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VOL. XXVii. _ YADKINVILLE, YADKIN CO., N. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 10, mi N(). 9
i. w~—===
i
Adventure
- Romance
i
By George Agnew Chamberlain
4-r. ■ ------.— ■ *}.
Copyright, The Bobbs-iiorriU Company
SYNOPSIS.
PART I.—Robert Hervey Randolph,
young New York nmn-about-town, leaves
the home of his sweetheart, Madge Van
Tellier, chagrined because of her refusal
of his proposal of marriage. His income,
110,000 a year, which he must surrender
If a certain Miss Imogen Pamela Thorn
ton (whom he has seen only as a small
Cirl ten years before) is found, is not
considered by the girl of his heart ade
quate to modern needs. In a "don’t care”
mood Randolph enters a taxi, unseen by
the driver, and is driven to the stage
door of a theater. A man he knows,
Duke Beamer, induces a girl to enter the
cab. Beamer, attempting to follow, is
pushed back by Randolph and the cab
moves on. His new acquaintance tells
Randolph she is a chorus girl, and has
lost her position. She is in distress, even
hungry, and he takes her to his apart
ment. There, after lunch, a chance re
mark convinces him the girl is the miss
ing Pamela Thornton. He does net tell
her of her good fortune, but secures her
promise to stay in the Hat until the
morning, and leaves her. In a whimsical
mood, also realizing that the girl’s reap
pearance has left hiin practically penni
less, he bribes the taxi driver to let him
take his job, and leaving word with the
legal representative of the Thornton es
tate <Khore he can find Pamela, takes up
his ness unties under the name of "Slim
Hervey.” He loves the girl, but Ins pride
forbids him approaching her under their
^changed conditions.
P.' ItT II.—One evening-he is engaged
by Beacher Tremont, notorious profligate,
to drive Him and Madge Van Tellier to a
bh' —J.'j.known as "Greenwood.” Aware
Of? 1 nature of the place, Randolph
,,, dp'-1*tj x Ji pair to Greenwood cemetery,
aj ^ j? Beaeher gets out of the cab
' « Randolph leaves him there, taking
P tb, <v jirl (who has-awakened to a realiza
tion of her folly) to her home. Uadgs
recognizes him.
to_ ______ j
ft, “C::ri’t I drop you wherever you're
L going?” askerl the very human mind of
i. * the leading legal authority on corpora
f tion hedge-rows and byways.
“Oh, no,'k said Pamela, translucent
jg as love itsajif ;,“I shall go in taxis.”
How mrinjy vulgar vehicles fo^ blrq
|k« were Messeft-®y- the- transient presence
•si of Miss Thornton during the next seven
rs hours is a matter of gross mathematics
h and consequently beneath the ken of
to an intelligence that can chat along
\i about nice things like IJamela,and^Ilob-'
h *rt 1’andolph for pure pleasure and'
si subsequently sell the remarks for cold
fi cash. Five minutes to spot a lively
!,, cab. five minutes to ticket the driver
t,, and pile him on the discard, two more
ti to find her purse, three more to look
j_ Innocent; then start ali over again.
Divide seven times sixty minutes by
all that* and you’ve got her number,
to Let us leave the statistical fiend and
*> pass on to seven o’clock of the near
Christmas evening when Mi«s rc*'—?
^ 1 i was moinontartij out of a cat)
and strolling down the slope of the
hump in West Fifty-seventh street A
X mushy snow-rain had just begun to
fj fa'l, giving anyone with the price a
£ splendid excuse for taking a cab any
gt where for anywhere. Before the portal
^ Of the Cl r^.Northern Lights squatted
^ four taxis ^n a line. In the driver’s
seat of the rearmost of these, and eon
p 8equently ttye last,on tfie rank, f Ian}?;
g human being was buried in an enor
mous turrmd-qp collar, roofed by a
m chauffeur’s 'cap set ££ an ang)e of
u slumber.
b Pamela, the very moment her eyes
& foil on the recumbent figure, felt that
tg short quick leap of the blood in her
III veins which- is ordinarily termed a
j* “hunch.” She longed to step forward
w and raise the. veiling headgear, but she
► dared not, for not pnly was the" 'hotel
Starter on the job but also the' vim, wv
j, .< $hades of the Poppy club i ext door
*>\/Were stilk elevated by special request,
gb owing to the slippery state ol' ihe side
" walk In conjunction with the home
t ward-hound stream of dress-models.
• As n consequence, she was necessar
o ny content with opening the car door
»- for herself and stepping in. The starter
. politely begged her to pass to the taxi
at the lujad of the rank -and just as
v politely she informed him that her feet
were wet enough as it was. In the
meantime, even her light weight on
the running-board had startled the
driver into wakefulness and, without
going ihrough any motions, he had
heard the unforgettable tones of her
voice.
: 1 The starter shrugged his shoulders,
barked out an address in Fifty-ninth
street and kindly offered to “turn her
over 'or him.” The driver laid trem
bling handsthef wheel and cautious
ly drew himself up to a sitting posi
•0
tion without disturbing the shielding
angle of Ms cap. Far from his trou
bled mind were thoughts of snow, the
slush and skidding. He threw in his
clutch, started her with a jerk, round
ed the cab in front successfully, skid
ded mightily thereafter, straightened
her out. skidded again, and crashed,
with a great splintering of spokes,
IT
She Lcngcd to Step Forward and
Raise the Veiling Headgear.
broadside front on the curb directly
before the delighted windows of the
Poppy club.
Nothin." ’.voTsJd have happened to
i Miss T’-omton had she 'been sitt'jjg
| back in u ladylike manner, but at the
! moment of i i;■ - cab’s collision with the
i Imperturbable curb, she was otherwise
i occupied: n skort, the glass befog a
bit frosted, she was standing up and
trying to peck through the speaking
i tl<;t,>A:- a <;o :,s< qa-eTK-e, when the door
flew op1. : with the shock, she also tiew
and volr ianed 1o a landing on hands
and knees in the very middle of the
very wide sidewalk.
With a cry of, "Oh. miss!” the
driver sprang toward her, but when,
still or 1 arsis and fcpees, she.looked up
and gas.s-i, “Oh, Itandy-^Sr. Ran
dolph !” he turned and tied. down the
hill.
“HI 5 You Slim Hervey!” yelled the
starter. “Come back here an’ sigh up
for the junk!’’
In the meantime, which 'wasn’t
much more than the twinkling of nn
l eye, three perennial near-youths
j dashed down the steps of the' Poppy
| club to the assistance cf the-liveliest
| trouble that had ever sent out an S.
O. S. signal in the face of ready help
to the falling. Individually and col
lectively, they raised the ctfflj'-haired
vision to its feet. , , i, '< r
“It was Mr. Randolph,” gasped the
maiden, in evident distress, “and I’ve
been looking for him for weeks.”
“Not Bobby!” exclaimed Mr. Near
ton.
“Not Herv !” ejaculated- Mr. Verries.
“Not Randy!” interjected Mr. Berry
Pamela nodded three tiinefc, but her
eyes failed to show wonder. Nowadays
everybody she ran/into seemed to
know everybody she kronr l>v his first
name.
j “Excuse roe,'* said Mr. Nearton, in
i'tent on getting there first with a re
"mark—any remark; “does he owe you
ttibney, too V .
i The effect was electrical. Miss
! Thornton assumed a freezing .digrtlt?.
She fixed Mr. i\ carton with steady
eyes. . •
“How mudi does Mr. Randolph owe
. you?” she asked. <r
• “Only tw-twenty,” babhled-Mr. Near
ton.
i “Well, here it IS ,”<s8iG P^fheTa.'draw
ing a yellowback from her chatelaine
. and thrusting It Tyto. Mr. Nearton’s
nerveless hand. ■ “I happen*-to owe Mr.
Randolph a great deal more than that.”
Wherewilh she turned and made for
the corner and the nearest telepTibhe
booth.
Pamela was short “Of~ breath whdn
she reached the telephone, but she
managed to get Mr. Milyuns’ residence
on the wire and learned that he ^vas
detained at the office. S’he called' up
that safe den of the woMd-be undis
turbed and connected with a new and
strange drawl.
"You’ve got the wrong number, lady.
This Mr Milyuns went home early to
; celebratf' Ids silver wedding.”
“Will you put me through to Mr.
Borden Milyuns,” asked Pamela, in a
i sugar-sv. at voice, “or do you really
want to start looking for another job?”
“How do I know you know him—
Miss Hurry, did you say? The office
boy ain*' here, *so I can’t ask him.
Leave r.w your number, an’ I’ll have
him rail you.”
“Know him!” gulped Pamela, Hi a
rage. “Why, I’ve k-kissed him!”
“Kissel Mr. Milyuns!” responded
the voic< taking sudden notice. “Well,
dearie, -why didn’t you say so? I
thought you was one of them high
brow da n s. if it’s a matter of kissin’
the boss ever the wire, why ju-t you go
to ft. I won’t listen—oh, no!”
And a moment later, Pamela, In a
streamline body:
“Ob, Mr. Milyuns, this Is Pamela
and I’ve found him! , , , Yes; Randy
—Mr. Randolph. . .. No; he got away I
. . . Yes. He’s going under the name
of Slim Hervey and be was driving the
Village Cab company’s No. 1898, and
he smashed It on the curb just in front
of that horrid Poppy dub, and when
he sew me. he ran. . . . Oh, you will
get hi;?, won’t yon? Please hurry.
Ant] how, if you'll hang up, I have a
few wards to 'say to that new tele
phone girl of yotvs, . . . Oh, no? jn*
needn't tell lier;vI<can feel her sagging
oil llio wire. ... . 'Oil, will you? Oh,
thank you! ,It. isn’t as if she didn’t
deserve it.”
PART IV.
The Accent to Mars.
When Mr. Robert Hervey Randolph,
alias Slim Hervey, chauffeur, vice Pat
rick O'Reilly, ex-driver of the Village
Cab company No. 1898, skidded that
vehicle* disastrously to the curb in
front of the Poppy club and, as a re
sult of his criminal negligence, in con
junction with Miss Imogene Pamela
Thornton’s reprehensible peeking oc
cupation, hurled Uiat young lady to the
middle of the sidewalk on her hands
and knees, he leaped from his seat on
a spontaneous impulse lo help her to
her feet and administer every kind of
first comfort that the occasion seemed
to demand.
Two consideration's, however, shot
from the double-barreled blunderbuss
of Ridicule and Honor, caught him on
'•he wing, as it were, and deileoied
his flight from west to east with a
'h‘;rp turn due south at tlie corner of
^ifiy-Keventh street and .Sixth avenue.
!n .ha urn place, out of the corner of
u:s eye he had seen his one-time
rds, Mr. Ncarton, Mr. Verdes and
M *. :: -r. des ;ei ding the s' allow club
'*•«,. r •• • in -.n ivahir -l •: in the
..•! > he •>. Uejdv do ed
* V , hie •]- s.mmn r. •,
; - .. : s ; e Pad g. • .
.> . the hn s var ; ,• : • .... . r
s iU : i'. ;.fi . • on ‘ •
d e kaeulcn of }. ■ ■■ m. <•.;• • !;..>!
in;; and V ’v."vr ;.uw vn eng h in
for tilfld: ; i:1 o. i - ht h; a. U..liief
of fen thousand i-oda-s a • year, un
mod inerm e o.t.
p,, cpf. tOO big {!{. ond
down into the eh eye. ■•mi :• ’or
al) iy eager five of ’ ' • five ;i',: > yv or.
• mi her hands “afic hue. s, which it
seemed unbeliever’ h bo had -nvo he'd
in his arms, only th» «;"r-rtprated
favorite poem of hr,=?~ pur-e :
_ .
I count net. love toga dear, s© much
Lo\t*i I not honor trargf
kept him, £roni fa|mg the avalanche
of ridicule an 1 giyifflg the e; ernally
searching biog^nefT??*Jth his lam -m
a run for his money. As previmis'y
stated, i( was not to be. • Mr. Ran
dolph turned from the waiting unnfi
of the sweetest temptation ever re
niged by man and made his swift way
to the sanctum of Mr. Tourke
O’Shaughnessy, foreman-manager of
the Village Cab company.
“Tourke,” said Mr. Randolph, “I’m
through. Smashed up the two off
“Tcurke,” Said Mr. Randolph, "I'm
Through."
, * \ %
wheels of my wagon on the curb In
front of the Poppy 'club. Pock f me
thirty, please, and make out inv miv
cheek.” ,
"Through, Slim? Whadda ya mean?"
said Mr. 0*Sh&ugkne'ssy. "Think I’m
goin’ to sack you l'or a skid on a day
like this? Pay for your fun, kid, but
take another wagon.”
Robert Raudotph, alias S’im Her
vey, shook his head.
“tfou don’t understand,” he said.
“I—I’ve lost my nerve.”
"Lost your nynv!” gasped Mr.
O’- hauglmessy. “Whadda ya mean hy
teiiin’ me a lie* like that? dome on.
now; draw a map! Did ye kill the
inside?”
“Oh, n<v. Shor. “'Imi .s ju>t it
I mean, tl !r iy is very i;:*iofc
all right,"
"I besir •*» >■ r^unnursd
Toupty. 4 on trad:, - \-.T
A look oA •!v ! hy on? ot
loyalty <•: ‘ ( <i - \yes, ‘'iw. is,
iim, • i. < ■ ii! . <.•!: “i
that try in >. \-amle is liUc
pkiysn’ i,.- •:lek- o’ • : ri
a;;it\ hut ' <; ,2 "ft eani.-i to
to. ' . . o’
u'.l II:?.* i. i- yo::, .. n
there's yo .. j ,:,j
:■ ■ ' * tir.-t ter
I t v. r hat* . . }T)
on ' :-.-y ■ i :
“T; ■ - - Mi: ! 1; h, j;>o
►hoofs ills ■.: t' s .
“NpV.-, >■
* rS!.;\ • - ill* ■ J • ‘ b> Si r: • f.f, ;;;, >0
the lx,;. S lb re ;y> ' cun:.; in ilu'
put ’• m (>i: In ih* •• -art. you >::n
out for a :: 'kv-iib ' Sally Pain" »r
ror.rd til? • ,(• yo*i ' t’i ’p
, » • 1 • r
'■own to u ■ ■ fre.-l;'! , do
a mifje .ye ■■ . y,-l
a !** v>ti so « *<i i ,;er I.:» oJ y-;f
tv Ust me
Mr, Ran * onh’s widely placed bl'ta
‘yesMiii-ro " -d in an o.i'ort to examine
■he ipropo- iiion skrev.«.ily from nil
-jj;tries, am: ;Sj.» light of hope was iu<t
beginning •* dawn across the trouble
in ids inn. si face when there came
a sharp k; >ek on the door, followed
promptly by the rattle of the loose
knob and be unceremonious entry
>v ore hiidiike, bald-headed, dapper
•'••••r; t.fioi lawyer and two corpuieut
- i becioihes m*;n.
‘‘W; '. rc the—” exclsfihied the
•-'i ■' ivshaughnessy.
• i . a l ’ ht paid him no heed and
'• '• •; t: yd .»• iasi-v. ’lung ttiim Her
V- y with or rrtclieii band. ^
l d'-'-oft ! ' - e I bw.wingiy. “fly
' . i•: y. : r . . ro e you
' •1 "ib ' ■ d hand. Kb; .
v . : . • , “The lit
:de i"... 11 1.: V b ;. .! • 1:» serve pap. rs
' i yer w a
■ id r -V • an’ .»u take
I . . . -
■■■■' ^ '■ ‘ . ^ ,.r li'L gu‘ g to
**iP"'d.>n't v why!her tin y think
p!li U yeti er n ■ rei
mark, d air. O’.'in;a; uneasy, fixing
nm.lgnant yyc s on t he two Ir'iwy
flanking for ■ of th smart i vy< r.
“I iwver .da! Pke tb • smell < fai.M
keenly he roareffi “Hey! id vs;”
‘1 by two hub slaved into mnos-f
pitaide pastures, ttjrhed. stepped <ntj
footed to the door,, tueL.tyok the til, t
of steps iu three. they cannot lie
.blamed, for they ka/l^iecopnred in. Mr,
O’Sliaughm.'sV.y th.e iihin'whq had onea
hey ii arrested for pt^fng v over . w.'tli
cm; hand a r'ord. ,rl;a,t litul crowded
• . . :
“Now, Robert,” said,, the legal per
sonage, apparently oblivious of
the desertion of ids- supports, ‘‘I just
want to talk wiiii-.yqu. May I sit
down?”
“Certainly, Mr. Mityuns,” said Rob
ert, apathetically. - -,
“Excuse me,” murmured Mr.
«> iMJsiuguuessy. yw i, or aiun z i
get the name correct?”
“I beg your pardon, Tourke,” said
Robert, “Mr. Borden Milyuns; Air.
Tourke O’Skauglmvstsy.” He pro
nminced it “O’Shoekenssy,” to the de
light of the owner’s ears, long unuc
<*u,strutted to the correct intonation oi
*! •> exolT ■ ironvfn;
I did t • ;■ £ . ' wil, , ’
'■ tg.shauglmessy,--asr l>e rose and tip
toed from the room. *T leave you
'.rents to your family affairlie add
ed from the ddoc, this eyes drinking
a last view of the (train king he had
dared to call a runt;
During .the next Ualfdiour. Mr. Mil
vims delivered •‘himself of an ovsortet
sol of special i>ten#Jce S.1iat i:e c.mic
nave said on then-maarfcetalmost an?
uy for'titty thtot npi ckdiary, bu i><
vie judge and his. oAom
at ill sat •‘fwinr^tfrareajae putteed leg k
: midair, - tho^tf&sajnnir.z aside tlh
i valuable 'dreams ^r^^-ddm-vvords. ark
I ■ uitintred puSlm rbore cigarette
" or aipr '.'«r. (hnSv:- dightod from ill
•utt of i;'-: prt h;-'/.vs .rl
I “itVn'o 'use, *}:\itynhs.” said It -h
I rt, n’t 'ish-t. *'Th*5 nth is. and yot
! mow it, that a ihef-.t'ng between ray
if and :'am—- Thorn ion. a' tin
' ■.■..‘sent iU-Ve dish under ike exception
[ al ce.)<3:irons, con!.f only briny aVsfl
j .eiiiPileHtions• 1 >eyV-1• • I ihc capabiiity v
i ’.ny one < f os vo handle. I! *:* pro
- snl (hat shy divide- her in cm . •
me is so absurd Ur >. 1 am t oe .<*-.\ a
■ imper—at your
even mentioning it.”
MV. U:?yuns wii d bis brov/ ipr tie
iirnt tiii'e in many years.
“I don’t mind you calling me ‘inn er
linen!;’ Robert,” he said meekly
■‘f’-hih me anything you please. Only’
—and his voice rose gradually to t
svrpris'ng volume—“don’t forget tliai
I promised one'- of the dearest, niosi
unspoiled, lovable. and wholly adur
aide young persons that it’s ever beer
'ey privilege to assure of U;,» impo*
le that I would bring you to her
end. by the holy mackerel. I will—rh
[ I have to hold yon by one ear will
my teeth.” /
1 Mr. RamioipU took Ids latwr eiga
re r e from his mouth during finds strict
I ly illegal peroration, and allowed hia
i lips to spread into a brood smile.
“Mr. Milyuns,” he said, “I always
did litre yon; now I’ve got a deeper
feeling. They call it love. I adm.it
, to 13)e human end of you ti’.at -,h©
or.Iy thing that keeps me from rush
ing straight away to call <n the h >y
you have so accurately d-wcribed is tv*
fact that i haven't money ami sh-i
h..-.'’
“But what about the .lob T offer I
you?” interjected Mr. MdyunK
“I was coruing to that,” said Sir.
■ ’ Iph. *Tm not keen on cl •
fr. - you any more than from IS!
Thornton, but—more than that—I
wouldn’t bury myself in your stuffy
oh] -kyscraper at any cash price
known to man. In the first place, you
boh : ft. most unoriginal of till pro
f< and, in the second, you mr.ke
money too slowly.”
“ ‘Make money too slowlygasped
Mr. Milyuns, forgetting Bobby and
Pamela and their affairs for the first
time in three weeks, and remember
ing, for a change, and with a twinge
of his hardened conscience, the size
of his last retainer. “Ila!”
But Mr. Randolph allowed him no
time for indulgence in vocal mirth.
“That’s what I said,” he continued,
unmoved. “To meet Miss Thornton
fa^e to face and unashamed, 1 feel
j that I must have a capital of at least
i a hundred thousand.”
j Ke sank his head in thought for a
| moment. When he raised it again,
the widely placed blue eyes were
there. So was the saddle of faint
freckles across his nose: so was the
; guarantee of hones.y a we- - his gw
i fee,., but superimposed ■•(•••• all w«>
1 & new look of sudden - o-.
Continued on last page
%
“V-ss Jores in the -to use?**
Lexington, Ky.—noc:r: ;;:r! was
• not ]■.•'.when J- *»■ ■■, *•.• was ro
i ported £ying, nil th"?u- in, lading
| Tbo movies, nmst page people when
the request is maih,
U. S. BOYS C> ITALY
Purs 5200,000 for Roma, Lsrrent Semi
Rigid Aircraft in the
World.
| Washington.—Purchase of the Ttni
| ian “blimp” airship Roma, believed tr
be the largest semi-rigid ai^cra.'t I?
j world, for approximately £20u.')d:».
| v**ts announced by tJie War depart
| aunt. ,
-t probably*, would.©ost $1,250,000 t
duplicate the ship, the statement*said.
The Kerr,a is of 1,200,000 cubic fee
capacity, 410 feet iong, 82 feet^wid
and 8;l-2 feet high. :md- equipped with,
32-cylinder enghaes of 400"horse!
I a,v, r each. It had an-estimated speed
of R; i hies an hour pnd a cruising ra
ius at.ruil speed'of 8,300 miles and a ;
cruising speed of 8,000, miles. i |
Maj. John G., Thornhill has been or-;
derod to Italy with an air service de
tachment to biding the lloma to Amer -
ica.
SAYS JAZZ DEAD IN LONDON
English Dancing Authority Predicts
Fex Trot Will 3e Siand
Losdon.—The “jazz" is dead in Lon
don, says I*. J. S. Itichurdson, one of
{.lie foremost Engiic* on
ill -
dances will be popularized tills year,
bur the fox trot, one-step and tango,
which have held hneraationai intereej
for two or three seasons, will be stand
ardized.
“Previously persons taught the same
dan cos by different teaches found
themselves hopelessly at sea when
they tried to dunce together,” he said.
- "‘Through standardization! on which
. the majority Of dancing uwors in
. Leaden have now agre =d, a ••oirmreS
framework 'n i:I. steps b ism ?d
I without eh-uini.tiag.. ail <•!: • • • of in
i trcd.ueifg iiv:.:.uo yerhr,; ■ .’re:, >
. o'-h and vn'.yc ‘Ugh: gy; e: .die;’
, such ns v ..Lg: i% forms o*
:\ve i::pidi. pus ig L".•.
' r, ■ r :
- 0,i i 1 pl.u’ . bits • »rdii;
J S«lf-DestrJction Record of Rrgv.iauc
■ Year ‘o B'^b.yunby More Than
* 1,GCr’ b?.3D3.
New Yl Srd cities in the «lrrji
j '"rase-' dm g the year of 1020 nuin
’■ j '"er ■;! 0,17 . including 7:.J children.
'! ’ “ Lie Save-a-Life leate.V
| •- • '<> told here by T>r. H. M. Warrer
•Vjii rf ti*a ?eeitte.
^Itib cXeeedeu use iigdi’eS o'f tin* «•»*:.
- vions year by more, than 1,000 ca er
, he said. During the year 2.GO 1 won
en died through '^Tf-desfrucuon. VhL
• js a large increase over the precede■.
’ ear.
Tlie Increased percentage amoi •;
' omen was ascribed to their entry n
•aumiereial and political life.
The youngest suicide in the countr*.
•fitting the last year was live years
g \ while the oldest was 103. ■
an 400 soldiers have taken tiud
rves since the termination of the W;n
lie report stated.
I Superior Coor! Casas
| Superior Cimrt which con
j veiled here ■; on day is still :a
; session. Up o bate. the follow
I mg cases ha • b ••a disposed of.
| joe Thomk , colored, manu
i facouriog iicj . iol. pros, with
i Herbert jasierp assault, nol.
j pros, with k
Charlie . •. k, assault, nol
! pros with lea e.
Jira Brown c.-.L Walter Oma
| rn, manufacturing liquor, not
11, uilty.
j- C. L. Lovelao , assault, guilt/
; i:o sentence.
Arthur Burch, carrying con
l cealed weapons, not guilty.
Glenn Brow n and W. \V. Pin
uix, assault, Pinnix lined $40
j arid cost. jNo sentence as to
j Ioown.
Lee Weatherman, driving au
i to intoxicated, lined $100 and
j cost.
! Spence. McNeil, Joe Ham
and Bryant Whitaker, store
breaking, each sentenced to not
j more than 6 years nor less than
| 6 years in state prison.
I Ed Mason, colored, carrying
; concealed y. capons, judgment
| suseer.dtd oi, p. \ ir.ent ot costs.
L ili Myers, house breaking,
118 months on roads.
I
I p li i 7 £ i :; • ■ * x•• ■ r 3 \ v A <nr r<
$ y «f is = s ! i t a i \ E Cf
, AS V *A'7. i,■•■'.:’• Vr-^fK'J
£ >^ 1 * — i;: i J, .Ji ,.s u i Cl »• U' «i i6 jl
>v
i uz nrih •; j'cl. whose ngeNk
is s-aiu io bo EH yc.n-s, cied at \
the home of her ton Mr D. E.
Chi,j’pci ifCi- ‘ Er.i r List week.
Ene was t;u: :ed.- at Lor glow’ll
iH.u Rev. K. ' e.,*>:C:e. .ed
I liiC i iiiiCi U S 4* ». •
DEVICE FOR CLEANING Gf?A:ji
South Dakota Man f-fes Invention for
improving Grain Which Is Sim:
pfe in donttrfiction. '*
1 '•*•■•<• 51 • V;tf
The Rek'Mificr .VfnWonii iri flVnsVfSfc.
u fns* dnA flc.'-'ri’ii;i^LVrr*’fiiv('MtH::d sf0^. *
Metlier of ilonno. S:1 sjty^t3 ' 0
' bills 'invention relates to ‘ ar*lfA-iee
for <■!<*:mirj?_r. cooliny uffd drying
by air blasts. T!:7 (pyjort is to, pzo
dwe a device by v.lvarious y.'sifcs
r~.—=r____-n i
pgata.. r_ • y/ ;
'' r re . vftrj*
A Vertical LoRSii^cijgjy..Ss^ioRk^f^s
- :' . r -• c^a%« -Vo*
may bo cleans*!’vw&rdfled"mVflPcIh
er\vi?e bhyVirreil. ^fSKfflTha
constructfon,” on :•■? '$P*roH$ e5bn$r(ckr
ries no raeellaSienf iHrTsCFo got but of
ortlex, or rsauir^ iuforjeatints.
_' :, - r,
• •FOR Finsi*r8-LM^
Village ScheOimadtar, Victim of YVajv
to Have—Government
•'Y Shaft.
‘.TOtfe***. —*
iToneher'ey,’r'i Ffeihh.'—A' eevA^b- 7
In honor of the first Frenchman ’v«]>- j
I11 the war lias jtist been h'eTd •fii + it >
Tittle village. The victim. ,T>' ^
Peugeot, was n schoolmaster ho ■’•.-•-»
the war and joined the nr. < t < ;l
corporal. Ho by a r’iiiar
trol. 12 kbpfheters (about seven # I
’ 9 half Hu'et} ^ora {he" German '-m
tier 34 hours before tint. SU^r,;V
of vrfir. A monument to the school
master erected here will soon h ft
tested by the French governr,1*'
Chimes visy a Kt -rn of □«?<•’>
J^ort Wayne, Tn-f.— Few un««ns* ■ .{
why the nr- 'ram was chair-tOi - •(.< ,
Edward F. Vamelle gave a r- ;,^1
on the tipv mimes or- ted in tot* i>:• >--••
byterjau oh i«*h tower, hut a * -W.;*,.* e*
messr'Cf. fr. ia the h^dsfde n d-.or
1 worn-;’- ■ ' ■:! •• -‘I’m , j*s- . . . }
f Die No