Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 57, 4 January 1909 — Page 7

PAGE SEVEN PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS RALLYKIG P01IIT F0BJ00j ...The Market Place of the People.., FOR THE Situations Wanted and Found Ads 2 times FREE Greatest little satisfiers of big wants are the ads below All advertisements must be in this office before 12 noon Indiana Society in New Yorki ?! Meets Monthly for Dig Frolic. EACH INSERTION.

TUB niCBKOlTD PAUAKUS i3UUiHLBSlI3, HOJTDAY, JAN UARY 4, 190

HE CENT

WEI IMS

CE OF 5

WANTED.

WANTED At once, two dining room girls. $3.50 per week. Imperial Hotel. New Castle. Ind. 4-3t WANTED Situation as cook or housekeeper; will go out of the city. Call 205 South 5th St. 4-2t WANTED Position as stationary fireman or engineer; 421 N. 16th. t . - 4-2t . VANTED Young men or ladies copy letters at home, $10 per week income; particulars for stamp. Kirkpatrick Co., Box 12, Sta. D, Columbus. O. ' 4-lt WANTED Position as waitress or to do general housework. 217 Main street. 4-2t WAlsfTED By girl of 14 years, a home, to work out. Call J. M. Bowen, 1129 Main street. J. S. Grady, father. 4-3t "WANTED Girl for general house work; call 20 N. 9th St. 4-2t VANTED Experienced girl for housework. 30 N. 13th st. 3-2t If you want money in place of your city property or farm, go to Porterfield's Real Estate Office, Kelly Block, Sth and Main. 26-tf WANTED You to learn bookkeeping, short hand, typewriting and telegraphy and all correlative subjects.

LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. t By Corrsll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Ohio,)

New York, Jan. 4. Open High Low Close L.&N. .. ..127: 127 124 125 Great Northern .. .. .. .. ..' .. ,.148, 148 145 146 Amalgamated Copper . . .......... .. ..84 84 82 82 American. Smelting . . . . ............... 83 84 80 81 Northern Pacific '.. ..143 143 141 141 U, S. Steel '.i .. .. -. .... .. .. 63 53. 52 52 , U.S. Steel pfd.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... ..113 113 112 113 Pennsylvania.. .... .. ...... .... .. ..132 134 131 133 St. Paul .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. ..151 151 148 149 B. & O. ...... .... .... .......... ..111 112 109 110 New York Central ..130 132 126 128 Reading .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ....... .,143 144 139 141 Canadian Pacific ..:.. ..177 178 176 176 Union Pacific ..184 184 178 181 Atchison .. .. .. ..101 161 99 100 Southern Pacific. .. .... .. ..121 121 118 119

Chicago. CHICAGO GRAIN ANQ PROVISION iBj CorrU and Thompson. Brokers. Eaton O.l Chicago, Jan. 4. Wheat, . Open High Low Close JMay . ,. 107 108 107 108 (July ... 98 99 98 99 Corn Open High Low Close Blay ... 61 61 60 61 uly ... 61 61 -j 61 61 Oats. .V Open High Low Close May 51 51 51 51 July .:. 46 - 46 ( 46 46 'Pork.-. "-- Open High,; Low Close Ban. ..i 16.35 16.47 16.35 ' 16.47 May .,. 16.5& 16.75 16.55 16.70 Lard. Open ' High Low Close Jan. .... 9.50 , 9.55 9.50 . 9.55 May .... 9.72 9.80 9.72 9.77 .... Ribs. Open High Low Close ?an. ... . 8.45 8.45 May ...... 8.70 8.75 8.67 8.75 CHICAGO LIVE-STOCK. ' Chicago, Jan. 4. Hogs, 46,000, rteady. Cattle 36,000, 6teady. Sheep 6,000, steady. Hogs Close. V Hogs Close Light, $5.305.95; tnixed, $5.606.15; heavy, $5.656.20; rough, $5.65 5.80. Indianapolis Market. REPRESENTATIVE 8ALE8. HOGS.

tio. Av. Dk. Price 28 269 . . $6.40 59''... 242 40 6.35 69 226 40 6.30 66 229 200 6.25 68 ........... 218 40 6.20 65 . . . . ............. 203 120 6.15 42 214 120 6.15 80 ........... v.-..-., 192 2S0 6.10 68 . 206 , 280 6.10 81 178 160 6.05 .75 . 169 160 6.00 37 ..t,... 193 160 6.00 92 , 133 160 5.90 59 ................. 135 . . 5.85 35 .............. 155 40 - 5.85 43 169 - ..-. 5.80 9i 137 'so '5.75 89 ........ 15.2... AO. 5.75 86 Ill .. 5.50 36 ;?V"rf.w.-f.-;-9--;;-5.30 13 .-. ..v.. ...... 104 .. 5.25 22 90 .. 5.00

IN0IANAP0LI8 LIVESTOCK. v .." HOGS. Best ' heavies. . $.0$G.40 Good to choice.. .. .. .i 5.85 6.10 BEST STEERS, Finished steers 6.25 7.25 Good to choice steers .. .. 5.75 6.50 Choice to fancy yearlings . 3.75 4.25 ...... 8TOCK CATTLE. Good to heavy fleshy feeders.. .. .. I". 4.50 4.75 Fair to good feeders 4.00 4.50 Good to choice stockers , . 3.001$ 4.00 Common to fair beif.rs... 'i.JQ H3 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice Co fancy heifers 4.25 5.25

Riohmond Business College. Term opens Jan. 4th. 1-tf

WANTED 5 cent cigar vending machine. Box 304, Fountain City, Ind. : 29-7t WANTED At Mrs. Hiser's Business School, 33 S. 13th St., Bookkeeping, Shorthand and Typewriting students. Phone 2177. Opens Jan. 4. 28-tt WANTED To buy all kinds of second hand household goods. Phone 4201. dec27-tf WANTED Manager for branch office we wish to locate in-Ricbmond. Address, The Morris Wholesale HouseCincinnati. Ohio. 48M WANTED 500 men tc earn barber trade and take positions waiting our graduates. Few weeks complete. Constant practice furnished. Scholarship includes tools, instruction. , demonstrations, examinations and diplomas. -Write for catalogue. Moler Barber College. Cincinnati, O. noTl-tf FOR SALE. FOR SALE Modern seven room brick dwelling, two blocks from Court House. Phone 1684. 4-7t FOR SALE Farm horses, four and five years old. 327 N. 18th. 4-2t FOR SALE Good milk cow. Phone Good to choice heifers . .... 3.65 4.00 - 8HEGP. Best yearlings .......... 4.00 4.50 Good to choice sheep .... 3.50(g) 4.00 Spring lambs ............ 3.50 7.25 VEAL CALVES. Good to fancy ........... 4.50 8.75 Fair to heavy.. .. .... 3.007.40 Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, Jan. 4. Wheat, ner bu ...1.06 Oats, perbu.. ...... .. Corn, per bu ............... Clover.. ...... .. .... .. a o52 ..:6i ..$5.55 EAST BUFFALO. . . East Buffalo. Jan. 4. Cattle receipts, 300. Prime $7.15; Shippers, $6.25 down. Veal Receipts,' 500; $.75--down. Sheep, 16.000; $4.75. Lambs, $6.50. Hogs Receipts, 17,000; $6.25 Pittsburg Livestock Pitsburg, Jan. 4. Cattle eRecipts, 05 loads; -extras $6.75. Prime, $6.50 down. - , , Veals, $8.55. s Hogs Receipts, 55 loads. Heavies, $6.35. ' Medium, $6.40. Sheep, receipts light; $5,004 Lambs, $7.50. . Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy hay (baled) .i, ... $11 to $12 New Timothy hay (loose) . .$11 to $12 Clover hay, (loose) $10.00 Mixed hay . ....... i ......... . .$10.00 Straw (per ton) ........ .$5.00 to $5.50 Oats, per bu .50c New Corn ... ; ....65c Richmond. CATTUB. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best bogs, average 200 to ' 250 pounds Good to heavy packers Common ' and rough . . Steers. v corn fed ...... Heifers . ..... ........ i Fat cows Bulls .................. Calves . .... ....1 ...... , Lambs- , . .$5.50$5.75 . . 5.00 5.50 . . 4.50 5.00 ,.; 4.50 5.00 ... 308 4.00 . . . .3.00 3.75 . . 3.00 3.50 . . 6.00 6.50 o.oO PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery. Young chickens dressed, per lb ...14c Old chickens, per lb.. ..12 to 14c Turkeys, per lb. .. . . . ; . . .18 to 20c COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee lUve.) , Creamery butter, per lb .........34c Country butter, per lb, 25e Eggs 25c

Richmond Grain Market (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per bu.) $1.05 Com. ( per bu) . . -. . ... . . ; . ; . ,65c Rye (per tu.) '...... 75c Bran, (per ton) ... , $24.00

4-3t POR SALE Antique mahogany bedstead; 519 Main. Phone 4201. 4-2t FOR SALE City real estate. Porterfield, Kelly Block. 28-tf FOR SALE Collie pups. 200 N. Sth. 31-7 FOR RENT. FOR RENT House five rooms, 236 Randolph street, eleven dollars. Call five North Eighth. 4-lt FOR RENT Furnished room with heat and -bath; 64 South 12th St 4-7t FOR RENT Beautifully furnished room, furnace heat, electric light, bath, 205 N. 9th street. 4-4t FOR RENT -f room house, bath and all modern conveniences; call phone 1542. 4-7t FOR RENT Good five room house, $7.00 per month. Call 516 Main. 4-8t FOR RENT Nicely furnished room, electric light, heat and bath; 24 N. 14th. 3-2t FOR' RENT Five room house. Phone 1833. 3-2t FOR RENT Fine furnished front room, furnace heat, electric light, bath; 209 N. 9th street. l-7t FOR RENT Office rooms and shed at Middlings (per ton) $27:00 Clover Seed, per bu .. $4.25 Richmond Seed Market. (Runge & CoJ Timothy, per bu. $1.50$L8-, Clover Seed $4.00CENTER VI LLE. GRAIN. (Furnished by Fred Schllentx & Sons) Wheat $1.00 Corn, new 58c Oats 45c Rye , 70c Clover Seed, prime ...... $4.00$4.50 PRODUCE AND .POULTRY. (Furnished by H. L. Johnston.) Turkeys .. .... ............... .10c Ducks ......... 6c Geese . . . ............. 6c Eggs ....27c Country butter 25c Young chickens 7c Old chickens ................ ....7c Country Bacon . .10llc Potatoes .. i. ............75c CAMBRIDGE CITY. GRAIN. (Furnished by J. S. Hazelrlgg) Wheat, No. 2, per bu $1.00 Corn, new, per bu...... 55c Oats 45c Rye ..............70c Clover Seed, recleaned ........ $4.50 No. 1 Timothy, per ton ........$10.00 . PRODUCE. (Furnished by W. B. Barefoot & Co.) Country Butter 18c Eggs, per doz. ....26c Old chickens, per lb 8c Young chickens, per lb. .8c Turkeys, per lb . 12c Ducks, per lb ................6c Geese, per lb. 5c LIVE STOCK. (Furnished by Harmac Bros.) Butcher steers . . $5.00 Good to choice .....$3.60 Heifers . . .......... $3.25 4.00 Veal calves 6.000 6.50 Hogs 6J5 Roughs 4.00 5.50 Sheep 1.50 3.00 Lambs 3.00 4.60 Pigs.. 5.00(3 5.50 NEW PARIS, OHIO. GRAIN. (Parnlsbed by G. W. & I. R. Richards) Wheat .. .. ..$1.02 Corn .. ......... ...68c Oata .....45c Rye 70c Prime Red Clover Seed . . .. ..$4.50 Alsike . $7.50 LIVE STOCK. (Furnished by J. Jarrett.) Butcher Steers, $3.50$4.00 Good to Choice Cows .. 2.50 3.00 Heifers ..... 3.25 3.75 Hogs ........... 3.50 6.50 Roughs 4.00 5.00 Sheep 2.50 Lambs ........................ 4.00 GREENSFORK. GRAIN. (Furnished by D. W. Harris & Co.) Wheat ....... 98c Corn 57c

3494.

Oats .... ... ... 45c Rye ....... .70c Clover Seed, No. 2 ....,.......$4.00 . PRODUCE. AND . POULTRY. (Furnished by D. W. Harris & Co. Country butter, per lb. ...... . . . . .18c Eggs, per doz .30c Old Chickens, per lb 7c Old Roosters per lb .....3c Turkeys, per lb 10c Young chickens, per lb. ..........7c Ducks, per lb . 7c Geese, per lb. ...5c LIVE STOCK. (Furnished by D. V. Harris.) Butcher steers .......... $4.00$5.00 Good to choice cows 3.O0 3.73 Heifers .. .. .. ...... 3.00 4.00 Veal calves . ..... . . . 5.00 6.00 Hogs .j .. .. .. 4.30 5.50 Roughs .. .. .. ...... 4.00 4.50 Sheep 3.00 3J Lambs .... 5.0QQ 5.00

WANT AD

LETT The following are replies to Palladium Want Ads. received at this office. Advertisers will confer a great favor by calling for mail in answer to their ads. Mail at this office up to 12 noon today as follows: O. L. ... H. R. B. . M ...... Loan ... R. c. B. X L. ... Z ....1 ....4 ...1 ....3 ...2 ,...1 B 4 F B. D 1 C ...2 D 1 E. A. S. 1 ,...1J ....1? Mail will be kept for 30 days only v All mail not calls for within that time will!beca8t out. 108 S. 7th. 30-7t FOlt REJnT Furnished roomX leat and bath, for gents, at the Grand. oct28-tf LAUNDRY. We can help make you aanay hooestty we can. Richmond Steam Laundry. FOUNTAIN CITY, (Furnished by R. A. Benton) Butcher Steers $400$5.00 Good to choice cows 3.00 4.00 Heifera 4.00 4.50 Veal calves .. 4.50 7.00 Hogs 4.50 5.50 Roughs 3.50 5.25 Sheep 3.00 3.25 Lambs .. .. 4.00 5.50 GRAIN. (Furnished by Harris & Jarrett.) Wheat 96c Corn, per cwt. 80c Oats 43c Rye ; 65c Prime clover seed ..$4.00 HAGERSTOWN. PRODUCE AND POULTRY. (Furnished, byEd Porter ft Son.) Country Butter u 20c Eggs ....... .25o Young Chickens 9c Old Chickens 9c Turkeys 13c Ducks .. ... 6c Geese ....... 6c Capons .... 14c GRAIN. (Furnished by Clark Bros.) Wheat $1.00 Corn 57c Oata 45c Rye TOc Bran, per ton $25.00 Middlings . $27.00 MILTON. , GRAIN. (Furnished by J. W. Brumfldd 4b Co.) Wheat. No. 2.. .. .. .. .. .. ..$1.03 Wheat, No. 3 .. .. ..$1.00 Corn.. ..62c Oats.. ..47c. Bran, per ton $36.00 Middlings, per ton $27.00 C. Corn, per cwt. $2.00 Bread Meal ......$40.00 PRODUCE AND SEEDS. (Furnished by F. M. Jones & Co.) Country butter . . .23c Creamery butter ...,30e Eggs 25c Potatoes, per bu. 75c English Clover Seed, per bu., . .. .$4.60 Little Red Clover Seed, per bu., .$4-60 STRENGTH. OF AN EAGLE. Wonderful Power In the Bird's Claws ami Legs. While I cannot give any positive proof of how much a bald eagle can carry, I should suppose, declares a writer in Forest and Stream, that be could carry at least as much in proportion to his weight as a bawk or a horned owl. I have the recorded weight of a male bald eagle weighing nine and a quarter pounds and a female weighing twelve pounds. A horned owl will welgb from four to five pounds, and I have several times known one to carry off a large house cat. One cat was very large, and the owner told me he could hear the cat cry as he was being carried off.- Now, any one who will weigh a large house cat will find it to welgb at least ten pounds. I have seen a goshawk carry off a ben fully twice its own weight, and I have taken from a marsh bawk a very large chicken which would weigh more than twice what the bawk would. The marsh bawk is one of our weakest hawks, but he had carried this ehlcken over a quarter of a mile. My belief is that if a hawk or horned owl can carry more than twice its weight (and I know positively that they can) then an eagle could, If occasion required, do as much in proportion to his weight, which would be to carry eighteen or twenty pounds. Once when an eagle, shot through the body with a rifle ball, lay on his back I up ended a long road skid and dropped it on him. Before it reached him be stretched op and caught it in his claws and held It the length of his legs above him. I walked up on the sl3d and stood above him, and be easily held me and the skid, which I should Judge would weigh more than twenty pounds. I took pains to be weighed the same day and weighed 119 pounds. Put a stick in the claw of a wounded eagle and let him grasp a small tree with the other, and a man most be stronger than I ever was to

El LIST

UPHOLSTERING.

See Holthouse for Upholstering. Phone 4367. 124 S. 6th St. 27-tf Upholsters and mattress making. Wardrobe, couches and shirt waist boxes made to order. J. H. Russell. Phone 1793. S6-tf AUCTIONEER. H. H. JONES, Auctioneer. I have lots of sales booked for spring. If you are going to have a sale of any kind. I would like to' do your work. Sat isfactlon guaranteed. Office Shurley's Barn. dec24-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. 11-tf LOST. LOST High school pin. Please leave at Palladium office. 3-2t LOST Gold nose glasses in case, from Dr. Ewlng. Phone 2116. 29-7t FOUND. FOUND During the Holidays in our OLDEU DAYSURGEOHS They Were Exempt From Jury Duty In Capital Cases. IN A CLASS WITH BUTCHERS Thought to Be Toe Bleedthirsty ts Calmly Pass en the Taking ef Hymen Lif Exseutieners Performed Operations and Acted as Doctors. When Great Britain's statute book was still in the Draconian state from which it was redeemed by Sir Samuel Romilly and the penalty of death was inflicted for the most trivial offenses, surgeons were exempted from serving on juries in capital cases. It must not be supposed, however, that this was because their profession was believed to make them too humane for such work as was then Imposed on jurymen. We are sorry to ssy it was for the opposite reason. They were exempted on the same ground as butchers, whose occupation, it was thought, tended to make them too bloodthirsty. .This ought not perhaps surprise us, since two or three centuries ago executioners not infrequently performed surgical operations. This seems to hare been particularly the case In Denmark. At any rate, we have more knowledge on this point In regard to that country than any other. . In J anas seme time ago Dr. K. Caroe of Copenhagen published a number of documents bearing on the subject. The most ancient of these bears date July 24, 1370, and Is a license Issued by Frederick IL to Anders Freimut, executioner of Copenhagen, granting him the right to set bones and treat old wounds. He was expressly forbidden to meddle with recent wounds. In 1600 it is recorded in the municipal archives of Copenhagen that Gaspar. the hangman, had received four rigsdalera for the cure of two sick children in the Infirmary. In 1638 Christian TV. summoned the executioner of Gluckstsdt. in Holsteln. to examine the diseased foot of the crown prince. In a letter addressed to Ole Worm, a leading Danish physician of the day, Henry Koster, physician In ordinary to the king, complain bitterly of the slight thus put upor him. He ssys that for two wholt months the hangman, "who. Is as fit to treat the case as an ass is to plsy the lyre. had the case in hand, and the doctor was not asked for advice, and, although the case went steadily from bad to worse, the executioner received a fee of 200 rlgsdalers and a large silver goblet "rewards," ssys the doctor plaintively, "which the greatest among us would not have received had he succeeded in curing the prince accordiag to the rules of art." Again, in 1681. Christian V. gave a fee of 200 rlgsdalers to the Copenhagen hangman for curing the leg of a page. In 1695. Andreas Liebknecht the Copenhagen executioner, was in such repute or his treatment of disease that he wrote a book on the subject "In the name of the holy and ever blessed Trinity." In 1732 Bergen, an executioner in Norway, was authorized by royal decree to practice surgery. . Even up to tbe early years of the nineteenth century this extraordinary association of surgery with the last penalty of tbe law continued. Erik Peterson, who 'was appointed public executioner at Trondhjem in 1796, served as surgeon to an infantry regiment In the war with Sweden and retired in 1814 with the rank of surgeon major. Frederick L of Prussia chose bis favorite hangman. Coblenz. to be his physician In ordinary. It might be suspected that this peculiar combination of functions had Its origin in a satirical View of the art of healing, but in tbe records we have quoted we can trace nothing of the kind. Perhsps the executioner drove a trade In human fat and other things supposed to possess marvelonS healing properties. He may thus have come to be credited with skill m healing, though the association surely represents the lowest degree to which the surgeon has. ever fallen In public esteem and social position. Compared with the .hangman, a gladiator and assndertakex b7 fee considered

store: 1 child's white fur muff; 1 child's black left-hand wool glove; 1 pair man's buckskin gloves; 1 man's black silk handkerchief; 1 blue and white deep dish; 1 Turquoise setting; 1 gold or gold plated bracelet. Persons may call and get same by proving property. Jones Hardware Co. 4-lt

MISCELLANEOUS. FREE Booklet on Fruit Growing and Truck Farming in Smith County, Texas. Write Herndon Real Estate & Investment Co., Tyler, Smith County. Texas. 16-2St FUNERAL DIRECTORS. DOWNING 1175. 80N. If N. Sth. Phone augl-tf NOTICE To whom it may concern: Notice is hereby given that from and after this date I will not be responsible for any debts contracted or made by my wife, Ida M. Hadley. Dated this 4th day of January, 1909. 4-2t ELMER F. HADLEY. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY. respectaW. BntiJli Meoicai Journal. "Painting the Town Rod.4 "That expression, 'painting the towa red,' is not," writes a correspondent "the crestlon of some unknown cockney genius, as some would seem to infer. Its birth has been traced to The Divine Comedy. Dante, led by Virgil, comes to tbe cavernous depths of the place swept by a mighty wind where those are confined who have been tbe prey of their passions. Two facet arise from tbe mist the faces of Francesca and Paolo. 'Who are yel cries Dante in alarm, aud Franceses replies sadly, 'We tire those who have painted the world red with our sins.'" Lon don News. Development. "Remember." said the earnest in ventor, "it isn't so many years since the telephone csused Isugh&r." , "That's true." answered tbe man who has trouble with central. "At first it caused laughter: now it causes pro fanity." Wsshington Star. Proof. Mrs. Shellpod Hiram, some o them tnere hobos bev stole tbe wash off en tbe lineagin! Farmer Shellpod Haow dew you know they wux hobos? Mrs. Shellped-Becuz tbey tuk everything out tn- towels. Chicago News. If better were within, better would ome out. German Proverb. HOI P0LL0I LOSERS "Swell" Atlanta Negroes Are Victors in Fight to Entertain Taft. GREAT EXCITEMENT REIGNS Atlanta, Ga, Jan. 4. The fight be tween the "swell negroes" of Atlanta and the black hoi polloi for the privilege of entertaining President-elect Taft when he comes to Atlanta Jan iary 15 has terminated In the victory of the aristocrats. This was decided upon at a meeting of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, It is understood that the arbiters looked upon the "plebians" headed by H. L. Johnson, ' as "butters in" and thought Bishop Gains and his "aristo crats" should have the right of wsy. But out of this fight another Is brew ing which may result in the elimina tion of Mr. Taft's speech, to the negroes while in Atlanta. A third party has been formed and it will ask the Chamber of Commerce that both Gains and Johnson be eliminated from the program, and that some other place for the meeting be selected than the big Bethel church or tabernacle. It is stated that if the Chamber of Commerce is unable to do these things that the third party will lay tbe matter before Mr. Taft and ask him to cut put his speech. DELINQUENT FOUR YEARS. In reading the civil docket in the ayne circuit court this morning. Judge Fox called attention to the fact a settlement of the Van Orman case has been delinquent for four years Such tardiness tbe judge declared must be amended. Long sermons were the rule In the) time of tbe Bar. Tbosnas Boston, who Is on record as having beads and four others of nardlyiea generous proportions. Such pulpit perceaeuy for tbe long polos with wkirb the old ttsoe wsrdesM gave nodding beads.

ON BANKS OF WABASH."

THIS INDIANA BALLAD IS "HYMN", OF EXPATRIATES WILLIAM BAYARD HALE IS A PROMINENT MEMBER. New York. Jan. 4. On the second Tuesday in vach month the Indiana Society of New York niets for dinner to fraternize, talk and sing "On the Banks of the Wabash. . The society, now four years old. woa organized chiefly by the effort of Col. James U. Curtis, formerly speaker of tae Iudiana legislature and commander of the world-famous Indianapolis Light Artillery. Tbe membership now numbers one hundred and sixty, among whom are Hon. Joseph T. Fanning, formerly auditor of state of Indiana: Senator Leon O. ltalley: Rev. Dr. Carstensen, formerly rector of St. Pauls Cathedral, aud Wm. DeMattos 1 loo lie r. one time publl librarian of Indianapolis: Dr. Lyman. Abbot, of T.ie Outlook, and Wm. Bayard Hale, now a principal editorial writer oa The New. York Times. It Id des?red to add to the member ship, and to that end the society wishes to learn tbe names and addresses of all former residents of Indiana, v. ho now live in. or near. New York. isitors to New York will l given the hospitable hand and welcomed to the monthly dinners if t iey WM let' their presence be known to Secretary Horace Hord. CS Park Row, New Ycrk. The annual bamr-iet f the Soc:ety is given early In Fsbruary of e.ic'i year, and In previous years tbe tVeo hundred, or more, guests bav b-:i , addressed by Senator BcveKdae. Con gressman Landi3. Mayor Rookwalter, Meredith Nicholson. Dr. Hale and cth-, er Hoosiers similarly illustrious la literature and state-craft. STRINGENT WILL BE COURT RULES juuyc ruA niinuuiiuco ihcu iiu Petty Delays Will ' Be Tolerated. ; JANUARY TERM IS OPEN. WHEELS , OF JUSTICE AGAIN 8TARTED MOVING BY SHERIFF MEREDITH IN BRAND NEW SUIT OF CLOTHES. The January term of the Wayne ctr- . cult court was opened this morning by Sheriff Meredith wearing a brand new suit. From the announcements made by the judge, it may lie construed that court business will be pushed along with more baste this term than has been tbe custom for some years. Tl court declared he intends to do away with all petty delays wherever possible snd to accomplish this result intends to enforce his rules more stringently. Instructs Attorneys. Before beginning t'ae "calling of the Civil docket. Judge Fox told tbe attorneys he Intends to have reports made In every. ease, wben they are due or citations will be issued. This means that' unless the attorneys "toe the msrk" they will be called Into court , to enter explanations. The judge announced he will call the civil docket at 9 o'clock every morning and he wants It closed up as quickly as possible. He stated after a case has been called he will not return to It. John Markley was reappointed ballff and sworn In. Markley has been bailiff for a number of years. He has been an efficient officer and is thoroughly acquainted with the law library, a naV ' ter of no little importance. New Court Calendar. Copies of the new court caelndar were distributed among the attorneys. The calendars . were fresh from tbe press snd no exceptions were takea nor errors discovered this morning. Tbe calendar shows there are fortysix members of tbe bar. Of this number, fourteen do not engage in active practice. Daniel Mason, of Cambridge City appears at head of tbe list as dean. He is the eldest practicing attorney in the - county. Edmund C. Newman, who formerly occupied this position, died during tbe past year. The names appearing In the list of at-' torneys entitled to practice as resident attorneys are Harold C Burton. Gat P. Freeman. Charles O. Williams. Boa: Just made Medal Flour. ie splendid Mooulf dHi NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT. State of Indiana, County of Wayne, ss: In the matter of the estate of Wirer Davenport, deceased. . Notice ta hereby gives that the undersigned. "William H. Davenport, baa' duly qualified as the executor of the Last Will and Testament of War Davenport, deceased. late of County. Stale of Indiana. Bald aetata is aoivenL . f"; WILLIAM H DAVENPORT. : Jeasop A Jessup Attorneys.

the stick froins&ias. -