Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 218, 9 September 1907 — Page 6
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THE RICHMOND PAUL AD IU3I AND SUN-TEIiEGR AM, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1907. PAGE SIX.
PARADISE FISHES.
These Creatures Live In Odd Necta Composed of Air Bubbles. Paradise fishes come from Japan, and their nests are very odd indeed for they are composed of air bubbles Unlike goldfish, they will breed atit raise their young In an aquarium c. even In a glass globe, and they rate three or four brood3 each year. Ordinarily the male paradise fish i of a dull silvery color, but when Ik goes a-courting be puts on a brilliant coat, striped with streaks of red, blut and green. When the female fish 1.ready to lay eggs, she builds her nest by swallowing air and making bubbles which are held together by a sticky secretion that comes from her mouth. The eggs rise in the water and find o resting place among the air bubbles, t which they cling. The female fish trie; to swallow the eggs, bnt hoc husbanc drlres her away and keeps guard unti the eggs are hatched- If the air bub bles burst, the male fish blows somemore, so that the nest Is always float ing on the snrface of the water. At the end of five day3 the young arc hatched out. They cannot swim, but cling like tadpoles to the air bubbles If one falls, the father fish catches li in his mouth and blows it up among the bubbles again. lie does not leave his little ones until they are able to swim, and then they take care of them selves. HOUSE OF NAPOLEON. The Dwelling In Corsica In Which the Great Man Was Born. Historically, AJaccio, Corsica, Is of lie utmost Importance, for here It was that on the 15th of August. .1760, Napoleon Bonaparte was born, and here it was that the future emperor spent his youth, enlightened by an Intelligent and lovely mother. The "Casa Napo leon" Is one of the or, I should say the principal building in Ajaccio. It I a solid three story building, with gra;, stucco walls and a number of largt windows. Situated In the old part of the town, one would scarcely find It were it not for the boys who tender their services to guide the stranger to the place. Although plundered In 1793 by the partisans of Paoll, the heroic Corsican fighter for liberty, the house still contains a few reminiscences of the great warrior. Besides a number of ordinary rooms, each room containing some furniture, one finds the bedroom where Napoleon was born, as well as Napoleon's sleeping and study room, with his bed and table; his father's study, still beautifully furnished, and the drawing room, in which are his mother's piano awl her sedan chair. Theodore flf Von i roii' Track News. DR. PARK DENTIST 8 W. 10th St., Richmond, Ind a .e e m jm - a TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTrTTT I Easy Payments I Or Cash at Hassenbusch I X 505-507 Main St. DR. A. B. PRICE DENTIST 14 and 15 The Colonial.. Phone 681 Xadj Assistant. 'I1 I 'I 'I 'I' ' 1 1 INSURANCE, REAL ESTATE I LOANS, RENTS W. H. Bradbury & Son $ ! Rooms 1 and 3, West cott Ilk DR.W. J.SMITH ..DENTIST.. 1103 Main Street, Ground Floor K ! A. SIEWEKE i t Drcjssmaking and Tailoring. Up over 818 Main St , 4. . ,t ! ! .. ! 4fr4i4fr eeeeeeeeeeee
GEMP3ETT THEATRE ELES?" ONE BIG WEEK SSsaSK Monday, Sep. 9 The Carl W. Cook Stock Co. in repertoire Monday Mght. MJlm, the Westerner. Change ol play nightly. ' FIVE BIG VAUDEVILLE ACTS FIVE Prices 10, 20 and 30c. Ladles tree Monday night usnal conditions. Seats on sale alter 9 a. m., Saturday, at the Westcott Pharmacy.
THE NEW PHILLIPS
O. G. MURRAY, Lessee. GEO. A. SCHWENKE. Treas.
WEEK OF Daily at 3:00 and from 7:30 f SEPT. 9. .OVERTURE -Miss Grace Miller. 3 BLACK AND LESLIE Premier Comedy Novelty Artists. 2 ILLUSTRATED SONG Cal Lankert. 9 THE TALCOTTS Eccentric Sing ing and Dancing. CHARLEY GANO Monoloeulst.
Special Matinee each Saturday; children 5 cents. Souvenirs at Wednesday's xnatlnep. General admission 10c, Reserved seats at night. 5c extra.
IS BOTH PRETTY AND ENTERTAINING.
''i't , " " 4 . ' V - 4- .'A , " L "'. - - . - t,ti.. - ' '"''V'f'"'-'."- - - -"-.w-- -- t ?c: t r t -.;-iv,-? -",.! ,. 4 -- . -'1
Miss Edyth LaNora, Soubrette With Gennett STAMPING ENVELOPES.""1 Queer Ways Some Folks Have of Do ing This Simple Act. "The only r?.y to stop people from plastering a stamp at any old place upon the envelope except the right one is to do as Is done In England. There a letter which does not have the stamp in the rLjht position is cast aside and handled only when all other mail is sorted and exchanged." This idea was advanced by a postal clerk quoted by the Philadelphia Record. "We often lose considerable time because of these letters," continued the clerk, "for of tenJ we have to stop and turn over an envelope to find the stamp. We do not mlud so much the love sick youth or maiden who places the stamp on the center of the envelope, because a stamp so placed can be seen at a glance, but it is chiefly with the foreigners that we have the trouble. These people invariably put on a stamp at any but the right place, and you would be surprised to know how they do it. Why, I have seen letters upon which the stamps have been placed on the back of the envelope at the point where the society girl will put her monogram in sealing wax. Others when they have to pay, say, 5 cents postage will buy Ave one-cent stamps and put one on each corner of the envelope, with the remaining one acting as a seal upon the back." An Exciting Escape. Prince Kropotktn, the Russian revolutionist, once made an exciting es cape from a fortress prison in St. Petersburg. After two years in the prison he had been removed to the jail hospital, where plans were matured by his friends for his flight, lie was allowed to walk for an hour each afternoon, guarded by armed sentries, in the grounds. . A line of spies outside maintained a system of signals to notify the prince when the adjoining streets should be clear. When all was well a friend in a kiosk opposite the gates played upon a violin. After one or two false starts the violinist burst into a mad melody, and the prisoner, flinging off an outer garment, leaped for it. Sentries tried to stab him with their bayonets; others hesitated to shoot, believing that they could catch him. A carriage with a racing horse in the shafts was waiting. Into it he sprang, and they left at a gallop. His beard was cut off, his clothes changed, and he spent the first hours of his hiding in the best cafe in St. Petersburg. The Amateur Detective. Said the man in the restaurant to the other across the table: "I'll bet you're a druggist." "No; you're wrong." "A chemist, then? "Wrong again." , "A photographer?" "This time you're right XIow did you guess it?" "It was simple enough," was the answer. "I guessed it from the way you held the vinegar cruet in making your salad. You placed your little finger at the bottom of the bottle. No one but a man accustomed to measuring out graduated and exact quantities does that." New York Press. --- . VAUDEVILLE THEATRE and Ass't Mgr. SEPT. 2. to 10:15 Continuously. F RUSSELL J. GROSE The Handcuff Monarch; removes any shackles, private or foreign combination or time lock handcuffs Included. The highest priced single act on the Vaudeville stage. G THE CAMERAGRAPH Latest Motion Pictures.
the Carl W. Cook Stock Company at the This Week.
Amusements The Carl W.' Cook Stock Co. The following is taken from the South Bend Times relative to the Carl W. Cook Stock company which opens a week's engagement at the Gennett tonight: The Carl W. Cook Stock company began a two weeks' engagement at Springbrook park Casino last evening, playing to the largest Monday night audience of the season, both in point of numbers and box office receipts. They produced that old and always re liable stock play, "Jim, the Westerner" and gave satisfaction. Arnolda, a very versatile entertain er, gave character impersonations, comedy juggling and illustrated songs. The play was carefully staged, special scenery, being used and the perform ance was meritorious throughout. Ladies will be admitted free to night under usual conditions. Manager Swisher has received the following telegram from Sam Young, manager of the Alrdome theatre, Terre Haute: "The Carl W. Cook Stock company, best of the season; enormous business here two weeks." Vaudeville at the Phillips. Little doubt remains that the vaude ville bill that is being put on at the r ft r i i it GROSE, THE HANDCUFF KING. New Phillips this week Is one of the best in many weeks and that Gross, the handcuff monarch, is as good a headliner as Manager Murray needs to get a big week's business. The pro gram is diversified and well balanced and should prove entertaining for the most exacting. A souvenir matinee will be eiven on Wednesday. The evening performances are continuous, from 7:30 to 10:15. Good manners are a short cut to one's goal. They lubricate the wheels of life Instead of obstructing them. Wharton. The Poor Girl. The woman I marry," he said, "must be glad to take me with nil my faults." - "Oh. she will be." the girl replied. "She'll be so desperate that fault? won't cut any figure with her. Logical. Little Dot Oh. mamma, there's ft sign. "Puppies For Sale." Won't you buy me one? Manama Wait till you are a little older, dear. Little DotBut they'll all be dog? then.- London Answers. If doctors fail thee, be these -thy doctorsrest, cheerfulness and moderate diet Latin Proverb.
QUAINT QUEBEC. The Old World Charm That Crowns This Picturesque City. Dear, delightful old Quebec, with hr gray walls and shining tin roofs; her precipitous, headlong streets and sleepy squares and esplanades; her narrow alleys and . peaceful convents; heharmless antique cannon on the para pets and her sweet toned teli8 In th spires; her towering chateau on th heights and her long, low, queer smell Ing warehouses in the lower .town; he spick and span ca leches and h.r ding, trolley cars; her sprinkling of soldier and sailors with Scotch accent anc Irish brogue and cockney twang on a background of petite bourgeolse speak ing the quaintest of French dialects: her memories of an adventurous glittering past and her placid contentment with the tranquil grayness of the present; her glorious daylight outlook over the vale of the St. Charles, the level shore of Montmorenci, the green lie d'Orleans dividing the shining reaches of the broad St. Lawrence, and the blue Laurentian mountains rolling far to the eastward, and at night the dark bulk of the citadel outlined against the starry blue, and far below the huddled housetops, the silent wharfs, the lights of the great warships swinging with the tide, the intermittent ferryboats plying to and fro, the twinkling lamps of Levis rising along the dim southern shore and reflected on the lapsing, curling seaward sliding waves of the great river! What city of the new world keeps so , much of the charm of the old? Henry 'ftr r-' - - "
NOI1CE. Notice is hereby given to the citizen of the First ward of the city of Richmond, Wayne county, Indiana, and to all others concerned, that I, the under signed, a male inhabitant of the state of Indiana, and a continuous resident of Wayne township, Wayne county, In diana, forbore than ninety days prior hereto and prior to the time of the filing of said application, and a person over the age of twenty-one years, and a person of good moral character, in tend to apply to the board of county commissioners of said county and state at its next regular session commencing upon the first Monday in October, for a license to sell intoxicating, spir ituous, vinous and malt liquors in a less quantity than five gallons at a time and permit the same to be drunk on the premises where sold, in accord ance with the provisions of an Act of the General Assembly of the state of Indiana, approved March 17th, 1875, and all amendments and additions thereto, and all other laws of said state now In force in relation to said business. I hereby state .that I am and will be the actual owner and proprietor of said business and am not acting as the agent of another and do not propose to and will not conduct said business as agent or partner of another person. The precise location of the said premises in which I desire to and will sell said intoxicating liquors should a license be granted me Is as follows, towit: Being the front room on the ground floor of a certain three-story brick building located on parts of lots 3 and 6 in that part of the city of Richmond laid out by John Smith, which said room is numbered 419 Main street and being on the south side of and fronting on Main street between Fourth and Fifth streets, in the- First ward in the city of Rich mond, Wayne township, Wayne coun ty, Indiana. DANIEL COOPER. Sept 9-16-23 CITY ADVERTISEMENT. DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS. Oflice of the Board. Richmond, Ind., Sept. 6th, 1907. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Notice is hereby given by the Board of Public Works of the City of Richmond, Indiana, that on the 6th day of September, 1907, they approved an assessment roll showing the prima facie assessments for the following described public Improvement, as au thorized by the Improvement Re3o!u' tion named: Improvement Resolution No. 109-1907, Providing for the construction of cement sidewalks on the North side of North "B" street from the first alley east of North 11th street to North 12th street and on the south side of North B" street from the first alley East of North 9th to North 11th street. Improvement Resolution No. 124-1907, Providing for the construction of a ce ment gutter strip on both sides of South 9 th street from Main street to South "A" street. Persons interested in or affected by said public improvement are here by notified that the Board of Public Works of said city has fixed Wednes day, Sept. 18th, 1907, as a date upon which remonstrances will be received, or heard, against the amount assess ed against each piece of property de scribed in said roll, and will determine the question as to whether such lots or tracts of land have been or will be benefited in the amounts named on said roll, or In a greater or less sum than that named on said roll. Said assessment roll showing said prima facie assessments, with the names of owners and descriptions of property subject to be assessed, Is on file and may be seen at the oflice of the Board of Public Works of said city. CLIFTON W. MERRILL, ' WATSON P. O'XEAL, B. B. JOHNSON. Board of - Public Works. sept6-6t $1.00 $3.00 $10 R. W. HALL WHY PAY ! FEED ! BALED HAY, STRAW, CORN, OATS, CHICKEN FEED U & 13 North 9th St. ' Pbone 196 J. G. GILBERT
(MSSI1E! IIWEraiElEITS ommf GEM? 11 " 7 INSERTIONS FOR THE PRICE OF 5 For Rent, For Sale, Help Wanted, Lost, Etc., and all classified ads. pertaining to business, one-half cent a word. Fcund,and "Situation Wanted" are Free.
All 'Classified Advertisements appear in both the evening edition of the Palladium and SunTelegram and the Morning Mail Edition without extra charge.
WANTED. WANTED A girl at 107 N. 20th St.; call afternoons and evenings. 9-2t WANTED Before Oct. 1, cottage, half house or flat, first class condition, central location; can use 4 to 6 rooms; two in family; very careful, prompt paying and permanent; rent not to exceed $15; address "Ov er 34 X. 7th St., city. 9-7t WANTED Apprentice girls. Klute Millinery Store, 18 N. 8th St. 8-3t WANTED Large hot blast stove, good condition at 101.1 Main street. 8-3t WANTED You to remember, Hall s $1.0O, $3.00 and $10.00 store. Main Street. 8-3t WANTED ifou to call and look at our large line of Favorite Base Burners, the greatest fuel saver ever known. The Peter Johnson Co. 8-3t WANTED You to know Whlsler the roof man paints and repairs your leaky roof's and guarantees to make them tight or no pay.1026 Main SL Phone 773. Thur. sun, mon. 3 mo. WANTED Telescop9 exchanged at Pennsylvania depot Friday morning. Report 318 S. 15th St. 7-3t WANTED Parties with money to Invest; can net you seven per cent. Rosoe E. Klrkman. 7-7 1 WANTED To buy all kinds of furniture and carpets. Antique Furniture Co., corner room, 4th and Main Sts. Phone 472. 6-7t WANTED 25 carpenters, 35 cents per hour for first-class workmen; apply New Castle Construction Co., New Castle, Indiana. 4-6t WANTED Small farm near Richmond; cash or grain rent; address X. Y. Z., care Palladium. 4-7t WANTED To do your upholstering. Herfurt & Son, 18 S. 6th st, phone 1717. 29-lmo WANTED Your carpets, rugs and upholstery to clean; Richmond House Cleaning Co. Phones, Home, 816; Bell 395R. 24-lmo WANTED You to bring your horses to Taube Bros.' sale barn, 124-126 N. 6th. Horses bought and sold, jl 30tf WANTED Men to learn barber trade, few weeks completes, 60 chairs continually' busy, licensed instructors, tools given, diplomas granted, wages Saturdays, positions waiting, wonderful demand for graduates. Write for catalogue, Moler Barber College, Chicago, 111. tf HAIR GOODS AND DRESSING Switches, puffs and curls made to order frora combings. 44 Colonial building. Phone 1002. 1-tf NOTICE Just arrived, repellant cloth, 54 ina goods, used for dresses, skirts, suits, coats, also for outdoor garments for rainy weather; in black, blue, green and brown, $1.00 per yard; we also have the largest comfort on the market, 90 inches long, white cotton filler, no shoddy; weisht 8 lbs. good quality of cloth at $2.50. Also cotton and all-wool Blankets, Lace Curtains, Mattings, Druggets, Rockers, Morris Chairs and Watches. Credit given to resoonsible parties. J. Glaser & Co., 233 S. 5th. Open every evening. Bell Phone 393 W. 30-tf XOTICE All persons having bills against the Richmond Chautauqua should mail them Immediately. W, S. Hlser, Secy. 7-3t DYEING AND CLEANING. DYEIXG, Cleaning. Pressing. Goods called for and delivered. Twentieth Century Dye Works. Rohe & Hill. Prop's., 1011 Main st. LAUNDRY. We can help make you happy honestly we can. Richmond Steam Laundry. RESTAURANTS. RESTAURANT For ladles and gentlemen. Good service, at Proffit's, 29 N. Sth. 9-30t PATTERN MAKERS AND MACHINISTS. Standard Pattern & Mfg. Co., corner 11th and X. E streets. augl7-lmo UNDERTAKERS. WILSON & POHLMEYER, Xo. 15 X. 10th streeL Private ambulance. DOAX & KLUTE. Undertakers. 14 South 8th SL Both Phones 36. EXCHANGE. Fresh Bread. Pies, Cakes, at Works & Haner's, S S. 11th. Phone 3S0.. 29-30t PHOTOGRAPHER. P. J. PARSOXS, Leading Photograph er, 704 Main streeL Phone 563. OSTEOPATHY. DR. TOWNSEND. North 9th and A.) Lady assistant. Phone 13j
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE Furniture and household goods at 52 South 13th; call any time. 9-4t FOR SALE OR RENT Modern eight room dwelling at N. E. corner S. 13th and A; James S. Zeller. 9-4 1 FOR SALE Don't forget wo sell all kinds of Insurance, Fire, Accident and Health; see us before an accident; Ball & Peltz, Real Estate and Insurance; 8 and 10 N. 7th st. 9-7t FOR SALE Two Franklin gas stoves small gas range and natural gas meter. Phone 1044 or call at 16 South 13th St. 77t FOR SALE Real estate and merchandise broker; Porterfield, Kelly block. 7-tf FOR SALE Pigs, all sizes; also sows bred to farrow In OcL and Nov. Phone 387. N. P. Wilson, Richmond, Ind., R. R. 7. s wed-fri-mon 4-3t FOR SALE New six-room house on city car line; bargain; Rosco E. Klrkman. 7-7t FOR SALE For breeding or feeding, 27 Poland China hogs. Phone i'A. 8-3t-eod FOR SALE Clothiqg that sells elsewhere for $13.00, the same quality at Hall's for only $10.o. 88-3t FOR SALE The best line of base burners in Richmond. Peter Johnson Co. S-St FOR SALE Edison moving picture machine, complete, ready for business; can be seen any evening after 6:30; 149 Bridge Ave. 8-7t FORTSAEE All kinds of antique anii second hand furniture. Corner room Fourth and Main streets. G-7t FOR SALE One square piano cheap at Routh's music house. Main st. G-7t FOR SALE1 A good gas range. 103 Klnsev st.. Home Phone 310. 5-7t FOR SALE Team of mules; also a big, cheap work horse. Harry Thomp son. Union nike. . 3-7t FOR SALE Small farm, fi acres, close to Richmond, well improved. Ad dress Farm, Palladium office. 3-7i FOR SALE Stock, horses, grain, corn in field, farming implements etc., Tuesday, Sept. 10th at 1 p. m., at A. M. Roberts', 24 miles west of Centervllle, near Jackson park. 3-7t FOR SALE Good 8 room house, large barn, No. 108 North 20th street, See E. F. Hiatt at Dickinson Trust Co. . 25-tf FOR SALE Cheap, buggies, phaetons, surrles, spring wagons; , call at 317 North A street. William Shendler 25-tf FOR SALE Good residence property In good condition; well Improved; nice location, near street car line; for sale to close up estate. W. C, Converse, zooms 20-21 Colonial Bldg.. phones 81 and 1.554. 20-tf FOR SALE OR RENT Good farms. city properties, also best accident and health insurance. W. M. Pen ny, room 16 I. O. O. F. Bldg., phone 1589. 27-tf Everybody buys property from Woodhurst, 918 Main SL Telephone 491. June5 tf FOR SALE Improved farms of all kinds, within a radius of 15 miles of Richmond at prices' from $40 to $400 per acre. J.'E. Moore, over 6 North Seventh streeL Richmond, Ind. 8-tf FOR SALE Modern residence, eight rooms, every convenience, hot and cold water, electric lighL hardwood floors. Pbone 736. 20-tf BAKERIES. MEYERS BAKERY, Bread, Pies and cakes, 107 Richmond ave. Phone 1C03 YOUR HANDS kept soft and vel vety and free from cracks and sores during summer work by using PetroPine Cold Cream Ointment. For sale by all druggists. MISCELLANEOUS STOVES Ranges, etc, at the Peter Johnson Co. stove store. 8-3t HAVE YOU Tried our Favorite. Call at Peter Johnson Co.s. 8-3t A FAVORITL With us. "Favorite-; with you. Ranges, Base Burners and hot blast stoves. The Peter Johnson Co. 8-3t REAL ESTATE AL H. HUNT, Real estate, 1 N. Stn streL Phone 877. R. L. MORE, Real Estate, Accident Insurance and colection; 14 X. 9th. REAL ESTATE. . Business property wanted. What have you for sale? Thompson, 710 Main StreeL 6-7t FIFE INSURANCE WANTED For Fire Insurance In good reliable companies call oc the Richmond Insurance Agency, 11 Bouth 7th streeL TeL 4L City and Country Solicitors waited. 6-tf IREDELL & FERGUSON, Insurance, Phone 626. No. 4 North 9th street, Richmond, Ind. 0-lm
FOR RENT.
FOR RENT Three on.TenienV rooms for light nousekeping at 2$ South 10th Street. " - 9-2t FOR RENT Four room flat. Call at 214 South 8th St. 0-3t FOR RENT Furnished room; address H. S., care Palladium. 9-14t FOR RENT Furnished rooms with bath; 22 S. 10th st. 9-3t FOR RENT Fumlsned rooms for gentlemen. 4S Ft. Wayne avenue. S-7t FOR RENT Furnished room, one for two gentlemen; 221 N. 12th street. FOR RENT Two Rmall houses; Inquire ISIS N. F street. 5-7t FOR RENT Furnished front room, bath; 30 X. 12th. 5-7t FOR RENT Furnished room at 44Ti South Tenth StreeL 3-14t FOR RENT Wilke s residence, 34 X. 0th St. 31-tf FORltENT Furnished rooms; 3 2 (TV. 10th street. 4-tf FOR RENT Furnished rooms for gentlemen only, at the Grand. 14 tf FOR RENT Modern flat at 1019 Main sreet 22 tf PERSONAL PERSONAL Kitchen utensils at Peter Johnson Co. S-3t PERSONAL Don'Fforget those Brown and Black stiff hats at Hall's, $l.oo. s-r.t PERSONAL Our $.i. trousers aro just the thing for Fall and winter wear. 8-3t PERSONAL Have place.liu your home Immediately Johnson's Under feed furnace. Saves labor, saves fuel. The Peter Johnson Co. 8'it PERSONAL Cheapest and best school of short-hand. Mrs. W. S. HIser, 33 S. 13th St. Phone 577. Re-opened Sept. 16l'n. 7tf LOST. LOST White fox-terrier pup; return to Jce Geler, 915 S. C; reward. 9-lt LOST Plain gold open fa7eatchTon fleur de lis pin, between 24 N. 10th St. and 715 Main street. Finder return to Palladium office and receive reward. 8-2t LoSTAbout $." in blllsnnenvelope; between A and Main on 11th St. Return to Palladium Office or L. D. Parks, Boston, R. R., No. S, and recelve reward. R-2t FOUND. FOUND Stray cow at the farm of J. M. Smith, known as the corner farm mile north National Plk, east of fair ground; owner can g?t same by paying ex-tonnes for keeping, and advertisement. 9-2t FWNDThe besthaf inthe worfOor $l.o. Ask the adv. man. 8-3t FOUND The best place to buy Grarel Rubber, Asphalt, Two and Three ply Roofing building and carpet paper, Slaters felt, Rcof Paint, Roof cement. Pitch and Tar. Whlsler th roof man, 1026 Main SL Phone 773. Thur. Sun Mon, 3 mo. DENTI3TS. Dr. Hamilton, 12 N. 10th SL Phono 675. MONUMENTS AND MARKERS. Richmond Monument Co., C. E. Bradbury, Mgr., 33 North 8th StreeL GET YOUR FIRE INSURANCE, BONDS AND LOANS OF MOORE & 0GB0RN, Room 16, I. O. O. F. Bldg., Richmond. Ind. Telephones Home 15S9. Bell 53R For a Little Cash. And easy payments per mo. Can sell a 2 room house for $500; a C room house fcr $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. CITY ADVERTISEMENT. DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS Office of the Board. Richmond, Ind., September 4, 1907. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Notice is hereby given by the Board of rubllc Works of the City of Richmond, Indiana, that on the 4th day of SepL, 1907, they approved an assessment roll showing the prima facie assessments for the following described public improvement, as au thorized by the Improvement Resolu tion named: Improvement Resolution No. 105-1907, Providing for the construction of cement sidewalks and cement curbs and gutters as follows: Cement walks . from Main to South "E" street on both sides of South 9th street, and cement curbs and gutters on both sides thereof from South B street to South "E" streeL Persons interested In or affected by said described public Improvement are hereby notified that the Board of Public Works of said city has fixed Friday, September 13tb, 1907, as a date upon which remonstrances will be received, or heard, against the amount assessed again Bt each piece of property .described In said roll, and will determine the question as to' 'Whether such lots or tracts of land have been or win te oeneiiiea in me amounts named on said roll, or in a greater or less sum than that named on said roll. Said assessment roll showing said prima facie assessments, with the names of. owners and descriptions o property subject to be assessed, 's on file and may be seen at the office of the Board of Public Works of eail city. CLIFTON W. MERRILL. WATSON P. O'XEAL. B. B. JOHXSOX, Board of Public Works. sept3-6t PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY,
