Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 193, 20 May 1909 — Page 7
PAGE SEVEJT. PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
THE BlCIUIOJrD r AL.L.AJJ1U3I AXD SUN-TElEGRA3f, THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1909.
0"fl Cincinnati Via C. C & L IL n SUNDAY
ONE GENT ; ' - PER fill
...The Market Place off the People... m. DAYS I.FOR THE rases Situations Wanted and Found Ads 2 times FREE Greatest little satisflers of bis wants are the ads below All advertisements must bs in this office before 12 noon EACH INSERTION.
OF. 5
WANTED.
" -vwi nnnnn ruLnn r n.n.n.nn. WANTED Two teams at once , for ' street grading, $4.00 per day; call or phone O. G. Porterfield. 18-tf WANTEDCompctent girl for general housework. Good wages for good work. 1308 Main street. 18-4t WANTED If you want money in place of your city property or farm, go right to Porterfleld's Real Estate office. Kelley Block. 8th and Main. K-tf WANTED You to call and see our Excelsior Motorcycle, Elmer Smith, 426 Main St. Phone 1806. aprl4-tf WANTED Men to learn barber trai Few weeks required. Best paying work within reach of poor man. Can have shop with small capital or position. Wages $15 to $20 weekly. Busy season soon. Start now. Catalogue free. Moler Barber college, Cincinnati, Ohio. 15-if WANTED To store your stove for the summer. 1030 Main. Phone 1778. 17-tf vt.iiMii jihuager lor branch office we wish to locate here in Richmond. Address. The Morris Wholesale House, Cincinnati, Ohio. 2-1 mo WANTED Girl at 214 North 9th. 20-2t WANTED -Situation by young girl to assist with housework or dish washer at hotel. Call 431 South 6th, in rear. 20-2t WANTED-To rentfiveroom cottage; no flat, good location. Address K. care Palladium. 29-tf WANTED Railway Mail Clerks, , CarierB. Examinations in Richmond, soon. Preparation Free. Franklin- Institute, Dept. 57 B, Rochester, N. Y. mayl2-37t WANTED Middle aged woman for Market NEW YORK STOCK (By Ccr'tH and New York, May 20. ' - V : Vi ' : . .. . ' L. & N. .. .. ... ...... Great Northern Amalgamated Copper"".". ' American smelting .. ... Northern Pacific ....... U. S. Steel U. S. Steel pfd.. .. Pennsylvania .... .... St. Paul ,. .. .. .". .. R & O. .. .. .. .. .. .. New York Central .. .. Reading ..... .. ,. . Canadian Pacific Union ; Pacific ......... Atchison . . .... . . .. , : Southern Pacific. . . ... Thompson. . .... . . . .... ... f .... i . . . . . . . . .... .... .... Chin.'jqo. CHICACO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. By Cot11 nd Tbompac. Crokerc Eaton OA Chicago, May 20. Wheat.
Open High Low Close May . . 130 130 July ..115 116 115 115 Sept ..107 107 107 107 .' : Corn ! Opon HigN Low Close May ... 73 73 July ... 69 " C9 68 68 Sept. .:. 6 67 66 66 ! . .- oats. "Oj.fau High Low Clos May ... 59 59 July ... 62 52 53 52 Sept ... 44 44 44 44
Indianapolis Market. REPRESENTATIVE SALES. "o. -s . j At. Dk. Prlre 30 SS .. $6.00 31 91 625 20 107 .. 6.35 M 117 ,. -6.50 6 378 .. 6.60 '71 132 160 7.00 55 ....... 155 .. 7.05 29 ; 142 .. 7.15 35 13S .. 7.15 85 .. 133 .. 7.20 91 ... 167 120 7.20 72 1S1 SO 7.20 53 1S2 ., 7.25 81 191 160 7.25 128 171 .. 7.30 .85 ................. 199 40 7.30 73 193 SO 7.33 59... 210 120 7.35 54 231 300 7.35 71 225 200 7.40 59 248 440 7.40 56 223 .. 7.43 65 A.. 233 .. 7.50 65 257 .. 7.53
INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOOS. Best heavies $7.35g$.,30 good to choice 7.25 7. 10 Best pigs . . . .... . . . . . . . . . C.25 6.50 x BEST STEERS. finished steers 6.500" 7.00 Sood to choice steers. . . . 6.10 6.65 Sholce to fancy yearlings. 5.65 6.25 STOCK CATTLE. Bood to heavy fleshy feeder . ... . . . .. . . .. .... . . 5.00 5.25 fair to good feeders .... 5.00 5.25 lood to choice stockers . . 4.25 4.75 Common to fair heifers. ... 2.50Q S.2S BUTCHER CATTLE. ? , doi.cjs to tancy belters... 6.25 CSS V 4
general housework at once; 244 Pearl Street. 19-3t
FOR SALE. FOR BALE City property and farms, merchandise stocks and fire -Insurance. Porterfield. Kelly Block. 8th and Main. S-tf CONCRETE MIXERS quire 211 N 2nd St. For rates in-l8-7t FOR SALE English go cart. 31 N. 19th. 18-Tt FOR SALE Automobile, 3 passenger Ford, full equipment, newly painted and overhauled. Will sell cheap. Address "Automobile," care Palladium. . 12-tf FOR SALE If you want - to cuy a farm or a home in the city. See our new list. We have t'asm all beat Beckwith & Chessman, 716 Main St. 25-tf FOR SALE Modern 6 room house, bath, electric light, gas furnace heat, good location, terms reasonable. Call 212 North West 3rd St., after six o'clock. 19-7t FOR SALE Rubber tired canopy top surrey; enquire Dr. Grpsvenor. 19-2t FOR-SALE Mill wood. C. W. Kramer & Co. . 29-tf Typewriters for sale, rent, repaired. Burr A More. Fhone 2111. 19-tf FOR SALE New and second-hand bicycles at bargain prices. Elmer Smith, 426 Main St Phone 1806. aprli-tf FOR SALE Stoue door sill and glass window sashes; 115 N. ICth St. apr20 tf FOR SALE Good cook stove, also gas range; 234 S. 4th. 15-tf FOR SALE Good gentle horse, cheap if Bold at once. 121 S. 5th. 18-3t Reports QUOTATIONS. Brokers, Eaten. Ohio)
Open High Low Close ..139& 140 1394 139 ..146 146 .145 ..146. .. 83 83 81 82 .. 93 93 92 . 92 ..145 146 144 144 .. 59 60 58, 58 ..119 120 119 119 ..135 135 134 134 ..151 151 150 150 ..115 115 114 114 ..131 131 129 129 ..159 159, 157 157 ..180 180 180 180 ..190 190 188 188 ..109 ,110 108 108 ..123 124 122 122
Good to choice heifers .... 4.50 5.15 SHEEP. Best yearlings . 6.50 7.00 Good to choice sheep .... 5.00 5.50 Spring lambs 6.00 8.00 VEAL CALVES. Good to fancy ....... 4.00 7.00 Fair to heavy calves 3.00 G.00 Richmond Grain Market (Richmond Roller Mills) Wh?at, per bu. ... ... ......... .$1.40 Corn, per bu .75c Rye, per bu.. .80c Bran, per ton . .$27.00 Middlings, per ton ...$30.00 Clover seed, per bu., ........... .$4.50 Richmond Seed Market. (Run: Co.) Timothy, per bu., ....... .$2.70$2.85 Clover Seed 4. 50 4.65 Richmond. CATTLB. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hog, average 200 250 pounds Good to heavy packers Common and rough Steers, corn fed ...... Heifers to ...$6.50$7.O0 6.00 6.50 . . . 3.00 5.50 , . . . 5.00 5.U3 ... 3.50 4.30 i vu w a . . . Bulls .... ... Calves 3.50 4.23 3.50 4.1-0 6.50 7.00 cuso Lambs PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery 1 Young chickens, dressed, per lb. Old chickens, per lb. ........ . Turkeys, per lb .18 COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb. Country butter, per lb... ..18c ...18c to 20C ...30c .. 2Se . . .17c Eggs .... .... Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan. Timothy hay. (loose) ........ .$14.00 Clover hay. loose ......$12.50 Mixed hay . , 113.00 Oats, per bu., SO to 52c Corn ........ .... ........ .76c EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, May 20. Cattle-Receipts. 25, tops. $7. Veal Receipts, 200 tdps. $8. Sheep Receipts, 3,600; tope $&40l Lambs, &fia .
FOR SALE Improved farms and farming lands in Osceola Co. J. L. Shigley. Leiloy. Mich.
apr29 eod3mo3-l FOR SALE Refrigerators and kitchen cabinets, cheap, 519 Main. 12-tf FOR SALE Good barn, cheap; must be moved at once; call or phone O. G. Porterfield. 20-tf FOR SALE One refrigerator in good order, two sets of single buggy harness, one light open top buggy. Frank M. Clark, 321 North 11th St. 20-2t FOR SALE Nice driving mare, S. W. 3rd St. "T55 20-7t FOR SALE At Auction, northeast of 5th and S. A at 2 p. m., Saturday, May 22, 1909. . 15-7t FOR RENT, FOR .'RENT Scrfl1sriodgTng"hX8v ' keeping, 103 N. 17th St. 19-3t FOR RENT Flats furnished for housekeeping. 415 Main. 18-7t FOR-RENTFurnished room, 42 S. 10th. 13-7t FOR RENT Furnished room for gentleman. 23i N. 9th St. 14-7t FOR RENT Y. M. C. A-, Furnished Rooms including shower bathe, beat and light $1.25 and op per weoi. apr!4 tf FOR-RENT Furnished rooms, heat with bath for gents, at the Grand. tebZS tf FOR RENTA strictly modern steam heated flat A. W. Reed. 7th and Main. 7-tt FOR RENT 5 room flat and 3 room flat, above Arcade. Geo. B. Moore, 616 Main. Phone 4058. 20-1 1 LOST. jadies goidi watch on Main street, Wednesday - afternoon. Return to Palladium. Reward. 20-lt Hogs Receipts, 1,500; tops, $7.75. Indianapolis Grain. Indianapolis, May 20. Cash wheat Corn Oats , .$1.40 ..75 OS TOLEDO GRAIN. Toledo, May 20. -Wheat ...... .... , Corn . . . $l.iO .76 Oats , Rye . Clover Seed, per bu .. , 60 .... 91 .,.....$5.30 CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK. Cincinnati, May 20. Hogs Receipts, 1,300; strong. Cattle Receipts, 500;. steady, but quiet. Sheep Receipts, 250; 6teady. Best Spring lambs $8.50. PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK, Pittsburg, May 20, Cattle Receipts, light; tops $7. Veals, tops, $7.25. ' Hogs Reciepts, 6 loads; tops $7.70. Sheep Receipts, light; tops, $6.20. Lambs, choice $7.95. EARM-lf OR (mm F.ETRIGC REGISTERS R0CKrORD,IAJ CORRESPONDENCE SOLICtTCO Copyright. 1909, by American Press Asaociatton. This matter must not be reprinted without special permission. CO-OPERATIVE BREEDING. Professor R. S. Shaw of the Michigan Agricultural college is the originator of a plan for co-operative breeding in dairy cattle that gives promise of being of real value to those sections where It Is followed. The plan in brief is as follows: A community controlling about 120 cows is organized into a co-operative breeding association. . This number of cows are divided as nearly as possible into three groups of equal number, it being Immaterial ust bow many cows the Individual farmer may have. A breed Is then selected which Is most in favor In the neighborhood and three registered aires purchased, one being placed with, each block of forty cows. The first cost as well as the cost of keeping the bulls Is divided among, the members of the association on the .basis of the number of cows owned by each. At the end of the two year, period. In order to avoid inbreeding the . bulls are transferred to other blocks and at the end of the second period transferred : again, an arrangement which makes it possible to keep all three bolls in the , neighborhood six years without Inbreeding. This arrangement makes it possible to keep- a sire of known merit during bis best years, a plan that is seldom carried oat under the present system of entirely individual management Besides this, the new plan tends to create a community interest in a single breed . and jves a jBycjkjqetter. jgsrtet fffr
WANT AD LETTER LIST The following are replies to Palla dium 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: B. F. 4 Mrs. N. E. ... 1 F. 1 Reliable 1 K S S. Ob m Mall will be kept for 30 days only. AH mall not called for within that time will be cast out
LOST Box of silver on North E street, from 12th to Windsor Hotel; return to Windsor Hotel; reward. 20-lt LOST A gold pin with Initial "S"; reward if returned to 609 South 8th street 20-lt 00BM0 MflM Then Buy Your Fishing Tackle Of numm bund Anything from a Penny Line to a Silver Plated Reel SEE OUR WINDOW man to 'pCTcnase cairy cowor " single breed in censiderable numbers. While the plan bas not been worked out as yet for a fall six year period, its advantages are so apparent that It might well be adopted in any strictly dairy section. THE ROSE BED. May is a good month in which to start the rose bed. Roses like a rich and rather firm soil, the florist recommending a mixture of one-third clay solL' one-third' wood loam and' onethird well rotted barnyard manure. The bed in making should be worked np to a depth of about eight or ten inches and the soil thoroughly mixed. Roses are fond of sunshine, and the bed should be located so that It win get a good lot of It Much of the damage to leaves and blossoms can be prevented If the bashes are given a dally shower bath with water nnder good pressure. Should they still be attacked, powdered hellebore Or common road dust will fix the green sings, and spraying" with a eolation of tobacco water will knock tbe red spiders and green lice. The bed should be hoed frequently to keep tb soil loose and watered often enough ft keep It moist As to varieties, there is a great choice. Of tbe tea roses for summer planting, the American Beauty, Carnot, Bride, Victoria, Golden Gate. Mamen Cochet Liberty, Mme. Chatenay and La France are among the best Of the hardy roses. General Jack. Lalng. Dickson, Rohan, Morrison, Neyron and Wilder are very satisfactory. To do well roses need care. If they receive It they give a most grateful and delightful return. A COSTLY EXPERIENCE. By way of showing that bawks and owls are in reality friends and not enemies of tbe farmer a recent magazine article cites an experience which the state of Pennsylvania had a score of years ago. In the year 1885 the state legislature passed what was known as tbe scalp act which authorized the payment of a bounty of 50 cents a head on all bawks and owls killed In tbe state. Under this act bounties were paid on 100.000 birds, which was accepted by tbe farmers as pretty good proof that the chicken killers were exterminated. But this was not the end of their troubles. Within a period of two years gophers, field mice and noxious insects appeared in sucb numbers that tbe farmers were powerless to cope with tbem. and the losses which tbey suffered from this source as tbe direct result of the Indiscriminate hawk and owl slaughter were placed at $4,000,000. A Washington authority has found that 00 per cent of the food of the red shouldered hawk, usually known as tbe "ben hawk, consists of injurious mammals and insects, while 200 droppings of tbe barn owl were found to contain tbe skulls of 454 small mammals. 225 of this number being of the destructive field or meadow mouse. WEIGHT OF EGGS. ' A quite extensive test which has recently been made in determining tbe weight of eggs shows that they -vary to weight from fifteen to twenty-eight ounces per dozen, tbe average weight being about twenty-two ounces. Such figures as these would seem to justify the selUn of eggs by the pound and not by the dozen, especially in a season when they hare ranged from 25 to 40 cents per dozen regardless of state. During the year of 1908. it Is safely presumed from the nearest fis-nrcs obtainable, there was enough coffee drank in tbe United States alone to fill a cistern twenty miles long, one mile wide and two miles deep. Of the 78,00.0000 people In the United States. 84 per cent are coffee drinkers. There were more ; than f 11,000 carloads of coffee grain brought into this country last year, or sixty-seven Shiploads, to sav nothino- nf .nuIUr
lahinmeata that are not recorded, -
LAUNDRY tiirty 'rcioii.esJ nia-le leesn; '' it y ou (Ka t behove it try us. Richmond See am Laundry. Phcce 1151. ?eb234f
jrH0MPS0NAGENCY. For House" building." Loans onm-3St favorable terms. 710 Main. 14-7t Bargains Modern residence. West Side, ready for occupancy, this week. Swr the word if you want it for it will sell qu!ck. OWNER. HERMAN F PILGRIM 432 MAIN ST. RES. PHONE 1685. mayS-tf INSURANCE, iloore and Oghorn Fire Insurance, Bonds and Loans. Room 16 I. O. O. F. Building. 19-tf GERMAN Notary Public and Stean boat agent Han N. Ko!L 716 Mun street 5-tf MOTOR CYCLES. New and .-evn A Cc, ss-tf 405 Main. HAIR DRESSING. Ma.nicu.-ing parlors, latest equipment. Hair Goods. Mrs. Blickenstaff, Colonial Bldg. may6-lmo MONEY LOANED. North Eighth. J. M. Lacey. and 18-7t AUTO LIVERY Touring cars and runabouts for hire by hour or trip, especially low rates. Moline Sales Co., Phone 2384. 1-tf KING COAL While He Lives His Throne Is Fixes) In the United States. ; The part played by coal in tbe world's affairs can well be Illustrated by assuming the available supply to be suddenly cut off. Tbe huge railroad systems of America, would stop at once. So also would tbe electric power and lighting; In all cities and suburbs. 8teamshlp service would cease everywhere. Transit facilities would be dead. - Factories, manufao torles and shops would close down. tVast Industries like steel, iron, copper, etc., would cease. Armies of laborers would be thrown out of work. Malls, schools, tbe navy, newspapers, foreign and Internal trade all would cease to exist The trilogy governing commercial advance, heat light and power, except a negligible amount of water, olL etc, would be annihilated all this until some other form of power could be developed. Tbe possibility of such a cataclysm is not imminent for coal will reign for some time yet and Is destined to become a power whose capabilitles have as yet been comparatively felt only more faintly than would a feather on tbe bide of an elephant. The world needs coat The United States has that coal to deliver. It will be wholly natural that so potent a necessity will make for continued peace and understanding- among the powers of the world. Tbe coal mines of Europe are sunk about 8.000 feet deep. Coal Is still being quarried on the banks of the Ohio, and tbe mines of Europe are nearing the limit of commercial possibility. The manufacturing supremacy of the old world is passing to tbe new. Goal is king, and while be lives his throne is fixed forever in the United States Metropolitan Magazine. EARLY CARICATURES. Quaint Art and Humor of the Ancient Egyptians. Tbe fables of Aesop prove that the ancients were not without a liking for fun, and the remains of ancient art tell the same story. Examples of artistic humor are more common than la generally supposed. A drawing on a tile In the New York museum represents a cat dressed as an Egyptian woman of fashion. She is seated languidly on a chair, sipping wine out of a small bowl and being fanned and offered dainties by an abject looking tomcat with bis tan between bis legs. '1 be cat figures largely in the ancient comic groups of animal life. ' In n papyrus in tbe British museum a flock of geese are being driven by a eat and a herd of goats by two wolves with crooks and wallets. One of tbe wolves to playing a double pipe. There Is in Turin a papyrus roll that displays a whole series of such comical scenes. ' In the first place, a lion, a crocodile and an ape are giving a vocal and instrumental concert Next comes an ass dressed, armed and sceptered like a pharaoh. With majestic ewagger be receives the gttra pieesnt ed to him by a cat of high degree, to which a bell acta as proud conductor. lion and a gaseOe are playing at draughts, a hippopotamus is perched in a tree, and a hawk has climbed into tbe tree and is trying to dislodge him. Another picture snows a pharaoh In the shape of a rat drawn hi a carriage by prancing; greyhounda. He is pro-, to stent a fort gairlsened by having: no arms, but teeth and The rats; have battted hows and arrowsSt Ofbbua: '-! - Gold Medal .Flour nourishing. Sexus
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WOOL WANTED. IliSiioat rice. cili paid. 217 Wayn6 Ave., near Unlca depot, Richmond. Clendenin A Ca SS-tt
ARCHITECT. Geo. w. MajibtieiJ.rRldencirnArcLitect. Phone 1&S3. 906 H Main. Jac25-tf FUNERAL DIRECTORS. DOWNING 6SdNri6'NrSlh. Phone 3175. augl-tf UPHOLSTERING. Awnings and Upholstering J. H. BusssL 16 & 7ta St Phaue 179.. marll-tf FOOT DOCTOR. A sore cure for Corns. Prof. H. H. Kolliag. SO S. Sth. feblS-tt MONEY TO LOAN. 6nmapprOTealirstate Security! For terms apply to The People's Home & Savings Association. Jesse H. Brooks, Sec'y, Room S, Odd Fellows' Bldg. 15-71 UPHOLSTERING. Upholstering and Gen. Repairing. Holt house, 124 S. 6th. Phone 4367. 20-tf TWO QOOD BARQAINS Strictly modern seven room house, cement veranda, worth $3,000. will sell for $2,500 if sold before June 1st Six room house, electric lights, $1,500, $200 cash, balance by the month. QEORQE B. MOORE 616 MAIN ST. PHONE 4058. A Hungarian DisK Clean and trass a fat chicken. Staff It with breadcrumbs, onion and herbs and bind together the stuffing with tbe yolks of eggs. Tie on the breast slices of lemon and salt pork; then wrap in oiled paper. Add one whole onion, one clove and some chopped parsley and enough white stack to cover it Cook tightly covered for an hour. Strain the sauce, add one cupful of hot cream, seme batter, the yolk of an egg. a little parsley and a liberal amount of paprika enough to tint the sauce pink and to taste strongly of the condiment Pour over tbe chicken when done and serve in a deep dish with a border of well cooked rlee 3ood Housekeeping. CXEMENTCTX ' Don't try to make angel food unless you rse Gold Medal Flour. Bamma. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Sealed proposals will be received at the office of William E. Brown, Trustee of Green township, Williamsburg, Wayne county, State of Indiana, on or before 12 o'clock noon. June 14, 1909, and then opened, for the construction complete, of one room frame school building to be built near Williamsburg, Indiana, District No. 2. Drawings will be on file at the office of the Trustee and the office of W. 8. Kaufman A Son, Architects, Richmond, Indiana, on and after the 2nd day of June, 1909. Eacb proposal shall be accompanied by a certified check in the sum of one hundred ($100.00) dollars, made payable to the Tiuatve as a guarantee of good faith, and the bidder, if awarded the contract, will enter into a contract within five days, and give a surety bond for One Thousand ($1,000.00) dollars. In case the bidder falls . to furnish bond and enter into a contract the above said check to be forfeited, as liquidated damages. Should any bid be rejected, such check will be returned to the bidder within three days, and should any bid be accepted, such check will be returned upon the proper execution and securing the contract The Trustee reserves the right to reject any and all bids. WILLIAM E. BROWN, Trustee, dly 20-27-3 ...... SCHEDULES Qsrc3 Ccjr .la Etfcct April 11. SJM.
STATIONS I Jl" Lv CxS O O Sena Chlcaso . .li10.0Spi " ftjfi Peru Ar I.lSp 1-11 ' 1-Ilp Peru ......... 1.21p 1.11 .0O 4.41p Mrton 1.1 Sp 3.1 Cm 7. Mm S.lip Mcnde l.Olp 4.1 T.St Clip Richmond ... 4.2p S.X1 9.22 T.rep Ct. Grove .... 4 SJp S.6S .. S.llp Clnelnt 4. top 7.20) ' l.10p West rttrnsid niri tl rMrspo) STATIONS i 2 I I Lu . Lv ExS P p .Sana
S.15!l.Br Ct. Grove .... Richmond.. Mattel ...... Marion ...... Peru Ar. .,..- Pent ......... Chle-o ....... t.S5ni.S4p( 14.30mJli.eamJ MS 14.10 11.se T.eep ll-SOm! 1.211 S-3VP lZ-mOpl 2.14ml 9. Sepjll.50 1-ID1 z.iaaj lS.lOpI 1.S3P S.lp S.40p 2.Sd4 X.XSJ -4p 7-S6J (11th 8t- 8ttlon Vetlbald Tr!. Cattajco ard Cteetanatl. n.rti, Mmivm crvle. Through sleeper ma train Nos. S and 4 between Cblrags aad.421a ctnaaU. rtn Buffet train 1 and X - rer trmln etnr lavhrMttea cU -. C
MAY
Train leaves Richmond 5:20 a. m. Returning leave Cincinnati, 10 p. m. Per particulars call C. A. BLAIR, Pass. 41 Ticket Agt, Richmond. Heme Tel 2062. CCSSD TCI? To r.lane!2 end Pcra VtaCC6LQ.11. C A. Clair, r. T. A. Tel.: POPULAR Via Chlecso. Clnolnnctl Q. Louisvl3 R. R. Oeason 1C00 $60.15 To SEATTLE. WASH Round Trip, -account of Alaska Yukon Exposition. Selling; dates May to October. Final return limit. October Slat $15.20 To TORONTO, ONT., Round Trip, account of Canadian National Exposition. Selling dates August 37 to Sept 9. Final return limit Sept 14th. $35.65 To DENVER, COLO, Round Trip, account of Annual Convention National Education Association. ' SellIng dates, July 1st 2nd. 3rd and 4th. ' Final return limit Sept 1st $19.05 To ST. PAUL, MINN Round Trip, account of United Society Christian Endeavor. Selling dates. July 4th. 5th and 6th. Final return limit July ' 31st ' , $24.30 To ATLANTIC CITY, N. J Round Trip, account of American Medical Association. Selling dates June 3rd. 4th. 5th and Cth. Final return Raw it June 19th. $4.50 ' To LOUISVILLE, KY Round TMp, account of Mystic Shrine Meeting Selling; dates June 5th. Cth. 7th and 8th. Final return limit June 17th. $13.40 To ASHEVILLE, N. C Round Trip. account of National Convention Travellers.' -Selling dates May 17th. 28th. 29th and 30th. " Final return limit June 30th. $19.85 To HARRISONBURG, VA, Round Trip, account of National Confer-, ence Church of Brethren. Selling dates May 24th to 31st Final return limit July 15th. - For reduced rates to points in North.. East. South or West call ; , . f ; v c. A- Blair. ; --;tPass 4 Ticket Agt; C, C. A L. R- R,' Home Phone ZOaz. Richmond, ino. "Married and ehr ' "Tea, indeed: been housekeeping; week now." "How do tou Uke tout laxle Husb! I won't permit yea to that way of my husband phta Ledger. fTbne Table EOeetrre Oct. XL 127.) ml ue
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