Richmond Palladium (Daily), 11 September 1901 — Page 8

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OUR CONSTANT AIM IS TO SELL THE BEST GOODS ... IN THE MARKET . . .

25

I lave

It's good value for the money, and we think the best iking f t th price in Richmond. It is a good, sound, clean lierry, ar 1 wi rnaka good ccp of coffee. We have higher priced goods, .nd ollee j low as 15c per pound. We know we can please you . . .

john f. McCarthy

BEE HIVE MAIN AND S. lOth.

WE HAVE THE

PURE CIDER

AND THE. FIN ST '-INE OF PURE SPICES

You win have GOOD PICKLES if you see us O . . for y:ur supplies ... . O

? In the city IK VOC 4GJ TIIK ' I I -. v O I. 1 V V t I ' O O ( rO O O O O Y Tin I - - iin'miii i r- - ' " " Cheap

y 0 bMKSlQ'R&l

W&DT. W. A. PARlTS

VNv? N0Tth Tenth

We have contracted with the Kiclimoml Shovel & Tool Co. for their entire ou'put of Mill Wood. This is the best quality of 3Iill Wood, cut front green timber, and hs but little bark on it. AVe have a good supply now, but it will not last long:. IMilCE S1.5U PER COKI).

Telephones 49

COLONIAL CARRIAGE

BLOCK

No. II S. 7th. H. LURING, Prop. I want first to thank ray many gocd customers who have favored me with thtir highly aypreciaUd trade for 20 years past, and kindly ask their favcr in the future. Iltvirg leased for a term of vears the above located saesrecm. I mi htie to s'py. I will keep on hand constantly a full line of C'v.rr.t us Tvgy Co. vehicles, Columbus. Ohio, which is the standard the world cicr, Btti so favcrablv In vtn in this territory ; also J. B. JIcFarlan Carrifge Co. vehicles. Cct-r.ersvtlle, Ind., a high medium grade, sold by nie 0 es-rs. rd tr.fr.v in gocd rucrdrji order totlay. I kindly ask old and new cus.un:ers to call sr.d see my goods and low- f.Ul prices. - - - H. LURING - r -

-THE POT CALLED THE KETTLE BLACK." BECAUSE THE HOUSEWIFE DIDN'T USP SAPOLIO

inrilMOND DAILY PALLADIl'M, WKIVSKSPAY. SKPKM 11, V.HW.

COFFEE

yon ever tried our 25c Coffee : !Z3J GROCERY r HOt.ES 183 VINEGAR! I I W 1111 V-IW k J - Hi m 1 Jir I il F tl III ' r - i Wood

Mather Bros. Co.

REPOSITORY

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Points Political ami Otherwise From Hooirrt'o u's N-at. Indianapolis. Sept. 11. James P. Goodrich of Winchester, chairman of the Uepubiic;m state committee and one of the most i lever tuen iu the world, was here y.-vterday. Ir is uud.Tst'H.u that he is displaying the qualities of a liaruioiiizi-r early in his official career, and that is trying to red nee the friction iu the Mei'ullochCromer ti-rht hi the Ki-rhth district to a minimum by applying his special make of hannouy oil. lie had a In.: conference with Vic- chtt irmau KealiULT of the state committee wl.en. it is said, this subject was .list nssed. The fret' ami asy manner which Mr. Met'mi.ch is ilourishiii.; his battle ax is worrying the Iiej .tibiieau leaders.

it i uses to suv wliii his candidate ftr t n'fess in the Kiirhth district will be. but it is und-Tst.Mid he has .ne. His very reticence is considered ominous, especially when eor.pled with the report that lie is now the actual owner of two new-papers i:i addition to his orsan at Muncie. There is a treneral feeling in the air that lie intends to "raise Cain." and this is distiuietimjt political circles not a little. The train bearing Indianians to Buffalo to participate in the celebration of Indiana Iay at the I'an-Ameriean exposition will Kill out of the Union depot in this city Friday at 'h.l'i p. m. Two of the conches will lie occupied by the Terre Haute and Montiecllo companies of the national guard. A private car will contain 'iovernor and Mrs. Intrbin and son Fletcher. .lames Whitcomb Kiley and t'ohmel Charles 12. Wilson, the governor's secretary. Niagara hotel will be Indiana headquarters at I'uil'alo. antl the four coii.panies of the national unard will eseoi't the visitors from the hotel to the exposition grounds via lelaware avenue, one of the tinest sireets in the world. At lo o'clock Saturday morn1ns the director general of the exposition will deliver a welcome, (iovernor Kurbin will respond. Poet Uiley will recite "Old Olory," and Senator I-'air-lanks will deliver the address of the day. The party will return to Indianapolis Monday iuoi-niu. The governor's staff will lie well represented. The congressmen have all been Invited to attend, and Congressmen Holliday, Hemenway, Cromer. Watson, Miers. Landis and Crumpacker have accepted. Steele antl Zenor have niif been heard from. Lieutenant iovernor Gilbert will represent the legislative branch, I.. ,T. Monks the supreme court, I. W. Comstock the appellate Court, and Attorney Oeneral Taylor the state orlicials. Mrs. Fairbanks, wife of Senaror Fairbanks, left last niu'ht for I'.uffalo. The latest iss;p in state p. -I'.tleal elrcles fs that State Seruitor Fremont Oootlwiiie of Wil'ii support will be a candidate for the Iieputiiican nomination for irovornor in 1!'1. He is a banker and farmer ami one of the largest Ian-1 owners in the state. The people of Indiana have shown a likins for men of bucolic pursuits in selecting their governors, n'ld Senator Goodwine's friends say he would be a worthy successor of Coventor Matthews antl iovernor .uonnt. i W. A. Lower, the sen in 1 assistant superintendent of public instruction, ; was absent from his desk today, and j it leaked out that he has rone to I)e- ' catur to marry Miss Nora Peterson, a eharmim; voting lady of that town. Something In a Name. Peoria. Ills.. Sept. 11. William Nieman, an insane farmer, who hat been under a delusion that the jwople were trying to lynch him for the" murder of President McKinley, died raving like a maniac in the county jail. lie was picked up on the street Saturday tleeinir from an imaginary mob. His condition is said to have been due to drink. Grief Unbalanced Htm. Erie, Pa., Sept 11. Grief over the shooting of President McKinley and subsequent worry over his condition and prospects of recovery wore the causes that led to Orlando I. Vancamp, one of Erie county's most prominent men, to kill himself. He blew off his head with a shotgun. He Worked the Guests. Huntington. Ind., Sept. 11. Paul Bart ley, a well dressed stranger, registered from Pittsburg. Pa., has been committed to the Indianapolis reformatory under the indeterminate act for stealing elothina from quests at a hotel and ransacking their trunks. The Iope Is Amusefl. Rome. Sept. 11. The pope has been so impressed by the attack upon Prosident McKinley that he intends to take i iar i u ii i , , . ot j' ie initiative in int action by the 1 Christian ptiwers atrainst anarchisui. He is writing an important eneyclic.il on the subject, which will be puhlishetl next month. Most Show Them, Elkhart. 1ml.. Sept. 1L The county commissioners hereafter will jjrant no more electric railway franchises unless a certified check of $1M accompanies the proposition as a guarantee of ood faith. Carried on Knsine's Pilot. Chicago, Sept. 11. Seven persons tidlns; in a waaon were struck at a crossing of the Baltimore i: Ohio railroad at sixty -third and Loomis streets. Two girls who were in tle wa-ron were carried for a Mock on The pilot of the engine and escarped apparently unhurt, but terribly frightened. All the others were injured.

iic5' jm fefi MSS. M'KINLEY.

M'KiiriEys THE HOME PIAZZA. EASILY CONVERTED INTO AN OUTDOOR SITTING ROOM. Rok or Mattinii For the Floor lttrnrtivt Pieces of Fnrniture l ittle Touehesi That Lend Spice tu Home 1. 1 t i n if. i The woman with a home of her own, built on modern plans, no longer ia ' ooliced to endure the discomforts of ' hotel life in ordt r to enjoy the suniruei months, for the home piazza suggests : additional relaxation. With screens I drawn, there may be privacy on the main deck of the home craft. In the evening there are the same front seats at the Moon as there are for sojourners . at crowded hotels. In the morning there is the privilege of sitting behind drawn screens in negligee attire, and in the afternoon there is an opportunity to entertain friends with a cup of tea or an ice. The piazza is really only another room, and if it extends around the house there is always a place , screened from the rays of the sun. The cheap cotton Japanese rugs, even those that have done hrst service within doors, are appropriate, for a floor covering. Indeed, a snip of matting Is preferred ay some women to the cot ; ton rugs. The latter match weil the ' light oak rockers known as piazza chairs and need not be taken in at night, for even if a shower give theia ! a gtod wetting there is no harm done. A couch of cane is less expensive than a rattan couch antl is almost as pretry. Over this rugs may be thrown and pillows piled np at the back, j A kitchen table, the legs of which i have been shortened and over the tcp of which a denim table cover has !een thrown, is convenient for books sad magazines. The Japanese screens or .shades that hang at the front and sldt-s of piazzas are inexpensive, easily lowered and raised and by many preferred to the striped awning. A hammock, which is the usual fea- ; ture of piazza comfort, is often more pleasing to look at than to lie in and for that reason is not so popular as it once was. If there is a secluded corner la which to suspend it. ail well and " good, but it no longer monopolizes space that can be more satisfactorily filled. The large willow steamer chair, which Is really a couch, is far more comfortable. It may be filled with pillows ai the .reclinics tack cr net.

BIRTHPLACE. It is a cou.. ortame summer ctiair aru I far ahead of a hammock. ' For the hammock the pillows should be lint n covered or gingham covered, j so that the slips can be washed every i week or two. for they are bound to ! fatch the d'ist.

A very attractive piece consists of a cross between a steamer chair and n hammock. The canvas is swung in au enormous woooen framework, and when the hammock chair fs filled witl ' pillows it is to be recommended for a ? siesta in a shady, secluded corner of i the piazza. The woman who knows how best to enjoy the summer at home has dessert served out on the piazza after dinner The little tables are spread with traycloths, and the c-oSfee anil fruit and an Ice are waiting there when the family adjourns from the dinner table. Then, also, the gentlemen can enjoy their after dinner cigars. Such little touches as these o so much to lend spice to and to dispel monotony from home living. The piazza party is now a feature of summer entertaining and takes the 1 A MAMI-IOCX t cttAia. roo nrMOtix& C OtDN p'ace cf the lawn party in a measure. Gnest3 meet on the piazza of the host ess and witnoct entering the house at all on warm summer afternoons partake cf refreshments, embroider and while away a few delightful, informt' hours. New Idea Woman's Magazine. The Kongo is one of the widest wsterways on the glolie. if not thf finest, tr. some parts it is so wide ti n-t vessels may pass one another and yet be out of eight.

People's Exchange. I Ail advertisettserits uiuler the alxve ht-ad, suoh as 'w itntetl, " "for sale." lost." &c, will !e ijiven one it-.strtioa free, to PaHndium subscrtlt-rs.

. Storaire- OrouLvl floor, sixtreoth i and Main. Vern 8mitb. tf a.m ki Kou top i;ii itt.u etuir. See J. White at Brunswick toit M.i li-.u.s t llttl li:ruifl eti cr ucfurnished alto baru for rtct. j No 32y south twelth Street. 3t. i ! For Sai f. Seoond-hand furcitu-e, s'"vesand baby cab. Sale bern i ; a . tii. Thursday. north seveuth S street. i Lost biav Ktt li jacket, at Glea ;ui"r, opposite hrst s-pririj froio ! Main sirve' e:tran e. Finder please j it ave at 3022 Main street or 122 State j street. ' W.tei Girl for l:bt hoi:sworti. One that will s-!et i at toie. 203 south eleventh. j Lost Bird dojf with oliarard mime. Return to Fred Miller at icratid hotel and receive reward Waxtkh Anyone having my o'd Family Bible will please drop me a postal card at Glen View, Richmond, Ind. It was sold through mis-take. It is valuable to n.e. Would very much like to tind it. Mark Hayxes. CW.wteh A god home for a boy, fourteen years old. Two years' experience on a farm. Apply this of! ice. Vaxtei I'iace to Ido general housework or work in restuaruLt er halcry. Address north 1210 north F. street. DAILY MAIIKKT lti;iOUT Prevailing I'ricc For Grain, Provisions ami Livestock on Se(t. lo. Imliaiiaiolls Grain and I.ivttock. Wlieut Wajtou, Toe; N-. red. Meady. i.e. c'tiiu sternly : No. 2 mixed, "Vic Oat a-I mil ; Nh. 2 ntixt-J, :CC Cattle Sternly at 75fti5."iO. Ib'jfs Sternly ul $.V.i7. Mit-eji SitH.ly tit jl .VX-i.'l.rs. i.a'.ul)S Active at 4.2.'ftj4.75. fhicaffo Cirain antl Provisions. iO!eueU.j L'lunfJ I I YVhptitSt it. .., lee M.iy t'eru Sept. ... 1 i.e. May i ' Sept. ... I . e Jhiv r..r' -S.-i-t. ... t l. t Jill I. it it! -S.-pt. ... Oft J;tll Kill S.I.I. ... Oil Jill ."n-'ty .74 .5."'i .r.-'kt, .:.:')!. . ;t .;7'i .."cV; ..TiXl ..r.iv i 14 70 ! 1 s1) (11 s 13 :ttt i 1". "-. ft J 42 Al :, 4v jg 17 S 2 s 7'i 8 T s t7 s 1" 1 .'t . ... . k wt.rtB ewre ,r.

.".; .litis. :u!;S,c; iih, 14.70; laid, .s'l.-lCt"'

rll), j.s.i"n. loinsville lira i il ait1 Livestock. Wheat No. - re. I and tmlierry, 71c. C'ttrti N-t. 2 vhit tle; ,.. 2 mixed, 'SOc. U;iu-... iiilxt-il. .'".it-; No. 2 wUilit, 4.K-. Cattle lu!l at fiiV.il.:i. Iltijtn Steatlj at St.&iii;j. Klleep SlttW at 1?,-J.7r.. Laiubs St' a-ly nt J.."K1'!il..Vj. Cincinnati Cirain ami Livestock. Wlieat leiil; No. 2 red, J: .-ii tp. et : No. 2 mixed, rt:. i ats . fy . N . - uiix.'d, ic Cat! I. --!.' !:. I I'j 'JX Htljs Active nt l.;i".j7. Sileep-Sieatly at Y.Si:i.2X b.u..l,s-i'tiil at g-'j4-"'. Cliicaso Livestock. Cattle Stjeii:: st.-ers, 4.4txaj.50; srjcb a-id r.-. .i i--. j s.''it,s. ili'n at $K''t'.'M! 1-fietp .steady at :s.lof.il.l0. Lamt.s Steady at 3.7V.j 4.WI. New York Livestock. Cattle Firm at 4.5o(WH. Ib.jfn Steady at iVnk:. bUefp Steady at fJ..V3.75. Laujhi Lower nt 4.2-Vii.j.g3. Kast Rufraln Livestock. Cattle Pull at $.1.wiJ-6e. U'-f Slow at i'Vul. Sheep 1 mil at fortes. Lamb-Lull at !4'a4.w. Ttlelo f.rain. Wheat ri!l; cash, 71V. Com I mil; N"o. 2 eah. "o. Oul Ltuil. No. '4 ei, Ci'jc TO-DAY'S Cl'OT.TIONS. Chicago Wheat, (IH. Oats. ?,:',. Lard Toledo Wheat, 71. Cere, Iticbmond Market. Whpat.rr bohl. ... 3orE. rer h r. h 1 22 .Ho ... . e ; .rr t?oaei , Hy, per bahel .... 1 "lover aeed.per bnabel reta.il . Butter, per lb ; Lrt! pr ib ... i Eicn. vr 'T't j PotatoB, new pr ba .. i 8 dea prr itj ... ... j F -n .111p ! 'hiekena, per lb : Wool . tt i. . hi He j fU-i' .... f 3 A Good Light. Bert Gas Burners, with chiatev j and mantle complete, SSc. Best pas ! chimney in town or.lv lf)c. Mact'es ( lo, 15 and 25 tents. Try us. f I Ilikf'.. Sixth and Main. Public Sale, Will be sold at public sale. twt7 fresh cows and other cattle, b y q Underbill at Pennsylvania railiari stock yards, corner tenth and sorth ; r streets, oaiurcay, bept, 14. w a. m. and 1p.m. 11-1

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