Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 356, 6 February 1908 — Page 7

THE IUCII3IOM) PALL.AIHL 3I AM) SI X-TELEGIIA3I. Till IISDAV. FEKIirATtV !. 1!K)S.

PACE SEVEN

A GEJI OF A" LIBRARY

TS WONDERFUL SCHEME IN COLOR TONE AND CLASSICS. Tb iJelifthtful lUruiour of the- Sarrniiiidinti H'a Only Kxrelleil by th Ingrnaity of th- Tel" olMlilr llciillon of Knnlox. A St. Louis professor who makes a apeciulty of the la-?.- language and is fifuii'-ulrirly f o n I of the Latui literature was t rH tl not hn since ti n snrp;i-:e Le is uot likely soon to forAn nlil f i-iii J v,h- for many year'- j resided in a distant slate not Ions a so , 1 iovfil to this city and sent to the pro j f'-ssor notice of his arrival. The twain ' Met downtown hy appoint men', ami ; the new arrival invited the professor j to tall at Ids home "as soon a.J we gf-t , things Vised up."' After a decent interval allowed for tin: fixing tip tin: professor vil!l. and as the gentleman ; of the. house was momentarily engarC1 the man of much Latin was usher- . ed int) his friend's library, where he Sat fleliifhlt-il with the elegant appear- i .".nee i f liiu super!) enrved oak Iook- ! c:imK ami the lon;i rows of gilt ami; Russia. His rhair was close to one s of the ense.j, ami, Klaiu-iiiir round, he noted v itli kefn satisfaction tlje names i of (ireek authors wh had heen his I lifeloit: lihrary companions, lie afso ; noted th.'t oaeh half of each ease to ( the middle of the door contained exact j ly twelve volumes and that each author's works constituted a set of the name number. Homer, twehe vol-j umes; hophocles, twelve; .so also with 1 Aeschylus, Furipldes, Herodotus, Tim i oydldes nnd even Theocritus, each had lt.i appointed nuinher. "This is peculiar," said the professor j to himself, for he knew that some of those authors wrote little and others ' much, "Extensive commentaries per- ' Imps." Mas his reflexion, and. rising, he Ftcppod to the next ease, and on the top shelf here was Ennius In twelve volumes, heading a long line of most j respectable Roman historians and poets. "What's this?" The professor j pave a start, for, although he knew perfectly well that Knnius was the first in tim- of the Latin poets, he knew itlso that there were only about a couple of dozen lines of him left and j that those had been preserved as quo- , tat ion in the works of lat er writers. ; Ennius in twelve volumes! I never ' beard of such a thing. What in tho world can It beV" lie clam ed Involuntarily at the lock. rut there as no key. And while his i Marvel greater grew the door opened ! r.'id In came his friend. J TIaif an hour later, after old times had been discussed and former friends recalled, the professor, who grew more ' ii:id more curious to find out how any i commentator could expand twenty or, t iiirty line; of an old time poet into ' t elve large volumes, brought tip the puh.hvt. ' ' Ty the way, I notice you have an lnnlus here in twelve volumes. Xow, remembering that only twenty or thlriy linos of bin poenu are known to ex- ; 1st. I have a great curiosity to know , what this cuji bo. Is It a commentary, history or, it net, whnt is it'.'" His ffien 1 smiled. "Oh, that':- a lit t'e ide.. o" my wife. You see. she has ii tavt;- for Latin and Oreek stuff like IlK't, an i w lit .1 we wen to buy books for our library- she determined to have a (5 reek case and a Latin case, but xvhen we looked at tho Greek and Latin books fh- found they were of all sizes, pome too big to go in the shelves and poio.e so little that they looked like babies alongside the others, so she would uot take 'om j 'T.nt having her heart set on tilling up tho Greek and Latin cases, she kept vorrying about them until finally she hit on a great idea. The ladies always tlo, you know, if you give 'em time enough. ! "She took her Idea to the binder and told him tho exact length of the shelves and their height. The binder prinned a little to himself as she explained, but he was not the man to lose a job, so he took a lot of thick pino boards, trimmed one side so that it bulged regularly like the backs of Imoks. and she went to a library souie--vhere and got a list of names for him 1 put on the backs, and he came nnd tacked in the boards, and so she filled up her Greek and Lutiu cases In fcets of twelve volumes each, twenty-four volumes on every board, and was perfectly satisfied. I don't know what fh did with the keys. Ah, here she. is now! Allow me to introduce my friend. Professor Blank. I was just telling him, my dear, of your little idea of the l! reek and Latin cases." "Oh. I hope, professor, you admire the sets!" said he lady. "Aren't they lovely": ' "Perfectly lovely, madam'." echoed the professor. "And don't you think it's a good idea';" rejoined the ladv. "You see Iioootiy ever rends tiioe old books unyhow, but the uniform sets look pretty, and the red contrasts well with the carpet." 'lVautifully,'" murmured the profess1 cr, nnd the subject was dropped, but j i-e is Sim w..ndoring how much lower classical learning will sink nfter that' twelve volume edition of Ennius. St, i;aif Immediate Thank. "The first thing Columbus did on Imding in Aiuerict was to knee! and express his gratitude." "Yes." answered Miss Cayenne: "1 suppose la- was thankful to get here under circumstances that did not brim; ldm into on'act with the customs of eers." Wa-hir.gton Star. M:. Car' Muck rector of the 1'c wife of the new ci- i ton Symphony Oraces', tr.. is so for.d of ihe say? she lias no ! merica tint ire u return :o -Berlin. She contemplates taking icveral courses at Radcliffe in. the enr future, and if her husband reluins here may go in for a degree. 1. t'jis concern you. -ea a carefully. i. ;akiwea' Syrup Pepsin Is poiiti.,e:y uarar crJ to core indigestion, constipation, sick headiclw. offensive breath, malaria and ail diseases ii-;ia from stomach trouble.

PALLADIUM -WANT ADS PAY.

TODAY'S

Ml

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson. Brokers, Eaten, Ohio. New York, Feb.

;,.; tliiiil Low Co: Amaigarruiied Copper ; ro', : A'' AmerjcHu C;,r Foundry -vlt 'i American LK-oiin.;ti"j ;;"'i ;i", Amei'ic.Mi Sm-dtiug ! "s n:j 't r..;, Am.-rioun Hugar 1 1 ' lli'L. 11PS Aichison 71 'i 71 'i ?o 71', i:. & o n::, m-'s VJ H. I. T 11'. ! i -IP, Cai'niii;ai I'acil'ic C. O :ii, -:lA c. G. w c-, r;, ph p c. m. it st. r noij niu poi4 in. C. F. it 1 P'- P's P1Dis. Sec :;i "H Kri" t 1". P. Xaiiotial Lead "' :'-s '!7'':, Us .New Yi k Central :; !!;'., ."s lei L. X !'i; fnlVi Xorfoik .t AW.storn i;.". ti.'U M. K. AL- T 22"s .Mi.-snuri I'acific SJ 4'H i 1 :; 4' Northern lio 1:; P'4', l.''7 1'P, J'ennsylvMniH Ill -,: i ll:'-, JIP 112', People's Gas ,st; Si; s.V4 sr'4 ll.-aUiiig . Him; W--H :inpH Republic. .Steel H" 11", Jtock Island II "-; ll'1, 1 l':. 1 V'Southern "ueiHc 7 1 :ti 71;;, 7PS 7 1 Southern It. R P)U lo' Texas I'acific I'nion I'acific HSi 111-; lP- n;i"H I t 1 .. .. , . .. Ji s S 2 4 ' y P. S. Steel pfd 1mPh !tp4 Jin3! hp; Wabash su ,s i Wa hash pfd Great .Northern 1 !'. 119 s mi 113'.

A i.o'iii-an Locomotive P,L dividend.

Chicago. (CHICACO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS Idly Co'-rtll and Thompson. Brokers, Eaton. O.) Chicago, Feb. (I. Wheaf

Own. Ilig't. Low. Close May . . 'M';k 97 4 or,a r7 v; : July !2"4 !:l:!4 W Sepi ;ini; jtt) SOi. 10 V-i ' Corn. May i(i"i f.1rs tio'-i f.l'i , .icdy. . .. . .r.,s"s r.ii-i . r,xT r.Sept 5s-"i. r,;;"',s .'s"i r.!P,i Oats. Open. High. Lew. Close. May r.:iii 51 51! 14 51 .Inly 4r.s HPS 4,"eli 4tia Sept. :j7"i ;!S'":k 37:,4 Pork. Pict.. Hig. Low. Close May 12.12 12.15 12.02 12.07 Lard. Open. Hign. Low. Close. .May 7.02 7.;2 7.."5 7.55 Ribc. Open. High. Low. Close May C.f.5 C.cr, C.tiO 0.57 1 1

U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, Feb. (i Hog receipts, 3X,000: left over. Istl. Cattle. 12.mm, steady. Sheep. 1''.hn, steady. Hog Market Close. Mixed Light Heavy Rough 4 -25C-4 CO 1 L'tv,; I .V 4 "2 .V.i 1 Co 1 L'.V; 1 :: CHICAGO GRAIN RECEIPTS. Today. Last Wk. Last Yr. Wheat Corn . Oats . . Y heat Corn , Oats '.. . . 15 7 lc: ii." Estimates. . . it; .27S ,.lol NORTHWEST RECEIPTS. Today. Last Wk. Last Yr Minnesota . .17."i 1 (i 1 P I'.t Puluth on 7: LIVERPOOL. Ojien. pno. . . 'Vo-i Ps'oP , Close. I's'.!', PC" J-' Wheat. Corn . 1 ., Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. nest heavies $1.4 5 Si' Good to choice Pifa rEEF STEERS. Good to choice steers .... 5.nV 5.5(1 Medium to good steers .... 4.5Wt1 5.15 Choice to fancy yearlings S.75f 4.50 lU'TCUER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heiters . 4.00.0 4.7,0 Choice to fancy cows .. . ;!.5ip 4.2.j Good to choice heifers . o.tKPr- 3.S5 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice l.OOy s.00 Fair to good :;.)( v. 1 t;.:.o STOCK CATTLE. Good to h'vy tleshy feci.; rs 4.25- . . 4.00'o" .. 2.50 o 4.."0 4.2.". o.iil 3. GO Fair to good feeders . . Good to choice stock or:; Common to fair heifers. SHEEP. Choice lambs, liest yearlings Lest sh.ep . . ti.25'? r, . h , , 4.2:.'. 4.7.0 . Richmond Grain Market . (Richmond Rolb Millsi I Wheat (per hu 1 1 Corn, (per but Cats, (per bu.'i Rye, ipcr bu t Bran, (per .on) : Middlings, (per ton ... . . .'..'He ...4 5c .. . 17c . . . 7 tc .S2."!.r.o ..20.tHi Richmond. CATTLE (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hogs, average 200 to i) lbs. 4.20 2. (VP.? 4.00..7 n.75 ! 11.00'., 3.004? l;.5iKr r..r,.t )i 4.P.O 4.00 i . 4 50 i Good heavy packers ; Coran on and rough Steers, corn fed.... 4.00 o.'.ll S.50 7.00 r..(Mi Fat COW: Bulls .. Calves . Lambs . Richmond Seed Market. iRunge V Co.) Cover Seed, (per bu . . . S JO SO j ipcr bu. . . . 2,20

T QUOTATIONS

Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Yv'helan.) Timothy hay (baled) Timothy Hay (loose) Clnvcr hay (haled) .. Clover Hay (loose) Mixed I!a Straw, (per ton.) . . ; . Corn, (per hu.i Oats, (per bu.) .. $12 to 13 . ? 10.00 " 11.00 $12.00 . .$9.00'r' 10.00 lo.oo ;.t 45 15 East Buffalo Livestock. East Huffalo. Feb. tl. Cattle Receipts light; steady. Veal and calves $5.oiK fi.25. Sheep and lambs Ueceipts 7.000. Sheen $n.75fr? COO. Lambs, culls to choice $5.00 7.5-). Hogs Receipts 2,250. Mixed and yorkers $l.75(?f 5.10. Uoavios and roughs $4.40(5' 4.n. Toledo Grain. Toledo, Feb. t. Wheat Cah f6 Corn Cash 57. Oats trash 5;l. Cloverseed Cash $11. 43. Alsike Cash, $2.25. Rye Cash SO. Cincinnati Livestock Cincinnati, Feb. tPHogs Receipts. 2.05S; strong, lynchers. !sl.4'( Cattle Keceijits 4C5, steady, v :, Sti.O'd 7.75. t .'; ep. $2.r.tP' 5.00. Lambs. $5.25f(i 7.75. MBS. FOUTS DEAD She Was One of ,the Best Known Women in the County. LIVED HER LIFE THERE. Hagerstowu, lud., Feb. tl. The death of Mrs. Mary Fouts, east of town, widow of David Fouts, occurred Wednesday morning at 1 o'clock after a long and tulious illness due to stomach trouble. The deceased was born on the farm now owned by Miss Ann McCullough, ji sister, -and lived in Jefferson township during all her lifetime. She was aged N4 years. She was the daughter of Samuel and Nancy McCu!lough. The deceased was well known throughout the entire county, and was a faithful member of the Baptist church at Salem, four milts east of town, since its organization many years ago. She is survived by one brother, Joseph McCullough of Cicero, Ind.. and one sister. Miss Ann McCullough, and nine children, four daughters, Mrs. Rose Ann Stable of Marysville. Mo.; Mrs. Nancy Harris of bartlett, Kans.: Mrs. Hulda Alcorn of Towanta. Kans.. and Mrs. Charles Petty. Five Muis, Harvey Fouts of Oswciro. I Kans.; George, David, Samuel and James Fouts of this vicinity , i Funeral ter vices will be held at ' Salem, Saturday morning at lt o'clock. Elder R. W. Thompson of Greenfield, will have charge. The interment will bo iu the cemetery adjoining. Rat-ier Equivocal. Uncle Morton, an old negro, who bad been a slave in the days before the c ivil war, was a retainer in the hous.-y hold of au Atlanta family. lie wa.something uf a philosopher and a good deal of a diplomat. One day the wait reses, two young mulattos, were chaf ting him. 'Uncle Mo'ton." one of them said, "who do yon like best. Belle or me':" The gray headed negro looked first at one. then at the other, and said, with a tone of indecision: "It am tc.o tedious to say." New York liiiies. The Parental Voice Maud, is that young man gone yet? The Daughter Y-yes. papa; be pays h i. Cleveland Leader.

'THE POSE OF POWER.

A Doctor Says It Can Only Be Obtained by Carrying the Body Right. The human lody is a machine a machine in s.me respects not unlike a watch. If you bend the watch slightly you dPpUee its parts fits organs. If you pleasei, and then the watch will not go :i right. 'Hie same is true of man. In his body every organ has its place. If hi body is bent some or all of his vital m eans are displaced. They cannot perform their vork, and the nan, like the watch, is out of order. -How matiy of us are like that?'' Weil, in an examination covering several thousand people I found less than one in a hundred w ho was right. Ninety-nine people out of a hundred have displaced organs. 1 may add that I have never found disease in any organ that was habitually carried In its normal place. The organ always becomes displaced before it becomes diseased. And what is the cause of this universal displacement'.' In a word, the cause is a bad method of holding the body in standing, in sitting, walking about and lying down. The trunk is merely a flexible, hollow cylinder inside of which the organs are supported. each in its place. When, however, the body is bent and collapsed, ns in most people, the organs drop out of their places Htid are crowded against each other. They are then tillable to do their work, and thus they become diseased. I Every case of chronic indigestion ! which I have ever examined has bad a ; stomach that was hanging from two to j Ave inches lower than its right position ! a condition known to medical men as ! gastroptosis. And the rare man who holds his body aright in standing, walking or sitting, such a man is always a man of power. Cromweli was a man of this type. So were Napoleon, Washington and P.ismarck. "And how shall I restore my organs to proper position'-" asks one of the ninety-nine. P.y so developing the body that it is at all times erect, uplifted and expanded. This will draw each organ into the position in which It can do Its best work. A glance at the pictures of the men I have mentioned will show you what I mean. As to practical methods, take the following exercise for five minutes four or five times a day: Place the feet together, arms at sides, head buck, chest up and forward, abdomen in, knees back, weight on balls of feet "the position of a soldier." Throw the weight as far forward as . you can. Hold the position from half ! to one minute, then relax. Repeat the j exercise from six to twelve times. j Add to this reasonable habits of Hv- j lug, and in three months you will have j gone far toward gainlug the pose of 1 power. Dr. Latson iu Chicago Journal Warding Off a Cold. The first point that must have struck almost every careful observer of catarrhal pneumonia is that in nine cases out of ten a cold is caught as the re-1 pult, not of getting cold, but, on the ; contrary, of getting unduly hot. This . apparent paradox is, of course, intelligible enough when one considers that j It is when the body is heated that the; pores of the skin are opened and are then much more likely to take a chill! than when they are closed by the aclion of the cold. This is also the expla- j natiou of the efficacy of a cold shower bath after ta.king a Turkish or even au j ordinary hot bath, as the sudden action of the cold water closes the pores and so protects the skin from the action of the air. The best possible preventive from catching cold is cold water, applied either in the form of a cold bath or, if that is considered too drastic a measure, it will be found that merely bathing the neck In cold water, both in the early morning and also the last thing at night, does a great deal toward giving one immunity from colds. Modern Society. Rossetti's Way. This striking picture of Rossetti appears iu William Allington's memoirs: "Rossetti walks very7 characterically, with a peculiar lounging gait, often trailing the point of his umbrella on the ground, but still obstinately pushing on and making way, humming the while with closed teeth in the intervals of talk, not a tune or anything like one, but what sounds like a sotto voce note of defiance to the universe. Then suddenly he will fling himself dojvu somewhere and refuse to stir an inch farther. His favorite attitude on his back, one knee raised, hands behind head. He very seldom takes particular notice of anything as he goes and cares nothing about natural history or science iu any form or degree. It is plaiu that the simple, the natural, the naive, are merely insipid in his mouth. He must have strong savors in art. in literature nnd in life. About these and other matters Rossetti is chivalrously bold in announcing and defending his opinion, and he has the valuable quality of knowing what he likes and sticking to It." A Hop!ess Pessimist. At a gathering of men and women each one in turn was called upon to cite the attribute he or she considered of greatest worth in the formation of character, each attribute To tie followed by the name of some one who best embodied it. For in"tance, a man gave sterling integrity end as his example Abraham Lincoln; a woman, tact, with Mine, de Maintenon as illustration; another woman, loyalty, adding the na.tce of George Washington. At last it came the turn of a very plain spoken woman, who in loud, clear tones cried. "Honesty, and I know of no example, either living r dead"' Of Sir Robert Peel's entire lack of of sympathy. O'Connell said: ''His smile was like the silver plate on a coffin." Less scathing but ie0s witty also wes O'Connell's description of a lady- of similar repellaut temperament: "She Lad all the chaiacteristics of a poker except Us occasional warmt h." I I Rub fork, spade, ax and other tool j handles with linseed oi! on hot days. I They last loogpr nd are plcasanter to i tfe Land

. i r Today's i Ads ! i j WANTED.

WANTED Woman in do vah;ng on Momlavs; call 7ti S. HOi !. t'.-: 1

WANTED Hy casKe! ncsscc one all-niuic. whn Knows how to chines; aPo one steady work. A. bin Palladium. 1 aetorc m I i n machine ham', ke.-p up ma-shapi-r hanl ; ss ' A. I!." care t'.-lt WANTEI Tw o or threo furnished rooms for liuht housekeeping; a.l-dre,-s "(7. A." care Palladium. 5-:!t WANTEM To buy late No. typewriter, R.-miimton or Fox, in good conditio;!. Call at People's Store. 5-:;t WANTED home; call do t pewriting at N. 1f.:h. 5 2t WANTEDstreet. -Washings at Main 4-::i WANTED Two rooms for light housekeeping close to Pennsylvania depot. Call New Windsor Hotel. ,".-7t WANTED Old feather beds price paid for old feathers; highest will stay a week in Richmond. Address Simon Cohen, General Delivery; will call. :n-iot WANTED To clotm wall paper. Sat-1 isfaction guaranteed. 21'.) S. R 3 0-11 1 WAITED Men to Learn barber trade; will equip shop for you or furnish positions, few weeks completes, constant practice, careful instructions, tools given. Saturday wages, diplomas granted, write for catalogue. Molor barber College. Cincinnati. O. tf MALE HELP WANTED YOUNO MEN to prepare for examination for RAILWAY A AIL aiul other COV. POSITION'S. Superior instruction by MAIL. Established 14 years. ThousBiids of successful students. Sample questions and "How Gov't. Positions are Secured" sent free. Inter-Stnto Schools, Cedar Kapids. Iowa. l'-30t WANTED if you havo horses you want to buy or sell, visit Taube's barn, !2G X. (Uh streef. Shipping horses at all times 22-tf ! WANTED If you want to buy or sell ; real estate, or loan or borrow nioni ey, see that Morgan. Cor. 8th and N. ! E streets. Both phones. 12-tf FOR RENT. i . 1 AUTOMOBILE FOR SALE $5.0n0 De Luxe Touring Car. fitted with Wind Shield, Top, Speedometer, Extra Tires, Etc., excellent condition, almost new; will sell at a sacrifice if taken before March 1st. as I wish to leave for Europe about that time; make me an offer, any reasonable one will be entertained. H. S. King, box 550, Detroit, Mich. C-lt FOR em, RENT205 NT. -Furnished room, modf'th street. f,.7t FOR RENT Furnished rooms, liirht housekeeping, 417 N. 11th. (5-2 1 FOR RENT House of four rooms, at 7M4 South Cth street. (J-2t FOR RENTand bath; -Furnished HO X. 12th. room, heat 5-7 1 FOR RENT Two front rooms fr light housekeeping; 1102 X. 7th St. ;:i-7t FOR RENT o-room flat centrally Tocated, ground floor, electric light, bath. Benj. F. Harris. 7-tf FOR SALE. FOR SALE Richmond real estate a specialty. Merchandise stocks, fire insurance. Porterfield, Kelly Block Sth & Main. 7tf FOR SALE Coca at ': X. Pith. FOR SALE A good go-cart. Call 111 X. lith street. 5-2t FOR SALE Building material. To any one contemplating building this spring, I have for sale several thousand good clean brick, ready to layin the wall; also joists, studding, flooring, windows and doors. SecJames Heath, South 13th street. 4-7t FOR SALE OR TRADE Farms; will sell or trade for larger farms or cityproperty. 10ij acres, 100 tillable; fair buildings; tile drained, 7 miles from Richmond, 4Ja from Centervine. $7,000, or 14tl acres including the 10G acres. $s,O0Q; 25 acres joining small town, good buildings, 7 room Louso, s miles from Richmond. $2.0.i0. Address P. (). pox 221. Richmond. 4-7t FOR SALE Another lot of pure bred tested seed oats; orckr this year before they are all gon-"-. Phone 2120. O- E. Fulghum. 4-tf FOR SALE 10 acres of saw timber; oak. ash. elm and beech. One and cur-half miles southwest t Boston

W. L. Seuacy. 4-7t

"OR SALE One general rnrpose mare and aroeery delivery iic.m with slip top and storm front. Call Automatic Plume 4 7't ;-"OU SALE lnickboard harm s, la: d-j n-.- a:.-l ariipU-r: "u:h a h n'f ', '-' 7 1 "OR SLE Sr. P.! r-l.ic of t-n a.it. w p'l ;;...: t.u. . b;i; n ;r.d o.'l -i 1 i;P ; i c-. "'rut , c. P ' " I ltuli A ! iiz. Red E ' a: '. !-a:a:'. - . .!!;: ! N 7rh :' 7: iVR S.M.K- 1. '. l'"-i ii or .-near Woo.in ..:.. IVPidn::.; P 7:

K SALE A fat m of 12 ". acros in A? -r.'. n Tcv. nht!' Wr- ne ce,tr.t It.a' -i' or- 1 .lie a! of the town of Abii'.gt.i-.; For further pat-;:.';!a''-vv : 1 1 c rati on ("lurk R. Crone. Ilichnnci. R. U. No. 1. or: .1 -V,:: I ' C: o- , Wt i -. -. Ii.;! . R. I No. -l :;o; ; Full SALE ()n set f Ems. P.oa and i Muff, a' o or.-- r-r'.an L.ur.b neck- j piece, sliiht !y c.s'd, at a st-ntice ; can be s-t at the Palladium office. . t t MISCELLANEOUS. NOTICE The .1 uncle. t22 Main St. A modern, midw int.-r for Rictimo'ad. An Exhii.iiion of Wi'al and Rare AntniaP. li.ptilo. ad kinds of Hints. Talking P.oro-s a:nl all1 Song RirOs. For sale at The Jungle. Open troin IO.00 a. 111. to i e . oil .. in. c ci day. 1 1 POIND Hand satchel on North 2i;h .street ; owner can have same by calling at 2201 N. F street. :.-:;t NOTICE The Antique Furniture Co. will move Feb. Ith. from the corner of 4 1 ll and Main, to ..!'. Main street, room formerly occupied by the Routh Music Store, where they will hae a tim stock of antique and second hand furniture. carpets ami stoves, to their many friends and patrons. l-7t PROF. Kolliag. for a sure cure for (tuns. 20 S. Mb. Phone 1242. 17-.'!Ot N'DTICE Public sale of personal property. Feb. 11th, one mile west of Chester on Inion pike at 10 a. m. Georgo Davis. 1-7t NOTICE The party that ntolo the gold watch from 12 Randolph .street last week, with llayden A. Kern' full name on it had better return it and avoid trouble as he is known. f.-lt DRY CLEANING-Dry Cleaning and Dyeing. Richmond Dry Cleaning Co.. Ki'21 Main. Phone 1072. 15-Hot SCHOOL School of Shorthand and Typewriting. Mrs. "W. S. Hiser, 33 S. mth St. Phone 577. 5tf FARM LANDS. All kind3, anywhere, J. Ed. Moore, oyer 6 X. 7th street. janS-Smo DENTISTS. CH1LVOWET1I & DYKKMAN. Masonic Temple. Automatic phono 2053. 8 tf HERBERT B. IX)PER. Dentist, Rooms Id and 17 Colonial Bldg. Phone li;:i 1. -Jlt-oUt FIRE INSURANCE. Richmond Insurance Agency, Hans X Koll, Mgr., 71fi Main. 11 tf FLOUR AND FEED STORE. Flour, Feed, Garden Seeds, Hay and Straw. J. G. Gilbert. 11 and 13 N. 0th street. Phone 2196. lS-30t FINANCIAL. MONEY LOANED Low rates, easy terms. Thompson's loan and real estate agency. Wide stairs, 710 Main street. Bond's automatic phone No. 2OS. 1-wed-thurs-fri-eat-tf MONUMENTS AND MARKERS. Richmond Monument Co.. C. E. Bradbury, Mgr., S3 North 6th Street UNDERTAKERS. H. R. Downing & Son, 16 N. Sth L 12sept6mo LAUNDRY. We can help maks ycu happy honestly wa can. Richmond Steam Laundry. Reduced Rates To New Orleans Pensacola, Ha., and Mobile. Ala. Via C. C. & L. R. R. On account o! MARDI GRAS Round trip tickej to New Orleans J2M.1-". Round trip ticket to Mobile cr Pensacola $22.2'. Tickets on sak February 2C, 27, 2S. 29, March 1 and 2. Final limit March 10th. C. A. ELAIR. P. & T. A. Home Tel. 2062.

PALLADIUM WANTEDS. PAY

Heavy Discounts I want to turn all heavy weight Su tmgs. Overcoats and Trouser-O-igs into cash and to maVe room for te handsomest line of Spring and Summer Suitings and Trouserings ever shown in the city. Liberal Discounts on a'l heavy Weights. It wiil pay you to buy your heavy Overcoats for next winter, at this big Di$count Sale. Geo. V. Schepman 829 Main St.

FRESH FISH Very tine. Call and get some At Muth's Fish Market 16 SOUTH FIFTH STREET Telephone 1535. Peiieitd to an part of the ein DR. A. B. PRICE DENTIST j 14 and 15 The Colonial.. Phone 631 lady Ai&ittant. NO. 6829. UNITED STATES MARSHAL'S NOTICE. United Stales of America. District of Indiana, ss: Whereas, a libel of information wad filed iu the district court of the United States for the district of Indiana, on the 2th day of January. l!e. by Joseph B. KValing. I'nited States Attorney, on behalf of the United States against one carload of flour, contained in Pennsylvania car NoiKlt'i, n Izod at said district In violation of the Food and Drugs liw, act tf June ::, Pun;, and claiming damages in the sum of $ --, and praying process against Baid property, and that the same may be condemned and pold therefor. Now, therefore. In pursuance of tho monition under the seal of said court, to me directed and delivered. I do hereby give public notice to all ierson claiming saitl goods, or any part thereof, or in any manner Interested therein, that they be and appear before th District Court of the United States, to bo held at the city of Indianapolis, In and for the district of Indiana, on the first Monday of March next, at 1 o'clock of the forenoon or that day. then and there 1o interposn their claims and make their allegations iu that behalf. HENRY C. FKTIT, Marshal. U. S. Attest: NOBLE C. BUTLER, Clerk. DARING PHOTOGRAPHY. Perilous Feats of tho Men Who Manipulate tho Camera. A man who can stand or sit on the flange of a steel beam not o wide as the eole of yonr shoe and 600 feet above a roaring granite paved city street, there coolly to take successful pictures of the top of the city far below him. must be possensed of three qualifications and each of the first water. He must have Judgment, patience and courage, these three, and, one may add without slighting the other two. the greatest of these Is courage. So writes II. G. Hunting In the Technical World Magazine. The eager eye of the camera goes everywhere nowadays, and the man who makes pictnre getting bis business adopts no peaceful, unexciting pursuit If he is under contract to a great newspaper or magazine be tnmr be called upon to secure a picture of anything, from a flashlight in the black depths of a metropolitan aewer to portrait of the falremt white alar In a Turkish harem. He may be asked to "get" a female grizzly nursing ber whelps In her mountain lair to Illustrate some naturalist's work at one end of the year, and before the other end has come he may snap a shorter on the Hp of some aiooking TOtcaoVa crater. When you see a striking or a startling picture of man or beast In some extraordinary place or pose, do you ever stop to think where the photographer was who made the negatlr or how he got there? If you are troubled with sick headache, coofttipation. indigestion, offenatve breath or aay di.seane arising from stomach trouble, jret a 50c or$l bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup pepsia. It is positively guaranteed to care you. Round Trip Sunday Rates Every Sunday Via The C. C. & L. R. R. To Cincinnati, O 1.30 To Cottage Grove, Ind 55 To Boston, Ind. .25 To Webster 18 To Williamsburg .25 To Economy .CO To IjOsantvin 70 To Muncio l.rO To Marion 2.10 To Peru 2.95 Trains Leave going East, 5:15 a. m. Trains Ly. going West 10:55 a. m. Daily. For further Information call C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. A Home Tel. 2062. Richmond.