Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 127, 14 March 1910 — Page 7

THE RICHMOND PALIADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, 3IONDAY, MARCH 14, 1910.,

PAGE SEVEN.

Branch offices' are Socated in every part off the city and county towns. Leave your want ad with the one nearest you. Rates are the sanrse.

For Yoiur Convenience LIST OF AGENCIES. Branca offices are located In every part or the city. Leave your WANT ADS with the one nearest yov- The rates are the same and you will save a trip to the main office.

South of Main. BRUENING, Thirteenth and South 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 SL WM. HIEGER, 14th and N. G St. JOHN J. GETZ, 10th and N. II St.

RATES I cent per word 7 days for the price of C days. We charge advertisements sent in by phone and collect after its insertion.

WAIMTFD WANTED To laundry your lace curVVr .r tains, neatly done; 11 Ft. Wayne WANTED Place as housekeeper; ad- Ave. 12-7t dress Sarah E. Wertz, New Paris, O. ffED-Y. M. C. A. Night school 14-2t fQr men. ciasse?- i.ow enrolling. FOR SALE Prize winning and'laying WAITED To rent by AlHTFToth, 7eggs for hatching at reasonable pri- room house with bath not to txces; male bird was formerly owned ceed $1S.00. Phone 360S. 7-7t by Harley Stick. Won 1 prize at TRUNKSTbTggage and packages delivl Farmland and Richmond poultry ered promptiy by Merchant's delivshows. 506 S. 5th. 10eod-6t ery Walter E. Murray. 519 Main.

watches, guns, revolvers, bicycles. Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday nights. J. M. Lacey, Pawn Broker, Eighth and Main. 11-eod-lmo WANTED A film camera. Address Camera, 5'JS S. lth. i:j-7t WANTED Last and milling machine men, tinners and assemblers, var- " nish and rough stuff rubbers and trimmers; good wages and steady work for experienced men and helpers. Reo Motor Car Company, Lansing, Mich. 9-14t WANTED You to go to Muray Billiard Parlors for recreation. 12-tf Market

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS (Furnished by L. J. Schwabacher & Co., Hittle Block. Phone 2330. - Schwenke, Manager.) New York, March 14. Open High Low L. & N. .Ao.iV2 1531a 153 Great Northern 1 37 138 14 137 Copper.. 79 Vs 79 78 American Smelting 87 87 8614 Northern Pacific 137 137 136 U. S. Steel 88 89 8S U. S. Steel pfd 122 122! 122 Pennsylvania 137 137 137 St. Paul 146 146-V H6V2 B. & 0 1 H3V8 113 113 New York Central 126 12oV2 125 Reading I6SV2 169 168 Canadian Pacific ..179 179 179 Atchison ..' ..117 117 116 s Southern Pacific .' 129 130 129 I' Union Pacific 1S9 190 1S9

CHICAGO. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS (Furnished by L. J. Schwabacher & Co., Hittle block. Geo. A. Schwenke, Manager.) Chicago, March 14. Wheat Open High Lot Close May ... 113 114 113 114 July ... 101 108 107 108 Sept. ... 105 Corn Open High Low Close May 64 65 64 65 July ... 66 67 66 66 Sept. ... 67 67 66 67 Oats Open High Low Clos May ... 45 46 45 45 July ... 43 43 43 43 Sept. ... 40 40 40 40 VISIBLE SUPPLY. Wheat, Increase 634.000 Corn, Decrease 475,000 Oats, Increase 352,000 INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. Indianapolis, March 14. Hogs Receipts. 2,0(0: primes, 11.00. Cattle Receipts. tHSO; steers. .$7.25. Sheep Receipts, 100; best, $G.;iO. Lambs, $).50. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK. East Buffalo, March 14. Hogs Receipts, T.KOO; Yorkers, $11.23; mixed heavies, $ll.;5t. Cattle Receipts. 2.70O; prime steers, 7.73; butchers' $t.7o. Sheep Receipts, 9.000; primes, S8.75. "Veals Receipts, .,1,400; choice, $10.30. Lambs, $10.5O.PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK. Pittsburg. March 14. Cattle Receipts. 110 loads; extras, $7.90: primes. $7.20. Hogs Receipts, 30 double decks; prime heavy, $l!.2i; Yorkers, $11.10. Sheep Receipts, 12 loads; primes, $S.50; lambs, $10.40. Calves Receipts. 700; tops, $10. You needn't suffer with sick headache, tmtt. Zestion, constipation or any other troubles arisiitg f.-ora a disordered stomach. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin will care jrou and keep you well. Try it keep it on hand tae rear around.

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Central. QUIGLEY DRUG STORE. 4th and Mala. West Richmond. JOHN FOSLER. Richmond Ave. and West 1st. GEO. H. SHOFER, 3rd and W. Main. Fairvlew. J. J. MULLIGAN. 1093 SherldaD St. FOR SALE 100 acres, fair improvements; good timber. A bargain at $70 per acre. Apply now to J.. E. Moore, over 0 North Seventh. ' '23-tf W ANTED Men to learn barber trade. Demand greater than supply. Graduates earn splendid pay. Few weeks completes. Wages while learning. Unusual opportunity to start an Independent business. Catalogue mailed free. Moler Barber College, Cincinnati, O. 21-tf WANTED If you want money u place of your city property or farm, go rigfit tc Forterileid's Real Estate office. Kelley Block. 8th and Main. 14-ti Report Geo. A. Close 153 13S 79 86 136 88 122 137 146 113 i: 04 168 179 116 130 189 CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK. Cincinnati. March 14. Cattle Receipts, 1,JH)0; shippers, .7.tvi. Hogs Receipts, 2,.H!0; shippers, $ll.oo. Sheep Receipts, SO; strong. Lambs. Receipts, -HK; tops, 0.33. Best Calves $4.75$S.50. INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN. Indianapolis, March 14. Market closed owing to death of broker. TOLEDO GRAIN. Toledo, March 14. Wheat Corn Oats Rye .. .$1,120 J7c 4Sc Sic Clover Seed U.S5 RICHMOND MARKETS. Furnished by Glen Miller Stock Yards LIVE STOCK. Best hogs, average 200 to 230 pounds $10.25.?10.S." Cood to heavy packers $10.00 Common and rough 6.43 7.70 Steers, corn fed 4.73 5.50 Fat cows 3.00 4.25 Bulls 3.00 4.00 Fat bulls 4.00 4 50 Veal Calves S.00 9.00 Yorkers S.253 S.75 RICHMOND HAY MARKET. (Omar G. Whelan) Timothy hay (loose) $15$16 Oats 35S37c Straw, baled ?6.00 $6.50 Corn ; 57c RICHMOND GRAIN MARKET. (Richmond Roller Mills) New wheat, per bu $1.13 Corn, per bu , ....50c Rye, per bu 70c Bran, per ton $25.00 Middlings, per ton I2S.00 Clover Seed, per pu-, $6.00 RICHMOND SEED MARKET. (Runge & Co.) Timothy .... .... ...$1.90$2.00

PALLADIUM

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Waet Ado

FOR SALE. 1XK SALE City property and farms, merchandise stocks and fir6 Insurance. Porterheld. Kelly Block, fcth and M.aln. " - 6-tf FOR-SALE Modern 6 room house. 324 Pearl St. 14-2t FOR SALE $1,600, bargain, 3i acres, room house, barn, fruit, one-fourth mile on Middleboro pike. D. A. Dennis. 14-lt FOR SALE Indian blanket, 26 N. 11th 14-3t FOirALErnle-!! Buff Leghorn fggs for hatching, $1.00 per setting of 15 eggs. 400 S. 5th St. Phone 2204. 14-3t POR SALE Walk Lumber. C. W. Kramer & Co. 29-tf FOR SALE A lucrative business, centrally located, conducted by ladies who wish to leave the city. For particulars see Turner Hadley. 13-7t ; FOR SALE Good work horse cheap. HwS S. J street. "i " ' 13-:.t . FOR" SXLFlJ.KmgpfaTio'ConTest certificate. Address "M. C." Palladium. i;?-tf FOR SALE Fine piano cheap. Mahogany case. Am moving; must sell at once. Phone lo!x. l.j-i't FOR SALE Certificate good for $125. any King Piano; will sell one-half price, good until March 22nd. Call 1527 N. E. 13-4t REAL ESTATE I have a large number of improved farms well located, city properties and lots for sale. One per cent commission on large sales. $1 for renting city properties. FOR SALE Good brick residence property, nine rooms, bath room, gas, hard and soft water, furnace. Property sold quick at a bargain. Call phone 3037. , . 11-yt FOR SALE Rubber tired,, phaeton and set of single harness. hone 305O or 111 S. 21 11 -4t LEARN BOOKKEEPING. Shorthand, Kaufman, over S28 Main. Phone 2394. 2-tf Clover seed $0.5O$7.0O POULTRY. (Paid by the Bee .Hive Grocery) Young chickens, dressed, per lb ..lS20c Old chickens, per lb ...18 20c Turkeys .....lS22o Ducks 15o COUNTRY PRODUCE. Creamery butter, per lb Eggs Country butter, per lb,, .20c .25c .v-x TWO FAST SKATEHS llaiicy Davidson, of St. Taul, Minn., the champion roller skater of the i world, and Jack Fotch of Chicago, an I exhibition skater, were in the city to- j day, the guests of M. C. Henley, the i manufacturer of roller skates. Mr. Davidson has won a number of medal3 and cups which he prizes very highly and also made a small fortune in the winning of prizes. SPOILED ITS EFFECT. A Speech to the Jury That Was Effectively Answered. A well known English barrister, whom we will call Mr;'Kj;' was a most eloquent speaker, anof nls vbice, particularly in its pathefWdnes. was melody itself. His powe?'6Ver a jury was astonishing, aiid it was very seldom that be failed to secure a verdict for his client. On one occasion, however, he was beaten and in such a ridiculous manner that a crowded court and even the grave judge were convulsed with laughter at the burlesque of the result. The case was a charge of murder. Mr. K. was for the defense. His peroration was exceedingly touching and beautiful. "Gentlemen of the jury." said he. "if you can And this unhappy prisoner at the bar guilty of the crime with which he is charged after the arguments to the contrary which I have laid before you, pronounce your fatal verdict. Send him to the dungeon, awaiting the death which he Is to receive at your hands. Then go to your families, lay your heads on your pillowsand sleep, if yon catr!' The" effect of the closing words was really thrilling. But presently the counsel for the prosecution rose and said: "Gentlemen of the jury, I should despair, after the affecting speech which has been made to you by my learned brother, of saying anything to do away with his eloquence. I never heard Sir. K. speak that better than when he spoke it now. Once I heard him speak it in a case of stealing at Leeds and again in a case at Manchester, and the last time I beard it was when two men were tried for pocket picking. But I never knew him to speak it so affectingly as Just now. This was a poser. The jury looked at one another, whispered together, and the speaker saw instinctively that he had them. He stopped at once, closing with a slsgle remark: "If you can't see. gentlemen of the Jury, that this speech fits all cases then there's no use my saying anything more." - - - And there wasn't. He had made his case and sot his verdict. Exc hans.

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Colininnie: WANT AD LOST Tne fc!lowl3 are replies to Palladium Want Ade. received at this office. Advertisers will confer a great 'avor by calling for mall .n answer to their ads. Mail at this office up to 12 noon today aa follows: A. B 4 0 1 Box 100 1 Stove Polishers 4 B. D. B 1 II. W. C 1 F. G 1 O. Y. & X. Q. 1 Mall will be kept tor 20 days only. Ail mail not called for within that time will be cast out FOR SALE White Rock eggs for setting. -2-27t S. 13th. Phone 147o. W. H. Bennett. 11 -7t CONCRETE BLOCKS-gCall up O. H. Wilson, new phone 324S, when or dering. FOR SALE Coal, Pocohontas $4.75 ton, Pittsburg $4.25. J. W. Hinds & Son. Phone 3124. 721 N. 12th St. 4-tf REAL ESTATE. A retiring farmer or business man can secure a fine suburban home with city conveniences. three squares from street car, by phoning 3130. 9-tf FOR SALE Seed Potatoes Early Rose, Green Mountain, Carmon No. 3, Irish Cobler. Samuel Glunt, Webster. Home Phone 5144-H. 97t FERTILIZERS. We manufacture High Grade Commercial Fertilizers. Prices reasonable. Call and see us before buying your spring supply. Clendenin Fertilizer Co. Richmond, Ind. 15-tf FOR SALE Four window frames, sash casings and glass, complete. Oeo. II. Knollenberg. 7-7t FOR SALE Make me an offer for a two-cylinder Ford runabout. Address W. L., Palladium. tf More Than the Mere Shilling Difference Between Them. MONEY CASTE IN ENGLAND. The Pound Is Straight Business Money, but the Guinea Is the Gentleman's Money A Nice Distinction In Charges and In Payments. "Funny thing." said the writer, who had just received a check for 2 2s. from London, "how the editor over la England paid me in guineas, not in English pounds. In fact. It would be an insult if the editor had simply paid me 2. "They've two kinds of money over there. One kind is straight business money. An even 2 would have meant in effect that I bad performed a routine job of some kind, such as compiling a table of statistics for the editor, and that I was being paid for mechanical labor. "But the editor adds an extra shilling to every pound he pays me. This means that I am not supposed to have performed any labor at nil, but to have created a work of art and submitted this work of art otherwise literature for art's sake. "My check is written 'Two guineas,' and the envelope in which it la sent me Is addressed 'John Smith. Esq. This in effect is a second recognition that I have submitted a piece of literary art Yet the figures on the check are '2 2s. to prevent errors In bookkeeping. "If I'd been on the staff of the periodical my salary would be paid me in pounds sterling, for then I'd be supposed to be working for pay and, according to English ideas, no longer a gentleman. "These two kinds of money, guineas and pounds, show up in many curious ways. All professional men are paid in guineas. If you are running a big private school you make a charge in guineas for tuition, and parents of your pupils pay you in guineas because you're supposed to be merely engaging in an altruistic, philanthropic project of building brawn and brain for Britain. But you pay the teachers in jour school in pounds sterling, for they're supposed to be working for pay. not for love. "If you're a doctor you make your bills for professional services out In guineas. Barristers are paid In guineas. Horse race prizes are given in guineas for all gentlemen's races. "The most curious mixture of all is the clergyman's pay. This ss a queer mixture of commercial and professional Ideas. The eharge of a parish is known as a living and is paid in pounds sterling, but if a wedding or a christening takes place in the parish the clergyman receives a personal fee, always guineas instead of pounds. "Artists are paid in guineas. The late James MacNeSU Whistler, who had a delightful habit of turning a keen wit on friends and making enemies thereby, was odc paid for a work of art in pounds sterling, a delicate implication that Whistler was a dauber and a tyro. "Two trades are paid in gvtneas for goods purchased, but other trades are paid in pounds sterling. These trades are the interior decorator and the jeweler TJie prefers ods are suntjos-

LETTER

GUINEAS

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POUNDS

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.

Live Stock Exchae; at Glen Miller Stock Yards. All kinds of live stock bought, sold or exchanged for cash or negotiable pajer. Will pay market price for veai cales. Bring them Saturdays. Phone, office. 3744. rhone, Shur'ey, 4184. Phone, Gaar, 2278. Qaar & Shurley FOR SALE Farm of 1274 acres, one mile from city, a good dairy farm, can give immediate possession, price 75 dollars per acre, easy payments. Phone 3139. 10-tf FOR SALE Clover seed. Phone 2196. 11-13 X. 9th St. 13-7t FOR SALE Baby carriage, ,up-to-date. good condition, will sell at one-third of original cost. Address "I. C. B." care Palladium. 5-tf FOR SALE A fine residence property on East Main street; eight rooms, bath, etc.. modern, $6,000 For trade, several city properties for farms or small tracts of land. Jones & Wilson, 7th and Main. Phone 1762. 2S-tf FOR S.XLK 157 acres for $10,000 within 12 miles of Richmond; would make a good stock and grain farm; immediate possession. See Geo. B. Moore, 616 Main. Phone 2459. 3-tf FOR SALE Big Four white oats for seed. Thomas L. King, Centervllle, Ind. 12-7t FOR SALE $2,MN property for ?1,1". Rents for 12 per month; leaving City. 4oT S. W. Third. 12-."t FOR RENT. FOR RENT Furnished room, beat, with bath for seats, at the Grand. feb22tf FOR RENT Rooms, bath. 109 N. 12th St. 8-7t ea to be wo. j 'of art. and sicli "commercial articles as watch chaius and watches are priced in guineas. Certain swell and exclusive London tailors, to whom you have to be intro duced, by the way, charge you in C guineas for the coats and trousers they consent to make for you. "Directors of companies were formerly paid in guineas for their attendance. They are now paid in pounds sterling, but when a pound sterling is in minted gold it isn't a pound sterling nny more, but a sovereign. "The idea is that directors of companies are always feed in gold, and as sovereigns only are coined now they are paid in sovereigns. The only exception is the directorate of the Bank of England. The members of the board are paid in golden guineas, part of a small store kept in the bank and tinted in the early years of the last century. "A gentleman wagers with his friends in guineas. He buys a hunter or a pony polo from a friend in guineas, but in pounds from a horse trader. But if he is buyins a work horse from a friend and equal he pays in pounds sterling. "If a gentleman wagers with a bookmaker at a race track he posts bis bet In pounds. If he tries to break the bank at Monte Carlo be puts up bis wagers on the roulette wheel in gold twenty franc pieces and speaks of his v. Innings or losses in pounds sterling, while he mentions his winnings or losses at bridge, paid in gold, in guineas. "There are hundreds of delicate distinctions in British etiquette In the matter of money. One of the most curious is that of a certain London club where the members receive their change in gold, silver and penny postage stamps, neither paper money nor copper being given, and gentlemen are not supposed to know any money except coined gold and silver." New York Sun. A Considerate Girl. Madge He said you were very punctual. Marjorie Why shouldn't he? 1 pever kept him waiting more than half an hour In my life. Llpplncott's. A good laugh Is sunshine Is the house. Thackeray. TO PLAN A PROGRAM City Clerk Balz Bescher received word from Mayor Darrow of Laporte. Ind., this morning to the effect that the state program committee for the municipal league would be in Richmond Wednesday morning of this week to confer with the committees from the various organizations of this city in regard to making arrangements for the holding of the state convention of the league in Richmond, in June. TO TALK OU TREES Prof. John F. Thompson, of the high school, will deliver an address this evening at the Commercial club meeting on the subject, "Uses and Abuses of Richmond Shade Trees." The lecture will be illustrated. The public is invited, to attend..

RATE!

FOR RENT Room with board, woman preferred; 41 S. 12th. -5t FO R R E N T G rou n d for cultivation and furnished rooms. Fhone ;:iu. Kl-7t FOR RENT Modern house, central location, to parties to board owners. Address Y. Palladium. K5--t FO R RENT Fou r room flat. 1 2:7 Main street. Phone 2244. l'-7t LOST. Host Hat on x. f Return to 32o N. A. Reward. 14-lt FOUND. FO' I N D- La id i e s ' tan glove on North 13th and A enreet. Owner can have same by identifying it at Palladium office. It BUSINESS CLASSIFIED INSURANCE. MOORE ft OGBORN. Automobile aud Fire Insurance, Bonds. Loans and Rentals. Room 16. L O. O. F. Bldg 1 3-tf INSURANCE. Hans N. Koll, Fire and Accident Insurance, 716 Main street. UPHOLSTERING. J. H. RUSSELL, 16 South 7th Street Phor 1793. Repair work a specialtj. 11-tf REAL ESTATE. Some bargains ia houses and lots. Paying good rate in rent. Properties to rent. Polled Herefords for sale. O. E. Fulghum. Phone 31'.. 22 tf MOTOR CYCLES. Indian and Yale. 1910 Model on display Pathfinder tires, guaranteed. $37.".oo. Waking & Co.. 4ni Main St. 14 tf Throw a ray pills and strong cathartics which re violent in action, and always have on hand Dr. Caldwell' Syrup Hepsin. the rnaranteed cure (or constipation and all diseases arising rom stomach trouble. CORPFttAt Gold Medal Flour In cheapest It's best, too more loaves to the sack. EcrnEtil. SIR MARK'S HOTEL BILL Relic of an Early Nineteenth Century Election In Ireland. During the time of a contested election iu Meath, Ireland, in the early part of the last century. Sir Mark Somerville sent orders to the proprietor of the hotel in Trim to board and lodge all that should vote for him, for which he received the following Mil. which lie got framed, and It still hangs in Somerville House, County Meath: April ltJth, 1S26. MY BILL. a. . To tenting sixteen freeholders above stairs for Sir Mark, at 3s 3d a head, is to me 2 12 0 To eating: sixteen more below stairs, and two more after sup per, is to ir.e S 15 9 To eighteen horses and five mules about my yard all night at 13s every one of them, and for a man which was lost on the head of watching them all night. Is to me 5 6 0 To six beds in one room, and four In another, at two guineas every bed, and not more than four in any bed at any time, cheap enough. God knows, is to me.... 23 15 A For breakfast on tay in the morning:, for every one of them, and as many more as they brought in, as near as 1 can guess, is to me 4 12 0 To raw whisky and punch, without talking of pipes and tobacco, as well as for breaking a not above stairs and other glasses and aelph for the first day and night, I am not very sure, but for the three days and a half of the election as little as I can call it. and to be very exact. It is in all or thereabouts as near as I can guess, and not to be too particular, is to me at least. 79 1$ I For shaving and cropping off the heads of forth-nine freeholders for Sir Mark, at 13d for every head of them, by my brother, who has a vote, is to me 2 12 1 For a womit and nurse for poor Tom Kernan. In the middle of the night, when he was not expected. Is to me ten hogs. I don't talk of the piper for keeping him sober as long as he was sober. Is to me no is 1 Signed in the place of Jemmy Cars wife. his Mark X Erysn and Oeraghty's SJar'i X Tou may say 111. so your honour Sir Mark Fend me this Eleven Hundred by Bryan himself, who and I prays for yout success always In Trim, so no more 1 present. The hotel keeper must have got weary as be n eared the end of his long bill, for his account becomes as wabbly as some of bis guests must have been when the crash of giase and delph accompanied their deep potation of raw whisky and punch. CITY ADVERTISEMENT. Department of Public Works. Office of the Board. Richmond. Indiana. March 14. 1310. TO WHOM THIS MAY CONCERN. Notice is hereby given by the Board of Public Works of the City of Richmond, Indiana, that sealed proposals will be received by it, at Its office, at the hour of 9 o'clock A. M. on Monday, March 21st, 1910. For the sweeping and hauling off the sweepings, of sucn of the improved streets of the said city, as per specifications now on file in the office of said Board. The successful bidder will with in ten days from the acceptance of bid by said Board, file bond in the sum of $500.00. The board reserves the right to reject any and all bids submitted to it. 1L M. HAMMOND, F. R. CHARLES. W. W. ZIMMERMAN, Board of Public Works. mar 14&17

OLD TAVERMCHARBES Ccst of Living at a Turnpike Inn. Near New York In 1846.

LOW PRICES THE RULE THEN The Regular Tariff For Dinner Was 19 Cents, and a Wedding Breakfast For Sis. With Twelve Quarts of Cats on the Side. Cost Just $1.69. Guarded a carefully as any of th guests' jewels that He beside It in tho M safe of a great and glittering Broadway hotel in New York city and treasured by the proprietor more than its weight la gold Is an old cashbook. 'lie eutries run from March to December. iS-liV They record in quaint, descriptive phrases the comings and goings of the travelers who stopped at a ways!de inn on a turnpike road less than 100 miles from New York. This tavern was kept by the Broadway hotel proprietor's grandfather. The building of the raiiroad. the passing of the stagecoach and the changes of more than half a century have obliterated this once famous old inu at South Durham, and now all that remains of It is this ancient book, which served not only as a record of cash received, bat took the place of the modern bote! register. The prices charged by this Innkeeper of long ago are as far removed from those exacted today as this ancient hostelry is from the gorgeous summer hotels of the countryside where it once stood. The regular pries for a dinner was 19 cents, bnt even this appears to have been "cut" to frequent travelers. For Instance, there Is an entry of "Candy peddler from Albany, two meals and lodging. 31 cents." Almost every entry Is a brief description of the individual traveler and what he got for example. "Freckle faced, eagle nosed boy, bay, supper, lodging and grease. 81 cents. This boy was probably driving a horse and wagon, which would account for the bay aud grease. Another man who was described as a "fellow with tired colt got bay, lodging and breakfast for 44 cents. Every few days there came along, according to this ancient register, a "Connecticut man." lie Invariably spent Just 0 cents for food, and that was for pie. On two occasions thers is an additional charge for "greasing wagon. 6 cents. There were no theatrical companies touring this turnpike road half a century ago. but a phrenologist appears and vanishes. It being recorded that for "bay. 6 quarts of oats, lodging and breakfast be gave up CO cents. Once in awhile a real spendthrift would come along, like the "gent with three ladies and two children." Tbey bad six dinners. For these, the bay for tbe horses, the "meals -for tbe dog and the "segsr" for tbe man S1-2S was charged. There was a wedding breakfast at this quaint tavern too. It is set down aa "wedding. RadclifTs sister. C dinners. 12 quarts of oats. Sl.Ca. Teople "went west by wagon In those days from tbe thickly settled east to seek their fortunes. Some did not find what they expected and came hack again. One such group, an "emigrant family returning east seven of them" spent ?- at the Inn. Thrss) cents' worth ef candy" is a frequent entry. Probably the "candy peddler from Albany" paid for his food and lodging in sweets. There are bnt two entries of anything stronger than lemonade, and those are for beer four quarts for 0 cents. Oysters were cheap, too. for six plates of them increased tne contents of the tavern keeper's money box by Just 15 cents. Among the Journeyers along this turnpike road wbose passage is recorded In this age yellowed volume is "Old 1'artickJar." Doubtless be was some cranky old codger who kicked about everything and whose goings tbe innkeeper sped as much as possible. Then there was the "Whistling Man," tbe "Stiff Arm Man." the "Dis peptic Man" (he bad four quarts of tea) and tbe "Hen Man." who ate a piece of pie and traded roosters with the hotel keeper. Other travelers along tbe highway are thus described: "Abolition Man." "Mean Fellow." "Gent With Noblo Horse. "Lady With Crying Baby." "Hank Day's Likeness" and "Cravat reddler" (fool). Occasionally an old acquaintance would pass by or some dignitary, for it is set down that a "friend from Lexington" bad bay and lodging one day at the inn. Who knows but be might have been a son of one of the "embattled farmers who kept the bridge that April morning of tbe ride of Taul Itcvere? . The "Grand Juror and Ills Wife" tarried for a meal at the Inn the same day as did tbe "Dominie's Wife snd Child." On Nor. 3. so the careful chronicle says, tbe proprietor "went to York," where be remained six days. He must bare had a roaring, roistering time of it while in the metropolis, for the next entry in his handwriting Is somewhat shaky and says. "Sundries while at York; SO cents." New York Press. Washington's Farewell. The farewell address of Washington, the military chieftain, to his soldier stands without parallel in all history, lie does not refer to his own sacrifices or achievements. Tie simply and completely sinks himself, the great central figure, out of sight. He sees only his country and thinks only of her welfareMagazine of American History. Falsehoods may be stated under impression that tbey are truths, but tying is characterized by the Intention to deceive. Loaf Bread In England. It Is perhaps worth recalling that tbe art of baking loaves of bread was introduced Into Europe quite late in history. Flat cakes were baked even In the earliest times, but as late as the beginning of the nineteenth century loaf bread was comparatively onknown In many parts of the continent. In 1812. for instance, when an English captain ordered loaves to tbe valce of in Gothenburg the baker stipulated for payment In advance on the ground that he would .never be able to sell them in tbe city If they wen left on bis funds. London Btasvdaxd.