Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 149, 13 July 1908 — Page 7

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THE RICHMOND FAIXADITJ3I AND SUN-TELEGItAM, 3IOXDAY, JTJIjY 13, 1908. PAGE SEVEN. ONE CENT PER WORD Each Insertion CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 7 DAYS FOR THE PRICE OF 5 THE MARKET PLACE OF EASTERN INDIANA T5ie Simplest and Cheapest Way to Get What You Want All Advertisements Must Be in This Office Before 12 Noon. Situations Wanted Will Be Advertised Frei

WANTED.

WANTED A lot 18 to 28 feet within three squares of Main, between Second and Twelfth streets. Address "Lot," care Palladium. 13-2t WANTED Boarders; all modern conveniences. 303 N. 8th Bt.. 13-!$t WANTED To repair rour watches, clocks and jewelry. Carl L. Culberson, cor. 4th and North D st. 13-lt WANTED Washing at 231 S. 12th. 12 2t WANTED A washerwoman to do family washing. Call at 30 S. 13th. 12-2t WANTED Position by a young lady who is an experienced book keeper; can furnish best of references. Address Miss W. N., care Palladium. ll-7t

TODAY'S MARKET QUOTATIONS

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohio.) New York, July 13. Open High Low Close Amalgamated Copper . 684 69 68 69 American Smelting 81 83 81 82 Atchison 3y4 83 83 83 . & q 90 90 90 90 jl x .."." 48 49 48 49 .l. & St. P. ".. ." 137 138 137 137 New York Central. . ... . 104 105 Northern Pac 138 139 137 138 Pennsylvania ...121 122 121 122 Reading H5 116 115 116 Southern Pacific 87 88 87 88 Union Pacific 148 149 147 148 U. S. Steel 39 41 39 40 U. S. Steel pfd 107 108 107 107 Great Northern . 132 132 131 132

Chicaao. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. (By Corrtll and Thompson. Brokers, Eaton. O.) Wheat, Open. High. Low. Close. July 01 Wj oiVj Sept 00 1)2 00 91 Dec .l2 t3Ts !I2 !3 May i5 S 5)5"i 07 Corn. Open. Higu. Low. Close. July '.-74 75 74. 74 Sept.. .. ..74, 75 74 74 Dec .. .. ,.02 03 02 02 May.. .. ..02 03 02 02 Oats. , Open. High. Low. Close. July . . . . , .50 50 40 50 Sept.. 4244 42 43 Dec 43 44 43 44 May 45 4i 45 40 Porx. Open. High. Lowl Close. July .. ..10.55 1G.55 Sept.. . 16.50 10.75 '16.50 10.72 U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, July 13. Hogs, receipts, 33,000; left over 300. Cattle 25,000. Sheep 18,000, steady. Hogs Close. Light . $6.35$6-85 Mixed 6.35 6.95 Heavy 6.35 7.00 Rough : . . . 6.35 6.60 Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, July 13. Wheat. 86. ' Corn, 73. Oats, 53. Rye, SO. Timothy, $11.00. Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies 6.80 Good to choice 6.60 BEEF STEERS. Good to choice steers .... 6.00 Medium to good steers . . 5.75 Choice to fancy yearlings. 5.00 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers .. 4.75 Good to choice heifers 4.25 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice 3.00 Fair to good 2.00 STOCK CATTLE. Good to heavy fleshy feeders . . . . , . 4.50 Fair to good feeders 4.25 Good to choice stock ers . . 3.00 Common to fair heifers .. 4.00 SHEEP. " Best yearlings . .v... 4.00 6.90 6.80 7.00 6.50 5.65 4.65 6.25 5.50 4.75 4.50 4.25 4.65 4.50 Richmond. CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hogs, average 200 to 250 lbs 6.30 6.40 Good to heavy packers ... 6.15 6.25 Common and rough .. .. 5.75 6.00 Steers, corn fed 4.90 5.00 Heifers 4.15 4.40 Fat cows 3.50 3.75 Bulls 3.25 3.50 Calves , 5.50 6.00 Lambs 3.10 5.40 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens dressed, per lb..lSc Old chickens, per lb 12 to 15c Turkeys, per lb., ...18o Ducks, per lb.. .150 COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb. ......... ,25c Country butter, per lb... .....15 to 18c Eggs, per doz .. .. nc PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

WANTED Dressmaking to do; work guaranteed; prices reasonable. 22 ,S. 7th. 10-7t WANTED All kinds of furniture repairing and upholstering. Work guaranteed. Holthouse, 124 South 6th. Phone 4201. 7-7t

WANTED Men to Learn barber 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 CoUege. Cincinnati. O. FOR SALE, FOR SALE City real estate. field. Kelley Bl-ck- f FOR SALE $450 buys a good business proposition in Richmond. No use Richmond Seed Market. (Runge & Co.) Timothy (per bu) $2.00 Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per bu.) 83c Corn (per bu.) ..65 Oats (per. bu.) 45 Rye, (per bu.) 65 Bran (per ton) $22.00 Middlings (per ton) .. . .. ..$25.00 Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. 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 $5.00 Straw (per ton) 5.00 Corn (per bu.) 65c to 68c Oats (per bu.) 45 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg, July 13. Cattle, receipts 125 loads. Cattle $6.85 down. Veal $8.00 down. Hogs Receipts 25 loads. Sheep and lambs, receipts light. Sheep, $4.50 down. Spring lambs, $6.50 down. The Overtired ' Conductor. When the horse cars were in existence there was a greenhorn known as John who conducted on the Thirteenth and Fifteenth street lines. He boarded with his two aunts, who lived on Catharine street, between Thirteenth and Broad. One day his aunts thought they would take a ride with John and see how he was getting along, so they waited for his car. Soon the car began to get crowded and passengers got off and on at every square. John began to get angry. At last he became so exasperated at having to stop so often that when an old lady asked him to stop at Chestnut he bawled out: "I'm darned sick and tired pulling the bell. It's nothing but stop here nnd stop there, stop here and stop there. Away with youse all down to Catharine street with me aunts, and you prot out in a bunch." Philadelphia Le;:Two of t ind. "Come, come," cried the brusque and bustliujc real estate man, "why do you pay rent when you might own a home?" "I I don't pay rent," replied the startled stranger. "Then you own a home?" 'N-no." "That's strange. May I ask yout business?" "I'm a real estate dealer." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Two of a Kind. "Oh, George." sighed the lovesick maiden. "I'm sure I'm not worthy to be your wife." "Well." replied George wearily, "I'm not worthy to be your husband, so we're Just about evenly matched." Philadelphia Press. To the Strict Letter. "Mary," said the lady "of the house, "you didn't put any salt in this bread." "But." replied the new girl, "didn't the master say yesterday he wouldn't have nothing but fresh bread on his table, mum?" The colors on the artist's palette make r.o show, but when they are pread on the canvas we see tbcll beauty. Grikie. Gold Medal Flour Is real economv Ffccnxxes.

for it. Must sell. Call 1010 Main, phone 3054. 13-lt FOR SALE Irish and German table linens. The Rossiter Linen Co.. 20 Richmond Ave. Phone 3O70. 13-lt FOR SALE Farms and city property. Splendid bargains. Will sell or trade. J. S. Fitzgibbons, Cor. 9th and Main. 13-lt FOR SALE Peninsular steel rangebargain. 326 S. 13th st. 13-7t

FOR SALE Cottage 223 N. 16th St. 12-7t FOR SALE Cook stove, roller skates, guitar. 24 North 14th. ll-3t FOR SALE Second-hand buggies and phaetons, $10 to $25, great bargains. Jones Hardware Co., ll-3t FOR SALE Grocery stock, will invoice about $1,000. In good loca MEN'S COSTUMES. The Change That Came When Powder and Snuff Went Out. The French revolution had its effect upon the fashions of 1800 as well as upon matters of more weighty Import, the tendency being greatly to simplify costumes. Young men In England adopted the short coat, light waistcoat and pantaloons inaugurated in Paris by a certain set who affected to despise the old court fashion. The use of powder, made more expensive by taxation, quite died out, and short hair became universal. Trousers and Wellington boots, at first worn only by the military, were adopted by civilians about 1814, and the dandy of the early Victorian era wore his tightly strapped down. He also prided himself on his starched collar, which had gone out of favor under George IV., who preferred a black silk kerchief or stock. The snuffbox vanished, and the characteristic ornament of the age was the bunch of seals hanging from the watch chain. Various modifications took place from time to time during Queen Victoria's long reign, but the form of men's dress practically remained unaltered. The knickerbockers and tweed suit of the country gentleman are of comparatively modern date, as well as the wide awake, the soft felt hat. English Illustrated Magazine. THE HYPNOTIC EYE. And the Man Who Likes to Test It on the Circus Animals. ' The man who wants to ftest the power of the human eye on savage beasts is legion, and he affords no end of amusement for the attendants at the circus, who are always on the lookout for him. Often he may be detected standing before the cage of a liou, gazing Intently straight into the eyes of the dignified, old beast, who gazes back with indifference and finally shifts his eyes, not because he feels any mystic influence, but because something else has attracted his attention. A story is told of a man who tried the hypnotic trick on an ostrich. At first the bird crouched down and fluttered his wings nervously, but madp no other manifestitation for some time. A few hours later the body of the man was found, with the huge bird alternately stamping and sitting on it. Another is told of a man who tried to outgaze a leopard, with the result that the animal made a fierce charge against the bars of his cage and at the man, and the two created a disturbance that brought the attendants hurrying to investigate the trouble. Harriet Quimby in Leslie's Weekly. Hard Lines For Bachelors. "Korea's the wrong place for bachelors," said a traveler. "Bachelors in Korea are considered as children and have only children's privileges. You. a Korean bachelor, get thirsty. You enter a rest house and call for palm wine. The pretty little amber colored waitress says: " 'Married?' " 'No,' says you. " 'Heraus then, says she, and out you go, unslaked. "You want to vote, but they won't let you if you are not married. "You apply for a job somewhere. How many children have you?' is the first question you're asked. And ns soon as you say you're unmarried they laugh In your face to think that you should presume to apply for work anywhere." New York Press. The Ita Palm. In the moonlit garden overlooking the sea no sound was to be heard save the petulant plaint of the mosquitoes, angry at being disturbed at their food. "Come," said the host, "let us go and sit under the Ita palm. They won't bother us there." In comfort under the Ita. he went on: "This tree is from the Orinoca delta, the home of the Warau tribe. The Orinoca delta Is Infested with mosquitoes to an incredible degree. The Waraus, to escape them, live In a palm whose odor the mosquito can't put up with. "This is the palm the ita which makes the naked Warau's mosquito proof bed. A bandy thing It Is among these salt marshes to have In a garden too." Cincinnati Enquirer. Basely Deceived. The Husband You want to know here I was so late last night? I was nt the office balancing my books. The Wife It seems to me that you balance your books very often. That ?xcuse Is about threadbare. The H. Hm! If you don't believe tae. why don't you consult a fortune teller? The W. Not much. I consulted one once, and she told me a pack of lies. Tae IL Indeed! What dli $tf tall

tion. Cheap rent. See. me quick. Al H. Hunt. 7 N. 9th St. 10-3t

FOR SALESt. -Wagon. Call 1129 Main 10-7t FOR SALE Merchants' Delivery outfit. Clyde Edwards. 9-7t FORTSA LE Antique!" new andecond hand furniture, cheap. Antique Furniture Co., 51'J Main. y-7t FOR-SALE -One seven foot. 3 spring wagon. See or call Meerhoff the Plumber. 1-tf FOR SALE Two modern houses, 5 and 7 rooms. 332 Randolph. 7-7t FOR SALE A car load of horses every Saturday avd Monday at Gus Taube's barn. -tl FOR RENT. FOR RENT Furnished rooms; areo you The W. She told me I would get a rich, handsome, kind, attentive and truthful husband. Costly Eyeteeth. "I guess paw must have passed a lot of time at the dentist's when be was in New York." said Johnny Green. "Why do you think so?" queried his ma. " 'Cause I heard him tell a man today that it cest him nearly $300 to get his eyeteeth cut," replied Johnny. Chicago News. Inconsistent. "Dear me," said the poetess, "I don't see why those horrid editors insist on having manuscripts written on only one side of the sheet when they go and print their paper on both sides." rathfinder. A DRAGON HUNT. It Took Place In Turkey end Wat a Great Success. "Yes, I wunst hunted dragons, and the hunt was successful, too," said a sailor. "It was in Eyoub, the native quarter of old Constantinople. I lived there with my wife, a Circassian gal, Fatmah by name, and, comin' home from the calf one night" "Calf?" "Sure! Calf. Don't you know what a calf Is? Kind of restaurant where you eat and drink and smoke. But where was I?" "You were coming home." "Well, as we come home from the calf Fatmah grabbed my arm. pointed to the moon and give a loud yell. The full moon behind the domes and minarets was goln' into an eclipse. I laughed, but Fatmah says: " 'A dragon, O my beloved, she says. Is tryin' to devour the moon!' she

- ... ... .. ... a dragon hunt. From every housetop the faithful fired blunderbusses at the moon In the hope of killin' the dragon. "When we got home I tried to explain to Fatmah what an eclipse was, but she thought I was laughin' at her. So I gave up my explanations, and, with a pistol, each of us joined in the hunt, bangin' away at the dragon from the winder turn and turn about. "By crinus, we got him! The hunt was a success! The dead dragon dropped off the moon, and she floated, round and silvery wunst more, above the palms and minarets standin' black agin the pale sky. . "Fatmah claimed it was her shot what landed him, but I was always convinced It was my own." New Orleans Times-Democrat THE TREATY TREE. Where Penn and the Delaware Chiefs Exchanged Tokens. The "treaty tree," the original American Hague, where our first peace congress was held, with William Penn on the one side and the Delaware chiefs on the other, was a mighty elm that stood at Shackamaxon, on the banks of the Delaware river. Kensington, one of the suburbs of Philadelphia, now surrounds the spot. As was customary on such occasions, the parties to the treaty exchanged belts of wampum, and the belt said'to to haye been given Penn on this occasion is now in the collection of tbe Pennsylvania Historical society. It consists of eighteen strings of black and white beads, and in the center are two figures, representing a European and an Indian, with hands joined In friendship. In exchanging tokens with the chiefs Tenn said: "The friendship between you and me I will not compare to a chain, for that might rust, or the falling tree might break. We are the same as if one man's body were to be divided into two parts. We are all one flesh and blood." When the Indians handed Penn the wampum belt of peace they said: "We will live in love and peace with William Penn as long as the sun and the moon shall endure." The treaty tree was blown down in a windstorm March 10. 1810. Its age. estimated by rings, is 283 years. The William Penn society erected a marble column upon the site as a permanent monument. Kansas City Star. NAIL THROUGH HAND. Prof. Conrad, who has had charge of the public school play grounds, met with a painful injury last Saturday. While closing the lid of ope of the lime boxes, a nail was run through the middle of his hand. It waa thought at the time that blood" poisoning might result, but the wound is im-

says, 'll the faithful slay it not, there e ? u.iuuuu vl iue will be no more moonlight,' says she soul of Beelzebub, passes his time 'never!' carving toy men out of wood. Each "Then, by tar, begun the biggest J Palr of hl8 creations are Joined toracket I ever hear. All Eyoub was on ! gether. now at the necks, now at the

office rooms, with steam beat and: bath, at The Grand, for gents only, j -- ; FOR RENT Room for lady or maa and wife. 35 S. 12th. 132t F6RReNT Two unfurnished rooms with bath, centrally located. Call phone 1531. 11 -St FOR RENT New 7-room house, gas' light, one block interurban. J. L. Houck. Centerville. ll-cit FOR RENT Five-room house, mod"-1 i ern conveniences. Also cheaper! houses. Benj. F. Harris. S-7t

MISCELLANEOUS. DEAD STOCK removed free of charge. Cash paid if delivered at factory. Telephone charges paid. Automatic phones Factory 4134; Manager's PASTIMES OF MADMEN. Cunning and Ingenuity Displayed by the Insane. Some of the Inventions of the Insane are of scientific value. A patient at Villejulf invented a "pan location machine" by combining a bottle, a plank and small metallic tubes, to which he had fitted faucets. Having set up his machine, he produced loaves of bread the size of a man's head. The bread was good so good that it was decided to make the machine known. One day when it was in action the doctor suggested taking a photograph of It. The inventor watched him as If petrified for a moment; then he fell upon the machine, wrenched it apart and trampled it underfoot. The invention, an exceedingly useful one, was lost, bocause no one had seen him make it, and no one dares speak of it to him. To allude to it is to bring on a furious attack. Most lunatics, no matter how contented they may be, generally cherish a furtive longing to escape. They collect wax from the polished floors, take the Impressions of locks and make keys from empty sardine boxes, spoon handles or anything to be found. Dr. Marie's museum includes a collection of knives of strange and unheard of shapes. Some of them have blades made from pieces of glass or slate and set in handles of corset steels. Objects harmless in themselves become dangerous weapons through the ingenuity of madmen. Insane sculptors are as common as insane painters. The Insane sculptor hews out coarse statuettes, fantastic animals, ferocious little horned and grimacing devils. f Aq ex-mechanlc carves all his soup bones. That his old trade is still in his memory is shown by the little screws that he makes out of the smaller pieces of bone. He works all day at his senseless and ridiculous task. Another lunatic, who W..H..-.-... 41 1 .. t: -. m . 1 shoulders. Helen E. Meyer In liarper's Weekly. NATIONAL CONVENTIONS. They Succeeded the System of Nomination by Caucus. Conventions have not always nomi nated our presidents and vice presi dents. For more than thirty years' presidential candidates were named by a cancus made up of members of the house and the senate. This system died when in 1824 the caucus Insisted upon by Martin Van Buren and other friends of William H. Crawford of Georgia defeated Crawford, which threw the election into the house on account of the scattering electoral vote caused by the entrance of Clay, Calhoun, Jackson and John Quincy Adams in the race. This fracas elected Adams. The campaign of 1828 in consequence was somewhat demoralized, and in 1S31 the Republicans followed the example the anti-Masonic party had set the year before and met in convention in Baltimore to nominate Henry Clay. The Democrats held their first national convention .in the same city the following year, nominating Martin Van Buren for vice president- The dominating figure of the party. Andrew Jackson, needed no indorsement of his candidacy for the presidency. The Democrats in 1835 and 1840 nominated Van Buren for the presidency in Baltimore, and the Whigs nominated Clay in the same place in 1844. when the Democrats named Polk. In 1S35 Romulus M. Saunders introduced the two-thirds rule to the Democratic convention, and it was adopted. The customs Installed at these earlier conventions which succeeded the tyranny of the caucus chamber have been continued and added to from time to time, and the conventions today are merely the descendants of those that nominated Clay and Van Buren. Charles Wadsworth Camp in Metropolitan Magazine. Horizon. A man calls It the horizon where the earth and the sky seem to meet, but a woman's notion of the horizon is the families she can see moving in from behind her front window curtains. If, further, they hang out their washing In a spirit of candor, they are, of course, all the more so. The horizon is caused by a somber of things, chief among them the gregarious instinct. Only for this next door would mean as little as tariff revision or pure food or international arbitration. It takes a star or something of that sort to rise above the horizon, but a very ordinary woman may feel above it. Life. There Is no medlcioe - eafs sod at the tatre Mm so pteaaaotto talc as Dr. CaidwaU's Syrtrp Pepsin, tbe positive cm for ail dieeaaas arising from wtoromch troobla. The prica is vary nu ocabio 50c mmA SL Gold JMed&i Flour makes SfiOXUES, caJta.L eex. saw.. the llgiiteet

Residence. 4034. Factory on Union Pike, 1, miles north of Richmond. Clendenin & Co.. Richmond. Ind. Manufacturers of High Grade Ferti lizers. mayii-mon&fri tl FOUND Cnp offhub of " automobile. Owner may have same by calling at No. 3 Hose House end pa.viag for this advertisement. 13-lt LOST Rosary beads . F i n d er r e t u rn to Water Works Office. 11-Jt Try a Palladium want ad. They pay. The Palladium will take your ad over the phone. FOUNDS-A brown waterspaiiielpujK Phone 5117A. 13-lt SC HOOL No w- is t he t fm et obegi n your course at the Richmond Business college. S-7t

If you want your vault cleaned and thoroughly disinfected telephone me THE FISH IN HIS BED. Funny Climax to an Ansling Expert nee of Gtneral Gallifet. Long ago. In the days of the second empire. General Gallifet waa the ald-de-camp of Napoleon III. At St. Cloud his quarters were just over the Imperial bedroom. Everything around him was very grand and very gloomy. The window of his room looked npon the pond that washed the walls of the chateau. The water was cler and the surrounding scenery was beautiful, but the young lieutenant felt like a prisoner. Early, one morning, while seated at his wjndow trying to drive away the blues with a cigar, he espied below in the crystal water an enormous carp. The instinct of the angler, strong In Gallifet, made the young man's eyes snap and set bis heart throbbing. The big fish was the private property of the emperor. Consequently for Gallifet it was forbidden fish. But it was such a fine fellow! The resistance of the soldier's conscience was useless. It surrendered unconditionally. The remaining part of the campaign against the carp was simple enough. Gallifet went to his trunk, brought oat his trusty line, to which he fastened a book and an artificial bait With his accustomed skill he cast his line. The carp was hooked and hauled In through the window. Here the lieutenant's fun ended and his trouble began. The fish, landed upon a table, overturned a large globe filled with water and caromed from that to a magnificent vase, which it also npset and smashed to pieces upon the floor. Then it began to execute a genuine pas de carpe among the smithereens. , The emperor, hearing the strange racket overhead and seeing the water trickling through the ceiling, was astonished. He rushed upstairs to find out what was the matter. Gallifet heard him coming and endeavored to grab the carp and throw It out of the window and thus destroy the evidence of his poaching in the imperial pond. But the slippery thing was hard to bold, so he toesed it Into a bed and covered it up with the bedclothes. When the emperor entered the room, he noticed immediately the quivering bedclothes. He pulled them down and uncovered the floundering fish. His majesty's face assumed an almost jlmJamlc expression, which gradually faded into a faint smile. He took In the entire situation, saluted and left the future war minister to meditate upon the mysteries of a fisherman's luck. "So you think my writing that book was a remarkable achievement T said the gratified author. "Yes," answered Miss Cayenne. "I don't see how you ever managed to stay awake through the first foor chapters, let alone through the whole book." St. Louis Repnblic. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY. Home Tel. 2062

Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Railrord Co. Eastbonnd Chicago Cincinnati

STATIONS Lv Chicago ........ I at eru ......... Lv Pern Lv Marion Lr Muncie L- Richmond .... T.T Cottage Grove Ar Cincinnati ....

YVestbotmd Ctacinnati 3ilcago

STATIONS Lr Cinctnnati ......... Lv Cottage Grore ............... Xr Richmond Lr Muncie Lv Marlon Ar Per Lv Peru ....... Ar Chicago (12th St. Station)...

Through Vestibuled Train between Chicago and Cincinnati over our own rails. Double dally service. Through Sleepers on trains Noa. 3 and 6 between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeper between STnnda, Maxtoa. Pern and Chicago, handled in trains Xos. 5 and 6. between Honda aa4 Pern, thence trains Nob. 3 and 4, between Para-and Chicago. .

For train connections and other C A. BLAIR,

Tttmm TftlhpT"'. 206Z.

and I will give your orders immediate attention. Only reliable vault cleaner In Richmond. Thomas Morehead. 93S Butler. Phone 3177. 6-7t I nst a n tenous Water Heaters of ill kinds. See them in operation at Meerhoff s. 9 S. 9th. Let us figure on your plumbing, heating and lighting. l-tf

LAUNDRY. We can h-ip make yen nappy honestly wa can. Richmond- -gtJtara Laundry. "Enieline, you are not happy. What makes you pretend that you are?" "Because artificial happiness Is lots better than none at all." VERY LOW ROUND TRIP RATES DURING SUMMEF SEASON TO ALL POINTS INCLUDING WISCONSIN MINNESOTA MICHIGAN CALIFORNIA AND THE EAST VIA WRITE TO THE UNDERSIGNED, STATE THE POINTS YOU DESIRE TO VISIT, AND WE WILL ADIVSE FREE OF COST, THE RATE, AND GIVE YOU OTHER VALUABLE INFORMATION. C A. BLAIR, P. 4 T. A, " Richmond, Ind. T. H. GURNEY General Passenger Agent CHICAGO, ILL. A Lucky Htrdmtn. A crious legend attaches to the discovery of the marble of which Ephesus was built. Two rams of a herdsman named rixodorus fought while feeding on a hill. One of them in the contest with his bora broke a crust of toe whitest marble. The peasant running to his Eptresian fellow citizens with the specimen, bis prize was received with applause, and his name waa changed to "Evangehis" (Giver of Glad Tidings), and. the atone being excavated for Diana's temple, divine honors were subsequently paid to him! London Strand Magazine. Lr-BKTi: Just leerneij that Gold Me1al Flour Is sifted tm Umr through flttrtt tUk. Ecokkia. The Great Blood Purifier. at all drug stores. Fr sal) DoceTeL 2962

IL

1 t t 31 Except Senary D"T rSr 8 ,35am .30pm m fgam 12.40pm LSSam T120jim 12.50pm 2.05am - 6.00am 4.40pm 1.44pm 2.59am ; 7.0 Sam 5.17pm 2.41pm 3.57am . 8.10am. j C.40pm 4.45pm t.53am '-X45pm 6.35 pm UOatm- HflttSpm

33 Except Sunday Daily Dally Butiarjr &.40am 10115am 1935am 12.r7ptn 1.19pm 2.15pm 2.25pm 6.40pm SOpm 10.40pm lL15pm 02.46am 1.44am ' 2.25am 2.45am 7.00am 8.40axa lfrieam 1247pm 1.1 fpm 2J5pm 4.60pm 9.20pm 6.20pm 8.00pm 9.00pm 10.00pm information call P. & T. Am