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About The Medford mail. (Medford, Or.) 1893-1909 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1908)
f I El JGLfillDSAYS KOALUtt In Food and strictly prohibits the sale el alum baking powder So does France So does Germany The tale of alum food. Ku been made illegal in Washington and die District of Columa bia, and alum baking powder an everywhere recognizedij njunou. jo protectyourse!f against alum, wnen oraenng Damng powoery Saypbfafy mm. ' and be wry sure you get Royal Royal is the only Baking Powder made from Royal Grai Cream ot 1 artar. It adds sameness ot the tood. 1 OUR. COUNTY C orr espon dents) eagM Point Eagleta. ' UT A. O. HOWLETT. Rev. Mark O. Davit mil oere next Sunday at 7:3o p. m. Elder Root, of Okladoma, peach oom- 'naooed a protraoted meeting i last Tuesday night. David Olngoada, Tbotrr.a Gny and Joaapb Riley, have been patting up a lot of wlte netting fence. Mrs Holt, wife of oar cnyslcten tarted for San Franoisei to remain aeveral months last Saturday. air. Cramb and C, O. PUiee, of Medford, were oat here one week looking at the oonutry. day last Miaa Dalla Miller, of Trail, was a eojourner at tbe Sanny Side Tnurs day of last wnek on ber way to Mrd ford. John W. Smith Jr., left f ir San Ftancisoo Saturday. Hie stay will depend on oircumatanoea, be Oiay re main all lammei. Mis.. Dikmeter, nee L.ibb!e Perry, came out the last of the week to vlsither ststats, Aleedamea J. V. Grover aud Frank Kioiiois, John McKeo and his grand sou, karenst MeKee, of Apple-gate, stayed here last Saturday night on theii wa to tbe old gentleman's former home. Miaa Mattie Nutting paased througb here last Friday on her way to Big Butte to viatt her sister. Mist beesie Matting. Soe came direct (from Bos ton, Maea. Tbe Rogue River Milling Compear aent out a load of lam ber for U. 1 Cooley, He etpeeta to baild aa aoon as be ean on tbe land be bought of Mr. Stoddard. Miaa Uarthena Smitn came oat from Medford laet Satorday with yoor correspondent on ner way from Roaebnrg to teach school-In the An telope distriot, where ahe -commenced to teanh last Monday morning. Rev. MoKee preached for aa twice laat Banday, at 11 o'clook -a. m. and after Banday aonool In tbe-afternoon, and I preaobed at night, we had a good aadlenoe enali time Mr. Mo Kee la a very pleasant and f oroef ol preacher and preaobed two : fine ser mons, Binos my last there has ween con siderable property changed bands, Wm. Knighton baa sold hla place of 16 acres for 13200, and Cland Warms ley bss sold bis plaoe of thirteen acres for 13600, nod Mr. Stoddard baa sold a ton oars traot off of tbe old Brown place to Mr. Cooley for SSoe, and the report Is tbat I steal Pattoa naa .bought property In Eagle Point, bat the feats ere not known to yoor cor respondent. Thus yoa see that tbls Ulttle town of Eagle Point to eoaslng to the front very fast. Yea. 100,000 limes each day. Doe it send out good blood or bad blood? You know, for good blood is good health ; bad blood, bad health. And you know precisely what to take for bad blood Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Doctors have endorsed it for 60 years. One frequent eenoe of Iwrt Weed It s ete-rflin llr. T!,l I...JU.-r, n,i. I..lt. rolWIHiU .iib-ttfit. ie then h.rt-t i. the btooa. Keep tlie bnweu open with Ayr, ltlt. A Matte br J. O Ayw C-., Zrl, Mmc. eUW tuut viooe, tore cue. CaEttV PECTOtAL. yers Ws lues ae Mints! We peellee. the ferne'.M of ell ear eaeaieleee. Does Yourl Heart Beatl - daki::o POWDzn to the digestibility end The Iowa Lumber & Box Company are poshing tbe machiuery Into tbe blilt aa fast as they oao. Toe y start ed another Dollar 1 aat Monday morn ing, bsalde sereral otb er tsama In all twenty two noises, baring bad ten to one wa joo-tbe one witbtb boiler on. Tbey are doing a great deal (it work to get the maohinery up this time of the year. Une of tbe team- repot ts that tbey will have one me mm rsaay lor ase in anoroor week. J-ue r -g.e roint w . u. x. u. IB fast oo.'i tg to tbe f-oot nnder the leadersatp cf Its etfl-'ent offloera. I te.'jjiiu send, f jr ti.e benefit of tbe thousands of readers of Tbe Malt, an extraot from the minutes of tbe laat meeting that may be of Interest to at least a number of those readers. , Meeting cpeoed by singing. Ths President, Mrs. Uruve, read 12 Kom., aons followed by Lorda Prsye- in oonoert. Tbe following members aoawered to tbe roll oall. Mesdnmes Urover, Jonaa, r'lornv. Misses Varlan Stickle, Dottie Harms!', Tlnna Lewia, Margeurette Klorey. We thou listeoed to the, report of the treas urer, Varoian Stickle, read a selec tion and did It well, Mrs. r'lorey also read a poem. The president re ceived thres new inembets, Miss Sadie (J.tcbeii, Miss Uerrtis Abbott itnd Hilda Abbott. Tbe resident then ffHvo one of ber Rood talks to tbe yonug folks asking all to do something to make onr meetings In teresting and telling tbem we hoped to soon organize tbem into e Loval Temperance League. Sbe appointed Misses Varlan Stickle and Tiona Lewis as a committee to prepare a program for ne&t meeting. Tbe meeting closed by singing tbe Teme. peranoe Doxoiogy. Rev. MoKse, the Bpt let Bolponr- ter, came out and assisted In the anti-mloon meeting tbet waa held nere on tbe evening of the 12tb Inst. He sang ''The Brewere Big dorses" in his peoaliar way greatly to the amusement of the -aadlenoe, Tbe Eagle Point orchestra waa there and did themselves credit In rendering some one mostc. A mixed quartet aang a piece witn Mrs 'Wm. Brown as urgantst and then Rev. Knodeli was introduced and he delivered a fine lecture on the saloon question nnd did not fall to tell the Eagle 1'olnt people how ashamed the people of Medford were of their Mayor for farthering the asaendment to sjiaut elties and towns the exclusive right to license saloons, gambling houses, brothels etc., but It Is not naoassary for me to say mack about his s peach for If tbe people turned out In other pteoes as tbey did here almost every body has heard him for themselves. Oliver MoUee and vrRe came sat to Lsgle Point last Saturday after- bum to pay a visit to lew of their old friends. Tbey only remained front the -arrival of tbe ar In tbe afternoon until 9 o'clock the next morning, so no one bad nruoh time to vMt with 'them. Mr. MeUee had just returned from the funeral cf hie brother C bailey, who died to British Columbia, aged GO years, and hie friends there wept tne body frozen from December -22, o7 until Ale rela tives came for H. His death occur red 16o mile north of K amooops and Oliver MeUee traveled to wltnln about Ion miles of tbe plsoe and gave oat so he bad to eend for tbe oorpee. They brought It to tbe old family burying ground in Josephine county where they Intend K with bis fatbsr, mother and other members of tbr family, lie leaves two brothers Oliver end Perry and sister that I snow of and I think tbat there ate other members of the tstnily Ivlng, bat am not certain. The MoUee family haa been an Important faotor in the oommunity In whlob tbey lived, sad the surviving members nf the family here a host of frlende la tbat part of tbe country, aad Mr. aad Mrs. O. MeUee. who were residents of onr town for several years, hsvs a host of friso lit la these parte. Phoeox Items. By M. o. C. Miss Lnla Roberta made Medford a basinets oall rrlday. Mr. and M-s. HtaDdsrd paased through our town Saturday. Mrs. Wm. Short and Aontie Stout, old time residents .of Pboanlx, but late of Idaho, are In onr midst sgaln. A. O. Cray ltd family an hers from Iowa. Mrs. Cray Is stvnsla of Wm. Beardealev, and Is visiting with tbem. Mrs, Harvey, ot Central Pclnt, oame up to Phoenix Filday to visit wlthXbor nleoe, Mrs. Ueorge fe cial n. James O'TooL who has been Bre men ua the railroad out from Sacra mento for over a year, Is here visit ing old friends. The little daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Furry has been quits sick with orooobitls, but Is Improv ing at this writing. Henry Snafer, one of our good towns people, haa purchased a lot of Cbaa MoClaln and Is having a seat little resldsnoe bnilt thereon. Saturday, March 14, 1908 records another one of those royal good times long to be remembered, both by Oregon Camp No. 138 and Oak Cir cle No. 242, W. O. W. at Pboenix. The occasion being litlatlon by tbe Camp of several new members and surprlsejof the camp by tbe aa llary The Circle. A banquet Bt for a ling was spread, whiob by the way the Camp bad supposed tbay would have to spread and eat by themsel ves, but the Circle thought different. All bad a fine time. What might have been a serious If not fatal eooldent occurred at the house just rented by .'trs. Wm. Short last Saturday morning. Mrs. Short had just brought a load of atovewood and had tire built of some of It She had just turned away from the stove where (he had been washing dishes nnd hsT little daughter aad that of James Morton had also' Just left the stove when nn explosion ooourred. The tap of the stove and the pan ot dishes were scattered about the room, bnt for nnatly no one was hart. Mrs. Short fonnd pieces ot tbe stick of wood whioh showed plainly that It had been loaded, but how or when, or by whom Is yet a mystery. However It was not intended for Mrs. Short as it must have been done in tbe woods. Kanes Creek items Perry Knotts has become a resident of Uold HilL Mr. Pope and family have become realdenta of "Garden Kowe." Mias Mattie Stallsworth la at pre sent staying with Mrs. Taylor, Charley Householder will leave fci California soon to iind employment R tiodson, of Koaeburg, passed through here one day recently en route home. Mr. and Mrs. Msrdoo were guests ot Mr. andMrs. Boggle Sunday at ths Hraden mine. Tbe Dardanell school is progeaelng nicely unaex tbe eUlclent manage ment of Miss Kewtou. Mrs. Geo. Rowland, nee Xoe, of Ulendale, Oregon, is at present the gueet of Mrs. Fred Rjete. Soie throats exnd bad ooids are quite prevalent now deys and almost everyone on Kanes creek la affected. Mr. and Mrs. fieese have returned home from Portland. Their slaugh ter, Grace, la muob Improved ere are glad to say. The Leap year ball In Gold HiU was a grand affair both socially and financially whlob 4a reported by those that attended. Mrs. Peps of the Braden mine, who bas been the guest of friends and rslatives at Jacksonville , has return ed bomt eocompenled by her friend Miss Chashmer. The Order nf 8t. Patrick. The "nioMt illustrious Order of Bt. Patrick dates onlr from ITS!.- saya ii London writer, when It was feumlert by George III., and ia not to be com pared In ase with "the most ancieuc and meet noble Order of the Thistle." which, dating fromm remote antiquity, was revived by James II. In W87. Th. curtoue thing about the bands. 4r rib bons, of these two orders Is that St. Patrick's Is bine of the hue that may be seen In the "hackles." or plwsee. In the bearskins of -the Irish trsexd". though It sntrgefta the blue beH o? Scotland, while tbe msh of the tUV:! la a dark preen, sncccatlve of httT verdant tele. On extnte cemmeo three two orders are frequently " 'founded. -What She Was Tryinj to AccoenptcJu. The otN-r morning et the breeltfew able three-year-old Jeaonette w por ing vigorously with beriknlfe at a Me cult. ' "What are you trying to do. Jeas nerteT" demanded mother. "Be carefuV. you will cot your band." Said Jeaonette, "I'm trying to un loosen this biscuit It's sortightr-New York Times. -Mot s Msttsr of Choies. Columbia Alumnus That woman on the debate team Is Intolerable. Ion wouldn't Itke to debate with a woman, would yoa? Cornell Alumnus Got so I don't mind It now. Been married tre years. New York Tribune. Herd Lines. "Does your wife make you explain aA yoor acts?" "Worse than that" N "Worse than that?" rPar worse; abe doesn't permit me ta explain them. Flouaton Post I boy poultry and eggs. B. J SommetUn, at Hotel Easerlck. 4-tf COUNTY OFFICERS "MEDDLING" IN CITY AFFAIRS Vigorous Expression of Oregon Sheriff on Civic Unrighteousness and Ncces-sity for Reform The editorial columns of Tbe Orego nlsn are so completely and ably voieing the sentiments of tbe moral people ol Oregon on tbe question of law and or der tbat little remains to be said. How ever, there is ons important issue along that line upon which tbe writer bss noticed scarcely any comment in tbe public press. We rsler to the question of "whether or not oounty oUoers have a right to meddle In matters pertain ing to city sffairs." It Is a matter tbat Is being discussed and agitated In the smsll towns and oities throughout tbe State of Oregon. This question haa become so acuta in Southern Oregon that Mayor Beddy, of Medford, baa filed with tbe Reoretarv ol Stele an lolatlvo petition for a con stitutional amendment, giving to in corporated towns exclusive authority to license, regulate or suppress saloons, poolrooms, theaters, racetracks and similar places thereby abrogating tbe present local option law. This ques tion will of course be voted upon at the state election next Juoe,and the friends of good government mast turn out and promptly defeat this proposed smend menb Attempts to enact anch legisla tion were promptly orushed at ths 1905 session of the Oregon Legislators. Mayor Reddy says: "We don't like to have county officers to meddle to matters that relate to city attain." Now, we all know that the best inter ests of tbe town and country are so Identical and closer related to each other that no dispute should erlse over matters ol local government. The trouble Is that we have not .yet elimi nated from ofnoial circles nil the Mayor Reddys in Oregon, and the few remain ing ones must be weeded 'out as quick ly as possible. You may rest assured that the city or town that has respect wed reverence lor Isw and that stands forclvle righteous ness and publio decency has so del ire to seorde from nor to notify the state criminal laws. Thetown that ts gov- , erned by men wbo -stand for taw and ordee. wbo have regard for their oatha of oCiee, and who have a sense of their moral duty to society, has aefear ol a aseddllnc"sterlnbut ts glad and will ing to work in conjunction with him for the betterment ol social, icaoral and financial conditions. The municipality that doeen't want to be "meddled" with by the- state crim inal laws it usually rovereed men "ho atand for a wide-aron. Cripple Creek, rip-roaring town, T?here gate bling and thievery thrive and whore everybody , including fatLer, works-nn Sunday. The mayor and oouoellmon and marstial vid recorder of such citieB are nearly air-ays to be fcund spending their loieure moments '.n the saloons, at the gtmhtintf tables or some similar plaoe of omueeiueuU They are asuully men vrbo -regard botre as elniply a quick-lunch cinnter a-nd a plane to sleep. Home, in its -b.gheat and no blest and trundert eense tbe very foundation of the Government itself is aa unknown institoton to tbem The wife of inch a ntan stays at'kome year in and year Oct, alaving -along with the ohild ren and house drudgery, never knowin, f wfeet it is to etrjoy the sweet oompao lonehip and tender pro tecting love o I a huejand aod.fc.ther. Wife aod'ChlMreaeee blm only a: meat times, for afu or tneiosss hoaread all day Sundcya he site at tbe card -tables in the ealooo a orsU'tfce club. iHehas degenerated 1 nto eimsly a money-making maouine, and wUI eacrifioe every thing, even t he honor and future wel fare ot bis boys ud girls, loritbe al mighty dellar . His eons have to look to the school t eschar at school and the town marshal nn Uio etreets for belr mo-al and lutelieotaal training, not daring toifollo w thetprecept and-exam pie of their fat ier. die ia a nteralesow. ard, and as an official he ia owned body and eeul 'by thei law-breaking element. He will tolerats any ivio condition so long as it contributes to his financial welfare. OBtf course .he doesn't .want anyaheriOito "meddle" with hie poll eies. In -mostiot the towns of Oregon ttke saloon element is strong enough to elect a "laverabM" mayor and city oeunoU, by imparting a bunch of floating tin horns 41 neeeasary. (The elty eeanoll ooUecUitbelicense money from the sal oons, gambling dens and houses of pros- tltation, and of course expends the mosey in theclty. When these ineu- beters of crlmo batch and bring forth their finished .produots in tbe form of murder trials. and kindred cases, it is then ewly ahateuch cities do not objebt to tbe sheriff and the dlstriot attorney and the termors and the etooknven butting in and -"meddling" with oity sffairs. Cor taisrejire perhaps thouaands of dollars of olrcuit court billa to be paid. Ninety-Ays per osnt of.all crimes are lneabated if. not perpetrated In the Ualoons ol the elties and towns. Mayor Beddy, has ths county tax- paver no interest in tke wsy bat home own is run? Has he nothing to say when his boys and girls come te town te attend school and fall prey to vicious town environments? Has the farmer nothing to sav when bis harvest hands oome to town Sundays, get drunk and don't return for several days, while bit crops and bard work are sacrificed for want of help? In lueh places a law-eoforclog sherif or dlstrlet attorney proves a God-send to ths fsrmer or stockmen and the law abiding element of towns and cities, nf. tertbe easy-going city authorities re fuse to do their plain duty. These county officers represent a btghar pow- ioo4ocaovowoa PAGE FENCE Stands the Test of Time and Hard Usage for Over 22 This PACK FENCE 'was erected on the farm of Mr. Austin Fitts In 1885 by 1. Wallace Page, the present President of the Pspe Woven Wire Fence Company, and is a good fence yet and still doing good work. Notice the coil spring wires. Page Fenoea ere made better today, better material, better conttrnction and in scores of strles. PAGE IS THE PION ERR sod is todav ore-eminentlv the nerlectlon of Woven Wire Fenoea No matter -where you are golni to fence or what fence you may have used In tbe past, call and get our quotations andexamlne our line, we can save you money on any stylo of fence. Remember, fencing is our business, We tnrnisb man and tools to assist in ths erection ot, and we guarantee every roa oi lence wiuiout extra ooet. Gaddis dl Dixon "The Pataf Fame Man" ApwHta Southern Oreeon and Northern California MAIN OFf ICE t S0OSOeOeGreOe)Cr r, and are usually under no obliga tion te the virions element tor their eleeiloB. They oan bring order and decency ont ol tbat cheatio state and en upheld by the people of the oounty. Tbey are, ot course, eosne sheriffs and district attorneys in Oregon who have no desire to "meddle" in city affairs. or In anything else that might lose them a few votes. Such officers belong to the gsng-ebove described, and their chief pursuit Is playing politics and -smiling aad winking at anytblog and everything, even the devil himself, if he coul.l In some manner help keep them in ofH-e. It is really refresning to see n mayor or. any other pabtio olBofal raie above his sutroundiugs and take i a firm, manly ataad f3r law and or der. It in astonishing how quickly be oan change the muial eomplexiou ct tbe city without the lestst damage iag ita financial lutsreats, f or aitsr all there la a latent majoiity in every community that atands ready and willing to come to the en p port of a publio -official who had tbe moral Mtamlaa and oourage to take a etand for rickt. Such-men aa Mayor Roddy aud the others we have described belonged to a past ae, and have as pi roe ia off! olat left in thla great, growing, re generated West, hninote the more back -otilctal and proteeeiooel poll tleiaayaud Install patriotic men wbo hold sacred their oaths of office, What. we need In Congress, ta the Governor's office, in all state, county letnd msicicipal official circles are men kwbo are not afraid to do their plain duty-whatever this calls for, even tho leu apparent majority are w gainst them on the start. Great and small reforms spring from heroic and persistent min orities. . Lincoln, Roosevelt and Folk aurnisbjLjrood examples for emulation. E. if. SHOlT, Heppner, Oregon .A Pleasant Physic When -vou want a pleasant physic give Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets a trial, they are mild and gen tledn their action and always produce a pleasant oatbartio effect. Oall at C Strang sarog store for a free sample, ,'A Wrong Diagnosis. The email boy with the big bundle of payers twaa observed to be snotsten lng mune..ef his stock In the street fountain. "Ah, myijad,' said a benevolent oM gentleman, -"It does me good to nee such aa Illustration of cleanliness." "What do yer mean, bosa?" asked tbe boy aa he stared up In wonder. 'Why, aren't you trying to wash lithe mud spots off the edge of yoor papers J" No, boeei you are way off. Ton ie3, some of 'OfM papera la two weeks old, an' if 1 dampen 'em up a bit peo ple will think. they are just from de presa an' never think of looktn' at d date. Good graft, old sport I Bay. some day when I am a captain of In dustry I'll glve jou a job." But the benevolent old gentleman had oal-Bostoa .Post F0I .SALE. 1 J. I. Case traction snglne, 14-horae power. 1 3-atampcnlll, Kisdan make. 1 small rock crusher. 1 8-borse power horiseotsl gas engine. Fftlroanxs. 1 H-horae power horitoetal gas snglne, Cineinati. 1 4-drtll air compressor. 1 double 6x8 hoisting engine. 1 8-side matcher and planer, 8x24, nearly new. 1 16-horse power horlsoatal boiler, Atlas. 1 12-borse power steam engine. 1 10-horae power standard gas engine. E.C.TKOWBRI1XJE, Manager Meeford Iron Works. YEARS - - - OREGON'S OPPORTUNITY Colonist Rates from all parts of the United States and Canada to all parts of Oregon and the Northwest will be again put into effect by The Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co. and Southern Pacific Co. (Lines in Oregon) ' lVleEsifCh. 1 lQOSf. dafly ThVoug'h'out March and April. From the principal citi a ol the Middle West the rates will be as follows: fkom mitcAuo " ST. .oris " KANSAS CITY ..e38.no . .S30.0U Corresponding rates from all other Eastern Points. Stopovers at pleasure at all points in Oregon. The Colonist Rate ih the greiiteritof all tioraebuilders. Oregan has unlimited resource and needs more people who deaire honing and larger opportunities Oregon people ran nooonipllsh eplenitltl remits by heralding thle opportunity to sit tbe world. ent Oregon ItK.-reture giving good. re. Utile liilurmsliaa about the mate, far sua wide. Cull oa ths above railroad! for It If oecusmrv. FARES CAN BE PREPAID Here at home if desired. Any agent ia authorized to accept the required deprit and telegraph ticket to any point. Call on any O. R. 4 N or 8. P. agent, or address S. P. Agent, Medford, Oregon ! BANK TOUR 'MONEY IN SOILS 'One grower told $110 strawberries from acre rows 3 feet apart, Another grew H tons of pumpkins on lees than 2 acres. Sold 'berries to looal store 197, besides giving quantities of fruit for ipioking from 40 hills raspberries and 88 Logan berries. Less than i acre of onions produced 14,0Oi lbs., sold $280. 25 Salway Peaoh trees in lour auootwaive years sold: 1904, 1900 boxes; 1905, 2300 boxes; 1906, 1300 boxes; 1907, 1000. One Royal Ann Cherry, 16 years, picked 600 pounds in 1907. 'One D'Anjou Pear, 7 years, picked 6 boxes. You oan get such results as these and better. Come to ma and I will tell you why. You can buy a new nine room house, large lot with barn fo 1200. 60 acres frontingon Rogue River, one mile from town ati0 per acre. 420 acres, very finest apple, pear, peach and cherry land, If miles, 160 per acre. 135 seres in town, $75 per acre. Very best vineyard land $15 per acre. Five room bouse and barn near depot. 160 acres with 8 water rights, $60 per acre. BEN A. LOWELL, WOODV1ULE, OREGON No Um to Die '! have found out that there ii no use to rife of lung trouble long aa yon can ret Dr. King -New Oieooverv" mm Mrs. J. P. White, of HuibboroPe. "I would not be alive to-day only for that wonderful medicine It laieona dd a cough quickor than aoythlngelte. and uurea innr aiMaaeeven alter toe oaaela pronounced bopeleM." This moat reli able remedy for courha and oolris, la grippe, asthma, brooch ills and hoarse ness, is sold ooder guarantee at Cbaa. Strang's drug store. 60c. and 1.09 Trial bottle free. MEDFORD, OREGON FK'IM COUSC1L BLUFFS ... OMAHA " BT. rtxh iw.no IWOU I30.U0 OP EVANS CREEK VALLEY nWICE. IW.S00 SCHOOL "0SD8, Dt STRICT NOj BMiwllI bt rax Td up to and inolo-lin Mare J tT Jsmdm M, CrocimUlsr. Tn-MUrer of Jtu'lttva Cowd., Oretoa, t tbe offlrtjof the Oounty Trejrer, In rbttTotvo olf .lawfcanorllte, Orrf on, Jor Uh purcb mco. io - . UTO00 Cmioo tmnJ", InauwHl by 8-rbeol lti. irlot No. 49, nt MirurrJ, Or en. n,b B jurt, 1 rnfi 'Iloil. bMrlnt A r mdi ' lmr4t vr ft bo am, payablsi a.i,i taalir' &lia to b nrcctui-ftnlsyl by srtinrd tkmck t Kt evnt. of tfc amount of bid Th B.w ahf rectors of smid bnol Iiiatrlet No MrM tbs rif bito rvlact may ud u kj,. - jw. m.cronkillir7 Xrinrir cf Jcioo CoulTty, ijSa.-