Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 172, 5 August 1908 — Page 7

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 All Advertisements Must Be in This Office Before 12 Noon. Situations Wanted Will 'Be Advertised Frcs Each Insertion

TITE RICIOIO'I PAIXADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGKA3I, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1DOS.

WANTED.

WANTED Girl at 214 N. Oth. 5-7t WANTED You to bring your suits to Joe Werner's, 8th and Main, to be cleaned and pressed. 5-lt WANTED Housekeeper of good character, good cook, must come recommended; a good home for right party. Mrs. C. H. Means, Centerville, Ind. 5-lt WANT ED At o n c e fi r s i c lass carpenters to work on store fixtures. S. H. Knox & Co., Cor. Main and 7th. 5-lt WANTED Washing to do at home, 122 Main St. 4-3t (U.MtiiJ Young married man interested In studying stock breeding, feeding and general farming. Farm, General Delivery, Richmond. 4-4t WANTED Groceryin. good location in South Side. Beall & Coffin. 3-3t WANTED You to see us for bargains in second hand furniture, carpets, stoves, dishes, etc. Odells,

TODAY'S MARKET QUOTATIONS

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. iSy Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohio.; New York, Aug. 5. Open High Low Amalgamated Copper . 79V& 80 7914 American Smelting 92 Ms 94 92 Ms American Sugar 131Vs 133 131 Atchison 87 88V4 87 B. & 0 92 92Vi 91 B. R. T 53 52 C. M. & St. P 142 143 142 New York Central 108V2 108 107 Northern Pac 142y2 143 142 Pennsylvania 125 126 123 People's Gas 95 95 94 Reading 123 124 122 Southern Pacific 94 95 94 Union Pacific 156 156 155 U. S. Steel 46 46 46 U. S. Steel pfd Ill 111 111 Great Northern 137 13S 137

Chicarjo. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISION ((By Correll and Thompson. Brokers, Eaton. O.l Chicago, Aug. 5 Wheat Open. High. Ixw. Close. 96 98 103 . Close. 76 65 65 ' Sept. , Dec. !May , 94 97 94 97 99 96 101 101 100 Corn. Open. Hign. Low, . 75 76 75 64 65 64 64U 65 64 Oats. 1 Sept. Dec. May Opei 46 46 48 . High. Low. 47 45 47 46 49 48 Close. 47 47 49 Sept. Dec. May U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, Aug. 5. Hogs, receipts 81,000, strong; left over 4,402. Cattle 18,000, Blow. Sheep 15,000, weak. . Hog Market Close. Light $6.15$6.85 Mixed 6.15 6.95 Heavy 6.15 6.95 Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Beet heavies $6.65 $6.95 Good to choice 6.50 6.80 BEEP STEERS. Good to choice steers .... 5.50 6.25 Fair to good steers 5.25 6.25 Choice to fancy yearlings. . 4.25 5.25 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers . . 4.50 5.50 Good to choice heifers 4.00 4.35 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice 4.00 6.75 Fair to good 2.50(3! (3.00 STOCK CATTLE. Good to heavy fleshy feeders 4.00 4.25 Fair to good feeders 3.75 4.00 Good to choice stock ers . . 2.O0$ 4.00 Common to fair heifers .. 3.25 4.25 SHEEP. Best yearlmgs 4.00 4.50 Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, Ausc 5.. Wheat. 91. Corn, 78. Oats, 48. Rye, 73. Timothy, $12.0 Richmond. CATTLE. ' (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hogs, averse 200 to 250 lbs $6.45 6.55 Good to heavy packers .. 6.35 6.45 Common and rough .. .. 5.60 5. SO Steers, corn fed 4.50 4.75 Heifers 3.75 4.00 Fat cows 3.25 3.50 Bulls 3.004J 3.25 Calves $6.00 Lambs $5.00 fKlDES tUK POULTRY. I (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens dressed per 10.. j IS to 20c ! Old chickens, per lb.. ..12 to 14c COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb 25r Country butter, per lb IS to 20c

516 Main. Successor to E. Wyatt. 29-7t

WANTED Rooms by the week, day or meal; opposite Court House. S. 4th street. 30-7t WANTED 'J feather beds at once. Highest price paid for old feathers. Will stay a week in Richmond. Address Simon Frank, Gen. Del. Will call. 30-7t WANTED Meu to Learn barber trade; will equip shop for you or furnish positions, few weens com pletes, constant practice, careful instructions, tools given, Saturday wages, diplomas granted, write for catalogue. Moler Barber CoUege. Cincinnati. O. tf FOR SALE, FOR SALE City real estata. Porterfield. Keliey Blck. 9-tf FOR SALE Bed couch. 103 N. 17th street. 5-2t FOR SALE Baby cab, good as new. Cheap. 410 N. 14th street. 5-2t Closn 79 93 132 S7 91 52 142 107 142 125 94 122 94 155 46 111 137 Eggs, per doz 15 DC Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per bushel) 85 Corn (per bu) 75 Oats (per. bu.) 45 Rye. (per bu.) 65 Bran (per ton) $22.00 Middlings (per ton) $25.00 Richmond Seed Market. (Runge & Co.) Timothy, per bu $2.00 Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy hay (baled) $10.00 New Timothy hay (loose)$7.00 to$S.0O New clover hay (loose). .$5.00 to $6.00 Mixed hay 7.00 Straw (per ton) $-.O0 to $5.00 Corn (per bu.) 70 to 73c. Oats ( per bu.) 476 to 50c Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg, Aug. 5. Cattle Receipts steady. " 1 Cattle $6.25 down. Veal $0.35 down. Hogs Receipts S loads: $7 05 down. Sheep and lambs, receipts lower. Sheep $4.70 down. Spring lambs $6.35 down. COURT BEARS MESSAGE FROM JOSIE TO HUBBY Woman Tells Chestnut to Stay Away From the House. For assault and battery on his former wife. Josie Bond Chestnut. Ed Chestnut was fined $10 and costs ia city court this morning. Josie instructed tho court to tell Ed to stay away from " the house" and the court accepted the orders. It was shown that on JulV 7. Josie called Fri nut nf tho ocueu saioon ana cursea mm. cnestnut struck her in the face with his fist. The man left town afterward end returned and gave himself up yesterday. i . 1 11 1 . ... NEGRO LYNCHED BUT SHERIFF DIDN'T KNOW Man Who Dynamited Miner's Home, Strung Up. Brighton, Ala., Aug. 5. The dead body of William Millings, a negro, was found this morning hanging to a tree. He had been taken from the jail during the night and lynched, but the sheriff says he heard no disturbance. Millings was under arrest charged with dynamiting a non-union miner's home. I.t-CKETTA: Just learned that Gold Medal Flour Is sifted ten fi?c through flnttt tiJk. Evsrxii.

FOR SALE Several small places from 11 to 25 acre.5 at clearance sale prices. Fitzgibbons, Oth end Main. 5-lt FOR" SALE ITroom houseT 2 lots, large barn; address 1224 Butler St. Phone 3080. -r.-3t FOR-SALE S roonTbrick house, bath, furnace, barn, all modern conveniences; a bargain. J. B. Beckwith, 716 Main. o-7t FOR-SALEFTne house, three bed rooms, bath room. pant,ry. six closets, cellar, gas, electric lights, both kinds water, front and side veranda, back porch, stable, outside closet, beautiful location. Terms to suit. Pilgrim Brothers. 3-7t

FOR SALE Bargains; organ Sr..H; piano, ?!".;. r.l!t Main. 3-3t FOR SALE Mrs. A. H. Commons will hold special sale of white china for decorating at her home 21 S. 23rd August 10th, 11th and 12th. 4-7t FOR SALE OR TRADE Moving picture outfit, 34 S. 10 St. 4-3t BIBLE INSTITUTE TO A CLOSE Sessions at Earlham This Year Were Unusually Interesting. WILL BE HELD AGAIN. FRIENDS OF WESTERN YEARLY MEETING MAY WITHDRAW BUT THIS WILL NOT KILL THE INSTITUTE, IT IS THOUGHT. One of the most successful Bible j institutes that has ever been held atj Earlham was concluded todar. It is j probable the institute will be held ; next year, even if the Western Friends j do withdraw, it is intimated. This morning Prof. Russell gave his last lecture on "The Outlook for Friends," and in part ho said: "I find it Is easier to do anything else than to get the younger people interested in Quakerism. But when Quakerism was growing in this western country we were gaining at the expense of the east. We have reached the western shore and western migration will cease. There are many signs that the day is not far hence when all the branches of the one church will unite and become one large church At nine o'clock Timothy Nicholson discussed the history of the "Five Years Meeting." Murray Kenworthy was the first speaker of the morning and gave a very interesting talk on Daniel, one of the most prominent figures in the Bible. At the Friends" Bible institute at Earlham college last evening Prof. Elbert Russell gave a very Interesting lecture on "The Contribution of J. J. Gurney to Quakerism." Prof. Russell explained how God had prepared Gurney for his work and the great influence this leader had, which was more than any other Quaker. Thus it is he stood out as one of the foremost Quakers. Prof. Russell stated that Gurney's first contribution was his great personality and his command of language which enabled him to give the new idea what a Quaker might be. He gave to Earlham its name. Second, he gave a new theology. He introduced the critical study of the Bible. He brought in the Bible as the authority for the doctrine and was declared unsound and was persecuted. His followers even of this day are branded unsound and they take comfort in their own company. The conference yesterday afternoon on the "Proposed Changes in the Meeting for Ministry and Oversight" was led by Louis Stout. It was stated that the proposed changes were practically the suspension of separate meeting for ministry and oversight, and the absorption of its functions by the body at large or by a committe appointed by it. Dr. Haskins and Alvin Coate were the largest debaters of the question and the majority seemed to be in favor of the proposed change. Richard Haworth led the conference on the question "Ought History and Doctrine of Friends he Taught in all Friends Schools. Every one agreed that it should be as it would offer rare advantages. Last Saturday Samuel Cowgell invited the Friends at Earlham to partake of a watermelon conference. The carving was done by the Rev. Alfred T. Ware and Henry Wright in the fchade of Earlham hall. The meeting decided that Indiana melons are the best. CITY STATISTICS. Deaths and Funerals. MILLIKEN Ambrose F. Milliken diced early this morning ct tho home of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Bothe, 37 north Eigth stret at the age of 43 years. His wife, Mary and one son survive him. Tho funeral will be Friday at 5) o'clock, from St. Mary's church and burial will bo in cemetery of the same. Births. Henry and Lizzie Norsdick, 90G South Fifth (tract. irL First cfcU4.

CMS

FOR SALE Residence in every part of city. Beall & Coffin, IS S. th. 4-lt

FOR SALE Excellent small tracts of land. Beall & Coffin, IS S. Sth. 4-lt FOR SALE HIf.;re-WaVne county fram. good buildings; fine soil, and all tillable. Must bo sold quick. Ball & Peltz. 31-7t FOR SALE Five-passenger automobile, good as new. Phone 31S8. 30-7t FORSALE A. car loacTof horss every Saturday a4 Monday at Gas Taube's barn. t-tl FOR RENT. FOR RENT rooms, water and gr.s; '.17 Ft. Wayne avc. 5-lt FOR RENT-or SaleNew 5 or-6 room house with electric lights, on car line, very cheap; will trade for city lot. Phone 1040 or 3016. 5-2t FOR RENT 8 room house 110 S. Sth. Call at 221 S. oth. 4-2t GIANTS OF THE PAST PREVIOUS AGES SUPPLY US WITH ENORMOUS FOSSIL BONES. Lizards Three Times the Site of the L,ttra-eat Elephant and a. Tnrtle Whose Shell Looked Like a Hat. The Remarkable Plated Llsard. The belief in a race of giants was once almost universal. Even today large skeletous when found are sometimes reported us being those of giant human beings. This was especially true of the period abut the tenth and eleventh centuries, and in the latter a most amazing discovery was reported, which threw the scientific world of the time into great exeltt-inent. It was so id that the body of Pallas, the sou of Evauder, had been discovered beneath the tomb of the Emperor Henry III. The bones were enormous and proved to have belonged to a huge fossil elephant. As lute as the fifteenth century a war of word. was waged over a find of large bones, one party claiming that they belonged to the giant Teutobochus. In 1857 a giant was discovered in Switzerland. The council of Lucerne requested a learned scientific man. Professor Felix Plater of Basel, to report upon it, and he not only announced the bones as part of a human giant, but made a complete restoration, showing the man twenty feet high, which the proud city adopted as an ancestor In the arms of the commonwealth. Unfortunately for the theory and much to the discomfiture of the people who had raised to a high pinnacle this mighty ancestor, it was found to be the remains of an elephant. Nearly all the mastodon finds were attributed to giants, but there Is no evidence that a human giant ever existed over eight feet in height, and it is extremely doubtful if this height was ever attained. Giants other than human are very common in all branches of the animal kingdom giants in every sense when compared to their pygmy representatives of today. Some years ago some laborers in the Senalik hills of India were engaged upon a government work when they came upon the remains of a turtle that proved beyond question that1 these ammals had their giants in the days of old. The shell which the m?n exposed might have been used as a shelter for several men, and at first, before its bony nature was observed, it was thought by the natives to be a hut of some kind. Fortunately the bones were uninjured, and they wore taken out and removed to the British museum, where a compete restoration of the animnl may be seen. The length of the turtle was ten feet, its horizontal circumference twentyfive feet and its girth fifteen feet, but it was estimated by scientists that this was not an adalt and that when fully grown this huge creature would display a dome-like back eight or nine feet high, giving a total length of twenty feet. One of the common animals In equatorial South America and in Central America Is the lizard iguana, which attains a length of four or five feet and Is considered rather large, but it was a pygmy when compared to an ancestor that once wandered over England and various portions of the world. A number of years ago some workingmen were excavating and blasting in a quarry near Maidstone, England, when some bones were uncovered that caused profound astonishment on the part of the finders. The skeleton was perfect, and as It was lifted out, bone by bone, their amazement increased, and the news was spread all over the country, attracting large numbers of people. When the bones were placed in their proper position they were found to be the skeleton of a gigantic lizard that when alive must have been three times as bulky as the largest living ele phant and stood upon its hind legs like a kangaroo, tearing down branches from the highest trees. Such an an) mal was a slow mover and sluggisu and must have fallen an easy prey to the human hunters, if they existed. The marine giants were even more bizarre and remarkable than the land forms. If we can imagine the little iguana lengthened out to thirty feeL its back spines changed to broad finlike objects, we form some idea of the appearance of one of the small dinosaurs, Stegosaums ungulatus, one of the most uncanny and remarkable creatures ever found. It is called the plated lizard, and the best skeleton was found on the eastern flank of the Rocky mountains. Some of the plates with which this armored lizard were proteeV?d were two or three feet In diameter, and the spines over two feet in length. From the fact that the hind limbs were the largest it lg aTi0fc tbAt this stranze creature

FOR RENT-Furnished room with! bath at the Grand, for gents only. ; 3-4 tfj FOR RENT Two" f urn1shedorunfur-1 nished rooms: both kinds of water! and bath; call 203 S. 7th street.

2-7t AUTO FOR HIRE. TO HIRE Auto Carriage; phone 3197. LOST. LOST Sack seed, north lUh st. Return to Isaac Dougan, of the Bis Auto. LOST Diamond Eagle pin; reward, return 116 S. Sth. 5-2t MISCELLANEOUS. If you want to sell or buy a home see Beall & Coffin, 18 S. Sth. 4-lt Frying Chickens. Lane's, I'hone 1S31. 4-4t eouia nrt itseir up ana sit like a Kangaroo, resting upon its powerful tail, which, with Its enormous spines, must have been a terrible weapon. A giant from America had a skull that measured eight feet in length. Almost over the eyes were two large horns, a third placed over the nose. The great length of the skull was given by a huge crest that was protected by a ridge of long plates. The mouth of the tricaratops was protected by a horny beak. In life it must have presented a formidable appearance, with a body clumsy and low like that of a hippopotamus, a long tail like nn alligator's, its head calling to mind the rhinoceros. This monster was twenty-five feet In length and must have been one of the strangest animals of Its time. London Spectator. Barely Mlaiaed. "I came near getting that appointment I was after." "How near?" "I got a disappointment." Exchange. It Is a miserable thing to live In suspense. It is the life of a spider. Swift THE PENSION OFFICE HUMOR THAT SPICES THE ROUTINE WORK OF THE OFFICIALS. lom of the Qaalnt and Original Applications For Payments That llaya Been Handed Ia to the Representaa tires of lacle Sam. If he dared to do so the commissioner of pensions at Washington could compile a delightful volume, putting therein the strange applications for pensions that come to his office. Some of these letters belong to the "too good to keep" class, and they, find their way out into the world, where they add a good deal to the hilarity of nations. Borne applicants for pensions manifest the most childlike ignorance regarding the method of procedure necessary when applying for a pension. They seem to think that all they have to do is to send an application to the pension office and Uncle Sam will forward a check by return mail. Soon after the close of the civil war there came to the pension office in Washington the following unique and poetical application for a pension that went the rounds of the newspapers years ago: to Commissioner of Pensions Washington. these many years I've tried in vala an honest petition to obtain For wound received in Sixty o at first Battle of Bull Run one of ohloes sons so brave who went to the front the union to save And whilst Engaged In above said fight a rebel Shell took half my sight Not content by taking an.ye this treacherous shell in Passing by took my Bye Brow Clear of the bono and Left ma as unoonscious as a stone burning a blister of Crystal Clear from the jaw bone to the Ear but thanks to god my life was spared Cheek and Ere brow but Slitely Seared aad one Eye wu left to me for to wright and read Poetre I hope that with that Eye to see the day when unkel 8an his Cripples will Pay. Much more recent is the letter sent to the commissioner of pensions by an applicant who had contracted blood poisoning In the following remarkable manner: I got blood poison by belnge hit with a hens eg wen I cam back from the frunt. The eg was not good wen you send my pension 1 want the Deed made sos my wife can't get none of It. She throde the eg. She war a rebbel. Equally appealing and remarkable was another letter sent to the pension office in which the applicant set forth his claims to a pension In this wise: The way I got my War lngery was a ketchin of a hog. The Hog war wanted by our captain for forege. We wu chasin the hog and she crawled threw a hole an I thot I wer about the slie of the hog and tried to crawl threw, but 1 stuck an In tryln to wiggle out I throde the rales, oft an one it hit me on my hed and nocked me senseless. I do not think the hog had nothln to do with my line of duty, for I did not ketch the hog. Wich she never was caul, so plese seed along my pension. One aged pensioner had evidently made a serious blunder by taking unto himself a wife in his old age, for love of gain seems to have been the motive of the woman who married him if the following letter stated the facts in the case: Dear Micter Government. Pleze to fix tip tny penshun papers so as my wife car.t draw my twelve do'.ers a mur.t when I am ded. she say she marryed me for lov aa to be a ole mans Darling but cow I no It was for to git my penshun on herself by being my widower so pleie let my penshun end with me but plese doant let on to her that you got this from me or i would have a hot time of It and times Is hotter now than I can stand. So when I send word that 1 am no moar then send her this If you want to but r.ot until the penshun Is shut off whltch It is her just desserts for marryln for money an in a Mersheer.ary spirrut. One day there came to the pension , qlScft a.. rSZ old. arkd .aubd jd .locking

All trees trimmed during the month

of August, trimmed at owner's risk PjU McKinlcy. ex fit. v Forester. 3i:t Dr. Grosvor.or otf.ee 713 Main street. moved over 3-7t ELECTRIC WIRING AND FIXTI RES Tungsten lamps, plumbing, steam and hot water heating at Meerhoffs. 2-tf Try a Palladiumwantad. Therpay. The Palladium will take your ad over the phone. LAUNDRY. We can help make ycu happy honestly W9 can. Richmond Steaia Laurdrr. LAUNDRYWTll call and deliver. Eldorado Laundry. Thone 2147. l-7t UNDERTAKERS. DOWNING & SON, 16 N. 8th. Phone 2175. augl tf rfian i?J lould scarcely totter atong with the help of two canes. By his side was a very robust and perfectly self reliant young woman of perhaps thirty years of age. When some one went forward to ask what was wanted th young woman said: "Well. I ll Just tell you. This ia my husband, and we ain't getting enough pension that's what we ain't. We're getting only 10 a month, and we know a man that wasn't in the war half as long as my husband was and didn't get a shot in him and he gits his $12 a month, and we want our pension raised to that figger or more." One applicant was willing to give the most palpable proof of the genuineness of his Injuries, for he wrote as follows: If you don't think I was hott In the war I am willing to come on thera and you or any one else can lay their flncer" on the bullet Imbedded In my back which panes me when I stoop or lay on It and which It has brought on permnent dlsabllllty so 1 ran't work like I used to could I iruesa tf you would speak to Pres. ldent Maykinley and tell him about the bullet he would say to send on the pentton and any medlkel doctor would say the same. A doctor here will go his ffydavltt that he has laved his Oncers on the bullet wtrh I am proud of as scara ot War where I fit and bled for my country wlch It is America and Union forever. New York Tribune. Net a Pair Dlylslaa. "If a house contains six bureaus, eleven armoires, seven chiffoniers and fifty-three miscellaneous drawers, hew many of 'em ia the husband entitled to and how many is the wife?" asked the young clubman. The second clubman laughed harshly. "Yon are young and have much to learn," he said. "You may as well understand first as last that if there were in your house a mile of bureaus, three acres of armoires aud 17.000 drawers all these would still be stuffed full of veils, ruching. hatpins, ribbons, silk stockings, petticoats, powder puffs and safety pins, and the best course for you to pursue would be to wrap your own things your shirts, underclothes and so on in a newspaper and keep them under the bed." New York Press. He that falls Into sin is a man; ho that grieves at it Is a saint; that boast U i U Is a devil.-Fullcr. l'atchoalt. l-ne plant from which the well known perfume patchouli is obtained Is a native of India and of China. It Is also grown in Ceylon. Paraguay and the l-'rench island of Iteunlen. It first became generally known In Europe about 850. At that time India shawls commanded Immense prices, and dealers were accustomed to-identify the genuine articles ' by their odor,as"tliey were perfnraed with patchouli. French manufacturers. acting upon this hint, imported the patchouli plant for the purpose of perfuming their imitation India shawls. Afterward perfumers took up the cultivation of the plant on their own account. The Morn Ins; Star. The morning star, an iron ball studded with spikes and fastened by means of a chain to a short handle, was mncb used in mediaeval times as a military weapon. It was exceedingly formidable, for when thrown It coald not easily be avoided or dodged, the chain permitting It to curve around the arm or over the shield. It was confessedly modeled after a common cactus jhlch grows in every part of Italy. An t'nnsaal Event. "Yes, I sent my uncle a telegram on Wednesday to say I was coming. I wonder if he received it." "I reckon he didn't, cos I seen him this mornin', an he didn't brag about no telegram." Brooklyn Life. Injuries we do and those we suffer are seldom weighed in the same balance. Simmons. To avert a sneeze press the upper lip ainlnst the teeth itb. the forefinger. PANK0WSKI FREE. No action has been taken by the authorities in the case of Valentine Pankowskl, the Pole residing at Fourth and South E streets, who is accused of abusing his family. The probation officer and the Rev. Father Roeil are looking after the case. F0RKNER RELEASED. James Forkner, who was arrested yesterday on suspicion and accused of the theft of shoes belonging to Harry Clark, bartender at the Kennepohl saloon, was released. No evidence was found to warrant his retention.

WILSON & rOHLMEYER, 13 N.

10th. Phone 1.335. augl-7t INSURANCE. ACCIDENT ANR HEALTH INSURANCE -Beall & Coffin. tit I N SIRE '" YOl' RT 1 I OM E wi lh" Dea.f: Coffln. IS S. Sth. -it t-'sr the Shipwrecked. "There Is uu reason save Ignorance why shipwrecked sailors die in their open boats of starvation." The speaker was a botanist. "Let the shipwrecked Include a light net In their luggage." be satd. "and let them trail this net behind them as they sail or row apon the sea's surface. Every few hour they can haul In and take from it a meal of small shellfish or other tiny sea fruit "Everywhere the sea's surface teems with animal and vegetable matter capable of snetainlng life." New Orleans Times-Democrat. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY FIREMEN EAT SOUP. The boys at No. 3 engine house and their especial friends enjoyed & feast of turtle soup last evening. Sunday a party of East Enders went Into the wilds and returned with seven large turtles. John Clemens and Alphonse Kutter prepared the soup and everybody declared It was the best eve. Th Haartso Of Llfto. Infants and children are Coastaatly aaadlnr a .native. It Is important ta aow what to gtva then. Their stomach and bowels are not strong enough for salta purr afire waters or cats act k pills, powders or tablets. Urva them a mud pleasaat. traatto. lasattoe toato tike Dr. Caldwell' a Syrup Pepsia. wbioa seH at U smalt am of SO cents or SI at drag stores. It la the one great remedy for yoa to have la the hoase to 'Vr csilarea when they need lb EXPENDITURES AND TAX LEVIES FOR THE YEAR 1909. The trustee of New Garden township for the yearly expenditures and tax levies by the Advisory Board at Its annual meeting, to be held at the trustee's office the following estimate and amounts for said year: 1. Township expenditures, $2,240, and township tax, 25 cents on the hundred dollars. 2. Local tuition expenditures, $2,10 and tax, 'JO rents on the hundred dol lars, and 25 cents on each poll. 3. Special school tax expenditure. $5,40o, and tax, .V cents on the hundred dollars, and 25 cents on each poll. 4. Road tax expenditures, $1,7I2, and tax, 20 cents on the hundred dollars. 5. Additional road tax expenditures. $sj5, and tax, 10 cents on the hun dred dollars. 7. Poor expenditures for preceding year, $186, and tax .01 cents on the dundred dollars. 8. Bond expenditures, fS.lGft. and tax. 20 cents on the hundred dollars. Total expenditures, $14,8.14, and total tax, 140 cents on the hundred dol lars. Signed, L. O. ANDERSON, Trustee. ' Dated Aug. 1, 1908. EXPENDITURES AND TAX LEVIES FOR THE YEAR 1909. The Trustee of Webster Township, Wayne County, proposes for the yearly expenditures and tax levies by the Advisory Board at Its annual meeting to be held at the trustee's house, on the first day of Sept... 1908, commencing at 8 o'clock a. m., the following estimates and, amounts for said year: 1. Township expenditures, 74, aad Township tax, 17 cents on the hurrOred dollars. 2. Local Tuition expenditures. 4)1,259 and tax 28 cents on the hundred dollars. 3. Special School Tax expenditures, $1,169, and tax, 26 cents on the hundred dollars. 4. Road Tax expenditures. $595, and tax, 20 cents on the hundred dollars. 5. Additional Road Tax expenditures. $447, and tax, 10 cents on the hundred dollars. 6. Library expenditures, $........, and tax cents on the hun dred dollars. 7. Poor expenditures for preceding year, $44, and tax, 1 cent on the hundred dollars. 8. Other items, if any, expenditures, $ and tax cents on the hundred dollars. Total expenditures, $4,578, and total tax. 102 cents on the hundred dollars. The taxables of the above township are as follows: Total valuation of Lands and Improvements $412,300 Valuation of Railroads. Express Companies Palace Car Companies, Telegraph Lines. Telephone Lines, etc etc. (Estimated from Last Year's Tax Duplicate) .... 44,810 $457,710 Amount of Credit on account j of Mortgage Exemption 17,980 i i Net Taxable Property of Township $139,730 Number of Polls. 97. . Signend, CHARLES HARRIS. Trustee ! Dated Aug. 1. 1903. 1 The Great Blood Purifier. Sit at all drug stores.

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