's Discovery. Tuberculin was invented by Prof. Koch, of Germany, in 1890. It is a prepared glycerin in which quantities of living bacilli have been "stewed" and then strained out. The liquid is then thoroughly sterilized and placed At the Murray. Week of September 22 "The Third Degree." At the Gennett September 29 "Within the Law.' Soon "The Rose Maid." "Broadway" Jones which comes to the Gennett theatre soon was last season's real substantial hit in New York. Geo. M. Cohan has written many good plays, but his last effcrt is in a class by itself, and one of the highest compliments that could be paid to an author, is this quotation from the New York Tribune: ; "Some people can live on Broadway j all their lives and never know what j the place really Is until they go and j see 'Broadway' Jones." j The cast that will present the play here includes: George Schaefer, Thos. i V. Emory, Curtis Benton, Geo. B. Mil-, ler, Murice M. Fisher, Mrs. Chas. Wil-! lard, Frederick Maynard, Miss Olive Artelle, Miss Grace Morissey. George ( K. Henery, Miss Indlc Yhiteside, j Frank Evans and Chas. H. Henderson. , I A Woman's Way. ! Miss Grace George first produced j "A Woman's Way" at the playhouse j in New York, where it had a long run. j j After that she appeared on the road, ; nlavins' nnlv the larger Mtioa fnr nna ' entire season, making the biggest hit i she had ever had in any other play. "A Woman's Way" has been select- f ed for the Fall Festival week by the ! Francis Sayles players at the Murray ' and Miss Olga Worth will be seen in j ; the part that was played by Miss George. There will be a matinee ev- j ery day nest week except Monday. "Within the Law." Baynard Veiller's smashing melodrama of modern conditions in New York life. "Within the Law," will be seen at the Gennett Theatre on MonCASTOR I A Tor Infants and Children. The Kind You Havs Always Bought Bears the Signature of

c

Supply be Tested?

in germ-proof receptacles. This liquid contains the poisons made by the bacilli and stewed out of their ; bodies. When injected into a tuber culous cow's system it causes disturbance which indicates the presence of tuberculosis. Such animals are called "reactors." Under ordinary circumstances this te6t is made once a year: conditions sometimes make necessary more fre quent tests but not often. If a cow does not give a complete reaction 6h is usually held suspicious and retested at frequent intervals. Those which react to an extreme must be destroyed. The others may be quarantined and utilized for food, for breeding purposes, or even for dairy purposes under strict supervision and perfect pasteurization of milk. This method of quarintine, called the "Bang system," was used with success in Denmark, the worlds greatest dairy nation. Infallible Test. The tuberculin test is almost infallible. Dr. Mohler writes: "Tuberculin test is the best dianos- : l . e i : . i lie aem htiuw u uir uisfasr. Another authority. Dr. E. S. . Schroeder, says, "After years of observation the tuberculin test has been I found to be more nearly infallible j means for diagnosing tuberculosis i than any we have in diagnosing dis eases of men and animals." "As a result of this method an accurate diagnosis may be established in over 97 percent of the cases tested." Dr. Melvin showed that out of 23S6! reactors 235S5 showed tuberculosis lesions making a precentage of 98.81 Where the animal has reacted but does not show tuberculosis on post mortem examination the cause of the Kailure may usually be traced to careessness in administering, or because the animal had been tested too recently, or to other illness. In come states trouble has been experienced with the practice of "plugging." If a large dose of tuberculin has been injected into an animal in the most advanced stage she will not react for some time. In this way unscrupulous dairymen have gotten rid of diseased stock at regular market prices. Test is Harmless. The tuberculin test is harmless to the healthy cow. It does not interfere with her milk production or affect her in any way. According to the federal bulletins: "Tuberculin interferes In no way with the milking functions in healthy cattle nor in quantity of milk nor in butterfat value. The station has tested cattle, hogs, horses, donkeys, goats, sheep, and some other kinds of animals and has injected doses of tuberculin fifty to one hundred times as large as those customarily used for a tuberculinn test, and not one of the numerous trials was followed by any injury to a healthy animal.' Law's Opinion. Law, in his Text Book of Veterinary Medicine, writes: "Many stock owners still entertain an ignorant and unwarranted dread of the tuberculin test. It is true that when recklessly used by ignorant and careless people it may be made a root of evil, yet as employed by an Intelligent and careful expert it is not only perfectly safe, but it Is the only known means of ascertaining approximately the actual number in, a given herd. In most infected herds, living under what are in other respects good hygienic conditions, two-thirds or three-fourths are not to be detected without its aid, so that in clearing a herd from tuberculosis, and placing both herd and products above suspicion, the test becomes essential." Tuberculin is manufactured by the government and supplied free through the state departments to any dairy inspector desiring it, provided he is a veterinarian. In such cases the test costs the dairyman nothing except the possible loss of a cow. day, Sept.. 29, and the unusual opportunity will be offered theatre goers in Richmond of seeing a great New York success while still at the height oT the interest which it has aroused. For an entire season of twelve months, this play packed the Eltinge Theatre, New York City, receiving the most extraordinary praise, not only from the RICHMOND PROOF Should Convince Every Richmond Reader. The frank statement of a neighbor, telling the merits of a remedy. Bids you pause and believe. The same endorsement By some stranger far away Commands no belief at all. Here's a Richmond case. A Richmond citizen testifies. Read and be convinced. Benjamin Lunsford, 20th and South B streets, Richmond, Ind., says: "I was annoyed by attacks of kidney complaint for Ifteen. years. Whenever I caught cold, my back ached. Sometimes the kidney secretions were profuse. Doan's Kidney Pills checked these annoyances completely. Once or twice since when I have taken this remedy, it has done good work. The endorsement I gave Doan's Kidney Pills a few years ago still holds good." For aale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. f Advertisement) Hsesdla.y

Harry 15. Paris Presents ORVILLE HARROLD, Tenor -AMD LYDIA LOCKE ( JJS.) Prima. Dona Plat open at Starr Piano Warerooms, Tenth and Main, Wednesday morning Sept 24

Prices: U.D(D, 75c, 5c

regular dramatic critics of the metropolis, but from prominent people, who hare never before lent their names to the endorsement of any drama, including Wood row Wilson. Theodore

1 Roosevelt. Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont. Mrs. i Harriot Stanton Blatch. Sheriff Julius Harburger, of New York, and Foliee Commissioner Dougherty also of New York. The Third Degree. Miss Olga Worth is certainly maki ing many new friends this week by her excellent work in "The Third Degree" at the Murray. This play has been seen here many times before, ' but never was the part of Anna Jeffers played any better than Miss Worth is taking it this week. j Mr. Schafer is also doing excellent this week in the part of Mr. Brewster. i Hal Worth makes a good How ard Jeffers, Jr., and the balance of the com- : pany all take their parts well. j Mr. Flynn's picture will be given : away at the matinee tomorrow. Palace. ' For today's program the Palace presents the Keystone farce. "The Fatal Taxi," a combination of sensational, laughable, burlesqued and exciting ; melodrama. The subject shows the .complete destruction of two taxi's, one ' burned and the other driven over a .high precipice, dropping into a tree The story deals with the deep-dyed ivillian, Egbert Throckmorton. The scenes are all laughs and thrills, as I the capture of Egbert takes place. : Ford Sterling takes the part of the vtllian. On the same bill Is the tworeel IHimino feature, "The Bondsman." t a tale Of Puritan days. Murrette. "The Burglar and the Baby," a comedy full of funny situations, is one of the pictures to be seen at the Murrette today. The story tells of a man with a nagging wife. She finally drives him from the house. He becomes a' burglar and the first house be enters, picks up a squalling baby and this brings about his arrest and that of his confederate. Mr. Nagg escapes. After ( getting outside concludes to go back ' to jail again saying to the others "No ! Boys home was never like this." I stay here. "The Ixive of Beauty." and "The Cattle Thief in addition to the Penn- i sylvania railroad wreck picture com plete an interesting bill. Benefited Many Who Had Tuberculosis Tboc wbo suffer from Connumptton are generally troubled wlttj night nweats. fever, loiw of mreneth and lit tie or no appetite. Frh atr. exl food, and the proper rare of the body are -ential to a recovery, hut In many case some! Uin eltso Is needed. Ehtnin'i Alterative U n medicine whl.-h ha txvu moat mioi'HKsf ul In stopping night aweatu, reducing fever and promoting appettte. and many who have uaed It. declare It xuved their lives. Investigate what It did in this case: "Gentlemen: For four years I was troubled with rough, which gradually became worse: I had ntgbt nweata and paina in my chest. I was losing my apretlte and bad become so thin and weak could not attend to my household duties. A physician pronounced my case Consumption. Not being satisfied. I was examined by the physicians of the Polyclinic Hospital. They also pronounced the disease Consumption, which was proven later by an examination of sputum, as Tuberculosis Bacilli were found. I was ordered to a Consumptive Hospital. My nephew would not allow me to go until I bad tried Eck man's Alterative. Iiefore 1 bad taken the medicine three weeks I bad marked relief, night sweats cessed, pain In the breast relieved, couch became loose and easy, fever left me and I commenced getting well. My health becam normal. 1 am In excellent health now and have been completely cured for ten years. 1 strongly recommend It." (M KS.) MART WASSON. Csre Ed. Green. 17:12 8. 17th St.. Phils . Pa. Eckman's Alterative Is effective In Bronchitis, Asthma. Hsy Fever; Throat and Lung Troubles, and in upbuilding the system, ttoes not contain poisons, opiates or bablt-formlng drugs. Ask for booklet telling of recoveries and write to Eckmst Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa., for evidence For sale by ail leading druggists A. G. Luken and Company. C Advertisement! POSTPONED SALE ON ACCOUNT OF RAIN I will sell at public sale, Thursday, September 25, at my farm, two miles east of Richmond, 350 good stock hogs weighing from 60 to 150 pounds. Sale commencing at 10 a. m. CLEMENT V. CARR.

"Clincher" Paint m We know a paint which holds to the wood like a driven nail. Seasoned lumber is porous. The pores are tLe emptj sapcells. White lead paint, which dries on the wood in the form of a solid, elastic film, fastens into these pores, and the whole coat of paint is actually riveted like armorplate to the surface it decorates and protects.

ANCHOR WHITE LEAD

(Dutch Boy Painter, Trade-Mark) and Pure Linseed Oil. make the paint that spreads into a solid body. It becomes a part of the wood itself an outer layer that preserves the life of the lumber. We sell it as well as other painting requisites. Come in and have a talk with us about painting. Jones Hardware Company

(DCDILIISIETlKI

Evening, Sept. 3tfMlh.

I MASONIC CALENDAR

Wednesday. September 24 Webb lodge. No. 24. F. and A. M. Called meeting. Work In Entered Apprentice degree, commencing promptly at 7 o'clock. INDIGESTION ENDED, STOMACH FEELS FINE 4- M. "Pape's Diapepsin" fixes sour, gas, upset stomachs in five minutes. Sour, gassy, upset stomach. Indigestion, heartburn, dyspepsia; when the food you eat ferments into gases and stubborn lumps; your head aches and you feel sick and miserable, that's when you realize the magic in Pape's Diapepsin. It makes ail stomach misery vanish in five minutes. If your stomach is in a continuous revolt if you can't get it regulated, please, for your sake, try Pape's Diapepsin. It's so needless to have a bad stomach, make your next meal a favorite food meal, then take a litle Diapepsin. There will not be any distress eat without fear. It's because Pape's Diapepsin "really does' regulate weak, out-of-order stomachs that gives it its millions of sales annually. Get a large fifty-cent case of Tape's Diapepsin fro many drug store. It is the quickest, surest stomach relief and cure known it is a scientific, harmless and pleasant stomach preparation which truly belongs In every home. C Advertisement) MURRAY ALL THIS WEEK Francis Sayles Players Offer the New York Hudson Theatre success, "THE THIRD DEGREE" By Charles Klein, author of "Th Lion and the Mouse" and "The Music Master" Trices: Matinees. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, 10c and 20c; nights at 8:15, prompt. 10c, 20c and 30c. 1 I Next Week, "A Woman's Way MURRETTE TODAY ! "The Love ofBeautyw Lubln Drama "The Burglar and the Baby" Kalem Feature"Sunny, or 'The Cattle Thief Vitagraph Motion Pictures of the wreck on the Pennsylvania Railroad. PALACE TODAYKEYSTONE. THE FATAL TAXICombination of exciting. Laughable and burlesqued melodrama. Two-Reel Feature. "THE BONDSMAN" "DOMINO" .

"iMBMeMtNBBpw aaa