Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 81, 6 May 1908 — Page 7
PAGE SEVEN. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT. Wanted, For Sale, For Rent, Lost, Found, Miscellaneous, Lodge Notice, Cards off Thanks, Obituaries, etc.. 1 CENT A WORD. Situations Wanted, are Free. i .o 7;iar.et Plaice of Richmond for buyer cr seller. A Irlzl will convince ycu -h-t Palladium Classified 7 INSERTIONS FOR THE PR5CE OF 5.
TFIE KICIOIOXD i'ALLADI U3I AND SUX TELEGHAM, WEDNESDAY 31 AY 6. 1908.
; ?
WANTED.
WANTED Men, Hoys and Children, lb call here tomorrow. See page ' for particulars. 6-It WANTED Competent white girl for general housework, 120 N. 11th Sr. Phone 10X5. Mlt WANTKD Good girl for general housework. Mrs. Westcott, 1415 K. Main St. 6-2 1 WANTED Every father's son and you to attend Bankrupt Sale at Big Store. 6-It WANTED The mothers to bring their hoys here tomorrow. See advertisement on page 3. Mt WANTED The young to attend our Kale of Clothing at Bankrupt prices. Big Store, 9th and Main. fi -It WANTED A girl for general housework, 31fi N. lftth. WANTED Boarders, $4:00 and $4.50 per week. Meals at $::.50. 1106 Main. 4-7t "tt ANTED V oni an or girl to wash dishes at 118 S. bth St. 4 :;t WANTED Men toLeam barber
TODAY'S MftRKFT QUOTATIONS
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohio.) New York, May 6. Open High Eow Amalgamated Copper ,;2 '' ''2 American Smelling T2:i.i 74'K 72'li American Sugar 127l4 127r-4 127'i Atchison M v N2T s!:,h B. & O ss 's S7 B. R. T 473 17-!4 4C.?k c. m. & st. P mii v-Wh i:;o:i4 New York Central 1024 102-V, 101:t Northern Pac i:5::V4 i::"' l;'-2-!4 Pennsylvania 119V4 119' lisa4 Teople's Gas 9u io s:ti. Reading 110 111 H9:'4 Southern Pacific N4 Union Pacific VMk W'k U. S. Steel oti'.i :!7k -'aK U. S. Steel pfd lott-' lui'4 H0-v8 Great Northern l'-X';, 1294 1288 It. S. Steel pfd 1"4 Div.
Chioaao. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. (By Corrtll and Thompson. Brokers. Eaton. O.l Chicago, May . Wheat. Open. High. Low. Close. May 1i'2"s in:; KC.. 12:1, July !H N'.i'U !N Sept st; si vi,; ,s.vs sr7s Corn. Open. Hign. Low. Close. Way 7-'vs 7o:'t 7 7o"i July UTs "'"' 4 f.-F's Sept '" '.-' 4 ,;2"'s Oats. Open, iligh. Low. Close. May :,:V'S s 4 .-.;;'t July 4i'es -ir.s li:;s 4r-v Sept ."7: "m'j ".'V::i ".C's Pork. Open. High. Low. Close. July .. .Si:t.47 .1."...v $1X.4 ?i;:.r, Sept .. . i:!.7." 1"..77 l.T.7.'! 1".77 . Lard. Open. High. Low. Clos. July .. . ?Vo ?S..".tv ,$S.4.' $s.4.Sept . . . S.(17 X.f7 SXC S.t'O Ribs. Open. High. Low. Close. July . . . $7. .7.2.'. S7.27 Sept . . . 7.52 7..V2 7.47 7.." U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, May 6.' Hogs, receipts 20,000; nc lower; left over 4.V,6. Cntlle 1S.000. steady. Shcep 15,000. Hog MarkeV Close. Light $5,351? $5.67 Mixed 5.355.7212 Heavy 5.305.70 Rough 5.305.45 Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies $5.S05j $5.05 Good to choice 5.65 'n 50 BEEF STEERS. Good to choice heifers.... 6.35 'ci 6.75 Medium to good steers . . 6.35(1? 6.75 Choice to fancy yearlings o.OO'jg 5.75 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers.. 5.50JT 6.50 Good to choice heifers .... 4.75 y' 5.25 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice $3.00 Jj $6.00 fair to good '2.0011 5.25 STOCK CATTLE. Good to h'vy fleshy feed'rs 5.25 'iT 5.50 Fnlr to good feeders 4.75 5.00 Good to choice stocaers 3.50 'r 4.50 Common to fair heifers .. 4.00:"r 4.65 SHEEP. Choice- lambs 7.25 7.50 Best yearlings 5.75x3 C-50 Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, May 5. Wheat 97 . Corn, 6S. Oats, 514. Richmond Grain Market. 1 (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per bu. t7c Corn, (per bu.) 65 Oats, (per bu.) 47c B-yo, (per bu.) ?Oc Djsii (per ton) $26.00
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 No. 1 solicitor at once; good contract to this kind; call at or address Room No. 16, I. O. O. F. Block. 20-7t
WANTED To clean and repair your wheels. Elmer Smith, 426 Main. ia-tf WANTED Yoi:i carpets, rugs. upholstery, mattresses, etc.. to clean by our vacuum process. Richmond House Cleaning Co. Phone, Home 1916. Bell 295R. 22-tf FOR SALE. FOR. SALE Richmond real estate a specialty. Merchandise stocks, fire insurance. Porterf'.eld, Kelly Block. Sth & Main. "tl i-XJlfsrOrOR TRXdE-7s' acres good level land, well improved, not far from Richmond. Will trade for Close f',:; 7::; 1271L2ss 4t.;-s 1 02 i::fu 1 1 it ;iu S 1'2 lou-'s 12lU Middlings (per ton) $2S.00 Richmond. CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir Rest hogs, average 200 to 250 lbs $i'.00fU Good heavy packers 6.00 J; Common and rough $4.50ff Steers, corn fed l.THKii, Heifers 4.hk, Fat cows Pulls u.r Calves ti.OOJti Lambs 6.00Q) ) $6.10 6.10 $5.00 : 5.''o ' 4.50 4.25 4.X) C.50 C.50 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens, dressed, per lb ..10c Old chickens, per lb., l'J'i to 15c Turkeys, per lb., lSc Dt'cks. per lb 15c COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb 20c Country butter, per lb., .....20 to 25c Egss, per doz 1 4c Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy hay (baled) $12.00 Timothy Hay (loose) . . .$10.0011.00 Clover hay (baled) $10 Clover Hay (loose) $9.00010.00 Mixed Hay 10.00 Straw (per ton) 5.00 Corn (per bu.) 60c to 63c. Oats (per bu.) 47 to 50c Fodder (per ton) $7.00 Richmond Seed Market. (Runre & Co.) Clover Seed (per bu) $10.00 Timothy (per bu) $2.00 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg. May Cattle Receipts Pg'nt: steady. Prime and extra. ,'l'.75'(j 7.10. Common and fair $6.35 a 6.65. Veal. $5.00 'it 6.75. Hogs Receipts. S loado. higher. Heavy $ 5.055t fi-10. Prime and yorkers $5.90 a 6.00. Pigs, $ 4.75 ?i 5.10. Sheep and lambs, receipts light; steady. Xlood to prime. $5.50 6.05. Fair to good lambs. 85 .01 w,, 7. Cincinnati Livestock. Cincinnati. May .--Hogs Receipts 1.961. steady. Butchers, $5.65 it 5. $0. Pigs. $3.35 'a 4.60. Cattle Receipts 271, steady. Shippers. $5.6" (i 6.50. Veal, $5.00$ 6.25. Sheep and Lambs Rect's 100 steady. Sheep. $3.35 .Ji 5.10. Lambs, $6.10.1 7.60. East Buffalo Livestock. East Buffalo. May . (Cattle Receipts 50. steady. Sheep and lambs Receipts S.OOO: slow. Sheep $5,101x5.35. Lanib. cull to choice $5. 00 Q 7.65.
Frank Greenstreet. ',-2t FOR SALE New Process gasoline vapor stove, 421 Pearl street. ;.".t FOR SALE The entire stock of young men's ami boys' clothing at bankrupt price. Big Store, Corner Uih and Main. C-lt FOIiTs A LET h e finest line of Fnderwear on the market today. At your own price. Bankrupt Sale, Big Store. 6-lt FO R S A LK An d "on 1 y thr eT d aytTt o sell it in everything goes at bankrupt prices. The Big Store. tl-U FOR "SALE-Kitchen cabinet, cheap; gornl as new. Phone I'.o.vj. ii-2t FOR SALE Homo on monthly payments, ;;45 S. W. 3rd Sr. Nice five room house, both kinds water, electric ligb'. cement walk. Reliable party can secure on payments like rent. T. W. lladley, Phone 2202. FOR SALE :Somechoic(My bred hound puppies. Call Butler's Shoeing shop. 5-tf F7)K SALE New and second hand 1 logs- Receipts, Mixed and yorkers, ,;.X"r;. IO. Pigs. $5.55. Heavies and rough, S4.70fM5.20. Toledo Grain. Toledo, May ',. Oats 51'v. Wheat, $1.00. Corn 69. Clover seed. $13.00. Alsike $13.50. Rye, Suig. SHERIFF SAYS TWENTY-FIVE E VICTIMS (Late Special) Laporte, Ind., May 6. Immediately after midnight an autopsy on the bodies which were unearthed yesterday, revealed evidence of violent deaths. Sheriff Smulzer and Coroner Mack and his corps of assistants began a vigorous examination in the "house of death" ana its surroundings. At daylight they had discovered numerous soft spots and began digging. They soon unearthed the body of a ni;in buried two feet below the surface. This was soon followed by discovery of two additional bodies and a quantity of ribi. and other bones until the authorities figure they have the remains of at least nine bodies in addition to the Gunness family of four discovered just after the fire last week. This afternoon in the basement was discoverd the room where Mrs. Gunnes slaughtered, dismembered and sewed in gunny sacks the bodies of her victims. It is now believed she had an accomplice. A hired man claims that he heard struggles of the victims while partly under the influence of chloroform and heard the noise of knives, saws, etc., and saw the remains of torches used while burying the bodies at night. Ills suspicions had been satisfied with her subsequent explanations. The premises are swauing with curious from all sections, seeking gruesome mementoes. Information is in hand that Mrs. Gunness collected more than $12,000 in insurance. Late this afternoon the sheriff predicts that thL total victims vvjll reach twenty-five. Lamphere cannot be induced to confess. He admits that many persons came to the farm who never departed. Excavation of one soft place .brought to light four bodies, a young person, middle aged person and two children. Von riutten's Misery. Very sad was the fate of Ulrich von Ilutten, one of the greatest writers Germany has ever produced. Unable to earn a living, he was reduced to tramping through the country, begging food and shelter from the peasants. One bitter winter's night both were refused, and nest morning he was found frozen stiff and cold in the drifting snow outside the village. "The only thing he died possessed of besides the rags he wore," says his biographer, Zuinglin, "was a pen." The Nub of the Thing. "Man runs to cliques," audibly ruminated a grizzled citizen. "He thinks pretty well of his country, of his state or province, of his town, of his own street, and then we get at the nub of the thing the man thinks pretty weil of himself." Kansas City Newsbook. Whan a man is being operated on by a barber it is best for hitn to keep hla mouth shut. The case is different whea th patient U la the daatlst's ckair.
city property. Economy, Ind.
furniture, carpets, stoves at lowest prices. The Bargain Store, 1230 Ridge St. 14-7t FOR SALE New 19S wheels and sundries. Elmer Sm:th, 12" Main. FOR SALE Automobile runabout in first class condition, at a bargain. Address "Automobile," care Palladium. 4-7t FOR SALE Electrical engineering course, complete. I. C. S. Great bargain. Address "C. M." care Palladium. 2-7 FOR " S A LE Household go6dsTl 1 T N. fith St. o0-7t FO R S A LE E x t rau i e'e" r cTa d-ca r t A . H. Pyle, R. R. No. 4. Phone f.lO'.C. 2-7t FOR SALE 34 acres inside corporation, Richmond. Splendid land for dairying, trucking or subdividing. Low price for quick sale. BinkleyHartnian Co., Indianapolis, Indiana. l-7t FOR SALE lViij.OOf)" IMne- PlasTc ring Lath at $4.50 per l.OOn. C. N. Matfield, Fountain City, Ind :jO-tf FOR SALE OR TRADE Modern resi
WAY 10 DISPOSE OF COUNTY BONDS Many Must Be Issued for the Construction of Township Roads. AGENT GIVES PROMISE. INDIANAPOLIS MAN SAYS HIS COMPANY WILL BUY ALL BONDS AT MARGIN PRESENT LAW IS SAID TO BE DEFECTIVE. It is probable a way will be found for this county to dispose of the bonds that must be issued to pay for the improvement of township roads under the new laws. An agent of an Indianapolis firm of brokers has stated that his company will bur all such bonds at a margin. This will necessitate the contractors making a discount. This method is being followed all over the state. It is believed that the next legislature will amend the road law so that the bonds will bear Tt1- per cent interest and be taxable or only 4 per cent and not be taxable. At present they only bear 4 per cent and are taxable in addition. This places a handicap on them that is hard to overcome. It is believed that contractors will be willing to permit a discount in order to obtain their money for the work done as soon as It is completed. Otherwise a road may be completed and if the county bo unable to dispose of the bonds, the contractor must wait an indefinite length of time for his money. The contractor will bo willing to accept S05 for a bond worth .'JH'O if he obtains the first named sum without delay rather than wait several years to gain the latter. The contractors even up by taking this matter into consideration when making their bids. They place the figures higher than would be done otherwise, in order that the county must bear the cost of discount rather than they. Funeral on 'Skates. Among the Wends, a remnant of the ancient Slavonic race inhabiting the Spreewald. a region Inclosed by an arm of the Spree river, about fifty miles south of Berlin, are seen the most curious funeral processions of the civilized world. As in Holland, the thoroughfares are waterways. In the winter time, when these are frozen over, funeral processions pass along the Ice on skates. The coffin is carried on a pledge drawn by six mourners on skates. The immediate relatives of the dead, men and women alike, skate along behind the coffin surrounded by their friends. The women carry a Bible in one hand and wear the ancient ational costume. Popular Mechanics. A Few Human Bromides. Now that surgery has advanced to a point where diseased or defective parts of the human body may be removed and replaced with those from an animal, it is presumed that the following will no longer be regarded as mere nature fakes: The man with the eagle eye. the man with the lion heart, the man with tin? chicken liver, the man with the bull neck, the man with the pig head and the man with the dog face. New York World. His Card Tricks. Mrs. Stryver We had a most enjoyable time at Mrs. Hunter's tea. Count j Tedout was there and kept us mystiI fied for an hour with his tricks with i the cards. Mr. Stryver (dryly) ne ! kept us mystiried with 'em for three months at the club, but we're on to ! him now. New York World. He Meant the Ashes. Hewitt Gruet uses Tery appropriate language, don't yon think so? Jewett Well, when I asked him what he thought of the idea of cremation his reply was, "It Jars one." New York
- 1
dence. Easy terms. Phone ?2s.
FOR RENT. FOR RENT- House ot five rooms. ?,:::: S. i::th. t; -it FOR RENT Eight room hoiiM- with bath and electric 'light; well located. Phone 4 24,1. f.-;f FOR RENT n room flat, suitable fer light housekeeping or business pur- i poses, centrally located, over 7 1 5 Main street. Inquire P. W , rare , Palladium. .-tt . . ; FOR RENT Six rooms with bath: and electric light. Inquire at 21 South 5th St. 5-2 FOR RENT Furnished rooms with I i light and bath. 109 N. 12th. ...,t FOR RENT Seven room house. 219 j N. 7th. V2t
FOR REN I a rooms wjtn electric P.-ui. 5-lti light and water at llfi S. Sth St. In-; LADIES" ST'lTS $1 0o " ' Acn7e" " Drv i quire at 221 South thSt. Cleaning Co., 2? North Seventh, j FOR RENT Furnished room wirh j Work guaran'cod. l-7t board. nOWost 7th. s"l;CKO. M. G I 'YER General contractor.! FOR "liKNT Furnished rooms; also Carpenter, and builder. Job work, j
COMMISSIONERS LOOK AT L STREET PROFILE East End of Street Higher Than West End. The county commissioners spent this morning in viewing a profile of the proposed South 1 Mreet prepared by County Surveyor Howard. The oast end of the street will be considerably higher than the west end at Liberty avenue and for this reason the filling and cutting down will be unusually large. The commissioners also discussed the maintenance of a county ditch within Center township. Complaint lias been made that this ditch is badly in need of repairs. THRILLING SPORT. Rafting Down the Canyons of an Unmapped Glacial River. With provisions for only ten days a party of explorers In Alaska found ona September that they must build rafta and tuke their chances of letting the swift river carry them to settlement where food could be obtained; otherwise Ice and snow would shut them in from all hope of rescue. In "The Shamelese Diary of an Explorer" Robert Dunn tells of the Journey on the roughly made rafts. "At 11 o'clock today began the most thrilling sport I know, rafting down the snaky canyons of an unmapped glacial river. "Fred and I captained the Mary Ann II., the other three the Ethel May. We rasped and hauled them over the gravel shadows of our tributary, shot out between tfte main walls of the stream and seized upon that boiling current. "We reached silently from cliff to cliff, jammed pike poles Into the slate shelf overhead, twirled out of eddies. We bumped and grounded. We dashed overboard and on the run eased her across shallows. We tugged half an hour to make an Inch at each shove through the gravel, suddenly plunged in to our necko, and she leaped free as we scrambled on. "Bowlders rose through white rufTs of water in midchannel. We might or might not hang on them for a perpendicular minute. "You must be very handy with a role. You must have a hair fine eye for moving angles, the strength of an eddy, the depth of foam ruffling over a stump. You must be surer of the length of your pole than a polo player of the reach of his mallet. You must be quicker than a Siwash dog. You must know the different weight of each log down to ounces, the balance of the duffel piled high like a dais, covered with the tent and the bean pot. the mackinaws and the ax lashed to all the lashings. It's a pretty game." A Risky Subject. "Do you think, sweetheart," queried the young man with the evenly divided hair, "that your father will consent to otir marriage'-" "Well." replied the fair one. "of course pr.pa will be sorry to !oe me, but" "Rr.t." inter -I t'. rah youth. "I will remind him that instead of losing a dai:gliter he win g:;a a son." "Dcr.rest." rej'ined the wise maid, "if you really v.-;;ut me you mustn't siy anything of the kind. Papa has three sti'-li s:;s boarding with hi:;i now, and he's a Htie touchy on the subject.'' Queer Milk. Many specimens c.f unconscious humor are received ly the editors t.f that monumental work, the "Imperial Gazetteer of India." A district was said to be "an extensive rolling plain, consisting of alternate ridges of bare stony hills ar.d narrow fertile valleys." An interesting item of natural history was aTorded by the remark. "The buffalo differs from the cow in giving milk which is richer in butter fat, ia voice and ia having no hump." London Globe. Mart Ett-fv: Oold Me1al TTour Is the best fnr mak-
office r o!cs, with steam heat ar.d
sent o"'y. S-s-tf FOR RENT-- Kurn ihd i ii:i, heat ; an-1 bvh : ;'. N. I2rh. 1-7: " U RENT B i: u.j-.-s rooms and f.a;.-. , Ft. Wa Ave. See A! fords. Uf.-tf. i MISCELLANEOUS. SEE our Bank: upt ad vert iseni, n: on page ;t tonight. '.-1 1 UST 't ,Mik ( .,n Uhc. w p ,.u c , L. station and National avenue,! . , ... ., . ,,, ' Apr:! :!:. Kewaro. Return to 21' National a i.ue. ; ' ' : NOTICE Bazaar Junior. I;stv M . n-ac-K jta-n win in.iKe tne stason i;te at my place. 21-.. miles Ji':th nf .tjhnm... M.,.,o,,)lnr 1 1 i i. . Kd Norris, l'hono M'.t.'.K. apt 2 lir.o 1'OIMI Haltor. 'Apply at 520 Norta DRAWING MAY NOT BE PUT IN SCHOOLS Wot Believed That Trustees Will Act Favorably. It is not believed probable many of the township trustees of the county will install a department of drawing in tho district schools. It has been suggested that such a course would be of great advantage to the pupils and place the district schools nearer on the same basis as those of the city. The trustees find numerous exceptions to the plan. Thr additional expense would be considerable, if it were found necessary to employ a special teacher for the work. It is not deemed advisable to attempt to make the teaching of drawing another of Hie duties of the regular teacher. The work is heavy enough as it is, so the trustees say, and tho teachers have all they may attend to in the time allowed. THREE HUDDRED KILLED IN BATTLE Engagement Fought in India, Sunday. London, Eng., May 6. Tho official report of Peshawar, India, states that three hundred Afghans wore killed and many wounded as tho result of Sunday's fighting at Khyber Pass. TO GO TO MILTON. The degree staff of the Whitewater lodge of Odd Fellows will go to Milton Saturday evening and it is expected a large party of members of the order will accompany the team. Spec ial rates have been secured from the Interurban company and the delegation will leave the station in a special car at C o'clock. EDISON THE VICTOR. He Humbled the Pride cf the Fast Telegraph Operator. Ddison made his first record as a telegraph operator in Memphis. A contemporary says be came walking into the office one morning looking like a veritable hayseed. He wanted a Job, and, although Lis appearance was cot prepossessing, the office was short banded, and be was assigned a desk at the St Louis wire, the hardest in the i ofSce. "At the end of the line was an 1 operator who was chain lightning and ! knew it," says Francis Arthur Jones' I "Life of Edison." j "Edison had hardly got seated before1 St. Louis called. The newcomer re-1 s ponded, and St. Louis started on a long report which he pumped in like a bullae afire. Edison threw his teg over the arm of his chair. . leisuiviy transferred a wad of spruce gum from his pocket to his mj irh. t U up a pen. examined it eriHy and started in about fifty word behind. He didn't stay there iong. though. St. Louis let out another link speed, and still an-: other, "vl the intr ;n.ent 113 Ivi; son's table h'ia.med like an o'd style Singer sev.Uug rr."hi:.e. Every mnn in ths office left his desk and gtrlired aronnd the lay to eee what he was d j.ng with that electric cyeioue. "We:;, sir. he was rlrht on the word and taking it down in the prettiest copperplate hand you ever saw, even i crossing his 't's' and dotting his IV ' fcnd punctuating with as rrucli care as 5 man editing teieiraph f r.' printnr. : St. Lou i got tired by trid by asd U?- , gnn to sio'.v down. Then Edison opened the kpy and said: j " 'Hello, there! Whn are you going to get a hustle or.? This is no primer class.' "Well, sir," said the gentleman in , concir-ion. "that broke St. Louis ail 1 up. He had been rawhiding Memphis j for a long time, and we were terribly J sore, and to have a man In our otSce 1 who couid walk all over him made ua j feel like a man whose horse had won the Derby.- - - I
Screens and screen doors. Automatic i-h.v-e ir.r.6. L'5-tt LA UN MOW EES sharpened ar.d re
a tied, t.iken and returned. Phone lv".t. Ceo Lane. 2-7t LAUNDRY. We can help make ycu happy honestly wo can. Richmond Stem Laundry. FINANCIAL. MONEY LOANEI Low rate, eaiy ernis. Thompson's loan and ral estate agency. Wide tUirs. 710 Main street. Bond's automatio phtme No. Ct8. 1-wed-thurs frl-at-ti Wht-n AhrHtam Lincoln la lStU) fought solitude tliat he might wtI: his Inaugural addreit, h asked his friead Ilerndon fer a copy of the con. ptitutloa, for Webster's reply toIIajTiet, for Jackson's proclamation acalast nuIllticnUon and for Henry Claj'tj ppeech on the compromise of 1S50. KNIGHTS TEMPLAR ARE MUCH INTERESTED Annual Conclave at Winona Lake in June. Local Knights Templar are interested In tho arrangements being mada for the annual conclave which will ha held at Winona Lake ar.d Warsaw, Juno 1 to 13. In order that the conclave may be held at Winona, when th spring rains are over, it was necessary to change the rules of the organization, which stipulates the conclave shall be held in May. It is expected that from 1.2 to 1..VX1 Knights will be in the parade. One of Ihe new features of the conclave will be a contest in open, ing exercises, when a handsome silver cup will be offered as a prize. Kec ptiona and balls will enliven the nodal features. More attention will be paid to social features for women than at any previous conclave. The Last Movt. Bobby Js the son of a Methodist minister and has had the experience of "moving" four times in the space of his eight years' life. He disapproves strongly of the itinerant system which Is the bane of the Methodist clergy. Some time ago an elderly minister was visiting Bobby's father and directed his attention to the small boy, asking him many questions of a semitheological nature. Finally the course of the conversation turned to beaten, and Bobby was asked concerning the abode of the blest "Yes." sajd tfa youngster, with a sigh ef deep weariness, "I know. It's the last place we'r going to move to." Argonaut. Out of the Ordinary. "Say," queried the high browed mil as he entered the drug emporium, "have you Blghead'i balm tot bald nees?" , "No," replied the druggist, tut" "Oh, yes," interrupted the proepee five customer, "of course yon bar something just a good, but I wait what I want Bee!" "You are mistaken, my friend," said the pill dispenser. "I haven't anything Just as good, but I hare something that is far better." Chicago News. Soothing the Author. Actor In the first act last night, when Roderlgo is to shoot me. bis gun didn't go off. This sort of thing spoils my play. Manager It doesn't make any difference whether he shoots yoa or not. The audience appreciate the situation. They know you are not worth the powder it would take to shoyt you and find it very appropriate that the gun misses fire. Liverpool Mercury. Unkind Deduction. Mr. rVnhara I'm going to glre big party on my birthday. Ben ham Who will be Invited? Mrs. Benhain Just my friends. Bechari I thought you said that you were going to gire a big party. New York Press. . SEE OUR SPRING LINE of GO-CARTS HASSENBUSCH'S The Great Blood Purifier. Fr sale by Lf-o II Fire. T. F. McDonald and W. H. Sudhoff. Moore & Ogborn Fire Insurance Agents. Will go on your Bond. Will Insure you against Burglary, Theft and LArceny. Room 16, I. O. O. F. Bids.. Pkones, Home 1583. Eell S3-B
