Richmond Palladium (Daily), 26 February 1904 — Page 8
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1904.
EIGHT.
ii&TEUsD ITlfQ ill
RESIDENCE FOR SALE The stone and brick residence, corner of Main and Twentyfirst streets, known as THE HIATT HOMESTEAD. This elegant home, with its high-class appointments ; hand-carved mantels : most elegant woodwork and staircase ; combination gas and electric crystal chandeliers ; no better home or location in the city, is OWNED BY A NON-RESIDENT, and must be sold this month. For inspection of premises, price and terms, inquire of T. R. Woodhurst or W. T. Hiatt Or address A. J. VAN DEINSE & CO., Lemcke Bldg, Indianapolis, Ind.
F
YOU
BRANCH YARD I MATHER 39 South Sixth St Phone 516. J. S. BRUMLEY Phone 312 So. HS.Ctli i m
ailroea ETe&iciu.rtt.ut, n e st.
PRICES REASONABLE. EVERYTHING UP-TO-DATE.
IFIERIliEi Voices Tested Free On Monday and Thursday afternoons at the NEW MUSICAL STUDIO Mrs. C. L. Andrews Vocal and Instrumental Music Taught. NO. 28 NORTH 1 1th
DO YOU WANT-A 50 PIECE DINNER SET FREE?
nil fjirt ..i!v
I
7lZx. I'fjssyCyCJnjS. . "j funics. To introduce our goods. 'e five free to evi-ry piir-
frost yon. Wt allow 15 davs to deliver (roods and return us money. Write for illustrated catalogue. Bead thia testimonial from'one of our customers and be convinced that we me.n Just what w ay: toxTOTOC. MISS. Gentlemen: My tea set fs just iovcly. I coiii'l have sold it - 4 the day I received it but would not part with it. UELLA JLL. V
SOAP CO- Cor. 12th
(Wecao personalis assure our readers that SalvonaSoap Co. is thoroughly reliable and ustworthy.KU
jii'.'jij how inacli money you can save Ui&SS-tLV.- von'd ;ti'1 to - I;.'.'!.:!...'i"-,'cr'' 'j r tVT p I . ii A r--U.ia.iSsA iy'vy-.'Cf r . v looltl dsi i ::'-t frfiin our factory ;:,' J'v.p-f SJt.l tax) Lank bond. We how inacli money you can save von M ; ri'l to - Vi
RAUAMA.TOO STOVE COMPANY, HFRS., RALAwAZOC t.. - AU our Cmc HiJZ'es and Ranges have jalcnt oven t.'ie: . " n ' 1 -
ijf r i i
la S i i &
Plain Taffeta Silt 19 inches wide
Commencing tomorrow morning, Saturday, Feb. 27th, we will place on sale for severa. days an exceptionally good value in Silk. All colors are shown
v jm ill w m"m I f III W4 I Vr ip i pr 1
WA
BROS. C0.-.&42
Bills Distributed WORK GUARANTEED. BATES BEAS tllBLB
xl .,4. ozd Nortn iwwnro nn hv selhll" OUT POB.DS tna i'fcr-
iamfi nicei. uecurairu or cuuiw ui uauj vuv ...... - articles. I'o the asrent who sells 24 botes of Soap or bottles of Perfume we five a 50 PIECE IHXNEU SET, full size, handsomely decorated and cold lined. We also givo I.ai:e Curtains, Rockers, Granitevrare, Sewing Machines, Bed Room ets, Dining Room ( hairs. Watches. Sporting Goods, and in fact any .tide vou may select. We give cash commission if crefcr-d. No money required. We
and Pine Sts.. ST. I.OUIS. 5IO. and dav V on 3 Kuar and how much better stove or range yo got day for f-.iU particulars about the If
imTmikmnmiam f
M R f ZOQ Steel Stoves . St... ..G5
fct) DaiVG Approval a est, :.;xr;;i -.: rantce perfect satisfaction or ask no frit.Vit. A ;lc frir onalr.?!1f Nfl. J. C III fl mm w m m w -mr m s i i nr. s -mw a m. m
vOiy vCsv' sJr3K Cr v-ov' O'
ri f 1 f 1 HT)
CAMBRIDGE CITY Byron Eldridge ,of Knihtstown, and Roy Cornell played for the dance in Ilagerstown Wednesday evening1. Miss Mary Swiinm, living nortli of this eitj7, is seriously ill. Mrs. Canady, of New Castle, is the p;uest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ault. Charlie "NVidner made a business trip to Knightstown yesterday. Mrs. Carl Boyd and Mrs. George Babcoek were in Richmond yesterday. Mrs. Winnie Ilogan, of Dayton, O., and Mrs. J. II. Shofer, of Richmond, spent yesterday with Mr. and Mrs. Matt Shew. Walter Boden made a business trip to New Castle yesterday. Ernest Doty has resigned his position with P. T. Frohnapfel, one of our leading grocers. Eli Paul has taken Mr. Doty's place. Mr. and Mrs. Will Hiatt, of Indianapolis, are visiting realtives here. Mrs. Falls and daughter, Virginia, who have been attending the millinery opening in Indianapolis for the past few- days, returned home yester
day. The Appean club will meet with Mrs. Strickler this evening. Mr. E. Clark, formerly of Chicago, has accepted a position as harnessmaker with Frank Ogborn. Mrs. Earl Tout was shopping in Richmond yesterday. Mrs. James Martin and daughter, Elsie, after a short visit with Mr. and Mrs. O. E. White, returned to their home in Richmond yesterday. George Butler, night operator at the Western Union telegraph office, has been unable to work for the past few nights. Daniel Van Buskirk is taking his place during his absence. The Western Union telegraph force, which has been here for the past few days, placing new copper wires along the line, left today for Anderson. John Kinsinger, of Germantown, was greeting friends here yesterday. The National Drill company shipped a carload of cultivators to Greenwood, Ind., yesterday. i Perfect Confidence. Where there used to be a feeling of uneasiness and worry in the household when a child showed symptoms of croup, there is now perfect confidence. This is owing to the uniform success of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in the treatment of that disease. Mrs. M. I. Basford, of Poolesville, Md., in speaking of her experience in the use of that remedy says: . "I have a world of confidence in Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for I have used it with perfect success. My child Garland is subject to severe attacks of croup and it always gives him prompt relief. ' ' For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. and W. H. Sudhoff, corner fifth and Main streets. English Spavin Liniment removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and demishes from horses, blood spavins, curbs, splints, sweeney, ring bone, stifles, sprains, all swollen throats, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wondefful blemish cure ever known. Sold bv A. G. Luken, druggist, Richmond, pi s i at 25c yard m m. m c . m m - & m i mm - ft.
5 STT"!
A? .
D.SMES AND DAUGHTERS. Mrs. Edith Dick of London is widely known as a successful designer of "art" jewelry. Mnie. Melba has leased for a short period the charming villa at Monte Carlo owned by the Earl and Countess of Wilton. Mine. Curie, famous as a female scientist and codiscoverer of radium, is thirty-six years old and dresses without the least attention to fashion. Lady Colin Campbell has collected the papers she wrote for the London World when it was edited by Edmund Yates and has published them under the title "A Woman's Talks." Mine. Takahira, wife of the Japanese minister to the United States, prefers American costumes to those of her sisters in the east. She is the only oriental woman presiding over a legation at Washington. Princess Schahowskoi Strechneff, who lives in Paris, owns the most sumptuous private car in Europe, for which she emplo3Ts an enormous suit of Circassian attendants, secretaries and servants, all wrearing gorgeous Circassian costumes. Mrs. Leslie M. ShawT is an "old fashioned woman." She has said so. She
; is genuine. She proved the latter when ' she said apropos of her recent trip to I Europe, '"I took my daughter to France so that she might learn to speak French after having studied it so . long." Mrs. Beerbolmi Tree, besides the reputation that she enjoys as an actress, has been called the most learned woman on the stage. She early developed a taste for study, being equally devoted, it is said, to classics and to mathematics, and was at one time a member of the teaching staff of Queen's college. SPORTING NOTES. Eastern universities are planning an Intercollegiate automobile meet. Auto boat races will be a prominent sporting feature the coming summer. Water polo and indoor swimming have taken on new impetus throughout the country this season. M. Haas of Sparta, Mich., has sold the pacer Ed M.. 2:27, for !?(J0U to 15. Dooge of Grand Rapids. Jim Scanlon of Pittsburg has pugilistic ambition. lie wants to fight either Jack Koot or Marvin Hart. George P.othnor. world's champion lightweight wrestler, is now. instructor in that work at Columbia university. Snowshoe jumping is a favorite pastime in Canada. The competitors run for about fifty yards and leap over hurdles. Morris Wood, the world's champion amateur skater, is a native of Long Pranch. N. J. lie learned to skate on the Shrewsbury river, famoxis as an ice yachting course. David A. Snell of New Bedford, Mass., will train Jupe, 2:0714, and four of his colts this season. Mr. Snell is seventy-six years old, but he will do the training himself. He drove Jupe to his record. JAPANESE CUSTOMS. At a Japanese banquet it is considered a compliment to exchange cups with a friend. Census taking in Japan is simple, but untrustworthy. The houses are counted, and for each of these dwelling places five persons is allowed. The lower classes of the Japanese employ, hardly any other material than paper for their clothing. Where wages are exceedingly low cloth is an impossible extravagance. . In almost every school in Japan it is the custom one day in the autumn to take the pupils out rabbit hunting, on another 'mushroom hunting at night with paper lanterns.. When a Japanese woman of the middle and lower classes is dressed for an evening entertainment she generally shows as much of her feet as she can and is sometimes barefooted. TRAIN AND. TRACK. The average annual dividend on the capital stock of American railways is 2. 01 per cent. An average of fourteen railway collisions a day is the record in the United States last year, as shown by the report of the interstate commerce commission. Last year 5,723 miles of new steam railroad track were built in the United States. That was thirty-nine miles more than the total mileage constructed in 1002. The American company which is building the sruilway from Guayaquil, Ecuador, to Quito has opened the station at Guamote, at an elevation of 30,000 feet, 120 miles from Guayaquil. The most difficult part of the work on the railroad has now been accomplished. Nothing Equals Chamberlain's Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Dr. P. B. Spears, of Pinchard, Ala., has become acquainted with the good qualities of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and uses it in his ovn famity and in his practice. lie says: "It beats any preparation I have ever seen for all bowel complaints. I do not think of recommending any other, and also use it with my own children." This remedy is for sale by A. G. Luken & Co. and W. II. Sudhoff, corner fifth F.nd Main streets.
THINGS THEATRICAL.
Yvette Guilbert has just returned from Berlin to Paris quite recovered from her long illness. William Gillette has entered upon the fourth month of his New York success, "The Admirable Crichton." The rhiladelpl.i theater managers are forming a protective association to oppose what they call impractical restrictions. Ella Wheeler Wilcox, it is reported, is to dramatize the Biblical story of Esther. The play, it is said, will be In blank verse. A report is current that Virginia Harned will play Letty in A. W. Finero's play of that name, recently produced with success in London. The Spanish government has invited Sir Henry Irving to present his dramatic version of "Don Quixote." The event will be of national character. Marie Tempest is consiering an offer to go back to musical work temporarily. The title roles of "Carmen" and "The Daughter of the Ilegiment" have been offered her. r After producing "Ivan, the Terrible." Richard Mansfield may appear Id "Macbeth" and also a tragedy written by Lord Byron. His season will extend until the middle of next June. CURIOUS CULLINGS. An ingenious Vienna bridegroom has invented an electric halo which will play round his bride's head during the wedding ceremony. A walking match at Heywood, England, for $100 between a one legged man with a crutch and another with a cork leg Avas won easily by the latter. An old lady being in a store In a Connecticut town sat down and extended her feet to an iron safe, remarking that she was so glad that "the air tight stoves had come into fashion again." A unique trade was made in Augusta, Me., recently, where two families swapped parlor stoves, the transfer being made while each stove had a coal fire in it, and, though the persons lived at some distance from one another, the exchange was made without losing either fire. A snail eating contest took place recently in a Paris restaurant for 50 lou is between two boulevardiers. Special Burgundian snails, fed on vine leaves, were used. An excited crowd watched the competition and enthusiastically applauded the victor, who had swallowed 243 snails. GOWN GOSSIP. Boleros are quite short and show beautiful wide waistbands. The cavalier cuff is again worn, and this is charming with a frill of old lace falling over the hand. Blue and green, or, as the French call it, peacock, shadings are very chic, and embroidery in these shades is the latest touch in trimming. Toques are narrow and elongated, while picture hats are abnormally large. The lace "curtain" behind and the lace veil over the face will continue to be worn. The new belt is decidedly decorative. It is of imitation silver filigree, wider at the back than in front. Woven in and out through it is a double strand of inch wide velvet ribbon of any preferred color. Everything is to be tucked, we are Informed, but the tucks are by no means to be the straight around or even up and down variety. Tucks in all sorts of circular and crescent shaped designs are presaged. lnn!Ie to Hold Thetr Own. "Sixth lap:" groaned the little darling as his fond mamma passed him round the sewing circle. Harvard Lampoon. DcatU nntl the Ilatoliet. Wills of millionaires remind us We can make our denths exciting, And, departing, leave behind us All our wives' relations flg-htinp. Life. IIIm Limit. "Doesn't your lodger do any work, madam?" "No, sir only works of genius." Fleetiner Fame. vr. The "man of the hour" "; May seem to be in it, But "time Hies," alas! He's forgotten next mimite. Philadelphia Ledger. Yonng Yet. He Have you been engaged before? She Not often. You forget that this is my first season. IV ot Declined. From a maid the poet stole a kiss Th far above his scribbling ranks, Because it filled his heart with bliss ; When it was "returned .-'th thanks." Cincinnati Enquirer. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. .Unequalled for Constipation. Mr. A. R. Kav a prominent druggist of Baxter Spru Kansas, says: "Chamberlain's Sloms.. and Liver Tablets are, in my judgment, the most superior 'preparation of anything in ! use today for constipation. They j are sure m action and with no ten- ; dency to nauseate or gripe. For sale .by A. G. Luken & Co. and W. IT. Sudhoff, corner fifth and Main .streets. -i... : J. !
People's Exchange J
STORAGE Ground floor, sixteentk L and Main. Vern Smith. I PnP OAIf fr rriT i i-t a new 8-ineh well boring machine and complete outfit for making water wells. Have made two wells a day with a machine like it. Must quit work on account of age. S. B. Huddleston, Dublin. 14-tf fOR SALE Old papers for sale at ! the Palladium office, 15 cents a hundred and some thrown in. FOR SALE A new ten-volume Americanized Cyclopedia Britannica. Inquire at Palladium office. It's a bargain for some one. WANTED Men or women local representatives for a high class magazine. Large commissions. Cash prizes. Write J. N. Trainer, SO East Washington Square, New York, N. Y. tf FIRE ALARM BOXES. FIRST DISTRICT. South of Main, West of Seventh. 12 First and south C, piano factory. 13 Second and south B. 14 Fourth and south D. A . 15 Fifth and south B. 16 Fifth and south H. . IS Seventh and south BT. SECOND DISTRICT. South of Main, Between Seventh and Eleventh. 21 Eighth and Main. 23 Eighth and south E. 24 Seventh and south G. " 25 Ninth and south A. 26 Tenth and south C. j 27 Eleventh and Main. 2S Eleventh and south J. THIRD DISTRICT. South of Main, East of Eleventh. 31 Twelfth and south B. 32 Twelfth and south E. 34 Fourteenth and Main. 35 Fourteenth and south C. 36 Eleventh and south A. 37 Twentieth and Main. FOURTH DISTRICT. North of Main, West of Tenth to River. 41 Third and Main, Robinson's shop 42 Third and North C. 43 City Building. 45 Gaar, Scott & Co. 46 No. 1 Hose House, N. Eighth. 47 Champion Roller Mills. 4S Tenth and North L FIFTH DISTRICT. West Richmond and Fairview. 5 West Third and Chestnut. 51 West Third and National Road. 52 West Third and Kinsey. 53 West Third and Richmond Ave. 54 Earlham College. 55 State and Boyer. 56 Grant and Ridge. 57 Hunt and Maple. 5S Grant and Sheridan. 59 Bridcre Ave., Paper Mill. SIXTH DISTRICT. North of E, East of Tenth. 61 Railroad Shops. 62 Hut ton's Coffin Factory. 63 Hoosier Drill Works. 64 Wayne Agricultural Works. ( 65 Richmond City Mill Works. .66 Westcott Carriage Works. 67 Thirteenth and North II. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Between Main and North D., East of Tenth. 7 Ninth and North A. 71 Eleventh and North B. 72 Fourteenth and North C. 73 No. 3 Hose House, East End. 74 Eighteenth and North C. j 1 75 Twenty-second and North E. SPECIAL SIGNALS. 1-2-1 Fire Out. " 10-10-10 Natural Gas Off. 10 Natural Gas On. I ' 312 Noon and 6 p.m. THE BLACK HILLS. The Richest Hundred Square Miles in the World. The Black Hills, in the southwest part of the state of South Dakota, produces one-third of the gold found in the United States, and is said to be the richest one hundred square miles in the world. A new booklet on the Black Hills has been issued by the North-Western line, with a fine detailed map of this wonderful region. Send four cents in stamps for copy of the booklet. W. B Ivnisken, 1 . X. Al., Lincago, III. mar26
f I
