Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 30, 1911, Image 1
The Omaha Daily Bee. OUR MAGAZINE FEATURES 1 II. name-. Metftn aad rami tirtnrr ikr ttrnt of eatertala "nl. Iitlrnffln, eataaeaaent. WEATHER FORECAST. For Nebraska Unsettled. For Iowa Unsettled. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. VOL. XL NO. 'Z OMAHA. Tl'KSDAY MORXIN' V 1011 TWELVE PAdfc'.S. TOBACCO TRUST IS AN ILLEGAL COMBINATION American Company and Its Associate Corporations Are Declared Parties to Unlawful Agreement court orders it dissolved Case Sent Back to Lower Court for Further Consideration, CALL FOR JaWT CONDITIONS ! Parties Given Sii Months to Reor ganize "Within the L" TTTTE TTMTT MAY BE El ' TLD ! i 1 Additional Sixty Days to Be G it Necessity is Shown. RECEIVER MAY BE APPOINT. If Plan Prnaed Sot Btlsfnrtory Lower foart It Mar Isae lajnae Una er Wlad Cf Affairs af tha I'nmHMf. BriLETn. WASHINGTON. May 3. The American Tobacco company and fta accessories and subordinate' corporations and companies. Including- the English corporation, today were Seld by the supreme court of the United States to be co-operators ln a com bination Illegal under the Sherman anti trust act. The court sent the caae back to the lower court with directions to hear further tiie parties so as to ascertain whether new condition cannot be re created ln harmony with the law. Justice Harlan concurred ln part with the court's opinion and dissented In part. The court decided: I "First That the combination, ln and of Itself. aa well aa each and all of the elements composing It. whether corporate or Individual, whether cosidered collectively or separately, be decreed to ba ln restraint of tiaue &d an attuspt to monopolise and a monopolisation within tha Erst and sec tions of tha anti-trust act. "Second That tha court below. In order to fftva effective fore to our decree ln this regard, ba directed to hear tha parties, by evidence or otherwise, aa It may be deemed proper, for tha purpose of ascertaining and determining upon acme plan or method for dissolving tha aombinatlon and of recreat ing out of tha aiementa now composing It. a new condition which shall ba honestly la harmony with and not repugnant to the law. , LtaaJt May Bar Extended. " T "Third That for tha accomplishment of theaa purpose, taking ln view the diffi culty of tha situation, a period of six months la allowed from tha receipt of our mandate, which leave, however, ln the event, ln the Judgment of tha court below, tha necessities of tha situation re quire to extend such period to a further time not to exceed sixty days. "Fourth That In the event, before the expiration of tha period thus fixed, a con dition of disintegration ln harmony with the law la not brought about, either as the coneequenca of tha action of the court ln determining an issue on the subject or ln accepting a plan agreed upon. It shall be the duty of the court, either by way of an injunction restraining tha movement of the products ot the combination ln the channels of Interstate or foreign commerce or by the appointment of a receiver, to give effect to the requirements of the statute." Pending tha bringing about of the result. It Is directed by the court, each and all of the defendants. Individual as well aa ccrporatt-na, are to be restrained from doing any act which might further extend or enlarge the power of the combination, by any means or device whatsoever. , HUI vof taa Caae. The American tobacco corporations were made the target of the second big "trust" prosecution ot recent years. Tha first was the Standard Oil. Because the testi mony taken In tha tobacco case waa not so extensive aa that In tha Standard OIL I denials by the government. Both the law ths two cases were before the supreme j Itself and the order drafted by the Inter court tor consideration at the same time. 1 state Commerce commission ware upheld Ths attempt of the government to dis solve tha tobaoro corporation aa violating tha ffherman anti-trust law took ahape In 1177. In thai year a petition waa filed ln ths United States circuit court at New York. Tha government asked that the American Tobacco company. Its officers, directors and affiliated corporations, be prevented and enjoined from restraining and monopolising commerce ln tobacco. Tha restraints and the monopolies alleged obtained by an intricate system ot cor- porata organisation. It began hi 1HO when (Continued on Second Page.) The Weather Fur Nebraska Unsettled. For low I. naettii-u. Teiaperature at (Inaka Yeaterauay. Hour. Deg. m Too sasrt is, m a. m ? a. m 8 a. m 9 a. m . 10 a. m 11 a. m 12 m 1 r m S p. m 1 p. m 4 p. m p. m. ... p. m 7 p. m TO TUl TOO so not .... 5 ! .... So ! .... 63 j .... a 1 3 1 . . . . , t , .... 71 j .... 70 ! .... 73 ! .... 71 .... 7S .... 71 ' c-oi Comuaraftva Lax-nl ttetrnrd. mil. uiu. l i. j Highest today 74 74 79 7" 1 l'l U-Uiv v 7 .'..'i Meava temperature 6 . M l'r.ipitatiun to nj si Teinp-raiar and prtt-tpitatKia departures from the normal at niMn wmn Man n 1. aa euinpard with the past two yean.: Nuiiral larmiers' ure 47 l'et.tiem-v f.-r ma .lay t Tutsi sscesa atnee. Mjrrh 1. 1911 340 ' -m mai praripttailun ; incn D-fli'itny f.-r fa duy 'h tm n T..t( ralnfail s.nce M tr-h 1 4 XI Inches rvfltiency aioce Man h 1 ; Jl n he Mi'if nr f..r cjr. ivrlod 19: ..'. i; Inches Deficiency fur cur. teriud Isutf . luunos Aviators Are eifMacfines! ! Eoland Garros and Andre Beaumont Have Motor Trouble. AVIGNON". France. May 2! A series of ilig'it scciilrits Impaired the prn(rrB of I the airman competing In the Par:s-Rome- Turin fliulit which wan benin yesterday juwt outside the French capital. Practically til the aviator ore repairing their I marhlne and keeplnsr in the contest. Rolaml Garros and Andre Beaumont. " ar "JZZZ.l-Z CrOBfl Hie Slant" linn jroi-iun;, here last mcht. having covered the 6 I kilometers l mllest from the aerodrome mt B,,c ln 12 (l and 13'Vl( respectively. Beaumont ana ijarros noi:i conunum their flights toilay from this city to Nice, the end of the first stage, but both met with motor trouble, Gsrros tu forced to land a short distance from Avignon and Beaumont came down at Brtgnnles. The distance from Avignon to Nice ia -JO kilo- ....-..-i. ...... .......... - j Frey, the German aviator, and Klmmer I ling arrived here today and Kimmerllng ' later resumed his flight toward Nice. C 'i Henrv Weyman. the American, Is still ' -pairing hia machine at Troyes. ninety - T.'v M of Pans. Weyman waa com- -j, d to make three stops on account of .lie trouble. During the third landing. the propeller ot his machine waa twisted and part of Uie frame broken. I A strnng wind and big sea probably will J Drevnnt the aviators from crossing the I Mediterranean to Genoa for the present. The nst of the contestants in the race eare reported to be trailing along the course from Paris. Nagey damaged his machine descending near Laumea. He abandoned bla aeroplane and returned to Paris. mr.sfiti.f. France. May 3 The American, Beaumont, succeeded ln repair ing his machine at Troyes and flew to Fre Jus. where he began preparations to start for Nice. BL"C. France, May 3. Despite a danger ous wind Landron, ln a monoplane, crossed the starting line here today, bound for Turin. He la determined to catch up with the other competitors ln the race BRIGNOUE3. France, May 29. Andre Beaumont, the French aviator, who waa forced to land here on account of motor trouble, resumed bis flight toward Nice this afternoon. LZONa. France, May 29. While en route from Dijon to Lyons, Henri Molla, the French aviator, descended violently at Vllleurbanne. His machine turned a som emault and Its wings were demolished. The aviator emerged unhurt. Hours of Service Law for Railroad Men is Upheld Supreme Court Finds Statute Limiting Work to Sixteen Consecutive Honrs is Constitutional. WASHINGTON. May Si-The hours of service law for railroad employee," passed by congress ln SOT. was upheld today as constitutional by the supreme court of the United States. This decision was an nounced by Justice Hughes In the test caae instituted by the Baltimore & Ohio Rail road company. Tha act made It unlawful for any com mon carrier engaged In interstate com merce to permit any trainman subject to the act to remain on duty for a longer period than sixteen consecutive hours, or any telegraph operator more than nine or thirteen hours, according to the time the telegraph station was opened for business. The act also created periods of rest for the employes. Tha Baltimore A Ohio Railroad company attacked the law aa unconstitutional on the ground that it applied to Intrastate as well as to Interstate railroads and . em ployes. The order by which tha Interstate Commerce commission placed the law Into operation could not and did not attempt to delegate to the commission tha power to require reports of violation of the law; that the labor and expense necestary to make the reports constituted a taking of the railroad's property without due process of law and therefore ln violation of the constitution, and that It compelled self incrimination by officers snd employes of the railroad, also ln violation of the con stitution. The objections to tha law were met with aa conxtltuUonal by the circuit court of the United States for the District of Maryland, where the case originated. One Man Killed and Five Wounded in Feud Battle i Ktched Battle at Crum, Ala., Between ! Posse and Band of Alleged ! tattle anstltTs. PORUM. Okl.. May 23. One man was killed and five wounded ln a pitched battle here tiMiay. which was the culmination of an old feuii. Dead . GEORGE MAXWELL. Injured: Cliff Hester, shot through the stomach; mav die Je Maxwell, ahot through arm. Peter linittam. shot tliro'igh the hip. Two unidentified men. stint and wounded. The battle occurred .in the edge of the town ani about lf) solits were fired. The people of the community have been prose cutlnf the Davis fact:. in of s.leK-d rattle rustlers. Today's trouble resulted over the moving of some cattle. It occurred at the home of Pony Starr, a member of the Pails faction. Starr's friends were lined ufc on one side and a poase of citizens on the other. A special train with a sheriff and twnty deputies is on the way here from Muskogee. SIR WILLIAM GILBERT DEAD Aatkar t Seeernl Tomle Opera Lin- 1 rettaa Paaan iwar la LdaJua. I.ON1V1N. May 29 -Sir Wnillam Schwenk j Gilbert, the British author and writer of I cmic opera librettas. died here thia after- j neon, lie was born la 1S.K and was -knighted bv Klrg Edward In lr7. The f imoui collaborator of Sir Aithur Sullivan 1 i.ed suddaly of heart duarasv while lu hia bih. JILTED FA Ml Ell TBOYS FAMILY James A. McDiety, Wife and Two . . Near Pawnee. KILLS SELF 15 SCHOOL HOUSE ! Defies Arrest for Several Hours Fol lowing His Escape. GIRL IS NOT SERIOUSLY HURT Woman He Wished to Marry ia Only Slightly Injured. SHERIFF IS FATALLY WOUNDED MaHerer, after Klrta Three Saata at Officer W tin (tempted to Ar rest Ilim. Tarne ttan aa Hlnaaelf. TECUM 3EH. Neb.. iTay 2?. (Special TelesTam.i James A. McDIety, his wife and two children were murdered this morning by James Fielder, a farm hund. at the McDIety home, seven miles south of Pawnee City. Fielder, who was employed by McDIety. had been payimt attention to the letter's older daughter, and a iuarrel started this morning when Fielder was toid that he must cease annoying the girL Ho drew his revolver and killed McDIety and then went to the houre. where he shot Mrs. McDIety and the children In their beds. He alto shot the girl he winhed to marry, but she is not serioumv curt. The murderer tnen firu ro a school house, where he barricaded himself and defied arrest for several hours. : Sheriff Claude Fuller. . who w as sum moned from Pawnee, called on him to sur render, and he replied by firing three shots, fatally wounding the officer. Ha then shot himself and died within a few minutes. Sheriff Fuller can Jive but a few hours. Special Grand Jury to Look Into Certain Acts of Lumbermen Investigation Will Begin in Chicago June 5 with View to Prosecutions Under the Sherman Act CHICAGO, May 29. A special grand jury will be empanneled before United States District Judge Keneeaw M. Landls June 5. to Investigate "certain phases of tha lumber business," with a view to prosecu tions under the Sherman anti-trust laws. A petition was presented to Judge Landls late today by Assistant United States Attorney El wood Godman. Na- tnfoi iiisilim as to the scope of the investigation could be learned from tha federal district attorney's office beyond the bare intimation that a definite plan of procedure had been mapped out and would be followed and that tfee rest would be left to the grand jury. A special grand Jury was asked because of the activity of the present ona ln the oleomargerlne case. Taf t to Make Long Trip Through West j President Will Attend Home Folks' Day at Salt Lake City and May Go to the Coast WASHINGTON. May 29 As having probably bearing on hia nomination in 1912. President Taft's prans for the coming fall are attracting unusual attention Today the president told Senator Smoot of Utah that he expected to accept an Invitation to visit Salt Lake city in Sep tember, when the annual state reception to old home folks Is being held there. The White house travel book already shows engagements which will carry the president Into Kansas and from there to Utah. Although no engagemnts or stops In Nebraska or Colorado have yet been made, it Is likely they will be. The trip may take the president as far as the Pacific coast. ROOSEVELT WILL DELIVER i MEMORIAL ADDRESS TUESDAY NEW TO RK. May 3. Theodore Roose velt will deliver the chief Memorial day oration in New York tomorrow. He will speak at Grant's tomb, under ths auspices of ths U. S. Grant post of tha Grand Army of tha Republic. Danish Student Singers Who Are Visiting I i V. W t 1 a? - :. If''. T V I I . 1 Tl . I ' I f . 1 tf-' 1 . tt -e-r III i Li y.4 u u M W- . . 1 NrW- v ' J ' 1 -vrss-yesBki,rJW aSKXsfa!t ONE DEAD AND TWO WOUNDED Marital Difficulties in Watts Family Cause Shooting. IBATE HUSBAND IS THE VICTIM George Brown Held at aoat1 Omasa Jail to Answer for Kllllag Rasa rtarat Preelpt- tatea tnat Conflict. One dead and two seriously wounded re sulted from an early morning shooting scrapa on tha corner of Twenty-eighth and Q streets. South Omaha. Monday morning. The dead man is John Watts. 38 years old. XOO R street, shot through tha chests who died before ha reached tha hospital. The Injoied artp.'Vl 1 Urm-&rls of 2720 R street, shot through the left fore arm, and Will Mayfleld of U21 Pierce street, who sustained a gainful scalp wound. The latter two were tomocent bystanders. George Brown of 3030 R street, who did the shooting is colored, as are all the victims of his bullets. Brown la held at the juil. Marital troubles of Watts, who formerly lived with his wife at tne atove address, led to the shooting. Brown, it is said, has been paying attention to Watts' wife. Watts and Brown have quarreled at dif ferent times over the relations between the two. Hot words have frequently re sulted, which finally culminated ln a row Sunday night, but serious trouble was averted. Watts, according to eye witnesses, was standing on the corner of Twenty-eighth and Q streets early Monday morning in company with Daniels and Mayfleld. Brown came along on his way to work at Swift's packing house, where he Is employed as a cinder wheeler, when the quarrel was renewed. Watts whipped out a razor, according to Brown, when the latter opened Ore with a 3s calibre revolver, firing five shots in all. The first laid Watts low. the bul let piercing the chest. Daniels and May fleld took to their heels, but Brown turned the revolver in their directions and both were brought to the ground. At the police station. Brown told the of ficials that Watts had threatened his life, tm-eiuening to kill him on sight. The shooting, he says, waa ln self-defense. The other Injured men will recover, physicians say. Mrs. Emerson lilven Olvoree. BALTIMORE. May 29.-A decree of ab solute divorce waa signed today for Mrs. Isaac E. Emerson in her action against Captain Emerson, the millionaire drug manufacturer. Mrs. Emerson was awarded alimony to the amount of CS.I0 annually and tha family home ln EXitaw Place. Nt -1 iv i ! J ,JasST' 'r;? . - "f naa-- p wv- , .... ., "Where Sleep the Brave" 11 fk mm m mAcA-iaak -i -1 fffw f 111 mrBlnir-tJlar-fMllafrrri awai i" MONUMENTS TO DELD SOLDIERS IN OMAHA CEMETERIE3. Big Outdoor Resort in San Francisco Burned Early Today Bodies of Three Men Kecovered from Ruins of the Chutes and Several Others Are Missing. SAN FRANCISCO. May 3. Three bodies have been recovered from the ashes of the fire that destroyed the Chutes. San Fran cisco's largest outdoor amusement resort early this morning. . Firemen are search ing the ruins for bodies of others still un accounted for. 1 Occupants of an adjoining lodging house, which caught fire, . were aroused from their beds to find that escape waa cut off. Before the firemen arrived. Delia Alvlso, a IS-year-old girl. and John Felat, jumped from a second story window. Both were dangerously Injured. Adam Williams, an employe of the resort, unable to prevent Miss Alvlso from jump ing, attempted to catch her as she fell and 'suffered a broken wrist. Mrs. Ida McFarland, who waa sleeping ln a room with two other women in the lodging house, awoke to f.nd her compan iona hysterical and unable to move. She drugged them to a window ledge and held them until the firemen arrived with ladders. John Boettinger and another man whose name la not 1 3wn. who were sleeping in the lodging house, are believed to have perished. The theater of the Chutes, which was built of concrete, is the only building within the resort saved. The loss ia esti mated at S2M.O0O. One of the bodies recovered has been partially Identified as that of John Walker of this city. Another is believed to be that of John Boettinger. who waa asleep in a house which was consumed by the flames. The third body taken from the ruins Is that of either a young boy or girl. Oklahoma City Wins Capital Fight Supreme Court Declined to Hold that Statute, Eemoving It from Guthrie Is Constitutional. WASHINGTON, May 29. The capital of Oklahoma will remain at Oklahoma City so far as the supreme court of the United States is concerned. That tribunal today declined to hold that the Oklahoma statute enacted last December to remove tha capital from Guthrie waa unconstitu tional. i-f V ( . J.-J 1 kn- T j Air r 1UV alCri CONSPIRACY TO RILL MADERO Plot to Start Counter Revolution in Mexico is Discovered. TWO MEN ABE UNDER ARREST Attempt Made to Bribe Oroaeo and Vllljler to Join Movement, Which I no I a tiea I nan Fractionary Cniefa In Conhnlla. EL PASO, May 29. Revelations of an alleged plot to start another revolution In Mexico after overthrowing tne leadership of Francisco I. Madero. Jr., and preventing h!s journey to Moxico City, created Intense excitement throughout the Inaurrecto army today. ' - That Madero has been advised, of certain fa.'tB not generally known Is believed by some to explain the delay ln hia departure for tha capital to consult with President de la Barra. concerning tiie pressing prob lems connected with the reorganization of the government, although Madero himself declared he postponed his trip merely to await the installation ot provisional gov ernors. The plot, which resulted last night In the arrest of Daniel DeVilllers of Mexico City at El Paso and of W. F. Dunn, an American at Monterey. Mexico, is said to Include three inaurrecto chiefs operat ing ln the state of Conhulla. A telegram from Monterey today states tnat Dunn, on Madero's orders has been placed ln com munltado for seventy-two hours. De Vil llers Is held in the El Paao Jail on charges of "conspiracy to murder Francisco L Miidero, jr.," According to General Benjamin Vllljoen. the Eoer veteran, who is Madero's chief military adviser, the scheme was that V'lljoen and General Orosco were to de sert Madero. and start a new revolutionary movement, which would be joined by cer tain inaurrecto leaders now ln the field together with a federal general known to be "friendly to the "Clentiefico" party. It waa represented to him. General Vllljoen asserts, that great quantities of arms and ammunition were stored ln the mines of Coshuila In anticipation of the new out break and that success waa assured as "Madero would never reach Mexico City." Vllljoen Helps Trap Plotters. Behinds the arrest of the two alleged conspirators last night is the story of sev eral weeks' conferences and the exchange of many telegrams. Soon after the battle of Juarez General Vllljoen received a tele gram from Mexico City, declaring that "the government wants to make a proposition." The telegram waa signed VUllerea. Madero waa Informed of tha telegrams and con cluded to give every encousagtment to those behind the overtures. VUleJoen ac- (Continued on Second Page.) in Omaha vl- .' ' '-"V' 11 ' ' . ' ..... -.- . -J FAST BURLINGTON TRAINS IN CRASH MANY ARE KILLED Tine Persons Killed and Twenty Five Injured in Wreck Near McCook. Neb. THREE OMAHA MEN ARE HURT Pitcher Bert Keelev. W. W. Marks and P. A. Ivens Amonj Victims. TWO BASE BALL TEAMS LN WRECK Gubs from Omaha and Denver Were Enroute to Latter City. NONE OF PLAYERS BADLY HURT President of Denver Team Has Bone in Foot Broken, FOUR OF THE DEAD TRAINMEN Two Are Reeloents af HoWf and Two RipiTM Mesaengere Tone Car Overturned. Bri.l-P.Tt. CAMBRIDGE. Neb.. May 29 ('pedal Telegram.) Four of the seriously Injured passengers who were In the fatal wreck at Indlanola were brought to the Cam hrigf hospital. Hiram Feektn and Lena Feekln of McCook and Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Culbertsnn of Wyoming, 111. Mrs. Cnl bertson died at 4 00 p. m and physicians say both members of the Feekln family cannot live. M COOK. Neb.. May 29 -East and west bound passengers Nos. 9 and 12 on tha Burlington railroad, met head-on in a fog. I nine miles east of McCook. about S o'clock ' this morning. Nina bodies havs already : been brought to the morgue la this city. I The members ot the Denver and Omaha base ball teams ot the Western league ! were passengers on the west bound train. the Colorado limited. A number of mem ; bers of both teams wera Injured. Jamas ; McGill. president of the Denver team had a bone in his foot broken. The dead: ENGINEER JOHN W. HTDEB, Lin coin. Neb.; train li , . v . , K.HE.V1AN DAMKRON. Lincoln, Neb.; JlNEER W. T. LEAHY. Lincoln. NkTiVeMAN!''a. J. OLSON. Lincoln. Neb.; "t-X PRESS MESSENGER GEO. FREER, xiHnMlSENGER FRASIER, Lin- '.. ?!e'. n Jr, Me.M Neb.: traveling man for Blminona Hardware corn pany 'cLtO.ESiCK A. HILwABEXK.. Boidragai- iTT'wJ-Ent a Burlington Hreman, on train as a passenger. I Nona of tha passengers was seriously ! Injured, according to J. JT. Vailery, gen eral agent of the Burlington raairoao in. Denver. The lis ot Injured Includes: W W Marks. 2i'13 Maple street, Omaha. P. A. ivens, ii6 North jilghtaenih street, UertUKeelev, of Omaha bass ball team. James McGiII, 44S3 Cherokee street, Den ver. Colo. . W. H. Harris, jr.. Max. Neb. Robert M. Anderson. 7 L street. Wash ington. D. C. G. Carpel. Perry. Neb. J D. WIlMon, Tobias. Neb. ii. B. Snltien, Aden. Colo. Samuel Davis. Williamsburg, Colo. Irving Steii, Pontia', Mch, L. O. Nooei. oxford. Neb. K. W. Kinsel'.a, 1125 Broadway. Denver. Colo. K. J. Gately. Gretna. Net.. C. 11. Anderson, mall clerk, S731 Q Btraet. Lincoln. Nell. H H Cuibertson. Brimfleld, Hi. iliiKUie sentence. McCook. Neb. E. Uui. toH Pearl street. Denver. Colo. E B. Kent, cream car messenger, 9-. North Ninth street. Lincoln, Ned. i onductor Wlllelts of No. 11 Conductor Rank of No. 9. A. G. Hinbee. McCook. Neb. Grace Dean of Minden. not seriously. Erakeman Dave Burnett of McCook. broken arm ana other injuries. Mr. ami Mrs. M. M. Feekin of Have loi k. Blight. 1 Pitcher Kinsella had his face baaiy cut ' and Second Baseman Lloyd suffered minor 1 injuries. No member ot either team waa ! badly Injured. The day coach on tha j limited waa totally wrecked and ln thia I car most of ths casualtlaa occurred. The tourist sleeper and baggaga car were thrown on their sides, but so far aa known, their occupanla escaped serious Injury. Surgeons and nurses hart been sum moned from MuCook and other nearby towns. Dead Will Ba Taken to XeCeak, Two relief trains have gone from McCook earning every available physician ln tha city. Both trains were running at high speed when the collision occurred, but the fores of the collision waa aparentiy felt mora by the heavy west-bound train, the Colo rado Limited, which was mads up ot a baggage and express car, day coach, two tourlbt bieepers. a Pullman sleeper and an observation car. The day coach wss reduced to splinters, and ln this coach moat of the casualties occurred. One of the tourist sleepers, con taining f ie members ot U:s Denver West ern league base ball team, was drown on Base Ball tickets. Cans of Farrell'3 Syrup. Bosea of O'Brien's Candy. Quart Bricks of Dalzell's Ice Cream. All given away free to thoa who find their names ln tha want ii. Read tha want ada every day. your nam will appear aoraetlm may be mora tha a ones. No puzzle to eolva nor su bee rip. lions to set just road Vim want ads. Turn to tne want ad past now. t