Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 146, 2 June 1915 — Page 2

PAGE TWO.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1915

HOLD PURTELLE FOR BILLS DUE CHICAGO HOTEL Lawyer Also Files Charge Alleged Traction Promoter Operated Confidence Game as Road's President. CHICAGO, June 2. Eugene Purtelle, traction line promoter, must appear Friday before Judge Mahoney to laswer a charge of failing to pay a hotel bill of $60. His arrest wes caused by the Hotel Sherman management. Just a few minutes before this charge was brought against him. Purtelle wat arrested for operating an alleged confidence game. In the confidence game charge W.. A. Miller, a lawyer, appears as complainant. Miller cause the arrest of Purtelle April 8 last. Purtelle, ha asserted, passed himself as president of the Tipton-Frankfort Traction company, and had sold him stock on the representation that money was to be used for buying equipment. The lawyer said he traveled between Tipton, lad., and Frankfort, Ind., without finding any trace of the supposed connecting line, before he swore out a warrant. Purtelle Indicted. Judge Prindiville held Purtelle to the grand jury in ?2,000 bail. He was indicted a week ago, and the grand Jury ordered the bond raised to $3,000. It was on this order Purtelle was taken into custody yesterday. Purtelle, now in his early thirties, has lived a life full of thrills, pot only for himself but for others. In 1902 be was Milwaukee manager of Red Letter Sullivan, then operating a string of bucket-shops stretching from coast to coast. The next year, after serving as general manager in Chicago for the Sullivan organization, which let him out of a job by failing, he returned to Milwaukee as representative of the E. E. Jones company, another Chicago firm patterned after Sullivan'6. In J909 Purtelle was president of Purtelle & Co., stock and bond brokers at 222 South LaSalle street. One year later his box in the Chicago Safe Deposit company's vault was forced and $5,000 was taken to satisfy a judgment obtained by John C. Keith, an insurance broker. Purtelle subsequently filed the preliminaries of a (5,000 damage suit against Keith. Not' long afterward Purtelle exploited the Northwestern Indiana Traction zompany, a $5,000,000 paper interurbin line, supposed to link Monticello and Hammond. The line has not been completed and Purtelle is defendant in many suits alleging he did not pay labor and hotel bills. TRANSFER STATION TAKEN FROM DEPOT

Under orders from the government, the transfer station at the depot which handles mail from trains, will be abolished at 1 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. The weighing of mail sacks will stop at midnight. Atfer tomorrow, all mail for transfer between trains will be brought to the postoffice, causing a great deal more work. The transfer clerk, J. E. Eves, will become a railway mail clerk on the Richmond division. K. OF C. SELECTS KLINGER FOR POST Charles O. Klinger, inner guard of the Knights of Columbus lodge, was elected financial secretary to succeed George Zwissler, resigned, at the regular meeting of the lodge members last night. At the meeting in two weeks, a member will be chosen to take the office of inner guard, vacated by Mr. Klinger's election. Nothing else of importance was done at the meeting last night. CONDEMNS HOUSE AT PUBLIC PARK Because of numerous complaints Dr. J. H. Kinsey, president of the city board of health, has condemned the women's retiring house at Glen Miller park and has ordered it located in a more isolated section of the grounds. "This place was located very close to some springs and it has been a menace to th public health because of fte constant danger of contamination of the spring water," Dr. Kinsey said. KLEINKNECHT WANTS STATE ORGANIZATION Supt. Clarence Klelnknecht today sent letters to managers of municipally owned plants in various Indiana and Ohio cities suggesting the formation of an organization for the purpose of promoting and increasing th efficiency of the public service work the various plants are engaged in. UNDER MARTIAL LAW. GENEVA. Swtizerland. June 2. Martial law has been proclaimed in Vienna as a result of the unrest which has followed the Italian declaration of war against Austria. Health Insurance For the Approaching Warm WeatherCheaply Obtainedby Using Simpson's Vegetable Compound This old and reliable alterative blood purifier, acts upon the secreHons, stimulating the inner organs to activity, thus resisting nature e cleanse the system of ita (cold weather) accumulation of impurities. For forty years Simpsona Vegetable Compound has been the Standard remedy for blood trouble, even in its tvorst forms, therefore much less is required of it, as a "Spring cleanser" than of any other vith-all a fine Ionic and body builder. One trial will easily convince you of Its superior merit. Sold by druggists rvervwhere. Be sure to get the genu me. Dr. A. B. Simpson Co., Richmond, hd.T-Adv.' -

"A Man and His Wife"

Isabel Finds Mrs. Simmons Is the By Virginia Terhune Van de Wate CHAPTER XXIIt Isabel Hamilton did not analyse the impulse that had led her to return to her maid the telephone number of the person who had called up. The wife did not even inquire if the unknown, was a man or a woman. Something, possibly a subtle sense of honor, prevented ber from asking a single question. She could not inquire of a domestic about things that concerned ber husband. Even jealousy and suspicion could not make her do that, she told herself. Yet was she jealous or suspicions? Was it not entirely natural that some business acquaintance should call John up at his home? Such things had happened before. But some how she ' shrank from handing the telephone number to John. She would rather have Cynthia do this. Of course John would mention the matter to bis wife, and perhaps she wanted to feel that she would do this without any actual necessity for his doing so. If she gave him the paper he migh feel that she expected an explanation. Was she, unconsciously to herself, putting him to a test? Soon she heard the front door open and John's voice calling her name. When she answered be came to her room and kissed her affectionately. Cynthia, busy in the kitchen, would doubtless mention the telephone matter to him later. Isabel wished she would do so soon and get it over with. She was ridicuously nervous about it. After a moment's chat John went into the hall, leaving the door of her room open behind him. Thus it came about that she overheard the maid speak to him as she emerged from the dining room on her way to tell her mistress that dinner was ready. "Good eveqin', sir," Cynthia said in reply to her employer's perfunctory "Good evening." Somebody called you up on de phome a little while ago jes' befo' Airs. Hamilton come in " "Ah! Who was it?" "I dunno, sir. She say please to call her up when you come home. I got de number on a paper in de kitchen. I'll go fetch it." So it was a woman after all! The wife felt her heart sink, then she pulled herself together angrily. How dare she suspect such a good husband as hers? The person who telephoned probably was the secretary or stenographer of some one of John's business acquaintances. Surely that was it. Yet she still stood motionless in the center of the room until Cynthia came out of the kitchen again, bearing the paper with her. John Seems to Be Especially Merry. "Here it is, sir," Isabel heard her say. "Thank you," John murmured. That was all. Even when Cynthia remarked, "Dinner served, sir," be said no more. Probably he was reading and re-reading that number. Isabell had not known that she remembered it, but now she recalled the figures clearly "Riverside 100f." Riverside! That was the same central theirs! Then this person must live in this neighborhood at least not far away. "Dinner's served, ma'am." Cynthia was in the doorway and Isabel started violently. "Very well," she said, "I'll be right in." Arkansaw There are many Indiana men, Who in some units saw, A great financial dealing Way down in Arkansaw. Some knockers thought them foolish; They made a bad mistake; But if we are muleish, There some more would partake. But units in this deal are past, No more can get a chance To buy a unit in Mackinaw, So don't kick of your pants. 1 Mr. Denison is a gentleman, And so is Mr. Hardy. You knockers that are knocking them Consider yourself tardy. i The land is in the cotton belt, Which everybody knows, And takes you down to Mackinaw Where hogs and cattle grow. Let's all us unit adders Now form a happy band; Go down there to Mackinaw Ami occupy tbis land. Some of our friends will follow soon To buy themselves a home; To settle down in Mackinaw And help keep up the boom. We will all go there with good Intent, And help each other out. And have a town upon the map That all can read about. This writer is a carpenter And has been on the ground, And after June the twentieth In Mackinaw can be found. To figure on your bungalow, A garage or a barn, If built in the town of Mackinaw Or on some near-by farm. CHARLES SMITH. RUIN WIRELESS DEPOT ROME, June 2.-rThe Austrian wireless station on the Island of Lissa off the Gallmatian coast and the semiphore on the Island of Curaola have been destroyed by the Italian fleet. It was near the Lissa shore that the Austrian fleet defeated the Italian p.vy in a great battle on July 20, 1896. The bombardment of the Mori, three nailes southwest of Rovereto in the Trestina has begun- , RECEIVES DIVORCE, Mrs. Ollie M. Adams was granted a divorce in circuit court today from Alva E. Adams. Judge Comstock found the complaint charging cruel and in human treatment and failure to pro yide sufficient and Una decree was is sned.. . .

One Who Has Called Up John

Switching off her light, she went into the hall. John stood there under the chandelier, reading the evening paper. . He was always reading the morning or evening paper, the wife thought fretfully. She had never known another man so addicted to the newspaper habit. But where was the slip of paper she had imagined him as still scrutinizing? He must have put it in bis pocket as soon as he glanced at it. Why had he been in such a hurry to do so? "Well," said John, joining her as she went toward the dining room, "how are thing6? Did you get Mrs. Ferris on the phone, and did she agree to have you without your husband?" He spoke merrily, carelessly, as if he had nothing especially on his mind. Evidently he thought of that person waiting somewhere for him to obey his (or her) suggestion did not trouble him. "Yes," Isabel replied, "I got her on the phone, and she wants me to come even though you can't She is sorry you have to be absent." "She is very kind," John remarked"I am sorry to have made her alter the arrangement of her table. "Oh, she can get a man in your place." the wife told him. "She asked me if there was not some friend of mine I would care to suggest." "Of course, there isn't," John replied quickly. "It would be much better for your hostess to supply one of her own friends." "Perhaps." Isabel shrugged her shoulders. It was plain that John did not approve of the idea of her selecting the man who would take his place at the table. She changed the subject. She did not care to raise the issue. Under some conditions it might be awkward to have John forbid her inviting her own escort. Isabel Tries a Counter Irritant. Dinner over, John took his hat and coat from the rack. "I am going to run out to the cigar store," he explained. "I will be back in ten minutes." Was he going out to telephone? If so, why? She must know. "John," she said impulsively, "didn't Cynthia tell you that some one wanted you to call up as soon as you got home? She took the number down." She felt a little sick as she saw him flush. "Oh, yes," he replied, "she gave me the number all right. But there's no hurry about it." She would ask no more. She knew he would not telephone from here. When he was gone out, she went to the instrument and called for "Information." "Please tell me," she said, "the name of the subscriber whose number is Riverside 10076." She waited, her nerves quivering, until the answer came in crisp accent. "The subscriber at Riverside 10076 is Mrs. A. L. Simmons." "Thank you," Isabel faltered. But her voice was firm when, ten minutes later, she called Cynthia. "I want you to mail a letter for me when you go out," she said. The letter was only a short note to Ida Ferris saying the writer would be glad to have Mr. David Duval invited in her husband's place for next Wednesday. Then followed his address which Isabel Hamilton had just looked up in the telephone directory. To becontinued AUSTRIANS STIFFEN DEFENSIVE TACTICS ROME, June 2. Austrian resistance against the advance of Italian armies in Trent and Istria has begun to stiffen as the invaders draw near to the positions which the Austrians have fortified for their most stubborn stand. Unfavorable weather conditions still prevail in the Tyrolese Alps, with rainstorms and thick fogs. The Italians have begun to bombard the defense of Rovereto, only thirteen miles from Trent. In the Adige valley a severe artillery duel is in progress. The Italian army which advanced through the Ampezzo valley, occupying thirty-seven towns, has established its base at Cortina, for a movement toward Trent from the northwest. Between Gradisca and Monfalcone stubborn fighting is in progress. The Italian army, which crossed the Iponzo river and attempted, to drive toward Trieste on the shore of the Gulf of Trieste, ran into a strong line Of fortifications. The Austrian land positions are being bombarded by Italian warships which entered the bay of Pan zona. RAID AUSTRIAN COAST ROME. June 2- A squadron of Italian warships steamed into the .Adriatic on Tuesday to give battle to the Aus? trian fleet, it was officially announced today, but the enemy remained hidden. The Italian ships then raided the Austrian coast. CAPTURE COMMANDER PETROGRAD, June 2.-nrGeneral von Pritzoitz, commander of the German forces holding L4beau, has been wounded and taken prisoner by thft Russians while motoring in couriancfc General von Pritzvitz's escort wt; killed. The prisoner is detained at Miteau. Theatrical Notes Promises of the Press Agent. AIR DOMEAt 7:30 and 9 o'clock tonight, the Air Dome will offer the best vaudeville bill that has been offered this season. Five acts are booked, one act impersonates Charles Chaplin in real life. It will be a treat to see a person imitate this popular star of the movie world- The program will be changed Thursday. Matinee Thursday at 9:30 o'clock.

AUSTRIANS BRING UP OLD VETERAN TROOPS ROME, June 2. Strong reinforcements have been brought up by Austrians in an effort to dislodge the Italians at Monte Croce on the Carnia frontier. The Italians at that point are threatening the Drava valley. Tho amous gilded horses which have adorned the portal ot the Cathedral of St. Marks of Venice have been removed so that they cannot be damaged by bombs from planes. MACCLINTOCK SPEAKS BEFORE GRADUATES OF QUAKER INSTITUTION The program for commencement week at Earlham college has been issued as follows: Friday, June Uth 8:00 p. m. The Annual Music Recital. Saturday. June I2th8:00 p. m. public Entertainment by the Ionian and phoenix Societies, in connection with Department of Public speakingSunday, June J8thlo:$0 a. m. The Baccalaureate Service. Address by Dr. Thomas Nicholson. New York, Corresponding Secretary of the Board of Education of the Methodist Episcopal church. At 7:30 p. m., the public meeting of the Christian Asto ciations; address by Dr. David Worth Dennis. Monday. June 14th 1:00 p. m. Meeting of the Board of Trustees. 3:30 to 7:00 p. m. The Commencement Drive. 8:00 p. m. The Senior Play, "Maria Stuart" Tuesday, June 16th-2 : 00 p. m. Business meeting of Alumni Association followed by business meeting of Old Students' Association. - 6:00 p. m.-The Quinquennial Banquet. Wednesday, June 16th--10:00 a. re

commencement. Address by Dr. William D. MacCIintock, Professor of English Literature. The University of Chicago. The Conferring of Degrees Announcements. FIND BODY OF GIRL CHICAGO. June 2. No doubt was felt today by the authorities as to the identity of the body of Grace Bond Coney, for whom her father and the police had been searching since May 22- The body of a girl taken from Lake Michigan late yesterday was positively identified as that of the missing Northwestern university settlement worker by several intimate friends. NAMES SALOONIST ON POLICE BOARD TERRE HAUTE, Ind., June 2. Mayor Gossom today named Fred Savoree, a saloon keeper, as a member of the police board. The selection of Savoree, the mayor asserts, was to prove his contention that saloon keepers, as a rule, desire law enforcement. ESCAPING INMATE FALLS IN PRISON MEMPHIS, June 2 Will Emmons, a prisoner in the county jail from an improvised blanket rope today while attempting to escape through te jail roof was fatally injured. Emmons and two members of the prank Holloway gang escaped jail after Emmons sawed the iron bars in a cell on the second floor. Emmons helped his pals to freedom but fell. REMOVE INSPECTORS INDIANAPOUS, June 2.-John Ella and William T. Fletcher, both Republican postoffice inspectors of the Cincinnati and Indianapolis division, were retired on the nominal grounds of inefficiency. Ella and Fletcher have been in the service 31 and 15 years, respectively. Their retirement is effective June 30 and leaves them eligible for eraployment in other branches of the service. OBITUARY. George K. Yager, aged 69, died at bis home May 21. He leaves a wife, ope daughter and her husband and one grandson, Edward, two brothers, Clark of Lafayette, and Joe of Richmond, and a host of friends to mourn bis loss. Mrs. George Yager, Mr. and Mrs. Onjar Brown. Rheumatic or Backachy? Get Trex Now Twenty-five Cents Worth Is Plenty; Try it! Take Harmless, Sooth, ing Trex for Just 3 Days. Then no more stlpgjng rheumatic pains; good-bye chronic miserable constipation; no more sore kidneys nor achlns back. Trex is wonderful! Acts right off. Trejc induces natural drainage of the entire system; promptly opens your clogged up kidneys, liver and bowels; cleans the stomach of fermenting, gassy foods and waste; dissolves out irritating rheumatic poisons; relieves feversbr cess, headaches, dizziness and constipation misery. Don't stay "knocked out" any longer. Get this quick relief today. ?5c at all druggists or sample direct from H- B. Denton & Co., (Not Inc.) Beardstown, UJ.-radv. PHOTOS ZZ MAJH &T RICHWONR IND. I? . IIVU! H!'pfi'it. w'. l .if CarlF.Weisbrod Piano Tuning and Repairing. Phone 2095,

REPEAT FOLLIES OF 1915 AT GEKTT TONIGHT

A wave of enthusiasm was created for the "Follies of 1915," at the Gennett theatre last night by the act, "A Study in Music and Song," by Harry Frajkel and Roy Parks wso carried away the house. A good sized audience greeted the "Follies." the weather keeping many away. The play will be repeated tonight to a larger audience. The Follies opened with a minstrel in which Ray Geler, with tn song. "Just a Little Love, 'A Little Kiss" was the favorite. He and George Hodge with the song, "When - You Wore a Tulip," received Ions applause. Miss Ruth Seott, with a violin solo and Miss Ruth James with a vocal solo, rendered pleasing numbers. Give New Danees. The Spanish and fairy dances under the direction of Robert Nohr, with Juliet Nusbaum as the solo dancer, were graceful aesthetic movements similar to the dances given in the spring festival at the Colesium. Numbers in school days received the greatest applause of any amateur acts in the show. Miss Meta Pfafflin as Sis Hopkins took the most promi nent part. The sotfg 'Poor Pauline," by Miss Mona Porter was cleverly given. Miss Marie O'Brien played the ROADS SHOW GAIN WASHINGTON, June 2 Ninetyseven of the principal steam railroads of the United States earned during April, 1915, a net operating revenue of $23,821,30$, the Interstate Commerce Commission announced today. These roads have total operating revenues of $118,546,608 and operating expenses of $84,725,800. The net revenue per mile was $297 for April, 1915, compared with $269 for April, 1914. KILLSHISWIFE. CHICAGO, June 2. -John G. Peter, son, a carpenter contractor, and his wife quarreled over the family finances early today. A few minutes later their two daughters heard two shots. They found Mrs. Peterson dy. ing from a bullet wound near her heart and Peterson dead from a bullet through his brain. The smoking revolver was lying near Peterson's hand. SUES ON OLD DEBT. A note bearing Spanish-American war tax stamps of 1899, was shown in an exhibit in a suit of D. M. Osborne & Co. against C. L. V. Locke for $313.20 in satisfaction of the debt of t64. The note is more than fifteen years Old having been given February 8, 19100. The complaint says Locke agreed to deliver the money to the company in Eaton thirty days after date and has failed to make payment in fifteen years. FLOUR PRICE DROPS. MINNEAPOLIS, June 2. The Minneapolis mills lowered the price of flour to $7.10, the price yesterday was $7.45. The decrease was due te the drop in wheat and to the easing off of cash premiums. SHIVELY IMPROVES. NEW YORK, June 2.--Senator Shively, who is ill at a private sanitarium, 6pent a fairly good night and was resting comfortably today. SHOOT OLD FARMER. ERIE, Pa., June 2.-Two masked men shot and fatally wounded Richard Mack, 60, at his home, four miles from Waterford, and then took refuge in a woodland, where they are exchanging shots with a posse of farmers headed by John P. Sullivan. The men attacked Mack in his barn and after robbing him of $10 shot him through the lungs. The Last

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part of "Sassy Little" and Miss Nelle Becher of "Rosie White." Clarence Turner as Willie Hopkins was the favorite In the act. John Deardourff as the teacher gave a Strong iaterpretationof the part. Make Big Hit Harry Frankel's songs and Roy Park's piano numbers formed easily

.the best professional act seen in Rich mond for a number . of years. The closing number, "Chinatown" was so popular that It was impossible to proceed with the show until several encores had been given. Then the applause lasted for several minutes after the stage had been cleared for the closing act. The society ensemble was an un usual act for local talent plays and the skill and grace of the dances and the new and intricate steps gave it close attention by the audience. John Deardourff and Miss Elizabeth Shrlber in "Maxixe," Howard Messick and Miss Mary Canby in "Gavotte." Raymond Jones and Mrs. ' Bert Kolp in "La Rouli Roull," Bert KOlp and Dorothy Bates in "Waits Medley" and Justin McCarthy and Mary Iliff in "La Russe" were the dancers. The ensemble dances the "One Step" and the "Fox Trot." INDICT OPERATORS OWENSBORO, Kay., June 2 Warrants were issued today for the arrest of three operators of baseball pools, following their Indictment by the grand jury. Baseball pools have been doing a flourishing business In Owensboro this season, more than 1,500 changes being sold almost dally. FIRST CASE STANDS. A motion of the T. H.. I. and E. Traction company for a new trial in the suit of Charles Wolford against the traction company, was overruled by Judge Comstock in circuit court today and the amount of damages given by the jury will stand- Wolford was granted $2,600 for his Injuries. GRANTS BOND ISSUE INDIANAPOLIS, June 2 Finly P. Mount, receiver for the M. Rumely company of Laporte, has been granted authority to issue $250,000 bonds for authorized receiver's certificates to carry on the business of the company. He was granted authority to sell certain Oklahoma lands owned by the company. All Babies Dssfinod to Great Achiovcmonf To be bora is to be great. For there are possibilities in every tiny human inrant. Ana lor uus reason every one should remember tbet whatever is dune to aid the mother, to relieve bcr of distresses during ber trying months, will surely bo of marked beneut . to the child. Among the sterling aids is a splendid external remedy known as "Mother's Friend." It is what is called an I brocatlon. It is sp iled to the abdorai&ai muscles, gently ebbed In by your own band guided y your own mind. It makes the muscles iliant, they expand quite naturally and the fleet upon the nerves is such that they ad'ust themselves to the process of expansion o that pain from tbis source is almost eliminated. Women who use 'Mother's Friend" refer to the absence of moral ag sickness, they -re relieved of 8. great many minor distresses, all apprehension disappears and thosa peculiar nervous "fidgets" no longer disturb lao nights. It is well named "Mother's rriend." Get a bottle today of any druggist. Then at once write for s most entertaining and instructive book for nil prospec ive mothers. Address Bradneld Regulator tY.. ' T,....- M'-ti

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GILES WILL CONDUCT TEACHERS' MEETINGS OF RICHMOND CORPS

Changes in the policy of the administration of the affairs of the high, school and the city schools, will be made next year, according to statements of Principal F. O. Pickell and Superintendent Giles today. While these changes will not be revolutionary or radical In character, yet they will be noticeable to the students and teachers. One or these changes, said Mr. Giles, will be the setting aside of one Saturday in each month tor the holding or the city teachers' institute in compliance with a law passed by the state legislature. The township teachers la the past have been meeting one day each month but the city teachers, while they held their regular grademeetings in the late afternoons of school days, yet they have never assembled monthly for Institute meetings. The institute for the city teach-, ers next year will probably be held in connection with the township teachers institute. Neither Mr. Giles nor Mr. Pickell cared to make public the changes they . have considered and decided upon. Mr. Pickell explained that he preferred to wait until after the changes bad been put in operation. The changes win deal for the most part with minor subjects, the Improvement of which were deemed advisable during the last term of school. KICKED BY HORSE. TERRE HAUTE. Ind., June 2 Maynard Pence, aged 7. is dead as the result of being kicked in the head by a horse. FREE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS A New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We have a new method that cures Asthma, and we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether your case is of long standing or recent development, whether it is present as occasional or chronic Asthma, you should send for a free trial of our method. No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or occupation, if you are troubled with asthma, our method should relieve you promptly. We especially want to send it to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, "patent smokes," etc.. have failed. We want to show everyone at our own expense, that this new method Is designed to end all difficult breathing, all wheezing, and all those terrible paroxysms at once and for all time. This free offer is too Important to. neglect a single day. Write now and then begin the method at once. Send no money. Simply mail coupon below. Do It Today. FREE ASTHMA COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room 75M, Niagara and Hudson Sts., Buffalo, N. Y. Send free trial of your method to: BASEBALL Uniforms Made to Order Complete new line ot Balls, Bats, Gloves. Etc, at lowest prices. Bicycle Tires And Sundries Specially Priced. SAM S. VI GRAN, 512 MAIN ST. - Summer