Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 145, 9 July 1908 — Page 7

PAGE SEVEN. , 4 ONE CENT PER WORD Each Insertion CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT ... THE MARKET PLACE OF EASTERN INDIANA 7 DAYS FOR THE PRICE OF 5 The Simplest and Cheapest Way to Get What You Want A!! Advertisements Must Be in This Office Before 12 Noon. Situations Wanted Wil! Be Advertised Free

THE RICHMOND PAL LADIUM AND SUX-TELEGKA3I, TIIT7RSDAY, JULY 9, 1908.

i

WANTED.

WANTED Lawn mowers to sharpen; Clifford Otto, 124 Hunt street. 9-lt WANTED Any kind of work to do by boy aged 16. Reference. Address Q. S.. care Palladium. 9-3t i WANTED Light packages to deliver ', by George Boyer. 814 North 12th street, 'Old Phone 415N. 9-2t WANTED A place to assist with housework by girl of 17; town or country; can go home at night. Address It. N. care Palladium. !:?t WANTEDExpeFienced farm hTnd.J. ' F. Brattain & Son, Boston, Ind. 8-2t WA NTEIPiaceto asifisC w i t hhbusework by young lady. Address "T" care Palladium. H-3t WANTED 50 Main street, phone Co. laborers, 19th and Central Union Tele-7-4 1 WANTED All kinds of furnitur-j re

TODAY'S MARKET QUOTATIONS

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Onto.) New York, July 9. Open High i.o Amalgamated Copper 68 70 V4 68 V American Smelting 81 84 81 American Sugar 127 M 121 Vs 127 Atchison 83 83 82 B. & 0 89 Vi 91V-. 88i a B. R. T 50 50 49 Vi C. M. & St. P - 137 138i,4 137 New York Central 105 103 15 Northern Pac 141 1 4 1 ?4 1V4 Pernsylvania 123 123 122 People's Gas 93 Reading.... 117 117 116 Southern Pacific 88 88 87 Tnion Pacific 149 150 148 if. S. Steel 40 40 404 (J. S. Steel pfd . 108 108 107 Great Northern 1334 133 132 Great Northern 1 div.

Chicago. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISION (By C01T6II and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton. O.I Wheat

Open. High. tow. Close. July 88 89 87 89 Sept.. ..88 90 : 88 90 'Dec 90 91 89 91 Corn. Open. Hign. Low. Close. , July 72 72 71 71 I Sept 72 72 71 71 SDec 61 61 60 60 Oats. Opeu. High. Low. Close. I July 47 48 46 4S iSept.. .. .40 40 39 39 IDeo.. .....41. ' 41 40 40 Porx. Open. High. Low. Close. (July 15.52 15.52 iSept .. .15.73 15.85 15.72 15.85 Lard. Opeu. High. Low. Closs. July 9.40 9.40 Sept .. . 9.43 9.55 9.45 9.50 Ribs. Open. High. Low. Closs. jjuly .. . 8.72 8.72 Sept . . . 8.82 8.S5 8.S0 ' 8.S2

U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. , Chicago, July 9. Hogs, receipts : 30,000, 5c lower; left over 7,276. Cattle 6,000, steady. Sheep 14,000, steady. Hogs Close. .Light ?6.00$6.50 j Mixed 6.00 6.62 ' Heavy 6.00 6.30 Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, July 9. Wheat. 86. Corn, 73. 1 Oats, 53. Rye, 80. I Timothy, Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies . .N$6.45$6.70 j Good to choice 6.30 6.50 BEEP STEERS. Good to choice yyers .. 6.25 '(Medium to good'ij4is .. 6.00 I Choice to fancy grirlings. 5.00 . BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers.. 4.75 Good to choice heifers 4.25 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice 3.00 7.00 6.75 5.75 5.75 4.65 6.25 r ir 10 gooa x.ww a. to 1 7 STOCK CATTLE. , Good to heavy fleshy feeders 4.50 ; Fair to good feeders 4.25 Good to choice stockers .. C.00 Common to fair heifers .. 4.00 SHEEP. Best yearlings 4.00 4.iD 4.50 4.25 4.65 4.50 Richmond. CATTLE. , (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) ! Best hogs, average 200 to 250 lbs 6.00 6.15 Good to heavy packers .. 5.90 6.00 Common and rough 5.40 5.65 Steers, corn fed 4.90 5.00 Heifers 4.15 4.40 Fat cows 3.40 3.90 Bulls 3.25 3.50 Calves 5.50 6.00 Lambs 5,10 5.40 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens dressed, per lb.. 18c Old chickens, per lb., 12 to 15c

pairing and upholstering. Work guaranteed. Holthouse, 124 South 6th. Phone 4201. 7-7t

WANT Situation by boy, aged 19 years. iod reference. Address F. C. care . illadium. 6-3t WANTKi Competent white girl for house work, in family of two. 100 N. 13th. Best of wages. l-7t WANTED First class girl to do cooking, etc; no washing; good wages to right one; call 1426 Main street. 2-tf WANTED Men to Learn barber trade; will equip shop for you oi furnish positions, few weeks completes, constant practice, careful instructions, tools given.- Saturday wages, diplomas granted, write for catalogue. Moler Barber Col?ege. Cincinnati. O. tf PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY. Close 70 83 127 83 9 1 49 138 1 05 141 122Ts ' 93 11G 88 H9 40 107 10 Turkeys, per lb -. Ducks, per lb COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb Country butter, per lb 13 Eggs, per doz .18c .15c to 18c . ..16o Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per. bu.) Corn (per bu.) Oats (per. bu.) Rye, (per bu.) Bran (per ton) 80 .. ..63 .. ..4 . .$22.00 . .$25.00 Middlings (per ton) .. .. Richmond Hay Market. (Omar (3. Whelan.) Timothy hay (baled) $9.00 New Timothy hay (loose) $7.00 New clover hay (baled $7.00 New clover hay (loose) . .$5.00 to $6.00 Mixed hay $3.00 Straw (per ton) 5.00 Corn (per bu.) 65c to 68c Oats (per bu.) 45 Richmond Seed Market. (Runge (per bu) & Co.) Timothy .$2.00 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg, July 9. Cattle Receiupts 10O loads. Cattle $7..'C down. Veal $7.50 down. Hogs Receipts' 35 loads; $(.S5 down. Sheep and lambs, receipts light. Sheep, ?4X0 down. Spring lambs $7.50 down. ANTI-INJUNCTION PLUNK. GOMPEfiS PET, IS F fContlnued From Page One.j sive tariff exactions and other Indirect methods. Federal Office-Holders. Coincident with the enormous increase in expenditure is a like addition to the number of officeholders. During the last year 23,784 were added, costing $16,156,000, and in the last six years of the republican administration the total number of new offices created, aside from many commissions, has been 99,319, entailing an additional expenditure of nearly $70,000,000 as against only 10,279 new offices created under the Cleveland and McKinley administrations, involving an expenditure of only $6,000,000. We believe in civil service and demand that laws pertaining thereto shall be honestly and rigidly enforced, to the end that merit and ability shall be the standard for promotion, rather than political services rendered to the republican party. Tariff Revision. We welcome the belated promise of tariff reform now offered by the republican party as a tardy recognition of the righteousness of the democratic position on this question, but the people cannot safely trust the execution of this important work to the party which is so obliged to highly protective interests that it postpones relief until after election. "We fatror the Immediate revision of the tariff

FOR SALE, OK SALE City real tsmu.. field, Kelley Bhx:k.

Forter-D-tf FOR SALE Bicycle. 126 S. 3rd .)-2t FOR SALE Lawn mower, 124 H unt street. 9-2 1 FOR-SALE Merchants' Delivery outfit. Clyde Edwards. 9-7t FOR-SALE Two or three corner lots with gravel. Inside of city; see me quick. Al. H. Hunt, 7 N. 9th St. 9-3t FOR SALE Good safe. Restaurant. above City !lt FOR SA LE Antique, new "and second hand furniture, cheap. Antique Furniture Co., rll Main. i-7t FOR SA LE OR TR A D E Fifteen-acre poultry farm near city. Five poultry houses. 7-rooin house, with furnace and two good cellars. See me by a reduction of import duties. Articles entering into competition with articles controlled by trusts are said to be placed on the free list. Paper Trust. Every consideration of public policy suggests the conservation of our wood lands and the ramoval of those im port duties "which put a premium upon the destruction of our forests. Existing duties have given paper niauutactr.rei's shelter behind which ihjy have organized a combination to r.use the price of pulp paper. The revenvea derived from import duties on pulp mid printing paper are so i.tnall mid benefits to he obtained from tho cbMtrnn of some ot tliesc duties so 1:1consideramle that we indorse the attitude of the dsmocratle renresnn'aUve in congress who unanimously favored placing nuln and nrlutinx pi'per, lumber, logs and wood timbers on the free list. House cf Representatives. The house of representatives was' designed by the fathers of the constitution to lie a popular branch of our government and as such, it was intended to be responsivs to the public will. The house of representatives, as controlled in recent yers by the republican party, has ceased to be a deliberative and executive bodv, responsive to the will of the majority of lts members, but has become an fis-i sembly under the absolute domination! of the speaker, who has entire control j of its deliberations and powers of leg-i islation. We demand that the house of representatives shall again become a legi:M lative and deliberative body control!-j od by the majority of the represent a-! 1 tives elected by the people and not' by the speaker, and we pledge oursel-j 'es to adopt such rules and regulations to govern the house of repreen ! tatives as will enable the majority otj Its members to direct its deliberations and control legislation. Misuse of Patronage. We condemn, as a violation of the spirit of our institutions, the action of the president in using the patronage of his high office to secure the nomination of his cabinet officer for the presidency. It is scarcely less repugnant to the public sentiment than is life tenure In that office. No good Intent on the part of the executive and no virtue in the one selected can justify the establishment of a dynasty. Income Tax. W7e favor the income tax as a part of our revenue system, and we urge the submission of a constitutional amendment, specifically authorizing congress to levy and collect a tax upon individual and corporate incomes to the end that wealth may bear a proportionate share of the burdens of the federal government. Statehood. We favor the election of united States senators by direct vote and regard this reform as the gateway to other national reforms. The national democratic party has for the last sixteen years labored for the admission of Arizona and New Mexico, as separate states into tlfe federal union; we favor immediate admission to the territories as separate states. Public Health. Believing vigorous, healthy population to be our greatest national asset and that the growth and prosperity of a country depends primarily upon the physical welfare of its people and upon their protection from preventable pestilences of both foreign and domestic origin and from all other preventable causes of disease and death, including sanitary supervision of factories, mines, tenements and child labor we advocate the organization of existing national public health agencies into a national bureau of public health, with such powers and duties as will give to the federal government control over public health interests. Asiatic Immigration. We favor full protection by both national and state governments within their respective spheres of all for eigners residing in the United State?, under twenty years of age. But we are opposed to the admission of asiatlc emigrants who cannot be amalgamated with our population or whose presence among us would raise a race issue and involve us in diplomatic controversies with oriental powers. Panama Canal. We believe that the Panama canal will prove of great value to the country and favor Its speedy completion. Hawaii. We favor the application of the principles of the land laws of the United States to our newly acquired territory, Hawaii, to the end that the public lands of that territory may be held and utilised (or the benefit - of bona fide hameaaksfi.

quick. Al. H. Hunt. 7, N. 0th St. 8-4t

FOR SALE OR TRADE One extra high two-seated trap, cheap if sold at once. Call 115 N. Sth St. S-2t FOR SALE Two modern houses. 5 and 7 rooms. Randolph. 7-7t FOR SALE Good sewing machine cheap. Call 215 North 15th st. 8-2t FOR-SALE Open top road wagon, cheap if sold at once. 12 N. ith. Phone ir.'i;5. 7-t FOTT"SXCECheap road wagon at 820 Main. I!-t FOKTSALE One seven foot. 3 spring wagon. See or call Meerhoff the Plumber. 1-tf FOR SALE car load of horses every Saturday ax J Monday at Gus Taube's barn. t-tt PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY MENTAL ATTITUDE. It Ilaa Much to Do With Winning Socffm In Life. The mental attitude which we always hold toward our. work or our aim has everything to do with what we i muy accomplish. If you go to your I work with the attitude of a slave who goes lashed to his task and see in it only drudgery; if you work without Lj.ie, sv'eing 111) future in what you are doius beyond getting a bare living; if you see 110 liglit ahead, nothing but p.jvcrty, deprivation and hard work all your life; if you think that you were destined to such a bard life, you cannot expert anything else thau that which you look fur. i If, on the other hand, no matter bow psor you u;ay be today, you can see a better future; if you believe that some r.ay you art g.inx to rise out of humdrum work, that you are going to get v:p out of the basement of life into the drawing rium, whore beauty, comfort j Liid jay await you; if your ambition Ls rhun cut and you keep your eye steadily upon the goal which you hope to reach r.n.l feel confident that you have the ability to attain it, you will accomplish .something worth while. The direction of your effort will follow your eye. If that looks up as well as ou, you will climb. That oue quality of holding persistently the fuitu iu themselves and never allowing anything to weaken the be j0f tuat somehow they would accompllsh what they undertook has been the underlying achievers, and womi a great -many complis'.i:. kept on principle of all great The great majority of men s ''! have given civilization started poor and for ; saw no hope of acr ambition, but they .'oi'.i.ng and believing that a way would be opened. somehow Think of what this attitude of hopefulness nnd faith has done for the world's great inventors how most of them plodded on through many years of dry, dreary drudgery before the light came, and the light would never have come but for their faith, hope and persistent endeavor. What if they bad listened to their advisers'. Ern those who loved them tried to beg them to give tip the foolishness of coining their lives Into that , which would never be practical or use- ! ful. We are enjoying today thousands 1 of blessings, comforts and conveniences i which have been bequeathed us by i those resolute souls who were obliged often to turn a deaf ear to the pleadj ings of those they loved best as they i struggled on amid want and woe for many years. Success. . - CHRISTMAS. Negroes consider Christmas day tne best in the year for a wedding. Christmas was first celebrated as a feast of the Christian church about the year 190 A. 1. At Culdaff, in Ireland, the game of kammau, a sort of hockey, is played on Christmas day. A leaf from Christmas decorations is preserved in Yorkshire as a remedy against toothache. Scottish servants each endeavor to be the first to draw water from the well on Christmas morning. It Is an old Irish superstition that gold should not be paid away on Christmas day nor silver lent. Christmas day at Cape Town is usually celebrated with picnics. The temperature averages 82 degrees. On Christmas morning in Norway every gateway, gable or barn door is decorated with a shenf of corn fixed ou a tall pole in order that the birds may eat from it their Christmas dinner. To Make a C'nnnry Slnf. Generally any kind of sort, sibilant noise wiil tempt a bird to sing. A canary hung in a kttchen will usually start his song if be hears, say, the frizzling of a frying pnn. We utilize specie! devices to tempt the shy singer, who is perhaps rendered the more bash ful by finding himself In novel surroundings. For this purpose we employ whistles and song organs, which artificially reproduce the "tours" of the roller. This latter method is found to be irresistible when all other plans have failed. The bird feels apparently that he Is being challenged and forthwith responds to the challenge by pouring forth the best of bis song. LonvIGn Tost. Vol eaa. Vulcan, the god of ancient blacksmiths and metal workers, was lame In consequence of a pretty hard fall he had in his early days. Jupiter an-1 Juno had a row, and Vulcan sided with his mother against the old gentleman, who promptly kicked him out of heaven. He fell for a whole day and lighted on the island of Lemnos, broke bis leg-and received as severe a g; tip as though he-had tumbled Jrrstor abaft, vcnlaxdua

FOR RENT.

FOR RENT 6 n om"s." tas;" f ,f ; 97 Ft. Wayne Ave. 9 It FOR RENT Five room house, mod ern conveniences. Also cheaper ' houses. Benj. F. Harris. s-7t FOR RENT - Four modern roomsT ."2.1 ' South ith St. 8-2t FOR R E N T F u r n i s he dT ooni sTTSi N. , 7th street. fo'kTrent" N. F. X-St j Apply- to"i2i6 j -House. -7t FOR RENT Desirable furnished rooms all conveniences, 203 S. 11th. 6-7 1 Fi.'K KhM r urmsned rooms; u ti office rooms, with steam htat and bath, at The Grand, for gents only. 8-ft-tf FOR RENT Large furnished room, bath; 415 N. 15th. front 2-7t FOR RENT Eight room house, hath" Set his leg, but U.tving oj:t Just received a diploma did a poor Job, and for a long time Vulcan went on a crutch. All at thr Head. Glass stands first of elastic substances, penrl is the heaviest of animal substances, mercury is the heaviest liquid, the heaviest woods are pome- J granate and lignum vitae. cork is the j lightest wood, and platinum Is tne most ductile metal, capable of being drawn so tine as to be invisible. He Will See Them. "A prominent oculist says h never saw a pair of perfect eyes." said the woman who reads the newspapers. "That." replied Miss Cayenne, "merely proves that the prominent oculist was never in love." Washington Star. The way to fame is like the way to heaven, through much tribulation. S tenia. LIFE INSURANCE Ita Karly Struggles and Hewnei In Taia Country. The origin of insurance in this country dates from 1752 and had its first beginning in Philadelphia. The first company was the Philadelphia Contrlbutionship For the Insurance of Houses From Losses by Fire, and its insignia was four clasped bands, which was its house badge. This mark may still be seen throughout eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey on old time houses. The company survived till 1847. In 1792 the first life insurance company was founded in the same city. It was called the Universal Tontine. The next year similar companies were started in P.oston and In New York. Its avowed aim was "for the purpose of raising a fund upon lives to be applied to charitable and other uses." its subscription books were opened on March 29, and five general ageuts were appointed. Some business was done during the summer, but in November of that year a general meeting of the subscribers was called, and the idea of a general insurance company was suggested and met with approval. The proposition was referred to a committee, and at an adjourned meeting held at the statehouse on Nov. 12 It was resolved that ' the Universal Tontine association be and Is hereby changed from its original object and converted Into a society to be called tjie Insurance Company of North America." Its first policy was issued to John Maxwell Nesbitt, its president, for $5,333.33. It wrote both fire nnd life Insurance, but paid atten tion chiefly to the former and gradually dropped life insurance altogether. In January, 1794, it considered the policy of insuring persons against capture by the Algerians ar.d Insured Captain John Collet "on his person against Algerians and other Barbary corsairs in a voyage from Philadelphia to London in the ship George Barclay, himself master, valuing himself at $5,000." The premium charged was 2 per cent. Two similar policies were issued, but the premium was increased to 5 per cent. Two similar policies were issued, approved, one on the life of John Holker, from June 0 to Kept. 19, for $24.00O, at 1V per cent premium, and one on the life of Albert Briois de Beaumez, for eighteen calendar months, in the sum of $5,000. The demand for insurance on life was light, and the business, which was finally abandoned by the first company, was not revived until 1S20. when Hartford men took It up and kept it running till it gained the great prosperity of modern times. Value of the Arernsre Man. Genius is a phenomenon; tho average man is a law. He has seen Shakespeeres and Goethes and Napoleons nnd Wagners rise and fall, and he goes on calmly, knowing that it is he and not they who are the race. Despise him, kick him as you will, the last word is with him. lie is nature's fa vorite. Like a true mother, she loves her dull boy best. A Shakespeare was too much for her, but she saw- to it that his faculty perished with him. He died, a wonder nmong men, anl his family revcrt.-d to the avernge. Lest the abhorred thing should reappear In the course of generations the family presently died out. The case Is typical. It is almost a commonplace of the science of heredity that tho appearance of extraordinary talent In any branch of a family means the extinction of that branch. London Standard. "Robbing; Peter to Pay Paul." This saying Lad its or'sin in the rivalry between St. Peter's cathedral, now Westminster abbey, and St Paul's, when, ia 1550, an appropriation was made from St Peter's to make good a deficiency in the accounts of St Taul's. Much opposition was shown to this, and It was for the time a posnlax outcry. "Why. rob. Peter .t

electricity and gases; 1510 N. K St. Apply to Mrs. M. A. Kitdhorn. 74 S. 17lh. 2-tf

LOST. LOST A brown purse containing three baby rings, valued as presents $" in Nil. 4.V change. Finder return to Rosenblbom, Buntin A; Co.. and receive reward. S-C;t MISCELLANEOUS. If you want your vault cleaned and thoroughly disinfected telephone me and 1 will give your orders immediate attention. Only reliable vault cleaner in Richmond. Thomas Morehead, 93S Butler. Phone 3177. 6 7t FOR-!! IRE Automobile carriage; spe cial attention given telephone calls. Pleasure parties and sight seeing. pay "1'aulT The sayffiir was revived as a proverb upon the death of William Pitt, earl of Chatham, in 1778. Th city of London argued that so Illustrious a statesman should be buried at St Paul's, while parliament held that the remains of so great a leader should be placed with the dust of kings and that to bury him away from the Abbey, of Westminster would be a grain a rob blng of Peter to pay Paul. Oae Sara Method. There Is a story of a medical student before a board of examiners to whom the question was put again and again of how he would produce perspiration In a patient. He proposed all sorts of things, to which one Importunate examiner always replied: "Well, and if that would not do?" At last the poor young man, driven to his wits' end, exclaimed, "I would send him before this board to be examined, and I warrant that .would make him perspire." ; Taa Obatael. "I came near eloping once, said the sweet young thing. "Indeed!" "Yes. We had quit made tip oar minds." "Who?" "Papa and I, but I mld not flnfl m man who would elope with me," Appropriate. Charles I don't see how Blank can make any money out of that tobacconist business of his. He's always smoking the best cigars himself. Fred Oh, that s his method of advertising! Charles How so? Fred Why, pufflng his goods. 2t , Safetr. lie Why does this theater hays Its orchestra concealed? She Why? Just wait until you hear it play. Man Is creation's masterpiece. Bu 1 , TVO ALPHABET LETTERS. J aad TVM Coaaparatlrelr Heeeat Addltloaa to the Mat. It is a fact, not so well known but that it may be said to be curious, that the letters J and w are modern additions to our alphabet The letter J only came into general use during the time of the commonwealth, say between 1649 and 1058. From 1630 to 1C46 its use is exceedingly rare, and I have never yet seen a book printed prior to 1G52 in which it appeared. In the century immediately preceding the seventeenth It became the fashion to tail the last 1 when Roman numerals were used, as in this example, viij for 8 or xij in place of 12. This fashion still lingers, but only in physicians prescriptions, I believe. Where the French use J it has the power of s as we use it in the word "vision." What nation was the first to use it as a new letter is an interesting but perhaps unanswerable query. In a like manner the printers and language makers of the latter part of the sixteenth century began to recognize the fact that there was a sound in spoken English which was without a representative in the shape of an alphabetical sign or character, as in the first sound in the word "wet." Trior to that time it had always been spelled as "vet," the v having the long sound of u or of two u's together. Ia order to convey an idea of the new sound they began to spell such words as "wet." "weather," "web." etc., with two u's. and as the u of that date was a typical the three words a!ove looked like this: "Vvet," "weather." "web." After awhile the typefounders recog' nized the fact that the double u had come to stay, so they joined the two u's together and made the character now so well known as w. I have one book in which three forms of the w are given. The first is an oil double v (vv; the next U one la which the last stroke of the first v crosses the first stroke of the second, and the third lit the common w we use today r-New York News. ' SITY STATISTICS. Deaths and Funerals. FLEMING The funeral of Albert Fleming will be from the home, li:5M Main street, Friday afternoon at two o'clock. Burial at Earlham cemetery The Rev. W. M. Nelson of the Grace M. E. church wiil have charge of the services. Friends may call to view the remains at any time. WEISS Carl J., little son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Weiss, died this morning at the home of his parents, two miles west cf the city, at the age of two years and ten months. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. -

F. M. Miller No 12 N. Tenth street. Telephone 2277. Terms reasonable. -7t F7RE INSURANCE Richmond Insurance A?ency. Hans N. Koll. Mgr. 71ti Main uiayS sun & thur tt SCHOOIXo-tsthT tfme to begin your course at the Richmond Business college. S-t DO YOUVANTto sell your house? A Palladium want ad will do It. ThePalladium will take your ad over the phone. Iubtantenous Water Heaters of all kinds. See them in operation at

Meerhoffs, 9 S. 9th. on your plumbing, lighting. Let us figure heating and 1 tt LAUNDRY. V can beip uaae uu nappy boaestly wa can. Richmond Steam Laundry. -ThVofd "BUmC? An old story concerning Lord Beaco as field Is worth repeating. One day. while walking about hta country place in the easy coat' and general careless attire he liked to adopt when among his farmers, be encountered two women, strong partisans of "Mr. Gladstone. Supposing him to be the keeper or gar dener or something, of that sort, they inquired if he 'would show- them over the place. While they : were walking about they overwhelmed htm with questions as to the habits of the master of the manor. "Do you think 70a could manage to get us a sight of the old beast himself?" asked one of them. "Madam," replied Lord Beaeonsfleid "the old beast baa the honor to wait cnon yon now!" London GranhlOa Hfrter: - - - Gold MedaJ Flour makes the lightest sponge cake I ever saw. Racbiu A 85.00 PARMA 1. 1 fllEIE WITH ) EVERY $10 j OR j $15 SUIT SOLD IN OUR STORE .1 NEXT SATURDAY ONLY See our windows for these and other great bar gains in Straw Hats. These Hats have all been marked down without first being marked up. HALL'S $10.00 and 15.00 Suits SI and $2 Hats 914 Main Street The Great Blood Purifier. -at all drug stores.