Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 158, 22 July 1908 — Page 7
PAGE SEVEN. i ONE CENT PER WORD Each Insertion 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 12 Noon. Situations Wanted Will Be Advertised Free
THE KTCII3IO:eD PAlADITJli JI'D SUN-TIXEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY, JUIr 22, 1908
WANTED.
WANTED To buy a second hand 8horse gasoline engine and 50 light dynamo. J. A. Roe, Union City. ' 22-1 1 VvANTtD Man to plow corn. Call at 326 Main St. 22-it WANTED To buy five to seven room modern house in eastern or southeastern part of city; must be cheap; for spot cash. Address B. B., care Palladium. 21-4t WANTED First class piano player. Address Palace Amusement Co. Lock box 203, City. 21-7t WANTEDTo repair your furni tureT . All kinds of job carpentering. Frank Van Tress, 103 Richmond avenue. 21-2t WANTEDTo repair your watches!
TODAY'S MARKET QUOTATIONS
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohtu.j New York, July 22.
Amalgamated Copper American Smelting American Sugar . Atchison ., B. & 0 B. R. T. . .. .. . . . . . C. M. & St. P. New York Central . Northern Pac. .. Perxisylvanla Reading Southern Paciflo Union Pacific U. S. Steel U. 8. Steel pfd Great Northern Chicago. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers. Eaton. CU Chicago, July 22. Wheat. Open. High. low. Close. July ... 90 90 89 90 Sept. ... 91 91 90 90 Dec. ... 92 93 91 91 May ... 97 97 96 96 Corn. Open. Iliga. Low. Close. July ... 75 75 73 75 Sept. ... 75 75 75 75 Dec. ... 61 61 60 61 May ... 60 61 60 60 Oats. Opeu. High. Low. Close. July ... 53 54 53 54 Sept. ... 44 44 43 ' 44 Dec. ... 43 43 43 43 .May ... 45 45 45 45 Porx. ' Open. . High. Low. Close. Sept. ... 15.82 15.85 15.67 15.77 Oct. ... 15.80 15.85 15.70 15.80 Lard. Sept 9.40 9.40 9.30 9.35 Oct 9.47 9.47 9.37 9.42 Ribs. Open. High. Low. Close. Sept 8.85 8.87 8.77 8.85 Oct 8.90 8.90 U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, July 22. Hogs, receipts 22,000, weak; left over 8,515. Cattle 17.000, steady. Sheep 20,000, strong. Hogs Close. Light $6.10$6.72 Mixed 6.20 6.82 Heavy 6.20 6.85 Hough 6.20 6.45 Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies ?6.95 Good to choice 6.80 BEEP STEERS. Good to choice 6teers .... '6.003 Medium to good steers .. 5.75(g) Choice to fancy yearlings. 5.00 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers .. 4.75 Good to choice heifers .... 4.23 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice 3.25 Fair to good . . 2.00 STOCK CATTLE. Good to heavy fleshy feeders.. 4.50 Fair to good feeders . . . . 4.25 Good to choice stockers .. 5.00 Common to fair heirers .. 4.00 SHEEP. Best yearlings 4.00 Indianapolis Grain Indianapolis, July 22. Wheat. 91. Corn, 75. Oats, 43 Rye, 75. .Timothy, $11.50. 7.10 6.90 7.00 6.50 5.65 5.85 4.65 6.73 5.50 4.75 4.50 4.25 4.65 4.50 Richmond. CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hogs, average 200 to 2501bs. . . . . fi.nofj 6.40 Good , to heavy packers.. .6.256.33 Common and rough 5.80 6.00 Steers, corn fed 4.90 5.00 Heifers 4.00 4.15 Fat cows 3.50 3.75 Bulls 3.25 3.50 Calves, 5.50 6.00 Lambs ,. 5.10 5.50 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) foung chickens dressed per lb. ... r .... IS to 20c
clocks and jewelry. Carl L. Culberson, cor. N. Fourth and D. 21-2t WANTE D A gbodgirnn a family of two. Mrs. I. M. Hughes. 10-7t
WANTED Situation by good boy, aged 19 years; can give reference. Address F. S., care Palladium. 20-3t WANTED Men to Learn barber trade; will equip shop for you oi furnish positions, few weuu completes, con b tan t practice, careful Instructions, tool given, Saturday wages, diplomas granted, writ for catalogue. Moler Barber Corege. Cincinnati, O. tt FOR SALE. FOR SALE City real estate Porterfield, Kellty Elck-&-tf "of FOR SALE OR TRADE Stock Open 71 84 130 86 92V4 . .. ... 51 1404 106 14 140 124 ...117 91 153 44 108i 135 High 73 85 130 87 Vs 92 5214 141 1104 141 125 119 92 154V4 45i2 108 136 Low 71 84 129 86 14 9214 51 140 106 140 124 117 91 152 44 107 134 Close 73 85 130 87 92 52 141 110 141 125 118 92 154 45 108 135 Old chickens, per lb.. ..12 to 14c COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb 25c Country butter, per lb 18 to20c Eggs, per doz 17c Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per bushel) '. 85 Corn (per bu.) 70 Oats (per. bu.) .. .. .. ..45 Rye, (per bu.) 65 Bran (per ton) ..$22.00 Middlings (per ton) $25.00 Richmond Seed Market. 1 (Runge & Co.) Timothy, per bu $2.70 Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy hay (baled).. $10.00 New Timothy hay (loose)$7.0O to$8.00 New clover hay (loose) . .$5.00 to $6.00 Mixed hay 7.00 Straw (per ton) $4.00 to $3.00 Corn (per bu.) 6Sc to 70c Oats ( per bu.) 47c to 50c Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg, July 22. Cattle, receipts light. Cattle $6.75 down. Veal $5.0O8.OO. Hogs Receipts 5 loads; 7.25 down. Sheep and lambs, receipts light. Sheep 4.75 down. Spring lambs 6.75 down. PRETTY YOUNG WOMAN CRUELLY MURDERED Man Who Committed the Deed Escaped. Brooklyn, July 22. A pretty young woman of about 23 years of age, neat ly attired and refined in appearance was shot and instantly killed in Giving Square park today by an unknown murderer. After destroying every clue that might identify the man except a silver handled umbrella bought at a New York department store, the assassin escaped. He probably drugged his victim first. A policeman heard the shot and discovered the body twenty minutes later in the cellar of a hou ' NIGHT RIDERS SECURE REVENGE Burn Depots of Illinois Central Railroad. Hopkinsville, Ky., July 22. Because the Illinois Central permitted a detachment of soldiers to camp on the right-of-way near Cobb, night riders this morning burned the depots at Gracey, Cerulean Springs and Otter Pond. Mariitta: Order Gold Medal Flour If your folk are peralcklty about tnelr victim la. Sai.i.t Ann.
hardware and general merchandise in good Illinois town. Will invoice about ?14,00o. Will trade for town property or farm. Fitzgibbons, fth and Main 22-1 1
FOR SALE Dressed turtle and all kinds of fresh fish. Moth's Fish Market. Automatic 1535. mon-wed-fri FOR SALE Honey ICc lb. H C. Hook, Route 3, Phone 4077. 22-7t FOR SALE Full blooded barred Plymouth rocks; buff leghorns rose comb white leghorns. 222 South West 3d. 22-lt FOR SALE New and second hand furniture at cost. 40S Main. 22-7t MARRIAGE A FRAUD Adam Smith Then Deserts Girl After Forced Wedding, It Is Alleged. IS OUT ON $500 BOND. Proceedings were insituted in the Wayne circuit court today by the state of Indiana ex rel Mabel Margaret Smith vs Adam Smith charging fraudulent marriage and asking $200 for support. Smith was arrested and released upon $500 bond. The couple was married September 14, 1907 as the result of bastardy proceedings institu ted In Squire Abbott's court. It was but fourteen days later that the defendant desertld his wife. Since then a child has been born. It is alleged in the complaint tl) defendant left the plaintiff without causa or any fault of hers. It is claimed no provision was made for the support of the plaintiff and the relatrix avers the defendant entered Into marriage for the purpose of avoiding prosecution and with the intention of making his escape of the consequences. It is averred the marriage was not in good faith on the part of the defendant. Smith is bartender at the Taylor saloon on South Fifth street. BRITISH BRIEFS. England's first representative parliament assembled In 1263. Caesar conquered Britain in the year 55 B. O. The Uoinau occupation continued nearly 500 years, or until 410 A. D. In 1679 was passed the habeas corpus act, which, along with the right of trial by jury, is the great bulwark of Anglo-Saxon liberty. The great plague was introduced into London In 1664 by bales of cotton imported from Holland; 100,000 persons succumbed to the disease in one year. Cromwell's long parliament assembled in 1640; Charles I. was beheaded Jan. 30, 1646, and Cromwell became lord protector in 1653. In 1600 the Stuarts were restored to the throne. Westminster abbey, where the kings and queens of Great Britain are crowned, was originally a Benedictine monastery. It was founded by Sebert, king of the East Saxons, aout 616. Brln on Bills. Among the humorous memories con nected with English judges is one of Justice Byles and his horse. This eminent jurist was well known in his profession for his work on "Bills," and as this gave a fine opportunity for alliteration his associates were accustomed to bestow the name on the horse, which was but a sorry 6teed. "There goes Byles on Bills," they took pleasure in saying, and as the Judge rode out every afternoon they Indulged daily in their little joke. But the truth was that the horse had another name, known only to the master and his man, and when a too curious client Inquired as to the judge's whereabouts he was told by the servant, with a clear conscience, that "master was out on Business." The Bengali. The Bengali has the best brains ol all the peoples in India and the readiest tongue. His memory la prodigious and his fertility In talk Inexhaustible. He is something of an Irishman, something of an Italian, something of a Jew if one can conceive an Irishman who would run away from a fight instead of running Into it, an Italian without a sense of beauty and a Jew who would not risk 5 on the chance of making 500. He is very clever, bul his cleverness does not lead him far on the road to achievement, for when 11 comes to doing, rather than talking, he Is easily passed by people of fat Inferior ability. London Standard. Reaonrcea of Genina. The editor looked over the manuscript submitted by the village poei and frowned. "Here Is one line," he said, "in whlct you speak of the music of the ddei press. How would you undertake tf imitate the "music' of the cider press V "I should think It might be don with a Juice harp." answered the poet Chicago Tribunef Th Soft Aattrtr. "If nature bad mad me an ostrich," said old Grouch, "I suppose I could eat your cooking." "Wouldn't that be nicer' answered his imperturbable spouse. "Then i could get some plumes for my hat."Boartov Tr-nscrlgt
FOR SALE A bargain, merchants' delivery outfit. Extra horse. Drug store, 9th and Main. 22-2t FORSALE Farm one mile north cf city. Good house and barn. Plenty of fruit. Mrs. Wm. Surendorf. on Middleboro pike 22-iJt FOR SALE English bull pups. Call phone 1927, Dr. George Ferling. 21-3t FOR SALE Good house; call 26 Richmond Ave. 20-3t FOR SAL,E A oar ioafl ot horses every Saturday a3 Monday at Gus Taube's barn. 9-tt
FOR RENT. FOR RENT Six room house in good condition. No. 73f) N. loth st. Call at 55 Main st. Hassenbusch. 22-3t HOW THE TIGER KILLS. (ever facet Ilia Prey, bat Attacks It on the Flank. I have taken considerable trouble to Ind out how tigers kill large game. Some time ago I was asked to come ind see a full grown bullock that had seen killed by a tiger. On examining :t I found the animal had its neck broken, and there were claw marks n the nose and shoulder, but nowhere Mse. There was no doubt that the tiger had jumped nt the bull and landd on the shoulder, and when the bull turned his head to gore the tiger he must have put his claw out and with i sudden jerk broken the neck. Ou another occasion I went to see a young buffalo which had been killed by i tiger and found the same thing had bapponed. There were similar marks an tho nose and also on the near shouller, which clearly indicated that this auimal had been killed in the same way. Malays who have actually seen a tiger killing a buffalo told me they saw the same thing happen; also that in dragging off a heavy carcass, such as buffalo or bull, he gets most of the weight across his shoulder. This must be fairly correct, as I have ofteu followed a kill, and the marks left indicate that only a portion of the animal was trailing along the ground. I have known a full grown bull, which ten men could not move, dragged for two miles by a tiger In a heavy jungle, where roots of trees and swamp had to be gone through. In no case have I seen the pug marks facing the wrong way except when stopping to feed, which proves he must carry a portion of the animal over his shoulder. The old idea of a tiger killing large game by a blow from his paw is nonsense; besides, in India a tiger never faces his prey, but attacks him on the flank unless charged. Another curious fact that may seem very jike a fairy tale is that a tiger does not seem to mind a small lamp being tied over a kill about ten feet high, but will come and feed. I have known three occasions when this has been tried, and each time a .tiger has come to feed upon the carcass. London Field. ITALIAN INJURED BY HEAVY STEEL RAIL Falls Upon Him While He Is at Work. An Italian named Michael Mastrullo who is employed as a section hand by the Pennsylvania railroad was injured while at work near the freight depot this afternoon. A heavy Iron rail had been cut in two and when it was thrown off the planks upon which it rested it caught Mastrullo . He was knocked to the ground and the rail fell across his abdomen. He Is severely injured. He was removed to the hospital and a spiritual adviser sent for at the request of the injured man. There is douht as to his recovery. Deaths and Funerals. WAGNER The funeral of John Wagner will be held from the home 226 South Fifth street Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. Huber will officiate. The Interment will be In Lutherania, Frineds. may call any time Thursday afternoon and evening. Tha Tip Tarror. "Give me a penny, sir, for something to eat" "But you've got sixpence In youi hand now. What's that for?? "Oh, that" s to tip the waiter, slr."London Globe. Baezl.mbots Bad as Dial act. Southern people have much to bear the articles In the magazines, for example, in which northern contributors try to put out negro dialect! It'senougk to give one the beezlumbots. Galveston News. There Is none made so great but he may both need help and service and stand In fear of the power and unklndness even of the meanest of mor tals. Th Surise Of Life. ' laf ants and children are constantly needier S ativa. It is important to mow what to giv them. Their stomach and boweU are not strong-noog-h for aalta, p rstiva waters or cathartic pllis. powders or tb-lets. Give them mOd. pleasant, ten tie. las-tire tonic like Dr. CaloweU'a Srrun Peoein. which aetta at tha amaH am of 50 cants or fl at Orag stores. It Is the one great remedy for von to have in the house to tney -
j FOR RENT Five room flat, inquire I Kielhorn's millinery store. 21 -3t FOR RE N T T hTee furnished rooir.s for light housekeeping. 4S Ft. j Wayne ave. 21-2t i FORRENT Modern fla't"322 " N. Sth. 21-7t ( i FOR RENT Seven room house, with j bath and furnace. Call at 26 South
Sth street. 20-7t FOR RENT Furnished rooms for light housekeeping; also room for Jodging; 27 N. 11th St. 20-3t FOR- RENT-Furnished room with bath at the Grand, for gents only. 3-4 tf MISCELLANEOUS. LOST Umbrella in PoEtofflee. -C. T. Wolford" on handle. Reward if reIS NOT FOR ANY POLITICAL PARTY Gompers Claims He Never Said He Would Deliver Labor Vote to Any Party. PLANKS ARE COMPARED. FAMOUS LABOR LEADER ALSO TAKES OCCASION THROUGH EDITORIAL TO CAUTION WORKING MEN HOW TO VOTE. Washington, July 22. In an editorial in the forthcoming issue of the official organ of the American Federation of Labor, President Samuel Gompers of the federation, discusses the anti-injunction planks of the democratic and republican platforms. Mr. Gompers takes occasion in this article to repudiate the statement that he proposes to deliver the labor vote to any party and defends himself from that charge. A feature of the editorial is a comparison of the republican and democratic anti-injunction planks, Mr. Gompers holding that the democratic plank virtually embraces all the demands of labor on that subject. Mr. Gompers also claims that his colleague, John Mitchell, was satisfied with the democratic plank. Summing up, Mr. Gompers says:: "A deliberate attempt is being made by the opposition press to make It appear that "Gompers has promised to deliver the labor vote to the democratic party.' " Such a statement is so absurd as to hardly need refutation. We want every laboring man to vote for any candidate and with any party that he pleases. Far be it from us to attempt to coerce the votes of the workers, nor are we so asinine as to promise to deliver the labor. vote. " But we do in all seriousness urge the workers and all good citizens to consider most carefully and thoughtfully the attitude in the two great political parties toward the fundamental rights and principles embod ied in labor's demands. Study their respective platforms and then vote as conscience dictates." GETS CONTRACT EOR SEWER CONSTRUCTION Schneider Bros, to Build Railroad Street Improvement. At the meeting of the board of public works today a contract was awarded for the construction of a sewer In Railroad 6treet between Sixteenth and Nineteenth streets and in the alleys leading south to Schneider Bros., at 90 cents per lineal foot; a resolution for cement sidewalks on both sides of North A street from Seventh to Sixteenth streets was adopted; orders were Issued for the installation of electric lights at the corners of Fourteenth and North G streets. National avenue and West Ninth streets. Commons road and West Seventh streets and between Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets on North D streets. Asalstant Master' Lot la Hard. If you take a scholar and a gentleman and make him do the work of a nursemaid for the wages of a bricklayer's laborer, coupled with the treatment of a dog, you then get that finished . product of civilisation, the assistant master at an English private schooL Barry Pain in Tatler. Am Improbable Story. The editor looks downcast. What's the matter with him?" He received a letter yesterday Informing him of a big legacy, and in the rush be replied, 'Declined with thanks.' " Ho Anxlens to Please. Neptune I say. Boreas, if you keep on blowing like that yomi get yourseii disliked. Boreas What do I care? It Isn't my business to furnish popular airs. Modern Society.
A5."NOUXC EM ENT::rRoad race Satur- The Palladium will take your ad day. August 22, 10th and Main, 3 over the phone. o'clock. 22-7t . D'rT OTST Doctor of LAUNDRY. Dentistry. Cor. 10th and Main. We cJtt hB,p ycu ppt oj ot estly w can. Richmond Steam " Laundry. PROF. SMITH cures corns and bun- - ions absolutely. Homo phone 142i ,-,. ,, n . lS-"t Occasionally Boston swears, even feminine Boston. Not long sine things WATCH' went wrog with Dorothy, aged six. r- rjn . , sod after prolonged self control she For Mount's Big Shoe exclaimeL with the air of on. who If Add. I going to the bad and who knows It: 22-3 1 Ain't! Got! Kind of ! There, that's j Just the way I feel!" Harper's. STEAM AND HOT WATER HEAT1NG Plumbing and electric wiring at Meerhoff s. 9 S. 9th. 14-tf PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY
' ROYAL EICLTrrZJ. - Moa-reha Who Were Fameaa Far Their CM arr Laral(. Royalty in times paat baa bad many an accomplished epicure as learned in culinary lore as in the practice of the cuisine. It was Henry de Valos who brought into fashion aromatic sauces and various spice dainties, Inheriting his taste for cooking from Catherine de' Medici, who introduced into France not only ices, but much of the culinary art from Italy. Louis XIV. was devoted to gastronomy, and for his use liquors were Invented In his old age, when, it is said, he could scarcely endure existrnce without a succession of artificial stimulants. But the pertinacity with which Charles V. of Spain gratified his appetite under all circumstances rivaled even that of Frederick the Great. Before rising in the morning potted capons were usually served to him. prepared with sugar, milk and spices, Iced beer being one of his favorite drinks. Fish, too, of every kind was to his taste, eels, frogs and oysters occupying a prominent place in the royal bill of fare. Frederick the Great was fond of highly seasoned meats and had a strong predilection for Italian or French made dishes. It was his habit during dinner to make pencil marks against the different items of the bill of fare, to which he referred when conversing afterward with the maltre d'hotel. When the Due d'Escars and his royal master, Louis XVIII- were closeted to gether to talk over a dish the ministers were kept waiting in the antechamber, and the next day this notice regularly appeared in the official journals: "M. le Due d'Escars a travallle dans le cabinet." It may be added that Louis XVIII. had invented the "truffles a la puree d'ortolans," and, reluctant to disclose the secret, he Invariably prepared the dish with his own hands, assisted by the duke. Another epicurean of the first order was the Polish King Stanislaus Leszlnski, who invented many a new dish and vastly improved the style of cooking, astonishing the Lorrainers, among other things, by having served up at bis table dishes of meat with fruits, both of which bad been cooked together. Geese which had been plucked when alive, then whipped to death, and msrinees were set down in his bill of fare as foreign birds, and after a somewhat similar fashion turkeys were transformed into "coqs de bruyeres" and were served at the table buried under the strong smelling helots of Lorraine. One year was remarkable for the entire failure of the fruit crop, but Stanislaus would not be deprived of his dessert, for, turning his attention to confectionery, he substituted compositions of sugared vegetables, especially of turnips. London Standard. CASUAL PHILOSOPHY. What one goes Into debt for nine times out of ten is a luxury. A. man always making excuses leaves himself no time to make anything else. Business based upon friendship threatens both; friendship based upon business strengthens both. That man can best Ignore the enmity of those who don't understand him who goes home to a wife who does. It Is a good deal easier to pray for men's souls than to pour balm into their wounds, not to mention that it costs less. The supreme court has not yet decided which is the weaker man he who is not able to see his own weakness or he who has no faith in himself. From an Intellectual point of view that time of one's lire Is most wasted when he tries, in ft spirit of dumb loyalty, to admire all those things that are popularly considered admirable. Success. The Wor -Sloye." The word "slave," which Is happily used seldom unless metaphorically in this country, is a word of brilliant historical antecedents. Its original, the Russian "elava," means glorious and is the title of that race which subsumes the Russian people. But when the Germans reduced hosts of the Slavs to servitude their name, from malice or accident, as Gibbon says, became ynonymous with servile." It retains no more suggestion of its racial origin now than does "ogre,' which is really "Hungarian," from a confusion of the Magyars with the Huns, and of both with the terrible Tartars. Lr-mTiA : Just learned that Golfl Me3l Flour Is sifted ten time through flnttt atf. EcasxL-, BLUE LIQUIB I0G AW Are Caaraa tees' Is Reap. Umber-eek asd i Turkey. Boss manse Nope. roS
r. c. GILBERT. Dealer in Feed, Grain, Etc
COURT RULES FOR GIGANTIC OIL OCTOPUS
(Continued From Page One.) have the right to punish. exceptflsjr due trial, under all the forma of law. Can that rightfully be done here mhsm there Is no other basis than 'the Jn&fe's personal belief that the pauty marked by him for punishment' Reserves punishment? It so It Is because the man who happens to be tb In another place the court say this: "The defendant Indicted, tried smd convicted, was the Standard Oil Co. ' Corporation ot Indiana, capital stock. $1,000,000. There Is . nothing- la reoord that shows that the defendant be fore the court has ever been guilty of 1 an offense of 'any character. -It may therefore be freely assumed that but for the relation of the defendant to another corporation, cot before the) court, the Standard Oil trust. The court should have measured out punishment on basis ot the facta stated. "That under such dreams tan- , ces the maximum sentence put Iota execution against the defendant be fore the court, would wipe out many times and for Its first offense ail prop erty of the defendant. It this was put Into execution, this maximum sentence would add to the liabilities of Che defendant to creditors and to ear rent liabilities, of from three to five million dollars, an additional liability of twenty-ine millions, resulting; with' out doubt in bankruptcy that would, deduct from every creditor's share ot ; assets a sum running from flltty to i nearly one hundred per cent ot money j such creditors advances. ' STOCK BOOMINQ. Standard Jumps Fourtesn Points Today. New York, July 22. Standard Oil! stock has Jumped fourteen points . since the decision ot the Court ot Appeals in Chicago repealing the hearr fine of Judge Kenesaw Landis. A TEXASEDIT0R. Former Milton Man Running, Demay ; cratle Paper In the South. Pearl Hassler, former editor of. the j Milton News, Is at present located In Montgomery county, Texas, where he is operating a newspaper. The polltl-, cal color of the News was Republican. , but Hassler has seen fit to take up the publication of a Democratic organ since going to Texas. Homos ! Order Gold MeaaJ nour next Time.FSUCITT. NOTICE TO HEIRS, ETC. CREDITORS.' In the matter of the estate ot Jane S. Clawson, deceased. In the Wayne Circuit Court, April Term. 1908. Notice is hereby given that Ray K. Shlveley as administrator of the estate of Jane S. Clawson deceased, has presented and filed his account and, vouchers In final settlement of said retate and that he same will come up for examination and action of said Cir cuit Court on the Sth day of August. 1908, at which time all heirt, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be. why said account and vouchers should not be approved. RAT K. SHIVELET. Administrator. SinVELEY & SHIVELET. dly 15-22-29 Attorneys. The Great Blood Purifier, at all drug stores. FWr sale GRASS F0L1TEY tOtlSIIS Car as Capea in Pealtry; Blsekbe-d a laa-l manatee. KaCare MAIM MX .
