Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County observer. (Moro, Sherman County, Or.) 1897-1931 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1910)
Or.HbtSoc., City Hail OBSERVER. - M oro, E is ta b lis h o d ± 8 8 7 . Sherm an - - C o ú n tv , _____-__ --------- 111 O reqw u, Are not alone confined to Rural Free Delivery >>f mail and the Telephone. There ia another convenience which all • farm e rs should have-— and many do have a checking ac count with a good bank. The poaeessor of eucb an account avoids the risk oi having- his money oir his person or about hit horns where il is In danger of fire and thieves. H|s bills paid by check are not only a valid receipt, but also a convenience in his home transactions where very « (ten the necessary change for concluding settlement is not at hand Don’t stop to think this over, but start an account now with The Itfseco darchoosc milling (o. Bank, of moro. .-ajmragxçm-mrag a - a ^ x r a ™ J . A. M A t A Z . m IÏIÛRO P H AR IÏIAC Ï E x p e r t, E x p e r ie n c e d , .R e g is t e r e d P h a r m a c is t s ' r ie d lc in e s C a r e fu lly C o m p o u n d e d . Complete Assortment of 81lverware and Jewelry JRMALDEHYDE. RUBBER GOODS, PERFUMERY. BRUSHES. COMBS. SPONGES. CIGARS. kf1y and all Kind» of P a ten t M e d icin e A lw ava In S tock F U R N IT U R E ... A N D ... U N D E R T A K IN G O. W . A X T E L L M oro - O re g o n . A Salato Owral fo r C u t_ ly f u l l n ■ k ip F elled se a m s. C o n tin u o u s fly . - V i,1 HrhbSrfMn. R IV E T E D COPPER Two p o c k e ts . OVERALLS WRNIY, HURT 1 CO. FIELD -----GARDEN-----FLOW ER— Experience and a thorough knowledge of our business and the markets of the world, enable ns to furnish the very best seeds, plants and supplies obtainable. It has taken many years to establish this relation with the producers and best growers, but only in this way is it possible to obtain the finest, true stocks at no greater cost to our customers than the ordinary kinds. OUR BEAUTIFUL NEW CATALOG W rite today. W e . 830 We »end postpaid It Leak far oar XM am oad tred* m ark H otel M goffin , PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. D r MARIK * M. GOFFIN. ■ a * Dueaiex of Touei 1 CHHm a Speclalti Office io The Goffin Building, lai St. M o a o , O mboon . J. R. Morgan K H arvard college needed to advi ttoa ltaaif, which, o f evuree. ft it has some great m aterial this year fur auch a purpose W h at w ith tour •’In W ASCO, - OREGON fan t prodigies,” one of whom talks about 16th to 30th of each month. the tow tb disieo Office opp. McCoy, Atwood Co ■Ion io r way to as tound ihS learned w n .u a ainra. G eo. M o w a r profess« ra, and Jap W ilson anese and Chinese athletes who are doing all sorts of wonderful gymna slum stunts, the dullest press agent would go wild w ith delight over the A tto rn ey s at L a w opportunity offered to a ttrac t atten tlon toward the college. Office in the M oro Commercial H arvard's Chinese athlete la named Koa Chow LI. and his track work, Co. new brick building. aocker playing. i»ole vaulting and Junqc lng have attracted w lie attention. MORO - OREGON. L l la In the class o f *10. H e entered the university a year ago. coming from Pleyaug university at Ttenatln. north China. He entered H arvard In the sophomore class and w ill there A ttorn ey at L a w fore complete the college course In three years. Rooms I S 2 over W . W M . Co. Bank. Another foreign athlet.* a t H arvard who la attracting much attention by O R E G O N his work la Masuda. a Jap. lie has MORO done some splendid work on the track recently and Is one of the heat aocker football players at the college. At Hnrvgrfl’s annual novice gymnas tic meet recently thia sturdy little na A ttorn ey - at - L a w tive of the Flowery Kingdom made an astonishing score. A competitor la Office in Vogt Block upstairs required to show his skill on the paral lel bars, the horses, the flying rings, THE DALLES OREGON the ladders, the ropes and at tumbling and sim ilar features. I f a competitor Is perfect In every branch be scores <00 points. Masuda sc «red 8’JU points, AS Ureas: M ORO. OREGON. the man who won ae<ond place 270. while the third man stored 142. When Harvard threw open her gates S tock In sp ector for the new term she found an assort meet of “ Infant prodigies** knocking S h erm an C ounty, for admittance. No few er than four of O regon. them were admitted, whose ages range from eleven to fifteen years. They are D eputy Stock Inspector Adolf A. Berte, fourteen, the young, Louts Schedew ttx, K ent, Oregon full fledged freshman at H arvard, and Lina W . Berle, fifteen, children of the N«m nat H o te l to Bucinsss C e n te r, B anka and Depot. S u n d a y D in n e r 35 cents. - T a b le t h e B e s t t h e f la r k e t w ill A fford Opposite Post Office * M o ro , O r e g o n . J. A. Wilson & Mowry vhoro th» peoplo »top The Um atilla House T t v e rxrexx^m . o r e a o n , am H eat. * Electric L ig h ts Electric Cull Bella. •wyar*« Compensation Fer Conclud in g Merger Between Big Companies, p ' h e fa c t that Samuel Untermyer. lawyer, hud received a fee of <775,- i f o r h is work In bringing about the rger between the Utah Copper com- uy u n d th e B o s to n Consolidated lulug company, flually completed tbs her night uftsr dismissal of the ln- ictlon proceedings In the United kites circuit court at Trenton, N. J., as the one topic of Interest recently a*<>ug lawyers lu New York city. I t Was generally admitted that It la the largnet fee ever received by a law yer In a single case In the United Stab probably In the world. Mr. Untermyer himself, however, would not talk about IK “la It true," be was asked, “that your fee of <777,000 Is the largest ever received by a lawyer?*’ “ For obvldua reasons,’’ said Mr. Un- tevmyer, with a satisfied smile. “I can not discuss such a personal subject. Anyway. It Is not a matter of public Interest.” Inquiry brought out from other sources some Interesting details re garding the work that Mr. Untermyer did for <775,000. In the first place. It represented some three or four yeays’ attentlou to the Interests of the Boston Consoli dated Company, which Is controlled by an English syndicate, and continued negotiations to bring about the con solidation whlcl baa at length goue through. As to ^he legal proceedings which Immediately preceded It, there tigs seldom been a case before the courts which Involved so much work Io the preparation of papers. Three com panies-one English and two American—wore Involved In the ault, and M r. Untermyer represented all throe. (| t I t also became known that M r. Un- tormycr’s fee waa not all cash. In cluded lu the amount were 3.250 a ha res of Boston Consolidated, which were turned over to the lawyer. These at the current market rate would be worth about <a6, XK). The rest, how ever, was cash. When the questioo o f fees came up the directors and stockholders of both the Utah and the Boston companies voted unanimously that the amount asked, <775,000, waa not excessive. In the merger Is likely to be Involved a total capitalization of <100,000,000. In comparison with thia.a <775,000 fee 1« a mere flea bite. Other lawyers who were asked what they thought of such a sizable legal fee all declined to discuss It on tbs 'gTound that it would he unbecoming to do so. Joseph II. Choats said he had never received such a fee himself and he didn’t see why be should dis cuss what another law yer had re- celved. Paul D Cravath, who baa received aome large fees himself, was greatly interested. “W hew!” he said “I t certainly waa a good round sum. No; I do not care to say what waa the largest fee I have ever received. I don't think, though, (bat It amounted to <775.000” Home Course In Domestic Science X L — The Process of Bre&dmiking. By W IT H G. CHARLTON, fat Charge o t Cepyrigbt. «10. by Americas Press E X T to milk there la no food more generally used by civilized nations than bread. To the average housekeeper there Is probably no pert of ths regular cook- lug more Important or worthy of her beef atteutlou than breedmaklug. To be able to make a well risen, good flavor ed. well baited loaf of wheat bread Is the goal of tbe young aspirant for call- uary fame. Uns has only to attend county fairs, farmers’ Institutes and meetings of other organizations where pantry stores aud baked goods are en tered lu couteet to see quickly that It-is In the bread that tbe greatest In terest ceutefs. And all this Is as It should be. for bread Is one of our best staple foods W ith the addition of a little butter or eateif w ith a glass of milk. It furnishes a nutritious, well balanced diet upon which one could subsist and maintain good health for an Indefinite length of time, provided one did not weary of tbe sameness. W ith a practical knowledge of cer tain principles governing alcoholic fer mentation as produced in breadmak ing, also some knowledge o f tbe d if ference In flours, and with careful at- N F iv e and this Is obtained by a chemical change being produced in the starch of the flour, changing part of It Into sug ar. Thia results In a fermentation the products of which are alcohol and car bon dioxide gas—the gas which makes tbe bread light. The average house keeper Is fam iliar w ith yeast or leaven In three forms—that which she makes herself by comblulng potatoes, floor, hop water and a “starter” left from a previous baking; also the dry and compressed yeasts. The last two are practically the same, the dry yeast having been mixed with more flour or cornmeal in order to preserve the plants for a longer time. The chief difference between these three forms of leaven la in tbe number and kind of yeeat plants which they contain. Tbe compressed yeast—tbe small square cake which comes wrapped In tin foil— contains the largest number of plants and so is able to produce the greatest amount of gas In a given time, making It possible to finish tbe bread In few er hours. The commercial yeasts are sup posed to be what Is known as a “pure culture”—In other words, one variety of plants—therefore is more uniform In strength and composition. Yeast plants exist In the air, and it Is upon these we depend In making “salt rising” bread. The flour and wa ter with a little salt are mixed into a batter, then set aside in s warm place to fermeqt. It contains sufficient gas to make Into dough when full of holes or when like a sponge, and this fer mentation has been caused by the ac tion of the wild yeasts In the air. C e n ts CONSTRUCTION OF NEW WORLD MAP Untlorm Plan and Scali to Be Followed In the W eit. SKTEEN MILES Ï 0 THE MC»L Technical Arrangements Made at In* tornatienal Conferenee In London—A ll Greet Nations Represented and Eeeh Government Expected to Help flpe eiel Symbols to Be Used. An international conference has re cently been sitting In London for tbe purpose of making the technical ar rangements for the construction of a new map o f the world on the uniform plun and scale of one to one million, which Is equal to sixteen miles to tbe Inch. These arrangements have been concluded and w ill be communicated officially by the British foreign office through Its diplomatic agencies to all of the civilized governments of the world. Including those which were not represented at the conference, with the request that they proceed as speedily The Procsss of Brsadmaking. as convenient to prepare maps of their This article Is In no sense an ex own territory conforming to the plan planation of all the scientific technical and scale adopted by the conference. ities of breadmaking because the sub All of the great European nations, ject Is too big and complicated to be thoroughly treated In a column or two. the United States, Canada, Egypt, In I t Is simply an attempt to outline some dia und Japan were represented at tbe of the prlnclplea to be observed and conference. The delegates from the to give a few helpful suggestions to United States were Bailey Wlllto, geol women who may not have a sntlafac- ogist, and J. 8. Kubel, chief engrav er, of the geological sun ey. The scien tqyy method of their own. The follow lng recipe is for bread made with com tific questions Involved In the proposi pressed yeast, and when care Is taken tion were all considered and reported , to maintain au even temperature, upon by subcommittees. They were sp about 80 degrees, throughout the proc discussed aud adopted a fte r modifica a rm ess the bread should be ready for the tion In some cases, and the plan ia now oven d about four hours from tbe time complete. I t remains only to take the It Is started. Tho special advantage practical steps necessary to carry it of tbe compressed yeast Is that It Is Into effect, and tbe British government more rapid, and when It Is used bread has undertaken to construct a sample sheet on the lines laid down as a speci need not be set overnight men aud publish the details agreed Compressed Yeast Bread. upon by the conference In several lan Add two tablespoonfuls of shorten guages so that they may be under ing (butter or lard), one tablespoonful stood. of sugar and one teaspoonful of salt and one cake of compressed yeast dis 3p«cial 8ymbols For Rjvora and Reeds. FSWA A SRV The International map w ill be what solved In three tablespooufuls of cold HOURS OBOWTM watqr to one pint of scalded milk or la kuown as a hypsometric map, and one-half milk and one-half water. the contour lines w ill be drawn in TEA3T PLANTS Theo atlr ja flour until dough la stiff brown at intervals of 100 meters or la ’ tentlon to these pointe, breadmaking enough to beet vigorously. Turn on decimal multiples or submuitlples of Is really a very simple process. W ith molding board and knead until dough that meaaure. The interval o f 100 me out this knowledge or attention there does not stick to the board, using more ters w ill be used up to a certain a lti w ill ever be mystery and uncertainty flour as necessary, a Uttle at a time. tude, beyond which the interval for First St. Strong brick, Moro, Or sbont It, and there w ill always be In Put in a well greased bowl aud brush a further altitude w ill be 200 metera, surface lightly w ith melted butter to the Interval Increasing at certain stages different results. z up to 7,000 meters and above. The There are only four Ingredients ab keep from crusting over. Cover with P o s t a l C ard h e a d q u a r t e r s spaces between the contours w ill he solutely necessary for tbe making of towel and let rise again until double tinted in green for the low er altitudes a loaf of raised wheat bread. They Its size (about three hours). At the and tbeu In different shades of brown. are good bread flour, fresh yeast, end of that time mold into rolls or Increasing lu darkness up to a certain C onfectionery liq u id -e ith e r milk or water and salt loaves and put Into greased pans, altitude, where the brown merges Into Other Ingredients are often used, but brushing the surface with melted but other tints, altitudes above 7,000 me Cigars, T o b a cco s they are not necessary. For Instance, ter. Cover as before and set to rise tere being left white. until double Its size; then bake. shortening Is sometimes added. This The sea w ill be shown by a blue Bread should be baked as soon ns B i l l w r d a n d P o o l T a b le s A “ BELLAMY” DANCE. makes s richer loaf. Sugar, too, may be tint, Increasing In darkness according It la sufficiently light, and tbe oven used In small quantity. Thia hastens to depth. All other water w ill be lo Everything Was Literally Backward at the growth of tbe yeast plants. Potato should be hot enough to brown flour In blue, special symbols being used to In fifteen minutes, about 300 degrees. At Odd Aftsir. w ater occasionally replaces the milk dicate rivers, the navigability of riv A “Bellamy” dance was given at the or water and makes a moist loaf, while this temperature ordlnury sized loaves ers, obstructions of various kinds, salt Beilfleld club hi Pittsburg the other potatoes and bop water form a mixture of broad should be browned all over. Bread should be turned from pan as aud fresh marshes. night, attended by several hundred in which the yeast colonies are quickly There w ill be special symbols for soon as taken from oven and placed fashionable young people. Everything started But good bread can be made uncovered In such a position that all mnin aud secoudary roads, for rail was literally backward. without tbe addition o f any of these sides w ill be expoaed to the air, not ways, telegraphs, poetoffleee, bound The dancing began with the home things. allowing It to come In contact with aries (International and provincial) and waltz and ended with the grand STOP AT towns of varying importance. The Fleur (Jasd In Bread making. anything which will give It an un march. The room waa arranged with In order that we may have a well pleasant odor or taste. When cold It spelling of place uamea In ludepend- large mirrors, and on the back of each ent countries w ill t>e that In uae by l«erson attending waa a tag written raised light loaf It la necessary to uae should be put Into a box! or Jar to Corner 7th and Stark S treets. the countries, while In the case of a a flour containing a large per cent of which tbe air can have acceaa and l>e backward, giving the name o f his or (I I . n « < a m i i l , ro o m « art- p to v k lr d w ith colony, protectorate or possession l> glatea. This Is tbe flour made from kept In a dry. cool place. This amount her partner for dinner. The dining r u n n in g * * » '* r * ' “ 1 lo n g <lin a i.e e le le - w ill be that of the governing couutrj Such of yeaat will raise three times as much room was arranged so that the supper the so celled ’bard’’ wheats. p ilo n e » . E n r »pent, p la n K « lr . 1 1 per <l«< and u p * u n i was served on chairs, while the guests flour has leas water than the flour flour and other Ingredients If longer International Numbsr on Each Sheat A separate sheet w ill be published I|< k U- .1 p ric e d ro e n . $3 sat on the tables. The menu waa made from the “soft’’ wheat, therefore, time Is given for It to become light. p e r da”. mixed w ith a liquid, gives a larger One point In which many first class containing a complete list of all tl»r printed backward and began with cof fee aud ended with soup. The waiters loaf. Gluten Is a grayish, rnbber llk r breadmakers often fall la In the baking. symbols used, while the most lmpor W right-Dickinson Hotel Co. wore their coats buttoned up the back. substance found lu flour after the Bread to be thoroughly digestible taut symbols w ill be shown on th- Cha». W righ t, President. They wore false faces on the backs of starch has been washed out. I t Is tbe should be thoroughly baked. The or margin of each sheet. Each sheet w ill bear an International their heads and served the courses “gum” obtained faom chewing a hand dinary sized loaf requires from one M. C. hlrklRrton, Manager. walking backward. fa I of wheat, as known by most people hour and a quarter to one hour and a number aud also the name of the most harvard s CHiMsaa and JArxwass ai who have spent their childhood In the half to bake sufficiently, and. that this Important place or feature on the country. Thia very character of glu may be accomplished without burning, sheet, so that In whatever country or Dog Turnsd to Btons Climbing Tree. John O’Neal, engineer on the South ten makes It accessory In breakwak- the oven should not be too hot In the language It may t»e Issued It can at Rev. Dr. A. A. Berle o f Cambridge», beginning. The bread ahonld not be once be ordered by Its number and pastor of the Rhawmuth Congrega ern railw ay, while hunting in a dense lag. It stretches and stretches, form name. The numbering starts from 180 tional church of Boston; Norbert W ei forest a few miles south of Manassas, lng Uttle pockets In which the gee la gin to brown until after tbe first ten degrees east or west o f Greenwich, ner, fourteen. T ufts, *00, son of Pro Vs., the other day. found a petrified retained In the loaf until It Is baked. minutes. P ortlan d , O regon . Many changes take place In bread and the sheets are numbered from 1 fessor Leo Weiner, Instructor in Sla dog-in the forks of a- tree near the The heat of the oven hardens the glu to tX), lucreaalng In au easterly dl vonic languages at Harvard, aud W il ground. The supposition Is that the ten quickly before It has had time to during the baking. The yeast plants "OSCAR A N D E R S O N . M anagbs . rectlon. The zones extending from liam James Bklla, eleven, sou of Dr. dog In springing for prey was caught re la i, and so tbe loaf keeps Its puffed era killed by tbe high temperature, tbe gaa expands, making tbe loaf still the equator on each side to 88 degrees Borta Ridis of Brookline, instructor In as found and slowly turned to atone. shape. north or south latitude w ill be given medico-psychology at the Harvard O’Neal took the dog to Washington, Good bread flour should be white, lighter, tbe fermentation Is stopped, letters from A to Y. T he polar arses where It w ill be placed on exhlbttioo. w ith just a suggestion of yellow. A ft the alcohol Is driven off and a large medical school. by tb” w ill be lettered Z, Young Berle is tbs youngest ta ll Many offers have been made fo r the er being pressed la the hand It should smonnt of tbe moisture to evaporated. word north or south, Thue eat Free bus to and from trains fledged freshman nt Harvard. Ills Mis Strange relic, but thus fa r tbs price fall loosely a p a rt I f It keeps the Im Also the browning of the crust In can be Identltled by Its number . Rates by the day ter, Lina, Is a freshman at Radcliffe has been refused. The perfect condi press o f the palm or remains In lumps creases the esse w ith which the loaf end not St Harvard, but Radcliffe eol#l tion of the dog makee It especially It has too much moisture. When rub Is digested, and the action of the ysest letter. * Each government to expected to do 5 0 c, 7 5 c , S I . 0 0 , S I .6 0 , S 2 lege, having Harvard professors, Har» valuable. bed between the thumb and finger on tbe gluten Is also supposed to aid Its share of the work, and the more Its digestion. vard examinations and the slgnaturg there should be a slight grittloees; It Important nations w ill divide up European Plan Euealyptus For Railroad Ties. Whole Wheat Broad. of the H arvard president on Its sheep» should not feel too smooth or pow- among themselves the rest of the l a The Southern Pacific R ailw ay com Scald a cupful of milk, take from la for all practical purposes a dery A Good Clean Family Hotel nkios, bor. the Are and add a heaping teaspoonful branch of Harvard university Df^ pany of Mexico has ordered thousands What Is Ysastl Oivialen of X»»■"■■■ 1 of eucalyptus trees, which w ill ba o f salt, a level teaspoonful of sugar Berle employed the German methods This useful agent In breadmaking Is Tbe expense o f the map w ill he paid In training his offspring. According to planted at various places along Its as old as the hills, and Its action Is and • tablaspoonful of shortening. his theory, the immature mind o f a naw Hue In the United States. The better understood when one Is fam iliar Add a cupful o f cold w ater to the by the respective governments, by geo scalded milk and when tbe mixture to graphical societies and other official very young child Is not capable o f trees w ill be grown for cross ties. with It. Yeast Is a microscopic plant, lukewarm add one-hslf yeast cake that and unofficial organisations, and seeb o t II* ruar to bto» grasping the Intricacies of mathemat» consisting o f a single round or oval IM * tatti 1 out aa4 , has been dissolved In one-half cupful government w ill adopt Its own plan of W all of tho Butohor Man. lea sufficiently to make Its study , J L The rapidity w ith which It grows of lukewarm water. Beat In enough distributing the results o f Its work to that subject of any real value. There» ■teaks, stoaka, a teaks. tnd reproduces Itself gives It much of All out and ready to sell. whole wheat flour to make a rather the public. I t to not necessary tor any fore Dr. Berle taught his children Ian-- But never a soul comeo Into my ahopi Its importance. I t reproduces either thin batter, beet well, cover and set person to have the entire map unless gunges at an age when most younfl Oh. beof truat, la thia wallt by sending oat bads Which break off aside until light. Then stir In as deal red. T he sheets tor n e b conntn sters are struggling w ith msthenmtlcg _ new plants or by forming spores Plg*o feat, sauaaca and pork. much mors whole wheat flour as you w ill be entirely Independent, and the and taught them mathematics la te r which Will grow Into new plants under Chlckena and veal aad tripe can beet In w ith a spoon. I t must be projection adopted w fll permit e v s ^ Norbert Weiner, the youngest stu My favorable conditions. to fit exaetly together w ith each stiff. Best well, turn Into greased tins, of them cattine rlpet dent In the Harvard graduate school, Like all plants, yeast requires heat, let rise until light, then bake so hour o f the four sheets adjoining Its tour entered Tufts when he was eleven But over the hungry throngs moisture and food In order to g ro^. These conditions are mode pos In a moderate oven. years old. Oo surging past my door. The degree of heat at which It grows sible by adopting what Is known as a Last, but not least, among thenf And no one venturee to atep Ina Ida Diahello Bread. best Is from 75 to 00 degrees, and this modified polyconlc projection- that 1» And atand on my aawduat floor, Child prodigies Is W illiam James Kldlfl, Take one quart of sweet milk, one by making It a plane Instead of ,« Is the temperature at which bread eleven years old. Young Sldls faff For thonaanda and thouaanda have heaping teeapoonful o f good butter, should be kept throughout the process spherical surface. ih r« , consecutive years was denlsfi T h e y ’ll sooner starve than sat of making. I f It were not for the liq ooe-flfth of a cake of compressed yeaat AU of the sheets o f the United Mate- A morsel of flesh or fowl W® a admission J ata»l*al A« A to a U Harvard » aw - • »» z < A on n a a r * c m i n n t t of c o i u beaten op with a little w ater ahd tw e uid used In breadmaking the yeast pasted together, not Including Alaskt Till down goes ths prlos of meat. eggs well beaten. Stir In gluteo flour A ! hto • ’ treme youth, but he has mndg would not have sufficient moisture and w ill make a map of about eighteen toe I ct C L / O e ftren tome of the gray haired pro» Beef. beef, beef! would not grow any more then It floes until a soft dough to formed. Kneed east and west end about twelve fee. It ’s hard to collect the Wll. iw cow FO ^TH b a IfM sors gasp and gurgle at the «as» as In ordinary breed, put la pane to north and south.- W illiam B. Curtin It In the dry cake. BuLoh^f <wths touj^jtb^^jher mffie and whan light hake In het P a ln le M D m t f t m I w ith which he deducts higher m a t*» W. C . Bryant Frank Menefee J lin e s S t e w n r t Wm. Rudolf SECTMW I $5 u n til in ûl F o r ila Bid Hotel Oregon » w y- I Z D s x x tls t MORO. - OREGON 1st to 15th of each month. Office opposite Drs. Goffin Esmond Hotel oro A p r il 2 9 , 1 9 1 0 . IINTERMYER'S $775,000 FEE. D r . o . j . The (rain (romers Conveniences K t-id a y , ' TIME p » . 4 Fo b r rid g t e - wo iste rk 4o b e a e M ou w i t r ó m e e Sla “ ts • In oountera are loaded with theae. H7|c D o n f Cll W I Tto twfi M U* nut " « ¿ -O r fc Ss.