Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 175, 20 July 1907 — Page 6

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THE EICIDIOyD PALLADIUM AXD'SUX-TELEGR,V3I,. SATCRaVY, JULY SO, 190T.

'S W SIDE, " Fearful Picture of Poverty and Dissipation. A SATURDAY NIGHT SCENE. fhe Awful Spectacle That a Bitterly Cold Evening In Winter Disclosed to the Wayfarer In the Streets The Hucksters and Their Cuttomera. It me show yon uomethtig which la more terrible than tragedy, and more hideous than vice. It is a cUse wedffed procession of thousands of' .happy but shabby men and women and children passim? at a crawl between shop windows and costermongers' barrows on a Saturday night in witer in southeast London. The wind from the Thames blows hither and thither the flames and naphtha lamps and mates them tug and hiss at the greasy burners. It is bitterly cold. Women draw their irrav shawls closer over their beads; men turn up their coat collars, j hump their shoulders and thrust their i rmrul deener in their pockets, and the j , , . , . i , i i... Ufirmti I the legs Of the Crawling multitude, j iuc vic I nhiver and Snuffle as they Creep SO j slowly forward with chattering teeth and purple lips, which twitch and shudder, half from cold and half from hunger. Look at some of the faces. The women have their hair dragged back from their foreheads. The eyes are hardlv visible. The noses are short find broad. The blubber Hps reach across " their swollen faces. The men have nhifty eyes. Their underjaws project. There Is nothing in their faces which suggests dignity or kindness. On all the faces you read satisfaction and content. Even the starving children peep about with excitement. On the top rail of a stall, stuck upon hooks and Just high enough to grin above the raultltnde. are the heads of two sucking pigs. The eyes are half open and wear a glassy smile. Round the rim of the ears and at the edge of the open grinning lips is a line of blood. They seem to hang there like the presiding deities of the market, the gods of this sordid festival. Butchers stand before their open windows, calling loudly and briskly for customers and reaching down joints of meat from steel hooks, which they fling to a man Inside to be weighed. Children, bareheaded and in rags, thrnst themselves among the crowd, offering beet roots on pieces of dirty newspaper. The street is filled with cries. There Is a smell of fLh and fusty garments. Into our faces as we go forward foul, fat women with; hoarse voices shove handfuls of animal matter things all bloody and dreadful ; -and tell us that the cost is only two- ! pence. At another barrow an old wo- , man and her three daughters are sell- . ing ror pennies, iwopences, uhcbpences and fourpences the loathsome oddments from their rag shop. Blouses, stays, petticouts, nightdresses, trousers, waistcoats and caps all of them so sodden and musty that we doubt If they would burn are snatched up from the wide stall, flourished in the light of the naphtha lamps and flung across to the highest bidder for a few coppers. And. while this marketing Is going on and while the air is filled with the hoarse shouts of the hucksters, out from the public houses, like bees dislodged from a swarm, drop men and iWomen. many of them carrying babies In their arms, and slouch away into the darkness of some neighboring court. The gin shops are crammed crammed with men, women and children. The more careful housewives are fingering bits of meat scarce fit for dogs and haunting the stalls till they have collected enough for Sunday's dinner, but when this is done they, too, fight their way into the gin shops and drink till closing time. In and out of the pawnbrokers' shops pass the mothers who wish to rescue their best clothes for the Sunday. The money lenders' doors are never still. And the crowd in the street grows denser and noisier. The smell of it fills the soul with nausea. A young man, with a child or two in his arms, comes out of a public house. His wife and a girl friend follow after him, mocking him for going home so early. The wife carries a baby of three or four months in her arms. In the middle of the road the girls begin to dance aud sing. The husband turns round and laughs. The child in his arms, with dazed eyes, watches her mother singing ami dancing. The dirty linen cap on the baby's head slips off as the mother whirls about, and we see the poor little bald head going round and round in the glare of the naphtha. How that tiny brain must swim! How it must wonder at the shrill laughter of its swaying mother! The baby is no larger than a skinned rabbit. Round and round, round and round, to the shrieked tune of "Sally, Sally, Was In the Ballet," while the husband stands grinning and the girl friend suddenly reels and goes down behind a barrow, chuckling and cursing. Detroit News. "To the Lamppost." "To the lamppost" Is a mistranslation of "a la lanterne!" There was no lamppost. The lamp was hung over the middle of the street, in the center of a cord, which passed over pulleys at the sides of the street. The lamp was let down, the person to be hanged was substituted for it. and the ends of the cord pulled. London Xotes and Queries. Knowledge and timber shouldn't be much used till they are seasoned. Holmes. The Great Dipper. The seven stars in the constellation known as the "great dipper" are, say the scientists, seven magnificent suns probably very much larger than our own and glowing with intense luster. Their massive gloles whirl through space iwlth Inconceivable velocity. Five of the stars are receding from us at the rate of seventeen miles a second, and the other two are traveling In an opposite direction. Thirty-six thousand years from now the seven stars of the "dipper" will have dissolved partnership, and its appearance will have entirely changed

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fuiMn re MiLLlf :7 INSERTIONS FOR

For Rent, For Sale, Help Wanted, Lost, Etc., and all classified ads. pertaining to business, cneha!f cent a word. "Found" and "Situation Wanted" are Free. All Classified Advertisements appear 3n both the evening edition of the Palladium and Sun Telegram and the Morning Mail Edition with out extra charge.

WANTED MALE HELP GOOD POSITIONS WAITING Verr capable fiiprinu:nd'-nf and foremen pxjwrfMirfd ui various Un-s. U r wrrlntt a Fiiimlwrof nnnint-m who need Mic h men for resuonslMe Unumtit onre. an.lwill puv$l'XV.yj a; yur. Afewr rfi,k,u...fiini- for men h.viiir uionev to Invest with thir w-rvi-?. VnV f Oinxtrt unit lesTtbln o(Kn rxuuon free ior inn aj.iM. iB,"',r .day stating ae, experience, etc Office in 12 clue. HAPGOODS (Inc.) Brain Brokers. 1013 Hartford Pldir.. Chicago WANTED. WAXTED Painters Co. Richmond Mfg. 19-2t WANTED-We want your Music Orders. Routh Music House, 519 Main. Tel. 5fll. 19-7t WANTED Work by an elderly lady; call at S17 X. 14th street. 19-3t WANTED Shoe repairing, lfth St. U. Henniger. 518 N. 18-7t WA.VJ'hJH -To buy all kinds of furniture and carpets. 'Antique Furniture Co., corner room, 4th and Main Sts Phone 472. 19-7t WANTED Agents, men and women, good money' to Tight parties. Call at 23i X. 9th .street. 18-3t WAXTED Middle-aged married man without children, to care for barn and. lawn and help with work on home farm. Call, phone !N7B. lS-t WAXTED Two hay hands. Xo. 1 wages. Frank Taylor, 2 miles west of city. 18-3t WANTED A second hand bakery wagon, in good condition. Address P. O. Box Xo. 201, Richmond. 18-7t WANTED Harvest hands, near town, phone S0SC or address Chas. Hines, R. R. Xo. 7. 18-3t WANTKIJSituatIon as bookkeeper; man Qf a . phone lg36. 17.tf WANTED If you want to sell your property or if you want to buy city property or'a farm, we can, and will please you. Ball & Peltz, 8 & 10 X. 7th St. 16-7t WANTED Two good boys accustomed to brush work for finishing room. Richmond Chair Co. 16-7t I ir fc-TTr,T' Ifon tn 1cnrri hnrhpr trndp. few weeks completes, 60 chairs constantly busy, licensed instructors, tools given, diplomas granted, wages Saturdays, positions waiting. Wonderful demand for graduates. Write for catalogue. Moler Barber College, Cincinnati. O. WAXTED Young man and mother want 2 or 3 roojns furnished complete for light housekeeping within walking distance of Olh and Main, about June IS. References exchang ed. State particulars and price. Address Lock Box 55 city. 29-tf WANTED Va'ilts to clean. Expert work. Prompt attention. Moorehead, 038 Butier street. Phone SS7. 10-17t WAXTED You to bring your horse3 to Taube Bros.' sale barn, 124-126 N. 6th. . Horses bought and sold. 30-30t WANTED To Make your fluff rugs, carpets, etc., called for and delivered. Banner Rug Co., Cor. 1st street and Richmond avenue. 15-30t WANTED You to buy all kinds second hand furniture. Lefler & Wyatt, ! S. 7th St. 2V2t WANTED You not to buy until you see our stock. Wyatt, S. 7th St.. furniture Lefler 2V2t WANTED Young men to learn Telegraphy; positions guaranteed: particulars free.- Eastern Indiana School of Telegraphy, Centerville. Ind. 20-2t WANTED Lawn mowers-to sharpen, and screens to make. Brown and Darnell, 1022 Main St. 2V3t FOR CONVENIENCE of the constantly increasing number of Classified Advertisament patrons in the Palladium and Sun-Telegram, we have established the following substations, at any one of which Classified Advertisements may be left and will be forwarded to this office. SUBSTATIONS. East End. Toler's Drug Store, Cor. 15th and Main Streets. Howell's Grocery, Cor. C and North ISth Streets. West Richmond. Geo. Shofer, grocer, cor. West 3rd and Main sts. Harry Haseltine, grocer, 257 North West 3rd Street Fairvlew. J. J. Mulligan, grocer, 1021 Sheridan StreeL North of Railway. Norrli and Sons, Grocers, 725 N. 10th StreeL South of Main Street. Bowing Bros., Grocers, 535 S. E StreeL

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TIME PRICE OF 5 WAXTED (20) twenty good laborers to wreck buildings to make room for the Xew Pan Handle Freight house, 20 cents per hour paid to good men. Apply (Monday morning.) The Dayton House Wrecking Co. 20 3t WAXTED Hustlers everywhere. to $.TO made weekly distributing cir culars, samples no canvassing. Steady. Merchants Out-Door Ad. Co Chicago. 2.-lt WAXTED You to know we do all kinds bicycle and general repairing. Brown & Darnell, 1022 Main St.l'O-Tt WAXTED You to try our Perfection extra heavy tread tires'. Brown & Darnell. 122 Main St. 20-3 1 WANTED Partner business. Small Results positive, dress "Industry," in n 1 n mi f a r 1 1 1 r i ntn capital needed. Investigate. Ad care Palladium. 20-3t WAXTED Girl to do houework at NX S. E street. ' FOUND. FOUND Best meats and lowest prices. Scholl's meat market, 421 Main. Phone -1511. 13-7t FOR SALE. Richmond property a specialty. Poncrfield. Kelly Block, Phone 329. tf FOR SALE Roof and Bridge paint, . guaranteed for five years. Retail3 at wholesale price. Clendenin & Co., 257 FL Wayne avenue. Both phones. ml-3ruo-wed-sat-wky FOR SALE Phonographs, Records. Routh Music House, 519 Main St., Tel. 561. 19-7t FOR SALE Another bargain in sec ond hand piano. Routh Music House, 519 Main street., Tel. 561. 19-7t FOR SALE Rubber tire surrey. Any one needing a surrey it will pay them to call Phone 1612. 19-7t FOR SALE All kinds antique and second hand furniture, corner room 4th and Main streets. 19-7t FOR SALE Plenty of the very finest fresh fish at all times, Muth's.Fish Market, 16 S. 5th St. 19-7t FOR SALE Carpet, 113 S. 5th St. 19-3t FOR SALE Nice S-room cottage cheap. Corner 17th and South A. 18-7t FOR SALE Mower supplies. All kinds at Henry Holzapfel's, north Third St. 18-7t FOR SALE One Xo. 2 Champion hay baling press and 10-horse traction engine. Call J. T. Caseley, R. R. 8. 18-7t FOR SALE A Henley bicycle and a gas stove; 2103 Main street. 16-7t FOR SALE Steel range, folding bfced and kitchen cupboard; 1724 Main street. 15-7t FOR SALE Xew and second hand wheels at bargains. Elmer Smith, 426 Main street. , 13-7t FOR SALE Cement blocks. Simmons' Cigar Store. Call at 13-2St FOR SALE Light, open-topped buggy at 404 West Main. 13-7t FOR SALE Before you go to James town or on your vacation trip, get one of our accident policies. $1 for $1,000 insurance for one year. Issued to any one from 1G years to 00. Ball & Peltz, general insurance. 8 and 10 N. 7th St. 10-7t FOR SALE A good live business for a hustler. Invoice $500. Good trade established. See that Morgan, X. Sth and E streets. Phone 71S. 10-7t FOR SALE Fine building lot, central; address "Best", care Palladium. 3-21t Everybody buys property from Wcodhurst 91 S Main St Telephone 491. June" tf FOR SALE Four registered Short Horn and Polled Durham bulls. W. B. Ell wood. Centerville, Ind. 14-7t FOR, SALE Modern residence, eight rooms, every convenienca. hot and cold water, electric light hardwood floors. Phone 736. 20-tf FOR SALE OR REXT Good farms, city properties, also best accident and health insurance. W. M. Penny, room 16 I. O. O. F. Bldg., phone 1589. 27-tf FOR SALE Choice suburban premises, well fruited, watered, etc.; beautiful situation; possession Immediate. See J. E. Moore, over 6 N. Seventh. 6-tf FOR SALE Improved farms of all kinds, within a radius of 15 miles of Richmond at prices from $40 to $400 per acre. J. E. Moore, over 6 Xorth Seventh street. Richmond, Ind. 8-tf FOR SALE William Dick's old wood, coal yard and feed store. Good for livery stable or storage room. 512 North A CalNat-112 Xo. 7th, 5-tI

FOR SALE

FOR SALE Cheap (300.000) three hundred thousand No. 1 building brick at buildings now being wreck ed to make room for the new Pan Handle railroad freight house 5th and D streets. The Dayton House Wrecking Co. 20-3t FOR SALE One Iron bed. 1 wardrobe. 1 writing desk, 1 couch. 1 kitchen cab inet. 1 china cupboard. 1 round Gar land Oak stove. 1 cot, 1 bedstead. springs and mattress, at '-21 Rich mond avenue. 2KJt FOR SALE (500) five hundred perch of good building stone at buildings now being v.7recked to make room for the new Pan Handle railroad freight house, 5th and D streets. Xo reasonable offer refused. The Dayton House Wrecking Co. 20-3t FOR SALE Two fine lots on Lincoln & Pearl streets, cement sidewalks, street, alley and sewer made. Will sell cheap. Address P. O. Box ISO. , 20-St FOR SALE Music box and one dozen records. Latest style, fast and slow lever,' plays two hours with one wind ing. Bought cheap, sold cheap at Routh's Music store, 5U Main St. 20-3t FOR SALE Cheap (200) two huncT red loads of Xo. 1 kindling wood. -50 and 75 cents per load. Apply at buildings now being wrecked for the new Pan Handle freight house, 5th and D. 20-3t FOR SALE Guitar at 315 S. Mh st 2V7t FOR SALE Two good, rubber-tired buggies, good as new. Cheap. Call 1114 X. G street. 20-2t FOR SALEond hand payments, street. -All kinds new and secfurniture. Cash or easy Lefler & Wyatt, 5 S. 7th 2t-2t FOR SALE Good, gentle family horse, buggy and harness. Cheap if sold at once, at 120 State St. Phone 1280. 20-3 1 FOR RENT. FOR R EXT Furnished rooms. Ap-20-2t ply at 3! X. (5th street. FOR RENT Five rooms, 331 S. !th. Inquire at 12 S. 5th. 20-3t FOR RENT Fine. U1UUK1 U 1 UU111. Vdll slreet. 20-7t 1 -!! V at 217 North 7th FOR RENT--Stable. Call at 217 N. 20-7t 7th street. FOR RENT A four room modern flat. call 325 South 6th street. 19-3t FOR RENT 6 room house at 331 S. W. Third St., $12 per month. Cement walk, boith kinds water, electric light, etc. Reliable party can secure house on monthly payments. See T. W. Hadley, Phone 292. 19-2t FOR RENT--Furnished room, 103 X. 18-7t Third St. FOR RENT House 8 rooms and bath. Xo. 230 S. 12th. Call phone 1231. 18-3t FOR REXT Flat with all modern conveniences, 103 South 4th St. 16-7t FOR RENT Five room flat with bath, steam heat and cellar, 322 North 8th street. Phone 1836. 16-tf FOR RENT Two Furnished, rooms at 34 N. 11th street. 14-7t FOR RENT A business room, 402 Main. Call Phone 310. 13-7t FOR RENT A house, 25 South 114. modern ten-room 19th street. Phone 18-tf FOR RENT Furnished rooms; 326 N 10th street. 4-tf FOR RENT Furnished rooms for gen tlemen onlv. at the Grand. 14-tf FOR RENT New brick house, all modern conveniences. Inquire at 7 South 7th. 13tf ftr RENT OR SALE My home "Bienvenu", corner W. 5th and Asy luui avenue. O. E. Falghum. Phone 63S. 13-tf FOR RENT Modern flat at 1019 Main street. 22-tf LOST. LOST A pair of eyeglasses in Jenkins' case on South 12th, S. E, or S Oth, on Tuesday evening. Reward if returned to Palladium office. 20-3t LOST A Sigma Chi Fraternity pinshape of a cross, with the Greek letters. Reward. Ge'orge R. Nix en, 122 X. 11th St. 20-2t LOST One plain gol-d band bracelet hinged. Leave at this office and get reward. 20-3t LOST Small gold watch and fob (Hunter's case) in C, C. & L. pas senger station wash room, double eagle Scottish Rite charm attached. Return same to C, C. & L. ticket of fice and get liberal reward. 13-tf LOST A tan pocket book containing a ten dollar bill, between Englebert's cigar store and Fred's clothing store. Saturday evening. Any information leave at Palladium office. Reward. 24-tf Cambridge City Classified Advertisements AGENT: G;o. E. Callaway, Druggist Leave your Classified Advertisements at Callaway's drug store and they will be forwarded to the Palladium and Sun-Telegram for publication. FOR SALE. FOR SALE! The Myers pumps and Star windmills at Huddleston Bros. WANTED Machine repairing, all kinds. General Repair Co., 32 Main SL

NOTICE.

NOTICE. The Hokendauqua Tribe will have an important meeting Friday night. The Glazier Lecture course will be up for discussion. All members are requested to be present. JOHN W. TOLWER. lS-2t C. of R. XOTICE Dr. M. W. Yencer, wishes to announce to the public that the cases of diphtheria in Boston Twp. and City of Richmond, that was reported by him to the Richmond City Board Health and the Wayne County Board Health are of the most malignant type of diptheria. Some half clad physicians and people think these cases are not diptheria. All those in doubt please telegraph to Dr. Hurty, secretary Indiana State Board Health, Indianapolis. 19-lt XOTICE Standard Manufacturing. Anything from brass casting to an automobile.. Cor. 11th and X. E. streets. LAUNDRY. We can help make you happy honestly we can. Richmond Steam Laundry. REAL ESTATE AL H. HUXT, Real estate, 7 N. 9th stret. Phone 877. R. L. MOORE, Real Estate, Accident Insurance and collection; 14 X. 9th street. OSTEOPATHY. DR. TOWXSEND, North 9th and A, opposite Masonic Temple; phone 1396. Lady assistant. FOR RENT TYPEWRITER FOR RENT Typewriters, No. 6 Rem ingtons $2.00. Strictly latest model No. 6 and No. 7 Remingtons ?3.00 Der month. A. A. Burr. Western Union office. 28-35 BAKERIES. MEYERS BAKERY, Bread, Pies and Cakes. 107 Richmond ave. Phone 1693. CHIROPODIST AND MANICURING. Mrs. Ina Parks Saine, 904 '2 street. Phone 1104. Main PHOTOGRAPHER. F. J. PARSONS, Leading Photograph' cr, 704 Main street Phone 563. E. F. DALI3EY. Commercial Photo grapher and Calendar manufacturer 14 N. 9th street. EDUCATIONAL ENTER Richmond Business College and prepare for good position. Ask for information. Phone 240. S-tf HAIR GOODS AND DRESSING. MISS II. GREENE, Beauty Parlors, Suite 44, Colonial Bldg., Phone 1002. 12-C0t DYEING AND CLEANING. DYEING, Cleaning, Pressing, Goods called for and delivered. Twentieth Century Dye Works. Rohe & Hill, Prop's., 1011 Main st. FIRE INSURANCE FIRE INSURANCE J. S. Zeller, 7 N. 9th st. Phone 877. l-30t WANTED For Fire Insurance in good reliable companies call on the Richmond Insuranco Agency, 11 South 7th street ' Tel. 4L City and Country Solicitors war ted. 6-tf ANNOUNCEMENTS. TO OWNERS OF JERSEY COWS. Highland Lad No. 121 (Polled), grandson of the Richest Milker in the Pan American exposition. Dam took first' placo, Ohio and New York state fairs, will be found at my farm, 3 miles west of the city. O. E. Fulg hum. 12tf LEARN TELEGRAPHY. LEARN TELEGRAPHY Greatest de mand ever known for operators; highest salaries. An expert tele grapher of twenty years' experience will give personal attention; rates reasonable. Hours to suit students convenience. Call on or address Telegrapher, 1106 Main street. 17-7t UNDERTAKERS. WILSON & POHLMEYER, No. 15 N. 10th street. Private amtulance. DO AN & KLUTE, Undertakers. 14 South Sth St. Both Phones 36. MONUMENTS AND MARKEPS. Richmond Monument Co.. C. E. Bradbury, Mgr., 33 North Sth StreeL Phone 1457. YOUR HANDS kept soft and vel vety and free from cracks and sores during summer work by using PetroPine Cold Cream Ointment. For sale by all druggists. DENTISTS. Dr. Hamilton, 12 N. 10th SL Phone C75. DRS. WILSON & WILSON, phone 519. Over Fihe's Drug Store. Bridge Work a Specialty. Drs. Chenoweth and Dykeman, Ma sonic Temple. Phone 533. Open ev enings by appointmenL COUGHLIN & WILSON. Indianapolis Dentists. Arnold Hotel every Thursday, Jon21-lmo

EDICLE COFFINS.

Paftiry Making In the Early Stags of English Ccsksry. At a very re;rly period the orientals were familiar with a kind of pntry, a mixture of flour, oil aud honey; end for centuries psstry making went no further, even among the nations in the south of Europe, lint in, the beginning of the middle ues a change begun to take place ia tlio method of mixing the Ingredients, aud some other substances were brought ir.ti use. Butter, eg;s and salt found their way into pastry making. and the result was a manifest Improvement. P:isU next enme to be used as an inclosure for meat, seasoned with spices, etc. Afterward it went a step further, the r.ext use being for the Inclof.ure of creams, fruit, preserves, etc.. :u;:l later still it began to take the many fanciful shapes In which it has since been commonly found. Iu the early stages of English cookery the pastry cases were called coffins or "cofr.vncs" and were made In various sizes ram "gret coffynos with lowe liddes" for the "tartes of mosclie" to the "small? coffynes" for "tartolettcs" of "fische or tllesche." mixed with "stuf of boylled CiTges ground and good powdure and spices." Petruchio in "The Taming of the Shrew," it may here be noted, calls a little cap "a custard coffin." These coffins correspond with the "vol-an-vent" of today. London Saturday Review. THE LOST SOVEREIGN. A Trick That Is Sometimes Played on ths London Cabby. Have you ever tried to play on a cabmau that old joke of the "lost sovereign?" It's very fuuny. A friend tried it last summer in London and succeeded too. He took a "growler" after midnight at Piccadilly Cireu to go to his lodgings at Rayswater. Remembering the staleness of the "lost sovercicm" dodge, he thought it would hardlv "go down" with a bright, cunning cabby. but resolved to try for the fun of It. Just as he enme la front of a public house n few doors from his home the "faro" stuck his head out of the cab window and ordered the driver to halt. "I say, cabby, I've dropped a sov.' It must be on the bottom of the cab. Just pull up at that-'pub. till I run in and got a match, so that I can find the coin." "All right, sir," said the cabby and pulled up opposite the door of the tavern. The fare alishted and bad taken scarcely three stops In the direction of the "pub." when, lo, Mr. Cabby whippod up his horse and flew away Into the darkness of the night, carrying with him, as he supposed, that sovereign snugly concealed In the cushions of the cab. London Tit-Pits. People lose their hair becatise they do not cleanse It sufficiently; do not give it enoush air and sun; suffer from nervous strain or poverty of blood; have the poisons of gout or rheumatism in th? system, or they acquire bacterial disorders of the scalp from ott. -' SCHOOL OF MUSIC. Henri F. Kampe, Teacher of stringed instruments, cor. 9th and Main Tel. 706. Jun7-lrao CAFES. DEUTSCHE WEIN STUDE, Wm. Torbeck( prop., 23 N. Sth st. Phone 2C0. Jun22-lmo GREENE'S CAFE, everything first class, 25 N. Sth st Phone 917. jun22-lmo VETERINARY SUR GEON. DR. S. W. BROWN. Veterinarian. Office, Wynn's Livery Barn, 42 N. 7th street. Home Phono 388. jly20-lmo MOORE & 0GB0RN CAN GIVE YOU SOUND INDEMNITY IN FIRE INSURANCE. Also Bonds and Loans Furnished Telephones: Home 15S9; Bell, 53-R. Room 16 I. O. O. F. Wldg. Richmond. Ind CITY ADVERTISEMENT. DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS. Office of the Board. Richmond. Ind., July 12th. 1007. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Notice is hereby given by the Board ot Public Works of the City of Richmond, Indiana, that on the 12th day of July, 1907, they unanimously adopted Declaratory Resolution No. 25 1907. Providing for the laying out and opening of an alley to the width of 14 feet from John to Sherman streets, the west line of said alley to be 147 feet from Boyer street, and parallel therewith and running from John to Sherman streets. The Board of Public Works of said city has fixed Wednesday. July 3l5t, 1JX)7, as a date upon which remonstrances may be filed or presented by persons interested in, or affected by said proposed opening of said alley as above described, and on said day at 10 o'clock, a. m., said board will meet at its office for the purpose of hearing and considering any remonstrances which may have been filed or present ed, and for the purpose of taking final action thereon. Such action shall be final and conclusive upon all persons. CLIFTON W. MERRILL, WATSON P. O'NEAL. B. B. JOHNSON. Board of Public Works. July 13-20. IHOFdUfftEHTS And MARKERS Best Material and Workmanship. H. C. H ATT A WAT, No. 12 Ncrth 6th Street. DR. W.J. SMITH ..DENTIST.. 1103 Main Street, Groan j floor ft i

Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Railroad Excursions. JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION AT NORFOLK, VA. Opens April 26th. closes Nov. 30, 1?C7. Coach fares, in coaches on ly, $12.S5 for the ROUND TRIP; these tickets on sale every Tuesday until closa of Exposition, limit 10 days. 30 Day Tickets $18.10 60 Day Ticket 21.40 Season Tickets 24.03 For Further particulars, ask C. A. BLAIR, Home Phone 44. Pass. & Ticket Agt.

5 C, C. & L. R. R. (Effective April 7th. 1907.) EASTBOJND. No.l No.3 No.31 No.35 a.ta. Ly. Chicago. dS:33 J,v. Peru ....12:50 Lv. Marion..- 1:44 Lv. Muncie .. 2:41 Lv. RIchm'd.. 4 03 Ar. Cin'U 6:35 p.m. p.m. a.m. p.m. 9:30 sS:35 4:40 5:37 6:40 S:05 9:30 6:00 7:03 8:10 9:33 05 3:57 5:15 7:30 10:25 a.m. p.m. WESTBOUND. No.2 No.4 Ko.32 a.m. p.m. a.m. ...dS:40 9:00 sS:40 Lr. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Arr. CIn'tl .. RIchm'd. Muncie. . Marlon . Peru . . . Chicago p.m. 6:30 8:00 9:00 10:53 11:22 10:55 12:17 1:19 12:45 1:41 2:45 7:00 a.m. :17 :19 2:25 2:45 2:25 10:00 6:40 7:00 9:20 7:00 p.m. a.m. p m. a.m. Dally. d-Daily Except Sunday. e-Sunday -Only. Through Vestibuled Tralna between Chicago and Cincinnati or our own rails. Double daily service. Through Sleepers on trains Noa. 3 and 4 between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeuer between Muncle Marlon. P. ru and Chicago, handled in trains Nos. 5 and t, between Muncie ana Peru, thence trains Nos. 3 and 4, between Peru and Chicago. For schedules, rates and further information call on or write, C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. A.. Richmond. Ind. GREATLY REDUCED RATES Via C. C. a L. R. R. EFFECTIVE JULY 1st Regular rate to Cincinnati $1.25 Regular rate to Chicago $4.50 A1L Z The Schneider Carriage i t Factory have removed I from 47 N. 8th St. to 43 1 t S. 61h St., next to Sho-1 fer's livery stable. INSURANCE, REAL ESTATE LOANS, RENTS 4 t W. H. Bradbury & Son Rooms 1 and 3, Wosteott Bik $1.00 $3.00 $10 R. W. HALL WHY PAY MORE? Easy Payments Or Cash t at Hassenbusch 505-507 Main St. DR. A. B. PRICE DENTIST 14 and 15 The Colonial.. Phone 681 Xad? Assistant. DR. PARK DENTIST 8 N. 10th St, Richmond, Ind For a Little Cash. And easy payments per mo. Can snr a 2 room house for S300; a 5 room house for $850; a 7 room house for $1,300; a 5 room house for $1,200; want cash to loan on good titles; have cash to loan on good titles. S. K. Morgan.

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PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.