Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 275, 28 September 1920 — Page 13

THE PALLADIUM

Standardised and Indexed for quick refxr cute, Bixoraing 10 ine ouu xj. oiuiui Bystcm (Copyright). Advertising Rates 10 cents per line, per Insertion, words to the line. No ad taken for less than 20 cents cash or less than 30 cents charge. No ads accepted after 11 o'clock on day of publication. For contract, call phone 2834 or 2S72.

MONUMENTS IB JOHN P. EMSLIE Monuments 15 Sooth Tenth Street Phone 4022 ' LOST AND FOUND 4

FLOWERED pocket-book lost Friday morning-; containing: glasses, money. Return to Palladium. Reward. KEYS Jjnmt Sunday; about 14 on ring; phone 1S08. LOST Ladles' tan hand pocket-book, containing money and door key, somewhere near 8th and Main Sts, on Main, or South 8th. or on South A. Return to Palladium office. BRACELET-WATCH "lost" on Main St, Friday night. Return Earlham College. HELP WANTED MALE WANTED A mechanic for all classes work. See Ed. Brannon, 13 N. 9 th. WANTED Experienced gas man to take charge of artificial gas plant. State experience and reference. People's Service Co., Connersvllle, Ind. WANTED 16 - year - old pin boys. Twigg Bowling Alleys. .WANTED Experienced book keeper for artificial gas company. State experience and reference. People's Servlre Co.. Connersvllle, Ind. WAITER Wanted. Union Station Restaurant. 6UIT "fritting" around. Take the 'direct route" to a good position, by n DiptiMAVn TJT'STVFIRS COL LEGE, Monday, October 4. which is a special Entrance uay. WANTED Boy at Pennsylvania Union news stand. WANTED Coal shovelers. T H., I. & E. power house, Wednesday 6 a.m. CLERKS, (men, women) over 17. for Postal Mall Service. $135 month. Examinations October. Experience unnecessary. For free particulars, write J. Leonard, (former Civil Service Examiner) 1041 Equitable Bldg., Wash ington. D. C. SALESMAN WANTED Good opening for phonograph; must be a salesman and one willing to worK. hee air. Lawrence, Starr Piano Co. HELP WANTED FEMALE 6 WANTED Woman at Coney Island Lunch, 1135 Main. 10 GIRLS wanted. Apply 222 S. 11th, ready for work. LADY wanted as second cook. Apply at onof. The Kandy Shop, 919 Main. $3.50 PER DAY paid one lady In each town to distribute free circulars for Economy Non - Alcoholic flavoring. Permanent position. F. E. Barr Co., Chicago. PASTRY COOK WANTED Kandy Shop AGENTS Female; $10 a day. Apply 3rd floor, room IS, S. E. cor. 5th and Main. Wanted Experienced Cook MRS. C. A. McGUIRE 208 North 10th St. Telephone 2595 GOOD GUL for poneral housework. Apply 608 N. 20th St. WANTED Housekeeper or assistant housekeeper. Phone 1837. GIRL Wanted for cigar stand. Westcott Hotel. WANTED Ladles to know that I re move the cause of disease. Ruth Straley. chiropractor, 243 Colonial Bldg. AGENTS & SALESMEN WANTED 7 Will $40.00 Weekly Interest You? Wanted A man to sell direct to the homes, on permanent routes In. city, large line of necessities. Apply to Mr. Rodkey, Room 64, Westcott Hotel, before 10 a. m. or between 6 and S p. m. SITUATIONS WANTED 8 SITUATION WANTED by young lady; clerical work; can operate typewriter. Box B2144, care Palladium. ROOMS FOR RENT 130 S. 11th Modern room for rent. FOR R EXT LTgh ih o 11 soke ep fn gan d sleeping room. 419 North 11th. HEATING AND PLUMBING 14 PLUMBING, heating and lighting contracting, repairing and Tfupples, at Meerhoff. 9 South 9th. Phone 1236. PAINTING AND DECORATING 15 HOUSE PAINTING Interior finishing. Prices reasonable. E. C. Sims, phone 2571. MOVING AND STORAGE 16 FORREST MONGER For local and ""long distance hauling. Furniture crated, stored or shipped. AUTO MOVING VAN 200 South 7h St; Phone 2608 STOIIAUK FOR HOUSEHOLD GOODS Feltmaqs Storage House. Apply Feltman's fiar Store. I'hone No. 2039. 609 Main St. MISCELLANEOUS REPAIRING 17B LAWN MOWERS sharpened: baby cabs re-tired; all kinds of repairs. Work called for and delivered. Pictures framed. New Bicycles reasontble prices. J. C. Darnell Co. Phone 1936. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 21 SECTIONAL bookcase for sale. Kielhorn's Millinery, 625 Main. FOU SALlvrime'B Golden apples; $2.00 bu. J. M. Elliott, R. A, Phone 4942. WHERL Gas Heater for sale cheap. 217 North 20th. Phone3633. BLACK WALNUT Pedestal Stand for sale. Phone2926. 405 S.Sth St. WASHING MACHINE. Roser washer, with universal wringer. 117 S.W. 5th. Phone 3361. IFOR SALE Household goods of all r kinds, and numerous other things. Call day time, back door, upstairs. Dr. Zimmerman's residence. FOR SALE S tove wood; $3.50 per cord. 224 N. 7th St. Phone 6062. . BEDROOM and dining room suite. 124 & 9th . Phone 17S2.

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 21

Extra fine quality fruit, $1.00 per basket at orchard one mile north of hospital, on Chester pike. O. D. ACTON REED BABY CAB FOR SALE; good as new; $20.00. 543 North 19ti St. TWO RUGS. 3x12 and 8-3x10-6; also combination range; all new., 421 South 11th. . a. REED baby cab for sale. 19 No. 15th. FERRETS for sale. 634 N. 10th ST WE BUY, SELL, OR TRADE for Used Watches also complete line of new watches, priced very low. Buy your high-grade spectacles of us at about half the usual price. C. E. KEEVER, 7 South 11th. FURNITURE AND STOVES All kinds; good prices. Home Supply Store, 131 Ft. Wayne Ave. Phone 1S62. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED 22 ONE 12x14 tent; 4 folding camp cots; one 12x14 tarpaulin. Phone 5225. FURNITURE WANTED We pay h7hest prices for Used Goods, Stoves, etc. Brammer & Foster, 17 S. 7th. Phone 1876. JUNK Before disposing of any Junk, call Richmond Junk Yard. Highest prices will be paid. Prompt attention. 1001 N. 10th. Phone 3498. ELI A SON FURNITURE EXCHANGE Good used furniture bought and sold. See us before you buy or sell. We pay highest prices. Eliason Furniture Exchange. 520 Main St. Phone 1469. GOOD USED FURNITURE of all kinds wanted. See uS before you sell. Townsend's Used Goods. 533 Main. Phone 1296. RECORD EXCHANGE 23A USED records bought, sold, exchanged. Nellie A. Booker, Miller Harness Store. MACHINERY AND TOOLS 24 FOR SALE Wagons, Wagons, Corn Binder, 10 Wheat Drills, and Vehicles all kinds. 317 N. A St. SPECIALS AT THE STORES 25 CUT When In need of carpenter, plastering, garden, and cement tools; we have the best tools at the lowest prices. BIRCK'S 611 Main MATCH YOUR COAT With a Pair of Trousers GRAHAM Tailor 532 Main Street FURNACES 253 WOLVERINE FURNACES E. J. Knapp. Ph. 1S76. Office 17 S. 7th. THE HOLLAND FURNACE CO. is only 14 years old and it Is much the largest installer of furnaces in the world. There's a reason. II. L. HOUSEHOLDER, 319 Randolph St. Phone 3163. BUILDING MATERIALS 28 IS IT A HOUSE? Bmld Jj with Concrete Blgx) rfzmBert&$Jkos. Phone 3230f LIVE STOCK AND VEHICLES 31 REGISTERED Duroc Sows with pips; also male yearling for sale. A. E. Petry, 3 4 miles west of Eaton, west road; Eaton phone 8097. LIVE STOCK AND VEHICLES 31 FOR SALE Two-horse wagon and bed. 909 North West 5 th. FOR SALE Good gentle bay horse at a very low price; priced to sell. Address Box E5167, care Palladium. Phone 4231. PET STOCK AND POULTRY 32 FOR SALE Yellow-headed Mexican Parrot. 405 S. 8th. Leaving for Florida, reason for selling. AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE 33 EMPIRE Roadster for sale; excellent condition. Call at 313 N. 14th. Phone 6004. FOR SALE OR TRADE Automobile; will consider property. Phone 2955. FORD for sale or trade; 1919 model; starter; newly painted. Geo. Worley, 15 S. 9th St. Phone 2906. MAXWELL car for sale; price $200; will trade for Victrola. 1140 Hunt. FORSALE 1919 Ford Truck. $100; 1920 Foi d Truck, $750; 1920 Ford Touring-. $550. These are all in fine condition. 224 N. 7th. Phone 6062. 1917 model Ford for sale or trade; one light Ford truck; electric; price $350. Lexington Six; closed top. Geo. Worley. 15 S. 9th St. Phone 2906. 1917 Ford Roadster; demountable rims; shock absorbers; good condition; cheap. Phone 336S. TAXI 36 Anderson's Taxi Service MULL & WILLIAMS. Proprietors Special attention paid to Merchants' Delivery and Transfer. Day and Ail-Night Service. 28 North 7th Phone 1370

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

TAXI 36 TAXI, TRUCK and TRANSFER See Harris Bros., phone err MOTORCYCLES AND BICYCLES 37 INDIAN MOTORCYCLES & BICYCLES Second-Hand Motorcycles and Bicycles MEYERS & TROXEL Opposite City Hall We don't FIX 'em we REPAIR 'em WANTED TO RENT 41 WANTED TO RENT House In east Richmond; three in family; references. Chas. Root, Home Laundry. TWO unfurnished rooms, man and wife, light housekeepin. Box A1096, care Palladium. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 42 FOR SALE Good brick house, 8 rooms; 3 squares from 8th and Main; strictly modern Phone 2002. After 6 call 2354 C. E. KEEVER CO. has a fine list of houses. Office phone 1641; res. 2169. Office 7 S. 11th St. See us for bargains. TURNER W. HADLEY, 2nd Nat. Bank Bldg., buys and sells properties. Homes sold on payments like rent. FOR SALE A JOB AND A HOME An unusual opportunity is afforded at HILLGROVE, the new town in the North Whittier Heights citrus district, to have a home built and sold to you on easy terms. A small cash payment, balance like rent, and an opportunity to work furnished either men or women In the packing-house or citrus groves. For particulars, write Albert N. Chamness. President, NORTH WHITTIER HEIGHTS CITRUS ASSOCIATION. Puente, Calif., or EDWIN G. HART, 729 Van Nuys Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif. QOOD CITY HOMES PORTERFIELD. Colonial Bldg. FOR REAL ESTATE AND FARMS, see A. M. ROBERTS. 18 S. 8th. Phone 4171. FOREST H. MEEK, auctioneer and real estate. Phone 4095. C. C. HAWLEY & SON New Paris. Ohio For Farms and Real Estate of all kinds GREEN & RAMSEY Real Estate. Rentals, Auctioneering and Insurance Hittle Block, 9th & Main. Phone 2676. FARMS FOR SALE 43 40 ACRES Level, good buildings, on Main pike. 78 ACRES 7-room house, two barns, silo, henhouse, smokehouse, garage, etc.; close to good shipping point; well fenced and drained. A bargain, $9,000.00. 100 ACRES 6-room house, big barn, plenty outbuildings, good orchard, close to school, a good producer; $15,000.00, terms. 120 ACRES Good buildings and plenty of them; 1 mile from schools and church; $175.00 per acre. 140 ACRES A money-maker, with good buildings, at a low price. Any size, any price. See us before you buy. " ' HARRIS AND KORTEWEQ S. W. Corner Main and Sixth Sts. Res. Phone 3014 Office Phone 2273 40-ACRE farm one mile from Richmond; extra grood buildings and silo. An excellent little dairy and fruit farm. Address, Owner, Grace-land Farm, Richmond, Ind. FARMS FOR SALE 50 ACRES Fine level land, good buildings, on traction line and macadam road; a good farm and a fine location. Price reasonable. 60 ACRES Fine land, good buildings, in good location. Price $200 per acre. Terms. 100 ACRES All level but about IS acres in pasture and woodland; good buildings and good location. Price only ?120 per acre. Terms. 160 ACRES All good land, good buildings, in good location. Price $150 per acre. 60 ACRES Fine pasture land, well watered, within half mile of town. Price $60 per acre. C. C. Hawley & Son Phone 75 New Paris, Ohio WISCONSIN FARM LANDS LANDOLOGY Special Number just out, containing: 1920 facts of Clover Land in Marinette County, Wisconsin. If for a home or as an investment you are thinking of buying1 good farm lands where farmers grow rich, send at once for this special number of LANDOLOGY." It is free on request. Address: SKIDMORE - RIEHLE LAND COMPANY. 406 Skidmore - Kiehlo Bldg , Marinette, Wisconsin. REAL ESTATE WANTED 45 WANTED TO BUY from owner, five or six room house; strictly modern. Address Box E5163. care Palladium. PUBLIC SALE AUCTIONEER H. C. Ramsey. 306 North 9th. Phone 6041. MONEY TO LOAN 46 FARM LOANS 5 years at 6 and small commission See me before a raise in rates. Ho B. CUSTER 710 Main St. X Phone 2962 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO BIDDERS State of Indiana. Wayne County, ss.: Notice is hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Wayne County, will receive sealed bids and proposals for the construction of the First Street Bridge in the town of Centerville. t.he Franklin Bridge in Dalton Township, the Reid Culvert in Wavne Township and repairs to the Webster Bridge in Webster Township, the Goshen Bridge In Wayne Township and the Abington Bridge in Abington Township. Bids will be received until 11 o'clock A. M. Saturday. October 9, 1920 at the County Auditor's office nt the Court House in the City of Richmond, Indiana. Bids must be submitted on blanks designated by the State which may be procured of the Auditor of Wayne County. Each bid shall be accompanied by a personal or surety bond In a sum not less than the amount of the bid. and in all respects conform with the law governing such matters. The Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. By order of the Board of Commissioners of Wayne County. W. H. BROOKS. Auditor of Wayne County. Sept 21-28. ,

SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,

Five Minutes with By JAMES

m Y

JULIA DENT GRANT, WIFE OF THE PRESIDENT

With the passing of Lincoln, Grant towered above not only all the other generals of the civil war, but also above the statesmen of that day, above even the great political parties themselves. A man without a party, he stood wholly for the union. A magnanimous victor, aloof from the bitter passions of the men who had only talked while others fought, he stood alone for the reunion of North and South. It was less his fault than the fault of our political system that he gave up to party what was meant for all. There was no place for him to serve, as there never is a place for any American to serve our government, except as a partisan and a politician. When he became president It was Grant's misfortune to know no one except his associates in the war. The self-respecting among these kept away from him. Bt the self-seekers and the camp followers crowded about a man who never forgot and never distrusted a friend, not even when he came bearing a Greek gift, and Senator Charles Sumner spoke scornfully of the administration as a "gift enterprise." The modest president and the conceited Senator, who plunged into a bitter feud, never were sympathetic. When Grant heard some one say with surprise that Sumner did not believe MONEY TO LOAN 46 YOU NEED

MONEY S100S200S300

Investigate our easy-to-pay Twenty-Payment Plan Loans. Get $50. ray back $2.50 a month. Get $100.00, pav back $5.00 a month, with interest at per month. Pay only for time loan runs. All busi ness confidential. We loan on Furniture, Pianos. Vlctrolas. Live Stock, etc., without removal. Call, phone or write RICHMOND LOAN COMPANY "The Friendly Company" Established 1895 ROOM 207 COLONIAL BLDG.. COR MAIN AND SEVENTS ST3. Under State Supervision. PHONE 1545 Richmond, Ind. -

PUBLIC SALE

CLOS

Having sold my farm and purchased A. B. Carman grocery at Chester, will sell at public auction at the Brookside Dairy Farm, 9 miles north of Richmond, one-quarter mile north of Whitewater Thursday, Sept 30, 1920. 10:00 A. M. Sharp 25HEAD OF DAIRY CATTLE25 Headed by Herd Bull Gelsche Pontiac Segis De Kil Number 236756 A Wcll-Brod Grand son of King Segis Pontiac

His sire, a 25-bull, represents the famous King Segis Pontiac. King of the Pontiac's Cvoss. Thus he is a three-quartfrs brother to the $50,000.00 nnd to the $35,000,000 sires, to a 31-pound cow and to the sires of nine heifers with records from 30 to 38.35 pounds. King of the Pontiacs has more O.R.O. daughters, 40-lb. daughters, 30-lb. daughters and 20-lb. daughters than any other sire. His dam is a granddaughter of Sir Gelsch Walker Segis, giving this fellow a double cross of the blood of King Segis, the grandsire of the only 50-lb. cow or 46lb. heifer. 12 HEAD OF REGISTERED HOLSTEIN'S Some of which I have their butter fat and milk records; 10 grade Holstein and Jerseys; 1 registered Holstein bull, large enough for service; 3 head of registered Holstein calves. Papers are open for inspection on these cattle at any time. 6 HEAD OF HORSES 6 One team of grays, 7 and S years old, real workers; 1 team of brown mares, 4 and 5 years old, in foal; 1 team of 3-year-old bays, well broke.

Lunch by Ladies' Aid Society of Whitewater Terms Made Known on Day of Sale Auctioneers T. CONNIFF, S. WEDDLE Clerk HARRY PATTI

IND., TUESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1920.

Our Presidents MORGAN 186 M-rCh 4. Grant Inauourated 18th president, aged 45. September, "Black Friday" in Wall Street. 1872 The "Alabama" claims settled by arbitration. Grant re-elected. The Credit Mobiller scandal exposed. 1872 Sept. 19, great panic In Wall street. 1874 April, Grant vetoed Inflation bill. December, Resumption Act passed. 1876 February, "Whisky Ring" exposed. March, Belknap, Secretary of War, impeached. 1877 March 4, Grant retired from the presidency. the Bible, he quietly remarked: "Well, he didn't write it." Another little brood that preyed upon Grant's kindly disposition was composed of a few of his relations and Mrs. Grant's. For them he laid himself open to a charge of nepotism, which was exaggerated, but which no other president had incurred. Grant's first aCV, in making up his cabinet, was characteristic. Never having held a council of war or consulted any one in the army, he did not consult the Republican leaders. MONEY TO LOAN 46 WE LEND PUBLIC SALE

INQ OUT

65 HEAD OF

Big Type Poland Chinas; 8 sows, 3 gilts, 1 registered boar, yearling, balance feeders. 25 acres corn in the field; 12 tons of mixed hay; 18 tons of wheat straw; 250 bushels of wheat and oats mixed; 45 bushels rye; 2 twohorse Studebaker wagons, good as new, one with flat bed, box bed and hog rack "complete; 1 dray; 1 buggy; 1 John Deere gang plow; 1 Oliver sulky; 1 tandem disc harrow; 1 cultipacker; 1 smoothing harrow: 1 John Deere two-row corn plow; 1 one-row corn plow; 2 onehorse cultivators; 1 fodder sled; 1 stalk cutter; 1 Johnson mower, sixfoot cut; 1 clover buncher; 1 new Black Hawk corn planter, with fertilizer and check-row attachment; 1 six-horse gas engine, on truck; 1 lV-horse Hercules gas engine; 120 feet of new one-inch hav rope fork and pulleys; full set of blacksmith tools; 1 Bluebell cream separator; 3 sixty-gallon oil drums. HARNESS 4 sets of breeching harness, new; 2 sets Birck's best harness, bought new June 3, 1920, guaranteed for year by Birck's harness store; 4 sets of new flynets; 2 sets of hip-strap . harness; collars bridles, halters, etc.; forks, shovels and numerous other articles' 150 Buff Orpington chickens. '

His secretary of the treasury, A. T. Stewart. th New York ' merchant,

could not serve because the law de barred an Importer from that oince. His RAcretarv of the navy was to fame unknown outside bis city of Philadelphia. It took the maus tnree weeks to find. In his obscurity, an ttnrnev epnpml that the President appointed without knowing where the man lived. In selecting a cniet justice he pursued the same hit-or-miss plan and bad to send in a third name before the senate would give its as sent Two of the seven nlaces In the cabi net were given to Galena, the presi dent's little home town, tne secretary ship of state falling to Congressman EHhn B. Washburne. and the secre tary of war to John A. Rawlins. There were sound personal reasons ror tne selection of General Rawlins, who had been Gran't vigilant watchdog in the army, standing between him and the bottle and between his too trusting nature and false friends. These latter needed now more than ever to be warded off, and the untimely death of this frank and loyal friend early in the administration left a place which remained sadly vacant. The many scandals of the administration were mostly traceable to the betrayal of Grant's childlike confidence in unworthy friends. "Black Friday" in Wall street cast its shadow on his family circle itself. A brother-in-law had inveigled the guileless president into the net of Jim Fiske and Jay Gould, who attempted to corner erold on the strength of In side information which they had wormed out of him. A quickly as Grant discovered the trick he smashed the corner. The "Whisky Ring" involved the president s private secretary. A memher of the cahinet was impeached for squalid transactions, but by accepting his resignation Grant let mm ooage the conviction. Th Civil war was followed by the most corrupt period in our political life. Rascally politicians noisny attracted the people from the real evils with fhnm hat flea aeainst the "rebel brigadier." The "bloody shirt" was made to cover a multituae or sins, while patriots went in loudly for "the nA flap and an nnnronriation." Although Grant himself was above just suspicion, the next highest official. Vice-President Colfax, was driven Into retirement under a cloud, and the third highest, the speaker of the house, James G. Blaine, was accusea of bartering his influence for private gain. j years after the war a prolific source of political demoralization. Lincoln s plan having been torn up in the savage strife between congress and Johnson, the southern states were converted into rotten boroughs for political adventurers from the North and for the white riff raff of the South. Out of the first batch of 12 southern senators, 10 were northern "carpet baggers" who had rushed south to exploit the negro vote, and an even half of the congressmen were squatters from the north. A liberal section of distinguished Republicans revolted against Grant's election to a second term, but they were mostly leader? without followers. The popular revolt did not come until the panic of 1873 had plunged the country into six years of hard times, and a tidal wave in the election of 1874 swept the Democrats into control of the house. Great occasions aroused Grant to independent action In peace as in war. In vetoing a currency inflation bill, in calling for the resumption of specie payments and in the peaceable settlement of the "Alabama" claims against Great Britain the first great international arbitration he measured up to the expectations of the people, who never lost faith in the soundness of the man because he had failed as a politician. First in war, he did not prove himself first in fJeace; but deep down beneath the bitterness of parties and factions, Grant remained always, through good report and bad, first in the hearts of his countrymen. PUBLIC SALE SALE HOGS 65

W. Ray Barton

PAGE THIRTEEN

CONFERENCE STUDIES FINANCIAL STRENGTH OF VARIOUS NATIONS (By Associated Press) BRUSSELS, Sept 28. Reports rel ative to the financial position of various nations were received by the International Financial conference In session here today. It is the plan cf the conference to secure a broad view of the whole situation before attempting to make recommendations or deal ing with problems which are presented by any particular country. It is expected the reports will be completed by tonight, so that Questions of currency and exehange may be taken up tomorrow. The leader of tomorrow's debate will be Dr. Zissering the Dutch banker, and Carlos Tornquist, one of Argentina's dele gates to the conference, will take part in the days deliberations. Feel Optimistic. An optimistic view of the situation in France is taken by M. Devenol, one of the French delegates who was one of the last speakers during Monday's session. He pointed out that France was still obliged to borrow money, but it was not for use in carrying out ordinary budget projects. The money, he declared, was to be expended ou reconstruction work which could not be delayed until reparation payments are made. He said the French budget is being covered by revenue receipts, adding, "the whole world Is being benefitted by the effort toward restoration made by France." The wheat crop this year is showing an increased yield per acre, he as serted, and he' estimated that the country would have 100,000,000 bushels of wheat for consumption in other countriesTERRE HAUTE LAD, 11, LOSES LIFE IN POND TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Sept. 23. James Hutchins, 11 years old, son of Mrs. Odra Hutchins of 558 Lafayette avenue, drowned at 4 o'clock Sunday while swimming with a companion in a pond west of the Big Four bridge across the Wabash river. The body was recovered a few minutes later by two men who were in the vicinity and heard the screams of a companion of the drowning boy. Efforts to revive were of no avail. CRUSHED UNDER AUTO BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Sept. 28. Clarence May, 30 years old, of South Union, was seriously injured when the automobile driven by John E. May of this city, and in which the Injured man and six others were riding, turned over ten miles weBt of the city Sunday. May's right side was crushed. The other occupants of the automobile were uninjured. May is in a hospital here and his ' condition is said to be serious. FISHERMAN CATCHES BIG BASS. LEBANON, Ind., Sept. 28. A big mouth straw bass weighing seven and cne-half pounds was caught in Sugar creek, near Crawfordsville, Saturday morning by Vernon Cobb of this city. The fish was twenty-two inches long and fourteen inches in circumference. It was one of the largest bass ever caught in Sugar creek. The fish was hooked on artificial bait. It is being mounted by a local taxidermist. CALLS COP; GETS PINCHED LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sep. 28 George Clay was carrying a sack, of coal to his home from the Wab'ash tracks when Albert Freeman, a railroad detective, accosted him and asked him to pay for the coal. Clay thought Freeman was an imposter and called the local police. After Freeman proved his identity Clay was arrested on a charge of petit larceny. A COSTUME FOR BUSINESS WEAR, SPORTS, OR GENERAL UTILITY Comprising Waist Pattern 3353, cut in seven sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 end 46 inches bust measure, and Sklrf Pattern 3345, cut in seven tfzes: 21, 26, 28, 20, 32. 34, and 36 inches waist measure. It will require 2V yards of 38 inch material for thskirt and 2 yards of 36 inch material for the waist for a medium size. The width of the skirt at its lower edge is 1 yard. The waist is a good model for liner? madras, gingham, batiste, crepe, siH: or washable satin. The skirt could be of serge, gabardine, mixtures, broadcloth, taffeta or velveteen. The waist pattern provides a patch pocket, and is arranged so that collar may be rolled low or closed high. This illustration calls for TWO separate patterns which will be mailed to any address on receipt of 12 cents FOR EACH pattern, in silver or stamps. Addr City Size

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Address Pattern Department Palladium. Patterns will be mailed to your address , within one weec