Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 150, 14 July 1908 — Page 7
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THE KICinrOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1908. PAGE SEVEN 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 Advertisements Must Be in This Office Before 12 Noon. Situations Wanted Will Be Advertised Fre; Each Insertion
WANTED.
WANTED Place to assist with general housework by a reliable girl. Call at 1208 North F. 14-m ."WANTED Place in country near Richmond to board large watch dog. Address Lock box "264," Richmond. 14-lt WANTED A housekeeper at 27GFL Wayne avenue: Call between 7 a. m. and 4 p. m. 14-lt WANTED-Washings to do at ST" 5th stret. 14-2t 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 st.. 13-3t VANTED Position by a young lady who la an experienced book keeper; can furnish best of references. Ad
TODAY'S MARKET QUOTATIONS
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohio.) New York, July 14. Open High Low Amalgamated Copper . 69 70 68 American Smelting 82 83 82 American Sugar 4 127 128 127 Atchison 83 85 8278 B. & O . 90 91 90 B. R. T 49 49 49 C. M. & St. P. 137 138 137 New York Central 104 Northern Pac 139 140 138 Pennsylvania 122 123 121 Reading ...116 116 115 Southern Pacific 88 90 88 Union Pacific 148 149 147 U. S. Steel 4 41 42 40 U. S. Steel pfd . 107 107 106 Great Northern 132 132 131
Chicago. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. (By Corrtll and Thompson. Brokers. Eaton. O.l Chicago, July 14. Wheat. Open. Hign. ixw. Close. July !Hi 01 90- 01 Sept.. 91 92 !Ni 91 Dec. ;.. ..02 93 92 02 May 00 97 90 97 Corn. Open. Hign. Low. Close. July.. .. ...74 74 73 73 Sept ..74 74 74 74 Dec 01 ; 01 02 May .. .. ..02 02 01 61 Oats. t i Open. High. Low. Close. ' July.. ... ..30- 31 30 51 Sept 43 43 43 43 Dec 44 44 43 44 May 40 40 45 43 Porx. Opm. High. Low. Close. Juiy.. ... lo.io Sept. . 16.53 10.00 13.S2 15.82 Lard. Sept. ... 0.37 ; 0.00 9.33 9.37 Sept . . 0.37 O.OO 0.35 9.37 Ribs. s Open. High. Low. Close. July. . .8.62 Sept. . 9.05 9.10 8.75 8.75 U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, July 14. Hogs, receipts 15,000; left over 7.000. Cattle 4,500, steady. Sheep 14,000, Btrong. Hogs Close. Light 6.35 6.90 Mixed 6.35 7.00 Heavy 6.35 7.00 Rough 6.35 6.60 Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, July 14. Wheat, 86. Corn, 73. Oats, 53. Rye, 80. Timothy, $11.00. Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies 6.95 7.00 Good to choice 6.80 6.90 BEEF STEERS. Good to choice steers .... 6.00 7.00 , Medium to good steers .. 5.75 6.50 Choice to fancy yearlings. 5.00 5.65 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers .. 4.75 5.S5 Good to choice heifers .... 4.25 4.65 V VEAL CALVESGood to choice 3.00 6.25 Fair to good . 2.00 5.50 : STOCK CATTLE. Good to heavy fleshy feeders.. .. v. .. 4.50 4.75 Fair to good .feeders.... 4.23 4.30 Good to choice stockers .. 5.00 4.25 Common to fair heifers .. 4.00 4.65 SHEEP. Best yearlings 4.00 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 cons 3.50 3.75 Bulls.. I,.. 3.25 3.50 Calves 5.50 6.00 Lambs".. .. 5.10 3.40 PRICES FOR POULTRY." (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) ,' Tk'oung chickens dressed, per lb.. ISc
dress Miss W. N., care Palladium. ll-7t WANTED Dressmaking to do; work guaranteed; prices reasonable. 22 S. 7th. 10-7t
WANTED Men to Learn barber trade; will equip 6hop for you ox furnish positions, tew weeks e,om pletes, constant practice, careful Instructions, tools given, Saturday wages, diplomas granted, write for catalogue. Moler Barber College. Cincinnati. 0. tl FOR SALEtor sale Cltv real estate. Porter field. Kelley Bli-ck- 9-tf FOR SALE Best new sewing machine for this week; $13.00. Antique Furniture Co., 319 Main. 14-2t FOR SALE Gocart. 218 N. 14th. 14-3t FOR SALE My property in southwest Close 70 83 128 85 91 49 138 105 140 123 116 90 149 42 107 132 Old chickens, per lb 12 to 15c Turkeys, per lb ...18o Ducks, per lb., l5o COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb 25c Country butter, per lb 15 to 18c Eggs, per doz 17c 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.) 63 Bran (per ton) f 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 14. Cattle, receipts light. Cattle $6.25 down. Veal $8.00 down. Hogs Receipts 10 loads; 10c lower. Sheep and lambs, receipts light. Sheep, $4.65 down. Spring lambs, $6.50 down. On the Verge of Prostration. "What else have you got?" asked Cholly, looking languidly over the bill of fare for something to tempt his Jad ed appetite. "Wen." replied the waitress, "we have hot biscuits too." "That'll do." said Cholly. resting his intellect by tossing the bill of fare aside. "Bring me a hot biscuit stew." Chicago Tribune. Rebuttal Testimony. The Guest Isn't your little boy rather nervous, Mrs. Blnim? Mrs. Bimm No; I think not Little Boy Yes. 1 am. . ma: when people who come here stay too long it makes me wriggle around and kick my chair. Badly Expressed. In Grant-Duffs "Notes From a Diary" It is told that when Landseer. the great animal painter, was presented to the king of Portugal his majesty said: "Ah, I am so glad to see you! I always like beasts!" Compromise. Customer (in bookstore) Let me have a copy of "Antony and Cleopatra." Clerk Yes, sir; $1. please. Customer Dear me, rve only got 50 cents. Jnst give me Antony ! Harper's Weekly. A Pocket Symphony. "My piano Is very much like my trousers pockets. When my wife goes Into them she often finds nothing but keys, and then there Is music.' Mew York Globe. Hfstieb: Gold Medal Flour makes the lightest ponge cake I ever saw. Rachel. There it bo madiclae sate and at tbe iin time o pleasant to take as Dr. CalctweU's Syrup Ppin. tbe poatthre care for all disease arising from stomach trooble. Tbe price is very tea oaahle SOsanaB, - .,
part of Centerville; cheap if sold soon. Address J. C. Marshall, Cenr terville, Ind. 14-7t FOR SALE Sewing machine, new improved GO. Cheap if sold at once. It; S. 11th street. 14-lt
FOR SALE Or will trade for horse. 13 H. P. traction engine. Roberts Bros., Centerville, Ind. 14-7t FOR SALE Household goods at once; cheap; leaving by Thursday. 241 S. 7th street. 14-lt FOR SALE A good 10 ft extension table and sideboard. Call at No. 7 North Oth street. 14-lt FOR SALE Baby cab. Good as new. 72 S. 7th street. 14-7t FOR SALE Peninsular steel rangebargain. 320 S. 13th st. 13-7t FOR-SALE Farm. 40 acres 3 miles north of Cambridge City, Ind. Good strong land; well improved. This is a high class farm and cheap. Price THE SUN A PUZZLE. We See Only the Outer Shells of trr Great Blazing Orb. The great ball of fire which we call the Eun is not really the sun. No one has ever seen the sun. A series of concentric shells envelops a nucleus of which we know absolutely nothing except that it must be almost Infinitely hotter than the fiercest furnace and that it must amount to more than ninetenths of the solar mass. That nucleus is the real sun, forever bidden from us. The outermost of the enveloping shells is about 5,000 miles thick and Is called the chromosphere. It is a gaseous fluid, tinted with the scarlet glare f hydrogen, and so furiously active that It spurts up great tongues of glowing gas (prominences) to the height of thousands of miles. Time was when this agitated sea of crimson flre could be seen to advantage only during an eclipse. Now special instruments are used which enable astronomers to study it in the full glare of the sun. Beyond the chromosphere, far beyond the prominences even, lies the nebulous pallid corona visible only during the vanishing moments of a total eclipse, aggregating not more than seven day? !a a century. No one has ever satisfactorily explained how the highly attenuated matter composing both the promi nences and the corona Is supported without falling back into the sun under the pull of solar gravitation. Now that Arrhenius has cosmically applied the effects of light pressure a solution is presented. How difficult it is to account for such delicate streamers as the promi nences on the sun is better compre hended when we fully understand how relentlessly powerful is the grip o' solar gravitation. If the sun were a habitable glob and you could transport yourself to IU surface, you would find yourself pulled down so forcibly by gravitation tha: you would weigh two tons, assumln? that you are an ordinary human bein Your clothing alone would weigh more than a hundred pounds. Baseball could be played in a solar drawing room, for there would be some diflV culty In throwing a ball more than thirty feet. Tennis would be degraded to a form of outdoor pingpong. From these considerations It Is plain that gravitation on the sun would tend to prevent the formation of any lambent streamers and to pull down to its surface masses of any size. Harper's Magazine. BARNUM'S OLD LION. How the Great Showman Turned Hii Death to Account Among the features of the parades of the Barnum circus there was formerly one that never failed to attract attention. On the top of one of the wild beast cages lay an enormous Hon. He was not confined in any way, and nervous people watching the parade would shudder at the sight and contemplate the terrible possibility of the lion springing into the midst of tbe crowd. But the venerable old king of beasts had reached the leonine dotage, and stiffened muscles and blunted claws rendered him harmless. He was as mild as a kitten and in the winter quarters, where he was allowed to roam at will, sometimes had to be protected from the onslaughts of irreverent and mischievous puppies. One night he wandered from the quarters. In the course of his travels he chanced on a barn where a meek eyed cow was placidly chewing her cud. A faint flicker of the slumbering Jungle spirit stirred his pulse, and. with a crashing blow of the huge fore paw, the cow was slain; then, lying down beside his victim, he went to sleep and dreamed of the time when he was a shaggy little whelp playing with his brothers under the bright sun of his faroff African home. In the morning the owner of the cow, a stalwart female with the blood of Irish kings In her veins, entered the barn with milk pail in hand. She was filled with wrath at the sight that met her gaze. With a keen edged ax in her hand and grim determination In her eye she fearlessly approached the sleeping lion, and when the men sent out to search for him arrived he lay cold In death. Barnum promptly paid for the dead cow and engaged to appear on exhibition 'the woman who In mortal combat had slain a Hon." . The Oldest Treaty. The oldest text of a real treaty now in existence is that of the convention between Rameses II.. king of Egypt, and the Prince of Kheta. which embraces the articles of a permanent offensive and defensive alliance, with clauses providing for the extradition of migrants, deserter crjaainaia - and
$4,000.00. Address Floyd & Brown, Dublin, Ind. 14-lt FOR SALE Farm, IGo avcres. 4 miles southeast of Milton. lad. Large bank barn, fine eight room house; peach, cherry and apple orchard; level; all second bottom. Must be seen to be appreciated. Price $S0 per acre. Address Floyd & Brown, Dublin, Ind. 14-lt
FOR SALE Farm, OO acres, 0 miles from Milton. All good bottom land; good 5 room house; barn and outbuildings, well fenced. If sold at once $73 uer acre. Address Floyd & Brown. Dublin, Ind. 14-lt FOR SALE Cottage 223 N. 16th St. 12-"t FOR SALE Wagon. Call 1129 Main St. 10-7t FOR SALE Merchants' Delivery outfit. Clyde Edwards. 9-7t FOR SALE Antique, new and second sillied ' wofkuieu. This treaty was drawn up in the fourteenth century B. C. and is the earliest record that we have of any International transaction. Her Uncooked Gown. Miss Flufflgirl Miss Newthought has gone tbe limit with her vegetarianism! Miss Furbelow Why, what is her latest? Miss Flufflgirl She actually refuses to wear anything but raw silk gowns now. New York Press. Time to Be Diplomatic. When a woman shows you the picture of her baby remember that you will get Into trouble, nine times out of ten, if you say exactly what you think. Somerville Journal. His Idea of Him. Bill Did you go to see that boy actor last night? Jill Yes. "Did he get a hand?" "What he ought to have got was a shingle." Yonkers Statesman. ' Samoa. TaTKiffg WarT. " Samoa's talking man, or tola fall. Is a character. All the affairs of state of the Tillage in which be holds office are carried upon his shoulders. In ordinary he Is the chief adviser, perEuader, convlncer and restralner of the leading chiefs. Having the gift of eloquence, he makes tbe most of it Hie enjoys immunity from many things. He cannot be spoken of in ordinary terms. If It should be necessary to speak of his eyes or his mouth or his limbs, special honorable words must be used, words -which attach to him alone and have never been applied to the personal parts of ordinary men. As he stands to deliver his soft, per suasive, mellifluous oratory, with staff of office In his hand, any one can see that he is a man of great importance, or if this is not apparent from his attitude it may be gathered from the attention paid to bis utterances by gray haired chiefs and by youth and maidens. If the talking man Is a clever fellow and understands his business, he is the chief ruling power in his tribe, although the nominal headship is always vested in a chief or patriarchal figurehead. How Wyckoff Was Revealed. The late Professor Walter A. Wyckoff of Princeton had a passion for knowledge at first hand and will be best remembered as the college professor who studied labor conditions by becoming himself a laborer. Starting in 1891 in Connecticut with no money and with a suit of overalls, he worked his way through nearly every state in the Union after the fashion of the floating laborers of this country, so many of whom ultimately become tramps. Wherever there was a possibility of work he applied for it, whether it were digging ditches, wrecking houses or factory work. For awhile his incognito usually worked well, but as soon as his fellow laborers saw him at table they at once began to suspect him. His manner of eating, his way of holding knife and fork, at once set them speculating. Once he was seen drinking tea at a fellow laborer's house in Chicago. He lifted the saucer from the table, held it in his hand and forgot himself so far as to drink without noise. "I knowed then," his host afterward said, "that he was a swell masquerading." Harper's Weekly. The Most Beautiful Flag. In a village school in the Acadian region of Nova Scotia the young lady teacher, who was from a portion of Canada more remote from the United States than the section she was in, was on one occasion preparing for a Httle celebration of empire day. Calling one of the boys, she gave him a coin and said to him: "Take this, please, and go out and get us the prettiest flag yon can find." She bad no idea, of course, of bis procuring anything else than a British flag, and her astonishment was great, therefore, when the boy came back with a small edition of the stars and stripes. "What have you there?" the teacher asked sharply. "Did you suppose I sent you for anything else than the flag of your country?" "Why," answered the boy, "yon told me to get the prettiest flag I could find, and there was nothing else so pretty as this!" The boy's judgment was unprejudiced, at any rate, for he was a Canadian. Oh, Wait Till He Returns. "Why, my dear," exclaimed the good friend on finding Mrs. Newed in floods of tears, "what is the matter? The young wife wiped her eyes and tried to compose herself and be inhumanly calm. "Well." she began, with folded hands, "yoa know John is away for a week." helped .tlw.Jadyvfriend,
hand furniture, cheap. Antique Furniture Co., 319 Main. ! 7t FOR SALK One-seven foot3 spring wagon. See or call Meerhoff the Plumber. 1-tf
FOR SALE Two modern houses. 3 and 7 rooms. 332 Randolph. 7-7t FOR SALE A car load of horses every Saturday avl Monday at Gus Taube'a barn. -tt FOR RENT. FOR RENT-Furnished front room, ground floor. 32 North 10th street. 14-7t FOR RENT Furnished rooms; r.o office rooms, with steam heat and bath, at The Grand, for gents only. 8-t-tt FOR RENT Five rooms. 27"7North 19th. July 11-sat-sun-tues FOR RENT Room for lady or man and wife. 33 S. 12th. 13-2t 'vV.7, "he writes to foe iegu.'arty, and in his his last letter he tells me he gets my photo out and kisses it every day." "But that is nothing for yon to cry about!" exclaimed the good friend. "Yes. it is." cried Mrs. Newed. bursting into tears afresh, "be-boeause I took my picture out of his ba-bag bebefore he started Ju-Just for a Jo-joke and put one of mo-mo-mother's in its place!" Why They Don't Desert. "Instances of desertion from the army in Mexico are very rare and fo the best of reasons." said Senor Jose de Minaldez of Nueva Leon. "The reason lies in tbe almost sure capture of the fugitive and the certainty that he will get not one but numer ous floggings on his bare back. These lashings are done In tbe presence ol the comrades of the deserter, and when tbe men see bow great Is tbe suffering of the miserable wretch who tried in vain to quit his military obligations they are forced to conclude that It is better to stick to the army than to undergo such a terrible ordeal." Baltimore American. Audiences Have Changed. "They don't write comic operas l'.ke they used to," said Mr. Stormington Barnes. "They used to have jokes then that made people laugh." Yes," answered the manager, "but you must remember that in those days they had audiences who could be made to laugh." Memphis Commercial Appeal. Not Deluded. "Do you want employment?" "Lady," answered Plodding Pete, "you means well, but you can't make work sound any more Invitin by usln words of three syllables." Washington Star. Brave actions never want a 'trumpet Italian Proverb. "rnen 'rimer, tne famous painter, was dying at Chelsea he sent in despair for a Ramsgate doctor who had done him some good during his recent stay at that place and who, he hoped, might take a different view of his case from that which the London physicians had expressed. The doctor arrived and confirmed the opinion that the artist had very Httle time longer to live "Wait a bit." said Turner to the doc tor. "You have had nothing to eat and drink yet, have you?" "No, but thafs of no consequence." "But It is," replied the painter. "Go downstairs, and you will find some refreshment, and there is some fine brown sherry don't spare it and then come up and see me again." The doctor refreshed himself and then came back to tbe patient. "Now, then," said Turner, "what is It? Do you still think so badly of my case?" The doctor regretfully said he could not alter bis former opinion. The artist shook bis shoulders, turned his face to the waif and never spoke again! Dundee Advertiser. A Rich Woman's Closet. "The nearest approach to a Bluebeard's closet that I ever saw," said a woman the other day, "was in the country bouse of one of New York's most fashionable women. "I didn't know her, but in a queer, roundabout way I was once shown over the house and saw Mrs. V.'s pri vate apartments. I pretty nearly fainted when I walked into a room where a dozen or more women were apparently hanging from the celling. "When I came to I found that what I had taken to be a choice collection of female corpses was really a lot of manikins. Mrs. V. had them made after her own measurements, and her choicest costumes were kept on them when not in use. "Her maid would fasten a gown on to a manikin, put something over it to keep the dust off and then by means of a rope and pulley draw the whole thing to the ceiling. It was a fine ar rangement but looked as if Bluebeard had been around." New York Sun. Bom That Way. There is perhaps no point on which the librarian and child disagree so entirely as that of tbe proper condition of the hands. A child whose band? were black with dirt solemnly stated. "I was born that way." Another declared that the doctor said "be must not wash his hands till the weather got warmer." Another whispered. "Teacher, that's the color of my skin." A boy who brought back a book with its cover soiled and greasy refused to pay the fine and finally brought his mother in to speak in his behalf. We had been very unjust and unkind to her boy, she said, "for he Is very careful. He puts his book in the Icebox, where the baby can't get it. and nothing but our food and . Willie's books ever goes In that icebox. Library Journal.
FOR RENT Five room house, modern conveniences. Also cheaper
houses. Benj. F. Harris. MISCELLANEOUS. STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING Plumbing and electric wiring at Meerhoff's. 9 S. t'th. 14-tf NOTICE The Robinson Cafe will be closed until September 1. H it LOST-White waist on South C strct; phone 2Ci3 H-it Try a Palladium want ad. They pay! The Palladium will take your ad over the iihone. SCH OO LNo wi t hetime to-begin your course at the Richmond Business college. &-7t If you want your vauitcleaned and thoroughly disinfected telephone me and I will give your orders immediate attention. Only reliable vault in a certain employment agency ten cooks nut of a Job waited one afternoon last week for a situation to turn up. Presently a well gowned woman who was short of servants applied at the desk for the desired help. The manager referred ber to the ten cooks. The woman interviewed each of them in turn wirh unsatisfactory results. "Not one of them." she explained to the manager of the agency, "Ukes to eat the things that we like." "But what difference does that make?" asked the manager. "They are no doubt good girls for all that." "Yet they wouldn't suit me." the woman replied decisively. "My family have very pronounced tastes in cookery, and my experience has taught me that only a cook who likes the same dishes that we like can prepare them satisfactorily. That is a matter of simple common sense. It stands to reason that any dish a cook likes will turn out better than one she doesn't like; consequently I will do the work myself till I find a girl whose tastes agree with ours." Philadelphia Ledger. Nature and the Barnacle. In the barnacle we have a unique and wonderful case of a creature that can afford as age comes on to dispense with the eyesight that was so useful in youth. For the young and old barnacle are as different one from tbe other as fishes from seaweed. In the heyday of life the barnacle swims about the sea, seeking its food with the aid of its eyes and generally leading a roaming existence. Later in life, however. It grows tired of this aimless wandering and settles down to worry ships' captains by attaching Itself to the keel of their craft and defying the much advertised powers of various preventive paints. Once, then, the barnacle has become a fixture, whether on ships or sharks, its eyesight is of no more use. It cannot seek Its food, and It cannot shun its foes, for It never more will move. Therefore Its eyes become superfluous and, according to nature's invariable rule in such cases, disappear. Lived to Fight Another Day. Frederick the Great simply lost his head at Molwitz. bis first battle. Had he not been a king it is safe to say that he would have been shot at the next sunrise. In the heat of the carnage he got an idea that tbe army under his command was being overwhelmed, so he put the spurs to his horse and dashed headlong among his soldiers. He rode many miles before he stopped in his wild flight Late at night he was discovered hiding in an old mill, awaiting, as he thought, capture by tbe enemy. Then he discovered that the army he deserted had won the battle. As Frederick was a prince, everybody tried to forget the Incident Just as quickly as possible, and after that, when the king went to war, he was Just as brave as any othr Home Tel. 2062
Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Railrocd Co. ' Eastbound Chicago Cincinnati
STATIONS Lr Chicago At Peru Lv Peru Lv Marlon Lt Muncie ...... JLv Richmond ... Lv Cottage Grove tAr Cincinnati ...
Westbound Cincinnati Chicago
STATIONS Lv Cincinnati L.r Cottage Grove lit Richmond Lv Muncie Lr Marlon Ar Pera Lv Peru Ar Chicago (12th St. Station)
Through Vestlbuled Trains between Chicago and Cincinnati over our own rails. Double dally service. Through Sleepers on trains Noa. t and 4 between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeper between Mnnde, Marlon. Pera and Chicago, handled in trains Nos. 5 and 6, between XI uncle and Peru, thence trains Nos. 3 and 4. between Peru and Chicago. For train connections and other information call
& A. BLAIR. Earns Telejihone 2062.
cleaner iu Richmond. Thomas Morehead. 92S Butler. Phone S1T7. , 6-7 1
lnstamenous Water Heaters of all kinds. Se them in operation at Meerhoff's, 9 S. 9th. Let us figure on your plumbing, heating and lighting. 1-tf LAUNDRY. We can help make ycu happy honestly wo can. Richmond Steam Laundry. Agriculture is everywhere being recognized as "the coming Industry. TUe old notiou that the uid who work. with bis Intellect more than with his muscle la not a real farmer, but only an imitatiou. is fast becoming relegated to the background. Business Man's Magazine. VERY LOW ROUND TRIP RATES DURING SUMMER 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. A T. A. Richmond, Ind. T. H. GURNEY General Passenger Agent CHICAGO, ILL. . Our Shrinking Sun. One hundred years ago 'the diameter of the sun was four miles greater than It is now. One thousand years ago the sun's diameter was forty mile greater than It Is st present. Ten thousand years ago its diameter was 400 miles greater than It Is today. The present diameter of the bud h 60,000 miles, and If this dlsmetei were to shrink tomorrow to tbe extent of 10.000 miles the change would not be appreciable to common observation,' though a much smaller change would not elude tbe delicto astronomical The Great Blood Purifier. Fr sal at all drug stores. Hone Tel. - 2862
is
1 SI Except Sunday DaUy D'I,y Sund3r 8.35am t.30pra 8.35am 12.40pm 1.55am 12.40pm 12.50pm 2.05am 6.00am 4.40pm 1.44pm 2.59am 7.05am 5.37pm 2.41pm 3.57am 8.10am 6.40pm 4.05pm 6.15am t5am 8.05pm 4.45pm 5.53am 8.45pm 6.35pm TJOam 10.25pm
a Except Sunday
S3 Dalljr Dally Sudsy 8.40am 19.15am 10.55am 12.17pm 1.19pm 2.15pm 2.25pm 6.40pm 8.00pm 10.40pm 11.15pm 12 46am L44am 2.25am 2.45am 7.00 am 8.40am 10.15am 10.55am 12.17pm L19pm 2.15pm 4.50pm 9.20pm L30pm 8.00pm 9.00pm 10.00pm P. A T. A.
Richmond, Xb4
