Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 34, 20 March 1908 — Page 7
PACE SEVEN. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Wanted, For Sale, For Rent, Lost, Found, Miscellaneous, Lodge Notice, Cards of Thaqks, Obituaries, etc., 1 CENT A WORD. Situations Wanted, are Free. The Market Plzce o! Richmond for buyer or seller. A tr:a! wil! convince you that Palladium Classified Ads ere result bringers. SERTICNS FOR THE PRICE OF 5.
THE RICHMOND P ALL AD I U 31 AND SUN-TELEGKA3I, FIJI I) AY", 31 ARC II 20, 1908.
'
WANTED.
WANTED Work by woman with child. Address "X Y" are Palladium. 2;;t WANTED To give you chance to cut out your rent. Can sell you nice '. home, small payment down, balance monthly. Call phone l'ix.5. 'JTt WANTED-Boarders at ?K N. Otb and C. $.'1.75 a week. 2o-7t WANT EljVciitnmakFr" Krciraeieri the tailor. 20-2 1 WANTED Washings and ironings to do; call at 124 South. Second street. 20-3t WANTED Job carpenter work. lo So. 18th. l!)-7t WANTED A situation by an experienced farm hand, married; would like a tenant house. Address "W. II." care Palladium. 18-3t WASTE D W i 1 d i f? & J ac k s o n7p act ical plumbing and heating. -7 N. 11th. 17-7t W A NT EDI f "ymi are-1 hinkiiTpfof Fo1 lng to housekeeping, come and see us. We can save you money. 1230 Hidge street. 18-7t WA NT E TdTo "sen r lth es priiig-ii u m -ber of our College Beacon to all interested parties. It is free. Spring term opens soon. Richmond BusineBS College. 17-7t WANtEDSitimtkm by a good girl in email family. References given
TODAY'S MARKFT 0U0TATI0MS
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohio.) New York, March 20. Open High Low Amalgamated Copper 56 57 W American Smelting 68 Va CJ)1'S fiS American Sugar 120 121 1-0 Atchison - 734 73a 73 & B. & O SOVa 818 S0?i PUT 47i 47V 46 C. M. & St. P. .j U5'2 llOU H4?4 New York Central ai 96 Northeru Pac 125 126 123 Pennsylvania UH4 117 11614 People's Gas Si!Vi Reading 103U 104 100 Southern Pacific "U 71 72 Union Pacific 123 12.1 122 14 U. S. Steel :!:! ;''3 32 U. S. Steel pfd 97 96
Chicaao. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS (By Con-til 8ud Thompson. Brokers, Eaton. OA Chicago, March 20. Wheat. Open. High. Low. Close. May 96 96 95 95 July tuni, 00 s; SMH-s Sept S7.a 8' 8t 87 Corn. Open. High. Low. Close. 7 674 July 4' 04 t-s Sept (Vis o;i- u2 o;i Oats. Open. High. Low. Close. May r4's .v. r4 .14. July ...... 4! 4S-i 48J, a sept :?ri.j :u ;:s osr-i Pork. Open. High. Low. Close. May .. .$12.5i $12.oO $12.35 $12.42 July .. . 12.90 12.00 12.75 12.S2 Lard. Open. High. Low. Close. May . . . ?7.f5 $7.!r. $7.02 $7.02 July .. . S.20 S.20 is.12 S.12 Ribs. Open. High. Ixw. Close. May . . . $.87 $fi.S7 $t?.SO $t.82 July .. . 7.17 7.17 7.10 7.12 U. S. YARDS. CHICAGO. Chicago, March 20. Hog receipts. 23.000, 5 cents higher; left over 5061; Cattle 2,000. Sheep -6,000. Hogs Close. Light 4.60 4.95 Mixed 4.70 5.05 Heavy 4.70(a) 5.05 Rough 4.705) 4.S0 CHICAGO GRAIN RECEIPTS. Today. Last Wk. Last Yr. Wheat 16 21 19 Corn 125 Oats .... 15S Estimates. Wheat, 31. Corn, 220. Oats, 231. NORTHWEST RECEIPTS. Today. Last Wk. Last Yr. Minn 26.1 290 310 Duluth 29 31 91 LIVERPOOL. Wheat Open higher; 1:30. -U tower; close - lower. Corn Open 14 higher; 1:30, unchanged; close lower. Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies $4 DO i J5.10 Good to choice .. $4.S5'7 $4.95 BEEF STEERS. Good to choice steers 5.505.85 Medium to good steers .. 5.50(5.60 Choice to fancy yearling?. 00 G 5.50 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fine? heifers.. 4.50.? 5.50' Cholc to fancy cons .... 4.005T.".0t Good to choice heifers ... 4 ini'n 4.";r VEAL CALVES. Good to choi'- 4.0il 7.00 j
and preferred. Answer 'L. B.," care Palladium. 18-ot WAN TEDGeneral f u rni t u re re pairing and upholstering, 12 4 South 6th. Phor.e 41'0i. 17-Tt WANTED Horsed 6r coltt"o feed and pasture for light work on farm. Phone 427. I t-tf
WANTED To clean and repair your wheels. Elmer Smith, 423 Main. i:;-tf WANTED 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. Moler Barber College. Cincinnati. O. tf WANTED Your carpets, nigs, upholstery, mattresses, etc.. to clean by our vacuum process. Richmond House Cleaning Co. Phone, Home 1916. Bell 395R. 22-tf FOR RENT. FOR RENT Three business rooms opposite Pogue and Miller on Fort Wayne avenue, suitable for any kind of business; also four apartments on second floor of same building and one front office room. These rooms will be ready for occupancy by April 1st. W. H. Alford. 20-3t FOR RENT Sixdioom house, both Close 57 y9 69 1211s re 78 SI 116 9S 126 116 SI 104 73 124 Fair to good 3.00(56.25 STOCK CATTLE. Good to h'vy fleshy feeders 4.75(2 5.00 Fair to god feeders 4.35 4.75 Good to choice stockers Z.oO(j) 4.50 Common to fair heifers . . 3.30y) 4.75 SHEEP. Choice lambs 6.75) 7.05 Best yearlings 5.00 6.50 Best sheep 4.50&) 5.00 Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills Wheat (per bu.) 95c Corn, (per bu.) i.Oc Oats, (per bu.) 47c Ryo, (per bu.) 70c Bran, (per ton) $24.00 Middlings, (per ton) $20.00 Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy hay (baled) .... $12 to 13 Timothy Hay (loose) . . .$10.0011.00 Clover hay (baled) $12.00 Clover Hay (loose) $9.00(510.00 Mixed Hay 10.00 Straw, (per ton,) G.OO Corn (per bu.) 55 Oats (per bu.) 47 to 50c Fodder (per ton) $7.00 Richmond. CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir. Best hogs, average 200 to 250 lbs 4.65 Good heavy packers . . . . 4.50 Common and rough . . . . 4.00 Steers, corn fed 4.50 Heifers 3.75$? Fat cows 3.00 :o! Bulls 3.255?' Calves 6.50Q Lambs C.OOit ) 4.75 4.60 4.25 5.00 4.25 3.75 3.50 7.00 6.50 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens, dressed, per lb . Old chickens, per lb 12 3 to Turkeys, per lb Ducks, per lb COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, rer lb Country butter, per lb 20 to Eggs, per doz 1"jC 15c ISc 15c Jlc. 2oc i Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg. March 20. Cattle, receipts light. Primo and extra $".75J? 6.10. Common to fair $4. 753 5.35. Veal $3.00 :a' 7.75. Hogs Receipts 6 loads. Prime and yorkers, $5.10 S 5.45. Good to prime, $4.254.40. Sheep and lambs Receipts light; Cincinnati Livestock. Cincinnati, March 20 Hogs Receipts 2.5S2, stron;
kinds water and gas. oix Main. See Long Brothers, Meat Market. Both phones. lCKit FORTRENT F'uTnTshed room, heat and bath. .".O North lth. JO-7t FORRENT House and three acres of ground on Asylum Avenue; inquire S2i N. 7th. I9-2t
FOR RENT Houses, Benj. F. Harris. $10, $14, $15. 12tf FOR RENT Furnished rooms; alto office rooms, with steam heat and j bath, at The Grand, for gents only. 3-4-tf FOR RENT House, five "rooms, bath and furnace. COS N. W. 3rd St. Dr. Walls, 21 South 10th St. 2-tf FOR SALE. FCR SALE Richmond real estate specialty. Merchandise stocks, fire insurance. Porterf.eld, Kelly Block. Sth ft Main. 7tf FOR SATE Roof and bTTdgepaint , guaranteed five years. Retail at wholesale price. Clendenin & Co., 257 Ft. Wayne ave. Both phones. mar lG-mon&fri-2mos FOR SALE Bicycle, chainless, Featherstone make. Good as new; will sell cheap. Address Geo. Pfarr, oOO N. Sth street. 2-2t i PUBLIC SALE W. B. Ellwood, of j near Centerville, will sell at public I auction, on Wednesday, March 'Joth. Cattle Receipts 718, higher. Butcher steers, $5.005.65. Veal. $5.00 6.D0. Sheep, steady. Lambs, steady. Richmond Seed Market. (Runge & Co.) Clover Seed (per bu) $11.00 Timothy (per bu.) $2.25 East Buffalo Livestoc 1. East Buffalo, March 20. Cattle Receipts 50; steady. Hogs Receipts 2000. Heavies and rough $4.15 4.80. Veal and calves $5.50 S.25. Sheep and lambs Receipts 2,000. Lambs $3.75 6.25. Toledo Grain. Toledo, March 20. Wheat Cash 97. Corn Cash 66. Cloverseed Cash $12.S0. Alsike Cash $12.25. Rye Cash 92. Cxpidsivc Force of Water. Water, looked upon as the tamest of liquids, is an 'great an explosive as dynamite under certain conditions. In one day water breaks up more earth and rock than all the gunpowder, gun cotton and dynamite in the world "do in a year. These explosives can be controlled by human agency, but water does not hold itself accountable to man. It runs into the ground, freezes, expands and splits the soil into little , pieces. Finding a crack In a huge rock. it repeats the same process, forcing it j asunder. If frozen In the pores of a tree it often explodes with a report like a gunshot and the force of a dyna-1 inite bomb. Popular Mechanics. j Funny Thing About Jersey. The policeman who usually guards the Broadway and Dey street corner, but who Is now off on sick leave as a result of trying to stop a runaway horse, was In a reminiscent mood. "All sorts of people pass the corner," he said. "One day I missed a German porter who -.vas in the habit of stopping to speak to me every day. A few days later he reappeared, and I asked him where he had been. " 'Over in Jersey,' he replied. " 'What part of Jersey?' I asked. " 'I don't know.' replied the German. 'Funny thing 'bout them towns over in Jersey They all have different names.' "New York Globe. Disqualified. "I should like to be excused, your lordship." said a man who had been summoned on a jury. "What for?" "I owe a man 5, and I want to hunt him up and pay it." "Do you mean to tell this court you would hunt up a man to pay a bill instead of waiting for him to hunt you up?" "Yes, your lordship." "You are excused. I don't want any man on the jury who will lie like that." London Chronicle. Something the Same. "Politics must be a very trying pro fession." "I don't know,"' answered Senator , Sorghum, 'that it Is so different in politics from what it Is la private life. Your friends all speak well of you and your enemies knock." Wash-! lngton Star. j Her Portrait. j Miss Elderly I painted this portrait of myself some weeks ago and Cad-j lings (looking at the picture of a young j girl i What a good memory you have! I Transatlantic Tales. j A Slip. "TCiat shall I play?" asked the organist an absentminded clergyman. "What sort of a hand have you got?' was the unexpected reply. London Telegraph. T1 nt th many oeth that male the truth. Shakerea re.
at ! a. m., 'J young mules, seven I horses, 10 registered short horns and ! Polled Durhams; -" full blood Duroc Jersey hogs: furm implements;; piano; organ: and No. ". Sharplcss Cream separator good as new. D. C. Brookbank, auctioneer. 'J'Mtj FOR SALE LOW Phe ancI room modern dwellings. Thompson, 710 Main street. i:t-7t FOR SALE A large refrigerator suitable for meat market or grocer, size 3 ft. x 7 in. x y ft. Can be bought for one-fourth of actual cost. Ball & Peltz, Real Estate & Insurance. 20-7t
FOR SALE 13 II. P. traction engine in good condition. Roberts Bros., Centerville, Ind. l',t-7t FOR" S A I jK B u fOfock"c-ggs? Fi f t y cents per l.i. E. G. Hunt, Fountain City, It. F. D. No. 1:7. 10-7t FOR SALE White Wyandotte eoekerels, $1.00. Eggs, 50c. At 317 S. 3rd. ps-7t FO irs ALE 'al n7a7ierf"lhe" ne wost and most exclusive designs. EIwood Morris & Co. S-7t. FOR SALE Columbia graphophone with 100 records. 12 1 S. l.'ith Street. 17- It. FOR SALE Camera and bath :.eat. Will sell very cheap. 51e S. Knh. nvr.t FORSALE H head of horses. pTulT; FORESAW THE OBVIOUS. The Usher Knew What the Answer of His Charges Would Be. "The temperance orator of today." he (said, "is sure of a respectful hearing. In the past it was not so. At the beginning of the temperance movement drinking men came to our meetings for no other purpose than to Interrupt and confuse. The orator had to be very careful in his remarks. lie had to look out lest he give his hearers an opening for some opportune but ribald Interruption. "I remember," he said, "when they began temperance work here in Washington. A series of meetings was held in a large hall. The audiences were always numerous, but they interrupted horribly. In the end an ex-prize fighter was hired to sit every night in the obstreperous gallery and keep order there. "Well, one night the orator contrasted the clean content of home life with the squalor of drunkenness. He spoke beautifully, and at his climax he cried in ringing, impassioned tones: " 'What do we want when we return from our daily toil? What do we desire to ease our burdens, to gladden our hearts, to bring smiles to our faces and song to our lips?' "Here the orator paused for effect, and the conscientious prize fighter tiptoed hurriedly to the front of the gallery, shook hl3 finger at his unruly charges and said In a threatening stage whisper: '"Mind, the first feller among ye wot eays "Beer!" out he goes. "Washington Star. IT WROTE ITSELF. The Author's Story of tho Origin of "My Maryland." Brander Matthews wrote an account of the circumstances under which "Maryland. My Maryland," was written, and the poem's author. James Ryder Randall, approved Professor Matthews' account. In April. 1SG1, Colonel Randall read in the New Orleans Delta news of the attack on the Massachusetts troops as they passed through Baltimore. "This account greatly excited me," Mr. Randall wrote In answer to a letter from Professor Matthews. "I bad long been absent from my native city, and the startling event there influenced my mind That night I could not dismiss from my mind what I had read In the paper. About midnight I arose, lit a candie and went to my desk. Some powerful influence seemed to possess me, and almost Involuntarily I proceeded to write the song of 'My Maryland.' "I remember that this idea seemed to take shape as music In my brain some wild air that I cannot now recall. The whole poem was dashed off rapidly when once begun. It was not composed in cold blood, but under what may be called a conflagration of the senses If not an inspiration of the intellect. No one was more surprised than I waa at the widespread and instantaneous popularity I bad been so strangely stimulated to write." Colonel Randall always told his friends that the poem "wrote itself." New York Herald. Doing Chore. To dig one's own potatoes, to shor-k one's own corn, to pick one's own apples, to pile one's own squashes at one's own barn! It is like filling one's system with an antitoxin before going into a fever plagued country. One Is Immune to winter after this, provided he stays to bake bis apples In his own wood fire. One works himself into a glow with all his digging and picking and piling that lasts until warm weather comes again, and along with this harvest glow cornea stealing over him the after harvest peace. It Is the serenity of Indian summer, the mood of the after harvest season, upon him upnn Lira and his fields and woods Dallas Lore Sharp to Atlantic. I. tin concerns roo. read carefui'vi Dr. "aViweil'e -yrup Pepsin is positively .aar--p'J to cor ind:8'ioa. constipation, sic it ha4ctje. of?err bresth. malaria and aiJ C)s jisinr from stomac trouble
lie auction. Saturday. March '.'vh. Taube's barn. N. t'.th t. 1: it FOR" SA LE -New Wall paper?" M rman's Book Store. 117: FOR SALE See our nl'- 'lim furniture at bargains. Antique Fun,;til re Co.. ;u .Main. S7t
FOR SALE New modern i efdti.ce, S. 12th St. Phone n.'.v luff FO II " S A L E - N t v,- 1 ; n . s v h e c j i. d s i : l : -dries. Elmer Smith. 12' Main. r;-tf LOST. u,s' luesuay evening an uinbreiia with initials, "('. W.- carved on end! of handle. Finder return to Palladium and get reward. Iv7t MISCELLANEOUS. DON'T SELL Y'OFR POULTRY until you call George- Lane, phone l!v, 1. 0-7t U EO. W." M AN S FI E LD, Resi denee A rchiteet, 42-43 Colonial Bldg , Richmond, Ind. 20-7t t H E FI N EST W A LI 7 UKCO R AT IONS at Elwood Morris & CoV. lv7t S PECIA m N DUC EM E N T Sft-77e7l"Trn plumbing and wiring. Richmond Plumbing & Electric Co., 418 Main street. Phono ISofi. l7-7t SPECIAL- LINE-of "w'aTl papers for THE FIRST INDUSTRY. Problems of the Farm Curiously Ignored by the Ancients. Why agriculture, the first industry to be learned and so obviously the most fundamental, was the last to be developed is one of the most baffling mysteries of history. One marvels at It afresh as one stands before a certain glass case In the Egyptian quarter of the British museum, wherein is a little group of farm utensils a fractured wooden plow, a rusted sickle, two sticks tied together with a leathern thong and several tassels that had hung on the horns of oxen. To be sure, these implements were used 3,000 years ago they were found in the tomb of Seti I. but one remembers ! that when Egypt was using these bread tools, no better than those of the barbarians about her, she bad a most elaborate government, an army and navy and art and literature. The records and relics of other nations down through history show the same strange incongruity. For thousands of years the wise men of the world absolutely ignored the problems of the farm. A farmer remained either a serf or a tenant. He was a stolid drudge "brother to the ox." Even the masterful old pilgrim fathers had no plows at all nothing but hoes and sharp sticks for the first twelve years of their pioneering. And therefore for thousands of years there was hunger. Everybody's Magazine. LORD KELVIN'S SUMS. Slipe of an Abeentminded Dentist In Simple Arithmetic. Great scientist though he was, the late Lord Kelvin sometimes failed to do simple addition or subtraction sums correctly. Once on a blackboard at Glasgow university he made two and ' two five and, hearing the delighted ! laughter of the class, hastily altered the five to a three. On another occasion he said, "Seven times nine, Mr. Macfarlane, are a hundred and what?" (Pause.) "But. no," continued the scientist, "seven times nine cannot be a hundred and anything, for tho square of a hundred is ten." How he nearly lost his life through his devotion to science was told by Lord Kelvin himself In the house of lords some years ago. lie was engaged in testing certain chemical Ingredients which could be safely mixed together in particular proportions, but which became a highly explosive mixture if the weight of one element was exceeded. His assistant In adjusting the difference between the decimal system and ordinary troy weight measured out a quantity which would have meant certain death to both and was just adding it to the mortar when Lord Kelvin noticed the mistake. WIFE KILLED FOR SAKE OF ANOTHER Man Wished to Get Rid of Her! That He Might Wed. ! Milwaukee, Wis., M-jrch 2". Mail with lovo for another woman an1 determined to fccvcr the bonds that bound him to the woman he did not ; love, George WilloughLy, prominent in business and church circles, shot his wife dead this morning, and twice wounded himself. The shots were fired into his own bod' t strengthen Lis siorv c aa attack by burglars, j Wilioughhy coni icd to the police j lie quarreled with his wife after a church social last night and said j he loved another woman whom he had j been supporting. This morning he j decided to end all. I jDL.-:x: Fl' l?f. J i M 1 M
'PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
cheap and In in;: rooms. Eli wood ; Morris v Cn. tN-Tt
WALL PAPKK a ir l '.; L. lVirf lias th. uctiiry tt ha mile H. M. Bosch Cw"s wa!l :;.!!'? of Chicairo. If ; mi would hkc to look oir the sample-, at osir hon.i ; call new phor.e 7. !V7r I'PHOl STICKING. Kei aiTiUg. line line coverings. Russell. H South 7th. Phone 17W. OUOt . V a King A: Co. Phmiidujr, Bicycles. I M"torcycIcs. 4o Main. Both phones.! ,.::..t J Crane 'rhoiiitison, Keueral idei trie contrae'ors and supplies, N ,'th. Plione 19.10. PROF. Koiling. for a sure cure for j corns, 'jo S. sth. Phono K-:Kf Low prices on i umber, lath and s-hing-les. ixuck & Hill Co. 1-;'.0t Hams. an kiml or size K'e. lb. Bacou. lean and nice and loe Should ers and calas '.'c It). Everytlilr.g in I'res-h meat; lowest prices, qtir.lity consideif d. Schwcgnian's Miat Markets, botii phones. o-2.1t FINANCIAL. MONEY LOANED Low rates, easy terms. Thompson's loan and real estate agency. Wide stairs, 710 Main street. Bond's automatic phone No. -XS. 1-wed-thurs-fri sat-tf
Walter Winans 30400 Trotter Trial 2:19. Chestnut Stallion. SIKED BY ROBERT McGREGOR C47, record 2:17i, fire of Cresceus 2;02'2. Kentucky Star 2:0S,i. Lurlino McGregor 2:11, Turn McGregor 2:12, Nyanza 2:12a4. and M others, and of the dams of Grattan Boy 2: OS. L'Uor.'e 2:0,SVi. York Boy 2:09-i. and 47 others; son of Major Kdsall 211. 1st Rilee. by Hotspur. Jr.. 3612. Dam or Kate Ham 2:214. Sire of Tommy B 2:24ai, and 4 others, and of th Geo. T. Putney 2:28.. dams of Ben H 2:21U. and others; son of Hotspur 172; dam Patty, by Blind Tuokahoe; 2d dara Nance by Telegraph. 2d Dam Tuglcs, by Mambrino Gift f.SL Record 2:20, sire of Mambrinette 2:21. and others, and of tho dams of Sphinxetta 2:084. Sandy Boy 2:12, Louis Owosso 2:164, and 13 others; son of Mambrino Pilot 29. etc. This horse will make tho season of 1908 In the rear of Harmon Shofer a Livery Stable, on South Sixth street, (between Sixth and Seventh streets), Richmond, Ind., at $15.00 to Insurs a mare In foal. CHARLES CHRISTMAS, Owner.
CINCINNATI, RICHMOND AND FORT WAYNE RAILROAD COMPANY. Richmond, Ind.. March 12, 190S. The annual meeting of stockholders of th Cincinnati, Richmond and Fort Wayne Railroad Company will he held at tho principal office of tho Company, in the city of Richmond. Indiana, on Thursday, April 2, 11J08, at ten o'clock A. M., for tho purpose of electing eleven Directors and transacting such other business as may properly come before the meeting. S. P.. LIGGETT, dly 12-20-31 Secretary. NOTICE. Come to the South A St. Market Saturday afternoon and evening for your meats spare-ribs, back-bones, tenderloins, back-straps and other meat. R. GREULICIL 13-20. Turn About. In a Great Western railway carriage on the way tip to London a youth had disturbed and annoyed the other passengers by loud and foolish inane remarks during a great part of the Journey. As ttiey passed Hanwell Lunatic asylum he remarked, "I often think how nice the asylum looks from the railway." "Some day." growled an old gfntlmau, "you will probably have occasion to remark how nice the railway looks from the asylum." London Answers. Getting It All. "What can 1 bring you today, sir?" "I hard!; know. Th" doctor nays 1 need carbohydrate and proteids, and I want sonifiIiig nitrogenous. I think." "Yes, sir. How about an order of hash;" Pittsburg Post Always et It. "They say that Mrs. Grindly d-.es a great deal of fancy work." "I should Fay nh did. When sh can find i:uthing eist- to do. she ruffles her husband's temper." Detroit Free Press. ITTT: 1 La t IMA. The Great Btocd Purifier. For sale by Leo II. Fine. T. F. McDonald a&d W. H. Sudboff. Notice Farmers
iJwa1f.i.MiM f Anaeeaawjj
MONUMENTS AND MARKERS.
Richmond Monument Co.. C. E. Bradbury. Mgr. Zi North Sth StreeL PHYSICIAN. PHYSICIAN" Dr. Emma Casdiier, osteopathic phvidcian. 2. N. 10th St. Phone 1 1 . inarlMiru FIRE INSURANCE. Richmond Insurance Agcucy, Ilar.s N. Koll. Mgr.. 716 Main. 14 if FARM LANDS. Smalt places near city. .1. I'd. Moor ovt N. 7ih street. janS-".m.j UNDERTAKERS. II. R. Downing & Son. 16 N. Sth t. l.septCtno LAUNDRY. We can help make you happy lion estly wa cd. Richmond Steata Laundry. REAL ESTATE 10C acres Is to Elijah Cooper. 25 acres is to Elizabeth Poullin. 5 acres is to Ell Cook. 40 acres is traded to Isaac Wilcox. BUT LISTEN, Still have 2G acres, lS-room house barn, wood-house, wind-pump, rn. third niilo from traction line. I session in 10 days. 12 acres, 5 room house, barn, goof orchard, four miles of oiry. 40 acre. 9-room house, bank barn, J miles of city." 40 acres, good buildings, 7 miles o city. 25 acres, good bnilding, 7 mile of city. The above are priced right. Can tin city property In exchange for 2fi an 40 acre tract. Easy terms on others. $10,000 to loan. Get busy. Frank M. Price Rooms 31-32 Colonial. Office Phone 1046. Residence, 4056. The Ground Hog Can't Keep Us In Six Weeks. I w ant SS0O.OO to Loan ; good. I have $500.00 to Loan. I have $600.00 to loan. I want $1,000 to Loan. I want to eell a realty Investment, $11,000.00, will pay 12 per cenL A 7 R. House, $1,200, 12 per cent, investment. A well located Residence, $2,200; 25 acres fruit, good Improvement, a bargain. A 3 Room House, $500 00. A 2 Room House, $500. A 5 room house, $S50. We can take care of a few more rental?. Prompt collection, our motto. ' If you want to woji, u jth us. if you want to buy, loan, borrow or i r-nf. wf ar? al your fc-rvice. 1 V.'f tan .s-il you a horn for a Intel's ! Cash. bal;-nc' R-tiT Wo make Mortgage Kxemptions from March 1 to May I, and we ne-d that 25 cents. It s That Morgan, Sth and N. E Th Hsb Of Tfc Body. The crffaa around whlrh m'A tho '.volvt. and upon which they are laxreiy dai indent lor their welfare, is the stomach, j hen toe function of tb atoniacii become tmired. the boweia and liver alao become deczed. To core a dlseaae of the stomach, liver - bcwels eet a cnt or SI botV.e of Dr. CaK- ; il's Syrop Pepsin at yoor tfnynrist't. It (s e promptest relief for constipation aad Cyr 1 .pia ever cc mroooed. ' Doddo," 22721, the impoited French Percheron Stallion, better known a3 the Clevenger horse, and "Prince Wilkes" .-ill be my Farm this season. 2g miles north of Richmond, on Middleboro Pike. The public Is Invited o call and pee them. A. H. Pjle. n. F. I. No. 4, PhnneVIO.Vr.
