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Greater Richmond's Greatest Newspaper GREATEST WANT AM) REAL ES? TATES MI'.DUM IS VIRGINIA, AND' OKK OF Tit E ?BST IN AMERICA. Want Ad Rates - In Effect June 11. ltlL Dally, one cent per nurd nhiu paid In advance. Nu Ad. taken fur lese than : tea cents. One and one-half centa a nord all 1 clnsHltlcntlona except Situation Wanted 1 for Sunduy. Sttuailon Wanted uue cent | ? Muni. No Ad. Sunday takva fur Icaa I than fifteen cents. H No Ada. taken fur lea* tban twenty Bve cents nheu phoned lu ur vtiarKed at the counter. I'liuue urdcrs not guaranteed. Classification nut suurautecd after ? i3<> P. M. For buslueaa cuntrncta send fur the Wont Ad. Haut nbuur Uoora* 1 WlU wor pert test to I said atitl c J< Exe iXirt'lV^SN ?T^-PA^HlONErj GOblj ! J-1 Vl'n, on West Grace or Monutnent ,r- I v Avenue, between Allen and Boule- 'the \ vard. Reward at lblT Weal Graceucu_ *?- g foyed I ft/tip voi.suiniu, jfua.r ... the JoU ARE WANTED F?R f^pr^dficed'a jnent position; *o? munth. Jf ? ., ...i,v, list or positions open. ,.?? , ?" INSTITUTE, Dept. ?0 G, !' tnc aKroe. js;_ y_ /Tdence against - }?? tr.e corpora JPRINTER WANTED. VQfhentIca,ea. u with some Knowledge M ,h . h.1K,n(.a_ position and make readf' bu,""fS8 once, giving full partlcjF.?W?I?M contln ary expected, LEWIS tfmdlng similar to kl, Va. SrV?NTED, CARPENTSf;l\'int, Provided for tu build house at Ott> ''late Asso Address LaEAl'ETTB <I States, and not C. tL, Va. f.he agreement was I rr,v,;.r,;?i \T<nT<i.-T?me 10 "ght because ^c\SS NWUh"^'"^, had saved a GEORGE A. KL'LLftmo6' lh?> committee | .lve evidence of the 6.UTO ?CHOUL-OJlat|on dId exlBt after and best-eouippeof the tell-tale docu prautlcal auto scl Open day and uly . . , , Call and see for>r' ot th? Lukens Iron Iwficd pupils isny, one of the parties RICHMOND AU. pool, testified that all ? gig W. Broad e agreement had been ?WANTED. XO\'dta 11 was thought 1U charautor to'ere Illegal. The agro? business. \V he testified, never was fifty and soIib company, and all ient factory companies were relurned for ^^nnfuhr3nl^ admitted, how*,, pa,' ' '?;' the cost?f th'- business of h:s thel'i jrst monlti'led along lines of a:i Teamans, 911) Wetlmilar to the provi Va.. uo longer 1^*4 agreement. Institution. 'J^ apportioned on a per dress cooimuulcs. ? .?. , Ing Dept.. 1B05 P?e admitted, for scv. W.. Washlugton'o 1906. His firm, he ANTED ]r~T7nrt to a ?uaranty fund bl'o and expopn? ?'Jl terms of oper must be able forts of business were salary expected Temple, who acted aa Dispatch._, the combination/ {P.'ANTED, IN Af*i cashier of the Mellon an oftlco boy,)' of Plttsburg. formerly must be neat Bon & Sons Bank, tostl who does nodst(.eJ Plate Association school. Rep ynl wlth nlB banR f S?W?'' to January 30. 1902. | IB Have You Seen the New ^Walter D. Moses & Co." m Piano? lM / y A car of these pianos just in. Walter D. Moses & Co. 103 ?. Broad St. Oldest Music House in Va. and N. C. Tho total credit account of the Plate Association was about $250,000, and all the checks and vouohers were made out in the name of W. 8. Kins, treas? urer of the association. Mr. Vanor mer admitted that ho had dealt with Mr. Kins during that term of years. To-morrow the committee expects to hear more concrnlng the actual operation of an agreement between the steel plate manufacturers from A. F. Huston, president of tho Lukcns Iron and Steel Company. Solloltor-Oencral Lehman testified that tho steel plate agreement much resembled the agreement of the wire manufacturers, upon which were based Indictments recently returned in New York. OUR REACH BS WASHINGTON. Is Rollins Wheelbarrow From Atlanta to New York on SOOO Wager. Washington, July 24.?-Frank Orr, of Charlotte. N. Ci who Is rolling a wheelbarrow from Atlanta to New York on a $500 wager, reached here to-night, having walked from Manas sas. Va., since yesterday. By the terms of his wager. Orr Is not allowed to I ask for anything except water. He! left Atlanta June 23 with neither I matches nor money. He will set out ; for Baltimore in the morning. Injurie? Mmy Prove Fatal. [Special to The Times-Dispatch.] Gate City, Vs., July 24.?Rlley Dock- I cry is dying as a result of being shot | hy Worley Sailing ten miles from here. Dockery Is reported to have shot Sai? ling first. Inflicting a serious wound. The principals In this affair are mem? bers of prominent families. GANG OF ROBGERS PLACED IN JAIL Five White Men and One Negro Committed?Charters Granted by State. Raleigh, N. C, July 34.?A special to-night to the News and Observer from Monroe, states that Constable btarnes, of Buford township. Union county, to-day brought to Monroo and aftor a preliminary examination be? fore Magistrate Helm, committod to Jail six store robbers who are charged with having robbed a number of coun? ty stores in that county. Five of the gang arc white and one a negro. The Sperry & Hutchison Company, of Jersey City, N. J.. filed domestica? tion papers to-day with the Secretary of State, to do a business In North Carolina, with its principal oftico in Wlnston-Salem. The capital Is 11, 000.000. There wsb an amendment tiled to? day for Gaston Hotel Company, of Gastonta, providing that the 110.000 capital bo divided into shares of (I each, instead of $50 each. The South Carolina Club (Inc.). of Hendcrsonville. was chartered to-day. with $15,000 capital, by Howard Cald well, Bartlett Shlpp and others. Other charters were to the Dixie Machine Company, Greensboro, capital $10.000. by D. C. Suggs, J. B. Dudley. W. D. Slier, J. D. Chavls and others, and the Ford Sales Company. Raleigh. N. C, capital 15.000, by Charles I* Bussey and others, for handling automobiles, operating garage and for other pur? poses. The Wake county Board of Equaliza? tion Is n session here this week, under? taking to hear the complants against the tax assessments on real estato thai have been made by the county and towns against assessors. It will takr several days to acoord all the hearings. The Indications are that there will b* quite a number of modifications, esps clally In the value of farm lands, the estimate being that the final increase In property valuation through the rais? ing of assessments will be around $3.000,000. Farm lands In some sec? tions of the county have been raised to $10 per acre, and this, lt~ts-argued, Is entirely too high and out of propor? tion to the assessments In other sec? tions of the State. Miss Bertie Dunn has Instituted a suit for damages against the Seaboard Air Line for carelessness on TRe part of railroad employes in having her put off the train at Southern Pines, when she was traveling to Aberdeen. It wai raining, and she was going for her brother to take him to Black Mountain, where he has since died. The com? plaint is not yet filed. bodied, unm? of eighteen of United S ui.d tempera r- und wrfl 1 or lnformafl Oillcer. 820 ?f ID1 N. S >.;->. a. uiia plKirmacibW S nrne j \YA.\TED, ? Helte nuj_ '.lookkeeplg; : . : < rtncsijf; . . r.: Time l A NT KD, r ? In pharm I three yel i ut with ! 15. ie Loves of Mary Stuart ms She Most 1 I >S ITION wholesale, experience make a c! of my fi reference^ Wllmlng!* Jl^ped of All ence an E 234. < ItYANTEr, Phono y JftANTEJ w- f fib 0 ? ? who Was Love of Old More Fervent Than Now? MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS "It is said that Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots, was the most beautiful, [ie weakest, the most attractive and the most attracted of women, raising round her higher irresistible fascinations, a whirlwind of love, ambition and ^jealousy in which her lovers became each in his turn the motive, the in I strument and the victim of a crime, leaving the arms of a murdered hus? band for those of his murderer." Read the other interesting facts concern? ing the life of one of the World's Wonderful Women, contained in the article by Deshler Welch in next Sunday's issue of Ti imes Other Features in the Sunday Illustrated Magazine Are ROBERT BARR'S clever LORD STRANLEIGH STORY entitled "The Romance of the Golden Brick;" John Kendrick Bangs's humorous article entitled "Pepper and Salt;" a story by Charles Edward Hay' "Wanted?A Good Yob;" an article by Lily A. Long, entitled "The War Dance as It Is;"astory by Linda de IC. Fulton, "The Turning of the Tide;" humorous story by Harry Lee Snyder, "Jakie and His Two Centuries;" an article by Lin McLean, "Why Not Teach Baseball in the Schools?" an arti? cle on "Farming with Dynamite,'* by Samuel Wesley Long, AND A CHRISTY COLORED COVER Use This Rich Milk Tomorrow ?Jus* One Day Try this milk from high-bred cows, kept in model dairies. Milk that is utterly germless?8 per cent butter fat?thick as cream. Madam, you can settle the .milk question at once and for? ever.by using Van Camp's one day. And the question is immensely important. . Tomorrow at breakfast serve Van Camp's Milk in your coffee. Serve it on cereals, make milk dishes with it, freeze it for Ice cream. Prove for yourself if this i* ? as we say ?the finest milk produced in America. The equal of any in Switzerland. And learn how good it seems to use a milk entirely free from germs. You'll Find Out This You will find that Van Camp's gives to milk dishes a richness and flavor which milkman's milk never gives. And it isn't an added richness. Van Camp's is simply the whole, rich milk, as it comes from the cow. Not an atom of anything added. Nothing bat water taken out. The difference is this: Milkman's milk separates. The butter fat rises and the solids fall. When that milk comes to the cooking It la rarely more than a half milk. Van Camp's is the whole milk. It has all the butter fat, all the solids, which belong to the richest milk. You Lemon Ice Cream Mix and stand aside for one bour nice ounces sugar, tba Erated rind of three lemons and the juice of two lemons aod ono orange. Boll and cool three-fourths of a pint of water and add two cans of Van Camp's Milk (small size). Poor Into the freezer und when nearly cooled add the sugar and lemon juico. Turn rapidly and finish freezing. Write for our book of 131 recipes, includine all sorts of ice cream. Van Camp Packing Co. Indianapolis, Ind. will be surprised when you first find out the richness that whole milk gives. How We Produce It Our dairies in seven states are located in Ameri? ca's best dairying sections. They arc supplied with high-bred Holstein cows. Close to each daigy we have built an evaporating plant, and we conduct it with hospital cleanliness. The milk fresh from the cows is put into a copper vacuum. On account of the vacuum, a moderate heat evaporates the water without scorching the milk. Two-thirds of the water is thus taken out?simply to reduce the bulk. When you put back that water the milk is the same as it came from the cow, save for steriliza? tion. Free From Germs The vital fact is that this milk is sterilized after being sealed. It is absolutely free from germs. Milkman's milk, as you know, is always germ laden. There are millions of germs in each spoon? ful. Careful people, in these days, demand sterilized milk for their tables. Van. Camp's Is utterly sterile. * Like Using Cream Van Camp's Milk comes to you as thick as thick cream. So thick that you add one part water for coffee, cereals or ice cream. It Is 28 per cent solids, 8 per cent butter fat. When reduced to the usual milk's richness the cost will figure about six cents per quart. The saving is due to the fact that we save the cost of the milkman's daily delivery. That costs more than the milk. And Van Camp's saves waste. You open a can when you want it and it keeps till you use it up. In the average home the use of Van Camp's cuts milk bills right in two. And you can buy at one time, if you want to, all your milk and cream for a month. The $100,000 Milk In perfecting this milk vvc brought to our dairies the ablest Swiss and Dutch experts. In seven years we have spent $100,000 in learning how to bring this milk to you in its perfect condition. Now there isn't a milk in all the world any better than Van Camp's. The 16-or. can costs 10 cents?a full pint of Van Camp's. The 6-oz. can costs 5 cents. Your grocer has it, shipped from our nearest dairy. Tell him now to send you some, and try it out tomorrow. You will then know for all the days to come which milk is best. v Van Camp's Milk Evaporated?Sterilized?Unsweetened v MORE BODIES TAKEN FROM MAINE WRECK Exploration of After Berth Deck Still Impossible 1 Experts in All Lands Interested in Work of American Engineers. Havana. July 24.?The remains of three or four more bodies?the pre? cise number has not been determined? were recovered to-day from the wreck of the Maine. They consisted of bones, most of them fractured and piled In a heap. Some showed tho action of fire. All were found near the place where other remains were recently dlscov ered, of members of the crew who are supposed to have been sleeping; on the ; open deok on the night of tho dis? aster. Exploration of tho after berth deck, Including the ward room anfl officers' quarters, is still impossible on account Of the mud, which probably will be I washed out in the next few days. The | cofferdam is now dry. except for pools l of water, due to the operation of the pumps used in cleaning out the In? terior. There Is now fairly good reason to hope that the main bulkhead, at which point the hull apparently was severed, retains sufficient strength to justify the expectation that the after section of the ship, constituting one third of its total length, may be float? ed. Forward of this point the de? struction was so complete that, viewed from the cofferdam, the wreck resem? bles nothing so much as the dumping place for tin cans, rusty iron and re? fuse In slimy pools. Nothing But Thin Mud. The second step in the great task of uncovering the Maine was completed yesterday with the pumping of the last few feet of water, surrounding the dismembered hull. The bottom of the cofferdam is now nothing but thin mud, which hides whatever there may be of the secret of the disaster of 1898. The cofferdam, the first of such mag? nitude ever attempted, apparently stands as a gigantic monument to tho skill of the United States army engi? neers. From the top of the piling to the floor inside It measures twenty-five feet and Is an Impressive sight. One may stand - below Its edge and watch the sails and funnels of 6hlps moving outside the dam far above the head of the spectator. Though several of the caissons lean Inward at a rather sharp angle, each Is braced against another In a sort of cantilever Idea. No weak spots have developed, al? though the caissons are now bearing nine-tenths of the total pressure re? quired. Prnlnr Major Ferguson. The work of driving the piles, which several local engineers declare was one of the greatest achievements of modern engineering, commenced last October, and on account of two acci? dents was not finished until June 7, when the pumping began. It was a Herculean task to construct twenty cylinders so as to exactly surround the wreck. E.ich is composed of 200 steel piles seventy-live, feet long, driven into the thin mud to the bottom In thirty feet of water. This was ac? complished by Major Ferguson with only two accidents. The engineers are enthusiastic In their praise of the work, and It Is State Hospital on Fire. WIchltn, Kim., July 24.?-Word reached Wichita at lli30 o'.-lock to? night from Wlnfleld that the State Hospital for Feeble-Minded In on fire, and the entire Institution seems t<> be doomed. It Is feared the loss of life Is | heavy. The fire Is still burning, and is apparently beyond control. Close to 1,000 children nre confined In the Institution. suggested that this style of construc? tion be known In the future as the Ferguson cofferdam, although Major Ferguson modostly Insists that the design Is that of Major Patrick, and suggests that It be named the Maine cofferdam. Mud Above Berth Deck. The vessel now lies In mud which Is higher than the berth deck on the port side, and so thin that the first ten feet probably will be easily pumped with an ordinary suction dredge. The rest can be taken out with a large dredge, with the assistance of an agi? tator, which slrts up and mixes the' mud. It Js about thirty feet from the sur? face of the mud to the lteel of the stern, but It Is impossible to say how far down the keel Is forward. The havoc is so great forward of the en? gines that the mud hides the most In? teresting part of the wreck, but it Is easy to see that the damage Is such that none expects that any part of the vessel ever will be floated. As the thin mud Is pumped out a i force of men will be sent to work digging out the thick mud, which fills the entire interior of the wreck. The very flrst effort will be directed toward rinding the body of Darwin Mer? it!, naval engineer, known to have perished on the berth deck. His par? ents have spent thousands of dollars in the last twelve years in the hope of recovering his body. This work Is In charge of Captain De.an Tllford, of the quartermaster's department. The bodies taken out of the wreck are being placed in metal coflins and taken on board the collier Leonidas Identification, of course, is impossible, as all of these were underneath the wreck of the conning tower, and ap? parently were enjoying the evening breeze in the passageway on the star? board side of the engine-room. Those in a similar position on the port -side appatently had better chance for theli lives. Many bodies are visible, pinned under tons of metal, and cannot be re? covered until the wreck Is dismembered. The engineers will give no opinion as to how long It will take to completely expose the wreck. RIOTING MINERS SHOOT OFFICERS - Pittsburg, Pa., July 24?In a riot to? day between miners of the Mansfield Mine of the Pittsburg Cos! Company, at Glendale, an isolated portion of Al? legheny county, three constables, two county detectives and a score of min? ers were injured, a number fatally. Fourteen men und one woman have been arrested. All were held in $1, Ortu ball on a charge of rioting. Three of the injured are surterlng from bullet wounds. The others were either stabbed, stoned or beaten with clubs. A factional dispute, an outgrowth of election trouble among the officers of District No. 6, United Mine Workers of America, which has been In prog? ress at Glendale for some time. Karly to-day throe constables arrested a miner who had almost beaten another workman to death. Tho news of the arrest spread rap Idly. When coming from Glcndale through an Isolated country to Heidel? berg, the officers were attacked. They I fired Into tho mob, but were soon stretched out unconscious fTom a bul? let or club. During the light two country de? tectives srrlved. One of these, De? tective McMIUen, dropped with his faco crushed from a huge stone, whllo Detective Insklpt sustained a frac? tured skull. The prisoner, a foreigner, was shot through the head by men , who tried to rescue him. J Tidewater League Standing of the Clubs. Won. Lost. Suffolk . 13 3 Elizabeth City... 7 6 Old Point . 7 8 Norfolk . 7 3 Newport News 7 9 Portsmouth . 4 10 Thirteen Innings. [Special to The Times-Dispatch.1 Hampton, Va.. July 24.?After Dean! had tied the score in the thirteenth In? ning this afternoon. Hazzard got his base on balls, and a long single by Wolfe brought him In, thus giving the exhibition between Old Point and Norfolk a sensational finish this after? noon on the Phoebus Army and Navy lot. It was a game filled with sensational fielding, and plenty of hitting, so that the fans were kept at fever heat i through the baker's dozen session The work of Wolfe, fierce, Derrlsh and Dean starred for the locals. Score by innings: R. H E Old Point? 000140020010 2?10 16 3 Norfolk. 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 1-, 0 17 7 Batteries: Old Point?Morley and Dean. Norfolk?Marchant and Lucia. Victory for Suffolk. (Special to The Times-Dispatch.] Suffolk, Va.. July 2*1.?Newport News failed to hit Franks effectively, end j the Suffolk Nancies won. 6 to 0, In a j snappy contest, which was Interrupted I several times by dust storms. Score by innings: R.H.E. Newport News. 00 0000 0 00?0 6 0 Suffolk . 2 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 ??t> 9 1 Batteries?Thompson and Hogers: Pranks and Kiock. OI!LI\ flUUU ifiriULL MAKES AN APPEAL Philadelphia. Pa., July 24.?Sherwood Magee, the outfielder of the Philadel? phia National League club, who was recently suspended for the balance of the 1911 baseball season by President Lynch for his attack on Umpire Fln neran, to-day forwarded a request to the tlve directors of the National League asking that he be given a hearing. Magee and the officials of the Phila? delphia club claim that Mr. Lynch act? ed hastily in suspending and fining Magee $^00. It Is claimed that the head of the league only heard the testimony of the umptres that acted during the game , in which the row ^ occurred, and In order that MageJ" might give his version of the affair a special meeting of the board was de? manded. n0PE HAS SORE THROAT WhvulclaaH llclleve a Few Days' Rest Will Rextore His Health. Rome, July Zi-?Pope Plus has taken cold and Is suffering from a sore throat as well as experiencing the lncoave nlence .of hoarseness. Dr. Ettoro Marchafava. consultl?" physician to His Holiness, vlsltod tj" latter to-day in company with 1,? Giuseppe Petaccl, the Pontiff's prlvtj, physician. They found that the r tlent had a slight temperature a? ordered that his audiences for ff present be abandoned, it Is belloijjjr that the Pope will be restored after a few days' rest. N possible for Electrics because our system of maintenance is the most Our rates, including everything, speaks for itself, viz.: Pleasure Gars, per month.$25 00 Commercial Cars: 700 lbs. capacity. 30\00 1000 lbs. capacity. 35 Oft. +cb'. net" 2000 lbs. capacity. 40.00 r^Vwi" 2-ton capacity. 45.00^'? b*,h' 3#-ton capacity. 55 .00 5-ton capacity... 70 00 H? Consider that the above amounts expended on hors**! would not vield half the results. Ice freu era Im in Mini -?. d?ac BUAV Electric Garage Virginia Railway & Power Co.? Corner Vine and Main Streets. Ta Day and Night Service. * Phone Madison 3400.OAT