Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 90, 15 May 1908 — Page 9
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, MAY 15. 1908.
PAGE NINE. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT Wanted, For Sale, For Rent, Lost, Found, Miscellaneous, Lodge Notice, Cards of Thanks, Obituaries, etc., II CENT A WORD. Situations Wanted, are Free. The Market Place of Richrncr.d for buyer cr seller. A trial will convince you that Palladium Classified Ads re result brinrrers. 7 INSERTIONS FOR TUB PRICE C
WANTED,
WANTED-Pianist, sing er and casthiner for 5c theater. Apply by Iet ter giving references to Z. T., care Palladium. 12tf WANTED Girl"" for general housework, 201 N. 14th. ir,-:;t WANT EIVashirigsand lace "curtains to do up. Call MS .. Mh St. 1 4-::t WANTED- Goorl home made cakes at the Woman's Exchange, 1015 Main St. 1 l-lit WANTED To employ a Catholic gentleman as local representative, we require a person of energy and ability for the position. Salary $1S per
TODAY'S MARKET QUOTATIONS
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Oh New York, May 15.
Open High Low (dose Amalgamated Copper t'.si f's- ex,?- i'.77fe American Smelting 77 ' 7.s 7t!a 77U American Sugar i:il l::i7H l::o.a i:tl 4 Atchison y'-'J'n s:;i2 s2't n:;;,h B. & O !)1 !t;p4 !U -':4 :;! n. R. t r.)"s r.i3s '""'h -r78 C. M. & St. P i:i44 l'!5 i:i2-K l.'!4 New York Central lo;."s lofii-i 1'15's lw; Northern Pac i:i"ai .... i:i5r'A .... Pennsylvania 121U 122 120io 12lsA People's Gas U2K 92 5,1 't Ot Reading 1134 llTU 115i 117,8 Southern Pacific Mi-'li S7!H 85 T8 874 I'nion Pacific 1 1 M i 111' 141 a4 114TS U. S. Steel th :;st- ;;s V. S. Steel pfd Ht2-'1H 11)2 101'i 102 Great Northern 132 . 132' 130V4 llUTs
Chicago. CHICACO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS (By CoTbl! ?nd Thompson. Brokers.
Eaton. O.l Chicago, May 17.. Wheat. Open. High. Low. Close. Way Ml' 102 looi4 H'Mj-"-; July Sit--, K Mt-S S!l... Kept St'.'i m;4 n; S.V',4 Corn. Open. Higu. Low. Close. Way T.::;, 741... 7::", 74 't July ;." t;r."s ;4::4 r.5c, Sfd't ('..'is i;; ttivKt Oats. Open. High. Low. Close. Way .-.p., -,v-H r..'i r.ii; July 47 -47J4 -h"s 47',i tfrpt 37i i f Pork. Open. High. Low. Close. July .. .?i3.ar .i:j.-iu sis.a.-; i.j.io Sept .. . i3.cr i::.t;7 i.,.e.r. i.j.ic. Lard. Open. High. Low. Close. July .. . $S.3T .5.... Bept . . . .... .... s.r.7 Ribs. Open. High. Low. Closo. July . . . $7.2 5 ... 9.... ?7 ,-, Sept . . . 7. 17 7,47
U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, May 15. Hogs, receipts 23.000; left over 7.302, slow. Cattle 2,000. Sheep 5,000. Hogs Close. Light $5.15?.$5.45 Wlxed 5.1 5 e? 5.45 Heavy 5.1 ncf 5.45 Hough 5.1 05f 5.25 Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, 'heat. 09 4. Corn, 7 Hi. Oats, 51 4. Oats, 51U. Timothy, $12.00 May 15. Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK HOGS. Sst heavies $ 5. r : Good to choice 5.25 ',( BEEP STEERS. Good to choice heifers.... O.o5'd Medium to good steers . . o.;Cvi Choice to fancy yearnncs 5.00 d BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers . . 5.50;h Good to choice heifers 4.75i VEAL CALVES. ti. . , 0.75 5.75 0.50 5.25 6 00 5.25 5.50 5.00 4.50 4.05 7.50 Good to choice Fair to good STOCK CATTLE Good to h'vy fleshy feed'rs "00 'a :.00ji 5.23 TC 4.75 'u 3.50 'ffi I. 00 It Fair to good feeders Good to choice stocKrs Common to fair heifers SHEEP. Choice Iambs Best yearlings o. 75lS I..00 Richmond. CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) fiest hogs, average 200 to r.0 lbs. .$5.40 o $5 5.15 't 5 Good heavy packers Common and rough Sters, corn fed . . . Heifers Fat cows Bulls Calves . ;!.oo;j . S.ttOJf . 4.50 . .'5.75 11 . 3.50 it . 5.00W
week, write at mire for particulars. The Hoey Publishing Co., Dearborn St., Chicago. 111. l.VH
WANTED To buy second hand surrey in good condition; rubber tires. Hell Phone 14 W. Home 314:1. 14-2t WANTED To buy second-hand carpets ;uid druggi.t. Phone 1201; T10 Main. i:;-:;t j W A VT I-' T" i.ilhf.r -cv O. (-in. I vans something that v.iil .sell: no! -oinpetition. Call or address VSi'J j Ridge street. lM-7t WANTED Cigar salesman. Expeii(;iice unnecessary. ?l'iii per mouth and expenses. Peorh.-ss Ciu';:;- Co., Toledo, Ohio. ' T-f't. WANTED Yen carpets, rat;i !;- holatery, jK'-iitressea. er.v. v c!c,-u by our viouum process. Richmond io.i Lambs 6.00 6.50 PRICES FOR FOULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens, dressed, ier n, Old chickens, per lb., to Turkeys, per lb., Ducks, per lb COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb Country butter, per lb Eggs, per doz 10c 15c 18c 15c 2Se 15 c. 14c Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per bu) Corn (per bu) . . . ; Oats, (per bu.) Rye, (per bu.) Bran (per ton) Middlings (per ton) ...9Sc ...70c . . .47c . . .70c $26.0" $2S.0() Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy Hay (baled) Timothy Hay (loose) , Clover h;iy (haled) . . Clover Hay (loose) .. Mixed Hay Straw (per ton) Corn ( tier bu. 1 . . Oals (per bu.) $12.00 . .$io.ooc 11.00 ?10 $0.00 :o 00 5.00 . . . ti.'l to 05c. . . . .47 to 50c Richmond Seed Market. ;Runre & Co.) Clover Seed (per but 510.00 Timothy (per bu) $2.00 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg. May 15. Cat tie Receipts light. Prime and extra J7..2." Common and fair $t.:: uown.. 0.05. Veal. $0.75 down. Hogs Receipts 12 load?. Heavy. $5.7."- down. Sheep and lamb receipts, 0 to Fair to good lambs Spring lambs ?.uo. down. Cincinnati Livestock. Cincinnati. May 15. Hogs Receipts 1.001, steady. Butchers. $5.05 -t 5. SO, j Pigs, $a.:;r.';t 4.00. Cattle Receipts 271, steady. Shippers. $5.0" if 0.50. Veal. $5.0(Kt 0.25. Sheep and Lambs Reefs 100 steadv. Sheep, $:!.M5 r 5.10. Lambs. $0.10vt 7.00. East Buffalo Livestock. East Buffalo. May i: Catth1 Receipts 2'0; firm. Veal Receipts 4.000. ?7.75 down. Sheep and lambs Receipts ll.OnO. Sheep $5.05. Hogs Receipts 9,000. Mixed and yorkers $5.70 down. Pigs. 55.40. Toledo Grain. Toledo. May 15. Oats 54 L . Wheat, 9i) if.. Corn, 74 U. Clover seed. $13.00. Alsike $13.50. Rye, self,. 1 ) ' Kl.-vur on7j. Vkromca.
House Cleaning Co. Phone, Home 1916. Pell 2U5R. 22-tf WANTED Small oak cigar case, op
en on top. Torn Urennan. Phone 12'1. 12-Tt j V. ANTL'D Mea to Lesrn ba--':er Hade; wil; equip sncp fcr yr.-n or j furbish positions, few weeks com- j pletes. constant practice, careful Instructions, tools giver. S:ttnrcl ; wag?s, diplomas tvn. w;te for ! catalogue. Moiei Pa, her College, j Cincinnati. O. tf
FOR SALE FOR SALE New mission morris chair. 2115 S. Cth. FOli SALE Pee. jive and sapplu-i iit V.'olfers, :inu South v,i Third. 15-:;t FOR SALE All the lixturcs and safe Cnirps,hocters cf As sou a a pit tne t-;cvc!uticn. I'M'IJ-;!! in a ru :e be wa s ghea I..u tier and ic.il After a lit ! b- pra. ; i a-., t sipi: he u re tu iui::g i:i :.s luiuy had rei ei i-d -barges it;, a st. el- leiit.'fc or t- t-;i JaeLet 'lant.ed." At t!a :-ij,tu-.'i.s as :;.def pen :!: or h . 1 i . 1 g aue o y. lv. el r. v, i hi b the bij beeatne a In! i loophole assigned him tight w ben t he set ; ,v-r . a an Indian foray Growit Lee;' i:;e a liuuter of dei r and bear, skilled in r,;i Utiiizitig -;i t-r, ca:a!:le lottj; niarchi-s tlir.n.g'i tra. tain forests. At night lie to cur! uj in a single Liau umtill tire and sleep u:.der heaen. If it rained, iu a he built him a lodge of bat e:U. h a u : et be e rt he i'w uiiaitti i or boiiL! With no implement but bis o;.e p anal tomahawk. Incessant war with the Indians taught him to be bis own general, to be ever on tin- aiert. to :.;.; his betid and shoot straight tnah-r di-e. Pitted against tin enemy who gave n i quarter, but tortured the living ami scalped the dead, he became himself a stanch lighter who never surrendered. The wilderness bred men of iron. The Churchyard Yew's Sscrct. "Why are yew trees found in cemeteries onlyV" said a forester. "Why. all over the world saving here, where they don't exist do you tind in cemeteries great yews of Immemorial age? Antiquaries have tried to attach some druidic significance to the matter. Yews grow in churchyards and nowhere else; hence they were sacred to the dead in the time of the Druids, nnd it was as erroneous to plant them in your garden as to plant tombstones there. I have exploded that superstition. On a walking tour of England one summer I asked every farmer I met why he had no yews on his place. The answer was always the same: 'Do you think I want to lose my cattle'' or 'Had one, but cut it down. The beastles got at it, and yew leaves is poison to the beastles.' Yes, that is the secret of the churchyard yew. It grows only in cemeteries because the farmers have destroyed it everywhere else, its leaves being injurious to live stock." New Orleans Times-Democrat. Washington and a C05. While the P.riiish ocenph-d Philadelphia and the A -ic-wi foive lay i; winter quarters at Valley Forge, one day as Washington and h:s s:..i? w ere dining a tine hunting do.,- which wa-. evidently lost came to soak somet to eat. On its collar was the "Conenii Howe." Washington o that (lie dog should lie fed. r.'.l 1 t! sent it to Philadelphia under a i truce, with a letter reading. name n .e-.iitigton s coin!', i ::ieti s o : 1 1 owe. He . to ret urti to dentally fell inscription o: long to Cent commander i ter ' on v o y i t : -j act of cotirtc:us himself tl if him dg w : t -h d 1 Italia r t: to b .1 ! I : rcpi : is v : . i " 1 ' : he cor nks mi ell; for th: A Judne's Pocticcl Rrquect. Ill "Memoirs of Famous Trials." te Rev L. V Ruruaby. is un amus story about the ;m. i0!.;1 i.W0I) brilliant, intellectual and clever judu His lerdship wanted a lift to the I chancellor's l.re:P.;f:tst in 1S3 and ddresse 1 the 1"., Honing re.piest to hi-: old friend. Mr. Justice Mat hew: My ror J C Will you he free to carry ni. l.siUe of thee, in your buggoo to Selborne's tea. if breakfast lie intends for we. on November nx: P. V.. eighteen hundred nnd eighty-three A. P.. for Lady B.. from Cornwai! O.. wii! absent be anil says ilia: she would rather see her husband be P dash P than send to London her bnggee for such .1 melancholy spree as Seleorne's toast and Se. home's tea? The Sneezing Prayer. The custom of following a sneeze with a prayer goes so far back into the past it is next to impossible to say wheu it actually began. According to Strada. the custom originated among the Assyrians, who. through an opinion of the danger that attended it. after the act of sneezing made a short prayer to the gods. The Romans after sneezing cried out. "Jupiter, help me."' The custom is mentioned by Homer, the early Jewish writers and others and is found among many savage tribes. The Original New Zeaianders. The original New Zeaianders were known as the most ferocious cannibals and the most warlike savages. They were big, fi.unt fellows, of immense muscular force and great sagacity. These savage New Zeaianders. though they ate their enemies. Interred their own dead, and they believed that the third day after burial the heart separated itself from the corpse and was carried to the clouds bj &a attendant
of he Tug More bankrupt stock, j Saturday and Monday at Cue Tauiw, ; C ad at ,he codseum. e nave no barn. ...... further for them. lMt'K SALE OK TRADK-Mo e
turtner ,;. for them. FOR SALE Fo'ding bed lounge. 10:; N. 17th Sfeet 15-1 FOR SALE Horse and mules. II C. P.ullefdick & Son. Phone V23Z. Kl-Ut c . -- t ua SALE - Barred Rock setting eggs at lintf .,,.!,,. Tr ...in """ " "oi ,iaj iarmers to invest. Charles II. Nye. 11 aouin iui street. !-7t i .-..a i.j-. t ova Kunabout cheap;. ha.s .'ust been ovnli.r.ii.ni inn. ;,., 1. ilj c- i i - ... . ... L. V.. Palladium :,H:co ' -. ' 1 rul'- SALE Nevi,o;u.er lohre P',n ,., FOR SXLi:-io..se:,o!d 'urni-u-e ',. -- .... '"M"1' it!l s'i-eot. i;r 'OR SALK-'A'ar load of" horses ev7ry U I P. j L LU lit i U. ij Li f R. : TTV !':!.. II lr.--; School Oook Law Not t:cd. i he !.:ch d oi Kell; i)b.,r, education . 01 Earlh lias t.sked ' junion in of am he rePre 0; law Thf ; d v. :v.it s.iall iss -e i;s ;)! .'O.vh s pn ' tiv e rs unsatisfactory school d,!ale!S er school pasent s.-ssic.n or whefhtitiiil the statutory i'v-: r i of school book in June. - ti::g o! c :::h POLICE NOTIFIED. Thr i" department has re ceived a postal card conveying infor- ! iiiation of the theft of a ouantity of jewelry at Louisville, Ky., and the re- : quest for aid. A reward is offered for information that may lead to the arrest a. id conviction of the thieves. Nan anj the 3uc?etT There is one particular fever of nonsense which the Princeton Tiger claims the credit of bavins originated, for ia the November issue. l'JO'2. appeared the following verse: There once was a mnn from Nantucltet Who kept til tils cash In a bucket. But bis daughter, earned Nan. Kan away with a man. And as for ihu bucket Nat: tucket. Eor the next few months Nan, her father und her newly acquired husband encountered a series of the most astonishing adventures In every known hamlet in the couutry which could be converted into limerick form by the brains of newspaper and magazine writers from sea to sea. Ely the time Nan came back with a dozen or so additional verses lacked on ro her thera is reason to wonder in the face of the ordeals to which she had been subjected whether the pecuniary advantage gained by absconding wi:. that bucket repaid her for all that she bad been 1 1; rough. - Roy S Inirstine ia Bohemian Magazine. H;w Ho Caved T'cn?y. A cnifttiv politician i-.i Pennsy.l var.ia m.H'a .; .! to gar elected to the legislature at I la : rispurg ;Vr one term. When he came hack he bni't himself a One house, costing about O.oro His old neighbors, who knew be had no money 1 el'i re lie vcit to II :rt:shnrg anil whu knew the salary of a Pennsylvania l.gi-dator. were curious to discover where the returned statesman got means to laiild the !eu--o. So one day a committee waited on the man whr btult the house, anil the spokesman said: "Jim. it may be none of our business to your thinking, hut we think you owe it to us win, sent yon t the !egishitur to explain where you got the moaey with which you built this house. Yon didn't I:ae a cent before you went to Ilarrisberg and owed eoryho..ly in the place How about it?" "Why." s;.i, die bitihler. "It's simple enough Yon see. when we were i:i Hun-isburg we didn't keep a hired girl." Argonaut. Freaks cf the C-r-. The freaks of the sea are the anglers and hat tishes. The people of North Carolina have aptly named the angler the allmouth. for the tail begins where the mouth ends. Inhabiting the north Atlantic, the angler has been given a variety of names. On the Massachusetts coast it Is known as goosefish. Rhode Island terms It bellowfish. and Connecticut gives it the cognomen of molltgut. Jamaica bay calls it the car-1 petbagger. England. Ireland. Scotland and Wales all have their local names, j The names of the English give to this one fish are expressive of its habits, to; say the least. They call it toadfisli, I frog, fishing frog, devilfish, sea devil, nassfish. monktish. pockettish. wide-! gut. kettlemaw and widegap. Thomas Pennant, who in 1773 wrote his "British Zoology." did not like the name of fishing frog, then applied to the fish, j so he "changed the old name of fishing j frog for the more simple one of an-' Kier. The nab Of The Body. The organ around which all the other orgaci revolve, and upon which they are largely dependent for their welfare, ia the stomach. When tne functions of the stomach become impaired, the bowels and liver also become deranged. To cure a disease of the stomach, liver or bowels yet a 50 cent or $1 bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin at your drnzglst's. It is the promptest relief for constiri and dy peaasaaawr sMsuid!.
FOK SALE OR TRADE Mo
: neiue. Kf.sy tt.: :n? F'h.,;; 1 ' 1 OR SAi.E City jer.l stare. Port.-.-field. KeRev Block. ;-tf FOR REiT. FOR RENT Room.-: lieht ho - .sekeej, ... : ing or boarding. lot: N. 17ih S'. tv;;t FOR RENT Fu: -.-d fiont room with bath. -7 N 11th St - I,-.-'. - V iU: P":; -'s root - una lu's F; Vr: -? Avi . See ' .-,U ::. ,-. .;. " ' IWI r-i-tu i ..:n l.otisv! v.-ith ' -V- - ; er,. i'.ioih f..' '. i tt FOR RENT Large ro.,!,i. f uruls'.'.e.l or uat ;i nish. d ; c-e-frally locaU'd ! ADDITIONS TO THE ; GLEN FLORAL HOUSE i 'Contract for Work to Be I Awarded Soon. An addition is to lie made to the flora! leuc-rs at Glen Miller park by the t reel ion of a new ma en bouse and the installation of a different arrangement for ht tiling purposes. Plans ate now shown at the office of the city engineer. The contract tor the work is to be awarded May 27. At present there are no accommodations provided for bench flowers and when placed in storage for the winter the plants are kept in pots and placed about on the floors of the two houses. The additional house will be .quipped with benches. Tbc l-.tj cf Kire end Ice. A: example of the strangeness oT Iceland U furnished by the volcine Mafia. This is buried under Immense anow fields, but from time to time Its fires burst through the glittering blanket, and then such floods are poured from the melting lee that a great stretch of country between the volcano at d the sea is inundated and huge masses of ice are carried out into the o.ean. It is unsafe even to cross the territory lying between Matla and the sen. so suddenly come the floods. Chicago Record-Herald. Their Crimes. Two boys of strict Free church parentage and upbringing in a Scottish town were comparing iniquities. One boasted that he had furtively been at u circus fihow. "Ah. but I have done worse than that." said the other, "for I've been once in the pit at the theater and twice in the Established kirk." Plackwood's Magazine. A Pert Answer. Mistress (astounded) You can't read, Norah? Cood gracious.' How did you ever learn to cook so well? New Cook -Shore, mum. Oi lay It t' not bein' able torade th' cookbooks. Town and Country. His Weight. "What do you think young Chumpley weighs'" "About 200 pounds on the scales anl about fen ounces in the community." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Borne Tel. 2862 SSI.
Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Railroad Co. Eastbour.d Chicago-Cincinnati
j t 3 S j 31 STATIONS Except j js-.day DaI,y D3,,y pCnday Lv Chicago .7 1 8.35am 90pm J j735am Ar Peru 12.40pm 1.55am I 12.40pm Lv Peru lL.-0pm 2.05am j 6.onam ! 4.40pm Lv Marlon Mlprn I 2 rd'am 7.05am 1 5.37pm Lv Muncie 2.41pm ! 3.57am 8.10am 1 6.40pm Lv Richmond 4.05pm 5.15am r.35axn S.05pni Lv Cottage Grovo 4.45pm .53am 8.45pm Ar Cincinnati C.Copm 7.30am ) 10.25pm Wesibound Cincinnati Chicago 2 6 I 32 STATIONS Except ( Sunday Da"y DaIly SonIay Lr Cincinnati JV40sm S.OOpm j 8.40am Lv Cottage Grove 10.15am 10.40pm i 10.15am Lv Richmond 10.35am 11. 1 3pm 5 30pm i 10.55am Lv Muncie 12.17pm 12.4oara S.OOpm i 12.17pm Lv Marion 1.19pm 1.44am S.OOpm l.l?pra Ar Per 2.15pm 2.25am 10.00pm 2.15pm Ly Pe 2.25pm 2.45am 4.50pm Ar Chicago (12th St. Station) 6.40pm 7.00am 9 20pm
Through Vestihiiled Trains between Chicago and Cincinnati over our own rails. Double daily service. Through Sleepers on trains Nos. 3 and 4 between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeper between Muncie, Marlon. Peru and Chicago, handled In trains Nos. 5 and 6, between Mund and Peru, thence trains Nos. 3 and 4, between Peru and Chicago. For train connections and other Information caU
C. A. BLAIR. Borne Telephone 2062.
cr.i desir.dde neighbor:;-,.,.! RefT - ,.:u.,. ,.N,h,::uo.!. Addtvss "L. W." u- PaKai, m ,:, - -
OR RKNT- '; nn m O. . -!:.il-.- un-'.-iiit ho,..1-k -;-::ig er 'ousir'.ess j-ur-pesis. cel.: r.i !"y ;i-c;i:-d. over 71." Main street. In-pure P. V . care I'.d'.adim::. 7.-tf itvi. i --i ui n.si.er. rooms; a:s-o - ! office rooms with eteam heat and FOR RENT --I'm nls'.er! rooms; ;cfj i bath at The tit ar.c for sent on! v. ! a-rtl Ei"R RENT '-Furnished room heat and hr.r' "Ji V T'lh !-7l MISCELLANEOUS. Rl GS inanufacturt i f i oin old carpets. - h:et Hug ( o.. of Indtanapoits. I'hoi-e ; jVntr! Il.it.d. 14-21 Lt'ST IU:u li of keys" Leave at Pafhelium office. s-tf ! CITY STATISTICS. ' Deaths and Funerals. ! 1 1 EN N 1(1 A R M rs. Elizabeth Henni- ! car died Thursday afternoon at her (home, ills North Fifteenth street, at I the aye of 71 jears. Eie sons surI viVe her. (Vcar and William of Indianapolis: Abraham of 1'rbana. Ohio; : and Gilbiit and Harry of this city. The 1 funeral will be Saturday afternoon at j J o'clock at the house. Hurial will be ' at Earlham cemetery. Friends may call any time. j PEELI.E Jonathan Albert Peelle. of New Paris. Ohio, died this mornine at the E. id Memorial hospital. The funeial arrangements will be announced ; later. I M PELICAN -Michael Mulligan died ! early yesterday morning after a short 1 illness at his home, lap; Sheridan (street, at the age of 72 years. His j wife, Rtidget, live sons and five I daughters, survive him. The funeral will be Saturday morning at '. o'clock from St. Mary's church. Burial at the cemetery of same. The deceased was a civil war veteran of Company I, Eighty-second regiment of Ohio Volu nteers. One day left Saturday for 10 per cent, discount on all Dress Goods and Silks at Knollenberg's. HALE THE SPEAKER. Mr. William Payard Hale of New York, formerly of this city, made an address at the annual dinner of the Indiana Court, Society of Colonial Wars. The following mention is made of him: "Twenty-five members of the Indiana Court, Society of Colonial Wars, met at the University club last night in the fourth general Court, anil annual dinner. William Parnard Hale was the principal speaker." The Notes He Lacked. "Yes, sh-," said the man with the frayed collar, "that land is now worth 20 a foot, and only a year ago I could have bought it for a mere song." "But you couldn't sing," chuckled the funny man. The man with the frayed collar eyed him distantly and replied in quick, cutting tones. "I could sing, but I couldn't get the right notes." London Standard. irnn, ' 1 a : Your pror has Gobi Mtdal Klour. Genevba. Home Tel. 2062 P. & T. A. Richmond. lad.
J LADIES' SKIRTS r-v and TV cn-e Drv C!ann Co -; Vr- II m' ! p,-!,,... 'T"' ' "'-l
t i.i'l'.f No. 1 v-M i..r GEO. M G C VER- Gent-ral contractor. Carinter. anj builder. Job work. cieen and screen doors. Automatic i hone 1.5K. 25-tf LAUNDRY. We can help make you nappy honestly W9 can. Richmond Steam Laundry. FINANCIAL. MONEY LOANED -lxw rates, easy erms. Thompson's loau and real ; 0.tate agency. Wide Etalra. 710 i .. .. . phtme No 2008 ..ic;u tunv. tuuus auiomaija l-weJ-thurs-frl-eat-tl REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS (Furnished by County Recorder Mosbaugh.) Elizabeth M. Harris to Charles Borton. lot Ph Mary J. Stevens add., Richmond, ll.r.OO. Herman F. Pilgrim to Iydia II. Warring, lot 1'2. F. Von Fein's Add, Richmond, $1.S0. Laura Patterson et al. to Mary A. Rrooks. Pt. N. E. Srt-16-14. Center Twp.; $717.34. P.enJ. N. Crump to Jlarley TT. Reoatz et al, 1 15 int. lot 9. Lamb & Boalow add., to Richmond, flSrt. Sarah C. I la worth to Adeline I 1mcas, lot 5. John Hawkins' add. Rich niond, $250. W ilson Cray to Wm. WVaNeft pt 8. W. 22-17-13, Clay Twp., $1,500. SEE OUR SPRING LINE of GO-CARTS ...at... HASSENBUSCH'S The Kiblinger Motor Boggy $375.00 and upwards. A practical, successful, economical, automobile at a small cost. Double cylinder, air cooled, 10-12 IL P. Solid rubber tires. Will run through, deep mud or sand, and will climb atacp hills. Write for our Agency Teraa. W. H. KIBLINGER CO, Box N. 320. Auburn. Ind. INSURANCE.REAL ESTATE I LOANS, RENTS W. H. Bradbury & Son f Rooms 1 and 3, Wastcott Bid ONLY $3.00 Roud Trip TO Chicago VIA TheC.C.L.R.R. Saturday Night MAY 16th Train leaves Richmond 11:15 p. m., arriving Chicago (12th St. station) 7:C0 a. m. Returning leaves Chicago 9:30 p. m. (Sunday night) arriving Richmond 5:15 Monday morrv eg. You will be sorry if you miss It. lars call For further particuC. A. BLAIR, Home Tel. 2062. P. A. T. A. Richmond, Ind. The Great Blood Purifier. Fr sale by Leo H. Fine, T. F. JIcDonaM and W. H. Sudhoft
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