Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 135, 19 April 1915 — Page 6
PAGE SIX.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1915 Baseball SPORTING AND ATHLETIC N Bowling
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VIGRANS GLEAN LONELY DINGLE OFFOFJL1TTLE Earlham Heaver Keeps S. A.
L. Batters Scoreless Whilo Logan et al Report Four Round Trip Journeys. Earlham, 4; Vlgrana, 0. The Quakers got back at the S. A. I Saturday afternoon when they beat out the Vigrans in a fairly interesting game by the score of 4 to 0. Earlham showed a decided improvement over the form displayed against the Ad vance-Hills two weeks ago, fielding in faultless style with one exception Bowen dropped a high fly in left field There was some excuse in dropping them in that field Saturday. This is the sun garden and the fielders bad o glasses. Little Pitches Well. Little, the Earlham moundsman, cer tainly bad the ball under control, nar rowly escaping getting credit for a no hit game. Sittloh caught one on the nose and shot it back at Little. It goes for an infield hit and robs Little of turning in the first no hit, no run game in tnis city this season. Hobos and Parker were much in the game and but for the plays of these two the game would have been much closer. Hobbs grabbed one off the end of Williams' stick that was no less than a crime and prevented . the Vigrans from scoring. Again in the eighth, when Sittloh got on via base on balls, Minier smote a terrific liner into left center which was ticketed for a homer, but Parker with a grand burst of speed speared it and doubled Sittloh off first. It was some catch. Earlham scored her first run in the first inning when Harter let the third strike get away from him and Hobbs was 6afe on first. Fisher sacrificed him to second and then Captain Cy Wallace bobbed up with a line double to right, scoring Hobbs from second. Their next two runs came in the third, Wallace getting on first on a fielder's choice and going to second on Stephenson's error on an attempted double play. Logan brought him in with a Bingle into left and scored himself a minute later when Meranda, a former local high school player, planted a clean single into right field. Logan scored the last run in the ninth on Bowen's scratch hit to the infield. Score and summary: VIGRANS. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E. .Villiams. ss. . . 4 0 0 2 1 1 Sullivan, c 2 0 0 4 0 0 Harter. c ' 1 0 0 7 1 1 H. Hawekotte, If 3 0 0 0 0 2 Kelly, 2b 3 0 0 2 2 0 Stephenson, lb. 3 0 0 8 0 2 Sittloh. cf 1 0 1 0 1 0 Reddinghaus, 3b 3 0 0 1 2 0 Minier, p and rf 3 0 0 0 2 0 R. Hawekotte, p 2 0-0 0 1 0 Roser, rf I 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 26 0 1 24 10 7 EARLHAM. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E. Hobbs, 3b 4 1 0 4 0 0 Fisher, c 3 0 1 4 6 0 Leonard, rf 1- 0 0 0 0 0 Wallace, rf&p3 1 2 1 0 0 rx)gan, ss 3 2 1 3 0 0 Parker, cf 4 0 0 4 1 0 Meranda, 2b... .1 0 1 1 1 0 Calvert, lb.... 4 0 0 10 0 1 Bowen. ir 4 0 1 0 0 1 Little, p 4 0 0 0 3 0 Totals 33 4 6 27 11 2 By Innigs Vigrans 00000000 0 0 Earlham 10200001 x 4 Two-base hits Wallace. Sacrifice hits Sittloh. Fisher. Struck out By Little. 6: by Wallace, 3; by Minier, 6; by R. Hawekotte, i. Bases on balls By Little, 1; by Min'er, 1; by Hawekotte, 2. Double plays Reddinghaus to Williams to Stephenson. Time of game 1 hour 50 minutes. Umpire Peck. SOB BURMAN ENTERS PEUGEOT FOR RAGES Foreign Team Enters Two Light Cars for Long Endurance Grind. INDIANAPOLIS, April 19. Dario fiesta, winner of the Vanderbilt and 3rand Prize races at San Francisco, ind Bob Burman, the world's speed ing, have been entered in the next Indianapolis 500-mile race at the wheel :f Peugeot cars. A third Peugeot has seen named, for which the driver, however, has not yet been selected. It is jnderstood that Arthur Duray, runnerup in last year's Indianapolis event, is in line for the job, though this report acks official confirmation. The Peugeot team this year will be jplit two ways, with Resta doing the leavy work in one of the cars that competed in last year's French Grand Prix. This machine, measuring 274 :ubic inches, is one of the fastest ever Duilt, and may be expected to be in front from the start. The other cars, 3eing ' of the "Baby" type, like that a'hich Duray handled last year, will be iriven more conservatively. Capable Df 105 miles an hour, with light weight, :hey will be heard from in a long race, where stops for fuel and tire changes count heavily. BIBLE SCHOOLS MEET. MILTON, Ind.. April 19. The Washington township Bible school convention will be held at Milton Christian church at 2 p. m. Sunday. April 25. The Rev. J. W. Zerbe of Williamsburg, will delfver the address. The music will be given by the combined or chestras of the Methodist Episcopal and Christian churcL schools.
THE NATIONAL PASTIME MIGHT BE ENLIVENED THIS SUMMER" WITH A FLAVOR OP WAR, SO FANS CAN TALK WAR AT GAMES
OiSPATCH EARLHAM MEN REVEAL SPEED IN SHORT RUNS Thornton and Bruner Sprint 100 Yards in 10 SecondsTaylor Travels Fast in 440Yard Event. Coach Whiteeides is very much elated over the prospects of his track team and believes that if the athletes trying out for places will continue the pace they have started out that Earlham has good prospects of turning out a team that wil class among the best in the state. The first meet with Indiana May 1, is looked forward to with much inter est among the Earlham students. The rule that the Quakers always have given the downstaters a stiff argument is expected to hold this year. The next meet, the following Saturday will be a class meet when the coach be; lieves some new material will be revealed. Wabash will be here May 15 and it is towards this meet that the Earlham track men will be pointed. Wabash always turns out a corking good team. Last year the Quakers took them down. Strong in 440 Dash. Earlham from present indications will be strongest in the dashes including the 440-yard dash, the weights, hurdles, broad jump and high jump. In Thornton and Bruner, Whiteside has two men who will surely burn up the cinders at a lively clip. Both claim record of 10:1. Taylor in the 440-dash promises to make the best of them hustle with his time around 51 seconds. In the weights, Thornton, Mills, Fowler and Morrish are the most promising, Thornton in particular has been making good heaves with the discus and shot. Hoskins and Winslow are taking the high hurdles in pretty form and should bring their time down around 16 seconds by the time of the first meet. Hollowell, Neal and Kampe are working hard on the distance runs. Fellers, Taylor and Mills are all going over five feet in the high jump. VIGRANS CLINCH INDOOR PENNANT "Y" INDOOR LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Vigrans 8 0 1,000 Panhandles 3 2 .600 Ad-Hill 3 3 .500 A. S. M 3 3 .500 Natco 2 6 .250 Fence Factory 1 6 .143 The Vigrans clinched the pennant in the "Y" Indoor Baseball league Satur day night, getting the decision in a for feit game. 9 to 0, because the Natco nine failed to appear. This gives the Vigrans a perfect percentage with eight games won. The boys have been the most consistent of the lot and have gone into each game with the determination of winning. The scheduled go between the Pan handles and A. S. M. failed to mater ialize, as neither team had enough men on the floor to play or to forfeit. Their percentage remains the same. Caught Off Bases of State League Perkins-Campbells defeated Selby Folks, Middletown, Ohio team yesterday by a 6 to 2 count. Rushville lost to the AU-Prnfesaion-al, K. I. O. team Sunday in a good game o io i. ine dox score reads nine hits apiece and four errors for Rushville and none for the All-Pros.
RED SOX WIN FIRST WITH TWELVE HITS Senators Commit Four Blunders in First Clash of 1915 Season. The Richmond Red Sox opened the season Sunday. with a win over the Senators by a 9 to 7 count. The Sox lined up with only six of their regulars and showed a fast and peppery game. The team looks forward to a successful season, and is open for games with out-of-town teams. Five errors were maae, tne senators committing rour of them. The Sox garnered twelve hits off the delivery of Newman, while but eight were registered against Gosselin and Conyers, the Red Sox flingers. Score and summary: Red Sox Bailey, c; Gosselin, p; Conyers, p; Hensler, ss and p; Klinger, lb; Parker, 2b; Holmes, 3b; Heinerim, If and ss; Gray, cf; Burge, rf. Senators Bricker, c; Newman, p; H. Sweitzer, ss, Pottenger, lb; Kelly, 2b; C. Sweitzer, 3b; J. Broderick, If; C. Broderick, cf ; Wise, rf. Score by innings: R h e Red Sox. .02102130 09 12 1 Senators. .02102110 07 8 4 K0K0M0 FINDS LOCAL HEAVERS FOR JIN RUNS Kenney's Mound Men Prove Erratic Batsmen Strain Backs Reaching for Link's Shoots. Kokomo, 10; Richmond, 1. Meager information -handed out by Dick Kenney as be was passing through Richmond, is that the locals lost the first game of the season Sunday afternoon at Kokomo by the score of 10 to 1. Richmond, for some reason or other, could not get together and probably had the worst day the team will experience this season. The boys for the most part have never been together on the field before and were total strangers to the ball, several of them being out in a suit for the first time this season. The team has the "stuff" in it and will deliver before another two weeks has passed. It will be remembered that the good team that Kenney got together last season had a hard time at the start, but after the first two games speeded up so it was almost impossible for any of the opponents to slip anything over. Pitchers Prove Easy. Thomas, Kerns and Knisely were the battery for the locals, with Thomas going the first five innings. He was wild and was touched up for two hits when they were needed. Five runs were scored off him. Kerns, the twirler from Springfield, worked the last four and was even worse than Thomas, yielding five runs. In the absence of Novack, who caught for the Shamrocks, Dave Knisely was on the receiving end and took care of his part in a satisfactory manner. Novy has promised Dick faithfully that he will be present for the Saginaw game here Sunday, April 25. Laddy Link, the Kokomo twirler, had the locals breaking their backs in their futile attempts to solve his twisters, but six hits being recorded by Kenney's men. Score and summary: R. H E Kokomo. 00 401302 010 11 1 Richm'd. 00000000 1 1 6 4 Bateries Kokomo, Link and Kelley; Richmond, Thomas, Kerns and Knisely. Flint, Michigan, won a 10-inning game from Connersville 9 to 6. Center field Merkle tied the count for Con nersville in the ninth frame with a hefty . two sacker Into left with the bases clogged.
SLACK'S SQUAD HOLDS BOCKOFF TEAM RUNLESS
McConaha Whiffs Eleven Makers of Automatic Drills Who Drill Great Holes in Spring Air. EASTHAVEN, 2: NATCO, 0. In a light hitting game Lon Slack's Easthaven S. A. L. team triumphed over the Natco's Saturday 2 to 0 Either the twirlers in this circuit are above the ordinary or the batters are weaker as in the two group games but 17 hits were garnered, less than an average of 5 per team. McConaha proved a surprise to the Natcos who were looking for easy meat but he was just the opposite and sent eleven of the opponents back to the bench via the whiff route. The results of these games do not count in the percentage but are played merely for pre-season practice. Eleven players were used by Pucket' while Slack kept his lineup intact. The winners scored their runs in the first and fifth innings. Score and summary: Natco. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E. Brenton, p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Quigley, lb ... 4 0 1 11 0 0 Conner, ss 4 0 2 1 2 1 Theemer, 2b . . 2 0 0 1 2 0 Kuhlenbeck, rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 Philips, cf 3.0 0 0 0 0 DIngery, If 3 0 0 0 0 0 Stein, 3b 2 0 0 2 2 1 Gartside, c ... 3 0 0 9 2 1 Hasecoster, p . 2 0 0 0 0 0 Mayer, p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Total 28 0 3 24 8 3 EastHaven. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E. Cohorst, 2b ... 3 1 1 3 1 0 Yedding, lb . . 3 0 0 8 0 0 Davis, ss 3 0 0 0 2 0 Rust, cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 Glenn, c 3 0 0 12 3 0 McConaha, p . . 3 1 1 0 5 0 Ray, 3b 3 0 1 2 0 3 Minaner, rf . . . 2 0 0 0 1 0 Riley, cf 3 0 0 1 0 0 Total 26 2 3 26 12 3 Ccore by innings: Easthaven .10001000 2 3 3 Natco 00000000 00 3 3 Wild pitches Mayer 1, Hasecoster 1. Struck out By McConaha 11, by Brenton 1, Mayer 5, Hasecoster 2. Bases on balls By McConaha 3, by Brenton 1, Mayer 1. Stolen bases Coherst, Rust, Connor, Hasecoster, Mayer. Time of game 1:30. Umpire Dr. Darrow. WANTS TO SUE CARNEGIE. CrflCAGO, April 19. Suit for $1 and interest compounded annually is the action which John Mund of this city desires to bring against Andrew Carnegie. Mund declares he loaned Carnegie $1 fifty-one years ago. And Richmond loBt too. BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove it TJr. Edwards' Olive Tabletsv the subEtltute for calomel, act gently on the owels and positively do the- work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Kdwards' OUve Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gently but . firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying; the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does -without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening. srrlping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets without griping, pain or disagreeable effects of any kind. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the for- ' mula after seventeen years of practice among patients afflicted with bowel anl liver complaint with the attendant bad Dream. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a iweek and note the effect 10c. and 25 per box. All druggists. 1 The Olive Tablet Company. Columbus, Q, J
GRAYS DEFEAT VIGRAN'S TEAM BY BIG SCORE
Two Weeks of Practice 'Enable New Paris to Wallop Locals-Score 7 to 3. New Paris, 7; Vlgran's Reserves, 3. New Paris Grays opened the season Sunday afternoon by defeating VIgran's Reserves of Richmond, 7 to 3. The Grays' two weeks' previous prac tice stood them in good need, their playing being cleaner than the Vi grans, who showed rather faulty at times. Twelve men were used by Manager White in an effort to stem the tide of defeat, but his efforts were of no avail. Haas, catcher, suffered the first accident of the season when he was spiked by a Gray batsman in the sixth inning. The hitting feature of the game was the slugging done by Johnny Holmes, first sacker of the Vigrans. Johhny was responsible for all his team's scores, bringing m Schattel in with the first run in the fourth inning with a pretty three-sacker, and in the eighth when Winter got on with a single and Muhl by an error, John delivered a scorching double into left. cleaning the bases. Vint Cooney tied Holmes for the batting percentage of the day with three safe ones out of four times up. Raney and his big bat got in the way of the Vigran twirlers's offerings for two hits, as did Williams and Hampton. New Paris scored three in the first. and two in the third, and laid off until the seventh, when they added two more for good measure. Official score and summary: Vigrans. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E. Schattel, cf .. 3 1 1 2 1 0 Winters, 3b, c 4 1 12 1 3 Evans, 2b 3 0 0 1 1 0 Holmes, lb ... 4 0 3 7 1 0 H'kotte, If, p.. 4 0 1 0 2 0 Stover, rf 3 0 0 1 1 0 Long, rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 Kiser, ss 2 01 0 1 1 Haas, c 3 0 0 9 0 0 Mull, p, If, 38 3 1 0 0 1 0 Rorr. If 2 0 0 0 0 0 Minner, ss . . . 2 0 0 1 2 1 Totals 34 3 7 24 11 5 New Paris. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E. Nierbor, 2b . . 4 1 1 3 2 0 Hampton, c . . 4 3 2 9 2 0 Cooney, cf ... 4 2 3 2 0 0 Williams, 3b... 4 1 2 2 2 1 Raney, lb 4 0 2 8 0 0 Brown, ss 4 0 0 0 3 0 Hartman, If 4 0 0 2 0 0 Sowers, rf ... 4 0 1 1 0 0 Lucas, p 2 0 1 0 3 0 By innings: R. H. E. Vigrans .. 0 0 01 0 0 0 2 03 7 4 Two-Base Hits Williams, Holmes. Three-base Hit Holmes. Wild Pitches Mull, Lucas. Hit by Pitcher Schattel, Evans. Struck Out By Mul 1, Hawekotte 7, by Lucas 6. Bases on Balls By Hawekotte 1, by Lucas 1. Stolen Base Williams. Double Plays Stover to Evans; Riser to Evans to Holmes. Time of Gabe 1:52. Umpire Woods. CROWDS VISIT PARKS How ardently Richmond citizens have been wishing for real spring weather was shown yesterday when crowds swarmed to the parks and strolled along the main thoroughfares. Early in the morning many hiking parties took to the country where they spent the greater part of the day. Automobile after automobile dashed along the highways. In the city several hundred persons gathered at Glen Miller park and at Morton Lake to bask in the warm sunshine.
Tlie Incomparable Four
REO VALUES THIS YEAR are equaled by none other. It is not possible for any other to equal them, for Reo purchasing power, Reo factory facilities and Reo experience are unequaled in the industry. AND BESIDES, if it were possible to obtain a car of similar power and size and of apparently similar quality still it could not carry the Reo nameplate and the Reo guarantee so you could not know and when you come to sell it, if ever, no one else would accept it as just as good. THERE'S AN ASSET of real of known, recognized and of definite value in that Reo name-plate. It stands for all there is of quality in an automobile, and of pood intent on the part of the concern from whom you buy it. - SO NO ONE CAN TELL YOU truthfully that any other car at anywhere near the price is "as good as a Reo" f or they can't match the Reo reputation for consistency of performance in the product or the guarantee you get with a Reo. Call, Phone or Write for Demonstration. E 0. Spangter, Ant. Bricker Garage
Baseball Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet Philadelphia 3 0 1.000 Chicago 3 2 .600 Cincinnati 3 2 .600 New York 2 2 .600 Pittsburg 2 3 .400 St. Louis 2 3 .400 Boston l 2 .333 Brooklyn l 3 .250 Yesterday's Results. Chicago, 2; Pittsburg, 1. Cincinnati, 6; St. Louis. 2. Games Today. Pittsburg at Chicago. St. Louis at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at New York. Brooklyn at Boston. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet. Boston 2 1 .667 Detroit 3 2 .600 Cleveland 3 2 .600 Washington 2 2 .500 New York 2 2 .500 Chicago 2 3 .400 St. Louis 2 3 .400 Philadelphia 1 2 .333 Yesterday's Results. Detroit, 8: Chicago, 7. Cleveland, 6; St. Louis, 1. Games Today. Chicago at Detroit. Cleveland at St. Louis. New York at Philadelphia. Boston at Washington. FEDERAL LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet Brooklyn 5 1 .833 Chicago 4 2 .667 Kansas City 4 3 .571 Newark 4 4 .500 Pittsburg 3 3 ' .500 Baltimore 3 5 .375 Buffalo 2 4 .333 St. Louis 2 5 .286 Yesterday's Results. St. Louis 3; Chicago, 1. Baltimore, 12; Newark, 5. Games Today. Chicago at St. Louis. Baltimore at Newark. Kansas City at Pittsburg. Brooklyn at Buffalo. ADVANCE-HILL TAKES GAME FROM SEEDERS BY SCORE OF 3 TO 2 ADVANCE-HILL, 3; A. S. M 2. For a practice game the AdvanceHill and Seeder game Saturday after noon was sure some battle, and if the Vim-a .an Irfion nn thin tf11n ttlA S A. T.. will surely have a grand little exhibi tion of the national sport Brady, a new pitcher for the Ad-Hill bunch, covered himself with glory in the four innigs he worked for them, etting the Seeders down without a hit. Gosselin was tried out on the mound for the "Ads" in the remaining five innings and got by good. Three hits n.-ara parnpr(1 hv the ast vear's champs, all of them coming off the de livery of Gosselin. Rarer and dracraft started as the Seeder battery and Bailey was given a pretty severe time in tne nrst inning, when the "Ads" made all their runs. Inhn Tncsrort worked the fourth and fifth and Muhl the remainder, with John showing the nest or tne trio. r nnvfR. third sacker of the Seeders. made a remarkable stop in the fifth inr.ins'. onlv to lose his man when Johnson dropped his perfect peg. The nintn snowea vim cooney 10 ue on the job when he picked one off of Bailey's bat far into deep center with no hnd Tt was ticketed for a three bagger at least. So sure was Otis Cracraft that the ball would fall safe that he as. almost home when Cooney puiieu the "sensash." He was doubled off second. Score by innings: innings 12345678 9 R. H. E. A S. M.. . . 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 12 3 3 Ad-Hill ...30000000 03 8 2
The next thins the teams In thi league had better do is to do a bit a strengthening.
Tfclrd laniaar SAFE ON FIRST! This is Decision Week at good cigar-stores, which are specially featuring CRANE'S DECISION Your first Decision will be "safe on first"; and then itwillbotthomerun. A pennant-grinning 5c smoks) NOTICE OF RECEIPT OF BIDS FOR CONSTRUCTION OF TWO NEW SCHOOL HOUSES IN WAYNE TOWNSHIP, WAYNE COUNTY. INDIANA. Notice is hereby given that the town ship trustee and advisory board oi Wayne school township, Wayne county, Indiana, will receive sealed bids at 2 o'clock p. m.. Tuesday. May 11th. 1915. from contractors for the construction of a one-room school house in School District No. 13, and a two-room school house with basement and restroom and library in School District No. 5. in said township. The detailed plans and specifications for said building are on file in the office of J. O. Edgerton, township trustee, at the court bouse In Richmond. Indiana, open to the inspection of all persons interested. The work contemplated shall be finished not later than August 15. 1915. and each bidder shall file with bis bid affidavits of non-collusion as provided for by statutes and his bond or certified check for three hundred ($300.00) dollars with bid for house In District No. 5, and his bond or certified check for one hundred and fifty ($150.00) dollars with bid for house in District No. 13, payable to the trustee of said Wayne township, guaranteeing that if he is the successful bidder he will enter into contract in writing to construct such building according to the plans and specifications. The contract to be made will be in substantial compliance with the terms of the Univer-' sal Form of Builders' Contracts, and same will provide for a penalty and forfeiture of five dollars ($5.00) per day in contract for house in District No. 13. and of $10 per day In contract for bouse in No. 5, for each day beyond August 15th, 1915, that completion of such work is delayed, and such penalty will be exacted. Further, the successful bidder, upon making contract will be required to give bond, either surety company bond or bond of individuals in the sum of at least fifty per cent of the contract price, conditioned upon his faithful compliance with the terms of the contract. The advisory board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Heating System. Further, at the same time that said trustee and advisory board receive sealed bids for the construction of said buildings, said trustee and advis ory board will receive sealed bods for a heating system for said building in District No. 5, plans and specifications for which are likewise on file in the office of said trustee. The bidders for said heating system will each file certified check or bond in the sum of one hundred ($100.00) dollars, payable to said trustee as above conditioned upon entering into contract of construction for installation If successful bidder, and will be required to enter into a like written contract for such work. The work to be completed on or be fore August 15th, 1915. and contract will provide a forfeit of. five doUars ($5.00) per day for each dajrs delay after such date, and same will be exacted likewise. The successful bidder will upon mak ing contract be required to give bis bond as above in like proportion conditioned upon his faithful compliance with the terms of contract. Further, at same time, said trustee and board will receive sealed bids for a one-room school heating system for said building in Dist. No.13. the bidders to submit with his bid his plans and specifications in keeping with require ments of statute. The bidders for oneroom heating system will each file a certified check in the sum of fifty ($0.00) dollars conditioned as above, as to contract and penalty. Sale of Old Buildings. Upon site of eventual building in each district there is at this time old school house. Said trustee and board will receive at same time sealed bids from bidders for the purchase of said buildings. Bids for respective buildings in separate bids, and purchaser to wreck and remove said buildings at " once upon acceptance of bid. Contractors bidding for new building will be permitted to bid for such old buildings, and If successful will be permitted to use so much of the material therein in the new work as passes inspection and meets compliance with specifications. The advisory board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Note. Each Improvement Is under separate contract, and if bidder bids upon each, he shall submit separate bids In separate covers and provivde separate certified check or bond for each bid. and shall likewise accompany each bid by an affidavit of non-collusion. , THE ADVISORY BOARD OF WAYNE TOWNSHIP, WAYNE COUNTY. INDIANA. J. O. EDGERTON. Trustee of Wayne School Township. (Apr 19-2S-May3)
