Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 332, 7 October 1909 — Page 7
PAGE SfiVlUl. OLSON THE V, Branch : Off ices Branch offices are located in every part of the city and county towns. leave your want ad with the one nearest you. Rates are the same. RATES PALLADIUM o o o o o o 1 cent per word. 7 days for the price of 5 days. We charge advertisements sent in by phone and collected for after its insertion. Defeated Steinmetz of Cincinnati in Two Straight Falls. i1 Want Ado Colminnies P0STL DID NOT ARRIVE
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXD SUJf-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, OCTOHEK 7, 15HW.
I BOER
For Yonnr CoeveoSeece LIST OF AGENCIES. Braccn offices are located In every part of the city. Leave your WANT ADS with the one nearest you- The rates are the same and you will save a trip to the main office.
South of Main. BRUENINQ A EICKHORN. 13th and S. E street. A. W. BLICKWEDEL, 8th and S. F. HENRY ROTHERT. 5th and S. H. North of Main. QUIGLEY DRUG STORE, 821 N. E St. CHILES & SON. 18th and N. C St. WM. HIEGER, 14th and N. G St. JOHN J. GETZ. 10th and N. H St.
RATES ' cent per word 7 days for the pilce of G days. We charge advertisements sent In by phone and collect after Its Insertion.
WANTED. WANTED You to enroll now for the class which enters next Monday at the Richmond Business College. C-if WANTED A good girl for general housework. Apply at once to 117 N. 13th St. 0-ot WANTED Vise and lathe hands in machine shop. Richmond Mfg. Co. 19-tf WANTED Union carpenters at the new High School building, corner of North 9th and B streets. 28-tf WANTED Girl to do housework at once. Call 227 N. 10th St. 21-tf WANTED 4 H.P. gasoline engine; 127 S. 12th. 7-7t WANTED All persons suffering from piles or any form of rectal ailment, write me for free trial of Positive painless File Cure. S. U. Tarney. Auburn, Ind. 4eod-tt The Markets Indianapolis Market. REPRESENTATIVE SLE8. HOGS. No. 47 27 47 35 16 54 61 55 75 86 98 59 92 54 50, 4S 03 32 69 69 47 55
Av. Dk. Prlr 70 . . $3.25 81 . . 5.00 104 . . 6.10 112 .. 6.50 130 . . 6.75 130 . . 7.00 132, .. 7.25 .148 .. 7.40 167 . . 7.50 156 . . 7.60 173 40 7.70 173 80 7.75 180 120 7.75 203 ... 7.75 160 . . 7.80 191 160 7.80 192 40 . 7.85 211 120 7.90 211 . . 8.00 226 200 8.15 248 240 8.15 292 40 8.30
INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Best heavies $7.00$S.3O Good to choice T.tiOft 7.S" Best pigs 6.25 6.50 HliST STEER?. Good to choice steers .... 6.35 7.50 Choice to fancy yearlings 4.75 5.50 6TOCK CATTr K. Good to hvy feeding steers i.50 4.73 Fair to good feeders .... 4.25 4.50 Inferior to choice stockers 3.00 4.50 Common to fair heifers .. 2.50(g) 3.25 BUTCHER CATTLE. Good to choice heifers .... 4.50 5.50 Choice to fancy cows ..... 3.50 4.73 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice veal 5.50 8.50 Fair to heavy calves ..... 3.50 7.25 SHEEP AND LAMBS. Best yearlings 4.50 5.00 Good to choice sheep ... 4.25 5.00 Good to choice lambs .... 6.23 7.00 Richmond Hay Market (Omar G. Wnelan.) New timothy hay (loose) $14.00 Timothy hay $12.00 Mixed hay $13.00 New oats. . 3035c New wheat per bu. . . $1.00 Corn 60c Rirhmrmr! firoln MopIaI MIVIIIIIVIIU VII Will IMUI CU Mllchmond Holler Mllli) New wheat, per bu $1.10 Corn, per bu C0c Rye, per bu ., 1,00 Bran, per ton.. .. .. .. .. ....$26.00 Middlings, per ton $28.00 Clover seed, per bu $3.50 Richmond Seed Market. (Runs & Cd.) Timothy.. .. .... .. ..$1.00g$2.00 Clover seed G.50 6.73 Richmond. CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best lingj. average 200 to 230 pounds .... $7.50$7.75 Good to heavy packers .. 7.00 7.75 Common and rough 6.75 7.00 Steers cora fad.. .. .... 4 75 5.25 Keifers ................ 3.50Q 4.30 Fat cows .. ............ .. 3.50 4.00 BuJ' 3.25 tf 3.75
Central. QUIGLEY DRUG STORE. 4th and Main. West Richmond. JOHN FOSLER. Richmond Ave. and West 1st. GEO. H. SHOFER. 3rd and W. Main. Falrview. J. J. MULLIGAN, 1093 Sheridan St.
WANTED Men to learn Barber trade. Few weeks completes. Thorough: practical training. Moler graduates command highest wages. Our diplomas recognized everywhere. Shop experience and wages before completing. Catalogue mailed free. Moler Barber College, Cincinnati, O. 17-tf WXNTEDYTTfTC. A. Night-School for men. Practical classes now enrolling. 2S-tf WANTED If you want money in place of your city property or farm, go right to Po:ternld's Real Estate office. Kelley Block. 8th and Main. 14-ti See Mrs. Hiser about Shorthand and Bookkeeping. Terms cheap. 33 S. 13th St. Phone 2177. septS-tf WANTEDStoves- blackened set up and furnaces cleaned. 103O Main. Phone 1778. 3Q-tt WANTEDTo trade RichmondproperCalves 6.000 7.0C Lambs 5.50 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by the Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens, dressed, per !b. ..18c Old chickens, per lb 18c COUNTRY PRODUCE. Creamery butter, per lb 32c Country butter, per lb iS20c Eggs -..23c JOIJK MAN MISSING The mysterious disappearance of Charles A. Lufuze, a junk dealer living on rural route 11. out of CenterPenny asking him to assist in finding him. According to the letter received by Mr. Penny, Lafuze left his home September 21, for Liberty and has not been heard from since. He took with him a spring wagon. Mrs. Lafuze says that she and four small children, the oldest of whom Is 10 years, are .dependent on the husband and father. They, are in destitute circumstances, with scarcely any clothes or food, and no money. Mrs. Lafuze furnishes the following description of her husband: 34 years old, height, five feet, six inches, blue eyes, brown hair, v.eignt. 165 pounds, crooked left arm, wore corduroy trousers, black and white striped shirt, straw hat and an old pair of shoes. OLD HARVARD HOUSE (American News Service) Stratford-on-Avon, Oct. 7 Harvard House, the home of Katherine Rogers harvard, mother of the founder of Harvard university, was formally opened yesterday with elaborate ceremonies and with ambassador Whitelaw Reid officiating. Harvard House was purchased and restored by Edward Morris, the Chicago millionaire, at the suggestion of Marie Corelli, the novelist The house Ir. a rendezvous for Americans visiting j airauora ana. in tact, is sougnt out by tourists from all over the world. The old house was built in 1506 and has been restored to exact similtude to th condition of the fifteenth century. It is the property of Harvard universi ty, having been presented to that In stitution by Mr. Morris. SUSPECTS ARRESTED. Bruce Thompson and Floyd Easter looked bad to the Dolice and were ar.rested last night on suspicion. Upon their promise to leave the city this morning, in the city court, they were released by Judge Converse. City Statistics Marriage Licenses. Walter B. Woodworth and Ruth Mott, both of Richmond. Deaths and Funerals. EGAN John H. Egan, a resident of Utah, who, while visiting Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mitchell, north of the city, was taken suddenly 111 and died yesterday afternoon. The burial will be at Liberty, Saturday morning. He is survived by his wife, two sons, one daughter and several brothers and sisters.
ty for farm. Give or take difference. Address Trade, care Palladium. l-7t WANTED House cleaning to do by vacuum cleaning process. Call Richmond House Cleaning Co. Phone 1916. 1-lmo
NORTH POLE discovered by Americans. Cook's own story and Peary's expedition. Of thrilling interest. Going like wild fire. Outfit free. Big terms. Act quick. Zlegler Co., 267 Fourth St., Philadelphia. 2-3-5-7 FOR SALE. FOR SALE City property and farms, merchandise stocks and fire insurance. Porterfield, Kelly Block, 8th and Main. 6 tf FOR SALE Babycab-andr6be 527 N. 19th. 2-7t FOR SALE Modern 7 room house; call at 510 S. 10th. 25-tf FOR SALE Watches at J. M. Lacy's Loan office, 721 Main street. 17-tf ELECTRIC Lamps, Wellsbach Gas Lamps and Lighting Supplies, Electric Irons, Steam and Water Heating, Plumbing and Sewerage at Meerhoffs, 9 S. 9th. Phone 1236. 6-tf FOR SALE House and lot. new kitchen cabinet; Morris chair, leather, with foot rest. 200 egg incubator; also garden cultivator and seeder, 440 S. 15th. G-7t FOR SALE Two ladies coats, reading lamp, bed, springs and other articles, at a bargain. 40 S. 13th. 0-'t FOR SALE Physician's complete outfit. 1117 S. A. 0-2t FOR SALE 1G7 acre improved stock and grain farm three miles east ! Richmond. Price low. H. R. Robinson, trustee. 5-It FOR- S ALE-Walk Lumber. C. W. Kramer & Co. 29-tf
Society Women Lead Bidders at Smugglers' Sale in New York
New York. Oct. 7. Collector Loeb's smugglers' sale today In the seizure room of the appraiser's warehouse, resembled a corner in the field of a baseball ground, for he had provided a regular "bleacher" of ten tiers of seats on the main side of the room for the rush of bargain hunters. Every society woman who appeared was escorted to a reserved s-eat, where she could look through the catalogue at her leisure, or look down an1 smile upon the auctioneer, Mr. Sheldon, when he accepted a bargain offer. When the stand was full and more women continued to arrive, Caspar Schaefer, assistant to Colonel J. H. Story, chief of the seizure room, eompeWed some of the men bargain "fans" to give up their seats to the women. It was more like a reception than an auction, as the colonel had his assist ants brew tea and pass a cup to each HE REACHES LONDON James J. Jeffries, Unbeaten World's Champion, to Return Home. HE WILL SAIL SATURDAY (American News Service London, Oct. 7. James J. Jeffries, unbeaten heavyweight champion fight, er of the world, has arrived here and will sail for America on the steamer Lusitania Saturday. Jeff has improv ed greatly by his trip through Europe i and says he will require but little hard work to fit himself for a fight with Johnson. When told that there Is some doubt in the minds of the public here as to his sincerity of his agreement to take on the negro fighter, Jeff said:
Chocolate Ammunition Used by 5,000 Girls in Necktie Strike
New York, Oct. 7. Chocolate is depended upon by 5,000 girls who quit making neckties because they wanted higher wages and shorter hours, to win their strike. They are foresworn to subsist chiefly upon chocolate until the strike is won, and they are to use chocolate as bait for other girls who may take their places in the shops and for their employers, should they meet the men in a conference. The strikers began work: at headquarters by making an appropriation out of the union fund for chocolate. The beverage was served all day during meetings and between meetings at Clinton hall, 131 Clinton street, on the assumption that it is nutritious anJ cheap and would save the girls who have quit work the expense of buying lunches. At the afternoon meeting the strikers voted to equip picket squads, cent out to watch the necktie shops. with a liberal supply of chocolate creams to be used in tempting workers who had
WANT AD LETTER U
IT
The following are replies to Palladium Want Ada. received at this office. Advertisers will confer a great favor by calling for mall In answer to their ads. Mall at this office up to 12 noon today as follows: A Bicycle ... 1 Cottage 2 Trade 1 Exchange 2 . . . , Farm 1 sScian 5 Mall will be kept for SO days only. All mail not called for within that time will be cast out. FO RSALE Extra good Shrop. maie lambs. Mait Starr, Boston, Ind 14 D, R. R. No. 2. 17-tf FOR SALE Dressed curb stone suitable for building. Telephone 1247 or 23C0. 29-tf FOR SAL Excellent steamboat accommodations from Baltimore to Itremen, Germany. Hans N. Koll, 716 Main St. 29-tf MODERN HOUSES with all conveniences, one in the South End and other on West Side. Prices right. 529 Main. Phone 1390. 28-tf FOR SALE Columbus phaeton, fine condition; new handmade harness. 47 S. 18th. l-7t FOR- S AUE bne-thlFd horse power electric motor, direct current. Phone 3133. 31-tf FOR SALE OR TRADE An Ideal sjburban home suitable for retiring farmer or busiuess man. Phone 3136. 27-tf LOST. LOST Halter in alley back of 104 S. 12th. Return to Palladium. 7-lt LOST Five dollars at market house. Leave at Palladium. 7-lt woman, with a cracker, when the noon hour arrived. The diplomatic colonel had a reason for this. He found that many of the women were leaving to get luncheon and as they were the most lively bidders against the dealers it would affect the sale, so he served light lunch to hold them. Only one-half of the articles comprising the 1,100 lots in the saie were disposed of. The remainder will be sold tomorrow. Included in the varied assortment of merchandise was a basket containing 20 pounds of bones, but whether of man or animal was not explained, there being only one bidder who secured the gruesome lot for 25 cent. An old-fashioned country circus outfit, wagon, tents and other apparatus, which came from Liverpool, Eng., on the White Star liner, Georgic and was never claimed. Is another offering. It will be sold tomorrow afternoon. Dr. Carl Hermann was the name on the traveling circus. "I was silent even under the heaviest fire of questions as to whether I would take on Johnson until I was fully satisfied that I could get in shape. When I learned that I could get into condition I publicly announced my willingness to fight and backed my agreement with a S.VKK) forfeit, which is now up in America. I will leave here Saturday and hurry to Chicago, where I hope to meet Johnson and sign final articles. I can see no hitch as matters stand now. Unless Johnson has changed from his stand when he met Berger. my personal representative. "I'll not only sign with him, but I'll bet him a few thousand and then defeat him just as I have all my other opponents. I am not the Jeffries of old and I never expect to be. but I will be good enough to beat Johnson. I desire the fight to take place In America and prefer "Frisco. If Jim Coffroth of California will offer as much as the highest bidder he can have the fight I do not want to train months and then have authorities step in and prevent the fight." PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY. not responded to the first strike call and new girls who may appear seeking employment There is to be no hair pulling in the strike. The pickets are under orders to wave one finger at every girl who looks susceptible to union influence, and. when the girl responds and comes over, to offer her a luscious chocolate cream. Pickets are forbidden to eat any of the creams themselves. So far the strikers, most of whom are not much more than school age, are enjoying their walk-out immensely. All agreed that it is lots more fun getting together In Clinton Hall, electing officers, drinking chocolate and calling their bosses mean old things than toiling in sultry shops twelve hours a day or more. Re-enforced by twenty or so cups of chocolate, theysjoted tonight to stay on strike until they get their demands or until every man la the United States is without a necktie to cover his collar button.
13a
FOR RENT. FOR RENT-Furnished flat, modern accommodations. 1117 S. A. C-::t FOR RENT-Furnished room with light, heat and bath. 04 S. 12th. 6-7t FOR RENT Seven rooms and bath. Phone 1092. 4-tf FOR RENT Six room house with bath, 211 W. Pearl. Apply 204 5. 12th. Phone 2477. 3-tf FOR RENT Five room flat, modern, 38 S. 11th street. 2-tf FOR RENT Five room house. $S. Phone 313. 22-if FOR RENT FurnisheU rooms, heat, with bath for gents, at the Grand. feb22-tf FOR RENT Furnished rooms with bath, 1115 S. A street. 5-7t FOR RENT Five room flat with bath. Call at 37 S. 4th. 5-3t MISCELLANEOUS. Have your house cleaned by Vacuum process. Rich. House Cleaning Co., Phone 1913 or Barters Book Store. oct4-lmo BUSINESS CLASSIFIED INSURANCE. MOORE A OGBORN, Automobile and
FMMIi WANT ADS PAY
Stork's Freight Neglected By Physicians of Chicago
Chicago, Oct. 7. A little matter of 50 cents is the reason why more than a fourth of the births in Chicago are not reported to the county clerk by the attending physicians, while all deaths become known, according to W. L. Bodine, superintendent of compulsory ed neat ion, who spoke before the Socal Economics club yesterday. The law provides that physicians shall receive SO cents for each birth they report. Unfortunately, however, no appropriation has ever been made for such purpse by the county board. As a result little interest is evinced by local doctors in the amount of luggage brought into town by the storks. With HE MAY BE PAROLED (Palladium Special) Indianapolis, Oct. 7. Application was filed with the governor for the parole of Ray Lamphere, the Ganness murderer, sent to the Michigan Citv prison from Laporte. Lamphere is said to be dying df consumption. H. L. Finley, of Laporte. a brother-in-law of Lamphere, is here to urge the parole. Mark Thistlethwaite, secretary to the governor, has written Warden Reid for a report on Lamphere's condition. Germany has instituted a meteorological service especially reserved for aerial navigation. All the data gather ed in the observations of Europe will be sent to Germany and, collated with those taken at Linenberg, Grorswentsel and Friedrichshafen. will be centralized at Aix-la-Chapelle. There they will be recollated and the results sent out by telegraph for the use of the German aero clubs. By this means it will be known with precision whether any particular day is favorable or unfavorable for an ascent Low, One Way Colonist Rates To the Coast Via Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville R. R. Effective September 15 to October 15 Only $36.45 To Seattle To Tacoma To Portland To San Francisco To Los Angeles To Texas To Mexico, Etc., For particulars call a A. BLAIR. Pass Ticket AgL
Home Tel. 2062. Richmond.
... AUTO LIVERY ... Hour or Trip. flCLINE SALES CO. C. A. Piehl. 922 Main. Phone 1633. Res. Phone 420S.
Fire Insurance. Bonds. Loans and Rentals. Room 16, L O. O. F. Bldg. 13-tf LAUNDRY. Dirty clothes made clean: If you dont believe It. try us. Richmond Steam Laundry. Phone 1251. feb23-tf Phone 2147 calls the Eldorado Laundry at IS N. 9th. Work guaranteed. aug25-tf BICYCLES AND MOTOR CYCLES. Bicycle and Motor Cycle Repairing; Waking & Co.. 406 Main. Phone 2006. 23-tf UPHOLSTERING. J. H. RUSSELL. 16 South 7th Street Phone 1793. Repair work a spec laity. U-tf FUNERAL DIRECTORS. WILSON. POHLMEYER DOWNING. 15 North Tenth. Fhone 1335. Private ambulance. 28-tf REAL ESTATE. For good 12 rental investment. See Thompson, 710 Main. -7t REAL ESTATE. For Reliable First Mortgage See Thompson, 710 Main. C-7t no fees in sight they forget to report "Chicago gets a full count on coffins but not on cradles," declared Mr. Bodine. "The school census enumerators In May, 1903, found by house to house canvass, 155,454 children under four years of age. Tet the birth records at the county clerk's office for the four years preceding, showed only 1)2,749 births reported. As a result Chicago is maligned abroad as a race-suicide town. "Dr. Herman Spalding of the health department stated today that this laxity on the part of physicians reporting births has existed more or less for th past six years." Mr. Bodine declared that a registration of all births in the city would render Impossible the present evasions of the child labor and compulsory education law. every child's age being on record for public Inspection. "It is a queer condition of affairs when a child has to die in order that It be officially recorded for the first time that it has been alive." said Mr. Bo dine. "The birth registration In the county cleric's office Is a farce and the doctors of Chicago are derelict In their patriotic and professional duty." Little interest has been shown among public school teachers in the election of teachers' pension fund trustees, which takes place this week. Fonr thousand teachers were given ballots yesterday and asked to mail them to the secretary of the school board to be counted Saturday. There are but two candidates remaining to fill the two vacancies, name Mrs. Serena H. Haynes of the Clarke school and Miss Nellie I Now lan of the Adams school. K One Price Cl ChtLiiers li Furnishers
Charles Olson, the Indianapolis grappler, defeated Charles Stelnmets of Cincinnati last evening at the Coliseum by pulling his shoulders to the mat in two stralgt falls in 25V, minutes and 17 minutes respectively. About 500 persons witnessed the performance, which was the opening t the game In this city, for th season. Charles Post!, the Milwaukee boy. who is a pupil of Frank: Ootch. the champion wrestler of the world, was scheduled to meet Olson, but owing to an injury received Monday night at Chicago had to call his contract off. However, Stelnmets put np a creditable match, considering the fact that he was opposed to the champion middle weight wrestler of the world. Olson did not have to exert himself to win the match. He allowed Btefomets to get all the holds knows ta tfc game and then interested the crowd tQ breaking what seemed certain falls. Stelnmets played aggressively most of the time, but when Olson assumed the offensive there was something doing. Olson used the toe hold a number of times. The first fall was secured by a full Kelson and the second by the toe hold.
FILES DIVORCE SUIT. A divorce salt was filed yesterday afternoon by William A. Bond to tho Interests of John B. Hampton, agalast Mary E. Hampton. He alleges that his wife left him In January HOT. Ho' ROUND TRIP TO cm emu at. VlaCCfiLD.il SUM AY OCT. 10 Train leaves Richmond. 8:20 a. m.; returning leave Cincinnati 10 p. m. Nearly 15 hours In "CSney." ' For particulars call C. A. BLAIR. P. 4b T. A, Rome TeL 2062. Uzziny, Oct 18D I will sell at my residence 5 miles east of Connervi!lc: 45 head of horses Extra good draft mares 25 Cattle, Sheep, Hogs, Etc. .niVd, VI & Kara . . . i CONNERSVILLE R. P. O. Ne. t. PHONE 3002. Sale Starts at 9.-00 A. M. Oct 18th. Mfi For FaH and Wfei!2r . -1 , AH the new styled and patterns and ' snappy ones too, with that swing and carriage to them that marks true supremacy over other makes the prices $10 to $25.
KFGE2 feEScly 803 E2Ia S&cet
