Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 287, 12 November 1906 — Page 6
Page Six.
The Richmond Palladium, Monday, November 12, 1906. FIRE ALARM .DIRECTORY Provisions Live Stock, Grain and Stock Markets Indianapolis Chicago ' Cincinnati, New York and Richmond. A'.- x-IRSTDI South of Main. 1-2 1st and S. C, eft"' of TUu h. WB GHIGUOk GINGiHNATI & THE PALLADIUM MARKET REPORTS ARE THE LATEST AND ARE ABSOLUTELY RELIABLE. NO 1-3 2nd an-! S. B LOnSVILLE R. R. (XII fc NEW WAY) NEWSPAPERS IN INDIANA, THOSE OF INDIANAPOLIS NOT EXCEPTED, GIVE MORE COMPLETE 1-4 4th and S. D, MARKET REPORTS THAN THE PALLADIUM. 1-5 5th and S. 6 1-6 at "j and S. II 1-S7th and S, Effeflive May . 20th, 1M. RICHMOND MARKETS INDIANAPOLIS MARKETS CINCINNATI MARKETS CHICAGO MARKETS NEW YORK MARKETS 1-9 7th and S. J SECOND STRICT lath cf Slain, bet 7 tat; EAST BOCNI
Poultry and fruit, both "home grown" are leaders in Richmond mar kets. The supply is large, the quality of the best and the prices are moderate, everything considerate. The poultry market will be very active from this time until after the holdays. Prices will advance, but even the big shippers are unable to tell what the future will bring.
THE LOCAL MARKET 3. (The prices quoted below are those paid by J. M. Eggemeyer, Main &. Fourth streets, for produce, vegetables and fruits. This gives the farmers and gardeners the accurate quotations for their products; also gives tne merchants of the smaller towns the wholesale prices paid in Richmond on all fruits, etc., bought from Commission men.) Produce. Kggs Hutter, (country table) .. Butter, (packing stock).. Chickens, (Spring).. .. Chickens, (roosters) . . . 22c doz. ..22c lb. ..14n lb. ..10c lb. , . . .5c lb. Vegetable. Okra 10c lb. Carrotts 50c bu. String beans.. ..... .. .. ..$1.00 bu. Onions, (white) ".. ..$1.00 bu. Onions, (yellow) i0c bu. Cabbage 75c bbl. Cauliflower fancy) 75c doz. Egg Plants . . . . . . .75c doz. Beets ..R0c bu. Turnips, (wasnei) .. 50c bu. Sweet Potatoes $2.83 bbl. Lima beans 15c qt. Mantroes (sweet) 5c doz. Potatoes 60c bu. FruittAi'ples, (picked cooking varieties).. ' 50c bu. Grapes, (Concords) 24c bas. Grapes, (Cal. Muscats) .. ..$2 crate Lemons, (Verdellas 300 s.) $5.50 box Oranges, (Velencias) 126 s $3.75 box Bananas, (Jumbo's) .. ..$1.50 to $1.75 Crape fruit .. ..$4.50 box WHEAT AND CORN. (Paid by Richmond Roller Mills. ) New Whsat. . - 68c Corn, per bushel 46c Oats per bu .. .. .. .. 28c Rye .. .. 50c j WAGON MARKET. 'Paid by H. J. Rldqs A Son.) Old Corn 46c Old Timothy Hay. Baled S14 i-oosg $12 to $13 Mu.2 baled $11 to $12 New Timothy Hay. New hay baled $10 to Sll Miscellaneous. Old eats 38 to 40c New straw baled $4.50 to $5.00 ciover. seed. (Paid by Wm.Hill & Co.) Clover Seed. Little Red or Big English, per bushel $6.00 to$7.00 RICHMOND LIVESTOCK. (Paid by Richmond Abbatair.) Cam. Choice butcher steers ..$4.00 4.35 bulls $2.00 3.00 Tows, common to good ..$2.00 3.00 Calves 6.00 6.50 Hogs. Hogs, heavy select packers 5.75 5.S5 Hogs, 350 lbs, common and rough 5.50 5.65 Hogs 200 and 250 lbs. aver 5.85 6. Hogs, 200 and 250 lbs average .. .. .. .. . 5.S5 6.00 Into each life some ruins must fall Wise people don't sit down and bawl; Only toots suicide or take to flight, Smart people tako Rocky Mountain Tea at night. A. G. Luken & Co. It Does. A day in the country with freshness ia fraught: It drops in our casket some brlsrht gems of thought: It sunb'jrr.3 our shoulders and coats us with tan 4jiJ a?l-es to the skeeter the red blood of nan. Moat of Them Do. ft mm 'See here, conductor, my change la 10 cents short." "My mistake, sir. My mistake. ' "Ah. I see you believe that a man should profit by his mistakes." Philadelphia Press,
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f Publishers' Press! Indianapolis, Nov. 11. The quotations Saturday follows:
STEEHS Good to choice steers 1,300 lbs and upward..?? 5.b5 .50 Ooramoa to medium oteera. L2na tba. ana upward .... Joixi tc choic teers 1,150 to 1,250 lb?.. . . Common to raedt'im steer? 1,150 to 4.75 5.65 , .5.00 5.65
lbs 4 25 5 00 Gtjod to chol.je steers. 900 to 1.100 lbs .. .. 4 25 4 75 Common to m llnra steers, 900 to 1,100 i'o; 2 50 Q 4 25 Oho.ce feeding 900 to l,00f bs ? 750 4 00 (Joud reedlcjt8rsr 5'-0 to l.OCO lbs 3 25 3 50 Medium teed?o3t eteer 700 to 900 lbs ', 2 75S 3 25 Common U hst ntec Iters 2 25 3 00
HfcifMS Good to choice heifers .. FrJr to medium heifars. Common light hefers to choice cows Fair to medium cows .. Canners and cutters .. .4.00 4.50 .3.50 3.75 2.50 3.25 3.25(3) 4.C0 3 00 3 25 1 250 2 85 Good to choice cows and cd calved SO 00F.n 00 Common to medium cows and c?Jves 20.00-3iVOO BULLS AND CALVESGood to primo buils .... 3.25(g) 3.75 Fair to medium bulls .. 2.50 3.00 Common bulls 2.M 2 25 Common to best veal calves 4 50 25 00 Fair and good heavy . rvogx 2 50 Bes heavia 210 lbs and upward !.-,. mm aril mixed, lbs. and upward 6 35 6 50 190 ,. .. 6 20 6 40 Good to choee lights 160 to ISO lbs. .. ... 6 25 6 35 Cotillon to eood lights 130 to 150 lbs.. 6 10 Best Pigs .... - 5 75 6 6 20 10 Light Pigs Roughs .. Bulk of sales Sheep Spring lambs. .. .. .. , 4.50 5.50 5 50 6 00 6 25 C 40 .4.00 7.50 Good to choice yeailings. .5.00 5.50 Comrom to medium 4.25(&4.75 Good to choice sheep.... 4.25 4.75 Culls to medium 2 50 4 00 Stockers and feeders .. 2 50 3 50 Wtif i tmy Old it. Two old friends on the street, lock ing arms, strolled slowly along discuss ing various topics. Personal ones were touched upon at last, and after ?xrhanging family solicitudes for several moments the Judge asked the major: "And dear, old Mrs. , your aunt? She must be rather feeble now. Tell me. how is she?" "Buried her yesterday," said the major. "Buried her? Dear me, dear me! Is the good old lady dead?" "Yes, that's why we buried her, said the major. Houston Post. A Gleam of Hope. He But don't you think you could learn to love me? She I'm- perhaps. I didn't care very much for Fido wbea I first got him. Philadelphia Press. General Blowout. "What did the girl do when her father discovered them eloping?" "She burst into tears." "What did the young man do?" "Oh. he went all to pieces." "What did the old man do?" "He? "Why, he exploded with rage and blew them both up. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. War of the Future. It cannot be long before the torpedo controlled and directed from a depot ship becomes an actual factor in modern warfare. The advantages of sucb an arrangement are so obvious that progress in this direction will be watched with the greatest interest. A machine made war. governed as all wars are. simply by the question of cost. Is a consummation devoutly to be wished. Fond Recollection. Knicker Doesn't memory take you back to the dear old farm? Booker It has to. The fare Is $43. New York Fun.
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Publishers Pess i Cincinnati, Nov. 11. The tions yesterday follows:
quotaCATTLE. T1KA VT STEER3 Choice $ 5 40 Fair to good 4.50 Oxen 1.75 rrfJER STEERS r 5.15 4.00 5 25 5 00 4 00 4-15 Extra Good to choice .... Common to fair .. .. Common to fair ... -'."I FEKS Extra Good to choice 5 10 .4.25 2'2Z& 5 '..4.10 1-25 3 25 4 00 ..1.75 3.15 Common to fair.. .. .. COWSExtra. . Common to fair Canners Ktockers and feeders . . Thin and light Bologna Fat Bulls . . a v fcs .3.50 3. 1 00 2 35 1 00 3 25 1 50 4 25 2 00 2 05 2 So 3 15 .3.00 3.35 Common and large .. .. Extra 3 00 5 7 25 Hoa. in- n " o rhn're uackert and butchers ' .i io ciiolct) benT fat sows Stags.. Light Shippers Pigs, 110 lbs. and less ., Sfteeo. Common to fair 6 45 6 50 . 4.75 5.90 ..3.75 5.00 6 15 C 25 5 SO 6 20 2 25 4 00 ..amra. Common to fair 1 25 7 00 A novel feeling of leaping, bounding impulses goes through your body. You feel young, act j-oung and are young after tak:ne Hollister's Rckv Moun - tain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents A. G. Luken & Co. ENGLAND'S SEA FERIL Crumbling of Her Shores Now a Real Danger. Royal Commission Appointed to Devise n Way to Stop Kttvajces of the Ocean To-.vn Once Far Inland Xow Lapped by Incoming: Tides A Fort Captured by tne Hansry Waves. So serious has the gradual but sure disappearance of England's coast line become that a royal commission has been appointed to study the matter and devise some means to stop the ravages of the greedy sea, says a London cable dispatch to the New York American and Journal. It Is known that places that were beaches a few years ago now lie beneath the surface of the ocean and that towns that once were far Inland are now lapped by the incoming tide. Cases of erosion or encroachment by the sea have long been known in practically all portions of the English coast line, but the facts that the progress of the land destroying ocean is going steadily on and that the island is being gradually eaten away by the hungry waves are now considered seriously. It has been found that between 1S67 and 1900 no les than 182,000 acres that once were English territory have been claimed by the ocean as Its bed. Moreaver, the amount of annual loss is Increasing from year to year, and unless something is done to stop the encroachment of waters upon the land it can be almost calculated when England shall have ceased to exist, except as a little group of rocky islets. Startling as this may seem, It is far from being a mere scientific speculation or the alarming cry of some theorist, but is rather the unpleasant and serious fact that will soon, it Is believed, make the saving of England from the ocean a national problem. That England might really disappear from the map of the world can be perhaps appreciated when it Is realized that all the space that is now occupied by the North sea and the English channel was once dry land. Great glaciers that slid down on this immense territory destroyed the land before them and dug a place for the sea. They divided the lands and made England, but their melting and processes of deposit gave her a soft and Insecure coat. The cliffs that seem impregnable fortresses are as playthings to the incessant lapping of the waves. j Each tide, indeed, takes a bit of Eng- j land away with it. Some of the worst effects of this erosion are to be seen in Sussex, where Langney fort, just beyond Eastbourne, is actually falling into the sea. The waves have eaten into the brick foundation of the fortifications to such an extent that this once valuable piece of coast defense has been recently abandoned. It was not many years ago that the map of the Suffolk coast showed little bays and jutting points of land. Now for miles it is straight almost as If cut with a knife. The site of Dunwich, that once was a prosperous market town, is now far out under fathoms of water, and Easton Bevent, the most easterly point in England, is far out beyond the general coast line. In the southeastern portion of Yorkshire the greed of the sea seems now to be at its worst, for there the cliffs almost crumble as the waves lash them. What Is to be the solution of the subject is not known at this time. The commission 1 has hardly entered into its work, but the members are determined to end the losses of territory that England is yearly sustaining in this way. Redemption of land will be undertaken as well, and much of the destruction of recent years will be v made up for,
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. v,u.igu, sov. ii. Saturday s quotations on the Board of Trade follow: (By O. G. Hurray's Special Wire.) OPEN'. CLO Wheat. Dec. May I July Xov. Dec. , May 7Z
73 77 76 " 76 A Corn. 43 43 42U 43 43 44 44 its. 34 34 ' 35 35 33 33 Pork. $14.17 $14.12 14.30 14.25 Lard. 9.27 9.27 8.67 8.67 Ribs. 8.50 S.45 7.C0 7.60 7.75 7.70 MARKET SUMMARY.
July Dec. May July Jan. May j Nov. jjoc i Jan. Jan. May CHICAGO CatUe: 'Common to prl-m uteers, $4 00(57 0; cows, $2 65"? 4 Vf; heifers, $2 05 35: bulls. $2 40 Si. I Btoc'rers and feeders. $2 4'.. 50. Sheep and I.amr-3 Sheep. 54 005 70; lambs, $ Pf?7 0; year'.'rrs, ?5 5 -? 40. Calve? $3 007 50. Hois Choice to arirr" heavy $6 35(6 40; rr edlum to srnc ' J heavy, 6 2$$ 30; butcher weights. $t S" 45; gocd t0 choice mixed, $6 15:6 30: packing-, J5 90g6 10; p'srs. $5 506 25. Wheat Xo. 2 red, 74 0;741c. Oats No 2, 33,bc. EAST BUFFALO Cattie: Good to choice export cattle, $5 256 00; shipping I T5 25; heifr.s, J3 0"s;4 60; fat cows, $3 ! 9'4 ou"- la- 2 5"4 2o milkers an springers. 130 00(!?60 00 Sheep P.n1 Lambs Good to choiee vearllngs, $G 00 6 2a; -wethers. $5 755f6 0; rtilxed, $5 5 CO; ewes, $5 u05 50; spring lambs. $5 00(37 50. Calves Eest, J3 509 00 Hogs Mediam heavy, JS 55 6 60; York era. $6 50((J 65; pips, $6 50S 60. PITTSQURG OtM: Choice. So 60 S 90; prime. $5 3005 60; tidy butchers', $4 354 80; heifers, $2 50Z4 30; cows bulls and stags. $2 00(f?3 75; fresh cows $25 0050 0 Sheep and Lambs Mixed sheep, $4 15; lambs. $4 50-r" l Hoys Ifeaj tv78. 5 7f(Si6 75: medium.: $6 656 75: heuvy Yorkers. S6 656 70light Yorkers nJ pigs, $6 516 65. CLEVELAND Cattle: Prime dry-fe'" cattle, $5 256 50; choice heifers, $3 OOrr 4 00; fat cows. $3 503 75; bUls, $2 75(5" 3 25; milkers and sprir.-ers, $15 00s2if (n Sheep and LamN) Choice lambs, $7 25; wethers. S4 50(&'5 PO; mixed sehep, $5 Of 5 25; ewes, $1 7504 85. Calves $7 50 IIojs Yorker and pigs, $6 AQSfS 45; mediums. $S 4(,fT6 4; heavies, $tj 40g6 45. roughs, $5 505 75; stags, $4 254 60. CINCINNATI Wheat: Xo.2 red, 75V 76ic. Corn No. 2 mixed. 43c. OitsNo. 2 mixed. 35M-C. Rye No. 2, 6769cLard $9 CO'O 10. Bacon $10 37Vi. Hup meats $ . Hogs $5 40 6 55. Cattl $2 005 Sheep $2 254 50. Lambs$4 25 7 50. TOLEDO "Wheat. 76f4c; corn, 48c aats, 36140; rre. ns4c; cloverseed, IS 27. Industrious Firemen. Some of the sacred fires of Indk have been burning for twelve centuries and promise to continue to send forth a cheerful glow as long as th man w-ho pays for the fuel is willing to keep putting up the price. That is a long time to keep a fire go lng in one spot, and the janitor who wheels out the ashes must have quits n pile in the back lot by this time, bul think what a snap it would be to have a fireman like that about the place during the cold winter evenings. The man of the house could go peacefully to sleep at night without being haunted by the annoying certainty that some one would poke him sharply In the ribs at 50 and say, "John, hadn't you better get up and see about the fire?" Life would certainly be filled with more joy for the man who banks his fire regularly at night and blanks it in the morning as a part of the routine of his life. Same Tiling. "I have heard of lots of people borrowing trouble, but did you ever hear of anybody having trouble to lend? "Lots of them?" "Where or who, pray?" "Any money lender. Afterthought. When called on for a little speech. Offhand, impromptu, how we reach For some idea vague that will In some small measure fill the bill But, oh, the things worth while to say We think about next day! PERT PARAGRAPHS. No one is quite so put out as the chorus girl who discovers the next day that she has entertained an angel unawares. Some men look for new worlds to conquer because they find the old one unconquerable. Man reposes; woman stirs him up. It is a waste of words to ask the Installment collector to call again. If football is to be civilized, the doctors will have to charge ns more for post-Thanksgiving attention to get even. "
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New York, Nov. 11. The decrease in the legal reserve of the banks and the statement by Secretary Shaw disavowing any intention to adopt measures of relief for the money market in present conditions seemed to be ignor-
7o7'?d by the stock market until at the
very last of Saturday s session. The Bank Statement. v The statement for clearing-house banks for the week (five days) shows that the banks . holds $1,514,125 less than the legal reserve requirements. This is a decrease of $4,563,900, as compared with last week. We owe the young people of this country the best example and teaching that we chance to know. That's good advice Take Hollister's. Rocky Moun tain lea. lea or Tablets, 3o cents. A. G. Luken & Co. Canada's Future. "Taking a blrdseye view of Canada, having watched it for the past seven years rise slowly from its Kip Van Winkle rest, I am convinced," says Cy Warman in the Indeiondent, "that tha Dominion's day is just dawning and that within twenty years ther will he millions of people west of the lakes, that Winnipeg will be the second If not the first city in Canada and that the big questions coming before parliament will b settled out there in the open where the warm chinook ia blowtag. In the west." CITY THAT HAD "SAND.' How Galveston Is Still Railing Itself Above Flood Line. Each day the solid wall crept farther along the gulf front until at length it stretched four and a half miles, guarding the whole corporate length to Its outer limits, aud on top of this the city has undertaken a task unknown in history, but which is now one-third completed to iift itself bodily above the flood line. A district as large as all that part of Manhattan below Houston street is being raised to a height in places fifteen feet above Its present level. It was not an open country or a tract of waste land which was to bo lifted. It was the major part of an active, vigorous town, the most important business center of the southwest. Street car lines, gas pipes, water mains, houses, churches, all the complex mechanism of a metropolis, had to be elevated an average of seven feet above the old grade. No less than 11,000,000 cubic yards are needed to complete this work. Eleven million cubic yards! The quantity conveys no definite Idea to most. What it really meant for the gulf city to undertake this work may be realized fromcomparisons. Galveston is the second export city of the United States. During the last fiscal year, 1905. there cleared here for both United F and foreign ports vessels of a tot f 1,762,478 net registered tons. This tannage is an equivalent of 1,S2S,000 cubic yards. If every vessel clearing from the port of Galveston last year had been loaded with sand to her full net tonnage capacity the amount carried away would be less than one-sixth of what Is being used in raising the grade. The material required would tnaSe five pyramids as large as that of Cheops. If every vessel flying the American flag were required to bring one full cargo of sand It would take three trips of this great fleet to meet Galveston's need. This Is the magnitude of the public "work that the city of less than 40,000 souls has undertaken with no outside aid save the retention of its own state taxes for seventeen years. The men of Galveston have built a solid concrete sea wall four and a half miles long at a cost of $1,500,000 and have paid for it in cash. They have backed the wall up with a hundred feet of solid filling and are now raising the greater portion of the city to an average height of fourteen and a half feet above sea level at a cost of $2,200.000 further. The solution of the problem of raising Galveston was an engineering feat. No tool In America could accomplish the work within the city's resources, and hauling material by rail cost $500.000 more than the municipal tax limit would allow. Suction dredges could not pump sand three miles into the heart of the town. The solution lay in the radical proposal of driving a canal into the heart of the city and using self propelled dredges, but recently introduced in Europe, which could take their loads from the ship channel, steam up this canal and discharge the material under the houses and through the streets. The operation of these engineeringTitans possesses a certain Interest. They steam over or alongside a sand bank. The main engines actuate a j large centrifugal pump, whose function t it is to take up material and discharge it Into the hoppers. "Kreisel pompe," or whirlpool pump, was the name given it by the old Prussian pioneer who first applied this principle to hydrauli dredging. The pump forms a small maelstrom, sucking up Into the Interior of the dredge sand, mud, etc., with SO to 90 per cent of pea water. Then with a full load of hundreds of tons the dredge steams across the navigable channel, up the temporary canal and pipes the mixture on to the lots and appointed streets. Two years more will see the accomplishment of this great undertaking. The sea wall will withstand the fury of the wildest storms. The raising of Its grade will lift the city above the danger point of the highest flood. The incubus which has for so long overshadowed this entrepot of the southwest will vanish. Galveston's legitimate furore will have to its realization no vital barrier. Scientific American. M
-l Fth and Mail '-3-Sth and S. E, '4 7th a?d S. G 5 nth and S. A h 6 10th and S. L'. '-7 11th and Ma iru
-aHth and S. .1 THIRD D: South cf Miin, last oX Ua 1 12th and S. 2 12th and S. 1 14th and Ma c 14th and S. 6 lst'u and S. 7 20th and Mai t-S 15! and 8. fourth District. -rth cf Main. Wfst of 10th. to rlTet. 1-1 3d and Mail, Robicsoalt hJfc od and N t-T, City Buildi 1-4 Sth -Sth aud X.fc, -Giar, Soottf& i-5 G Co. ! fr No. 1 Hos House, &J 1-7 CT.ampion ill. l-S 10th and I. E. i-9 0th a:-d N 4-12 Citv Flf ic Light riant. nr-TH ISTRICT. and Sevastopol. Weft Rfchmo 5 W. 3rd a Chestnut. , 5-1 W. 3d an National Atcbqo. Kinsey. Rich me -4tanc R. R. 5-2 W. 3d an 5-3 W. 3d an 5-4 W. 1st ai 3-5 State and oyer. J-b orant and Ridge. 5-7 Hunt and I a pie. 5-8 Grant an Sheridan. 5-9 Bridge A nue, Paper tSSL 5-12 F.arlham 'ollesre. SIXT DISTRICT. North of , East of lOtlu fi-1 Railroad Shops. 6 2 Ilutton'sfCoffm Factory o-3 Hoosier $rill Work. 6-4 Wayne Works. 3-5 City MlJ Works. 6-6 15th aniR. R. 6.7 13th nlN, IT. SEVENTH DISTRICT. lesween m&i ana isortn jj. I f 10th. 7 9th andN. A. '7-1 11th auQ N. D. 7-2 14th aj& N. C. 7-3 No.' 3 Dose Hoas&r i 7-4 lFth afll N. C. 7-5--22d arp N. E. SPECIAL. ."xTGNALflf 2- 2-2-rjtrol Call. 3- 3-3 -Vre Pressure. 1-2-1 Ijjre out. 3 'e pressure- oftV Hum or and Philosophy By DUNCAN N. SMITH PERT PARAGRAPHS. A square deal nicely rounds out a friendship. When you get something for nothing the something Is generally nothing. Uavlng the ceremony performed In an automobile is a case of marrying in haste. rr It Is easier to go to the theater in the rain than it is to go to church under like circumstances. fliose College Boys. There's nothing so happy, so gay and bo tree As boys who are trying to make a degree. Thej- ehout till their throats are as rough, as a Hie And ogle and stare at the ladies meanwhile. On work they are short as a mother made pie: For footbaU and gym work tbey constantly sigh; They don"t give a rap for the way the world goes; They Uiink that It lies at the tips of thentoes. A chem'cal test of our varsity boys Most likely would show b!g percentage of r.o'.se. Together with rerve to put up a good front. And come oJt alt right when they're doing their stunt. They swagser and boast with an Infinite gall And thin! that the world will rerpond to their call; They spend all the dollars their daddies can serd And learn how it Is tor themselves at the end. - - The IxJerenee n n "Tie wants to be judge in a show." Tired of life, eh?" baby Time may heal wounds, but rt Isnt a master hand at smoothing out wrinkles.
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fT It limnnd , ticie .rriTe .v riTS Ntki-ion MfU- ., m f lata !-M ArrlTaf Ii rem lite cago , riru :-T . rite jh'hmnd. l!t'i tll except Huady. Blind v iIt. IJk Kuua to iiiinui dally exoepb andaxh t he lirfS am. train from Richmond ma. ;-ct 3'nuotlon i Ortfilth wtth Granc unk.rcalcftf . arrivlug Chicago 7 p. m. Al) rfjBt-bouud trains make direct oonaeoi f t Cottage orove with C, H. D. for lii ri HauiUion.lberty.ConnersvlLlaanil jshi t or farther Information reiardln rata i.u mm4UL .vumvKKMita. asj C A, BLAIK. Pass. an Ticket Aot. INDI 1NA, COLUMBUS & 'EASTERN TRACTION CO. DAY ON-RICHMONO DIVISION TIME TABLE EFI ACTIVE OCT. 15, 1906 jA.M. IP.M.I P.M.;P M. Richrt'd lv.;6:00j c !8:00 9:20 11:00 New EAest. ;6:20l . 18:201 9:3711:2C New fHope 6:30 g j8:30i 9:45;11:3C Latont j6:42j 8:42 9:5411:42 West i Alex t6:55j j3:55j10:04:l1:5C Johnslle 7:11 ,9:11jl0:l7l N. Lrfianon 7:15 9:1510:19! Dayto Ar, 7:55 9:55j10:55 All firs make connections at New WestvtJ for Cedar Spring and New Paris. 7 Connpttiona at Dayton for Hamilton, Cincinnati, Springfield. Columhus. Newarle'iZanesvHIe, Lancaster, Circleville, ' Olllicothe, Delaware, Marlon, , Xonta,' iTroy, Plo.ua, Lima. Findlay. Toledo.! BahdtrsKV, Clfviand, Detroit and m.'py other points.1 "! :" Limlfid cars from Dayton to Springfield ewy hour 7.10 a. m. to 7.30 p. m. Nofexcess on Dayton Springfield Limitei 150 pounds of baggage checked fref Ticket office 28 S. Sth street. Homf Phone 269. , MARTIN SWISHEnl Apt. 5 iH,j5i,,ii,,i FOR SALE. 4 Very desirable West Side resorthwest corner of .j. West Seventh streets. 4 Bradbury & Son 1' 13 Westcott Block , GIB If. SCOTT I INVEfrMENTS t ESTATE RENTALS LOANS and reneral Brokeraga 707 Main St. - RICHMOrJD, IND. i . i-O-a-i fa VV. WAKING PliTih anil Ha Fitter - W .ii , . fyciei and Sundries 142. 406 Main 8U X IVIcre&Ogborn Wrifi Fire and Tornado IncurJ rf1v' We wiirbond you. Loan irA jioo tf 52.5oa Phone Heme 1589, BII 53 R. ROOM 16 I. OC O. F. BUILDING. t Rlchmoni Monument Co. t A t 33 fArth Eighth SL Phone 1VT Richmond. Ind. I It has sons out of fashion o boast of never reading ads. Those who do not nowadays -as are inclined xo Keep ouiet about it, as they would about any other personal shortcomi
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