Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 182, 29 July 1907 — Page 6

THE mCII3IOXITAIiIiADimiAXI SIIX-TIXEGKA3I, MONDAY, .JULY 107.

rAUli SIX

ROBUST DOUGH ROLLERS.

Work In Pf Factory la on tb Scale of Athle.'fcs. To properly describe the processes of baking pumpkin pies would require one skilled in the technicalities of the art. This Is the way It looks to a mere man: First, the coarse yellow rind is removed, and then the' pumpkin Is cut open and the seeds taken out, after which the two halves are thoroughly washed. Then a husky lad takes a sort of cleaver and cuts the pumpkin into large pieces, which are fed Into a steam chopping machine and reduced to small fragments. These are placed In a huge copper boiler capable of holding perhaps twenty-fire gallons. After the boiling has been completed a pasty mixture of eggs, milk, sugar, cinnamon and other spices and condiments is added and well stirred In. and then the yellow mass Is ready to be filled into the skeleton pies. The crust is prepared In another department, where the dough is mixed, rolled and placed in the pans ready to receive the filling. If any one thinks that piemaking is an easy and effeminate employment be should visit a pie bakery and inspect the muscles developed on the arms of expert pie crust mixers and rollers. They would be creditable to a trained athlete and would put many a mill worker and blacksmith to the blush. Finally the pies are placed on racks and shoved into huge ovens that resemble nothing else so much as the kilns used for burning brick. These kilns are constructed in any size desired, with a capacity of anywhere from fifty up to several hundred at a time, while they can be refilled every half hour or less. Pacific Monthly. PECULIAR EYES. Tho Organ of Slitbt of the Spider and tbe Snail. The next time you catch a spider try to find the eight shiny little eyes at the anterior end. Borne above and some put under the edge of what we may imagine to be its forehead. To examine these parts to the best advantage hold the spider In tweezers, or it may be better to use a spider killed by being dropped into a bottle of diluted alcohol. These eight eyes vary In arrangement and In relative size in various species of spiders In some they may be arranged In two rows. In other in three; some may be very small and others large and prominent, and so on buf there they are, rather poor eyes, nearfrighted, looking In several directions at once, and the spider, which can never t-but any of them. Is sure to see everything that approaches unless it is asleep, lu which case the sight Is dead. For some purposes it may be convenient to have eyes that roll up and disappear at the approach of danger. And these are exactly what the snail has, situated at the end of two long and sensitive palpi, or feelers. When all is quiet their owner extends these organs, and you can see at their tips small round knobs upon which the eyes are placed. But If you touch one of the palpi or even jar the snail a little the eyes begin to back Into these feelers as the tip of a glove finger may be turned In. and they no longer see any danger that may be lurking at hand. Danjrera of the Revenue Service. The officers of the Internal revenue service make little fuss over their accomplishments. The world scarcely hears of them unless they have had a desperate hand to hand fight with mountain desperadoes which has resulted In the death of several of their number. But day after day and night after night they go about their work calmly, quietly. In constant danger of death from a shot from some ambushed moonshiner or blockader. Yet these men are an absolute necessity for the safeguarding of the country's interests, and they deserve much credit for their hard task, scarcely appreciated by the great mass of the people. David A. Gates in Metropolitan Magazine. When the Wire Tires. "Messages." said a telegraph operator, "always slide over the wires better on Monday than on any other day. The wires, you see, have profited by their Sunday rest. It Is a fact that Inanimate as well as animate things get tired and need a vacation occasionally. You know bow true this is of razors, of automobiles, of locomotives, and it is Just as true of telegraph wires. A wire after its Sunday rest gives a quicker, a fuller and a more delicate transmission. It is like a piano that has just been tuned." The Thumb. The radical difference between the Land of man aud of the monkey lies in the thumb. In the human hand the thumb has the "opposing power." which means that the thumb can be made to touch the tip of each or any of the other fingers on the same hand. The monkey's thumb is nouopposable. -Pittsburg Dispatch. eeded the Money. "Say." queried old Wedderly, "why don't you get married?" "Because." replied young Singleton, I'm too poor." "Huh!" rejoined the old man. "When I was your age I was so poor I had to marry." Chicago News. They Mnat Like It. "Does this ponder really kill the cockroaches?" asked the housekeeper at the grocery. "Why. certainly not!" replied the grocer. "If It did we wouldn't sell a third of tfce quantity." The truth Is nlwnys the strongest arjrumen t. Soph o-1 v. A Nauticl Explanation. In front of the Theater Royal at Oxford are, or were, some gigantic ston figures, the age and object of which ire buried In oblivion. Two sailors were going by, and one of them asked, "Who are these fellows, Bill?" "The twelve apostles," was the reply, without a smile. "Twelve apostles!" roared the Incredulous Jack. "How can that be? There's only six of em." "Well, y swab." replied the learned Bill, "yer wouldn't have 'em all on fleck at once, would seY' Leds Mercury.

'. h ' ' - - v C " ' - i I ,-.'.'-,',,.., TO V ; ' - ' - - - J .-, i 4

MRS.

H. COLEMAN DRAYTON.

Mrs. II. Coleman Drayton, one of the prettiest youDg matrons in New York, is living with her mother at Saybrook. Conn., and has secured an interlocutory degree of divorce against her husband. Mrs. Drayton was Miss Mary Constance Knower prior to her marriage. She is a talented musician and an able linguist. Her husband Is a son of J. Coleman Drayton and a grandson of the late William Astor. The Draytons were married about two and a half years ago.

A DAM BUILT ON END. How a Clever Engineer Conquered a Mechanical Difficulty. Almost every boy has built dozens of dams In various ways, constructing them across the 'bed of the channel, wide or narrow, to be dammed. But did any boy ever think of building a dam on end and then tipping it over? An inventive American engineer, Isham Randolph, who became famous by his work on the Chicago drainage canal, has tried this Idea on the Niagara river 00 yards above the Horseshoe fall and made a remarkable success of It. Of course an ordinary dam could not easily be built In the fiercely racing currents of Niagara hurrying to plunge over the fall. So Mr. Randolph decided to build his dam on end on the very edge of the river. It was not meant to do more than raise the water level a few inches, so as to prevent water scarcity In winter for the Canadian town of Niagara Falls when the ice Jam conies on. A darn seven feet or so high was enough and fifty feet long. Turned on end. this meant a column fifty feet high and seven feet four inches square. The clever engineer used concrete as the cheapest, easiest and least corrosive material. But any column of any material was certain to break In the shock of falling. How was that to be provided for? Easily enough, the inventive builder argued. Up the middle of the concrete column, like a huge backbone, he ran a strong iron chain weighing about 800 pounds. The whole column weighed some 200 tons. At intervals eight feet apart all the way up it along the landward face wooden wedges were inserted, so that in breaking it would follow these lines and break into regular blocks, held together by the chain. The plan was audacious, but entirely practical a true "Yankee notion." On Nov. 9, 11W5, the finished dam was sent flying over by three hydraulic jacks. Amid the breathless interest of a large crowd of spectators the concrete column fell, splashed and settled. When splash aud spray subsided there it stretched, broken at the destined points, tilted a trifle irregularly In the middle, where the river bed was higher, but quite effectual. The depth of water . increased ten Inches at once. The "obelisk dam" was a success. William Rittenhouse in Forward. WEDDING SUPERSTITIONS. A bride who finds a spider on her wedding dress may consider herself blessed. The bride who dreams of fairies the night before her marriage will be thrice blessed. If the bridegroom carries a miniature horseshoe iu,his pocket he will always have good luck. No bride or bridegroom should be given a telegram on the way to church. It Is positively a sign of evil. If the wedding ring is dropped during the ceremony the bride may as well wish herself unborn, for she will always have ill luck. Kiss a bride right after the ceremony and before the newly made husband has a chance to do so. and you will have excellent luck throughout the year. Should a bride perchance see a coflir while being driven to the railway sta tion prior to departure upon her wed ding tour she should order the driver to turn back and start over again, c else she will surely meet with bad luck. New York's First State Prison.The first state prison In New York state was built at the foot of We?t Tenth street, in New York city, in 1707. Within seven years there were three mutinies of prisoners. In wliich keepers were killed and the prison set on fire. Nevertheless the institution seems to have been considered an at traction, us eppears from the follow ing advertisement of the Greenwiel hotel, printed in the Columbian of Sept 18. 1S1I: A few gentlemen may be accommodated with board and lodging at this pleasant and healthy situation, a few doors froT the state prison. The Greenwich stajc passes from this to the federal hall ar.C returns five times a day. The prisoners were transferred tr Sing Sing in 1S23. and the propert; was sold the next year. New Yor' Pres.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

DOGFISH CUTLET.

Said to Be as Good as the Best Lob ster Ever Eaten. .Dogfish ought to be good to eat, as it is well known that they feed on soles, plaice and flounders. The naturalist hailing from the north Kent marshes with whom I collaborated in various books said that in his boyhood they were much used by the fishing folk and that they were excellent eating, a mid dle cutlet being considered by many to be as good as the best lobster ever eaten. As a boy he never tired of hear ing the fishermen's yarus about how the great savage creatures snapped and fought when they were captured. Lying in the bottom of the boats, they lashed about and bit at the men and. at each other. The larger ones would fix on the men's sea boots as they moved about or hang on to their oil skin fishing coats like bulldogs. A bite from one was no joke. Dogfish abounded fit certain seasons In some parts of the fishing grounds; other part3 they avoided. Sometimes the men would go out only to catch dogfish just to reduce their numbers a little. They caught great numbers of them and sold them somewhere farther down the coast, keeping back just a few for themselves and their neighbors. You could get a monster for a couple of shillings. Couch, the naturalist, says he has known 20,fX of the picked dogfish to be taken at one cast of the seine. Robert Chalmers quoted as follows from the "journal" of Ppaldlng, the town clerk of Aberdeen: "1042. From the beginning of this year up to June there was a scarcity of wbitefish along the east coast to the hurt and hunger of the poor ahd beggaring of the fishermen. It was reported that when the fishers had laid their lines and taken fishes abundantly there came one beast called the seadog to the lines and ate and destroyed the haill bodies and left nothing on the lines but the heads. The like scarcity of fishes to continue so long has scarcely been seen in Scotland, while nil other meats were also very dear." rail Mall Gazette. Mr. tJri-cii ...... i,.iag to teh 'on something. Ethel. Do you knovi hat last night at your party your eIser promised to marry me? I hope you'll forgive me for taking her away. i.ittle rthel Forgive you. Mr. Green? Of course I r,i!!! W'a;-. that's what the party Understood of Slippers. Slippers play an Important part iu the life of almost every man. In childhood they are laid on him; In manhood, Just after he has been married, they are thrown after him, and for a considerable part of the rest of his life they are under him. A Pleasant Frolic. , After the dissipated Duke of Wharton had been narrating his frolics Dean Swift said to him: "My lord, let me recommend one more to you. Take a frolic to be good. Rely upon it, you will find it the pleasantest frolic yoa ever engaged in." The usual fortune of complaint Is to excite contempt more than pity. Johnson. CHIROPODIST AND MANICURING. Mrs- Ina Parks Salne, 904 Main street. Phone 1104. UNDERTAKERS. WILSON & POHLMETER. No. 15 N. 10th street. Private ambulance. DOAN & KLUTE, Undertakers, 14 South Sth St. Both Phones 36. YOUR HANDS kept soft and velvety and free from cracks and sores during summer work by using PetroPine Cold Cream Ointment. For sale by all druggists. ANNOUNCEMENTS. TO OWNERS OF JERSEY COWS. Highland Lad No. 121 (Polled), grandson of the Richest Milker in the Pan American exposition. Dam took first plac?, Ohio and New York state fairs, will be found at my farm, 3 miles west of the city. O. E. Fulg-

hum. 12 U L

DFDEHD Ik

1IL1F (BEIT P

7 INSERTIONS FOR

For Rent, For Sale, Help Wanted, Lost, Etc., and all classified ads. pertaining to business, oneha!f cent a word. "Found" and "Situation Wanted are Free.

Classified Advertisements appear in both

the evening edition of the Palladium and SunTelegram and the Morning Mail Edition without extra charge.

WANTED. WANTED Boy to learn Job Printing, or boy who has had some experience in press work. Address 2. C. Care Palladium. 26-tf WANTED Pianos and organs to tune and repair. 15 years' experience. Work guaranteed. Mail orders attended to. Pianos restrung. F. A. Samuelson, S. 13th St. 2.M WANTED Boy of 16 or 17 at Starr Piano works. 2S-2t WANTED The cash to make a good $1,000.00 loan; also an $S00.00, also a $500.00, also a $600.00. All good titles and first mortgages. Sth and North E. That S. K. Morgan. 29-7t WANTED Good home bread at the Woman's Exchange, lOlo Main st. 2S-2t WANTED Lawn mowers to sharpen, and screens to make. Brown and Darnell. 1022 Main St. 27-3t WANTED Five men of wide acquaint ance in Richmond and Wayne coun ty to represent an old and reliable life Insurance Co., with an establish ed business. Excellent contract and salary to desirable men. None others need applj-. Experience un necessary. Address Old Line CoGen. Del. Richmond, Ind. 2(J-7t WANTED You to know we do all kinds bicycle and general repairing. Brown & Darnell, 1022 Main St. 27-3t WANTED You to try our Perfection extra heavy tread tires. Brown & Darnell, 1022 Main St. 27-3t WANTED Twelve news boys to call No. 26 S. 13th St. 27-3t WANTED Your plumbing and heating, see Wm. WTaking, 406 Mfin St. 27-7t WANTED Sewing to do at home. Call at 513 N. 18. 27-7t WANTED To buy all kinds of furniture and carpets. Antique Furniture Co., corner room, 4th and Main. Phone 472. 28-7t WANTED Y"ou to come and get our prices before you buy furniture. Lefler and Wyatt, 516 Main St 27-2t WANTED We want your Music Ord ers. Routh Music House, 519 Main. Tel. 561. 27-7t WANTED Tb repair your bicycle. Elmer Smith, 426 Main gtreet. 27-7t WANTED Vaults to clean. Expert work. Prompt, attention. Moorehead, OSS Butler street. Phone SS7. 10-17t WANTED You to bring your horses to Taube Bros.' sale barn, 124-126 N. 6th. Horses bought and sold, jl 30tf WANTED Competent stenographers to fill vacancies now open. Apply Richmond Business College. 21-tf WANTED To do all kinds of repair work. Standard Manufacturing Co., Cor. 11th and N..E St. 26-tf WANTED You to know Whisler the roof man paints and repairs your leaky roof's and guarantees to make them tight or no pay.1026 Main St. Phone 773. Thur. sun, mon, 3 mo. WANTED Laborers to work in sew er pipe factory; steady work the year round; no strike or trouble. Wm. E. Dee Clay Mfg. Co., Mecca, Ind., on C. & E. I. railway. 24-7t WANTED Situation as bookkeeper; young man of ability; phone 1836; Call 322 N. Sth street 17-tf WANTED Men to learn barber trade, few weeks completes, 60 chairs continually busy, licensed Instructors, tools given, diplomas granted, wages Saturdays, positions waiting, wonderful demapd for graduates. Write for catalogue, Moler Barber College, Chicago, 111. tf WANTED Stenographer willing to take position out of city. Richmond Business College. 21-tf SCHOOL OF MUSIC. Henri F. Kampe. Teacher of stringed instruments, cor. 9th and Main. jun7-lmo gistsred in U. S. Patent Office Pride of Richmond has for a long time stood as one of the best brands of flour in the United States. Recently, however, it has become so popular and widely known that the company has been compelled to protect their rights by having the brand registered in the United States Patent office. This piaces Pride of Richmond on the list with the leading and best brands of flour in the world. This protects the company against imitations being put out under this famous brand, and is also a guarantee to the public that any flour branded Pride of Richmond is genuine and of the very best quality and worthy of confidence.

. . 22-7-.

ilWEmlE

1EIT THE PRICE OF 5: ROOMS WANTED By Aug. 3. Three rooms furnished complete for light housekeeping, within walking distance of 9th and South A streets. References exchanged. Box 55, City. 27-5t FOR SALE. Richmond property a specialty. Portorfield, Kelly Block. FaoDe 329. tf FOR SALE Fine old cherry bureau in fine condition. C. M. Williams, Fountain City, Ind. 27-:it FOlt sTLlnciTEAP Tvohundred thousand 200.xio of No. 1 building brick, five hundred perches of good building stone, frames, sheds, fences and different kinds of building mate- . rials. . At buildings now being wrecked to make room for the, new Panhandle freight house on Fifth Street. The Dayton House Wrecking Co. 2S-7t FOR SALE Phonographs, Records. Routh Music House, 519 Main St., Tel. 561. 27-7t FOR SALE Good Mcycle tires and sundries,, see Wm. Waking. 406 Main St., Phone 506. 27-7t FOR SALE Indian or Racycle motor cycles at Wm. Waking's, 406 Main St. 27-7t FOR SALE Antique furniture an1 couches. Corner room, 4th and Main street. I hone 472. 2 5-7t FOR SALE Special prices on bicycles to reduce stock at Wm. Waking's, 406 Main St. 27-7t FOR SALE New and second hand wheel3 at bargains. Elmer Smith, 426 Main street. 27-7t FOR SALE Swiss music box and one dozen records. Jatest style, fast and slow levar, plays two hours with one winding. Bought cheap, sold cheap at Routh's Music store, 519 Main street. 27-7t FOR SALE S3-acre farm 5 miles from Richmond, $3,000. This farm is better by far than the price sounds. Must be handled right away. S. K Morgan. 25-7t FOR SALE Another bargain In sec ond hand piano. Routh Music House, 519 Main street. Tel. 561. 27-7t FOR SALE A trotting bred stallion. 166 hands high. Bay in color, 7 years old. Price reasonable. For particulars address John Y. Coddington, Greensfork, Ind. 24-7t FOR SALE OR RENT Good farms, city properties, also best accident and health Insurance. W. M. Penny, room 16 I. O. O. F. Bldg., phone 1589. 27-tf Everybody buys property from Woodhurst, 918 Main St Telephone 491. JuneS 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 North Seventh street, Richmond, Ind. 8-tf FOR SALE Modern residence, eight rooms, every conveniences hot and cold water, electric light hardwood floors. Phone 736. 20-tf FOR SALE Cemenf blocks. Call at Simmons' Cigar Store. 13-2St FOR SALE Guitar at 313 S. 9th st Made by Lew Harls. 20-7t PHOTOGRAPHER. F. J. PARSONS, Leading Photographer, 704 Main street Phone 563. E. F. DALBEY, Commercial Photographer. 14 N. 9th stret. FOR CONVENIENCE of the constantly Increasing number of Classified Advertisement patrons In the Palladium and Sun-Telegram, we have establishe'i 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 Streets. Harry Haseltine, grocer, 257 North West 3rd Street Fairview J. J. Mulligan, grocer, 1021 Sheridan Street North of Railway Norris and Sons, Grocers, 725 N. 10th Street. South of Main Street Bowing Bros., Grocers, 535 S. E street

mm

FOR RENT.

FOR RENT Fine furnished room. All modern conveniences. Call at 217 N. 7th. 2lV7t FOR RENT Five rooms over 715; Main. Call at 122 N. 13. Phone 114. 2i-7t! FOR RENT Six-room hotioe. 331 S. W. 3rd. electric light, both kinds water, cement walk, $12.00 per month. Phone 292. T. W. Hadley. 25-7 1 FOR RENT Furnished room all modern conveniences, private entrance, centrally located. Address G. M., care Palladium. 23-7t FOR RENT New 6-room house with bath. Call 435 Richmond avenue. FOR RENT Storage rooms; call at 31 South Sth street. 24-7t FOR RENT Furnished or unfurnished rooms, suburban, good water, shade. Cheap. txx N. llth street. 23-7t FOR RENT Furnished room. 103 N. ."th street. 24-7t FOR RENT Five room flat with bath, steam heat and cellar, 322 North Sth street. Phone 1S36. 16-tf FOR RENT A modern ten-room house, 25 South 19th street Fhone 114. lS-tf FOR RENT Furnished rooms; 326 N. 10th street. 4-tf FOR RENT Furnished rooms for gentlemen only, at the Grand. 14-tf FOR RENT OR SALE My home "Blenvenu", corner W. 5th and Asylum avenue. O. E. Fulghum. Phone G3S. 13-tf FOR RENT Modern flat at 1019 Main street 22 tf LOST. LOST A pair of long black silk gloves and a leather card case; return to this office and receive re ward. 29-2t LOST A gold crescent-shaped pin with small green flower; reward if returned to Palladium office. 28-tf LOST Black silk jacket, between Cox's Mills and Richmond. Leave at Richmond Corn Mills. A, S. Jef fries. 2IMt 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 flee and get liberal reward. 13-tf LOST A tan pocket book containing a ten dollar bill, between Engleberfa cigar store and Fred's clothing store, Saturday evening. Any Information leave at Palladium office. Reward 24-tf FOUND. FOUND The best place to buy Gravel Rubber, Asphalt, Two and Three ply Roofing building and carpet paper. Slaters felt, Rcof Paint, Roof cement, Pitch and Tar. Whisler the roof man, 1026 Main St Phone 773. Thur. Sun Mon, 3 mo. REAL ESTATE AL II. HUNT, Real estate, 7 N. 9th stret. Phone 877. R. L. MORE, Real Estate, Accident In surance and colectlon; 14 N. 9th. BAKERIES. MEYERS' BAKERY, Bread, Pies and cakes, 107 Richmond ave. Phone 1G93 DYEING AND CLEANING. DYEING, Cleaning, Pressing. Goods called for and delivered. Twentieth Century Dye Works. Rohe & Hill, Prop's., 1011 Main st OSTEOPATHY. DR. TOWNSEND, North 9th and A. opposite Masonic Temple; phone MONUMENTS AND MARKEPS. Richmond Monument Co.. C. E, Bradbury, Mgr., 33 North Sth Street DENTISTS. Dr. Hamilton, 12 N. 10th St Phone 675. DRS. WILSON & WILSON, phone 519, Over Fihe's Drug Store. Drs. Chenoweth and Dykeman, Masonic Temple. Phone 553. VETERINARY SURGEON. DR. S. W. BROWN, Veterinarian. Office, Wynn's Livery Barn, 42 N. 7th street Home Phone 388. jly20-lmo FIRE INSURANCE WANTED For Fire Insurance In good reliable companies call on the Richmond Insurance Agency, 11 South 7th street TeL 4L City and Country Solicitors wasted. 6-tf LAUNDRY. We can help make you happy honestly we can. Richmond Steam Laundry. CAMBRIDGE CITY Classified Ads. AGENT: Gso. 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. PLUMBING, Heating, and Lawn Hose at Huddleston Bros. WANTED Machine repairing, all kinds. General Repair Co, 32 ilain s SL

ROUND TRIP TO Atlantic City Cape May Ocean City Via c. c. & l. r. r. and B. & O. S.W.R.R. Thursday, August 1st Tickets good for return until August 15th. Stopovers allowed at Philadelphia. Baltimore, Washington, Deer Park, Mountain Lake Park and return. For particulars call C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. A, Home Tel. 44. Richmond. Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Railroad Excursions. JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION AT NORFOLK, VA. Opens April 26th, closes Nov. SO. 19C7. Coach fares, in coaches only, $12.S5 for the ROUND TRIP; these tickets on sale every Tuesday until close of Exposition, limit 10 days. 30 Day Ticket $18.10 60 Day Tickets 21.49 Season Tickets 24.00 For Further particulars, ask C. A. BLAIR, Home Phone 44. Pass. A. Ticket Agt 1 C., C.&LR. R. (Effective April 7th, 1807.) ' EASTBOUND. No.l No.3 Na31 No.3-5. a.m. p.m. a.m. p.m. Lv. Chicago. dS:35 9:30 8:35 9:30 Lv. Peru ....12:50 2:05 4:40 6:00 Lv. Marion. ... 1:44 2:59 B:37 7:05 Lv. Muncie .. 2:41 3:57 6:40 8:10Lv. Rlchm'd.. 4 05 5:15 8:05 9:35 Ar. CIn'U 6:35 p.m. 7:30 10:25 a.m. p.m. WESTBOUND. No.2 No.4 No.32 No.6-4 a.m. p.m. a.m. ...d8:40 9:00 sS:40 p.m. Lr. CIn'U Lv. Rlchm'd. 10:55 21:22 10:55 6:30 Lv. Muncie.. 12:17 12:45 12:17 8:00 Lv. Marlon 1:19 1:44 1:19 9:00 2:25 2:45 2:25 10:00 6:40 7:00 9:20 7:00 Lv. Peru ... An. Chicago p.m. .m. p.m. sv.m. Dally. d-Dally Except Sunday. s-Sunday Only. Through Vestibuled Tralna between Chicago and Cincinnati over our own rails. Double dally service. Through Sleepers on trains Noe. 3 and 4 between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeper between Muncie, Marlon, Peru and Chicago, handled In trains Nbs. 5 and 6, between Muncie and Peru, thenco 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. I INSURANCE, REAL ESTATE LOANS, RENTS t W. H. Dradbury A Oon Rooms 1 and 3, Weateott Oik l-444-44 MM4t4 I Easy Payments Or Cash I at Hasscnbuoch 505-507 Main St. 01.00 03.00 010 R. W. HALL WHY PAY For a Little Cash. And easy payments per mo. Can sell a 2 room bouse for $500; 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. MOORE & 0GB0RN CAN GIVE YOU SOUND INDEMNITY IN FIRE INSURANCE. Also Bonds and Loans Famished Telephones: Home 15S9; Bell, 53-R. Room 16 I. O. O. F. Bldg. Richmond. Ind. DR. A. B. PRICE DENTIST 14 and 15 The Colonial.. Phoxxs 631 Xady Assistant. DR. PARK DENTIST 8 N. 10th St., Richmond, Ind DR. W.J. SMITH .. DENTIST.. 1103 Main Street, Ground Floor