The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, July 08, 1910, Image 2

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    T1IK CITIZEN, KltlDAV, JULY 8, 1010.
.
FORM H PARTY
Progressive Democrats Or
ganize in Albany.
IS ANTI-HEARST MOVEMENT.
Mayor Gaynor or Justice Seabury
Suggested as Right Sort of Men
For Governor A. J. Elias Made
Permanent Chairman.
Albany, July 5. Outlining n plan to
cut the ground from under Hearst po
litically mid Insisting that Wall street
Democrats had control Of the Demo
cratic league, 1 C. Leubusclier of Now
York city, a former Ilenrstite, ndivss
ed twoscore of Democrats from differ
ent parts of the state, who met hero
to take part In next fall's campaign.
This movement Is really declared to
be another Gaynor attempt to out
wit Hearst and the Saratoga league, at
the same endeavoring to force the
nomination of Cinynor or a Gaynor
man for governor by the state con
vention. Mr. I.eubuscher as temporary chair
man called the conference to order.
He ns-ertd that the progressive Dem
ocrats wanted a candidate for governor
of the type of Gaynor or Justice Sea
bury, a former Hearst man.
A permanent organization was ef
fected by the election of A. J. Klias of
Buffalo as chairman and William I.ust
garten of New York city as secretary.
The address to the people of the
state adopted by the conference as
sorts that the real Democratic senti
ment of the state Is voiced when the
following demands nre made:
Candidates for congress who believe
the tariff Is a fraud and a sham and
who will work for the largest possible
extension of the free list.
Direct nominations unlimited In op
eration. Initiative, referendum and recall.
Home rule for municipalities and
counties with iower to own and oper
ate public utilities If desired by the
people.
Abolition of personal property tax.
The adoption of the constitutional
amendment giving the federal govern
ment the right to Impose an Income
tax.
The nomination by the npproachlng
Democratic state convention of a can
didate for United Suites senator.
CZAR'S PALACE AFIRE.
Rumors That Blaze Was Work of In
cendiary. St. Petersburg, July 5. One entire
wing of the czar's summer palace at
Peterhof was destroyed by tire, entail
ing a loss of several hundred thousand
dollars. The wing Included the palace
theater and other buildings. The royal
family Is on a cruise and did not learn
of the lire until late yesterday.
There are rumors that the tire was
the work of an incendiary.
NOTED ASTRONOMER DEAD.
Schiaparelli, Discoverer of Mars Ca
nals, Passes Away.
Milan, July .I. Professor Giovanni
Vlrglnio Schiaparelli, the former chief
astronomer and director of the Milan
observatory, who discovered the canal
llke markings on the planet Mars in
1877, Is dead.
He was born In Piedmont lu 1S'.5j.
Three Women Among Victims of Lake
Shore Wreck. ,
Cincinnati, July n. The Cincinnati
bound section of the Lake Shore lim
ited train, which left New York over
the Njw York Central, crashed head-on
into a Cincinnati, Hamilton and Day
ton freight at Middletown, Itutler coun
ty, O., thirty-four miles north of here.
Nineteen persons were killed, of
whom three were women. One of the
passenger cars telescoped was the la
dles' car, reserved for women traveling
alone and children. Of the dead one
woman and four men have not been
Identified. All those recognized are
Ohloans. It Is supposed that two of
the unldentllled men are from Day
ton ACROSS OCEAN AIR LINE.
German Inventor Completing Craft For
Aerial Voyage From Europe,
lierlln. July 5. William Itcttlg, a
German airman, Is completing an air
ship with which ho hopes to voyage
from Europe to America In forty-elghl
hours. His ship will be 42(1'.. feet long
and will be able to carry thirty pan
iengers. It will travel at an altitude
Df 5,000 feet.
Finding Him Out.
Indignant Constituent This Is the
fourth time I have culled to see the
senator by nppolntment and found him
out every time. Private Secretary (ot
eminent statesman) Ob, well, I would
not make a fuss about that. Accord
ing to what the papers say, everybody
la finding hlui out. Chicago Tribune.
Matrimonial Dyspepsia,
"Well, bow do you like married
life?" inquired the friend.
"Not at all." replied the man who
had married money and was suffering
for it "I'm a case of matrimonial dys
pepsia." "Matrimonial dyspepsia?"
"Yes. Slio never agrees with me;
she's too rich."
IN THE WORLD GF
SPORT
Billy Papke, Whom Middle
weights Are Sidestepping.
Since his disgraceful fiasco with old
Joe Thomas, Hilly Papke. "the Illinois
Thunderbolt," has made frequent and
emphatic denials of any crookedness
nbout the bout that went over the fif
teen rounds by "mistake." Billy has
declared up and down that he will
show the California public that he
can fight, and fight on the square. He
picked Jim (Fireman) Flynn as his
next opponent, but the bout was called
off. Then he made a date with Jimmy
Howard, and Jimmy has Just made it
known that ho will not enter the ring
with the "Thunderbolt." It looks as
though mlddlewelghts were a little
leary of tackling the husky representa
tive of the Papke family lu his wrath.
Cost of Running Baseball Club.
Few people stop to consider the cost
of keeping up a ball club. The ex
pense goes on not only in the regular
season, when the gates are working
for the club, but it is a big proposition
in the spring training camp. Man
ager Hughle Jennings of the Detrolts
recently estimated that the Tigers' ex
pense a week while In training is Just I
about $1,000. He remarked that that
was only a beginning.
"Wo have the hotel bill, the car to
grounds, the baths and other like in
cidentals to consider, and this makes
the figures mentioned by me rather
conservative when you consider that
we have twenty-four men in the camp.
"The Detroit club is liberal. It calcu
lates on an outlay of from $10,000 to
$15,000 during the training season.
While the pay of the players does not
start until April 15, the traveling ex
penses, hotel fare and other Incidentals
give a magnificent total and one that
would appall were it not for the fact '
that a winning club is worth its
weight In gold. -
"This outlay is very nearly evened
up in the first series of the league race, 1
but at that time the expenses keep
running also. However, It Is not long '
before the spring debt Is rubbed out.
"Our salary list? Well, wo pay out i
about $100,000 a month for our play- ,
ers. Add that to the other large ex- j
penses and you have some idea of the
cost of a pennant winning ball club. ;
A club has to take In somo pretty
sizable crowds to get back the money I
Fpent. And yet baseball Is paying In !
most towns."
Playing Managers Now Scarce.
There's nothing to It but that these
are baseball's big. Important days and
that Inside of n very few years there
won't be a single player-manager left.
Clarke and Chance admit that they've
had enough that tho double work Is
too strenuous for them. Uoth hope to
go to tho bench next spring. It wasn't
so many years ago that there were
very few bench managers. Now tho
majority of them operate from the
coop to wit: McGraw, Lake, Dahlcu,
Griffith, Mack, McAlecr, Donovan,
Stalllngs, Duffy, McGuIre, Jennings
and O'Connor. Ry the bye, notice
there isn't a single 'player-manager In
the American league.
Manager Fred Clarke says that the
slump his boys have taken Is some
thing that comes to nil ball teams, and
the team that cannot stand n Uttlo
backwash now and then should never
be classed as the real thing In base
ball. ' Pessimistic Brown Fan Musings.
What's the matter with tho St. Louis
Browns? One St. Louis man replies:
"They cau't hit. They havo no pitch
ing staff worth tho name at present.
They hare u first class baseman who
is overanxious to make good. They
have a star outfielder who reported six
weeks late. They are demoralized
through failure to get together at tho
etart and through the fact that not a
pitcher on tho staff can bold down the
opposition. And if there's anything
else you van think of you might in
clude that too."
Pitcher Vlckers Wants to Catch.
Baltlmero may develop another Rog
er Bresnahan. Pitcher Rube Vickers'
dreams may materialize if the catch
ing staff should get crippled. Ho has
signified hU intentions along that lino
nnd la patiently waiting for tho oppor
tunity to don the wind pad and the
wire screen. Like Roger, be may get
his chance, and this chance may be
the development of another pitcher,
catcher.
i
DAMES AND DAUGHTERS.
Mrs. W. G. Hoggs of Seattle. Wash.,
has succeeded in growing a beautiful
rose whoso stem is smooth like that of
a lily,
Mrs. Grovcr Cleveland and her
daughters and son returned recently
from Europe, where she has spent the
past year, most of the time In Lau
sanne, Switzerland, where the chil
dren were lu school.
Mrs. Catherine Van Voorhls of
Rochester Is said to have made the
largest Hag that ever 11 on ted over the
capltol at Washington. She attended
the suffrage convention rccetitly held
In Washington and In spite of her
eighty years took part, in all the pro
ceedings. Mrs. Virginia Hamersley Field has
obtained permission to visit and give
spiritual advice to condemned prison
ers In the death house of Slug Sing
prison. 'Mrs. Field has been conduct
ing a Klble class at Sing Slug prison
for twenty years.
The smallest grauduiothcr in the
world Is Mrs. Mlnnlo Myers of Fort
Myers. Fin'., who Is seventy-five years
old. She Is twenty-seven and a half
Inches tall and weighs thirty-two
pounds. She has been the mother of
three children, the daughter with
whom she now lives being n woman
of nvcrage height. Mrs. Myers spends
most of her time with her two grand
children. The Royal Box.
Queen Mary, consort of King Georgo
V. of England, Is nu admirable lin
guist. She speaks French, German
and Italian excellently.
Crown Prince Ferdinand -on Hohen
zolleru of Itoumanln Is n keen soldier
nnd very popular with the Rouma
nians. His wife, who was the eldest
daughter of the late Duke of Saxe-Co-burg,
Is one of the most beautiful wo
men In Europe.
Yusuf Izzeddln Effendl, heir ap
parent to the Ottoman empire, was
made minister of war when ho was
eighteen years of age. He was born
In 1857. He was deprived of most of
the large fortune left him by his fa
ther through the displeasure of Abdul
Ilamld, but he has gradually recovered
It and Is now said to be one of the
wealthiest men In Turkey.
Current Comment.
So long us the man bird needs gaso
line the other birds havo tho laugh.
Chicago Post.
An official dentist has been appoint
ed for the Missouri penitentiary. Ap
parently the old forms of torture for
convicts are considered Inadequate.
St. Paul Dispatch.
"The gentleman from Arizona" and
"the gentleman from New Mexico"
will soon figure In that well known hu
morous publication, tho Congressional
Record. St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The treasury department says there
are not enough small banknotes in cir
culation. Republicans, Democrats, in
surgents and Socialists will agree with
the administration In this particular.
Milwaukee Sentinel.
Pert Personals.
With $100,000 reward in sight, Rich
ard Parr is very certain that honesty
Is tho best policy. Baltimore Sun.
One thing the Wright brothers can
not do, and that Is collect royalty on
Charles K. Hamilton's nerve. Phil
adelphia Telegraph.
One of tho men who tried to Black
Hand Caruso was convicted. But who
is going to prosecute Caruso for hold
ing up tho American people? St. Louis
Star.
Frank Jay Gould Intends to make
Franco his permnnent home, but he
will as cheerfully as possible use
American dividends In keeping up his
French establishments. Chicago News.
Three Trees.
A ten-year-old clove tree will produce
about twenty pounds annually.
Tho mahogany Is the most excluslvo
of known trees, single specimens grow
lug here and there throughout tropical
forests on an average of two to an
acre.
In Germany the linden tree Is fairly
held sacred, and tho Russlaus regard it
as tho habitation of her highness the
goddess ot love. This very charming
tree lives to a great age. Wurttemberg
claims to have a wonder of a linden
1,000 years old.
English Etchings.
Thojlrltlsh sovereign pays uo rates
or taxes.
Tho king of England has officially
uo suruamo.
Tho center of Ascot raco courso is
laid out as golf links.
The gun carriage that has been used
for carrying tho coffins of both Victo
ria nnd Edwurd VII. will now be an
object of popular Interest In tho court
yard of tho Tower of London.
Recent Inventions.
Concrete beehives form tho subject
of a recent patent.
An ingenious French optician has In
vented a cane fitted with lenses nnd
mirrors In such n maimer that a user
can see over tho heads of a crowd in
front of him.
A stomach telescope, iuveutod by a
London surgeon and. In constant use In
a hospital In that city, enables a doc
tor to see tho exact condition of tho
entire interior of tho stomach of a patient.
EARTH CURRENT8.
Experiments to Show Effects of Eleo
trlc Traction 8ystems.
Interesting experiments havo been
made at the Kow Obscrvntory, near
Loudon, on the effects of the electric
crrronts produced In the earth by the
electric traction systems of tho Drlt-
I Ish metropolis. The delicate magnetic
Instruments of the observatory arc-
affected by the currents,
j Metallic plates burled in the ground
I wcro connected with a photographic
! recording apparatus, and the tracings
recorded by the Instrument formed a
picture of the tlme-tnblc of tho Lon
don Central Railway, although the
nearest point of approach ot that line
Is six miles from Kow.
Even accidental breakdowns occur
ring on the traction line were Indicat
ed In tho photographic record.
Ry connecting the earth-plates with
a sensitive galvanometer, the effect
of the movements of the tramway con
trollers was rendered evident, and, a
telephone bolng attached, sounds
were heard at each controller move
ment. Great Tunnels Projected.
Two projects for the construction
of rnilway tunnels of unprecedented
magnitude are now under discussion.
One of them, which appeals strongly
to the Imagination if It docs not enlist
much sympathy among practical men,
Is Monsieur de Lobel's plnn for tun
neling Bering Strait to connect Si
beria with Alaska. The author of this
plan explained It before a largo meet
ing of the Nnvy nnd Military Club at
St. Petersburg recently. Bering Strait
Is about 38 1-2 miles broad and 107
feet deep, but It has two Islands so
situated that the tunnel could bo di
vided Into three sections of about
12 1-2 miles each. The other project
Is older, and relates to tunneling the
English Channel between Dover and
Calais. French engineers have re
cently been studying the enterprise
anew. The distance is about 23 1-2
miles. The work would be relatively
easy because the tunnel would run
through chalk.
Peculiarities of Submarines.
Equilibrium is almost as difficult
to maintain for a submarine vessel
as for an aeroplane. With modern
large submarines, says Sir W. H.
White, the act of diving Is performed
when the vessels have headway. The
bow Is depressed by horizontal rud
ders controlled by skilled men. and
the vessel moves obliquely downward.
The desired depth having been attain
ed, the steersman must so manage
the horizontal rudders that the ves
sel shall practically maintain Its level,
but, In fact, Its course becomes really
an undulating one, up and down.
There must be no movements of men
or weights In the vessel without Im
mediate compensation to restore and
maintain the balance, else the sub
marine may dive to a disastrous
depth. Manual has been found better
than automatic control.
School Children's Attention.
Prof. W. Phillips read recently, bo
fore the Royal Sanitary Institute In
England, a paper detailing his obser
vations on the limit of school chil
dren's capacity for attention. He con
cludes that two Intervals of rest of
10 minutes each during an ordinary
school session are more useful than
one of 20 minutes. The attention
wanes more rapidly In the afternoon,
and consequently the studies which
most severely tax the attention, llko
mathematics, should bo confined to
the morning hours. Professor Phillips
concludes that gymnastics Is not of
necessity a mentally recuperative
agent. If the teacher Is a strict disci
plinarian In gymnastics, the fatigue
exhibited by the children may be of a
pronounced character.
Vienna's Crown of Green.
The city of Vienna has recently un
dertaken, at an estimated expense of
$10,000,000, to surround itself with a
belt of forests. The existing forests
near the city are to be preserved, and
others, together with broad green
meads, are to be established In such
a way as completely to encircle the
city. Land Is being reserved for the
now plantations, which aro to bo con
nected with the celebrated Prater,
which already forms a green border
for the Austrian capital on the cast.
This Idea Is enthusiastically urged
for the beautifying of the suburbs of
other cities, which are now, In many
cases, not only unattractive, but often
hideous.
About Egypt.
Tho total area of Egypt proper Is
about 480.000 squaromlles, of which,
however, only some 14,000 square
miles aro arable. Tho population ex
ceeds 10,000,000, tho density of tho
settled part thus surpassing that of
any othor land on earth, Belgium not
excepted. The superiority of Egypt
as an agricultural country Is owing to
tho equable climate; the possibility
of carrying on farmlpg all tho year
round, a constant supply ot water and,
as a consequence of the Nile overflow,
a natural and perpetual richness of
the soil, which does away with the
great cost of fertilization.
Growth of City Population.
In 1780 only one-thirtieth of the
peoplo of the United Statos lived In
cities of 8,000 inhabitants and over;
in 1800, one twenty-fifth; in 1830, ono
sixteenth; In 1840, one-twelfth; in
1850, one-tenth; in I860, one-sixth; In
1870, one-fifth; In 1880, one-fourth.
It Is safe to say that to-day more than
one-third of the people of the nation
live in cities and towns, with the
tendency steadily growing. If the
present paco continues, by the middle
of the present century the rural popu
lation will become extinct
Spinster's Strange Will.
An extraordinary will has boon loft
by an elderly unmarried lady who re
cently died In Vienna. Her proporty,
amounting to about $250,000, Is to be
divided between her three nephews,
now aged twenty-four, twenty-reven
and twenty-nine, and her three nieces,
ngod nineteen, twenty-one and tneuty
two, In equal parts on the. follu.ving
conditions:
The six nephews nnd nieces r.-.ust
all llvo in tho house formerly Inhabit
ed by their aunt, with tho executor, a
lawyer. None of the nephews Iz to
marry before reaching his fortle'h
year, nor tho nieces before their thir
tieth; tho share of the one so mnrry
lng will bo divided, Further, the six
legatees nre admonished never to
quarrel. If one should do so persistent
ly tho executor Is empowered to turn
him or her out of the houso and di
vide the share. The executor Is him
solf forbidden to marry or to reside
elsewhere than In the house with tho
legatees.
Tho old maid Is said to have made
this peculiar will because her nephews
nnd nieces continually worried her by
asking her to give them money to en
able them to marry--requests she al
ways refused. Vienna Correspond
ence London Express.
Value of Antitoxins.
During the course of diseases caus
ed by bacterial Infection, certain
poisons (toxins) are developed in the
blood by the bacteria, or exist In tho
bodies of tho bacteria. Nature, In com
bating tho disease, produces certain
principles In the serum of the blood
of the patient, called antitoxins, which
antagonize the action of the toxins.
These principles have not been isolat
ed, but they are used to combat dis
ease artificially by Injecting blood se
rum which contains them Into the
tissues of a person suffering with the
bacterial disease to aid him In neu
tralizing the toxins resulting during
that disease. Antitoxins combating
the poisons of snake-bite, pneu
monia, tuberculosis, yellow fever,
bubonic plague, cholera and oth
er ailments have been prepared and
used. The one most often employed
is the diphtheria antitoxin, which is
called simply antitoxin."
Human Antiquity.
The credit of Inaugurating the line
of research which has resulted in de
monstrating the existence of the hu
man race on this earth for tens if not
hundreds of thousands belong to the
French scientist, M. Boucher de Per
thes. Possessed by the energy and
enthusiasm of a truly scientific spirit,
he devoted himself from 1836 to 1S41 to
a thorough exploration of certain an
cient caves, pat-mosses and deposits
in the vicinity of Abbeville and in the
shape of arrowheads, (lint axes,
knives, hammers, etc., which started
the Investigation that was to knock
the accepted chronology to pieces and
establish for man a record for anti
quity of which the world of this day
had never dreamed.
As May Seem Good.
I am all thine, do with me as may
seem good In thine eyes. Show me
what thou wilt have me to do. As
the heavens aro higher than the earth,
so are thy ways higher than our ways.
We are Impatient, for our life is but
for a moment Thou art from ever
lasting, therefore is thy patience full
of long-suffering. Fenelon.
She Didn't Went.
An East Tennessee girl is credited
with the following reply to a question
as to whether she had been to the
fair: "I didn't went, I didn't wan to
wont; and, if I had wanted to went, I
couldn't havo gotten to gwine." Good
Housekeeping.
D. & H. CO. TIHE TABLE
A.M.IA.M.
SUN iSUN
8 SO
19 00
A.M.
A.M.
P.M.
10 00
4 30
(i 05
A.M.
2 15
Albany ....
Illngbamton
10 00
10 00! 2 15;
12 30
8 30
Philadelphia..
1 U0
2 US
7 25
8 15
4 40
3 30
1 20
2 08
7 10
7 55
...Wllkes-Iinrre-.
Scratuon
J'.M,
A.M.
l'.M,
l'.M,
A.M.
I.v
S 40
s so
9 05
9 15
9 19
:
U 42
U 4S
li 20
li :so
2 05
2 15
2 19
H 45
8 55
8 59,
U 18
...Carbondale ....
..Lincoln Avenue..
Whites
Karvlew
Cumum
... fjike Lodore ...
... . Wtiyinart
Keene
Stecuo
I'romptou
Fortenln
SeelyvlUe
Honesdaie ....
5 51
6 11
li 34
ti 52
2 37
ti 17
8 23
li 26
8 58
2 43
2 49
2 82
9
7 04
7 07
9 29
9 32
9 51
9 57
7 13
7 IB
7 20
2 5
U 37
10 00
2 5
3 03
3 07
3 10
3 15
9 39
9 43
9 47
9 50
9 55
ti 39
(j 43
K 48
6 M
10 01
10 08
7 21
7 27
7 31
10 11
10 15
P.M. A.M. l'.M
l'.M. A.M. Ar
The Era of New Mixed Paints !
This year opon.3 with a dolugo of now mixed paints. A con
dition brought about by our enterprising dealers to get some kind
o a mixed paint that would supplant CHILTON'S MIXED
PAINTS. Their compounds, being now and heavily advertised,
may find a sale with tno unwary.
TIIEJONLY PLACE IN HONESDAIiE
AUTHOniZED TO HANDLE
Is JADWIN'S PHARMACY.
There aro reasons for the pro-minonco of CHILTON PAINTS
1st No one can mix a bettor mixed paint.
2d Tho painters declare that it works easily and has won
derful covoring qualities.
3d Chilton Btands back of it, and will agree to repaint, at his
own oxpense.every surface painted with Chilton Paint that
proves defective.
4th Thoso who havo used it are perfectly satisfied with it
and recommend its uso to others.
Dene-Holes.
Thcso curious well-like excavations,
found In Kent and Sussex, aro popu
larly supposed to belong to the tlmo
of the Danish rule In England. They
are Invariably nbout 3 feet In diame
ter nnd seldom" less than CO feet deep.
Ingress nnd egress were provided for
by means of rude ladders or ropes.
Various explanations have been offer
ed to account for their existence -somo
supposing them to havo been
places of refuge, others that they
were connected with secret forms of
worship, still others that they were
dug for tho extraction of chalk and
places of refuge, others that they
flint Mr. A. J. Philip, In a recent
study of the subject, ndvocates the
view that the holes were made to
serve as silos, or granaries. They are
found closo together In groups, corre
sponding with the habit of various
tribes ot clustering In restricted areas.
Dogwood.
The Industrial value of dogwood la
probably but little appreciated except
by manufacturers and users of bob
bins, shuttles and spindles employed
In cotton and woolen-mills. These
aro made of dogwood or persimmon
wood, and hitherto the supply has
come from tho Southern Stnte3. The
Forest Service now calls attention to
the fact that the supply In that part
of the country Is nearly exhausted.
Fortunately dogwood abounds In Ore
gon, Washington and California, and
large plants for the manufacture ot
spindles have recently been erected In
the Cascades In Oregon. In the East
an attempt has been made to substi
tute the wood of the mesqult and tho
tupclo for dogwood. The mesqult Is
very hard, heavy and close-grained;
the tupelo Is heavy, but less hard. It
has the valuable property of wearing
Bmooth by friction.
Roll of
HONOR
At tention is called to tne STRENGTH
of the
Wayne County
The FINANCIER of New York
City has published a ROLL OP
HONOR of the 11,470 State Banke
and Trust Companies of United
States. In this list the WAYNE
COUNTY SAVINGS BANK
Stands 38th in the United States
Stands IOjIi in Pennsylvania.
Stands FIRST in Wavne County.
Capilal, Surplus, $455,000.00
Total ASSETS, $2,T33,000.00
Honesdaie. Pa.. May 29, 190S.
A. O. BLAKE,
AUCTIONEER & CATTLE DEALER
You will make money
byhavlns me.
Irell phone 9-u Bethany, Pa.
HONESDALE BRANCH
l'.M
I A.M.
1".. ,A..M.
SUN iSUN
10 50
8 45
2 00
10 50
8 151
12 40
3 53
31
.732
31
32
A . M
i. m.
10 20,
9 37!
4 05
3 15
7 15
6 20
2 25 P.M.
1 35 10 03
Ar
A.M.
P.M.
l'.M
P.M.iP M.
8 051
1 35
1 25
5 40
5 30
12 17
12 07
12 Ut
11 41
11 37
11 31
11 29
11 23
11 20
11 18
11 12
11 09
8 29
8 17
8 13
. 54
47
7 41
7 39
7 32
7 30
7 28
7 22
7 19
7 15
7 54
7 50
7 33
7 25
7 19
7 17
1 21
5 21
5 Oh
1 0.1
12 tti
5 01
12 51
5 50
12 19
12 41
12 40
12 3ii
4 54
4 48
4 45
7 12
7 09
7 05
4 41
7 01
12 32
4 37
4 31
4 30
6 5S
ti 55
12 29
12 25
11 051
Lv A.M. P.M. l'.M
... A.M.,1' M
CHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS