Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 133, 27 June 1908 — Page 7
TITE HICH3IOXD FAIXADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 190S.
ONE CENT PER WORD CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT! 7 DAYS FOR THE PRICE OF 5 THE MARKET PLACE OF EASTERN INDIANA The Simplest and Cheapest Way to Get What You Want AO Advertisements Must Be in This Office Before J 2 Noon. Situations Wanted Will Ae Advertised Free Each Insertion
WANTED. WANTED Yards to mow.
1530 E. 27-lt Main. VANTED Plain sewing. Call at 313 N. A street, upstairs. 27-3t WANTED AGENTS-fosill our five"piece set of blue lined Dutch Cooking ware to consumers. The greatest money making proposition ever offered to canvassers. One party sold 48 sets in eight hours, giving him a profit of $'J4. He is now handling a crew of 10 people and ordering in carload lots. If you mean business, send us 15c to cover postage on complet canvassing outfit with which to begin work. The J. W. McCoy Pottery Co., Roseville, Ohio. 27-lt WANTED Any kind of work by married man, coremaker by trade. Address "B. Y," care Palladium. 27-3t WANTED Some good live solicitors for sick and accident insurance. Fitzglbbons, t)th and Main. 2G-3t WANTED A Becond hand floor case five or six feet long. Call 1943. 23-6t WANTED Two good girls for general housework and to take care of
TODAY'S MARKET QUOTATIONS
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohio.) New York, June 27. Open High Low Close Amalgamated Copper 664 66 65 65 American Smelting .. ... 75 76Vs 75 75 Atchison - 81 82 81 81 B. &O .. ..... 86 86 86 86 B. R. T 47 47 46 46 C. M. & St. P. 133 133 132 132 New York Central -.. 102 103 102 102 Northern Pac 136 136 135 135 Pewisylvanla 120 120 Reading.. 112 112 111 111 Southern Pacific 87 87 86 86 Union Pacific 145 145 144 144 U. S. Steel ... 37 37 37 37 U. S. Steel pfd 102 102 102 102 Great Northern 130 130 130 130
U. 8. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, June 27.-Hogs, receipts, 11,000. strong, left over 3,769. Cattle, 800, strong. Sheep 1,500, weak. Hogs Close. Light $5.70$6.25 Mixed 5.75 6.35 Heavy 5.75 6.35 Rough .... 5.75 5.95 Chicaao. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. (By Corrfcll sad Thompson. Brokers, Eaton. O.l Chicago, June Wheat. Open. High. . 84 83 . 84 80 . 80 87 Corn. Open. Hign. lxw. Close. 84 85 84 85 80 87 Low. Close. 67 08 68 .68 58 58 July Sept Dec July. Sept Dec 67 0S 68 r.t 5S 59 Oats. Opeu. High. Low. Close. .... 44, 42 44 44 ,...-38 38 37 3854 .... 39 39 Porx. Open. High. Low. Close. .$14.57 $14.67 $14.57 $14.67 July . . Sept . . Dec, .. July . . Sept . . . 14.80 14.92 14.80 14.90 Lard. High. $9.15 9.30 Ribs. High. $.8.22 S.47 Open. , $S.97 , .9.10 Open. . $S.15 . 8.35 Low. $8.97 9.10 Low. $S.15 8.35 ClOB? July .. Sept .. $9.15 9.30 C10S9. $8.17 8.43 July . . Sept .. BANK STATEMENT. Reserves less XT, S. dep., Inc. $7,333,425 Reserves, Inc., 7,386,923 Loans, dec, 8,701,300 Specie, inc., 4,552,900 Legals, Inc., 2.563.500 Deposits, dec, 1,082,100 Circulation, dec 800,500 Indianapolis Graii? Indianapolis, June 27. Wheat, 85. Corn, 72. Oats, 53. Rye, 80. Timothy, $10.50. Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies $6.15 $6. Good to choice 6.00 6. BEEF STEERS. Good to choice steers $0.505?$7. Medium to good steers . . . 6.2o 7. 40 .20 .25 .00 .75 .50 65 .50 Choice to fancy yearlings 5.25 5. BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers.. 4.75 5. Good to choice heifers.... 4.35 4 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice .. 3.00 6. Fair to good.... .. .. .. 2.00 6 STOCK CATTLE. Good to h'vy fleshy feeders 4.75 5, Fair to good feeders 4.50 4 Good to choice stockers .. 3.00 4 Common to fair heifers .. 4.C0 4 SHEEP. Best yearlings .......... 4.50 5 00 00 75 25 65 00 Tabcta: Gold Medal Flour leads them all.
two children. Apply Mrs. James Morrison, N. E. corner 16th and S. E. 25-tf
WANTED A good experienced girl for general housework; no washing; small family. 35 N. 8th. 22-7t WANTED You to buy sand and gravel of Caldwell and Mobley, general contractors, 112 S. 7th. Phone 2112. 23-7t WANTED A place to assist with housework or housekeeper by a lady of experience. Good reference. Address Miss Sarah E. Wirtz, New Paris. Preble Co., Ohio. a-3t WAisTiiD Meu to iearn barber trade; will equip shop for you oi furnish positions, few week completes, constant practice, careful instructions, tools given, Saturday wages, diplomas granted, write for catalogue. Moler Barber CoUege. Cincinnati. O. tf WANTED See Morehead tor proroa sional vault cleaning. Phone 3177. 938 Butler Street. mayl6-tf WANTED Manager tor branch oince we wish to locate here in Richmond. Address with reference, The Morris Wholesale House, Cincinnati, Ohio. 4-30t Richmond. CATTLK. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hogs, average 200 to 250 lbs $5.30 $5.40 Good to heavy packers . . 5.15 5.30 Common and rough 3.45 4.55 Steers, corn fed 5.10 5.85 Heifers 4.60 5.10 Fat cows 3.60 4.35 Bulls 3.60 4.60 Calves 4.90 5.15 Lambs 5.15 5.40 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens dressed, per lb.. 18c Old chickens, per lb., ......12 to l5o Turkeys, per lb '. ...18o Ducks, per lb 15c COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb 25c Country butter, per lb 15 to ISc Eggs, per doz 15c Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per bu) 85c Corn (per bu.) 65 Oats (per. bu.) ".43 Rye. (per bu.) 63 Bran (per ton) $23.00 Middlings (per ton) $26.00 Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy Hay (baled) $10.00 Timothy hay (loose) $7 to $S.00 Clover Hay (baled) $8.00 Clover Hay (loose) $6 to $7.00 Mixed Hay $7 to $8.00 Straw (per ton) 5.00 Corn (per bu.) 65c to 6Sc uais ipt?r uuj . . . . 40 Richmond Seed Market. (Rungs & Co.) Timothy (per bu) $2.00 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg, June 27. Cattle Receipts, light. Cattle $6.75 down. . Veal $7.00 down. Hog6 Receipts 16 loads, $6.45 down, Sheep and lambs, receipts light. Sheep $4.55 down. Spring lambs, $6.75 down. East Buffalo Livestock. East Buffalo, June 27 Cattle Receipts. 300; quiet. Veal Receipts active, $7.75 down. Shee-j and lambs Receipts S00. Sheen $5.25 down. Lambs, $6.25 down. Hogs Receipts 2,500. Mixed and yorkers, $5.S5 down. Toledo Grain Toledo, June 27 Oats, 52. Wheat, 90. Corn, 72. Clover. (October) $7.4: Alsike $13.50. Rye SI. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE City real estate. Porterfield. Kelley Block. 0-tf FOR SALE Cheap, new 5 roomed house in Benton Heights; see me quick. Al H. Hunt, 7 N. 9th St. 27-3t FOR SALE Heating stove in good condition. See W. J. Hiatt, S North Ninth. -2t FOR SALE Splendid house, lot, 332 Randolph. Large 27-2t FOR SALE Dining room table and kitchen cabinet, -KK5 N. 13th 27-lt FOR SALE Good carriage, $5am; Newbern's shop on alley Fourth and North A streets. 27-3t FOR SALE Very cheap. New six room house, on car line, large lot, electric lights, newly screened and papered. Will rent. Phone 104O or 3010. FOR SALE Canaries; young singers guaranteed. 1530 E. Main. 27-lt FOR SALE Dressed turtle and-fish. Muth's Fish Market. Phone 1535. 20-3t FOR SALE fen room frame house, two lots, good barn, water, fruit, NOT IN A Public Service Corporations Make No Move to Remove Poles. LIGHT COMPANY OBSTINATE It appears that none of the officials of the Richmond Light. Heat & Pow er company or the Terre Haute. Indianapolis & Eastern traction company are sitting up of nights worrying about complying with the terms of the Main street pole ordinance. E. E. Witherby of the former company has stated that his company has as much right to remove its Main street wires and place them overhead elsewhere as the city has and unless this privilege is granted the company it will bring suit against the city for the purpose of con testing the validity of the pole ordin ance. The traction company is required by the ordinance to remove its wood poles and substitute iron poles. The company objects to this and as yet has made no arrangements for complying with the ordinance. The board of public works had one conference with the representatives of compames effected by the pole ordinance but no satisfactory arrangements resulted. Since that time the board has held no further meetings- and the Main street pole situation remains just the same. STATE INSPECTOR Says Food Stuffs Exposed Must Be Covered. Today John Owens, state food and drug inspector, stated that all places of business in this city, which exposed for sale food stuffs, ready to be eaten, as they are such as pie. candy, bread, cake, nuts, etc., must keep them in some kind of a covered case. This order, he states, will be rigidly enforced. Street venders who sell fruits and vegetables which are eaten after being washed and cooked, must keep them covered with a netting. RESOLOTIONS OF REGRET ADOPTED Jefferson Club Acts on Cleveland's Death. At a meeting of the Wayne county Jefferson club last evening resolutions expressing deep regret over the death of ex-President Grover Cleveland were adopted. It was the sentiment of the local democrats that the world had suffered a loss in his death. The constitution and bylaws of the club were brought up for consideration and all but one section in the constitution were adopted. Next Friday evening the club will hold another meeting. CONTRACTS AWARDED. At the meeting of the board of county commissioners today the following contracts were awarded. Repairs Middleboro - bridge to Isaac Smith, $238; fill at Eliason bridge to James H. Martin at 25 cents per cubic yard; Thornburg bridge, Dalton township, new. Pan American Bridge company, $935. this concern 700. Td eareruBr. Lr. .aid well's Syrup Pepsin I cositioiy fc-aarao-ei to ear radigaetipa. constipation, sick beadicbe, offensive breath, malaria ana aU diseases u-isias from stomaca treuaie-
HURRY
etc. A bargain $2,050. Fitzgibbons. Ninth and Main. 20-3t
FOR SALE Two nice houses. Call 435 Richmond avenue. 20-0t FOR SALE OR TRADE Good steam hay press. Phone 1411. 114 S. 10th St. 20-3t FOR SALE 50,000 late cabbage plants. Spring Grove. D. L. Reid. 25-7t FOR SALE Two properties. Cheap if sold at once, 1019 N. 11th St. FOR sale-Two properties. Cheap 1019 North 11th St. 25-7t if sold at once. FOR SALE Household goods. 10th St. 20 N. 24-7t FOR SALE A splendid new upright high grade piano, and about half the price usually paid piano dealers. An opportunity of a life time to get a very fine piano and at a very low price. Conditions are such as must sell. Phone 3634. 22-7t FOR SALE Cheap, new and second hand furniture. E. Wyatt, 516 Main. 22-7t FOR SALE A car load of horses every Saturday asd Monday at Gus Taube's barn. sMf 24,000SWISSCOLONISTS TO COMETO WASHINGTON Large Purchase of Land Made For Them in Big Western State. Tacoma, June 27. A Swiss colonization company has purchased 200,000 acres of land in Washington for $1,500,000 and will bring over 24,000 Swiss colonists. PROSPECTIVE TEACHERS BEING QUIZZED I Exhumations Held Today at lie Court House. The regular monthly examination for teachers' licenses is being held at the office of the county superintendent today. A number of applicants are taking the examinations, which are held the last Saturday of every month. SCHCOL SOOABBLE HAS BEEN ENDED No. 9 Building to Be Located On New Site. The protracted squabble that has ensued as the result of the effort to locate a site for the proposed new school building in district No.. 9 was settled today. The petition of the majority of patrons that the building be located across the road and directly east of the present site' was approved by the county superintendent. The cost of the acre of ground required has not been agreed upon. STRICKEN WITH PARALYSIS Albert Townsend Formerly of Centervllle is III. Centerville, Ind., June 27. Albert Townsend, who at one time resided in Centerville and removed to Nebras ka about three years ago has been stricken with paralysis. His daughter, Mrs. Lawrence McConaha and Mr. McConaha have gone to be at his bedside. Mr. Townsend was a prominent member of the Friends church in Centerville. His daughters were popular teachers in the Centerville public schools. i LETTER LIST. Women Helen Baird. Ida Burden, Mrs. W. J. Cox. Miss Edia Hants. Lucinda Mann, Mrs. Etta Scott, Mrs. Peter Smith. Men C. W. Barnes, Dr. Moss Ballard. Dr. W. Brown, Thos. Doyle. John W. Evans, W. Ferguson, Gus Hartzler, W. W. Leyman, W. Lewis, Fred Stuber, Edward Stegall, Leroy J. Tillman, B. Williams. Drops Richard Hinees, Miss May Smith. Oscar Trouse. J. A. SPEKEXHIER, P. M. MISSIONARY TO SPEAK. Miss Lydia Pike Will Address Centerville Friends. Centerville. Ind., June 27. Miss Lydia Pike of Fountain City a returned missionary from Mexico will give a lecture on missionary work in Mexico on Sunday evening at the Friends' church. Miss Pike will also be present at the Sunday school and display a collection of curios from Mexico. The public is cordially invited to hear Miss Pike. Rev. J. O. Campbell will preach and administer the Holy Communion at the Third M. E. church tomorrow asor&lsg. I
FOR RENT.
FOR RENT Two large room flat furnished complete for house keeping. Modern, 46 S. 11th St. 23-tf FTJk Kau.VI i'urnistiec rooms, a'o office rooms, with steam htat and bath, at The Grand, for gents only. ft-4-tf WANTED One hundred families. Stop paying rent, own one of one hundred beautiful new homes same as rent. Call or address Kirby Realty Co.. 901 Main St. Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evenings. 22-7t LAUNDRY. We can hlp make yen happy honestly we caD. Richmond Steam Laundry. MISCELLANEOUS. LOST A Roman gold ring, wrapped, set with large coral sot, carved in in the cameo head. Liberal reward if returned to 35 North .Nth street, or if phoned to 2002. 27-3t MON E D LOANED on easy terms. Deaths and Funerals. NOFFSINGER Sarah C, wife of Enos Noffsinger, died yesterday afternoon at their home, two miles north west of the city on the Williamsburg pike at the age of 58 years. Funeral services will be held at the home Sunday afternoon at three o'clock. On Monday morning the remains will be taken to Arcanum, Ohio, for burial. Friends may call any time. TAKEN TO HER HOME. Rowena Hood of Greenville, O., Is Recovering. Rowena Hood, who received a fractured limb in an accident at the Glen the fore part of the week is doing nicely. She was taken to her home near Greenville, Ohio, Friday night. WOMEN'S SENSES. rhey Are, It la Said, X-ese Acnte Thm Those of Men. The man, when his tooth was pulled, lyelled hoarsely. The next patient, a woman, bore tne pain or tnree extractions with silent fortitude. "Yes," said the dentist, "women endure the paugs of tooth pulling better than men, but they deserve no praise on this account. They feel the pain less. Experiments have frequently been made to test the acuteness of the masculine and feminine senses. A series of experiments were made In New York city, and they were interesting and conclusive. 'First, taste was tried. The male subjects could detect In water the presence of the sixtieth part of a grain of gall. The women couldn't distinguish the gall In a smaller quantity than the twentieth of a grain. The men's taste was three times keener than the women's. "Next, smell. The men smelled the presence of the hundredth part of a grain of prussic acid. The women were unconscious of the acid till a quantity five times greater was set before them. In smell the men were five times the women's superiors. "Men heard a watch ticking at a distance of ten yards; women could only hear it at a distance of two yards. The males again, you see, were five times the better. It was the same thing with 6ight and with touch, 'j'he men saw five times better. They felt five times more keenly and delicately. "These experiments explain In a way the apparent anomaly of woman's wondrous fortitude to pain. Woman's senses beiug less acute, 6he Is less affected by pain than man." Exchange. THE OYSTER. It Wa Eaten by Riparian Man Thousands of Yeara A so. It was Dean Swift who remarked that "he was a bold man that first ate.an oyster," but neither Dean Swift nor any other lover of good eating has been able to find records of any time, however ancient, when oysters were not eaten, while there Is ample proof that thousands of years ago riparian man not only consumed these" biTalves, but was very fond of them. Thus the "kjoekkenmoeddinger" or "kitchen refuse" along the Scandinavian coasts exhibits huge hills of oyster shells from which prehistoric men ate this succulent mollusk at their feasts in the days of Thor and Odin. There is, of course, an interesting tradition which relates how, in those prehistoric days a man clad in the skins of wild beasts ran barefooted along the shore of the sea. Suddenly he caught his foot in an oyster shell, which, as it instantly closed upon him, caused him so much pain that he seized a stone to dislodge the strange foe that clung to him eo tenaciously. After accomplishing his purpose be raised his hand, moist with the Juice of the oyster, to his lips, with results that were so pleasing to his palate that he promptly proceeded to eat the entire bivalve. Thus, it is said, did man first discover the gustatory delights contained within an oyster shell. The Stomach. Ache. For genome stomach ache that is, pain in the true stomach you must blame tbe digestion. If the pain often occurs one may be sure that a serious state of chronic indigestion obtains. Then of coarse it is very necessary to take advice directed to that one case. But for a solitary attack there is nothing better than getting rid of the stomach contents. They cannot possibly do good and may greatly upset the system. Warm .ssJt and water is a simple
Thompson's Agency, 710 Main.
2"Ct LAWN MOWERS sharpened. fly screens made to order and rep.ired. All kind of bicycle repairing, t'hene 1936. Brown-Darnell. 1022 Main. - I -ot LOST Rain coat between lb and 0th on South E street. Please leave at the Palladium office. 27-lt MONEY LbXNEI)irTasy"rmsT Thompson's Agency, 710 Main St. June 12 fri&sat tf AGENTS We positively have the fastest selling household patent on the market. Wolvereen Co.. Pittsburg, Pa. 27-3t HARRY LANCASTER. Paper Hanging. Home Phone 105S. loo South !th street. 20-7t $25TO$40NDMOkE A WEEK made by lady a;;ents handling "Mine McCabe" flexible side and expanding back corsets; well known; easily sold; perfect fitting; popular and satisfactory; agents wanted in territory not already taken; experience not necessary. St. Louis Corset Co., St. Louis, Mo. 2t-7t W A Y N EC 1 e a n i ngi a n dE xeavatlng Col Cisterns cleaned and repaired. Hard aoraeVac emetic. V nen there are acid risings and burnings in the throat a teaspoonful of bicarbonate of sodium in water, taken in divided doses, may be tried. Tbe Adirondack Lakes. One of the most striking phenomena of the Adirondack region is the carrying power of the human voice in stll! weather upon the lakes great and small. Persons ashore easily hear the ordinary conversation of others who are so far out upon the lake as to be Indistinguishable, and as a great many Adirondack visitors habitually violate the law touching the slaughter of deer all such offenders are extremely careful not even to whisper a word that might betray their guilt when rowing upon the lakes. A "Gold Brick" of Old Time. In one of the Tell-el-Amarna letters, written during the eighteenth dynasty, the king of Babylon accuses Amenophls III. of Egypt of sending him a mass of base metal for gold. He says, "The twenty mlnas of gold you sent me contained, when melted down, only five mlnas of pure gold." London Tost Ho Competition. "What do you consider the most memorable occasion in your career?" "Once, at an evening performance," answered the great tenor, with emotion, "all the boxes were occupied by mutes. I shall never forget that night." Minneapolis Tribune. Her Conklnc Young Wife How do you like my cooking? Don't you think I've begun well?- Husband I'm-yes. I've often heard that well begun is half done. Punch. Sarcastic Swift. It was Swift wh3 warned a friend who was extolling the air of overtaxed Ireland: "Hush! If they hear you say that they'll certainly tax the air." A Dad Combination. Scads You say he left no money? Baggs No. You see, he lost his health letting wealthy, and then lost bis sealth trying to get healthy. THE PLANET MERCURY. Like Venns and For Like Cause, It S Xon a Dead World. Mercury Is a body devoid, practically If not absolutely, of air, of water and of vegetation. Consequently It Is Incapable of supporting any of those higher organisms which we know as living beings. Its surface is a vast desert. It is rough rather than smooth. Whether this roughness be due to mountains proper or to craters we are too far away from It to be abbs jet to say. Tbe latter Is the more probable. Over the greater part of its surface change either diurnal of seasonal is unknown. Three-eighths of Its surface is steeped ia perpetual glare, three-eighths shrouded in perpetual gloom, while the remaining quarter slowly turns between the two. The planet Itself, as a world. Is dead. Interesting as Mercury thus proves to be, the interest as regards the planet itself is of a rather corpselike character. Iess deterrent perhaps is the Interest It possesses as a part of the life history of the solar system, for tidal friction, the closing act in the cosmic drama, has brought it where It is. The machine has run down. Whether it ever supported life upon its Eurface or not, the power to do so has now forever passed away. Like Venus and for like cause, It is now a dead world. And it was the first thus to reach the end of its evolutionary career, earlier to do so than Venus, inasmuch as tidal action was Tery much greater upon it than on Venus and consequently produced its effect more quickly. Mercury has long been dead. How long, measured by centuries, we cannot say, but practically for a very long time. Venus must have become eo comparatively recently. Both, however, now have finished their course and have in a most literal sense entered. Into their rest. The Hanriao Of Lift. Infacta and child res are cocstantlT "trg -axstive. It is importsst to otrw what to frra them. Tbeir stomach aad bowels are not stronr aeongh for saits, porsativo waters or cathartic pClt. powders or t moists. OHrs tbem a mild, pleasant, gentle, laxacrea tonic Ilka Dr. CaldweU's Svrnp iVpain. wbicb seEs at tba small tarn of So cents or SI at oror stores. It la tb one (reat remedy for von to have ta the bauae 10 ""C cbiians wfcc !"-eoad itPALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
wood floors refinished. Furnitura and wall paper cleaned. Cement and sewer work, whitewashing. Household goods crated for shipment. 1O10 Main street. Richmond, Ind. Home phone 103. lS-tt
GAS WATER HEATERS and hot weather sundries at Meerhoffs. Both phones. 24-tf SCHOOL. MRS. HISER'S Business School. 15th year, bookkeeping, shorthand and typewriting. Phone 2127; 33 South 13th St. jun!6-t? CARD OF THANKS. I wish to thank my many friends for their liberal patronage for the past 40 years, today. Don't forget the street. 93$ Butler. Phone 3177. 27-Tt THOMAS MOREHEAD. ) The "line of liberty- Is a term used by artists for nn ideal line frequently represented In the form of a very slender, elongated letter S. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY Real Estate $400.00 Cottage on Waloon lake, a pretty body of water near Petoskey. Mich. Gasoline Launch cost $250.00 and boat house for same; two row boats, house for same; lot 83x200. Household utensils, all for $400.00. $2,500 10 acres. Green Township. North West Williamsburg. S room new house, room for bath, plumbed for hot and cold water; furnace, fine cellar with a laundry room, 20x30 bank barn. This is the best few acre propositlon in Wayne county. $2,400 Six rooms and bath, on Kinsey street, fine location.open hall and stairs, electric lights and other conveniences. $10,000.00 117 acres near Fountain City; 7 room brick and slate roof house, large bank barn 40x60, and another 32x40. All wire fenced. Running water year round. Good land. $5,600 77 acres. Franklin township; 5 room story and half house; good barn 30x60; wagon shed and corn crib, good fences; 2 miles south west Bethel. WHEN RELEASED HE WILL BE REARRESTED Curtis Williams Given a Small Fine Today. Upon his plea of guilty to the charge of public Intoxication. Curtis Williams, of Cambridge City, was fined $0 and costs this morning. When Williams serves his fifteen days' Jail sentence In this case, he will be rearrested and charged with assault and battery upon his wire and children. RIVALS BATTLE 0VER A GIRL Nineteen Year Old Boy Is Slain. Asheville, N. C, June 27. Charles Jones, aged 19, was killed by a rival, Basil Watson, aged 23. in a quarrel over a young woman here last night. MRS. KERLIN DEAD. Remains Will Be Brought From Indianapolis for Burial. Mrs. May Kerlin, wile of William E. Kerlin. died this morning at Indianapolis. The remains will arrive in this city, Monday morning and ill be taken to the home of James Kerlin, north of the city. Services will be held at the home. Burial at Goshen cemetery. Mrs. Kerlin Is well known locally, having been a former resident in this vicinity. CAN CAMP TWO WEEKS. At a meeting of directors of the Chautauqua association yesterday aft ernoon tbe camping privilege was giv en consideraton. It Is proposed to permit campers the use of the grounds for two full weeks, although the Chautauqua will be but ten days la length. "How much Is this soap a cake? Take two for 15 cents. "Two? Do yon think I buy soap by the wholesale?' Fliegeode Blatter. The Graat Blood Purifier, at all drag stores. Sit sal
