Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 14, 29 February 1908 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, 1 KliltL AKV 'XK 1!KS.

BIG ROMP WITH RUSHVILLE LADS Richmond High School Showed Strength in Basket Ball Game Last Night.

VISITORS WERE HELPLESS. IN THE FIRST HALF THEY SCORED 6, BUT IN THE LAST PERIOD DID BETTER SOME PRETTY TEAM WORK. The Richmond high school basket ball team defeated the Itushville high school five last night at the Garfield gymnasium in a fast and close game by the score of 33 to 19. The Rushville quintet played a hard game but tvas unable to cope with the stellar team work of the little Quakers, who Jiad the sphere throwers from Watsonville at their mercy during the enlire contest. The local five played the best game it has played this seaRon. The pace set last night would have made the best high school teams In the state husrle to keep up. The scoring iu the first half was etarted by Bankard of the Rushville team who made two foul goals. Then the high school team pulled together and by magnificent team work took the sphere down the floor, Thornburg scoring a field goal which was immediately followed by ono from llarringlon. liankard was the star for the visitors and succeeded in making the only field goal in this half. The team work of the Richmond boys had the visitors guessing, and at the end of the half it was found that Richmond had 16 points to their credit while tho Rushville team had but 6. The second half opened with Thornburg making a field goal from the center of the floor and this was soon followed by Williams for the visitors. During this half the locals demonstrated that they compose one of the fastest teams In the state. They were exceptionally strong in guarding, and succeeded in smothering their opponents at critical moments. In the second half Allison replaced Tallant and played a fast game having Ileiner at his mercy. This half the locals registered 17 points while the visitors made 13. The lineup and summary follows: Rushvllle Bankard Forward Heiner...... Forward . Williams Center Dennis Guard . . Richmond .Thornburg Harrington .. ..Marlatt Tallant Allison Crowe Bparks Guard ... Referee Mausey. Umpire Torrence. Field goals Ileiner 2; Bankard 1: "Williams 2; Dennis, 1; Thornburg 7; Harrington :!; Marlatt 5; Allison 1 Foul goals Harrington 1; Bankard 1. Time of halves 20 minufes. Try a Pathfinder cigar, it's Havana, E cents. E Defeated Beallview Aggregation in City Polo League Contest. AN UNINTERESTING MATCH. Club. Klbbe s . . Crescents . (Ireeks . . . "Empires . . Krones . . Eeallviews Won. Lost, o (By Gaston) rl" 1 1 e. Greeks won easi! from the Jtoallview bunch of city lejiguo pennant chasers at the coliseum last night, bv ft score of t to ". The game was slow iind uninteresting. The south siders didn't have a "look in," while Allison and Bulla played rings around the Heal I view defense. Sharp played a jast game, cagmg iour or tne lanenuers goals. Allison caged a dandy by winning the rush and juggling the pill utralght into the cage in five seconds. The lineup and summary follows: Greeks (' Beall views (". Atlison Hulla . Haas . . . First. Rush . .Second Rush .Center .Sharp . .Rhoe Harris .Weist . .StoIIe . Moore Time. H. Karns Mescke Half Kteinkamp .Goal First Period. Rush. Caged by Sharp Allison Allison Bulla Allison Second Period. Allisou Allison Allison l!ison .... Allison Allison Allison Sharp ..... ..;.it . :"" .7:1". .vi; . s :.V. Ailison Allison . .. Bulla Third Period. Allison Miarp 2:4.". Sharp Sharp Allison Allison r:;5;! Allison Sharp Allison Allison (5:4 -I harp Harris .Vll Allison Allison s Allison RushesAllison. 14; Sharp, T.. Stops Steinkamp. 27; Moore St. (Mv nm "RBrtMrt ftt murxrr t .v.. . Laxative Rromo Quinine CorW CoM In One Dv. Crin in 1 A.vi

GREEKS

WON

AM

What Men Will Wear This Spring Men's Spring suits are iu the gray and brown mixtures largely. Neat plaids and stripes will be worn. Neat effects in dark grays, also blue serges, black Thibit. Venetian cloth and unfinished worsteds are good. Among the new .shades in suitings the Oxford gray, tan and light brown appears to be the choice of many. There are delicate overplaids in novel Scotch mixtures, and decidedly pretty are certain English effects in which a distinctive pattern ' is produced .by two tones of the same color blending into the design. Over COO styles in these new woolens at Emmons Tailoring company. Fine suits $15 and ?18.

MOSIC MEN BEATEN Gaar-Scott Polo Team Shows Music Manufacturers A Few Stunts. MANLY ART PRACTICED. GAAR SCOTT 4 STARR PIANO 2 (By Gaston.) In a fast finish, the boiler makers defeated the manufacturers' of music last night by a score of 4 to 2. In the first period after a few exhibitions of the manly art and some fancy tumbling "Skin" Pierson rolled one in the cage for the first marker and in the second, Reid "eased" another by Kehlenbrink. The third period was a scream. Hobby Crane began to jump on poor little "Hunk" Howman. After Hewitt gave a few -exhibitions of fancy roller skating, he caged a goal. The foundry men seemed encouraged by this and took a big brace. Crane and Newman scoring three more markers. Lineup and summary: Starr Piano Gaar Scott Pierson First Rush Cane Reid Second Rush Newman Mote Center Hewitt Bowman Half Harrison Meyers Goal . . . Kehelenbrink First Period. Rush Caged By Time Crane Pierson 0:27 Crane Second Period Pierson Reid 2:00j Crane Third Period. Crane Crane ". . .3:00 Crane Newman o:50 Crane Crane 5.57 Crane Crane 8:40 Crane Hushes Crane X; Pierson 1. Stops Kehelenbrink IS: Meyers 20. Girls, a clear skin is the first requisite for personal beauty; to secure it good digestion is the secret. Perfect digestion comes from the use of Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Makes rich red blood and clear healthy skin. 35c. Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. Miner Mnl Mo Dlffrrrnpr. A poor hut worthy old couple had a tare stroke of luck. Some relative died nd left them a fortune of 20. The right of the arrival of the lawyer's letter telling them of their good fortune they sat up Lite, discussing the future and what they were to do with the srreat sum they had inherited. When

lCt. j they had done and were rising to go to l.xiOj tne 0i,j man said, with a grand air .tiooiof magnanimity: "Wool. I suppose. .t00 ; .lanpt. this'il mak' !..- dilTerenoe. We'll .4(Kj just speak to the . nrs as before." .200 London Standard .oo Th" Fm-t For the Finnre. "Of couro." ih b.o belor girl, "T

am lonely, but 1 am afraid marriajte WOUld be out of the 1 1 r ; ; i a p;tll into thf fir" "It's more likely." auwered MiM Cayeune. "to ho out of the chafing difh Into tho ras sloe. "- Wahini;ton Star. There will nevr be universal peace. It is an idle dream. People will always get married. MISTAKE CORRECTED Correct the mistake of risking pneumonia by neglecting a cough or cold when Foley's Honey and Tar will not only stop your cough but. expel the cold from your system Foley's Honey and Tar contains no opiates and is the best and safest throat and lung remecy. A. G. Luken & Co. Capt. Jules 15a illy, t ho osteologist of MtGill unhersiiy. who has just died at. the age of scveutj -seven, was born in Frame, and his grundur.cle, Simon Bailly, was one of the committee who signed the order to behead Louis XVI. He started his career as apprentice to a pastry cook. For a time ho resided iu Philadelphia. October -0 las' the I'i'.iUan gold peso soUl a a premium of s. per cent, in tlie paper curremy of the country. This disturbed business.. specially in tho export iir.e. Sir.ee the beginning of July the gold peso has been fluctua ting between t and niium until recent'o. above the mark . - per cent prewhen it reached In the family of Mr. and Mrs. William Milier. of Niles. Mich., are four sets of twins. Each ret was born on a Sunday. on every 2i

EARLHAM lowered CHAMPION'S COLORS

In Sensational Basket Ball Game at Dayton, Locals Nosed Out Victorious. ST. MARY'S RECORD. WERE UNDISPUTED CHAMPIONS OF TWO SEASONS UNTIL THE QUAKERS CAME ALONG AND SHOWED THEM THE GAME. In a fast and exciting game of basketball in the St. Mary's gymnasium at Dayton, the Quaker quintet from Earlham, trimmed the St. Mary's five by a score of 27 to 23 last evening. Tho St. Mary's team had the Ohio State championship well in hand, hav ing won every game they have played j for the last two years, twenty-seven in number. The Quaker five was at no time more than three points ahead of their opponents. Out of a possible fitteen chances at goal, Wilson chalked up nine. The line up and summary follows: Earlham (27) St. Mary's (25) Wilson Forward Welsh Hotchkiss Mahoney Chambers Center Morris Hancock Guards Ball Newsom Costello Earlham Field goals Wilson 2, Hotchkiss 4, Chambers 2, Newsom 1. Foul goals Wilson 9. St. Mary's Field goals Welsh 2; Mahoney 4. Foul goals Welsh 1, Morris 11. Pointa awarded, 1. Referee and umpire Gray and j Thiess. Alternating time keepers ; o t;onnor ana mm. scorers free man and White. THE ODOR OF SAN CITY. A French Writer' Theory of How ft May Be Exuded by Man. Dr. Georges Dumas is the author of an article in the Revue de Paris on "The Odor of Sanctity." The writer accepts as true the numerous reported Instances of saints and mystics of the Catholic church whose bodies after death or during moments of ecstasy emitted peculiarly pleasing odors of various kinds. Then men and women with whom such legends deal, argues Dr. Dumas, were neurasthenes. and it is not impossible that the aroma of sanctity which surrounded them was j the product of strictly physiological ami chemical changes common to all men, but present in highly Intensified form in subjects who, so to speak, burned up the candle of their existence at an unusually rapid rate. lie says In part: "So far. then, we b:ue come across a great variety of perfumes- cinnamon. clove, orange, pmeappie. rose, violet. ,

lily of the valley, yellow amber and j standard Oil Company of New Jersey, benzoin. Now. the natural constitu- i with ils 50 subsidiaries, a trust in viotlon of all of these Is well known, and ation of the Sherman law. officials of chemistry produces them daily for com- the conipany iiave Deen subpoenaed to mercial purposes. We may therefore ! appear in the united States District eubstitute the equivalent chemical ex- !nnrt hprp M.,rri, o

pressions for the ordinary terms we have employed and say that orange, cinnamon, violet and musk owe their perfume to aldehydes and acetones, aromatic liquids derived from the alcohols, just as the artificial essence of pineapple comes from butyric ether. We have, then, to ask whether the human body can produce odorous compounds of tbe kind we have mentioned and under what conditions. As a matter of fact. It does produce a certain number of such compounds In the destruction of organic matter, which is the constant condition of life, in particular acetones and the volatile fatty acids, butyric, formic, acetic, etc. If the process of combustion is normal all these constituents are burned up, completely oxidized, ami give as a residue water, cai'lnic acid and urea. P.nt lt some slack-cuing occur in the inmost nutrition of the tissues and the same constituents will escape through the! j breath, perspiration and the ski' MAGIC MIRRORS. Paculiar Effects In Some of the Polished Bronze Reflectors. Now and then mirrors of a curious kind are seen In Europe. They are called "magic mirrors' and are of Japanese origin, made not of glass silvered, but of cast bronze, polished on the face and bearing on the back raised patterns. Inscriptions, symbolical designs, crests or pictures. When exposed to a bright beam of light from tbe sun or from an electric lamp they reflect in the light from their polished face the image of the pattern on their backs. This is a purely optical property and has of course nothing in common with the fortune telling; magic crystals of the astrologer or the alleged magic I mirror of necromancy, yet it long puzzled the scientific optician and even ! now is Utile known or believed. The rosea rehts of various scientific men hsve established the fact that the phenomenon is due to very miuufe differences of curvature In the polished face, differeni-es so minute that they do not afect the ordinary use of the mirror as a irtokin$ glass nnd that carl e detected only by delicate optical rests. The only rtfuiainirig mystery has been as to how these delicate differences of curvature were produced in exact corrponuetiL to the pattern on the back. The makers themselves are ofteu in iguorauce of the magic property ami do nor kuow which of their mirror po,ses it and which do not. The mirrors are cast in molds and afterward polished by hand, and It ia held by scientific men that the difference of curvature is caused by the metal's yielding unequally under that pressure of the tools used iu scraping and polishing, the thin parts naturally landing mere than the thick. This accounts for the mirrors' hconuDg mayic Caicago News.

IN FRENZY MOTHER TOOK LIVES OF LITTLE TOTS

Baltimore. )., Feb. yjt. A terribletragedy was enacted on a farm three miles west of Basil yesterday when Mrs. Joseph C. Spires, aged 05, killed thre- of her little children, fatally wounded a foi'.nh and then endtd her own life. One of the children was drowned in a well, the other three were shot and their throats cut. The mother first took poison, then cut her throat and shot herself. The woman i is supposed to have been seized with a fit of insanity, but so far as known she had shown no symptoms of mental unbalance. The dead: Mrs. J. C. Spires, aged ". Luella Spires, aged f. Catherine Spires, aged Jesse Spires, aged 1 year. Fatally wounded: Alva Spires, aged -1. Joseph Spires, husband of tTie woma- w way from home during the day attending a farmers' institute at Carroll, and it is not known at what time the tragedy occurred. When he arrived home last evening he was hor-

REASSURANCE SHOULD BE GIVEN BANK DEPOSITORS

Memphis, Tenn., Feb. 2'J Five hundred banqueters heard William J. Bryan speak at a local hotel last night. At the banquet Mr. Bryan was; warmly received and his speech was given marked attention. Tho speaker said prospects for the coming cam paign are very bright from a Democratic standpoint and are growing brighter every day. The issues, in a sense, he said, are moral ones, since all economic questions are, in the last analysis, moral problems. Tho most important step to be taken for the restoration of better business and

EVIDENCE IS SOUGH! AGAINST STANDARD OIL

Big Officials Are Subpoenaed In the Ouster Hearing Copy Says Trust Illegal. Cleveland, Ohio, Feb. 29 In the prove the Government's effort to A copy of the petition in the suit de -

claring the company an illegal combi-jare S. B. Squire, Vice president of the nation was filed here Friday by Unit- j Standard Oil company of Ohio, and ed States District Attorney Sullivan on j Louis Emery, a prominent independorders from Washington. I ent operator. All told, 24 witnesses The object is to secure testimony have been called.

BACK PA! GIVEN MUNCIE EMPLOYES C, C. & L. Settles Back Accounts With Men. ! Muncle ind.. Feb. 29 Employes of 4, rinnati T.nnUviiie Railway Company have been made j happy by receiving their December I pay envelopes. January pay is still j due and February money will be due j Sunday. Employes have received assurance that they will get all money due them in time. .Most or me employes have remained loyal and are still at work. Keeping Open House. Everybody is welcome wnen we feel good; and we feel that way only when our digestive organs are working properly. Dr. King's New Life Pills regulate the action of stomach, liver and bowels so perfectly one can't help feeling good when be uses these pills. 25c at A. G. Luken & Co., drug store. Still Mar RemarkableIt is remarkable that birds are so ini telligent. when they're so small, isn't it.-' asked oti uictnoer or tne t,asy ! Information club of her choicest friend talk on "Our Home Birds." i if?, isn r itr aseiiTea me ineiiu , eagerly. ''Why. .iuxt think even how ! , r . , i V ' r . 1 !J - 411.1,17 ' - i.J V v k w I clocks are, and of course they are on'.j little wooden birds'. ny one say that a good cigar'.' ,. , . ,. D-..1 you eer hear ; the Pa: blinder is not OLD PADDOCK AFFORDS SKATING. The paddock at the old Driving park, east of the city, has been flooded and the skating there ia said to be excellent. Yesterday tho pond was black with small boys busily engaged in playing hockey and other ice sports. Ice skating in Richmond this wintor has been extremely scarce.

rifieci to find tile baby Jese dead in its cradk: on the lower floor with it throat rut and a bullet hob" in its j head, tioing upstairs be found the! body of his wife lying in a pool of blood dead, and his daughter Luol'a lying on the bed dead and the by unconscious. The throats of both the boy and girl had been cut and bullet wounds were in their bodies. Mrs. Spires' body pre-

seined a terrible sight. Her lips and face were burned with carbolic aci.l, there was a gaping wound in her throat slashed by a razor and a bul-' let wound in her head. Mr. Spires at once alarmed his neighbors and search was made for the girl Catherine. Her I body was later found in a well. A J shawl had been firmly tied about the j child's head before she was thrown in-' to the we!!. It is supposed the boy was also first thrown into the well, as his clothing was wet. He probably crawled out of the water by means of a ladder, which stood in the well, and returned to the house only to meet, his death there. Mr. Spires is prostrated with grief.; financial conditions, he said, is the building up again of confidence in the banks of the country. Mr. Bryan continned: "I think the most important step to lie taken is to reassure the depositors in the banks for until confidence is restored in these banks, more or less money ought to be kept in circulation." After closing his speech, Mr. Bryan immediately boarded a train for .lackson, Miss., where tomorrow afternoon he will address the Mississippi Legislature in joint session. for a similar suit previously begun in St. Louis. Evidence, oeiieved to be in the possession of Standard men in Cleveland, Buffalo and Pittsburg, is necessary in the government's effort to lay bare the operations of the giant corporation. In order to get the evidence right on the ground of the Standard's early development the ouster stitt was rcfiled in Cleveland. It is expected that the Cleveland hearing will conclude the exami ation of witnesses before Special Examiner Franklin Ferris. Among those whom ! the government proposes to examine JUST A FEW "LASSES Indications Point to a big Output of the Maple Product This Spring. i wn nl TFR ATPfl PRfinilPT MU UU L I Lnrt I CU rnUUUb I "Say," said the grocer, "ther's going to be something doing in about a month, when the tree molasses begins to come in. We are busy now selling tne maple accessories to the farmers. What do I mean by accessories"; Why. j pans and buckets and such. No. I don't kuow anything about brown sugar. If they buy it. it's thir business. "What I mean is that undfr this new pure food law every jug of maple syrup the farmers bring iu will have to be labeled according to its contents. So much maple, so many corncobs, so much hickory bark, and a jigger of brown sugar, or. if it's the pure stuff, they will have a right to say so. "We have the finest maple syrup in the world right here in Wayne county, and there is more of the unadulterated product than you would think for. I believe a good many of cir farmers can write "Pure Maple Syrup" on their juge. and toll the truth about it. Still. some of these labels will be intercuting. A NIGHT ALARM Worse tuati an alarm of fire at night. j is tb metallic cough of croup bringjRg drea1 to tv,r household. Careful; jmoth-rs keep Fo'ey's Hoiuy and Tar; J in the house and civ It at the first; i siga of danger. Foley's Honey and ! iTar has saved many liuie lives and it j is the only safe preparation for childj ren as it contains no r armful drugs. A. G. Luken & Co. Greatest Sale of Men's Boots, Shoes and Rubbers ever known in Richmond at Richmond Shoe Co?s Close Out Sale. Sale starts Monday j morning and continues one;

iwcek for Men only. ,

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Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Railroad Co. Eastbound Chicago Cincinnati

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f . Dally i Dally Sunday Sunday j j Lv Chicago j ."Hani j :hpm J.35am 1 Ar Peru f 12.40pm j 1 JJam ! 12.40pm Lv Peru j l.Opm ' '.' '".'.am i 6.00am ! 4.40t: j Lv Marion 1 44pm 2 r.ium i T.tCam ;..:?Tp:n j Lv Muncie ! 2.41pm j 3 .'.Tarn j S.lOam ; 6.40p.u Lv Richmond 4 0"pni J ri.K.am I .;iiam s or.ptu j Lv Cottage Grove 4 45pm i i).5S.im ( 45pii Ar Cincinnati Ooptu 7.30am ( 102."pm

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2 4 6 j 32 STATIONS Except Dally Dally Sundav Sunday IiV Cincinnati S.40am I 9.0pm i S 40am Lv Cottage Grove lO.l'.atn JO. 40pm : 10.ir.am liv Richmond lO.C.r.am 11.15pm G.r.Opm I 10.;&am Lv Muncie 12.17pm l.Mr.aru M0pm j 12.17pm Lv Marion 1.19pm 1 44am i 9.00pm j 1.19pm Ar Peru ' 2.15pm 2.::5am ' lOOOpiu i 2. 15pm Lv Peru 2.25pm 2 45am j j 4.60pm Ar Chicago (12th St. Station) t.4opm 7.00am J I !t.20pm

Through Vestibuled Trains between Chicago and Cincinnati nr our own rails. Double daily t-crvicc. Throuch Sleepers on trains N'os. :! and 4 between Chicago and Cincinnati. IxKral sleeper between Muncie. Manon. Peru and Chicago, handled in trains No. 5 and between Muncie and Peru, thence trains N'os. 15 anil 4. between Peru and Chicuro. For train connections and other information call

C. A. BLAIR, Home Telephone 2062. LETTER LIST. Women Sally Rush. Mrs. Mary Eagle, Ever Henson, Ella Luwson. Mrs. V. A. Moore. Men Frank Anderson. Janus lilee. I). E. Rocker. H. F. Rattin. S. E. Royd. C. E. Rullock. C. L. Rrown. W. C. Clifford, 15. F. Clark, W. O. Phillips. Mr. .Ind Mrs. P. R. Davis, Earl Fanner. M. II. Freetzer, It. O. Fraze, Arthur Curlier. Harry E. Hakes. Will Hains. Chas. Kratzer. A. C. Myers. Now Viena Medicine Co. Drops John Rehnen. Chas. Rassett, Dave Rradshaw. Wm. Rurden. John Rurnes, John Rrown. Homer Rrooks. Joe Cook. Charley Dullip, Frank Eaton. Ed Engelbert. Angelo Gianni, Henson Hunter. W. S. Higer. Wm. Howren. Mr. Johnson. Chas. King. E. A. Knotts, Max Iiuh, Fred Iane, Henry Myers. Chas. Rick man. F. Spinning, Frank. Schooley. Amos Trival. Theo. Well. W. Wet tig. Package Mrs. Edd Page. J. A. SPEKENHIER. P. M. Commercial Printing . . Advertising is the tribute business competition pays to success. A most potent factor in the treatment of an ad. is the manner in which it is handled by the printer. Our staff of capable craftsmen enables us to furnish to tho professional man, the wholesale or retail merchant, the large or small business any business commercial printing that is attractive, convincing, and effective tho kind lhat can be relied on to be successful in net results. Quaker City Printing Co. Over 17-19 N. 8th SI. Phone 1121 SPECIALS BULK OLIVES (30c quart). HAMS (Pig Size. 12'2c) BACKMEYER KRAUT. Phones 292 & 2292. HADLEY BROS. Moore & Ogborn Fire Insurant:- Agents. Will go on your Bond. Will Insure you against Burglary, Theft ani Larceny. Room 1C. I. O. O. F. BIdg., Phones. Home 1DS3. Bell 53-R. I DR. W.J. SMITH I K ! g nFMTIQT X mm mm a HOME PHONE 1232. 3 E 103 Main Street GroanJ floar i THE NEW PHILLIPS O. G. MURRAY. Lessee. Daily at 3:00 and 8:15 A. OVERTURE Miss Eva Ifazti lue B. THE GREAT AND'ONLY FAY Spiritualist nd Cabinet Wo: k. C ILLUSTRATED SONG "We Parted as the Sun Went Down." D. BROOKS AND VEDDER la a German Comedy Sketch entitled "The New Housemaid." E. WOOLEY AND PIERS Triple Horizontal Bar srtists, nho ac-

Special Matinee, each Saturday; children. S tenia; souvenirs at Wednrtv day' marine. General a dm if ion, 10e. Tteaerved scats at nighf, r.r ejtra. Amateurs Friday night. Those iihic; to acicar. amulr at hux oSXUla.

Home Tel. 2062 31 P. &. T. A. Richmond. lad. Reduced Rates To New Orleans Pensacola, Ha., and Mobile, Ala. Via C. C. & L. R. R. On account of MARDI GRAS Round trip ticket to New Orleans Round trip ticket to Mobile or Penaacola $22.20. Tickets on sale. February 26, 27. 2S, 2?, March 1 and 2. Final limit March 10th. C. A. BLAIR. P. & T. A. Home Tel. 20C2. DR. A. B. PRICE DENTIST 14 and 15 The Colonial. Phone 2281. Lady Aasiatant. INSURANCE, REAL ESTATE: LOAMS, RENTS W. H. Bradbury & Son Room 1 and 3. Wostoott Blk X Kiblinger Motor Buggy. $375 And Upwards DOUBLE CYLINDER, Air cooled 910 II. P. Tho Automobile for winter. No water v freeze. No punctured tires. Simplo. tafe and reliable. Built for country roads. W. H. KIBLINGER CO., Box No. 320. Auburn Ind. Round Trip Sunday Rates Every Sunday Via The C. C. & L. R. R. To Cincinnati, O To Cottage Grove. Ind. To Boston, Iud To Webster To Williamsburg .... To Economy To Ivosantville To Muncie. J1.30 &3 r - . x 18 Co 50 70 1 20 To Marion 2.10 To Peru 2 33 TrainB Leave going East, 5:15 a. in. Trains Lv. going West 10:53 a. in. Daily. For farther information call C. A. 8LAIR, P. &. T. A, Home Tel. 2062. Richmond. VAUDEVILLE-THEATRE WEEK OF MARCH 2Satjrtfay Night, 7:30 to 1C: 15. complish difficult flyovers, doubles ar.d siusies, who present the entire i'-ptrtoir- of circus fvats in their vaudeville r.ov. lty. F. GLADYS KING Vocalist. G. THE FIVE LU BINS Southern Playlet, entitled "I'nclo H-n'-Birthday." H. THE CAMERAGRAPH Latest Motion Pictures.