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THE CAIRO BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH; 10, 1909,- THE CAIRO BULLETIN! .'. ' EalaWUbea IHHR. Publlahed Pally and Hunday by th Hullciiu Cum pauy at "MOIilo .street, t'tiouotki. Subscription Rate by Mail. Invariably Cash lu Advance. One year, fially and Huuday Subscription Ratei by Carrier. By Carrier Inf'alro-. iif Carrier outnlde of Cairo-, . One a month -tjoc a uioutb Notice to Subscribera Hubacrlheni will confer a favor bv reporting to UilB office any tank of prompt dellv try mi the part of carrier. - .. .r-.T .-s----.-i.:- - - , sas in the recent cruise ot the Allan Entered at the Cairo PoKiofflce as (second-1 ... , a,ullll,i ,iu, world, was born ilaha Mail Mailer. CIRCULATION STATEMENT. Average number of complete, ami perfect copies of The Cairo Bul letin printed daily ami Sun. lay (luring tilt year IMS 2084 Average number of complete ami perfect copies of The Cairo Bul letin printed laily ami Sunday during the month of Febru ary, 1909 227'J February Circulation. . .2435 . .2433 ..2428 .,243s .,'mi ..242S .. 228(1 . .2Ju8 ...2224 2229 ..2253 . .2229 15. .. Hi... 17... 18... 19. .. 2D. .. 21. .. 23... 24... 25... 2C... 222") --'' . 22 15 3. .. 4... 5... 6. . . 7... S... 9... 10... 11... 12... .22:15 .22;!i .22;;.' .220d .2228 .2244! . 22 1.1 i l;j 222$ 14 2192 28.. The above is a correct statement of the circulation of the Cairo Uulleii.i for the year 19oS ami for the month ,of February, 19u9. CLYDE SULLIVAN. Business Manager. Subscribed and sworn to before nu this 8th day of March, 19(19, LEO J. KLEB, Notary Public. The Bulletin is on sale at the fol lowing places: Coleman's, 214 Eighth Street. Halliday House News Stand. Blue Front Restaurant. They have a wonderful engine, r (orps ov?r at the Citien offic . Their achievements in scientific re nearc seem destined to startle the world and gain for Cairo a fame oaly b'cona to mat wnirn a certain f . :i lent amber fluid has gained for Mil- wiiukee if all that is claimed fori them be true. N'ot only have they solved the problem of boring a hole In water, but they have actually dis covered the rule by which a straight .ti tp.? rigid body can be fitted so snugly and so tightly to a solid circular ho.iy . that awter ran not pa.-s through between them. Their nielhol id bbriilg a hole throiig'i water is to bank It up and their method of bank-, lag it up is to driva "sheet piling" around the place wher? the bole is to be dug. That looks very pimple to (he man of ordinary understanding.. He can see readily how a dyke or coffer-dam can lie built out fro n a Kolhi bank and a basin created out; of whieh the water can be punip 'd and a cavity made below the water line, as was done at the foot of T-mth RtreeV when tho stewer washie ..rivihg.-s or immunities of eiti- extended to low car timlerstand water mark, lie : also how "sheet ! piling eoui.i ie driven in ;iie middle of a stream so as to form a circle or huge tcb or tank out of which the water could bp pumped and the bot tom of the stream exposed, put what puzzles the average mind is how ei.ber i'f these methods could be ap-i plL'd to the situation at Fifteenth and j Commercial, where the big concrete j tube i'.iown ns the Commercial ave-i line sewor is broken an I needs to b repaired. That Luge circular body! lien some twenty feet under the! ground, and is entii.dy submerged in water under a pressure of tmmv i pounds to the square inch. How to ; drive "sheet pili.u" into the gr.iunl.j along si.Ie of. or over, or under, or' at right angles to. or "any old way,"! t") that the water nay be pumped j away from the sewer and the broken j iiart. exposed that is what puzzles; the average obtuse rea lex. and that! is the great problem which the Citi ; zen's wonderworkers have solved. 1 To men of ordinary mental calibre various practical methods stigft, at ; themselves, by which this brek. r sewer could fc? exposed, hot th se voold le very cosily umler f sr. se it conditions; and as there is no reason on earth why this should be drne now, sineo the condition has been! ivr iered quite haiwb ss by prnmiti a.ol energetic work. the ex-pens? i would be a wanton waste of public money. The sewer wi'l have to lei rcoaire.l, and this will l.e done when it can be done after the river has prne dowe so that the brokeiv pa it tan be gotten at. la the mean tlinj r. is to ho hoped the es teem , con-! temporary will cea-e remling its gar ments anil spluttering nonsense. 3 TODAY IN HISTORY : March 10. 177C The British (soldiers, contrary to orders plunder :d Boston. 1?"0 Bioux Indians anriihilaied Hie c? 1 . .... ; nti.i r.ti iiimj iii.ir on - oupiie. iwa. - is'. a Manassas june'ltia evaemted ; by the Confederates. Js'C3 Jacksonville, Fia., ukea by the Federals. lStla -lienortil Sherman occupied Fay etteville, N. C. J$!C- -Prize fighting declared ill. gal by the courts of Louisiana. 15o2- -Suit begun by Atloriiey-Uelier al Kuokx 10 dissolve the Nurth eru Securities Comiaii.v. -First iiiti! -national con vontlon of Young People's Missionary .Movement opened in Pittsburg Biography. Cap!. Charles K. Voorlnnd, V. S. N.. I who commanded the batlledilp kaa- ..Mil .Viw Jersey. March I ft, 1 S. lie enlisted in the navy as an apprentice. During the war with Spain In 1S9S ho served on the minium! iUlenua and dispatch boat Ikdphiu. t vtttettttttttttttttf i CAIRO IN 1875 tia4tti4a (From The Cairo Bulletin published by John H. Oberly). Hie;h school exercises were held on Xov. 19th. Amone those who took ..art in the piogiam were Misses to race Alter, l.rlu Pace, Lizzie Bat ' litta Fof.s, Luelhi Feasor, Laura Ren f ie and .Master Eugene Ellis. Mr. and Mrs. Word Ritteiihouse issued initiations to a number of friends who composed a social cirel-e .,,,-jin t airo in l.v.2, the companions ana " '")"':, I associates of ;Mr. and Mrs. Ritten " ' j auuse before their marriage. The iti '''"" l v itations read as follows: "Cairo . Iyguiis' Folks of 1S02. W. If. Morris. D. J. Baker. 11. L. Halliday, Win. (lii hert. A. 11 Irvin, 11. II. Candee. Win. liner, J. B. Humphreys. A. Sloo, C. W. HelldersOll, W. BilteliliilU:!!': May White, Libie White, Annie Candee, Amarala Alter, Ella Miller, Laura Artec. Should auld acquaintance be forget. And never brought to miff? Sin t:ld auld acii aiutaiice be forgot. And days of auld lane syne? Mr. ami Mrs. Wood Ritteuhouse present their kindest regard4!, and would he happy to have you partici pate in a reunion of the young folks of ISti'i, on Wednesday evening, N'uv. 21th, at half past seven." ttfttttmitlttf.f.lt.tt I LECAL DECISIONS I ; a tii4re seiMncrimmation. in Twining vs State of New Jersey, 29 Supreme Court Reporter. II. Twining ami a-i- other, officers of a trust company, were, convict cd of having- kmuvin;;!v exhibited a false p.ip, r to a haul; ex er witn intent to deceive, he pai.i r was refern d to in the indictment, and in the course of the trial defendant called ik) wiiu.'ss and did not. testi fy hiiiis.-lf, though the New Jersey law gave him the riiht lo do so. The jury were instructed that they mli;ht draw tin n n fa v arable inler'-nie against him from his failure to tes tify, where It was within his i..wei in denial of the evidence which tend ed to incriminate him. The law of New Jersey ptrmitted Mich an in ference to be drawn. The question wan whether such a law violated the i foui teem h amendment, by abridging -cs of the I'nitcd Sla'i-s. The court aild ill Hie r.lltset lleo il w.f. in. ! "U!lll;eit. (.Il I the exe-apt i def. iidant to pl'.,Ve ,ii f i . mi complilsiM y that iitcriiiiinatioii guaran'eed b. the led" I al cii;J it II! io!l moat by tl.e slates. iaiu.st impair Tile SUjiletlle . jiirt. of lie- I'nited Stat that such eiinplHll !!: iurd,inieiii:i rigtits lioi one of i he id' national citi- hii. ro as irivileges s of Hie to be tin lit,!. , and Immuuiiie: !!td States. anion ; of c!t- PBISONER DIES SHE AND SEVERAL MEMBERS OF FAMILY WERE SERVING LONG SENTENCES FOR MURDER IN KANSAS. I. 3v, ti worth, Kas , Man Nam Wih.oii, gen. i Mra. StelTleback, one of uotoiiou.-s women p.isiuiei Kansas loisuii is dead. h 9. Mr., kiiou ti ,is t he too l ; in t h a ' i i'.' t When she realized le i 'iiuis con ii-l lion she asked that her mki, t Ugl- i rttafilel ack. a lifetime cu!i,it, and JCI-arU s Wiison, her second husband, lanotb.er convict, be broug.it to her beds ide. They remained with her un til she died. Mis. SlafThhaik was brought lo the Kansas penitentiary in May, 1.S97, ti serve a 21 year scitciuv fur mur der. At the same time two of her nous wire brought in under lip- sen teie-es; a third son to ten s,.v,n eais: cnarles Wiison, ..-:- l.mband. to feerve twenty five years One of the s,,ti serving lif s, n t nee .K.'d four years ago. The third one served out .lis sentence of seven years and it is reported that he- is row serving a term in the Missouri peniLeiiiary at Jeft'erso.j City. The Stafflehaeks lived near Galena Kansas, all. W ere ai eiist. I ..r ,....... - ' t" I ,us aj atrociutis murders. Th ey ran a hotel and it wa.s allei;...! t. t they murdere, ei est h,. ie.,i gl eStS nioiiev and threw mine. the Ijodii .s into a deserted AGEO IMA FIGHT Ml 11 CENT FARE LAWS OFFICIALS OF WESTERN RAIL ROADS WILL HOLD MEETING SOON TO MAKE PLANS. WEST VIRGINIA CASE May Be Affected By Decision Handed Down By Judge McPhcrson- Case Will Be Carried to U. S. Supreme Court. Chicago, March 9 A meeting if the executive committee of th. We t ' ern Passenger association is to be held here tomorrow to formulate a plan of action: in view of the Mis sarrl two cent rate decision. A meet ing of the executive officials of the Western roads is to be held soon with a view to concerted action action against all two cent possenger laws. It is expected that suits will be begun in several states. CASE IN WEST VIRGINIA. Charleston, W. Vn., March 9. It is belived here that the decision ef Judge Mcl'hersou in the Missouri two cent far,, case will have a be -icing upi n a similar case (lending in t! :s state. The C.-a! and Coke railcoad among . hos-e heavy stook'wMers are Sen ator Si.-piieusou P. Klkins, and for mer Senator Henry ;. Davis, has ap plied fur a writ of mnndaiiius to pre vat the attorney genera! and prose cuting attorney of Kanawha count v item e.ifort ins tl two cent fare cute law a., it!', t that r. it Is eoiifisratory. Cirs,. K. Pi ice. for the Coal in..? C '..ly that he heiievt dec-ision will have Kid. claiming that g-'to'ra! conn e. eiid to- VI i the McPhorsoa an iTect on all getting a fair re 'sniient but UI! reads w hich an net tern upon their iuv not affect roads that retu rns. are earning fair TO U. S. SUREME COURT. J.-rferson City. Mo., .March A.-I.e-u.-v Central Major innh'.ht stnt.d that lie would take steps ininiedialely to appeal the two cent pis 'iiger rate and nuivimnui n eight rate cases t.) the l'nife.1 State" tnpreme corrt. DICKINSON TALKS OF APPOINTMENT (Concluded From First Pago.) sui'.'iiK e to the southern people, that although their redid electoral vote was arainst him. he wanted them to feel that 'hoy were in close relations with his admioistral ion and would he In no sense alien to it. Action Patriotic. "If he had selected for this purpose a southern Republican, however w II oi'.'ilifped to discharHe the duties of the office, it won!, not. have fulf'illel the purpose he had In mind. If he had selected a Tvmorrat who had ot'-d for him, there would have bet n rorni for carping critic-Ism to say, howev -r unjustly. t;i-,f, the appoint ment had bee; ten, Iered an 1 accept.?! as a. reward for such support; and bcsi.lt s. such mi appointment might have lai ked that liira-neii w ith the southern people which would exlt l.t-twetn them and one who '.ia 1 h-ft the party. I am confident that the great i.urpose of the pit si. lent was to establish Hi relationship I htive in dicated. It Would belittle the bread patriotism which inspired him. to as same that his put pose was to achieve political results. Having known nie for a b.iig time and intimately, atid h.iung conferred with southern men w hose opinion"- he aired, he ca ti'' to tile r otiepi:-icei that' n i y oualilica ti' ns and i, iv relations to the south i .ti p.dpie were such as to ju.-ify I ii" in;; iae in his cal.in- t. "Having accept-d the position. 1 shall briiKr to the di-charire of the dulies of the office my b-st efforts, and shall of course, carry out. bis I" H i'-s. I carii-et conceive that anv eity e.iii aris.i in contieetii n with that office that will be incoiiipatpd.' with any views I have hitherto enter tain".!. Certainly if such an occasion should a'ise. I woiihl ,n,t embarrass Hie prM,ent by hohliug a jsition. t! tlutie-- of which I roiil, I not heartily .M-charge. j "That tie- piirp se operating in l'is is broad, m.'ietiaiiiinous and lio l lie c.-ei cp eslion. The boih of the puinise all 1 of t'i ti is to ! tried by Hate, very a iiranc , from le.f-rs lesiif.ns i tile public pr'"-S. aclion in :.i,eiiiing me a-id luiii. I ; pa'rh t ic wi: dolll hi- Se'e- I have ami ex;, that bis my I v of action in act t he si nth and the southern : jmitTiii. nt I'tiio;. are nptirovetl having t obappreva! 1 mii'Tatic st.it s. was especially ap- Wis pealed to in tie's ma'-r by the presl deat, 1 can r with erpianimity aiy l it ie is in that tuav come from in diiilaal Iieinoctals Isewhere." Furnishings. ine average wnman doesn't think the house Is furnished unless she has a card receiver in the jarlor and hand-i -ilnt-'d Milt ani popper shakers in the ll-!." r -i. j A Busy Time. j On a winriy day it Is quite trying for a womau to attempt to hold ud her skirt, hold on her hat and hold htr tongue all at oucO. Philadelphia Bi to. J. 1909 With Easter Sunday less than four Weeks ahead it be hooves you to get busy if you are to wear that new suit TOD A Y AND TOMORROW cMarcb the Tenth and Eleventh, we ivill have with us Mr. Wessels, of St Louis cAn Expert Cutter and Designer Who will be pleased lo take your measure and be prepared to show you a complete line of Foreign and Domestic Woolens in the latest spring shades and designs, LET US MAKE YOUR CLOTHES. We Refer You to Those That HaVe. We Guarantee you a perfect fit and general satisfaction. Sneezing as an Art. "Yesterday." said the pretty girl, "1 mot a speeding teacher. I don't. mea:i a teacher who sneezes, but. a poison who teaches other pool -le how to git,...,:... 1 had always r.u lerstood that New York a'tiac's i'lsti ictors in every a.-t kt.ev.i; lo iiiodera education, hut a pre!'. SMr of i m .! struck me as a th elded novcPy. "I am eolng to take a few lessons. The p.-ofts.-or Mgn.w ihat he Li a very u: eful member of society. Nobody, he claims, can prevent sneezing, no niat t' r how luauy formulas ami medica i eats may be ab.io: b d. Put though i sneeze may nut bo avoided It may he cultivated, and from a stertorous vnort It may he modified into a spintje, melodious trill. For anybody who la likely to startle the neighborhood with tretp'iit sneezes the experiment Is well worth while." Some Birds That Don't Mrate. "It is a curious thing," said Prof. Henry Bird, an ornithologist of Rye. N. Y at the Renr.er', "that birds of European oiigin do not adopt the mi gratory habits of our native birds. The English spnriow never seems to get. wise to the ndvantat'os of going south in winter to avoid the rigors of a northern climate, thott'-'h he might g"t the Hp from our wild fowl or the M.liiu faintly. Of late years we have l.a-1 In Westchestt r comity the starl ing, also an English Importation, and 1 notice that this newcomer follow: out the exact wa,s of hli predecessor, the sparrow, in that h" stays constantly in one place, regardless of the sea sons." Baltimore Ann. i lean. Insects with X-Ray Sights. A Oeitnan scientist has discovered that many insects, such as moths and i.iitterlUes. have X ray sight. This meann that the eyes of these insoctfi can see with something similar to X rays objects invisible to human eyes unless aided by a fl Horoscope, if or dinary sunlight has enough of tho X rays In it for the butterflies to se clearly, the world must be a fit range siidit "to them. This scientist believes that they can nee through the clothes and flesh of human beings and behold us walking about in our skeletons clad in a ti ansliicetit covering of llesh. A Flat Child. "I was a flat child," he said. "I was twin and brought up in a New York tlat. I have never known what it is to live anywhere e'se." She looked him over. He was six feet two In bis stoc king feet and broad In proH,rlion. He not only filled tho chair he sat in, but. he seemed in his !:r-at health ami strength and bigness to fiil the Mat. ' You are not like those little flat .less, are you y she said. "Those lit tle b ni: doss thai ar.. 'ooru under a chifi'oidtr to lit a Hat, those Dacha loioi'.s?" mmr Thetn Oatolths -House ta Di9 Stea rns' Elect rio Rat and Roach Paste 1 sotuW'ly miftrantv A rvtralnAts nts. mlv. f"-kr, .fct-lie.. B.w.imc.. .-U!. hHtt Inr ,. Wtlr thin I 1!. ft.r It 4r1v i at" antl t;i f ttfr uf tltw boa U, Jm mi iki ii M .i:. f r W-i IAs. . ! m, .'1,1 ..rTWIirTr or aenl iprM pria ua iAli4 ol .ii.'t,. STEMr EIECT1IC MSIE CO.. C!t.t, HI. Spring WHITE & VISITS Willi Our Fire Company, It Is written of Nero that ha fiddled while Lome burned. In Glea Ellyu where I live, wa are neither as ical as Nero. Uheu tl- fire bell rings, we Inataut iy stop our 't,iat games, forget the error of our part ner at not 1 'aalitii trumps when wo have bet.-:; signal ing with all the ten spots ill our hand, pitch the cards into the middle of the table with ooo fell swoop, find start for the lire on i lope! Even though we have no monu ments of Grecian nit or Roman vir tue, no trophies of the Punic and (Jalllc wars, and no holy temph-s, as had Rome, we think a heap of our chic 1: e u bouses, our hr. v sm.'ks and our chimneys 1 And the homo fire department, every member of which receives fifty cents each ' .Tj t.l mom 7h.lt trVf mm .riCeJeili Nil i. .1-. y time he hot foots to a lire and guts sopping wet. is our pride and oar boast. When the fire department wants money with which to purchase more hose or a newer hose cart, wo put our heads together and neitle on a drama by home talent or a hop where tho elite and tho plebeian revel freely with no thought of cn.ite or r.ocb ty le st riction. Whet) it comes to fighting the demon fire, we are there with our sprinkling cans on common ground: We pride ourselves on our lightness of sleep and our vigilance of e,.r. Tile post 'office may be robbed and our daughters elope in the stillness of plu tonlan night. Unmindful we slumber on, but at the first sibilant clung of the firebell or the primal discordant note of the calliope whistle, Morpheus is shaken off as chaff before the wind for the first man in the traces of the hose cart Is a hero and he who aleeps on unmindful of the ragini; demon of conflagration, is the laugh ina stoc k of the town! And we rally as quickly and as bravely to extinguish a hay stack as we do to flL-ht doggedly on against billows of flame in our town hall or our local schoolhoiise! Wherever the hydra-headed' element of fire dares to show its forked head, we are there with the swiftness of the wind" and the sureness of the rising sun! Wo look up to the fire chief of the village! We call him by his first name when we bur our groceries and our meat at his Main sir'-ct emporium. We flatter hlni and compare him to Na poleon and Alexander and Hannibal lor 1 may be our chitaen house next! And our girls' Why, they can no morn ie s'st our bachelors when earbed mm 1909 W ALDER. in i lie regaoa of the l.Teman's gia.i rags, thttii can the water resist run ning down hill after a spring f roshet '. We may have our nifty misses with their Ideas of dukes and titles aad castles In Spain but nature and love re-assert themselves when, the local Lean Hrummel dashes holjly forth In his flie-flghting clothes. Love laughs at peerage when Cupid wears the fire man's cap. and lordly mansions pale Into the dim mirage of fading dreams when Dan ia holding tho sum tiu hose. Thus it is with us and our fire com pany. We may be select and stucK uiTat receptions and hails and coun try clubs, but beside the buniing build ing, in the flickering light of the dart ing flames, we are as alike an peas in a pod, birds of a feather that flock in our undershirts and our wrappers, onu shoe off and the other oiioo on broth ers and sisters in a common cause against a common enemy! o o o Smiles. i W Lee stings are sure cure .for rhe'c mutlstii. If you have no bees talro a loll of barbed wire U, lud Willi jo.i! 'r A Kansas City young mad was lo't 1100,000,000 a year ago and In; ib - j elates he hasn't spent a tvnt fool ishly since he got the money. Aw, there's something wrong with that fellow! , . o o o Wanted His Mc'ncy First. rmr:.icr n i: ' ' il nn-et'ee; i, . mull who wan ;.- ;....d .by t'..t v,nn M:it to come forward to ;.lie altar, atild: "There la a w oman in your choir who. la aiiisi:-. Cr.me to .lenufi." liiroiotli ft double set.nl fills,, teoth thnt I niii'k' lier ai-vc-ul yes, r.i hko, and ah tiH.i iitva r paid , me a vrr.t for ih.-ni. When slit pr.ys that It'll, ihi-n I'll talk to you about reli'on."" Hlncklay (Mich.) (.Scaette. o - LIKE NOTHING ELSE ON EARTH. Night Lights of New York Are a Vision of Magnificence. The sky line of New York is always changing. So, too, the night lights shift and grow in wonderful nianih cence, creeping continually further up ward toward the stars, until the lower city, grouped around tha Singer tower, has become a veritable Chitoborazo of glitter and glow. The littlo lamps that mark the dark wharves barely show. Above them the scant candles of the older city twinkle here and there, but not enough to mar the dark forejround beyond which come the' palaces more goregoua than any ever coaxed from genii land by slaves of Aladdin's lamp. From the platform towers of the great bridge the picture sets to the best ad vantage. It begins with the sinking sun. The murky vlev beyond the bay bet conies dull and dark. The torch in Liberty's hand Suddenly gleams star like in the night and then, like the twinkling In a kaleidoscope, the pal aces begin to glitter ia the gloom, 't here Is do vision like It elsewhere in the world, yet only now and then docs a bridge pedestrian pau&e in his hur ried walk to give the spectacle a mo mentary glance. The usual New York er cares little for the tpleudor Of his to ll. H. Y. World. OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. Cairo, Alexander CountVi Population 16,147. Illinois. Clerk, K. A. HATCHER. Treasurer. THOMAS H. MAIIONFCr City Attorney, FRAN'IC MOORK. Comptroller, EUNIOST NOKDMAN. Polleo Magistrate, A. J. ROSS. Chief of Police, M. H. ROAN. Alexander County, Population 27,467 County Clerk, JESS I? E. MILLER. Circuit Clerk. ALFRIOD P.KOWN. Sheriff, FRANK H. DAVIS. Stales Attorney, ALEX. WILSON. County Superintendent of Schools, PROF. S. K. OOTT. Assessor and Treasurer, FRED D. MOLLIS. Board of County Commissioners. J. J. JENNKLLK, Chairman. 0. V. N'EFF. DR. reifWIN 0APSE. mil CARD CAIRO ELECTRIC RYS I Kilf 1 1 cars due to InavfiHuoond fit. gc , UCII ItlllC tin. north on Com iiier.-l&l Avi I HxlHt- tf Ift 111 llllO id. I't-niit 11 n. Ill . 1 1 ri. ill. . . ! I 1,, In,, e., i-lli ,,n U ntil, ,i 111 , ru h. lii,.tui I from iUiS a. in tu tu.'.Vi p. ut. Pnnlip CI lino Hultirook Ave, car dim ! lUfldl 31. I.11IC U, nveHHM,llll Ht. (jo jliitf north ou lltillirook., al (:f ,Z; llri; t-:(lf.7 i 7.1-- a.m. mi. I tin tin- nit mi, m I u uL Mvory Imul I until I0:-14 and tl.ri v. tiotiiK west on t wenty Kluhth Kt. at MV, 1 8:1a; Bill, H:l!) and 7:01 a. m. ami on aiuu luln- ul, b everv hour until Ul::i4 and ll.l'-t p. ni. I I'oiilar HI. cam due to paux Kt. Marv'n park li lulu jlt-n after leavlnt; .n'olni Ht, Belt Line Owl Cars IVSIVira! in,; !::.) a. in.; M a. in.; ;i:3i) , in.; 4:91a. tu.; 6:!i a. in. i . Noitli on Ctiiiiiuerclal - -12 p, ra. la m, la in. ;t a. in. 4 a, m. b a. m. Kelt and o l cam aradua to paw Wt I l,lrty fton tli Ht. 15 nitnult altor loavln Socoiid Nl. B001S AMI SHOES Manufactured. Repaired. Work ueally and quickly tleiie by niui'lilnt' or bv hand. Urine your Hlu.ci. licit' w lu-n 111 Heed u( It-pltlt'S. E. IHUMIIELIFB WW Commercial Next to Hold Marlon. IS KO GOOI) ofBvs 'xtss Ljm 3ach .5 nn tf so -Nt irn:n :s fist Stationum. !r YoluPaiho NAGtDinsDS Jo A srx TCT Ov Tttc Way Ki'f' ffiiss flora li'owrVtk You Ca) Araw Nor U PRICES WITHIN EASY REACH OF ANY BUSINESS. LET IIS QUOTE YOU. THE BULLCTIN CO. W. C N lentil s. K, I", Kri.eorNK. .loll N M. M AKSU t LI- Kilcoync Electrical Co. iiousc Wiring ami Elxlurc Work a Specialty. HE,UOUARItRS 211 Six Hi Street.' , llt.nic 'XI See us for Contracts. JOIlrV J. O'SIIEA Is now jiiejinicd let tl Elcciric VVirincj And Gas Fittimj KiillniatcN i hcerliilly fiirnlslicd. ,H..lli plioiio 170; Wiisliiiiunm Ave. avrjrti -ajr t,?3v..' - Hi,' jt -,jfiJ :N0 & WILLIAMS TIN, COPPER m . SHEET IRON WOHXS Sole aoents for the PERFECT PANTRY the Bug Proof . and Germ , Proof Method of, keeping Groceries . in the houa. Ask our aolicitor to call. 810-12 Commercial Avenue Calr. Phone 47. a