Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 41, 27 March 1908 — Page 7

THE KICII3IOM) PALLADU3I AM Sl.N-TKLWiKAJI, 1 KIDAV. UAK II Vi;. los. PAGE SEYKX.

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Wanted, For Sale, For Rent, Lost, Found, MscellanvQUS, Lodge Notice, Cards off Thanks, Obituaries, etc., 11 CENT A WORD. Situations Wanted, are Free. The iTLnrket PIsce cf Richmond for severer seller. A trie! will convince you that Paliadium Classified 5.

WANTED.

WANTKI) First class man or woman j i-l Sell article Of merit. OWI1 tOWIl. Clifton, floii'l Morton. Indianapolis. 1'7-lt 4 .WTKD fJirl for housework. Phone. 1 1 S. Iti'.h St.. 27-2t. W A NT K I') Nu rni ns 1 do by an experienced nurse, 20.") Main street. 2;-::t. v'ANTKU-Plain "sewing. Olive ClemFountain City, Ind. 27-.'!t v ANT K i )- Fu rn i s h e. ' room ; a d d re.ss I. ('. F., t:aif Palladium. 27-31 WANTED Place in the" country to keep house for widower; rail 0-H N. Kith street. !7-:Jt u ANTKH - Work hy boy V!1 :):', S 9th. 14 years old. 2H-:;t WANTKI") Washing and ironing to do. Call at 121 S. 2nd st. 2;-.".t W A N T E D See Moreh end f o r i r f f essii,n;'l vault cleaning. Phono 2177. ;t:;s Butler street. 25-7t WANTKI) A man to trim apple trees. .1. H. Colvin. Route s. Box Ml. 21-lt WANTKI) To buy . a'" light tan" bull 'ja. Call phone ."lose. 2-'!-7t W'AXTF1' - Two good men for country "f. Apply to dolding. Palladium -oTfice. 22-7t WANTKI") You'-to" ride "" a "Reading standard, holds the world's record. Moid by Brown !t Darnell, 1022 Main St. 22-7t . .v. I r.W v.hceb-. To clean and repair your Elmer Smith, 420 Main. l.Ttf A.N i ED .Men to Learn barber trade; will equip shop for you or furnish positions, few weeks completes, constant jTactice, careful Instructions, tools given. Saturday wages, diplomas granted, write for catalogue. Moler Barber College. Cincinnati. O. tf WA N T ED Your carpets, rugs, up-

TODAY'S MARKFT QUOTATIONS

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohio.) Now York, March 27. Open High Low Amalgamated Copper i04 fi2V2 Hn7s American Smelting 71! 74' K 72 V2 American Sugar 125' 126 1 25 Atchison "4 Tt 73 78 B. & O S4, S24 B. R. T . 538 47 U 4tl'i n. m. & st. r n7s 1 1 rs 1 1 s 1 2 New York Central f.S.a 9J 9Si Nor then. Pac 1-7 12s 12--4 Pennsylvania HH' H73i lltD.4 Teople's Gas '. 90 i:,v i() Rending 10'i's 1075s P Southern Pacific 757 77 75 1 i I nioa Pacific 12?2 129 12ii's . l s. Stool :ii7x ::5""s V. S. Steel pfd 99 's 99- 99 ig Great Northern 12."5'i 12H2 12::

ChV.agc. CHICACO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS, tBy CoTtil and Thompson. Brokers, Eaton. O.) Chieagc.. March 27. Wheat. Open. Hish. Low. Close. May '.M'.. !C.'S !P4 94'... July S.N St)4 SHVi Sept ST 7'i MiV sin 4 Corn. Open. High. Low. Close. May iWr's ';;i Vr"s tu;y.2 July i:i'!s tH'j U tu Sept ;:', s iu",is iw.iy) Oats. Open. High. Low. Close. May -M 1 s .4- rPs "d's July (si, 4S.I4 Sept :;s.'4 .-vs.;, :t.j Pork. Open. High. Low. Close. May July ..12.!C. Kl.lJ ?T2.!5 $13.05 . 1 i::.r.2 13.47. Lard. Open. Hign. Low. Clo9e. . $S.1" $S."22 $.s.irt JSS.S2 . s.; s.45 s.r.r, s.42 Ribs. . XT.Oi") S7.7 57.1Y) $7.v. 7.3,") 7.37 T.S"") 7.35 May July Mny July U. S. YARDS. CHICAGO. Chicago. March 27. Hogs, receipts 18.000, 5 cents higher; left over S.RSfi. Cattle" 2S.000. Sheep S.000. Hoga Close. Light, $5.355.S0: mixed $5.35 H.S5; rough $5.35$? 5. SO: heavv $5,35 7? 5.50. . CHICAGO GRAIN RECEIPTS. Wheat. 20. Corn. 27. Oats, lsS. Estimates. "Wheat, 13. Corn. 3 IS. Oats, 149. NORTHWEST RECEIPTS. Today. Last Wk. I,ast Yr. Minn ..144 2:5 Holiday Dulnth . 31 29 Holiday Indianapolis Market. n ' lis livestock. hogs. Best heavies $5.5011 $5.60 Good to choice 5.40 Vi 5.55 BEEF STEERS. Good to choice heifers .. 0.2511 6.75 "dium to cood steers.. 0.351? 0.75

holsfery, mattresses, etc.. to clean by our vacuum process. Richmond House ("leaning Co. Phono, Home rjlC Hell 395R. 22-tf

FOR SALE. FOR SALE Richmond real estate a specialty. Merchandise stocks, fire Insurance. Porterf'.eld, Kelly Block, Sth & Main. 7tf FOR HALE OR TRADE -Any kindf a farm or city property. Can loan you money to buy with. Phone 21 .". Dye and Price. Cor. !th and Main. 27-7t. FOR SALE Newest styles in wall paper. Moormann's, ."2" Main. 27-71 FOR SALE Barber shop, halt' interest. Ross Tyler, Cambridge City. L'7-7t. FOR SALE 'One lot of good secondhand lumber; cheap If sold at. once. Call at 217 South f.th- street. 27-2t FOR '"SALE- Will " be sacrificed" this week. Fine vacant lot . also elegant modern home. Beautiful locations. This is going to be a snap tor someone who knows a bargain. Phone 12-" quick or you may be too late. 24 mon-wed fri-tf FOR SALE1201 S. J. 1 larvey. -Rhode Island Red eggs. Phono 1591. Geo. W. 26-9t FOR SALE Good big team of mules, cheap. Also riding plow, new last year. Harry Thompson, Union Pike. 2H-7t F6RSA-LE Hot. plates, furniture, etc. Bowen & Co., 1 120 Main st. 2!-7t FOR SALE House 450 South 14th St rooms, modern, 23-7t FOR SALE One Garland base-burner, one gas range, one Monarch gas heating stove; all good as new; caU at 1515 North B. 25-3t FOR SALE Just recefvedrnew lino of HM'jK wheels, three standard makes, Close 62T3's 12G 75 1i S4U 47' ii9"; 9S7 127-4 117-h 90 10714 7tl3 12S 34 :!.-' 2 99 U, 124 14 Choice to fancy yearlings 5.50 'it 0 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers.... 1.75 "d 5 Choice to fancy cows.... .2(c 5 Good to choice heifers . . 4.25'u 4 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice 4.00-Vi f Fair to good 3.001i0, STOCK CATTLE. Good to h'vy tlesliy feed'rs 5.00''t 5 Fair to good feeders 4.05 itl- 5. Good to choice stocKers 3.50'Jj 4. Common to fair heifers . . 3.30'm 4, SHEEP. Choice lambs t;.751f 7. Best yearlings 5.00Q . 0. Best sheep - . T 0 .5 r 5, to Richmond Grain Market. (Riehi.icnd Roller Mills) Wheat (per bu.) 95c Corn, (per bu. ) 50c Oats, (per bu.) 47c Rye, (per bu.) 70c Bran, (per ton) $24.00 Middlings, tpcr toni $26.00 Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy hay (.baled) Timothy Hay (loose) Clover hay (baled) . Clover Hay (loose) ., Mixed Hay Straw, (per ton.) Corn (per bu.) . . Oats ( per bu. ) Fodder (per ton) . . $12 to 13 .$10.0011.00 $12.00 . .JD.OOS'lO.OO 10.00 0.00 55 . . . 47 to 50c $7.00 Richmond. CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abatto ir.) Best hogs, average 200 to 250 lbs Good heavy packers Common and rough Steers, corn fed Heifers Fat cows Bulls Calves . Lambs .$5.H5 f $5.00 i .$4.50 4.50 ".75 2.00 .00 f 4 $ 3 57 3 Iff 7 ! G 75 j 50 00 50 p. 50 6.00 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens, dressed, per lb . .10c Old chickens, per lb 12'2 to 15c J iurKeys. per 10 isc

The Rise of Jimmie Johnson,

VII. JUNIOR PARTNER JOHNSON. t -po; i ntndi ng things for quite a little term ADVERTISING" Johnson then was taken in the firm. "Jenkins, Jones & Johnson" was the name upon the store, And th more the business grew he ADVERTISED the more.

not made by the trust. Call and get prices. We can please you. Full line tires and supplies. Brown and Darnell, PCii Main St. 22-7t FOR SALE All kinds sewing machine needles, oils and repairs. R. M. Lacey, 5:10 Main street. 25-7t FOR SALE Yearling short horn bull. J. B. Colvin. Route S. Box 1. L'4-7t FOR SALE -Some Big Four seed oats. Call on or address A. O. Halsley. Route 7. 22-7t FOR SALE Roof and bridge paint, guaranteed five years. Retail at wholesale price. Clendenin &. Co., Ducks, per lb 15c COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb 31c. Country butter, per lb., 2 to 2oc Etfgs, per doz 12 Richmond Seed Market. (Runge & Co.) Clover Seed (per bu) $11.00 Timothy (per bu.) $2.25 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg, March. 'J7. -CattleReceipts light. Prime and extra .1?5.mi;.5i. Common to fair. .". m 14 (i.H. Veal $:L00'(7' 7.25. Hogs Receipts. S loads. Prime and yorkers. ..5.sik;.im. Common and roughs, I.tntto 4.."iO. Pigs, .l.'.K). Sheep &, lambs, receipts light, steady. Good to prime. St'.2.V7.'.u. Fair to choice lambs, !?5.roj;7.5o. Cincinnati Livestock. Cincinnati. March 27. Hogs -Receipts. 2.71 : strong. Cattle -Receipts, S25: strong. Butcher steers $5.50fd' 5.00. Veal, $5.25fa6.50. Sheep, easy. Lambs, strong. Toledo Grain. Toledo. March 27. Wheat. '.W.,. Corn. ;;'-. Oats, .15. Clover seed. $13.8.". Alsike. .1'. lo. Rye, S2. East Buffalo Livestock. East Buffalo. March 27. -Cattle Receipts, 25 head; active. Veal and calves $.j.00tti7.7f. Sheep and lambs Receipts. V4)0. Sheep $3.7M;6.25. Lambs, cull to choice. $3.2."?i S.f. Hogs Receipts. 2,04d. Mlxe dand yorkers. $o.tlcv,j.-,.(;r,. Pigs. $4.40f.2.". Heavies and rough $1,00 7 5.45. A Giant Apple Tree. At Cheshire, Conn., stands an apple tree which is known to be 190 years old and is beileved to 1m? much older than that. The tmnk is seventeen and a half feet in circumference near the ground, and the height of the tree Is about seventy feet. There are eight large branches. Five of these bear fruit one ye?r and the other three the next year. One year this remarkable tree yielded 130 bushels of apples. Th tree Is regular in form, and the circle shaded by its branches is 130 feet In diameter. The Twilight Of Life. The mscles of the stomach in olU ajre are not . mii.c as in yunm ana m consequence old people are vwy subject to conipa. t-.cn and indigestion. Many seldom have a bowel movement without artificial aid. Ma-:v also, havs unpleasant eractarions of B"as from :ne stomach after eaticsr. All this can be avoided by the use of Dr. Caldwell's Syrap Pepsin which permanently rerulates the bowels so that passages come naturally, and so strengthens t.-.e stomach that food is dig-ested without discomfort. Druggists sell it at 50 cents or Si a Istrse bottle. Vermont gets the credit cf being the granite state, but Pennsylvania leads in the production of stone, with nearly 14 per cent of the total to her credit.

257 Ft. Wavne ave. Both phones. mar Kt-nion&f ri-2mos FOR SALE Bargains in new secondhand and antique furniture. .".lit Main. 21-7t FOR SALE -1 head of horses. Public auction. Saturday. March 'JSth. Taube's barn. 12'. N. fith St. lt!-tf FOR SALE -Nt w 1!os wheels "and sundries. Elmer Smith, 42'' Main. irvtf FOR RENT. FOR RENT Furnished rooms for A SECOND FIDDLE RILE DISTASTEFUL Judge Fox States That City Court Has the First Recognition. CIRCUIT COURT WAS IDLE. THIS MORNING WHILE THE PROSECUTOR WAS ENGAGED IN A CASE BEING HEARD BEFORE JUDGE CONVERSE. "Well, well- the spectacle of the circuit court on the bench waiting for a mayor's court is very amusing.'' In this manner Attorney Henry U. Johnson expressed his feelings at the delay occasioned by the absence of the prosecuting attorney from the circuit court room tin's morning, when the Drischel case wad called for trial. "Well. I'm getting mighty tired of this court having to piny second fiddle to the city court, myself." remarked Judge Fox. The judge had been on the bench from ! o'clock, and it was then 1:30 o'clock. The last hour he had passed in the effort to retain his patience, while the prosecutor was detained at the city court. Judge Fox holds the opinion that if the prosecutor has a case in the city court and one set for trial in the circuit court at the same time, he ought to intrust one or the other to a deputy. The circuit court has broader jurisdiction and is recognized as a higher court than that presided over by Judge Converse. This fact is cited as the reason why the prosecuting attorney ought to afford the circuit court prior recognition on such occasions. Judge Fox has stated his views upon the subject more than once and this morning he suggested there may be some ruling or instruction promulgated by him that will obviate the necessity for such tiresome delays in the future. The members of the jury had come to the city expecting to hear the case. They spent the time as best they could about the court room. The case had been set for trial at 10 o'clock. The jury was ready and waiting, having left farm work, office work and other avocations and come to Richmond from remote parts of the county. The case at the city court held the attention of the prosecutor and after he appeared in the circuit court room it was only a matter of three minutes until the jury was told it would not be used and the members were dismissed. Justice Brewer, of the United States supreme court still holds and preaches to the text that public debts are not public blessings. The Swiss government has received a petition with nearly 7tov names, protesting against the building of a railway up the Matterhorn. There is so medicine so f afe and at the same time so pleasant to take as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, the positive cure for all diseases arising from stomach trouble. The pxice is very reaa. "aabie 3oc and L

tsekfcpinc 22" N. 12'h St.

'I KKXT Kiirnie'.ied room. I:m: .. : : !.:-h. :: N . '2: h. J7 7' Ft HI- RENT Six r.tni l th kinds ;' r ..ud c-t.r.i cil! .1' :7 Ft. Wayne Ac 27-1 t FOR KENT F:m r .-,. -..-.i !,.um , S. lltll ; . ltd .1 stut t.-. wi'h i.iii-e -.irei en. ('ail plume ; L'7 "t FOR RENT Rooms; lodging or ij.jh!house keeping; cheap, in; . lTtii St. -Iw.l F()R RENT Two furnished rooms for light house keeping, 4 Ft. Wayne Ave LV. 2t FOR RENT - Four room modern house Call :;2" s. ith st. 2;:;t. r'UK KENT Business rooms smt rials. Ft Wayne Ave. S e Alfonis. J'Vif FOR RENT Furnished rooms. 71M N 12th street.. 25-7t FOR RENT--:; or -I rooms, furnished or unfurnished, near car barn, :;ls. 7 room house, S. ISth street and burn. Sec me quick. Al II. Hunt. 7 N. 0th Si. 2.V::t r()R RENT Furnished rooms. :I4 N. j 11th. 21-71 ; FOR RENT- Flat five rooms and hath;j cellar, etc.. steam heat and water! 1 furnished. .".22 North sth. 2l-7t I FOR RENT Houses, $ 1 0, '$ ! i , $ 1 5. ! Benj. F. Harris. 12tf t uk itfj.Vl Furnished rooms ; also, office rooms, with steam heat and j bath, at The Grand, for gents only. 3-4-tf I NOTICE. NOTICE Mr. Switzer, of Cleveland, has taken charge of the upholstering and repair work at Billheimer!? shop, corner 4th and Main streets. First class work is guaranteed. 27-Tt SOME FIRST OCCASIONS. The first lucifer match was si ck In 1834. The first steamer built in England appeared in 1S15. It was In 15!5 that the first black lead pencil was sharpened. During the reiprn of Edward the Confessor of England the practice of employing surnames began. Lord Avebury, otherwise Sir John Lubbock, was the first person in England to have his photograph takeu. The tirst ship was brought from Egypt to Creeie by nnaus la 14K5 B. C. The llrst double decked ship was built, by Tynans, 7G B. C. The tirst woolen cloth made in England was manufactured about 1330. though it was not dyed and dressed by the Kugllsh until lti7. The first record of coal Is about 300 years before the Christian era. Coal was used as fuel in Europe as early as 852. A Klnj'i Hrbnkr. The queen of Wurttemberg was one day walking iu the streets of Stuttgart attended by a maid of honor, when she met a body of students who refused to make room for the ladies, and thus compelled them to walk In the gutter. The queen reported the matter to the king, and the next day the captain of the corps Suevla was summoned to the palace. A servant led him Into a room where there were no chairs, and there the unfortunate student bad to wait a full hour. At last the king appeared and finally the young man waj dismissed by him thus; ' I cannot demand that every student should know my Tvife, but I do demand that the Corps Suevia give place iu the streets to fadies." A Hride Tkiit Surpriiri. That edd expression about the sidewalk coming up and hitting a man ia the face takes on an actual expression the tirst time one sees the bascule bridge over the Gowauus canal iu operation. On approaching the bridge at a moment when some barge or schooner Is about to pass through it one sees the gates swing to. and then suddenly the roadway rises up and stares the wayfarers In the face, tracks aud all, remaining there until the vessel has passed tnrough, when the whole thoroughfare drops back into place again. The operation of raising the wings of the bridge is performed so quickly that the surprise is all the more sudden. New York Press. His l ittle Joke. "Yes," admitted the drummer, '"there are a great many skins In my business." "'What is your line?" asked the portly passenger. "Leather." answered the drummer as he lighted a fresh paper coffin iiall. Chtcasco News. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY. Seed Potatoes Seed Oats Essex Rape Lawn Seed Garden Seed Seed Corn Prices Right

Garver & Meyer Seed Merchants

LOST.

LOST -A 4,n !.i;k i.r :-u.. :! .-r.- : r: : : U .it. LOST- ! w i w i'it!i ,,.,! s. : C ,;t:!f-r scat off a child's .-l.H-i : i f'ie Ref.t! n to 1 1 !r:iala s Hard-1 war.- St, it,.. .;;t ' i MISCELLANEOUS. j MIDDAY- M:r7. draft h.use. vm ,s MaS.f m:isci:i at Rt. hen's li 'fy barn. ' 151 Main street. Good Pedigree. ; S 1 2.'' lnsr.v colt. Farmers please: .all 25 7t ' SHOE REPA I Itl NG -.toiiu S.-amnn.' 15UL1 Main. ;.V7t GEO. M. GT'YKR Genera! con' r7cToir. j Carpenter, and builder. .lob work, j Screens and screen doirs Auto'na- j tic- phone loa?. 25-tl ' SI 'KCiAL I.VIK'CKM E N T S offered " , n pliiiiibihi.' and wlrii:? Richmond I'luiiiliii'.t; and Electric Co., -lis Main street. Phone is;. 24 7t HERBERT" B. LO PER Dentist ; room 10 Colonial BUlg.. phone )t.34. 25-30; NOTICE Miss S. E. Conn has opened dress making parlors. Room t;i Colonial building. First class work, reasonable- prices. 24-7t A. B. HARNED. tirst-class shoe repairing; North Itch and E sts. 2:?-7t VEHICLES of all kinds repaired, painted, rubber tiring. New shop on alley. North l:h and A streets. 2.:-7t FIRE PROOF "STEEL' "SAFE'S Latest models and secondhand. Iow prices. Write or call Allen C. Harris, 407 P. B. Building. Dayton. O. 21 tf NOTICE Better see Lott - Jones, it South tith street, about those new screens you will want this season. 21-7t NOTICE -Now's" t he" time" to shoe'jour J FACTORY FIGHT Harmon Frazier Fined for Making Assault on James Hahn. STRUCK WITH WAGON SILL. HAHN WAS KNOCKED UNCONSCIOUS HE ACCUSED FRAZIER OF REPORTING HIM AS A STRIKE PROMOTER. Hainion Frazier was fined 5 and costs this morning in the city court for assault and battery on .lames Hahn, a fellow workman at the Wayne Works. Hahn testified that he had learned that Frazier had been spreading a report that he had been trying to get the men to go on a strike because they objected to the action of the foreman in appointing a man to fill a certain position. Hahn stated that he asked the foreman who had started this report and he told him that he would have nothing to say- until he had made a thorough investigation. A few minutes after .lis conversation with 1 he foreman. Hahn "Mated that, be approached Frazier and asked him if he had been responsible for spreading the report. He said that he told Frazier that William Sharp had told blm that Frazier had started it. He said that he asked Frazier to gg with him to Sharp. Hahn said that Frazier then said that Clark was a liar and that he was also. Hahn said this made him angry and he answered Frazier roughly. While he was looking out of a window, he stated, Frazier nit him over the head with a wagon sill, knocking htm unconscious. Frazier .stater that when Hahn afproached him he was carrying a mon key wrench and that he thought the j man intended to assault, him and that j he struck him to protect himself. A CORRECTION. I was stared in the Palladium this week that Mabel G;;ines Ware had ! been arrested. TLe name should have i read Mabel Saine Ware. ! The Hub Of The Bod jr. The organ around which al! the other organ rc-voive. and upon which they are largely dependent for their welfare, is the stomach. . hen the functions of the stomach become impaired, the bowels and liver also become 6raneed. To cure a disease of the stomach, llvrr c r bowels sret a 50 cpnt or SI bottle of Dr. Caldwe;i 9 fcyrup Pepm at your druggist's. It i-, t. e promptest ir-iie' for constipation and d? ptpsia ev-r t- rrrot-c..s2. We are in a position to tarnish good seeds tor garden and farm at as low figures as any reliable house. Call or write os for catalogue. Phones H. 2198; B. 98.

AIRING

!.!!- at 1 to on: per kid. at Rrook's t ne. Mam. 21 7t I' I'llOl .STKKIM",. Repairing, line lino coverings. Ru.seil, !4 South 7th. Pl.one 1 7:o fi.Ot Wakti.t; .v Co. Plumbing. lticcles. M.'-ovv cl. s. 4'G Ma;n Roth phones. h-:X

Crane - TruiiupMn. general v-lec-tric omtracto: s and supplie.. 1 X .".th. Phono 1 ;.;,(. 4 30t Hams. an Kind or tce 12c. lb. Icuon, l-an and nice 12'8,an,l 15c. Shoulders and cahis ;e H Everythii;c in ti"1-!) meat; best prices, iiu.llty c o:Mdeicd. Sfhn etlna n s Meit Markets, both iho:ies 5 25t PROF. Ko'llg. for a sure cur, for corns. "."O S. Wii. Phone 4242. 17 30t Low pilces on lunilxM. lath and shini?l.'s. U.uck i- Hill Co. f,-30t MONUMENTS AND MARKERS. R'chmoud Monurcent Co.. C. K. Bradbi;ry. Mgr., 23 North Sth 8tret. PHYSICIAN. PHYSICIAN Dr. Emma Gardner, osteopathic physician, N. p)th St. Phone 11. niai3 lmo FIRE INSURANCE. Richmond Insurance Agency, Hain N. Koll. Mgr . 716 Main. 14 tf FARM LANDS. Small places near city, J. Ed. Moore. ov-r 6 X. 7th street. jnnK-Hrao FINANCIAL. MONEY LOANED- Low rates, eaay terms. Thompson's loan and real estate agency. Wide stairs, TIO Main street. Bond's automatic phone N'o. 2ouS. 1-wed-thurs fri eat-tf UNDERTAKERS. H. R. Downing & Son. 16 N. JMh U iCseptemo LAUNDRY. We can help make ycu happy honestly we can. Richmond Steam Laundry. The Ground Hon Can't Keep Us In Six Weeks.' I want $u00.00 to Ixan; good. I have $500.00 U Ioan. I have $600.00 to loan. I want $1,000 to Loan. I want, to fcell a realty Investment." $11,000.00, will pay 12 per cent 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 rentr als. Prompt collections, our motto. If you want to sell, list with 11a. If you want to buy. loan, borrow or rout, we are at your service. We can sell you a home for a Littl Cash, balance as Rnt. We make Mortgage Exemption from March 1 to May 1, and we need that 25 cents. It's That Morgan, 8th and N. E Round Trip Sunday Rates Every Sunday Via The C. C. & L. R. R. To Cincinnati, O $L90 To Cottage Grove, Ind 5 To Boston, Ind 25 To Webster lg To Williamsburg 25 To Economy 50 To Losantville 70 To Muncie 1.20 To Marion 2.10 To Peru 2.S5 Trains Leave going East, 5:13 a. m. Trains Lv. going West 10:55 a. m. Daily. For further Information call C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. A, Home Tel. 2062. Richmond. The Great Slood Purifier. For sal by Ieo H. Fihe. T. F. McDonald and W. H. Sudhoff. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.