Richmond Palladium (Daily), 20 September 1899 — Page 3
RAILROAD STORE
Bear in mind, we some Rocker, or Rug,
outstanding: cards of Thomas &. Ackerman Poling &, Poland. Today we speak of
25 dozen New Fall Neckwear goes on sale this mornirjg. New shapes in Tecks (tntn acd boys sizes) in rich styiish coloring?, plaids and neat figures. Well wcrthy the price 25c Imperia's, great, broad, rich stripes; red, blue and purple; beautiful fall shades 25c
PUFFS Itailroad Store Piiee
THE RAILROAD
25c GAS I Is Cheap If Used With JlecrliolT's Furnace Burner. Phsnam 43. Plumbing, Haating, St.nl Ranges, Ete. fT). - .. .-K -f'. .. ' J.' M'iila lV S. K. MOlUiAN, Telephone, 718. EWrLOVMET, REAL ESTATE Information, Abstractor, InsurJ ance and Notary Work. A place to bay a home aa you pay rent. O. 15. 31 0 KG AN, Frnetleal iluiutr a ad Mas Fitter Eighth and N. K St., Richmond. lad. Get your Laundry work done where satisfaction is guaranteed. ELDORADO laundry aSS Main St. Telephone 364 L. V. STIHSOM. Prep. J. H. STINSON, TUB OLD REUABLH SHOEMAKER fa still In th. bunineas. Those who have soro or tender feet, corns or bunions, will find pleasure la wearing minaon's make ot shoes. Be pairing neatly and promptly done. 829 MAIN STREET. MAKE A CHANCE Ta the RICHMOND STEAM LAUNDRY If tha quality of tha work dona by others la not pleasing. CAKPETS CLEANED By the Latest Method. IX W. WALTERS, PROP,, Phono 151. 819 Main St. asm . . . - . - k -..,.. th.i. Mtwaa rESiHVROYAL PILLS ,9 WM. I . , , .... .(. Wnttc. BBBilrt imtiia, imtcioti or aurm tioB of mnrosA or awn in pimvin wnpprt, hf ipr?n, r-h, J. tea I .CO, or 3 bote)--, Cuaiovr mat u rfaiuMC
RICHMOND, INDIANA.
give Cash Cards which
or Stand, or most anything you want.
- NECKWEAR -
Full ad plump in size. Made of the best of all silk materials, cart fully put t -gether. StroDg, well made b .nd?, high class in evry particular. Iiich, molest coloTiiJ23. 50c 50c 53c.'
GLOVES FOR TOE WI)fflG Ml We show a large stock asbestos tannfd mule skin Gloves Th y are cut as car. fully and fit as well as any $1 00 glove on
the market. The very name will "MULE The maker says they are
beli vei 'sso, 25c he Pair; 25c the Pair.
ONLY. AT TO CHATTANOOGA. Through Route for Wilder's I'rigade Reunion and Dedication of Indiana Monuments. Indiana will be well represented on j the battlefield ot Cbickamauga next week, when Wilder'a brigade will tolj a reunion on that famous battlefield and unveil a monument. In addition ' tj tha unveiling of the Wilder'a brigade monument and reunion exercises, the formal dedication of monuments erected by the State of Indiana in hontr of the forty regiments which were in the battle of ('hiekamanga, and their transfer to the United Stttes, will tke place. Addresses will be I K riAinrit T a rti net A f rtllir General Uenry lioynton, Msj r Connn!lv ami ..ther eminent men. iiiniin ! v tiuiriiiti vatuva uwuua Low rate tickets to Cnattanooga will be told via Pennsylvania Lines for this occasion and may be purchased by all wbo wish to ko. The Pennsylvania k Wtwta, selected as the official route, atid a spec l-tl train runniug through to Chattanooga will leave Indianapolis over it at 7: JO p. ni. Monday, September 18ih. Sleeping cars will be included in the service, which ill als comprise two coaches. The special will reach Nashville early on the morning of September 19. h for breakfast. The ruu from Nashville to Chattanooga will be by daylight, and the latter point will be reached in time for dinner Kound trip rates will be $1) 82 from Indianapolis, $11 50 from Kokomo, $12:20 from Loganport, $9:35 from Knhmond, $10:65 from Anderson, and proportionate low fares from other points on the Pennsylvania lnes in Indiana. Tickets will be sold for regular trains of September ISt'a and 19:h, as well as for the special train from Indianapolis on the evening of September lSth. A cordial welcome is extended t all to join the congenial party to leave Iadiauapolis on the special. For particulars apply to nearest Pennsylvania lines ticket a,ent or address W. W. Kichardson, district p tssenger agent, Indianr polis, lud. Stopied the Backache. A. K. Bass, Moruantown, Ind., writes: I was ftlited with Kidney disease and had to get up quite often during the night and suffered severe pains in kidneys and with backache. 1 used Foley '8 Kidney Cure After taking three bottles I am entirely cured. A. Q. Luken & Co. and J. L. Adams Co., druggists. Indiana State Fair Excursions via Pennsylvania Lines. September IS h to 23J, inclusive, low rate nontransferable excursion tukets will be sold to Indianapolis via Pennsylvania L nes for the state fair, where yisito'8 may see many new and novel features marking pror. s of invention, expert manufacture, aitistic designing and attractive disiKy of fruits and vegetables. Tickets good going on regular trains and good returning until Sunday, September 24th Sousa and his farxoas band of fifty will be there September 20h and 21st, on which dates the special train will leave Indianapolis at 11 p. m., centra! time, for Richmond and intermediate siations. ' C. W. Elmer, Passenger and Ticket Agent. Drink Graln-O After you have concluded that you ouht not to drink eoffee. It s not a medicine but doctors order it, because it is helthful, invigorating and appetizing. It is made from pure grains and has that rich s aJ brown color and ttts like the finest grades ot coffee and costs about one-fourth as much. Children like it and thrive on it because it is a genuine food drink con taining nothing but nourishment. Ask your giooer for Grain-O, the new food drink. 15 and 25o. To Consumptives. As an honest remtdy, Foley's honey and tar does not bold out f aUe hopes in advanced stages, but truthfully claim to give comfort and relief in the very wrst cases, and in the tarly stages to effect a cure. For sale by A. 6. Luken & Co , and J. L. Adams 5t Co., druggisti.
entitle you to a hand-
. .... All by will be redeemed injure the wear - - SKIN," as good a buck kin, and we STORE. Notnlnar In It. I see from the papers that a man fell into the docks and was drowned," said Phildng. "Couldn't swim, I suppose," said Wtt ester. "That goes for nothing," said Phildog. "IxHk nt inc. When I was washeu overlxmni. going to the Isle of Man, 1 couldn't swim a stroke, yet 1 kept myself afloat by keeping my head" "Certainly, your head kept you up," remarked Wngster. They don't speak now. Spare Moments. Jerusalem Is now nothing but a shadow of the magnificent city of ancient times. It is about three miles in circumference and is situated on a rocky mountain. "While it cannot be denied that ali men are liars." said the corn fed philosopher, "yet not all liars are men.' Indianapolis Journal. : Orlttla of the Fh. The use of the fan aritnntd in China and s-prann from the following incident: A royal princess, very beautiful, was assisting at the feast of lanterns, her face covered with a mask, as usual. The excessive hent compelled her to remove it, and in order to guard her features from the common gaze she moved it quickly to and fro in front of her face, thus simultaneously hiding her charms and cooling her brow. The idea was at once adopted throughout the kingdom. Catherine de' Medici curried the first fan from Italy ever, seen in France, and in the time of Louis XIV the fan covered with jewels was worth a small fortune. Itath For the Hair. Light hair should be washed often and dried in the sun. A tablespoonfu! of household ammonia added to each basin of water used in washing assists materially in keeping it light. Iark hair should lie dried in the shade, or it will fade in streaks. Itut if the dark haired girl wishes to lighten her tresses without a bleach she can accomplish something in that direction by adding borax to the water and, after drying the hair in the shade, giving it a "sun bath" as often as practicable. During the sun bath the hair should be spread and shaken out constantly, that the rays may reach all the roots alike. Tea Table Etiquette. A hundred years ago there was a quaint tea table etiquette. It was considered a lack of courtesy to take much cream or sugar in one's tea. Ktiquette demanded that the tea should be tasted from the sjwwin and that the hostess should then inquire, "Is your tea agreeable?" Modern women would be shocked by a fashionable lady of those days who cooled her tea with her breath. Yet Young wrote of a certain bewildering Lady Iety: Her tw-s rd lips afti oted sephyrs blow To pool the Rihea and inflame the bean. While one white finger and a thumb con!pire To lift the cup and make the worlj admire. In Mexico everything and everybody pays a direct tax. from the street porter to the largest mercantile establishment, and the stamp tax for documents Is equally lucrative. Bismarck's Iron Nerve Was the resulc of his splendid hea!th Indomitable will and tremendous energy are rot found where stomach, livtr. kidneys and bowels are oat of crJer. If you want these aaUties and the success thev bring, use Dr. King's New Life Pills. They develop evrv power of brain and bc-dy. Only 25c at A. G. Luken & Co , drug store. - (2) Announcement. To accommodate those who are partial to tie use of atcmrzers in applying tiqnids into the nasal passages for catarrhal troubles, the proprietors prepare Cream Balm in liqiid form, which will be known as Ely's Liquid Cream Balm. Price including th9 spraying tube is 75 its. Druggists or by mail. The liquid form embodies the medicinal nronertiea of the solid nrpnaratin. Cream Balm is quickly absorbed by j .1 t , . . , . 1 . me oieinuraue aiiu uocs not ury u: tne secretions but change them to a nat-1 ural and healthy character. E'y Brothers, 56 Warren street. N. Y. Piles Cured. If eufEjrers will use Banner salve according to directions a positive cure will result in worst cases. Guaranteed. 25 1. A. G. Luken & Co., and J. LAdama St Co., drue&rists.
WiS!liNGTONGiIOSTS.
Specters Which Haunt the City and Suburbs. SPIUlj T OF THE CAPITOL CUT FT. 1'hiaUmt Said to Have spra ni From Emu ! Historic lair jrrt (.hastly Lrgtsdi Along the PliBif Slver. Washington is said to hare more ghosts than any other city of its size the world. i. he corridors and corners. the cr nts and vaults of the capital itself re the scenes of uiauj such "creepy' stones L Evt-u the busy chambers themsel ves are not exempt, and the spirits of the mij thor:ti restlesi hty dead, we are told on good au- . may aoinetinies be seen Hitting My among once familiar scenes. On a busy ail ni-ht session, about 3 in the tuoiuiug, more than one o'clock! new (nember has nervously asked neighbor if he does not hear quer noises and, gilanciug toward the statuary hall has vowed that the stauies of the old heroes! of debute make him creep with tlieir eierie groaning. In the very spot in the old honse where the new meiuiwr may be standing Presi dent John ljuincy Adams died at the ripe age of iJ. They laid him on the sofa againsp the wall, where a little tablet marks the place, and ever since then about that hour of the night, amid the noise and bustle of business, the ring of voices I and the darting to and fro of pages, fretful murmuring and weary signs from dim corners and recesses betray the presence of impatient ghosts longing to mingle once more in the fainil iar balitle of brains. The I ancient suburb Georgetown has had njoie time for accumulating good lasting ghosts, the liuga-shira variety, who whoop ant gihicr to the moon and haunt particular spots with a fixity of purpose that at least is admirable in its assiduity. Some of these are older and more established specters than the others, and one of the greatest standing in the community is located alove the town, at the Great falls. lie is known as "the drummer hoy of the Potomac" and is the representative -of a Ilevolutionary regimeiiit. The istory, which, so far as the story goes, boy w s well authenticated, is that the (is drowned while crossing the riv er at the falls under circumstances which attached a suspicion of foul play to his disappearance. Since that time he has not ben seen, but on stormy nights his drum is heard above the roar of the falls and quite distinct from the rushing of the water beating out a ghostly long roll that sends a thrill to the hearts of the hearers and is supposed to betoken misfortune to the on who is so nnfoitunate as to be an amlien -e at the spectral serenade. Another specter of the same region is a headless horseman, like the ghostly trooper of Sleepy Hallow, made famous by Irv ii'-" s story. The stamping ground of this rider is the strip of land known as the Iiwgrounds, lying Ix-tween the river and the canal alove Georgetown. This specteif stampedes the cattle browsing . . -.T-.V. --'.fne. It" - r;'gL ri" "VMS KT. I 'Hi: ii j SPIlIIT OF THE CRTPT. among: the thickets and has been seen by many (mating parties on the river riding at breakneck speed over the rough and broken! bowlders that line the Maryland shore of the river and where it would be death for a mortal horseman to venture in broad daylight. Farther down the river there are ghost ly legends attaching to the Three Sisters, a fatal; group of rooks where a number of drowning accidents have occurred and where khere are said, at night, to be seen lights and where sounds are heard that cannot! be traced to any mortal origin. A number of old tenements in the town itself, flow rapidly disappearing before the m;rch of improvement, are said to be haunted, and the tales of murder and conspiracy connected with these fatal spots would fill a volume. But the most ghostly of all the region and thie p!ace to which more circumstnntirV'iv c-"r'-t " be try, ry " Pull ur . " That's the counsel very often given by a well meaning person to a inenti wtio is slipping down the road of alcoholism. And when the answer comes ' I can't stop," the man is perhaps repruf.cfct.-tl for the cowardice of that phrase, I can't." But intemperan; e is ordv a form of disease, ami tiiere fruv come a time in the progress of any disease when it can t be stoppea. That's what we me m when we Uilk of gr.Ht.pitig consumption." It's like a horse running away with us. We can't stop itj Strvngtb. will stop the wildest horse. Strength is the great necessity in the stop-iig cf disease. Dr. Pierce's Golden M?dic:jii Discovery lias cured thousands wh- Iliad obstinate owirh, bronchitis, weak lti!itrs. spitting of blood, emaciation, art 1 similar aliments which if neglect.-1 ior unskilfully treated lead to const!rnrtilo:i. It ct:res by strengthening the lu-is:"-. land giving tbem power to throw o'u oie.ise. 1 hJ ivt-n trrniMrd with bronchitis and dtinilo' the hen t kr eight ynn had severe ctr.iz .itu't at t:i:i-s great !tuk-citT in hreath-i-.-- ' -ntes J W. H.Mrertun. Km., of Bigiill. II t'-Ki ice Co.. Tt-nn. A portion of the time rey iii$ vns poor atvt part of the time I was sci;.e to ilo aaything, 1 had been treated by o-jr countr-r nh-sicins for seeeral years but w,!h beucSu " I had boen reatiiny about ZVla?ZS& . . r - . , r it ji t i..re I ha-.l taicn one-ihtmi ol a b' bf Dr. Pierce' Golden Medical rhscCTrI cw-inafi tafc.'i" ; until I nail tatcea 5cmi t. ' t1' - I No I leel like a new man and can io sm ret- II a day's work a arrtr man. I advise au cf n:-. iriea.!-. who are diseased to take Doctor FieTr--f 'ioHeB Medical Itescurerr." Frvtc- The Feeple's Common Sense Me.l-.v-al Adviser free. Send stamps to evrrtense oi ma.iiiEg only. ir-emi nt starrres 'or naper rov-rrs, w ji stamjdt for cloth binding. Aodress Dr. P r ;TS Buffalo. N. V
MRS. PIXKHAM says that irritability indicates disease. Women who are nervous and snappish are to-be pitied. Their homes are uncomfortable ; their dispositions grow constantly worse. Such women need tie counsel and treatment of a woman who understands the peculiar
EVERY-DAY TMIZG WITH VJOEIEH
your Vegetable Compound has done for me. It has helped mo more than anything else. I suffered for a long time with nervousness, pains in back and limbs and falling of the womb; , also had neuralgia in my head and could not sleep. I told ray husband that some
thing must be done, for I was nearly frantic with pain. Having read of the wonderful cures Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetaoie compound had o performed, I determined g to try it. I have taken o. it and am happy to say I 0000 am cured. I recommend it to all my friends and never tire of telling the benefit I have derived from its use. I have you alone to thank for my recovery." Mrs. Ellen Flana GAJT. 1810 Mountain St., g - Philadelphia, Pa.. writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham a sufferer from chronic dyspepsia, was irritable and cross, and can sav !. c o uiai laaaiig seven o bottles of Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound was entirely cured. I take great pleasure in writing this to you and would be pleased to be interviewed by any one who is afflicted with that distressing complaint. I am very grateful to you."'
is the .New Cut road, a place in which the newness attaches only to the name. This hit of, roud. not quite a mile in length and running just north of the oi l Georgetown college grounds, has a very unsavory rfpntation among those who bject to ghosts as steidy company. During the late war there was at least one killing on this i-oad. A heavy storm had washed out a part of the great cul vert which carries off Foundry branch. small stream running across the road. and at this spot a young Georgetown mun was held up. or attempted to le held up. by a soldier. The young fellow was wild and reckless specimen and kiiUd the would be robber on the spot. Instead of reporting the affair he merely shoved the body under the bank in the culvert and kicked down a portion of the over hanging ground to cover it. Got Kven With Randolph. One nij;lit when traveling through Virginia John .ltandolph stopped at an inn near the forks of two roads. The innkeeper was a tine old gentleman, Hud, knowing who Iris distinguished guest was, he endeavored during the veiling to draw hiin into a conversa tion, but failed. But in the morning, when Mr. llandolpli was ready to start, he called for his bill and paid it. The landlord, still anxious to have some conversation, tackled him ag:iln: "Which way are you traveling, Mr. Randolph 7' "Sir:" said Mr. Randolph, with a look of displeasure. "I asked." said the landlord, "which wrty you are traveling?" "Have I paid you uiy bill?" "Yes." : "Io I owe you anything more?" "No." '-Well, I am going just where I pltase.-iPilyou understand?" "Yes." . TJio IanRonrty this time got aomewbat cxeijio'. and Mr. Randolph drove iff. rtvf fl rne landlord's sumrise In a few nildjutes he sent one of the serv ants to inquire which of the forks of the roadio take. Mr. Randolph, still being within hearing distance, the landlord yelled at the top of his voice: "Mr. Randolph, you don't owe me one cent; take whichever road you pleaser A Ilnblt. The lawyer asked the witness If an Incident previously alluded to wasn't a miracle, and the witness said he didn't know what a miracle was. "Oh, come." said the attorney. "Supposing you were looking out of a window in the twentieth story of a building and should fall out and should not be injured. What would you call that?" "An accident," was the stolid reply. "Yes. yes: but what else would you call it? Well, suppose you were doing the same thing the next day: suppose j you looked out of the twentieth story j window aud fell out and again should find yourself not injured. Now, what would you call that?" "A coincidence," said the witness. "Oh, come, now," the lawyer began again. "I want you to understand what a miracle is, and I'm sure you do. Now, just suppose that on the third day you were looking out of the twentieth story window and fell out and struck your head on the pavement 20 stories below and were not in the least Injured. Come, now, what would you call it?" "Three times?" said the witness, rousing a little from his apathy. "Well, I'd call that a habit." And the lawyer gave it up. Gentlewoman. Crime De-teetina: tr a Lork of Hair. One recalls the method of discovering a thief by chewing rice, said to have been practiced in the cast. But it Is not necessary to go so far to find a more remarkable method of thief catching and not so well supported by sound reason. A lady in Paris is reported to have lost her purse in a dressmaker's establishment. She had all the young ladies of the establishment called in, so it Is seriously reported, and demanded from each one a lock of her hair. . The tokens were then pinned to pieces of raier hearing the owner's names, and as the customer left the ; establishment she remarked: "My ; purse has Iteen stolen, but as I do not j wish to subject innocent girls to the humiliation of being searched I intend : early tomorrow morning to submit ' your hair ami handwritings to a somnambulist and clairvoyant, who wi'I tell me which of you is the thief." : In the course of the evening the lady received an anonymous parcel containing intact her purse with its contentHaw to Make Chlekea d Clam B rotaMix one quart cf chicken stock with one quart cf clam juice, beat to the boiling point, skim and season to taste with salr. pepper and cayenne Add one-fourth of - tnp of milk to threefourths of a cup of thick cream ana beat until stifL- with . an egg beater Serve the broth in cups with a spoonful of cream on top of each.
troubles ot her sex. Mrs. Anna E. Hall, of Milldale, Conn., was all run down in health and had completely lost control of her nerves. She wrote to M rs. Pinkham at Lynn. Mass., for advice. Now she writes : I wish tn thanlr.Vfm frT- t,-Vio
niP Jx3gSSL, ml
3v -rvrTlvV .
I X a. S a r-
Colored Ualitronifii. Of the uiuuy national conventions of this summer one of the most Interestlug was that of the colored women's clubs organized as the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs aud which hold its annual convention iu Chicago. In this organization are nearly -! clubs and societies, representing nearly every Mate iu the Fuion. The organization is modeled closely after the General Federation of Women's Clubs, to which many of its clubs belong. Its motto Is "Lifting ns Ye Climb." am! it has Ikh-u an inspiration to the members who have sought to interpret its significance. due of the lenilinf eli'bs !n the Fedi-r- 1 ation of Colored Women's Clubs is the Woman's Kra club of Bostonof which Mrs. Josephine St. I'ierre RutUn is founder and president. Mrs. Rulhn has been a clubwomau for many years, be ing a member of the New England Woman's l'ress association and having been lately made a member of the board of directors of the Massachusetts State Federation. Indeed, Mrs. Rullin may be looked upon as the founder of the National Organization of Colored Women's Clubs, for it was she who sent out the call for these clubs to meet in Boston in 1S'.C. Boston Herald. For Milnrly'M Dok, Blotters in the fashion of a garden roller, with silver handles, are a late addition to the paraphernalia of the up to date writing desk. The days when a leaf of the kitchen table, a sheet of foolscap, a goose quill pen and a sifter of blotting sand sufficed for the expression of the most eloquent and voluminous muse are long past, and before the divine afiiatus can find reception now there must be such a wealth of fitments as would have hin dered ye ancient Pejrasus iu his aerial flight. A Dresden clock and candle sticks, calendars Innumerable, wonder ful receptacles for pens and penhold ers, paper knives Hill letter oieners, pens anil penholders tr:". lore, inkwells of wondrous construction, paperweights. a letter scale, station ry sjM'cially suited to each and every occasion, penwipers and 1 h trers. :::: :';i-re pots and stamp receptacles. ri;ie;s ami erasers all these and tnariv more- go today to nftike ip the appointments of milady's desk. rtetionlnEf : Ari-aiigei.ii i through t:;c v.-;:h p-itn. e i t en madt !.;! :i.atie chan .i t:f commercial To this end M in Dels for tl.e res relations :tii S ill. Ister Ston i ;-t A!. ui; it!. I:;is been 111 structod to take sue!: sT'.-p.j as will lead to the usual commercial treaties be tween t'is ot. nt ry ami Spain. He hairepoited tli.tt tiiere is every indication of the speedy settlement of the various question in vol veil, dilliculf y and he expects to in arranging the have no treaties. rSetlrereent of C aptain llnfT. Captain "Hank" Ha7. the sailing master of some of the famous America's cr.p defenders, is living at Islip. N. Y. Advancing years caused him to be retired from the list of possible captains of the Columbia. The handling ct the W foot sloops needs not only skill find experience, but nerves of steel Captain Charles Barr was selected tc Fail the Columbia because he Is a com parativ-!y young man, ami has had great deal of experience in sailing largt sloops. Uldiammrr Joy. I don t see how poets find any inspiration in hot weather. " "Oh. I don't know! There's hackle berry pie " Chicago Record. BIit Falntfcir Job. The Eiffel tower is being put In read mess for the exposition. It Is to be given a coat of enamel paint In flvt 6hadVs. gradated from lemon earo niton the summit to deep orange on th. pedestaL snys the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Two coats will b applied, foi which nearly 00 tons of eiiamtl will be rt-ipj rcdNo Right to Ugliness. Tie woman who is loIy in fa , form and temper ill lways havt friends, but nt who v onld be attrar tive muct kep h-r balti. If she i wes , sickly ard all run don, the i be nervous and irritable. If she ha constipation or kidney trouble, her itrpnre blod will can epitrp'es, blctchettkin eruptions and a wretched com plexion. E eetrie B ttera is the bes medicine in the world to regu!ate stom aeh, liver and kidaeys and to purify the blood. It gives strorg nerves bright eyes, smxith, velvety skin, ric complexion It wi 1 make a good-lock ing, ehannine woman of a nm-dowr invalid. Oalv 50 rerts at A. G. Luken & Co 's Drug Stoie. ' 2 Don't be Imposid Upon. Always insist on gettirg Foley's Horey and Tar, aa it is po tivaly, abso'ately srd urqusLfiedly the bet cu;h mfdirine. Accept no substitute A. G. Loken & Co and i L. Adams & Co., druggists. .
MAKE IT PUBLIC Publicity Counts That's What Pecple Want Richmond Expression oa the Subject.
the Make it public. Tell the people about it. Gratitude promotes puDlicity. Grateful eifixoca talk. They ttli their neighbors; Ull their frifcds. The cews is too good to keep. "Bad barks" are numerous. So few understand the eanse. Many Ki hooond people are learning. And, better still, they're being cured. Lame backs are lame no n o . Weak ones regain tbeir streuttih. This is the every day labor in Richmond Of Doan's Kidney Pills. Our citizens are making it publia. Her's a case of it: Mrs. P. Heater, of Xo. 607 north thirteenth strett, says: 'i offered severely from kidney complaint fcr tJrebty yeais, and at times was so bad taat I eould hardly get up or dowt without assistance, and even had to uee crutches to get about the house; evety joivt and muscle in my back felt a theme h it would break when I would move. I could nt t rest well at night, but always felt more tired and used ut in the mora' igs than I did the eight before. I i aw Doan's Kidney Pill; recommende 1 and got a box at A. G Luken & Co.'s dreg tdore at-d started to use them. They soon cuied me My son-was also troubled badly with nis oacjf.. tie too a uoans tvianev Pills at my suggestion, and the result in his case was a thorough rtlief from n:s misery." Doan's Kidney Pills for sale by all dealer?; price 50 cents a box. Mailed ou receipt of price by Fester-Milburn Co., Buffalo, X. Y., sole agent for the United States. Kemember the name Doan's and take no other. Going Down Hill. Per pie si fferinc from Kidney Diseases feel a gradual but steady loss of strength and vitality. They should lose no time in tryicg Foley's Kidney Cure, a Guaranteed Preparation. A. G. Luken & Co. aud J. L, Adan a & Co., druggists. EASE AND DLSEAsE A Short Lesson on the Meaning of a Familiar Word. Disease is the opposite of ease, vVebpttr defi tis disease as "lack ot sse, uneatineris, trouble, vexation, Ii quiet." It is a condition due to some derangement of the physical organism. A vast majority of the "dis-f a.-e" from which people suffer is due to in pure blood. Disease of his kind is cured by Hood's Sarsa , parilla which purines, enriches and vitalizes the blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures scrofula, salt rheum, oimples and all eruptions. It tones the f-tonaach and creates a good appetite, and it gives vigor and vitality to thj whole body. It reverses the sonJition of tbings, giving health, com fort and "ease" in place of "disease." Special Excursion to Cincinnati Next Sunday via Pennsylvania Lines. September 24, $1 00 round trip froi R chm nd on excursion train at 7:30 it m., central time, to Cincinnati, O , -eturuirjsr leave Cincinnati 7:00 p. m All day for sight-seeing. C. W. Elmer, Pass, and Ticket Agent. "YouMayBend the Spling,Buta Not the Tree." When disease has become chronic od deep seated it is often difficult to eure it. That is the reason why it u test to take Hood's iSarsaparilla when 'isease firtt shows itself in piaple-. leadaches, indigestion, or oihei roubles which tell of poor blood, we k toraach or disordered liver or k;deys. This great medicine rrgnlate he whole syste-n. It never disappoints. Hood's Pills are tho favorite fam ly cathartic. 1 DEWEY RECEPTION FXTURSION. Iaiw Fares to New Yok ard Waslnng'Or v:a rennslvai ia Lines. For the A''m'ral D.wey rreeptionit New Yo k, September 2U h anf 30 h, and m V. ast ingtoc, Ocir.hr 21 ipecial escnrsi, n tickets of the opei orra w, ich .ooa not require igratur ill be sold from r rireiptl stations oi. h- Pt-Dnsylvaiiii Liiit-s. N( Yoik fcici t-ioo tickets will bt M Srpembei L'Cih 27ih and 28th. d W1 be gtod to retnrn l-airt N'f w YorK or Washington not latei an Oeto er 4th. Thfy will be hon re1 relnrtiirg within tbeir lio:it eirhei a direet line or via Washington. - Wshi!!gt--n rx'.nrsion tickets will - so'd Sepferobi-r 30ti aad 0;-ober I t, and will b go! to re'nrn leaving Vs iLgton not later than October th For tickets, information about ratf s, me of throagb trains ar.d other dei !. apt ly to n arest tit kot agent f e Pexnaylvania 1:e8. Bleb Water Advertlalaa- Mark. The Srw Tork Herald cf Acrtl 17 crtnted an editorial .latement mat on the prvn day i.Sunflav. A&rll Its rjaid adv.rtlainr reacb,l the hih water mark in that Journal hlatorr. " The Chlcairo Tribune " on that aame day. lat Sun-lay. April printed nyt only more adverUsinir than the Xe. Tork Herald, but what ia believed to be the rreatt amount ever printed In a ainrle Issue of any regular mala edition of a newspaper. UeavinK out of account the twenty-two columns of aivertiinB printed by th. New York Herald on that day in the special section devoted to the interests of Broofclyr and New Jersey and appearing only la those editions, the record of " The Tribune " for April 1 rur-parae-i that of the Herald for the same day by mora than I'M.' ajrate lines of paid advertitn. Even ailowtnr the Herald ail It claims. IrarludIns its BrooklyTj and New Jersey supplements, the N-w Tork Herald on that day stiil fell short of The Tribune " by more loan IJJ'jO lines In tn actual amount of paid advertialnir. Tbe exairt firures are rivea aa follow.: The Kew Tork Herald of April IS printed In its main eiition. exclusive of Its firooklyn and JCew Jersey supplements. 7 i.KZi aerate lines of advertisements. Including those supplements it elaim. ii.l'jt: " The Chicaro Tribune " printed that day M. 4-V) a irate lines of paid advertlsementa. Th. comparison hou;d be made in lines of ajrat. meainire. becaose tha column, of " Th. Tribnne " are lonrer and contain 3M5 ajrats lines. whll those of the . - w Tork Herald contain only 2SH lines of arate earn. For the four Sundava endlnar April 1. the number of columns of advertisements to the Kew Tork H-raM. aordina; to its own claims aad including; its Brooklyn and New Jersey special section, was l.iT7.25. In the same period of tima The Tribune " printed l.W i'i coioir.ns of actual paid advertisements. These, reduced tj ajrate linea. rive the New Trk Herald 3T,Sfi lines and " The Tribnn. ' ttnes. ta ' Tba Tribune th-re wre printed in taat period Zt.33 more a irate lines than in the New Tork Herald. This excess was equal to eia-fatr-on. column, cf the aixe of thore of tSe New Tork Hrald- Tnerefwe the New Tork Herald printed aa averajr. of 20.23 columns leal a h BSSdav IMa " XS. CUcao Tnbaaa,n
Ii AND MADE HARNESS . . IN ALL GRADES. OUSTERS NETS, ETC THE WIGGINS CO. SOS Mala St. FOR TRADE A FIXE - - Building Lot V. IN CHOICE LOCATION TO EXCHANGE FOR A SMALL RESIDENCE. Wm. R. Eradbury & Son, Westcott Block. TIME TABIJ3. Pennsylvania Line. directive Juno 18, 18 99. Trains Run' By C.ntral Tlma. Rlohmand Union Station. rMrtaaara Ciaolnnatl. Chloaga St. Louis Ry. RICHMOND DIVISION. Ctwaaa Chicago and CtootnnaU. BA8TWA BD TbalMri tHrolntt Mall arid Hi .. jliW a. ra. :U a. tClcoln'M Aodui. rd Bz. E:Q a. at. t:li a, IS. tLoirac.port Aooom S:M p Past rtuctb.rn U and Bz S:M1 p. m. t:M a. ir Mackinaw A Oiu Et . Mack. A Cin. Mail and Ex feMa a.. wiuSTwaan trains. t Lor nil port aoxra , T:S a. B Paat C tilt ago at and B!z106 a m. ll:M a. M t! OfranjiiH.rt A room 1:10 p. m. TiH a. at Ohieaao Mall and K UrOO p. a. p. at n ana Mackinaw ?r U M n m Cin. a Mack. Mail and Ex. 10 p. m. INDIANAPOLIS DIVISION. Batwaan Colambna and Indiana aolla. WHSTWAJU) TKAIHa aaaiva JRU-h a Indpln anram m. l . Bt. L m. a E 5:i a. n ttt. Loai. fast Mll Ht. Lonl. Kaat KiprMa fCoi a Ind. Aocand fc lk0 p. a Fat MiOl .. :M r " T. and Ft. Lonla. B. T:Up. m, tBlcb a Ind. Aoo and tuz KAirrwamD vaama. St. L.4V. T. M. and aa... is a. DBF a aw p; ra . few a. as 6:36 a.m 10:M a. m laasp at .:6Sp at T p ai kill at Utfkn tlnd. a Ool. CO- and Km . a. bv St.liiltaH.T.rMtaaUkM I 'Panii. Spaolal ( Mail ...: 1 a. -t L, a N Y. M and Bz. T:SS p. a. Tr46p.ai n. l.. m t . Ldinnaa mwn p. ra. find, a Rich aoo and Bz :tf p. ai. Jlndpl. A Kick, acoom. a. m. DAYTON &XBNIA. DIVISION. Raawaaa Bloluaocd and Oolamkaa Tla Iwyta and Xante. WKBTWABD TSAIII8. aamrva. paraa tpiina.a Rica. Mali abf. p. am, Hi. Uall rt Mall t: a. B. 81 Lonl. Fa.t Kxpram M:S6 a. m. Sprlno-flatd BicL. Ba lOiai p. am ASTViRD TUIIS. IRionmond a X.nia M. a K. H4on Spring-Cld Ita. Ht. Lonls a, N. Y Kaat Mall P.nn, bMClai (Mall) . . bt. It. a n. I i-lmltal fcilOp . av 6:6 a. a. .t a. as iM p m at a. iRAD RAPIDS A INDIA NA R . iit.tM Richmond aad Mackia.w via Val W?m aud Urand kaplda. !ODTBWAD TaalftS aaairm. naraa Mack A Oln Mall Bz. f SC a. as. Hi, H a Biok. M. and aVz S:s0 p. ss, tFU Wayne a Bioh. lStSn a. sa. KO&THWAUl TKAIsTS. tK-.eh aa. B.M. aad Kx l.i p. m Htca. m Mackinaw Bz 6:4t a. sa Oin Mack 'all a Ma. p-.b p. aa. Dally t Dally . sapt Sunday. Buooa; only, ICS mast b. at th. station 10 alaausi for. Wain Una e. -V. HLMBB. Tlokat A.ral I. a. GORifOW . Htatioi Mmw. FIRE ALARM BOXES1st district, so nth of Mala, west ol seventh. 12- 1st and south C, pianofactory 13 2d and south B It lib aud south D lis 6tn and com h H ;itt 6tt and south H 118 - 7th and aoutli O Sd district, south of Main, betwoea 7th and eleven ta S1 th and Main AIM Sth and aouta B l.iH 7th and south U is Sth and sooth A i'.jn loth and aontta Q ;T llth and Main j 11 and souUl 1 Sd district, south offalnentt oi eleventh :m ink and aontfa B I .ttr- 12tn and souia K ; - Uin and Main 14ih and south O ' as lKth and soota-A J37 Ah and Mala 4th district, north of Mala, west of loth to river I I 1 3d and Main, Robinson's anos ,tl d and norUs j l l.lly bniidmc la-Gsu, beott m. Co .44 No. 1 hose bouse, norUlcUa 47 C hampion mna wi lOtn and north I 6th district. West Rich mood and Sevastopol 6 W 3d and ' heatnnt 61 W M and Nauuual road 64 W Sdand Kkajt -W id aad Richmond ava 6t Karitiam coileze 6 late and Boyer 6 Oraat and siulre 57 Hunt and laspie 6 irant and -herdai 69 Bridce ava, paper mill 6U district aorth oi Upcast of tenth 81 Railroad abop. S3 fi QLtoa a oi-us factory 69 Hooaie drill work. 4 W syne acric. itarai worka 6s Ctty DiU worka - estcott caman eo rj14in and north B. 7th district, between M.'maa.raoi t D, east oi vesta ,7- Sth and aorta A rTI llth aad north B 71 litn aad north O 7S fSo i hose house JT4 18th aad nortn O Jjs xid aad north B SPECIAL. SISHALS. S 3 Patrol call S 1 S Fire preatwra W .tsrai ana om ' I 1 Fire out S preasar. off 1 1 U ii aiai gmm oa tifl hoi
