Richmond Palladium (Daily), 3 January 1902 — Page 5
Richmond . Palladium
FRIDAY. JAN. 3, 1902. Indiana and Olilo Weather Washington. D. C. Jan. 3. For Indiana: Fair tociyht and Saturday, colder in the north tonight. For Ohio: Fair and colder tonight a fid Saturday. LOCAL MENTION. For good watches and clocks see Ilaner. D. M. Sisson of Anderson is in town. Go to Haner's for correct fitting of eye glasses. Trains on the Panhandle were all of? again today. See tbe big reduction on shoes in Haislay's window. The Business' College will open Monday, January 6. sat-tu fri Robert L. Study was at Indianapolis and Connersviile yesterday on business. Don't miss the opportunity of hearing Miss Jackson tomorrow night at Pythian temple. Typewriters, all makes, for sale or rent. Ribbons, repairs, etc. Tyrrell, W. U. telegraph office. tf Mrs. E. P. Weist of Indianapolis is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bert Noverre, 211 north four Wen th street. Haisley's show window is attracting shoe buyers. MissJacksoD has with her this season Mr. Harry Fe-lows, tenor and AVm. Bauer, concert pianist. Tomorrow night at Pythian temple. Tbe annual meeting of the Home for the Friendless will be held at the home Monday, January 6, at 2 p. m. Reports of the year's work will be given. Election of board of trustees. Everybody invited. Leonora Jackson's violin is a Storioni and is valued at over $3,000. The maker was a pupil of Stradriarias. Cloud Gould of the Nicholson Printing company was called tolcdianapolis by the death of his brother-in-law, who was killed in an accident on the Big Four. He was a railroad engineer. City Engineer Weber received a letter today announcing that his father, who was very ill, is convalescing, lie lives at Detroit, but was taken sick while visiting his daughter at Van Wert, O. The History club meeting is deferred one week. It will be on the evening of January 11th at South Eighth Street Friends church. Paper by' Mrs. Elder on "The Czar's Window and the Kremlin." People interested in beautiful sights should take an occasional peep at the planet Venus these evenings. Her light is now so strong as to make a shadow. In less than a week she will be visible at daylight for a" few hours. Leonora Jackson was the violinist at one of the concerts of the Boston Symphony orchestra in New York city. Hear her tomorrow night. Humpe, the shoe man, will have a handsome piece of wax work on exhibition at his store in a day or two It is a statue in wax of the German Queen Louise to be exhibited bv the makers of the queen quality shoes, shown here the first time in Indiana. It is life size and a very beautiful sample of work. The man who was found on a bridge near Anderson on the Big Four, where he had been struck and killed by a passenger train, has been identified as Fred Becker. He was in the emoloy of the C. R. & M. road and had been in this city consideiably, but was known only to the railroad people- His home was in Cincinnati. O. G. Davis returned last evening from Greensburg where he had been attending the funeral of M. F. Par sons, funeral director, and past president of Indiana state association. There were 21 undertakers in attendance from different parts of the state. Mr. Dayis, by the way, is a candidate for renomination to the legislature. DEATHS AND FUNERALS. Eouejieyer Will C. Eggemeyer, aged 38 years, died at hU home, 131 south fourteenth street, last evening of peritonitis. The funeral will be from the English Lutheran church Sunday at 2. m.. Rev. Kapp officiating. Because of the serious illness of Mrs. Ejjgemeyer the services at the house will have to be strictly private and tbe friends will be given an opportunity of viewing . the remains aft the church. The interment will be at Earlham cemetery. Jenkins Silas M. Jenkins died last night at the home of his mother,
CLOAKS! SUITS! SKIRTS! ONE-FOURTH OFF! ONE-HALF OFF! THREE-FOURTHS OFF! About three hundred Cioake, Suits and Skiits to go in this speciol discount sale. lts a rr.oney saving opportunity. Don't mis3 it. THE (BE. WJ. CirJODLLErJlSEIHKS (SO,
Mrs. Lucy Jenkins, 106 south fifth street, of typhoid fever at the age of 30 years. Besides . his mother he leaves three sisters. The funeral will be Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock from the borne. The interment will be at Earlham. Bctlee Ellen Lucile, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Butler, died Thursday evening at their home, 433 Main street, of bowel trouble. The funeral will take place tomorrow afternoon. Interment in Earlham. Rail back Oscar Railsback died suddenly recently at his home near Indianapolis. He was the old
est son of Mr. and Mrs. liansbaek, formerly of this city, and was born near Abington in 1835. He was a brother of John H. liailsback, the well known Panhandle conductor, now of Logansport, and Lon M. liailsback of this city. The ymains were placed in the vault at Crow a Hill, Indianapolis, and will probably be brought to Earlham later for interment. COME SEE THEM. Every article in the house cut in price ut the Model Clothing Co.'s great reduction sale. A Little Measles. Measles is reported in the family of Samuel Ligon, 317 south fourtn siree. j In the family of George Ball, 115 north sixth streen. Wilbur, aged 7 years. In the family of Frank Land, 314 north twelfth street, Horatio, aged 6 years. i v." i In the family of Evans, 506 : north fifth street. The patient is a daughter, aged 8 years. Born, to Wm and Mary Howe Spaulding, a son, third child. j Hen ing stoves at reduced prices at Jones Hardware Co. C. M. Wilson the horse shoer. ! A Cure Ft I.utiinaco ! W.C. Willia-'-.n of Amherst, Va., says: "For m 'Un ;i year I suffered from lunabiiro. 1 finally tried .Chamberlain's Pain Balm and it 'gave me entire relief, which all other remedios had failed to do. ' ' Sold by A. G. Luken & Co. and W. H. Sud- , hoff. Heating stoves at reduced nrices at Jones Hardware Co. Tangerines and grape fruit at Prices'. Heating stoves at reduced prices at Jones Hardware Co. Peculiar Find. Portland has made a find which will give the gossips which are the main portion of the inhabitants something to talk about for years. In playing in the attac of an old house some children broke a ' hole in the plastering and found beyond that in the peak of the roof a cradle containing the skeleton of a baby. The present tenant of the building is above suspicion, and as the house is over thirty years old there is no clue to the mystery surrounding the affair. After putting the cradle in the wall the hole in the plastering had been covered up. Great reduction sale now going on aC the Model Clothing store. Nice sweet cider at Prices. Heating stoves at reduced prices at Jones Hard ward Co. C. M. Wilson will shoe your horse or mare, will call for them in the city, anywhere. Will take them and return with proper care. He is an up to date shoer and will treat you fair. Heating stoves at reduced prices at Jones Hardware Co. Plenty of nice fresh oysters at Prices'. , City shoeing shop, C. M. Wilson proprietor, 13 to 15 in rear of Chalk Taylor's livery barn. Phone 1314. Heating stoves at reduced prices at Jones Hardware Co. O ye people! hare . ye wasted the golden momsnts of never returning time in taking a substitute for the genuine Rocky Mountain tea made by the Madison Medicine Co. Ask your druggist.
RICHMOND DAILT PAUAPltTM, FRIDAY; J AX UAH Y
A it The Troubles of the Everett - Moore Syndicate Don't Atfect Us. The troubles of the Everett-Moore svndio.at at Cleveland will not. it is said, hurt any of the traction lines projected for Richmond. Members of toe Eaton, Hamiltan & Richmond line tell us that they have noconneci tion whatever with that syndicate, : have all the r material contracted for, and will be in here by September next, at the latest. Whether tbe Puis line is scorched no one knowa; but it has rot been counted on to any alarming extent anywav. . - . . The bvncicate owns ana conxrous 1 130,000,000 of elecett ic and telephone lines and will have to go into the hands of a receiver it is feared, though only temporarily, it is asserted. An important meeting in regard to the extensions of our present line is in progress today at the Westcott. E. W. Handley and Valentine Winters of the Dayton and Western and Messrs. Smith, Wallace and Murdock of the Richmond Traction company.are all in conference. STORIES OF CAPTAIN LEARY IlerrtiBK Inridrnta In the Career of Vura'i 13i-Corior. With tbe deam of Captain Richard P. Leary a unique figure passes from the navy, says the New York Herald. He was appointed to the Naval acadtuiy from Maryland iu ISat and during the civil war was attached to the block-" adins squadron at Charleston, lie wa next heard of prominently at Samoa during the stirring unns ihl culiu: nated when the tornado of 1SS!) destroyed the German and American war ships In those waters. Captain Leary was then in rotnmanil of the Adams, a little vessel of autiqui type. The German flagship was th Adler. a much superior ship. Ther were troublous times iu Samoa, but tut nations represented by their warship;in those waters were supposed to main tain neutral positions. The Adler out day steamed past the Adams and saluted. Strapped to the German ship's mast was a native rebel chief. Captain Leary's ship did not return the salute, and the German commander lowered a boat and sent to learn the reason. Captain Ieary's reply was characteristic: "Tell your commander that the United States does not salute any vessel engaged in the slave trade." Another time, learning that the German man-of-war had left the harbor to bombard a fort on an island under American control in support of Germany's candidate for the Samoan chieftainship. Captain Leary got the little Adams under way and arrived oil tbe Island as the bombardment was about to begin. Cleared for action, the little vessel darted between the German ship and the shore, and not a gun was fired. During the Spanish-American war Captain Leary commanded the San Francisco in West Indian waters. He afterward was appointed governor ol Guam, which he ruled as he would his ship. He required the natives to marry, called on the men to perform a certain amount of work each day and even prescribed how much poultry should be maintained by each family. Captain Leary was regarded in th navy as a brave and efficient officer of great executive ability and was very popular. CARRIES HIS OWN LIGHT. Carpenter Finds a Way of Reading In Street Cnra. Hermann Schmidt, a carpenter of St Louis, carries his street car illumination iu his pocket, says the Chicagc Inter Ocean. When he gets on tbe street car in the evening on his waj home, he takes out his light and clamping it on the pilaster of the cat window, settles down In his seat tc assimilate the news of the world while the other passengers bow to his genius. Schmidt says he invented his ad Justabie, self folding candle powei lamp out of sheer self defense. TLc lights in the street cars are so pool during the busy hours of the evening that he could not see to read his paper be said. He found himself dropping behind the band wagon. He is a busy man and has no time during the day and is too tired at night to read. Rather than submit to a gloomy houi on the cars in the evening be set tc work to make a light that he conic carry with. him. He used a piece ol copper wire eight inches long, a brass tube, a piece of old fashioned furniture and a wagon key. The first appear a nee of the lamp on an- Eighteentl street car the other evening in St. I -on is created a sensation. It was an in sjatnnvna hit n-ith tlx iiassonsrprf
RICH11
on the car. and Schmidt is thinking oi
going ujto the business of manufacturing tbe lamps on a large scale. . DAILY CHIME FOR M'KINLE Bells to Keep on Rtsainn "Nearer Mr C i. to Thee. The city of Lincoln. Neb., recent I j perfected plans for the erection of memorial to ltesident McKinley in tb way of an elaborate set of chimin belts to be placed in the lately com pleted St. Paul's Methodist church says the New York World. The ordei for their manufacture was given to company iu Troy, N. Y. They are U cost $tiomj. The fund for their pur chase came as voluntary subscription! from the eple of Lincoln. William J Bryan being one of the subscribers. The largest of the bells weighs ar even ton. and they range from that U one of 125 tounds. Each day the byini "Nearer. My God. to Thee." will bt chimed. The .ew .Monanteat to Farnell. Augustus St. Gaudeus. tiie Americai sculptor, has beeu selected to make th heroic figure of Parnell for tbe tnonu ment to be erected in Dublin, . say Harper's Literary Gossip. Tbe wort must be completed in five years anc will cost from $40,000 to $50,000. Ol this sum there has already been sub scribwl $30.uoo. It will be lung befort raruell is forgotten by his compatriots He had that indefinable quality ol knighthood which endears a man to th hearts and 'anchors him in the imagina turns of his contemporaries. It 0'Irien"s "r.ife of Charles Stewart Parnell" (HariHT's Mr. Gladstone l quoted as saying of Parnell: "Thai na:uf. that very remarkable, that hap py and unhappy name. (n th list of Irish patriots 1 place him, witt or nest to Daniel O'Connell." Parnel Is buried in Glasnevin cemetery. Dub lia. near the grave of O'Connell. Celestial Diplomaejr. When Minister Wu was asked whj he would not accept the chair of oriental literature at Columbia university he replied by asking six other ques tions. Mr. Wu's diplomacy, says th Washington Evening Times, is of t kind that makes a person see start with its abruptness. " THE HORSES. " Onward Silver, 2:08, will be driven by John Hussey mxt season. J. H. Shults owns ten mares in the 2:10 list. Match it if you can. George Starr expects to take Ray Btar, 2:08, to the races next season. II. K. Devereux of Cleveland has refused several flattering offers for John A. McKerron. Net profit? of the New England Trotting Horse Breeders' association for 1001 w ere $17,000. Medio, by Cooper Medium, dam of Peter Stirling, was bred by Major P. P. Johnston, president of the N. T. A. The Monk. 2:08. is in. Buffalo for the winter, and the outlook is that Geers will drive him if he starts next season. George Ketcham while in California leased the stallion Silver Bow. 2:10, by Robert McGregor, and will keep him for service at Toledo next season. John Call, the Cleveland veteran, has taken the handsome mare Gertrude M., 2:lSi,i. by Reveille, 2:2iy. to New York and is stepping her on the speedway there. Baron Dillon, 2:12. is sire of five in the 2:20 list and ten with records of 2:14 to 2:28 at ten years old out of his fifty foals two years old and over a remarkable showing. HOUSEKEEPING "DON'TS." Don't put butter in your refrigerator with the wrappings on. Don't use butter for frying purposes. It decomposes and is unwholesome. Don't keep custards in the cellar in an open vessel. They are liable to become poisonous. Don't pour boiling water over china packed in a pan. It will crack by the suddcu contraction and expansion. Don't moisten your food with the idea of saving your teeth. It spoils the teeth, and you will soon lose them. Don't use steel knives for cutting fish, oysters, sweetbreads or brains. The steel blackens and gives an unpleasant flavor. ". . . Don't scrub your refrigerator with warm water. When necessary, sponge it outiuickly with two ounces of formaldehyde in two quarts of cold .water. Don't put tablecloths and napkins tbat are fruit stained into hot soapsuds; it sets -or fixes the stains. Remove the stains first with dilute oxalic acid, washing quickly in clear water. Mrs. S. T. Rorer in Indies' Home Journal. Making a Bat MartGas City, lad.. Jan. 3. An explosion of natural gas in the Thompson glass factory here yesterday resulted in the injury of three men. one of them being reported as fatally hurt. The factory is a new one and started up Wednesday mcrning.
3, 1902
A Happy New Year To AH!
With the ringing of chimes we bid good bye to 1901 and extend to the Sew Year a hearty welcome. This store is grateful for the generous patronage it has enjoyed, and we trust that we have earned your confidence by deserving it. 1901 has given us many new friends and made us more solid with the old ones, proving that such merit as lies in our business method is bound to win. Again thanking you for your liberal pat-,, ronage of the past, and hoping for a continuance of the same, we wish you all a very happy and prosperous Netc Year. Very respectfully, Loehr & K lute.
For
U Overcoats, r-8
Suits, Hats and Underwear
pur prices are. lower than the lowest.
START tha Maw Tssr with a Savings Aecoaat. ava tha paaniss and tha dollars will savs tbaat - aalvn. On aallar1 start yaw. Tfcraa pr mmU interest.
FINANCIAL DIFFICULTIES are nearly always avoidable hy people of integrity. Financial difficulties are nearly always the result of litUe miscalculations. If you have miscalculated and, therefore, need a few dollars with which tobridge over, it is probable that we can. help you out. If you are about to be confronted with finencial difficulties, now is the time to avoid them. We loan to parties holding good permanent positions on their unindorsed notes. . We loan on many kinds of peraoatal property without removal. J We loan on diamonds, watches and. other articles of value left in pledge. Our methods and terms will pleai secrecy guaranteed. ' - -.' Richmond Loan Co., (Eatablishad 15) Room 8, Colonial Building. S. . Cor. Main and 7th sts. Home Phone
