Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 176, 9 August 1908 — Page 7

PAGE SEVEN. ONE CENT PER WORD Each Insertion CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 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 Free

TIIE RICH3IOND PALLADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, 190S.

WANTED.

WANTED -Laborers wanted Monday morning tools furnished, good wages. Apply 4th and Main Sts. T. H. I. & E. Traction Co. AVAN'TED Sell Texas Land! Big Pay for Live Aggressive men! Greatest of all Texas Land propositions! Fine farms cheap, on easy terms! New railroad direct to our immense body of rich land! Free Berths on our Private Car to Plainview, Texas; our own hotel accommodations. Write quick! Monarch Land Co., Amarillo, Texas. julyl9-26 aug2-9 WXNTED Experienced salesmen; Holiday Season just opened; next five months great money making period for real salesmen. If interested in productive line, address Box 470, Dept. 34, Kansas City, Mo. 9-lt GENERAL BINGHAM HAS um STICK" Indiana to Test Legal Rights Of the Express Companies. DELIVERY IS NOT UNIFORM. BRIEF IN CASE THAT ALREADY HAS BEEN TRIED, NOW BEING PREPARED SOME POINTS INVOLVED IN THE FIGHT. Alleged discrimination on the part of express companies in their local delivery service, is to be made the basis of a brief to be filed in the supreme court by Attorney General Bingham and his associates. The attorney general is seeking-a new trial of the case of the State vs the Express companies, involving the right of companies to discriminate in its delivery. It is customary for express companies to charge a certain rate for their railroad transportation of a package and if It is delivered at its destination within certain limits, no additional fee is charged, but if the place is beyond these limits, an ndd'Uonal fee for delivery has beeu charged. To a large extent the state's brief deals with technicalities pertaining to pleadings and other methods of court procedure. The counsel for the state assert In reply to the appellees brief that the Indiana law does not deny equal protection of the laws nor does It take property without due process of law, as contended by the appellees' counsel. ' The attorney general holds that both of the views taken by the appellees' counsel are unsupported. Charge of Discrimination. "In the very nature of things," says the state's brief, "all the consignees of express matter in cities of over 2,500 Inhabitants can not live an equal distance from the express companies' offices. The express companies arbitrarily divide a city Into two parts by fixed limits. Consignees who reside within these limits receive packages free of a delivery charge. Those who reside beyond them are compelled to pay an extra charge for what appellees term local transportation. Thirty-first street Is the limit on the north. Why should the consignee whose house is located on the south side of that street receive a package free while his neighbors on the north side' of the street must pay 10 cents for delivery? "If an express package Is sent from Richmond, Ind., to Indianapolis, and delivered within the carrier's limits, the charge Is 23 cents. If the same package Is sent from the same place and delivered beyond the free limits fixed by the carrier the charge is 23 cents plus 10 cents for local delivery. "Ther surely is an unreasonable discrimination against people who live beyond these limits and in favor of those who live within them, when the first class of people must pay 10 cents for the short distance, which at the most can not be over four miles from Monument Place, whereas all the miles between Richmond and Indianapolls cost but 25 cents." A Tea Party In Darkness. . There Is a tradition to the effect that when domestic lighting by gas was till a novelty Sir Walter Scott introduced it into every room and staircase of the house that he was building at Abbotsford and did so without provision for any unexpected failure. His entering into possession was made the occasion for a house warming on a scale of considerable magnitude, and in the very middle of the festivities all the lights suddenly went out. The guests were left in absolute darkness until such time as mounted messengers could return from Melrose, whither they had been dispatched with instructions to collect all the tallow candles and tin sconces or 'candlesticks which the village .contained. London Times. TfceEMfcOf TfcBdT. Tbe orgtn sroaad wfrich all the other orc-ans fcTolve. and ucr Tk they are lately detndent for tbMj VwVre. is the stomsch. Vfcen ti functfcat 1 8. Momach become Unpaired. th bow er also become de-

u3 L.Uki s urc sromacn, live or S?wSl U 1 1 bottle of Dr. CakS teU Syrnp PButatt r drusrgiefa. It i promptest rek'tj ,! tstipaiion aa-1

yejam. ever co-xptufj

GIRL WANTED General house work. 100 N. 16th St. 8-7 1

WANTED Farmers, ploughs, shears, axes, scythes and all other edge tools ground. Brown & Darnell Co. 8-3t WANTED People to use our money to pay their bills. Money loaned on personal property, 25 cheaper than it can be had of any similar concern In the city. Confidential. Indiana Loan Co., 1010 Main St., Westcott Hotel Bldg. 8-2t WANTED Place to keep house for gentleman preferred, by Jady of middle age; no washing and ironing; reference furnished; address L. J. Smith, 710 N. 12th St. 7-3t WAlTEDBoomers by first class boarding house, opposite court house, S. 4th Street. 7-7 1 W A N TEDGirl at 214 N. 9th. 5-7t WANTED You to bring your suits to Joe Werner's, 8th and Main, to be cleaned and pressed. 5-7t WANTED Young married man inter IS NOT DISCOURAGED Mack Will Try to Get Lower Rates to Bryan Meeting. PARTY LEADERS TO MEET. . Chicago, Aug. 8. Chairman Mack says that he will make further efforts to obtain a reconsideration of the order of the Western Passenger Association which prohibits the granting of reduced rates to the Bryan notification next Wednesday. An important conference having to do with the adoption of a general outline of campaign will be held on Tuesday between W. J. Bryan and Norman E. Mack, chairman of the democratic national committee in Lincoln, Neb. Mr. Mack will leave for Lincoln immediately after a meeting here on Monday of the various heads of the subcommittees of the national committee, at which tentative plans for the campaign will be formulated for presentation to Mr. Bryan. Urey Woodson, secretary of the national committee, arrived here from his home in Kentucky today, and Gov. Charles N. Haskell of Oklahoma, treasurer of the committee, is expected later. OLD EMPLOYES MAY APPEAL TO PRESIDENT Bookbinders Not Satisfied With Ruling. Washington, Aug. 8. The civil service commission after holding the mat ter in abeyance for some months has reached a decision adverse to extend ing the one year eligibility of the 400 bookbinders discharged from the government printing office in April and May. 1907. This means that the discharged men and women, some of whom, have been in the government service for a great many years, will have to stand for another examination and If they obtain re-lnstatement it must be in the same manner that an apprentice would. No preference is to be shown on account of former service. . Dissatisfied with the decision of the commission. President James L. Feeney of the Bookbinders' Union, states that that organization will take the matter direct to President Roosevelt in the hope that he will recognize the merit of many years of service on the part of old government employes. Gully, the Plunger. A prize fighter named John Gully, born and bred in very humble circumstances, was so successful in his turf operations, bookmaklng and backing horses that he became member of parliament for Pontef ract and owned Derby winners and collieries. His horse Margrave wou the St. Leger and 80,000 in bets for him. He had a very big gamble on the race. He won another fortune of 50,000 when his partner's horse. St. Giles, carried off the Derby. When his own horses, Pyrrhus I. and Andover, won the Epsom classic he on both occasions netted a very large sum of money. He was one of the most consistent plungers ever known on the turf. He was married twice and had twenty-four children. Sir Robert Peel said of him, "He was the only member who literally fought his way Into parliament." Pearson's Weekly. Halcyon. Halcyon " is the Greek for a kingfisher, compounded of "hals," the sea, and "kno to brood on. The ancients were of the opinion that the kingfisher laid its eggs and sat on them during the fourteen days Just before the summer solstice, throughout which time the waves of the sea were always unruffled; hence the "halcyon days" the days of happiness and peace. New York American. Pamela: Be sure to usa Gold Medal Flour. Isabella.

ested in studying stock breeding, feeding and general farming. Farm, General Delivery, Richmond. 4-4t

WANTED Mea to Learn barber trade; will equip shoo for you oi furnish positions, tsw weens completes, constant practice, careful instructions, tools given, Saturday wages, diplomas granted, write for catalogue. Moler Barber Col'ege. Cincinnati. O. tf FOR SALE. FOR SALE City real estate. Porter field. Kelley Elck-9-tf FOR SALE Upholstering, Mattresses, Awnings, Hair Mattresses remade and renovated. Repair work a specialty. J. H. Russell, Phone 1793. 14 South 7th. 9-lt FCTRluJEHorse, phaeton and harness; call at 814 N. 120k 9-lt FORI SALE SeTeTaF86and 100 acre farms for sale, $4,000 and $4,500, near Richmond. See Beall & Coffin. 92t HOTELS MUSI HOW PROTECT GUESTS Chief Inspeector Will See That Proper Fire Precautions Are Used. INSPECTION IS TO BE MADE LOCAL HOSTELRYS WILL EE VISITED AND RECOMMENDATIONS MADE IRON FIRE ESCAPES NOT SUFFICIENT. Hotels in this city will be required to take additional precautions against danger to occupants from fire. Wm. E. Blakely chief of the Indiana Department of Inspection is compelling hotels in every city in which his deputy inspectors have investigated condititions to make changes and improvements. Richmond is on the list. Besides Are escapes the inspectors are requiring knotted ropes or chains to be put in each room for use in descending from windows. John Fitzigbbons, a deputy inspector was in this city a few weeks ago. At that time he paid particular attention to the school buildings, but took opportunity to visit the hotels. These institutions in this city have rooms are not equipped with chains or knotted ropes. All the hotels in Anderson were required to put In equipment of this kind a few days ago. THREE SPECIES OF MOOSE. They Are the Eiropean, the Eaatern American and the Alatknn. There are supposed to be three species of moose the European moose or elk, found in northern Europe and adjoining parts of Asia; the common mooBe of eastern America, distinguished chiefly from its Europe., congener by the skull being narrowed across the maxillaries, also by its greater size and darker color, and the Alaskan moose, separated by its giaut stature, its nar row occiput, broad palate and heavy mandibles. Expressed in external features as illustrated in the adult male (always best for differentiating species): The Scandinavian elk is a small gray animal with little palm and mauy spikes on its antlers. The Canadian is a large black animal with much palmatiou and always a separate brow bunch of spikes. I have seen hundreds of Canadian moose antlers, but never a pair that did not show a well developed separate group of prongs in front of each brow. I have seen a score or more of Swedish elk, but never saw one that did have a separate brow group of prongs, though I confess I have seen figures of such. The Alaskan is a richly colored black, gray and bron giant, not only the largest deer alive today, but believed to le the largest that ever did exist, since no fossil has been found to equal it in bulk. Its antlers differ chiefly in sise from those of the Canadian moose, but Madison Grant claims that they arc also more complex and have in the brow antlers a second palmatiou which is set at right angles to that of the main palmatiou. In these peculiarities he finds "a startling resemblance is shown to the extinct cervalces. a moose-like deer of pleistocene times, probably ancestral to the genus alces. "If this resemblance indicates any close relationship, we have in the Alas kan moose a survivor of the archaic type from which the true moose and Scandinavian elk have somewhat degenerated." Ernest Thompson Seton in Scribner's. BECK RETURNS. C. B. Beck, chairman of the Wayne county democratic central committee has returned from a business trip to Rushville. He stated last evening he did not attend to any political matters. The Twilight Of LUto. The muscles of the stomach a old re are not as strong- or actftra as la youth and in consequence old people are very subject to constipation and Indigestion. Many seldom have a bowel movement without artificial aid. Mary also, haT3 unpleasant eructations of ess from tne stomach after eating. All this can be avoided by th. use of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pspsia which permanently regulates the bowels so that passages rome naturally, and so strengthens tbe stomach that food is digested without discomfort. Druggist aeU it at SO oasis r fi large bottia, , ,

FOR SALE See the new Postal Cards; Moorman's Book Store. 9-lt

FOR SALE Special new Copyright Books, 50c. Moorman's Book Store. 9-lt FOR SALE Wall Paper and Mouldings. Moorman's Book Store. 9-lt FOR SALE Sewing machines from $18 up. R. M. Lacey, 520 Main. 8-2t FOR SALE All kinds of second hand furniture; 121 S. 4th street. 7-7t FO R S A LE One 40 and "one 30foot lot in first square South 4th; price reasonable. Enquire 3S South 7th. 7-3t F(JRSAXE 8 room brick house, bath", furnace, barn, all modern conveniences; a bargain. J. B. Beck with, 716 Main. 5-7t FOR SALE Mrs. A. B. Commons will hold special sale of white china for decorating at her home 21 S. 23rd August 10th, 11th and 12th. 4-7t FORSXD:-Firiehouse, t h ree bed rooms, bcth room, pantry, six clos OLD'TIME LEGAL METHODS. IVhen the Evidence of Ghoili Sufficed to Hang Men. The testimony of a ghost would not now count for much in a court of law, but the day has been when it has sufficed to hang a man. There was a ghostly accuser in a case with which the readers of Scott are familiar. Soon after the "-13" an Englisu soldier wandering near Braemar met a violent death. Years passed and then came a story of a communication from another world. A farm servant declared that in the night a spirit had appeared to him declaring itself to be the ghost of the soldier, whose bones, it is said, lay still unburled. The highlander must see to their decent interment and have the murderers, two men named, brought to Justice. The highlander promised, but did not keep his word, and a secoud and third time the spirit appeared and upbraided him for his breach of faith. Alarmed at last and no longer daring to delay, the man called a companion and went to the spot which the spirit had indicated and there found the bones of the murdered warrior concealed in a moorland tract called the hill of Christie. The story of the highlander came to the ears of an anti-Jacobite, who caused the matter to be brought to trial before the court of judiciary. Edinburgh. There the tale was corroborated by a woman who had seen a naked figure enter the place on the night spoken of by the man. It was an age of superstition in a district more than commonly given to superstition, and the Jury seemed disposed to find the two men charged guilty of the murder, but it happened that the principal witness spoke only Gaelic. "Now." said the counsel for the defense, "in what language did the ghost speak?" "In as good Gaelic as I ever heard in Lochaber," was the reply. "Pretty good for the ghost of an English soldier," said counsel, and that question and comment saved the necks of the men at the bar. The jury could believe in a ghost, but not in an English ghost speaking Gaelic. London Standard. NAMING A TOWN. tlow Abilene Came to Be Selected by Mrs. Heraey. Abilene was named by the wife of the founder of the town. T. F. Ilersey. With her husband she bad come to central Kansas in the spring of 1857. Tbey lived in a log house on the west side of Mud creek and were the first settlers on the town site, although no town then existed nor was there one until I860. Then C. II. Thompson, who had moved to the county from Leavenworth, bought from the Kansas Pacific Railway company a tract east of Hersey's and laid out a town. When it came to the( naming of the future city Mr. Thompson went to Ilersey and asked him to suggest a name. "Xo," was the reply, "let my wife do it. She is a great reader." Mrs. Horsey was a graduate of a seminary In the east, and her little library, which she carried with her in ber wanderings, was one of the ties that bound her to th girlhood life. She i was a devout Methodist cud knew her Bible from "cover to cover." When she wns asked to name the town she turned to the New Testament for sug gestion. There. In the third chapter of i Luke, first verse, she found this: "Now In the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, Fontius Pilate being goernor of Judaea and Lysanlas the tetrarch of Abilene." "Call the town 'Abilene. " said she. "It means 'City of the Plains. and that exactly describes the location." So Abilene it was. and in the fight for the county seat, wherein it contested with Newport. Smoky Hill and Union City, all loDg since passed away, good fortune attended it. and the new town became the county capital for the 37S dwellers then in Dickinson county. Kansas City Star. Fleehmakina; Food. Cream . gruel, according to an eminent English authority, is the ideal nourishment for thin folk. A teacupful taken at night immediately before retiring is said to give marvelous results. To be at its best it must be perfectly made, then thinned with sweet cream. Taken in that condition and warm, it is agreeable as well as fattening and produces Just that sense of satisfied hunger essential to ideal rest. It is claimed that perseverance In the treatment yields such apparent results that the cheeks can be seen to expand from day to day. The Pepper Vine. The pepper vice grows best in a wooded jiSX Tiere.thev is Rlgity of

ets, cellar, gas. electric ligtts, both kinds water, front and side veranda, back porch, stable, outside closet, beautiful location. Terms to suit. Pilgrim Brothers. 3-7t FOR SALE Residence in every ran of city. Beall & Coffin, IS S. 8th. 4-lt

FOR SALE Excellent small tracts of land. Beall & Coffin, IS S. Sth. 4-lt FOR SALE A car ioaJ of horses every Saturday a3 Monday at Ous Taube's barn. :-tt FOR RENT. FOR RENT House, 314 N. 14th; inquire, 309 S. 9th. 9-3t FOR RENT House of 4 rooms. 36 S. Cth St. S-2t FOR RENT Modern fiat, 26 N. 11th street. Tel. 2179 or 3043. 7-tf FOR RENTFu7nished room with" bath at the Grand, for gents only. 3-4 tf niv :iv 4 tect it from the heat of t!:e sun. It i given a rude s-jrt of cultivation. Th growers plant it. keeping the frrn,s from its roots, and when the tree neai which it is planted 1 has no lower branches strings or poles are placed in proper position to enable the vine tc climb the tree. It needs no further at tentlou. Snrcat(c. "Yes. my dear; I believe in transmi gration of souls. I may be a brute it my next life." "Wouldn't that be discouraging oi don't you care for a change?" IIous ton Post. In Plain Words. "What." asked the Judge, "was th cause-of the altercation?" "I didn't see anny. yer honor, but II was him callin' me a liar that shtarted the fight." Chicago Record-Herald. The Bengal canal. 000 miles In length is the longest artificial water course is the world. The War la Turkey. In the days when M. Paul Cambon represented the interests of the French republic at Constantinople Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, who had been touring in eastern Europe, was desirous of giving a dramatic representation at Yildiz kiosk. The sultan was willing, and the terms were duly arranged with the keeper of the wardrobe, the worthy pasha who has the control of all entertainments at Ylldiz. But the pasha held out his hand for more backsheesh than La Belle Sarah felt Inclined to give, and so the long looked for representation did not take place. Sarah Bernhardt lost by it 1,000 and the coveted order of the Chefekat. Hermann, the conjurer, knowing the ropes better than the French actress, squared the keeper of the wardrobe, gave his show and got his thousand pounds. Exchange. i Remodeled. ( After being Injured by a bull of peculiarly savage temper John Wesson was under a doctor's care for a considerable time and thereby incurred a heavy bill for medical attendance. When he was almost well one of his old friends who had called upon him said he congratulated him on looking so well after such a long illness. "Looking well!" echoed John. "I should be looking well. There's been $150 spent In repairs on me lately, and I'm not finished yet!" The Frtvlleare of Peers. There is a curious case in Fortescue's "reports" relating to the privilege of peers, in which the bailiff who many years ago arrested a lord was forced by the court tf kneel down and ask his pardon, though he alleged that he had acted by mistake, for that his lordship had a dirty shirt, a wornout suit of clothes and only sixpence in his pocket, so that he could not believe that he was a peer and arrested him through inadvertence. Green Bag. lie Died AnyliOTr. This was the way a native physician in India filled out a death certificate: "I am of a mind t'.iat he died (or lost his life) for want of foodings or on account of starvation. Maybe also for other things for comfortables, and most probably he died by drowning." The Original "Village Blacksmith T" Dunchurch. near Rugby, claims that its smithy is the original forge which Inspired the famous verses on The Village Blacksmith." It is a picturesque oid place, and the "spreading chestnut tree" still flourishes In front of It. London Strand. o ?ed For a Leader. The society reporters always speak of a bride being "led to the altar." just as though a bride couldn't End ber own way there blindfolded. Philadelphia Reccrd. SERIOUSLY ILL. T. H. Coleman, a passenger conductor on the G. R- & I railroad is seriously ill with pneumonia at the Butterworth hospital at Grand Rapids. He is well know n in Richmond. POLITICAL. "A party platform," said Uncle Eben "makes mighty hopeful readin. But bo does a promissory note." Washington Star. DOESNT IT MAKE YOU WARM To think of a sealskin cap with ear tabs a day like this? Chicago JournaL

MISCELLANEOUS.

We repair automobile engines and all kinds of machinery. We will make drawings and hui'.d special machinery or models. Winchester & Hungerford. 411 N. 11th St. S 2t FOVND Pair gold rinuuid glasses Owner may have same by describing at Palladium office. S-3t MERCHANTS' "DELIVERY H7Cl Davis, headquarters, Birck Harness Store. Phone 195S. 7-7t MOST A N Y T i 1 1 NO fn waiter gas, steam and electrical can be had at Meerhofrs. tftf MERCI f ANTH" "DELI VKRYFfedSTtFloh. headquarters Eggemeyers grocery. Phone 1151. 6-7 1 If you want to sell or buy a home see Heal. & Coffin. IS S. Sth. 4 It tW. Grosvcnor office moved over 713 Main street. 3-7t Try a Palladium want ad. They pay. The Palladium will take your ad over the phone. OUR LANGUAGE UNIFORM. While Great Britain, For Instance, Has Many Different Lasgaatrs, It has been observed that the language spoken In the United States is remarkably uniform. True, there are many dialects, but Great Britain, less in area than any one of half a dozen of our states, contains such very different languages as English. Welsh and the Gaelic of the Scottish highland, to say nothing of the provincial dialects of Cornwall and Yorkshire and the unique speech of the London cockney, while in this country, with its vast expanse of territory, its settlement by Spanish, French, Dutch and Swedish colonists and its millions of immigrants drawn from nearly every country, large and small, all over the world, there is far greater uniformity of speech than in any other land of equal area and population. The causes can be readily seen. The public schools have made us a nation of readers, and the press has supplied books and papers without limit. Press associations have done their part toward giving a uniform and fairly good tone to the newspaper language of the day. The telegraph, the telephone and cheap postage have brought distant parts of the country into quick and easy communication, and so have aided in teaching a common language. The railroad has penetrated every corner of tbe land and made us a nation of travelers. Countless human shuttles thus are thrown dally across the land in every direction, carrying with them the threads of thought and speech and doing their part to make one pattern of the whole. No doubt our maps, which still present so many different kinds of names, will in time lose the strangeness and the "foreign air" that are so noticeable now. II. M. Klngery in St. Nicholas. The Tarkey. Turkeys are great wanderers. A mother will often lead her brood three or four miles away from home. There they take up their habitation in tbe unfrequented woods. The instinct for sol itude and wild life is very strong after centuries of domestication. But a kindred instinct impels the mother to bring ber grown family back in the fall to where she started out with them la tbe spring. This is not done, however, till the leaves are all off the trees, the beechnuts have fallen and have been eaten and the cold winds and sometimes the snow have made the sylvan retreats inhospitable. Mecca, Mecca is a large city and a principal one of the east. The temple of Mecca, to which so many pilgrims annually travel, forms a SDacious square about a quarter of a mile In each direction, with a quadruple row of columns. A number of steps lead down to Mohammed's house, and within it is tbe black stone said to have been brought by the angel Gabriel for its foundation. The Markets Cfricarjo. CHICACO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. (By Corrtil Md Thompsoi. Crokers, Eaton. O.. Chicago, Aug. 8.

Wheat. Open. High. low. Close. Sept. ... 95 95 944 94 Dec. ... 974 98 96 9694 May ... 101 102 101 101 Corn. Open. Higa. Low. Close. Sept, ... 76 76 76 76 Dec. ... 65 66 64 66 May ... 64 65 64 63 Oats. Open. High. Low. Clcse. Sept. ... 48 43 48 4S Dec ... 48 43 48 48 May ... 50 51 43 50

V. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago. Aug. 8. Hogs, receipts 17,000; weak; lert over 2,893. Cattle 200. unchanged. Sheep 1,300, weak. Light $6.00$6.70 Hog Market Close. Mixed 6.100 6.75 Heavy 6.003 6.75 BLUE LIQCTJ ESC AW Arc Caarnstece to

Cholera, PJacaa.TaaaBpeanadw.i Vj: Cholera.

Ma pay. .,wm

I. G. GILBERT. Dealer in4 fev .,rOra!n, Etc

LAUNDRY.

We can hslp make yen nappy honestly we can. Richmond Steam Laundry. LXUNDRY-Wili call and deliver. F.fdorado Laundry. Fhone 2147. ltf UNDERTAKERS. DOWNING & SON. 16 N. Sth, Phone 2175. augl-tf WILS0N&P0HLMEYERT 13 N 10th. Phone 1335. augltt INSURANCE. FIRE INSURANCE Richmond Insurance Agency. Hans N. Koll, Mgr. 716 Main. may3 sun & thur tf ATClf7ENTSRH EALTlI INSU !S . ANCE Beall & Coffin. j lt iNSUREYOURHOMEwltbBeill"Jt Coffin. IS S. th. -It PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY. Rough 6.0o 6.30 Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies $0.n.Vt 6.02 Good to choice CAj) 6.73 BEEF STEERS. Good to choice steers .... 5.50 Q 6.25 Fair to good steers 5.25 6.23 Choice to fancy yearlings.. 4.25 5.25 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers.. . 4.2A3I 5.25 Good to choice heifers. ... 3.75fJ 4.0O VEAL. CALVESGood to choice 4.00 6.50 Fair to good.. .. 2.K25.75 STOCK CATTLE. Good to heavy fleshy feed ers 4.003! 4.23 Fair to good feeders ..... 3.75 4.00 Good to choice stockers . . 2.O0 4.00 Common to fair heifers .. 3.25 4.25 SHEEP. Best yearlings 4.00 4.50 Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, Au. 8. Wheat, 9Ui. . - Corn, 7814. 1 Oats, 48. Rye, 75. Timothy, $12.00. - Richmond, ' . CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hogs, average 200 to 2riO lbs.. $6.5.7(11 6.70 Good to heavy packers .. 6.50 6.00 Common and rough.... .. 5.80t 6.00 Steers, corn fed.. .. ... 4.00f(j 4.50 Heifers 3.50Q 3.75 Fat cows 3.25;3.SO Bulls .. .. 3.00 8.25 Calves ...$1.00 Lambs f 5.00 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens dressed per lb. . IS to 20o Old chickens, per lb.. ..12V& to 14c COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Be Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb J5o Country butter, per lb 18 to 20c Eggs, per doz ......15c Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per bu.) 88 Corn (per bu) 80 Oats (per. bu.) ..43 Rye, (per bu.) 65 Bran (per ton) $22.00 Middlings (per ton) .. .. .. ..$25.00 Richmond Seed Market. (Rung & Co.) Timothy, per bu ..$2,00 Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy hay (baled) $10.00 New Timothy hay (loose)$7.00 to$8.00 New clover hay (loose).. $5.00 to $6.00 Mixed hay 7.00 Straw fper ton) $4.00 to $5.00 Corn (per bu.) 70 to 73c Oats ( per bx) 47c to 50e Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg. Aug. 8. Cattle Receipt steady. Cattle $0,50 down. Veal $7.50 down. Hogs Receipts 20 loads. $7.05 down. Sheep and lambs Receipts 15 loads. $L0O down. Sheep $4.70 down. Spring lasbs $6.35 down". ' The Great Blood Purifier. Fr sal at all drug stores. GL:'S rc, it I; tXttEBIES Cmt 1 Irtt aUM9fi:&i

1