Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 218, 25 August 1915 — Page 4
V
PAGE FOtJtt THE niCmfONp PALLADIVI1 SztmQS PPAXt AVQ- & 195
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM PublUhed Every Eventa Except Sunday by . Palladium Printing Co. ftUladlum Building,. North Ninth and Sailor St ; R. G. Leeds, Editor, E. H. Harris,. Mgr. ., to aicnmone. 10 eeatt m'weelt By u. ta 4Taeepa year. $5.00; six month. $2.0; one month. 45 cents. Html Routes, In advance one year. $100; fix month, $!.$; n month at cnu. t ,' - En tared at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, aa See
The jingoes are now talking about spending three hundred million dollars on the navy and one hundred and fifty million dollars on the army, or four hundred and fifty million dollars per year getting ready for ware that plight never to come. Four hundred and fifty millions a year would amount to about five billions in eleven years! That sum would gridiron the United States with hard roads twelve miles apart, so that.no citizen would live more than six; miles from a good road which would enable him to go every? where. It is estimated that a farmer can haul four times as much on a hard road as on a, dirt road. What a boon it would be to a farmer to be relieved of the mud embargo! The sum above mentioned would in ten years revolutionize the road travel and traffic of the country, but half that sum would probably supply present needs. If we keep our : army and navy appropriations as they are now and simply use for good roads the sum which the jingoes desire to add to these appropriations, the benefits to business will be enormous. Good roads or frenzied preparedness, which? So writes William Jennings Bryan, "peace-at-any-price" advocate, in his Commoner. ' We believe the former premier of the Wilson cabinet is guilty of an exaggeration when he asserts there is a demand for "frenzied" preparedness. The American people are not likely to-become frenzied in their advocacy of any military policy. Having realized their utter lack of military preparedness they are now firmly insisting that congress provide an adequate national defense, and a saner demand than this was never made by our people. Mr. Bryan is an idealist, a dreamer. He has seen what weight treaties have in the prevention of war hut he would still have this country de? pend upon arbitration treaties as its sole protection from attack and invasion. Unlike Mr. Bryan the great majority of his fellow countrymen are not visionaries. They believe in things as they are, ancj today are likening themselves to an unarmed man in a world of bloodthirsty maniacs.
CROPS IN COLORADO FAR ABOVE AVERAGE
J. S. Kuth, veil known farmer, mho la traveling in the west, writes from Oreely, Colo., as follow: We left Denver at 10 a. m. for Oreely. Col. Mr. Eaton, our "chaperone," drivca an Indianapolis made car the National. The motor develops 107 horse power so you can almost guess that we are cutting some, and leaving some when we start out. Greely was founded by Horace Greely and the pioneers still call it the colony. Mr. Greely must have been a man of great brains with large thinking power to leave New York and the east and locate a colony that has a climate, land and scenery with a city where the environment cannot be equaled anywhere in the west. Mr. Greely placed restrictions that never have been violated. It is today a model city. Wheat and oats harvest and threshing is all over. They have fine crops. I have never seen anything like them- Fields of sugar beets containing sixty-five acres. We saw three sugar refineries. We also saw potato cellars that hold thirty car loads. It is very interesting to see and learn bow alfalfa seed is grown. To grow alfalfa seed, it is planted in rows, three feet apart and is cultivated like corn once each year for seed only. The sugar x refineries are growing many acres of sugar beet seed to save tbem from importing seed from GermanyThey are having an excess of rain all season and it is still raining too much.
The total production of whale oil in 1912 was 1,200,000 barrels, mbre than half of which came from Norway. Ten years ago the cost of producing a ton of the oil was less than half what it is now.
True Secret of Keeping Youthful Looking
Such beta the casethe vs to admonition
WMbington, founder of the repuhlie afid its savior, makes more pf an impression upon our peor pie than 'the rantings of the world' greatest Chautauqua star. " --..'' - ' - In 1780 the discouraged hut undaunted Wash: ington addressed this letter to congress : " 1 TOe Ides of CaftaarWtht Union awrthe - fate' of brave Montgomery, compelled to, a " rash attempt by the immediate prospect of being left without troops, might be enumerated in the catalogue of evils- that have sprung from our lack" of a force of trained soldiers. - v . "We find ourselves unprepared, without ' troops, without magazines, and with little time to provide them. We have frequently heard the bravery of militia extolled upon .one or another occasion by men who judge only from the surface, by visionary men who have no experience in war and whose credulity easily swallows every vague story. "I solemnly declare that I never was witness to a single instance that can countenance an opinion of militia or raw troops being fit for the real business of fighting. " mean not to detract from the merit of our militia. Thejr zeal and spirit upon a variety of occasions have entitled them to the highest-applause, but we should learn to estimate them rightly. - - "We may expect everything from ours that militia is capable of, but we must not expect from them service for which regulars alone are fit. The late battle of Camden is a melancholy illustration of this fact! - The militia fled at the very first fire. "Every motive which can arise from a consideration of our circumstances either in a domestic or foreign point of view calls upon us to abandon temporary expedients and substitute something durable, systematic and substantial. "Our system furnishes us in emergency a mob of men, but no army. We must adopt a plan.that will give more energy to government, more vigor to . the army and to the . navy. "Without it, we have everything to fear. I am persuaded of the sufficiency of our resources if properly directed. Our safety depends upon our preparation for defense. The present cricis of our affairs is so serf; ous as to justify the expression of my sentiments freely for the safety of the republic. I hope the motive will excuse the liberty f have taken." x And the "present system" of 1870 is the system of 1915 in this country. In 1870 war was a fight ; in 1915 it is a science. In 1780 the "spirit" won?Ttsame spirit remains undiminished i;day, but in the new warfare without GUNS and TRAINED MEN it can achieve little but brave defeat.
of
Dolly's Daily Ghats For Housewives
The materials required to make a mixed meat loaf are: Two pounds lean veal, one-half &ound pork tender; loin, one-half pound sweetbreads, onehalf pound lean bam, three eggs, one cup white bread crumbs, three tablespoons cream, one tablespoon salt, one half teaspoon pepper, one teaspoon onion Juice, and one cup of canned mushrooms, cut in piecesPut all of the meat through the food chopper twice, then add all of the other ingredients and mix thoroughly. Pack in a bread pan, cover with buttered paper and bake in a brisk oven for one hour. Uncover and cook one-half hour longer. Serve cold and sliced thin. Rice Croquettes. These answer as well for a luncheon dish as do meat croquettes. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan; stir in one tablespoonful of flour, half a cupful of milk and mix over the fire until boiling. Then add two. teaspoonfuls of chopped onion; a cupful of boiled and drained rice, a chopped, hard cooked egg, a tablespoonful of chopped parsley, a beaten egg, salt and pepper to taste and four
tablespoonfuls Gf chopped nut meats! Turn out tb cool and stiffen. Then divide into even portions, and form these into croquettes. Roll in bread crumbs, brush over with beaten egg, and again coat with bread crumbs. Fry in smoking hot fat, then drain. Lemon Syrup. Orate the rind of six lemons into the juice of -twelve and let it stand over night. Make a thick syrup, using twelve cups of white sugar. When H is quite cool strain the lemon juice into it, squeezing some of the oil from the grated rind. Bottle and set away for ' use. A tablespoonful in a glass of water will make a delicious drink for a hot day. English Apple Tart. To make it, pare, core and cut into eights enough tart apples to nil the baking dish.' Line the edges with puff paste and put in a layer of apples, a sprinkling of sugar, a pinch of nutmeg or cinnamon. Repeat till the dish is filled. Cover with paste, in which slit holes. Wet the edges and brush over top with sweet milk. Bake until the apples are tender.
HOW TO WIN THE "IRON GROSS
If
(The Beauty Beaker.) "The real secret of keeping young-look Jng and beautiful," says a weU-knowa lygienist, "Is to keep the. liver and bow Is- normally activs. Without these re aulsltea, poisonous wast product remain in the system, polluting .the bloo and lodging In various organs, tissues Joints. One become flabby, obese, nerv tue. mentally alufglsh; dull-eyed, wrlnfcUea and sallow of face. 'But to set liver and bowels working; as they ought, without producing evil after-effects, has been the problem. For tunately, there la a prescription of unquestioned merit, which may now be had In convenient tablet form. Its value la
4ue largely to aa Ingredient derived front the humble Mar apple, or its root. whJco
i been eauea -vaecaDie caioraer pe
er Its enecuveneae jnwuen
course It la not to be ciaaeea vrun znm real calomel of mercurial origin, There Is ao habit-forming constituent in sen tail el' tablets that's the name and their use Is not followed by weakness or exhaustion. On the contrary, these harm less vegetable tablets tend to Impart an ni .laatinl tv ta the relaxed intes
tinal wan. Sentanel tablets, which mar
be procured from any druggist MMk mrill Aa will MMMf a pel
aar constipated. liver-troubled persoV
tst a dlJ revelation Q tied ner sot"
Lieutenant Gebse, of Glogau, and his orderly. Private Tuerk, of Essen, in one of the battles ' in Poland with several other soldiers crept up to the position of a detachment of Russian sappers to attack them with hand grenades. When their ammunition gave out Tuerk returned to the battalion to get more grenades. This he repeated twice, but when he. returned the third time he found the lieutenant and his comrades surrounded by a detachment of Russian infantry. The situation was desperate but the cool-headed private attacked single handed. In quick succession he threw a half dozen bombs into the ranks of the Russians, demoralizing them completely. His bravery saved Lieutenant Gebser, who gathered his handful of men around him and cut his way through the ranks of the panic-stricken Russians with the bayonet. During an attack on a French position on the heights of Meuse, Corporal Bosse, of Delligsen and twelve - men charged, the enemy with: hand grenades. Although the thirteen men were greeted by a heavy musketry Are ithey advanced.? stept by step, throwing the bombs which were brought up to ihem from the rear. One of the thirteen attackers., was killed apd J wo; fell, badjy .wounded. Bosse's left ear was torn off by a bul
let and be was also shot in the leg, but with his remaining nine comrades he kept up the attack, until, after an hour and a half, the French trench was conquered.
NEW PARIS
Mrs. D. W. Miller is making extensive improvements upon her recently purchased residence on Cherry street, which was a part of the Hutton estate. Mr. and Mrs. G...M. Arnold and daughter of Richmond were guests of relatives and friends here Sunday. Miss galena Raney returned home Tuesday from a visit with relatives at Portland, Ind. Miss Mildred Martin returned Tues
day evening to her homein -ColumbuT
O., after a five weeks' visit with Mr. and Mrs. Venoman .Reid. Mrs. ' Reid and Miss Martin -were school ehums when residing In Columbus. i Misses LillianyvVilson and Helen Sitt ot ;Alexandria,: Irid., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clement L. Jones, south of New PariKEwF . v ,'-'' Mrs. Marcus Penlahd spent Sunday with her parents at Ithaca, O. Mes Minnie Reid of Campbellstown, O., rwC the week-end guest, of her brother, Venoman Reid.
Early
City Histbry
Contributions on tKe Early Pays of Iclimond Will Appear - - inThisColuiim Dafly '
The) first directory of Richmond was published by Robert O. ' Dormer and W.'R. Holloway anCrtnted, by Holior way and parts, at the Palladium ofiice in . I85t v 4 , ;v . y.u : I x - The year 18IT was a very bad tima for business venture. : The country had ejected James Buchanan, Democrat, to the presidency, defeating the first Republican candidate. John C. Fremont. ., Buchanan wa duly inaugurated In March, 1857, and before the summer was over the nation was plunged into panics, business paralysis and a widespread distress such as America has seldom experienced. Fremont had been assailed as a Roman Catholic. It was charged that he had cut a cross on' Independence rock in bis western mountain explorations; that his adopted daughter hd been educated in a Catholic school; that his French ancestors were Catholics, and that a priest had married hint to Miss Jesse Benton. The vilest and most contemptible of all political schemes is this appeal to religious prejudice. The . years ' from 1850' to i860 were full of it. But the civil war broke much of it down, for it showed how brave and loyal the Catholic soldiers were. This attack on Fremont defeated him Under Buchanan, in 1817, money disappeared, specie payment was suspended, thqre was no worki and "hunger meetings" were held all over the country. A "hunger meeting" in Philadelphia was composed ot 10,000 idle worklngmen clamoring for bread. Fifty thousand unemployed men had marched down Wall street, New York City, carrying a banner inscribed: "We Want Bread!" . Another famous event makes' ' the year 1857 memorable. The supreme court handed down the Dred Scott case decision. One ' sentence alone set the northern states all ablaze. It was this : "For more than a century the civilized world has regarded the negroes as beings of an inferior order and so far inferior that they have no rights which the white man is bound to respect." " x - It was in such , stirring and distressing times 'that " Robert O. Dormer, W. R. Holloway, Benjamin W. Davis and David P. Holloway issued the first directory of Richmond. It is just and proper to say here that these men were among the earliest pioneers of the Republican party ; that they all espoused that party because it was the party of justice and humanity, the party of education and progress. And they were valiant fighters, too. Benjamin Wa Davis was one of the keenest editorial writers in Indiana, and
as editor of The Richmond weekly
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beinf; obliged to sit apart and. to "the !Wr Pigusic: V V- ; When . a small ,boy the writer' saw General Tom. Thumb (Charles Sherwood Strattcun) at Starr Hall.- , He was la - company with Lavinia Warren- a dwarf.: whom; ha afterward married. Tonj Thumb weighed sixteen pounds and ' was lass - than. ' two feet high. Mothers ' took their little children up to a table upon which Thumb stood to have him kiss them. When a few of us boys' were presented to be kissed he swelled up in anger and said; "I don't kiss boys!4! and we felt smaller than . Tom Thumb until we got out on tha street where we could "just holier." ; Dr. Kane, the great Arctic explorer also exhibited his Eskimo dogs, sleds and natives in Starr Hall, and such lecturers as Bayard Taylor, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry Ward Beecher appeared there.' " The little directory I speak of contains a sketch of Richmond by Dr. John T. Plummer. He gathered a tpreat deal of valuable information retardlng the earliest settlers, and the rst incorporation of the town, under the title of "Reminiscences of the History of Richmond." Dr. Plummer then lived on Ft. Wayne avenue, just across from the old Hicksite meeting bouse, now replaced by the Second ward school building. It is related that when the famous Lucretia Mott addressed the Hicksite meeting on slavery she offended Dr. Plummer by her lurid denunciation of human bondage, and that he treated her discourteously when she returned as a guest to his home; and that she left there and' took refuge with Dr. Mary F. TnOmas, the first' woman physician in Richmond, perhaps in Indiana. Dr. Plummer was a close and successful student. He acquired a speaking and writing knowledge of Latin, Greek, Hebrew1,' French ' and German 4 languages. He was' a personal friend of Noah Webster and assisted him in making his dictionary. He was in correspondence with the foremost scientists of his day. He was editor of "The Schoolmaster," a paper published by Holloway and Davis in 1839, and compiled two school readers for the Friends. . . - . - Young, in his history of Wayne county,, says that Dr. JPlummer rendered ah invaluable service to the public by writing his sketch of Richmond for the directory we are speaking of. "The timely publication," he says, "of this little book, which appeared in 1857, rescued from oblivion many interesting facts and reminiscences of early times which cannot now be obtained from any other source." The little book is now very rare.
The writer has a copy, given him by
ABOUT THAT
ITCWNG RASH Don't worry any more about that itching skin-trouble. Just spread a little resinol ointment over the sick skin and the itching disappears as if you had simply wiped It away! And even more important this soothing, healing ointment gets right to the source of the trouble and rarely fails to clear away every trace of the unsightly, tormenting eruption. Doctors have prescribed resinol ointment for over twenty years, and thousands owe their clear, healthy Skins to its use. It contains nothing that could injure or irritate the tenderest skin. Sold by all druggists. Sample free, Dept. 29-R, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. Adv.
Dayts came to Richmond in .1814 and worked as a Journeyman printer for Finley and "Holloway, owners -of. the PaUadium..Jn-l83 te and David P, Holloway purchased The Palladium and continued it "for nearly half a cen
tury "Mr. Davis Jwaa tlty-clerk from
1848 to, 1859, a period of eleven years. Tha Richmond- Palladium : is " now 84 years -of. age t. TO STAGE TOURNEY. . MILTON. Tiid., Aug: 25X There : will be a' tennis tourney at the association court here Thursday and Friday. A number" from other places are expected. -'.-....
x- HARVEST DELAYED , . . . j CAMBRIDGE CITY.' Indl. Aug. 25 Threshing which began again on Manday was stopped by the heavy rains on Tuesday.- Much of th wheat in. this part of the county is so badly damaged that it will not be taken from the fj ields. while a large portion of that which is being threshed will' not be marketable. Farmers say that It will he difficult to obtain sound grain for.the tall sowinig:
A large neaiiuy pigeon bvaicu on ids
v -' 1 L J " - "
lj town ciovk, causra iuc mafor o
miss bis train by twenty minutes recently . : " ' '
. . .- r - - - t
Plrwnouncexl Kl ko
JUWefa America
WorU
GINGER ALE
Come on ift, the Clicquot is Fine '
Sparkling Clicquot Club Ginger Ale is as refreshing on a hot day as a dash through foaming surf. Join, for this summer season, the happy throng of folks who know the joys of Clicquot, see what a pleasure it is to have a case in your cellar, and a few bottles nesting in the iceFind out what a refreshing beverage real ginger ale is. Clicquot is made of ginger, the pure juices
of limes and lemons, arid pure spring water. This water is slightly laxative. ' Each regular bottle holds two glassful. The one ".ce cold" drink which is safe to drink when you are overheated. Mixes splendidly with most any- . thing good SoU by Coed Grocers and DruggUU CLICQUOT CLUB CO., MILLIS, MASS. New York Office tlO Hudson Street Chicago Office 356 North Michigan Avenue
dictfaot CUt Bmvmtagmat CJngsr Ala Birch Beer Sarsaparflle) RootBser Orange Phosphate) - Lsmon Sosjf
Palladium he was a moat ferfc&ai maiv-. Wrpavis, he pubjishr. IVi
and justice to wealth on the side of
venality and-Jtimsery4g. . -; AfAVp..nfftBDv -This modett ttleirectoixt:onta
twenty-eight pages of names of residents about 980 in all. It has 74 pages of the advertisements of Richmond business men. It contains a very good wood cut of the Meredith House, which stood on the corner of Eighth and Main streets, just where the Dickinson Trust building is now being erected; also a good picture of the Huntington House) which" stood where the Colonial building now is. Eighth street was then Fifth street and Seventh street was Franklin street. Sixth street was then Marion, and Fourth street was Front ' street, because it was the brow of the hill looking down into the valley of the Whitewater. One of the advertisements reads like this: "Starr Hall! This new and commodious hall is centrally ' located upon Main street and is capable of holding an audience of two thousand persons, is furnished in the most comfortable manner, has a stage of sufficient size, furnished with foot lights, drop eur-
Ltain, etc. The walls and ceilings are
frescoed in the richest style and the whole is lighted with more than sixty gas lights;-' " T' ?. "JAMBS M. STARR, . - "Proprietor." Starr Hall . is now occupied by Drultt Brothers' furniture store.. It was sold to the Methodists at one time and converted into a church' and was called TJnion Chapel. The congregation was a "split-off" from the old and original Methodist church . on North Fifth street, called the "Pearl street church." The split was caused by a difference about "promiscuous setting" and music. The departing insurgents objected to men and women
yyjy Dm mm "tec nmnben Wy are hit on
WU17D17 IS THE LARGEST CLOCK! IN . WrllLlxEi THE WOULD? WHAT CAUSES NIGHTMARE? UrT DO FINGERPRINTS "GET" THE rlViW CRIMINAL?
Coupon with 98c. brings yon this $4.00 Wonderfnl Knowledge Book.
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dob aad SSe St the aSlea Af tha
.lacii m and icure e copy of tbe Beek
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It answers thousands ot questions of In tercet end value and tells the story of the Woadera of Hatare snd those produced by Msa. Siae of hoek 10x7 -
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AUJTO
Headquarters 19 N; 9th St.
Palladium Building
GLEN KARN-RICHMOfJD LINE Owners Welsh & Spencer Leatve Arrive 7:30 a. m. . Glen Kara 1 5:30 p. m. 7 :85 a. m. . . . , . Hollansburg 5 :00 p. m. 8 :00 a. m Bethel 4 :30 p. m. 8 :,15 a. m. Whitewater . . . . : .4:15 p. m. 8 :20 a. m Lock's Store 4 :10 p. m. 8 :30 a. m. . . . . . . Cox's. Mills 4 :00 p. m. 9 :00 a. m. (arrive) Richmond (leave) 3 :30 p. m. NEW PARIS-RICHMOND LINE Owner Chas. F. Freed Leave Arrive 7:00a.m.. v New Paris 10:30a.m. 10:00a.m. (Ar.) .Richmond. (Lv.) 7:30a.m. :00 p. m. . . New Paris . . 4 :00 p. m. 3:30p.m. (Ar.) .Richmond. (Lv.) 1:30p.m. UNION CITY-RICHMOND" LINE Owner Lester G. Harris
Leave 7:10 a.m.. 7:55 a. m.. ' 8:15 a.m..' 8:35 a, m.. ' 8 :50 a. m.. 9:35 a. m..
Arrive , Union City 5 :20 p. m. . Bartonia 4:35 p.m. Spartansburg . . .. 4:10 p.m.
Crete 3:50 p.m.
Arba ........ 3 :3o p. m. Chester ....... 2 :50 p. m.
12:2q p. m. (Ar.) Richmond (Lv.) 10 :05 a. m. " OwnersH. S. Pownerd and R. C. Hudson Leave " Arrive 1:30 p. m.. . . . Richmond ,'6.:O0.p..m:
f 2:00 p. m.. . . . . ;. . Webster . . i. .5:20 p. m.'
a :su p. m. . . . . . wmiamsnurg . . . . 5 :00 p. m. 2 :00 ifL m. (Ar.) . . Economy . . (Lv.) 4 :30 p. m." IUCHK10ND-LIBERTY LINE Owner L.:Thonia8 Leave -x. , : Arrive 8:00 am. ....... Liberty .... ...6:00p.m. 10;00a.;n. (Ar.) .Richmond. (Lv.) 3:00p.m.
RICHMOND-HAGERSTOWN LINE Owners H. S. Downerd and R. C. Hudson Leave Arrive 7 :30 a. m Richmond 11 :30 a. m. 8:15 a. m Greensfork 10:45 a.m. 10)00 a. m. (Ar.) Hagerstown (Ly.) 9:00 a.m. RICHMOND-GREENVILLE LINE Owner Charles Spencer Leave Arrive 7:15 a. m Richmond 5:30p. m 8:00 a. m New Paris 5:00 p.m. 9 :00 a. m ; Eldorado 4 :00 p. m. 9;30a. m New Madison .....3:30p.m. 10:00a. m Ft. Jefferson 3:00p.m. 10 :30 a. m. ( Ar.) . Greenville . (Lv.) 2 :30 p. m. RICHMOND-LYNN LINE Owners Denison & Thorpe Leave Arrive 7:00a. m Lynn 12:00m. 7:20a. m Howell's Store .. ..11:00a.m. 7:30 avm Fountain City 11:30 a.m. 8:05 a. m Chester 10:50 a.m. 8 :30 a. m. ( Ar.) . Richmond . (Lv.) 10 :30 a. m. 1 :00 p. m Lynn 6 :00 p. m. 1 :20 p. m. Howell's Store 5 :40 p. m. 1 :30 p. m. . . . . . Fountain City 5 :30 p. m. 2:05p.m. ....... .Chester 4:50p.m. 4 :30 p. m. . ( Ar.) Richmond (Lv.) . 2 :30 p. m. EATON-RICHMOND LINE : ; ;;, '- Owner-J. A. BanfUI YZ'!": Leave - .' ' : ' ' : . ' : ."Arrive 7:00a. m. ... . . . Richmond C... . 11:30a.m. 7 :30 a. m. . Boston ....... 11 :00 sC m. 8 :00 a.m . .... West Florence . . , . . 10 ;15 a. m. 9:00 a. m'. (Ar.) . . . Eaton. . . Lv.) 9:30 a. m.
2 :00 p. m. . . . . . Richmond . . . (Lv.) 6 :00 p. m.
z :au p. m . . . .Boston ......... 5 :30 p. m. 3."t)0 p. m.. ... . . West Florence. . . .''...5:00 p. m, 4:00 p. m.. ........ Eaton . .4:30 p. m.
PHONE 1069
Mgp.
IHe pabJc ts requested to ta)c advantage of the Auto Hack for passenger and freight service to and from the vartauB tawns-i the -vlclaltjF- at Riehmond. For Information, phone 1069.' . i
