Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 32, 10 December 1908 — Page 7
PAGE SEVEN. 'PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM' CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS1 OFFICIALS MUST QUALIFY SOOH Both Trustees and Assessors Required to File Bond Before January 1.
THE RICJZ3IOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 10, 1908.
1E0EIT ;..The Market Place of the People... SEM IMS PEtfH WOUlD) Situations Wanted and Greatest HttSe satisffiers of AH advertisements must be FOR THE f Found Ads 2 times fcig wants are the in this office before PRIKPIP fHllP EACH INSERTION." FREE ads below 12 noon nmUlU?LyiT
WANTED.
WANTED To explain the Texas proposition to you. Join us on Dec. . 15th. excursion rates. Knquire Cor. 9th and Main. Dye & Price. Phone 2150., 10-4t WANTED A place to do housework or as housekeeper, by competent middle aged girl. Best of references. Address G. H., care Palla diuni. i0-2t WANTED Nursing to do; experienced, orices reasonable, reference: ad dress S. N., care of Palladium. 10-2t WANTED To buy a small house of five or six rooms, centrally located; cash if wold cheap; address X. Z., care Palladium. 9-2t WANTED You to buy your wife a nice kitchen cabinet for Xmas. Antique Furniture Co.. 519 Main. 9-tf WANTED Hands to cut wood. II. S. Roberta. 114 S. 16th. Phone 1411. 9-tf WANTED A place to assist with housework by a young girl. Call or address 1136 Main St. 9-2 1 WANTED Situation by boy" after Bchool and Saturday. Call 425 S. 4th St. 9-3t WANTEDblIUpnp: AddresT'D care Palladium. 8-.1t WANTEDOood lady cook at busch's Restaurant, at once. 8-tf
Student Government fs Likely 4 Governor" in Boys' Dormitory May Lose Official Position When "Home Rule" Is Adopted By Young Men.
Earlbam men are discussing the subject of student government. Prof. Mcndenhall is in favor of student rule jtt Bundy Dormitory and it is thought that the faculty will be ready to grant the privilege if the proposed venture Is a success. , The student council met last evening and dwussed a plan for the student government of the evening study hour. They will bring the plan be STATE LOSES FUNDS County Local Option Proves Costly to Ohio State -Government. ESTIMATE IS $1,800,000. oiutudus, u., jjcc. iv. interesting t r-v a x i . figuvea relating to the revenue of the state and the various counties arising out of the recent local option elections have been secured from Auditor of State Guilbert. The money, derived from the tax on saloons goes to the general revenue fund of the stte to the municipalities for the police and Infirmary funds and to the county for poor relief and county infirmary pur poses. Through the voting dry of 5S counties the state loses $538,729 and the counties themselves $1,236,432.70. The net gain in the general revenue fund of the state last year, accordine to the figures furnished by State Treasurer Green, was I364.418.4S. It will be noticed that the loss sustained by the , state will wipe out that gain unless there is a secondary Increase from some other source not now discernible. CHRISTMAS CANDY MUST BE COVERED Must Be Protected Against Dust and Dirt. H. E. Barnard." state food and drug commissioner, haa issued warning to dealers in Christmas candies to keep the display under glass to protect it from dust and dirt as required by law. "The season is approaching." eald'Mr. Barnard, "when large quantities of Christmas candies will be
TODAY'S MARKET-QUOTATIONS
- NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohio.) New York. Dec. 10. Open High Low L. & N 123i 123 122" Great Northern 144I3 144 1434 Amalgamated Copper 844 S5 84 U American Smelting 924 92 9 IT Northern Pacific 143Vi 143 142 TJ. S. Steel , . 004 . 55; ,r.4v U.; S. Steel rfd ..113 Pennsylvania . .130i 130"8 130 St. Paul ..151 . 151 150 B. & O. 109Vj 109H 108 New York Central 118 11S 117 Reading .. -.142 142 141Vi 'Canadian Pacific .. .. .. .. .. I1S14 178 177 Union Pacific 183 184 183 Atchison . .. 9S 98" 9S 'Southern Pacific. .. .. .. .. ..120 131 120
9-3t WANTED Business men in need of office help call Richmond Business College. ' 5-tf WANTED Manager for branch office we wish to locate in Richmond. Address, The Morris Wholesale House, CIncinnari, Ohio. 4-3H WA NTED "T WO CON FECTINT.R Y SALESMEN WITH ESTABLISHED TRADE IN NORTHERN AND EASTERN INDIANA. GOOD SALARY'. CORRESPONDENCE CONFIDENTIAL. ADDRESS "W," CARE PALLADIUM. 4-7t WANTED 500 men to learn barber trade and take positions waiting our graduates. Few weeks completes. Constantpractice furnished. Scholarship includes tools. Instruction?., demonstrations, examinations and diplomas. Write for catalogue. Moler Barber College, Cincinnati, O. novl-tf WANTED Good boarders and room- ! spo t dnnro tmm fn!n' ?K Smith 4th St. 28-tf FOR SALE, FOR SALE City real estato. Vortertleld, Kelley Block. 9-tf FOR SALE Desk space in office, centrally located; light, heat or telephone furnished. Address X. Y. Z. care Palladium. ' 10-tf fore the student body to be voted on and it is generally conceded that the plan will be accepted. Should self government for the evening study hour be successful the plan will be gradually extended to the whole day. When the governor, the present governing office will be done away with and will merely be retained in Bundy dormitoryas a faculty advisor. The movement is entirely new at the Quaker institution. BRYAN IS ARRESTED Nebraskan Violates Texas Game Laws and Is "Caught Up." SHOT TOO MANY DUCKS Galveston, Tex., Dec. 10. W. J. Bryan fell into the hands of a game warden yesterday when he and three other hunters were arrested at Iake Surprise, the famous preserve of Banker Moody of Galveston, in Chambers County. Bryan, Moody and two friends are charged with having violated the state game law by killing more than twenty-five fowls each. The law limits that numbers of birds to each hunter in each twenty-four hours. More than 150 dead ducks testified to the work of the sportsmen who are said to have honored Mr. Bryan by allowing him the majority of the shots so that he made a record in the number of birds killed. When the. game warden appeared they swore Mr. Bryan had killed very few canvasbacks. Moody and the other two pleaded guilty and were fined $25 each, w.hich they paid. Lake Surprise is off the railroad and practically inaccessible. The game warden's appearance was a surprise. displayed. Such goods can not be displayed except under glass unless in violation of the law. "We have had practically no occasion to speak of this matter since last year and hope that the conditions which have prevailed during the summer season will obtain during the rush season. The reasons which make it necessary to cover the candies eleven months out of the year are very much more urgent during the Christmas rush, when the stores are being tramped by an increased number of people and there is a very general consumption of sweets among all classes." 1 Close 123 144 84 92 142 55 113 130 151 109 117 142 178 -184 9S 121 ...
WANTED Boy, 421 Main St.
FOR SALE Collie pups, $3.00, 200 N. Fifth 10-pt TEXAS Mr. J. H. O'Donnell of Texas will be at our office on Friday, Dec. 11th, and we invite you to come in and talk Texas with him and arrange to make the trip with us on the 15th. Fare Round Trip $32.88, to Brownsville or any point in Southern Texas. Ball & Peltz, 8 & 10 N. 7th St. 9-2t
FOR SALE Ki-shot Winchester rifle; shoots a special cartridge. $7.ro. Apply to M. C. Darby, r13 N. l;th. s-;:t FOR SALE We will give you bargains in bedding, household goods, table linens, stoves, dishes, etc. Come and see the bargains, 1032 Main. 5-tf FOR SALE Have your business and calling cards printed by the Automatic Card Printing Press, 35c a hundred. Central Hotel. 3 tf FOR BALE A car load of horses every Saturday a&d Monday at Qua Taube's barn. -tt . UPHOLSTERING. Upholsters and mattress making. Wardrobe, couches and shirt waist boxes made to order. J. H. Russell. Phone 1793. 26-tf UPHOLSTERING and general impairing; J. B. Holthouse, 124 S. 6th. KERN AND LAMB IN AN ALLIANCE In Case Either Quits, Strength Will Be Thrown to The Other. - PRACTICALLY CONFIRMED. ONE OF TERRE HAUTE MAN'S FRIENDS SAYS CANDIDATES UNDERSTAND EACH OTHER THE BREWERS FOR SHIVELY. Indianapolis, Ind., Dec. 10. An alliance, offensive and defensive, has been entered into by John Worth Kern, of Indianapolis, and John K. Lamb, of Torre Haute, Democratic candidates for the United States Senate. Kern, it was said, will -get Liamb's votes, or most of them, if Lamb finds that he can't win. If Kern falls down unexpectedly he will attempt to lanil Lamb the position. Kern and Iamb have not appeared together at the Denison, which is the headquarters for the Democratic members, but it was learned that they lunched together at the Claypool a few days ago, and that afterward they had a conference. One of Lamb's intimate friends says that he ami Kern understand each other's position thoroughly, and that Lamb is very anxious for Kern to win if he sees that he hasn't sufficient strength himself. Lamb has not been making the aggressive fight expected of him a month ago, when he entered- the race. lie came here several times during the 10 days following his announcement, but since then he has been sticking close to Terre Haute. Rumors Net Confirmed. There have been rumors that he would withdraw before the Legislature in convened, but none of them has been con Armed. Lunb, it .is said, has no intention of retiring, as he figures that "while there is life there, is hope," and the itoga might come to him if there was a slip-up in the Kern movement. Close observers of the race say that with Lamb out of it, Kern will have the place as good as nailed down in spite of everything that L. Ert Slack and his followers can do. One democratic leader, who is a member of the machine that controls the party, said last night that neither Lamb nor Kern are the favorites of the brewery combine, notwithstanding the reports to the contrary. He said that there was a pre-election deal between the democratic leaders and the brewers by which Benjamin F. Shively, of South Bend, was to have been sent to the senate. He asserted that the brewers are anxious to make good for Shively but they have been told by the followers of Kern and Lamb that if they "butt in" the county local option law cannot be repealed. There are rumors here that some of the Marion county members are wakkneed in their support of Kern, but they were not confirmed. Kern's "followers say that every member here will be loyal to him in the caucus. $50,000 FIRE. Union City. Ind.. Dec. 10. Electric sparks, caused by pulling two sides of leather apart suddenly, set fire to the Schemmell Enameling Works here. Owing to naphtha gas in the building the fire spread like a flash and many of the workmen saved themselves only by jumping from the windows. The loss is -estimated at $oO.OOO, with 425,000 lnsuraao.
UNEMPLOYED. Are you out of a job? Have you ever thought that you might as weil be working as leafing: How? By inserting a "Situation Wanted" Ad in the Palladium you are sure off getting a Job? Situation Wanted" Ads are printed FREE. Telephone 112 1 insert your ad ( and get a position.
Phone 4201. 17-tf FOR RENT. FOR RENT 5 room house, modern; also $10 house. Benj. F. Harris. 10-7t FOR RENT Nicely furnished room; call 39 S. 10th. 10-7t FOR RENT Furnished rooms for light housekeeping, 417 N. 11th. 9-2t FOR R ENT-- FouF"r6om"fIat Bath Electricity. PJ37 Main. Phone J277. 6-7t FO"RRENT Nice house, 309 N. 11th street, 7 rooms, good cellar, city VETERANS MAY VISIT SCENES WAR DAYS Indiana Monument at Vicksburg to Be Unveiled. The old O. A. K. men of Richmond have during the past several days been receiving circulars announcing the unveiling of the Indiana monument at Vicksburg, Miss., Sunday, December 27. It is probable several veterans from Richmond will go to Indianapolis and take the special train that has been provided by the railroad companies. Gov. J. Frank Hanly and staff and the officials of the different departments of war. will attend the services. An elaborate program has been arranged by the monument commission. There are in Glassgow 17,000 unlet premises, 16.000 being dwelling houses. Giving evidence at an inauest at Lambeth, Loudon, a woman said that she had had twenty-one children, six of whom were alive. INSTRUCTS JURY IN WILL CASE (Continued From Page One.) mental condition of such person can be judged with absolute certainty. No definite line can be drawn nor boundary fixed so as to show where sanity ends and insanity begins. Judgment in such matters must depend in a great measure upon the facts and circumstances surrounding each particular case. No Rules to Judge. You have been instructed that no definite rule can be stated nor absolute standard fixed by which mental conditions can be judged, yet the courts, in the light of experience, have formulated rules to aid juries in investigating and judging of such conditions that will serve this purpose as nearly as it can well be done. You are therefore instructed that while the law does not undertake to measure a person's intellect and define the exact quality and quantity of mind and memory which he shall possess to authorize him to make a valid will, yet it does require him to possess mind and memory enough to know the nature, extent and value of his property, the number and names of the persons who are the natural objects of his bounty, their deserts with reference to thei'- conduct and treatment towards him, their capacity and necessities, and that he sltall have sufficient active memory to retain all these facts in his mind long enough to have his will prepared and executed. A Valid Will. In order to enable a person to make a valid will he must at the time that he executed it have a disposing mind and memory that is, he must be capable of making his will with a rational understanding of the nature of the business in which he is engaded. realize that he is making a will for the purpose of disposing of his his property; he should possess mind and memory sufficient to enable him to ! fully recollect and understand the na ture and extent of his property, the persons? who are the natural objects of Lis bounty as well as the persons whom he desires to make legatees and devisees in his will; he should be capable of forming a rational judgment as to the manner in wnich he wishes to dispose of his property and of doing exactly what he desires and intends to do. In determining in a given case as to whether a persons possesses testamentary capacity or not it is the mental rather than the physical condition that la to receive attention. Ton ara further Instructed as a mat-
water, gas, large yard, fruit trees and grapes Inquire W. J. Hiatt, Real Estate. 4-7t
FOR RENT 7-room bouse, 631 S. 8th St. Call phone 14CG. 23-tf FOR RENT Furnished rooms, heat and bath, for gen's, at the Grand. oct2S tf LOST. LOST Pocketbook in G and 10 cent store; money and papers; return to 617 North Sth St. Reward. 10-lt LOST Dollar bill on South 12th between D and E, or 12th and 10th on South E; return to Stegman's Grocery; reward. 10-lt LOST Kid glove between 14th on Main and High School. Return to Palladium. 10-2t LOST Friday evening! lad ies small openfaced gold watch, monogram on back, fob attached. Return to Palladium office. Reward. S-l't MISCELLANEOUS. H. H. JONES. Auctioneer. Telephone 1536. Office, Shurleys Barn, 12 North Sth St., Richmond, Ind. 10-71 H. H. JONES. Auctioneer, Telephone 1536. Office Shurleys Barn, 12 North Sth St., Richmond. Ind. 3-7t HANS N. KOLL Deutscher Notar ter of law in this state, all persons except "infants and persons of unsound mind" have the right to make disposition of their estates by will and so devise their property as to divert the interest therin of those who would otherwise inherit it as their legal heirs. Courts and juries have no power to supervise the making of wills by sound minded men nor to set wills aside because they are not majde as they think they ought to be. Sane men have the same right and power to dispose of their property by will as by deed. However, in a case where awill is being contested on the ground that the testator was of unsound mind or was unduly influenced at the time the will was executed, the provisions of the will, if the same appears unjust and irregular or if the terms of the will are apparently unnatural, unfair, unreasonable and out of the ordinary, such matters may be considered by the jury in connection with all the other evidence in the case for the purpose of determining what the mental condition of the testator was or whether he was unduly influenced at the time the will was made. Deaths aud Funerals SHERIDAN Madissa S. Sheridan died yesterday morning at her home, about one and one-half miles north of the city on the Middleborough Pike, at the dvanced age of seventy years. She was one of the best known and respected colored women of this vicinity. The funeral will be Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock from the Baptist church, at the corner of South Ninth and B streets. Births. Osen and Minnie Green, 405 Pearl street, girl, second child. Charles and Mary Surendorf, 209 North Eighth street, boy, second child. Ora and Anna Wilson, 232 Maple street, boy, first child. Upton and Lizzie Dafler, 212 North Fifth street, girl, fourth child. ART GALLERY FOR RICRMOND (Continued From Page One.) to hang therein their collection of pictures." Opportunity Accepted. The Art association- responded to Mr. Nusbaum's statement with the following resolution, presented by Mrs. M. F. Johnston: "Be it Resolved that the Art association of Richmond, Indiana agrees to accept the opportunity offered by the school board of placing its permanent collection of works of art in the pro- ; posed art gallery of the high school building to be erected on North Ninth and B streets; provided, that the collection be properly cared for and freely accessible to the general public and to the pupils and teachers of the public schools at such hours as shall be determined by the two boards; and provided that the board of directors of the Art association, or some committee appointed by it. shall have supervisiton. of and jury power over all exhibitions held in the gallery, understanding that a member of the school board shall be a member of the board of directors of the art association, and that the two supervisors of drawing in the public schools shall be members of the jury and the other members representing the different art interests of the city. "Understanding that the Art associai tlon aims in the future to be democrat ic as it has been in the past, to the end that anyone in Richmond doing an acceptable piece of art work shall feel assured of the opportunity of exhibiting it; that the art movement in Richmond shall continue to be not only a means of happiness and culture to the children of the public schools, but to everyone in our city." This resolution was adopted by the directors of the art association and approved by all the members of the
and Versicherungs Agent; 716 Main Street. Tel. No. 1620. nov24 tf PLUMBING AND ELECTRIC WIRING.
If it's Plumbing. Heating or Lighting you want, call Meerhoff. Phone 1236. 9-tf LAUNDRY. We can ftttip make you nappy loo f-stly ws can. Richmond Steam Laundry. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. fc"S6u;"ii' phoni 2175. augl-tf MOVING VANS. Phone 4258 calls the large Empire Moving Vans with sober, reliable and experienced white men only. Al. Wintersteen, 30 N. 6th St. ll-tf "la there any hope for me?" asked the consumptive. "Tea." answered the doctor. Too must, though, Invariably Bleep with your window up." "Then goodby, doc. I can never do that. My next door neighbor haa a phonograph!" Cleveland Leader. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the Board of Finance of the City of Rich mond, Indiana, will meet on Monday, the 4th day of January, 1909, at 2 o'clock p. m. at the Council Chamber of the City of Richmond, to receive written proposals from banks and trust companies to become depositor' ies of the funds of the City of Rich mond from the 1st Monday of January, 1909, until ' the first Monday in Jan uary, 1911. Such written proposals and all bonds presented to secure such funds must conform in all thinajs to the require ments of the Act of the Indiana Legis lature of 1907 entitled, "An Act Con cerning Public Furvdfc. etc., Acta 1907, pages 391 to 404 inclusive." All proposals shall be sealed and addressed or delivered to WEBSTER PARRY. City Controller, And Secretary of he Board of Finance of the City of Richmond, Indiana The proportion of left-handed peo ple is one in six. WONDERS OF ELECTRICITY! APPENDICITIS Now cured without an operation. Also urinary and sexua maladies of men and women cured in the privacy of their own homes by this new direct current system. Far superior to any electric belt Filling the Lungs by the continuous direct current :ures any curable case of throat and lung trouble. Call on, or write J. Charles, 24 S. 13th St, Richmond, Ind., for free book giving full particulars. : "Hotter Than Sunshine' t t t TRADE Raymond Coal MARK Lump, per ton ...$4.25 Egg, per ton $4.00 ? Accept no substitute. We are the exclusive agents. ALL HEAT SPLINT. Lump, per ton $4.00 a Best in town for the money, f GOOD HOCKING COAL, t Lump, per ton $4.00 J All other grades at prices as low as the lowest. I Richmond Coal Co. : t West 3d and Chestnut Phone 3121 Try our $3.50 Heating Stove CO A L U.C.BuIlerdick&Son Phone 123S. 529 S. SO St
NOTICES ARE SENT OUT. SEVEN ASSESSORS AND SEVEN TRUSTEES HAVE MET ALU RE QUIREMENTS OF THE LAW HOWARTH'S BOND $32,000.
It is important that the township trustees and assessors-elect should qualify for their offices by the first of the year. A number having failed to do so, the county authorities have un dertaken to notify in each instance, where the future officeholder is known. The county auditor has not been sup plied with the names of some of these men and for this reason w ill not send out notices of election and dequests that the proper Qualification be at tended to. The bonds required of each asaessor 1$ 3.O0o. Each trustee is required to put up a bond equal to twice the amount of any one semi-annual settlement. In Wayne township a bond is required that is larger than that given by the county treasurer. The township assessors handle only very small amounts of money and for this reason the bond is low. No dis crimination is made because of size of township or value of taxable property. The assessors who have filed their bonds are: Abraham Rummell, Jackson township; George Cook, Perry; Edwin DaJbey, New Garden; William Hyde. Franklin: E. S. Lamb. Clay; Charles Potter, Wayne; and Charles Petro, Jefferson. , In Center township the bond required is almost twice that required of the trustee of Jackson township. JThis is because of the fact in Jackson township there are the school corporation and town corporation that have separate jurisdiction not controlled by the trustee. Those who have filed thsir bond sand made arrangements to qusl ify for office are: James Howarth, Wayne. $32,000; Nathan Grave, Franklin. $0,000; Dr. C I. Stotelmeyer. Jefferson, f7jOOO; Samuel Clevenger, AbIngton. $4,1)00; Amandus Mason, Jackson, $8,000; W. H. Miller. Washington. $7,500; James F. Harris, Center, 15,000. REVENUE OFFICERS VISIT SALOONS Seek Violation of Government Regulations. Two revenue officers arrived in the city late yesterday afternoon unheralded, and visited several of the saloons for the purpose of seeing; if the various government regulations for the sale of beer and whiskey were being complied with. So far as known the officers did not find any violations of these regulations. So frequent of late have been the visits of the revenue men that the local ealoonlsts are very careful. 609 MAIN STREET ED. A. FELTMAN Assorted sizes in Glass Cigar Jars, Ash Trays and Plates, also asserted Cigar Bands and Center Pieces for Decorative Work. Full Line of Pipes and Smokers' Suppiles. Smoke American Kid, best 5c Cigar. EO. A. FELTMAN 609 MAIN STREET free! Dll COONE WEEK'S T I bbVTREA ITMENT Cares Hemorrhoids, Ulcers. Itchiaa;, Bleeding Piles, Ftetnla sad sQ Rectal DUesaes. Gives Immediate ReBaf. SEND AT ONCE. POST PAID. PILO CO., Anderson, Ind. Peter Johnson Company MAIN ST. Favorite Stoves and Ranges. LADY OR GIRL wanted each town, good pay. spare time, copy names for advertisers, cash weekly; stamp for particulars. Am. Adv. Bureau, Sanbornvllle, N. II. The Great Blood Purifier. Far at aH drug stores. -
