Richmond Palladium (Daily), 25 March 1904 — Page 7
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, FEIDAY, MARCH 25, 1904.
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Effective March L'O, 1904 'EAST XSD SOUTH AM I'M TM No. 2 No. 4 No. Dnily lnily Sun cniy " ex.Snn. Lt Richmond -a 3.:-" .15 Lv Oottge.irove vi.rx i.X it (.0 Ar Cincinnati 2U .40 H-la A No. 1 N'.s; lally Daily Lv Cincinnati . ".45 4 on Ar Richmond U 4 7.tX) NO 1H II AND WEST AM I'M No. 1 No ;l Dfllly laily I.V Richmond MAS 7.X Ar M uncle -37 Ar Marion 1 87pm .;0 Ar Peru :Mopm H.iA Ar North Judson a.iopm AM AJ1 No. i Nc. 4 No. Dally Daily Sun only ex. Sun. Lv NorthJudson 8. loam Lv Peru 5.0 ll.Sopm 4 i Ar Richmond .0j 3;topra 8.1 For rates or Information regarding connections Inquire of C A. BIjAIK, Home Phone 44 city Ticket Agent. TRAINS Every Day Sloncie, Ilarion, Pern md Northern Indiana citiesvia C. C. &b L Leave Richmond Daily, 10: 15 a m 7:00 p m Through tickets sold to alJ points. For particulars enquire o C. A. Blaib. O. P. A. H)meTel.44 $150,000 FOR. " Athletic Ervents ' . In the Great Arena at the Exposition TOR A ROUTE. JLookattheMa Or THL SHOUT LIMES A FINE On Street Car Line In Boulevard Addition AT A BARGAIN . W. H, Bradbury & Son Wcstcott Block. TIME TABLE. On Sundays Cars Leave One Trip Later. First car leaves Kiclimond for Indianapolis at 5 a. ra. First car leaves Dublin for Richmond at 5 a. ra. Every car for Indianapolis leaves Richmond on the odd hour, from 6:00 a. to 7:00 p. m. - First car leaves Indianapolis for Richmond at 7:00 a. m. and every other hour thereafter until 5:00 p. m. Hourly service from Richmond to Dublin and intermediate points, from 6:00 a. m. to 11:00 p. zx. Subject to change without notice.. EATE OF FAEE. Richmond to Graves $0.05 to Centerville . . . to Jackson Park . . to "Washington Rd to Germantown . to Cambridge City to Dublin to Indianapolis . . 10 .15 .15 .20 .25 .30 1.05 Eotel Rates St. Louis World's Fair. For copy of World's Fair official amphlet, naming Hotel accommodaions and rates during Universal Exosition of 1904, address E. A. Ford, General Passenger Agent JPennsylva-lia-Yandalia Lines, Pittsburg, Pa.
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VERY ANNOYING. This Hardly Expresses What Rich
mond People Say of It. Any itchiness of the skin is annoyin?. Little danger in itching skin dis eases. But they make you miserable. Doan's Ointment is a never-failing cure. For Piles, Eczema, all itching troubles. Richmond citizens endorse it, Mrs. Henry Ranks, of 112 Fort Wayne avenue, says: "Doan's Oint ment is a splendid remedy, the best I ever used and I can recommend it wherever a soothing and healing prep aration is required. I was troubled for years with hemorrhoids in a very severe form, and, although I tried a great many different remedies, 1 never obtained the least relief from them until Doan's Ointment was rec ommended ahd I got a box at A. G. Luken's drug store. A few applica tions relieved the irritation. I believe Doan's Ointment will cure any ease where its use is indicated." For sale by all dealers. Price 50e. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. . ( Remember the name Doan's and take no other. LucasCold Water Paint For Interior Decorations has no equal. Can be applied over rough finished wall or over oil paint. Costs li'tle more than calcimine or white wash, but lasts indefinitely longer and does not rub off. wet or dry. Sanitary. Fireproof, Durable, Odor less. For Sale at HORNADAT'S Hardware Store, Phone199 861 MainPensytoaniaJLines TIME TABLE CIN CINNATI AND CHICAGO DIV. In E lect 2 p. m , Feb 16, 1901. Arrive 11.10 am 12.30 pm 4.45 pm 7 2-5 pm 10.50 pm 11.00 pm 4.05 am westward Depart ' Rich and Logan Ac Ex 6.45 am Chicago Mail and Ex 11.15 am Cin and Mack E Cin a id Loaan Ex 5.00 pm cm and Kicn Ac Ki' Cin and Mack Mail and Ex Cin and Chi Mail and Ex 11.15 pm CJeastwakdJ Chi and Cin Mail and Ex 4 15 am Mack and Cin Mail and Ex 5.15 am Rich and Cin Ac Ex 7.00 am Losran and Cin Ac Ex 10.10 am Mack and Cin Ex 3.45 pm Fast South Kx and Mail 4.00 pm Logan and Rich Ac 48 am 3.55 pm 5.40 pm COLUMBUS AND INDIANAPOLIS DIV. In Effect 9 a. ra , Nov. 29. WESTWARD N Y and St L Mail St L Fat Ex St L Fast Mail and Ex Col and Ind Ac Ex N Y and St L Mail and Ex 4.45 am 4 50 am 4 45 am 10 15 am 10 30 am 1 25 pm 10 10 pm i, am am i 57 pm 7 30 pm 10.25 am 1.2o pm 9 15 pm 5-93 nm Col and Ind Ac Ex EASTWARD St L and N Y Mail an "x Ind and Col Ac Mail an "c St L aud N Y Fas ' Ind and Col A", Penna rerial (Mil) St L aud N Y Mail aad . St L aud N Y Limited Ex 9 45 am 9 50 am 3.45 pu 4.5 pm 7 20 pm 8.40 pm DAYTON AND XENIA DIV. In Effect 12.01 p. m., Jan. 24 WESTWARD St L Fast Ex Springfd and Rich Ac St L Fast Mail and Ex Sprin and Rich Mail and Ex EASTWARD Rich and Sprin Mail and Ex Rich and Xenia Ac Ex N Y Faft Mail Penna Special Mail and Ex St L and N Y Limited Ex 4 37 am 10.00 am 10 10 am 10.02 pm 5 30 am 8.15 am 9 ."v am 4.55 pm 8.49 pm GRAND RAPIDS AND INDIANA RY. n Effect S a m., Feb. 16 SOUTHWARD 4.3-5 am 9.42 am 3.40 pm 9 45 pm Mack and Cin Mail and Ex Ft XV and Hich Mail and Ex Mack and Cin Mall and Ex Sunday Ac NORTHWARD Rich and G R Mail and Ex 5.40 am Cin and Mark Mail and Ex " 12 50 pm Cin and Mack Mail and Ex 10.55 pm ""'Dailv. ?annday only. All trains, unless otherwise indicated, depart and arrive daily, except Sunday. TIME TABLE Dayton and Western Traction Co. In effect January 23, 1904. ' Cars leave union station, south 8th St. every hour 6:C0, 7:45, and 45 minutes after every hour until 7:45 p. m., 9:00, 9:15 and 11 p.m., 'for New Westville. Eaton, West Alexandria, Dayton, Xenia; Tippecanoe, Troy, Piqua, Springfield, Urbana, London, Columbus, Last car to Dayton at 9 p, m stops only at New Westvill e.New Hope, Eaton, West Al. xander a and way poiutuast, 9.15 and 11 p. m, to West Alexandria only. New Paris local car leaves at 4 50. 0:20, 8;20, 10;20 a, m., 12:20. 2:20 and 0:20 pm. For further information call phoue20y. C. O. BAKER, Agent. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup seems especially adapted to the needs of the children. Pleasant to take; soothing in its influence. It is the remedy of all remedies for every form of throat and lung disease.
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Copyright. IS9I. by Charles W. Hoofce (Continued.) CHAPTER VIII. THE BEACON AND THE WRECK. lllfj norm wma was gaining 1 I strength as the day advanced. The orchard was a mass of tossing boughs as 1 looked down upon it from my window. Those trees must have been planted by an inspired geometrician, for the design was 6uch that whatever point of observation might be selected there was always one tree, and only one, between the observer and the lodge. It seemed perfectly easy to move a little wray and get a clear view, but at the precise instant when any given tree passed from the line of vision another interposed. The tranches hung low, and the lodge was i a hummock, so that a waving green veil always fluttered before it. There was no strong temptation to look that way. for Miss Scott's side of the lodge was the nearer to the house, and Miss Scott, by all accounts, was not a romantic object. Nevertheless I had acquired a habit of staring down Into the orchard, and on this particular day the high and rising wind so tossedj the boughs that I had a better view than usual. I saw Miss Scott sitting by the door, and I made her out to be angular, awkward and well past her J youth, yet these were guesses, ror tne distance was considerable and my glimpses momentary as the green billows of the orchard rose and fell. Presently I saw Jimmy Lamoine go down the crooked path, and I was not surprised. lie exchanged a few words with Miss Scott and then dodged round the porner of the house, passing beyond my vision. Half an hour later I was startled to see him coming along the carriage way that led from the road. There was, however, no mystery in his return by this route, for the "lay of the land" was such that he could have passed from the lodge to the road with out being visible from any part of the house, unless perhaps the roof. He paused just outside my window and seemed about to deliver a remark of tremendous importance; then he changed his mind and went on without saying anything. This was one of Jimmy's favorite methods of making himself obnoxious; it was a rite in his religion of mystery, and it sometimes grieved me sorely when he thus annoyed me to be reminded of his sister. As for the physical resemblance between them which Lucy Arn had mentioned, I had never been able to see it; but I was beginning to be painfully aware that there was a certaiu similarity in their ways. It was grotesque the likeness of a fearful caricature. That which was with Anna a pretty air of reticence, the veiling of some sweet fancy, a delicious riddle, appeared in Jimmy as arrant trickery. Thus will a familj- trait often disclose itself in varied form in the different individuals, and be3'ond a doubt the prudent may now and then gain valuable warnings in this way. But I did not wish to be warned; I did not believe that it was necessary, and many a time I could most willingly have laid a hand upon James not in the way of kindness when he performed before my eyes this dire mockery of his sister. Not long after he passed the window I saw him going down into the orchard again, this time accompanying Lucy Ann and carrying in a big basket the luncheon for Miss Scott and the girl. I observed that Lucy Ann took out the portion that was Miss Scott's and that Jimmy then carried the basket around to the other side. So Lucy Anu did not serve the girl; did not see her at all. What could this mean?. Obviously thai Laundry Blue Won't Freeze Won't Break Won't Spill Won't Spot Clothes Costs 10 Csnls, Equals 20 Cents worth of any other kind of bluing IViggUStick i a etick of solablo blue in a filter bag inside a perforated wooden tnbe, thron?h which the water flows and dissolTes the color as needed. " DIRECTIONS FOR USE: . Wiggle-Stick around in the water. ) Manufactured onl by THE LAUNDRY BLUB COMPANY, Chlcl
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Hotaard Fielding the girl was souie out? whom L.uey Ann would recognize if she should see her at close range. I jotted tlown this point for future reference. 1 had not yet made up my mind that the girl was Sibyl; that is, I had said so to myself, but something within me had refused belief, lteally I could as easily believe that Miss Jones was Sibyl. The basis of this confusion was that elusive memory such as drives one distracted when a name dances upon the tip of the tongue for hours, even for days, and will not be uttered. The girl reminded me of somebody, and It seemed that if I could but think of that person all doubt would vanish. It did not vanish when I thought of Sibyl. I spent the afternoon In the woods alone, "a book of verses underneath the bough," no loaf of bread, no jug of wine, no girl. Yet, though lacking the best part of old Omar's prescription, I did not waste the hours. The trees sang well in the wind, and the odors of the wood were heady as wine. They lured me away from my book; they made me walk many miles without wreariness, indeed with an access of strength for every step, and when at last I strode across the fields toward Mrs. YVitherspoou's, with the Western sun giving me a half mile of shadow, I viewed that part of the house which held the kitchen with a certain uneasiness. At that distance it did not look big enougn. But no man will starve at Mrs. Witherspoon's, no matter what his appetite may be. She fed us amply and well that evening, and I Avent forth after the meal exceedingly content. The breeze had gone down with the sun, and the lake seemed to be smooth as a mirror when I viewed it from the head of the long path. It invited me, and not in vain. There were half a dozen boats on the strip of beach, and I chose the one that pleased me best. It was a rule at Mrs. Witherspoon's to follow one's impulses in such matters. I judged that a person whose impulses proved to be defective would be gently eliminated from this idj-llic spot and that the discovery of his unfitness would be prompt. Such was my confidence in this notion that at the end of the first week I would have gone into the Witherspoon stable and saddled a horse with my eyes shut, sure that had I been the sort of fellow to take the wrong horse I should not have remained so long a guest of the house. I paddled out into the lake. There was still a trace of color in the sky, and all the air seemed to be most delicately rose tinted. The mere eye could not see this, could not watch it fade into the faint gray of the ashes of roses, but it was none the less visible. There were whispers from all the shores. The rough hill spoke in its own way; the low ground where the willows grow had a very different story and .the orchard another. I was naturally most interested in the orchard, and I propelled the boat to a favorable position, keeping my distance, however, as I had been taught. v , Suddenly I became aware of a light upon the shore. The lake meanwhile had clothed itself with indistinctness that was not the dark, butscarcely more penetrable. That light had a reddish glow, and it illuminated nothing except the narrowest path upon the water. I made it out to be a fire of little sticks kindled upon the rocks that
f.ere quite rugged at the eastern side of the orchard's sea edge near the hill. It was so placed as to be visible over a small area only, and this I knew from having come so suddenly into the view of it. Now, what should a light be kindled for upon the shore except for the sailor who seeks a harbor? A beacon is set upon a roclf as a guide to show the way. But there are false lights, of course, and the mariner must exercise groat caution;' he must not set all sail in a hurry. I am a good skipper of small craft. I can paddle over the rail of a boat, and you shall neither hear nor see anything that boars a hint of propulsion. And thus I floated in toward the shore through the gray night. Presently there came a sound as if a hand had been laid upon a stringed instrument; then there were chords very lightly struck, and at last I heard a woman's voice singing softly an air that was new to me. Considering this matter in a coldly rational fashion, it was evident that if the lady had wished me farther away she would have, sung more loudly. Her voice was so wonderfully clear, even in this whisper of singing, that I felt sure she could have made the music audible across the lake. Plainly, then, this was an invitation, and upon the strength of it I cut my distance from the shore in half. Yet the song neither ceased nor grew louder. My bout must have been visible. It might look white or black in the night, for that question 'is not determined by the normal color of the paint. If the firelight reached it, the skiff would show white and declare itself more plainly for what it was. I decided to be frank about it and not try to pass for the trunk of a tree. In matters of romance I believe thoroughly in honestyif it wins. So I cut off another rod or two of distance. The lire was now. quite distinct. It
reemeu to u on a flat rocii not much above the water level, and behind it was a curving wall, a little cliff ten feet high, but of this only the top was visible, for it was of course impossible for me to see anything that w'as directly behind the li'ht. As for the singer, she was utterly invisible. There was something mystical in this music, which seemed to proceed out of the red fire that, with the familiar habit of inanimate moving objects, assumed to the eye the rhythm of the song. I was so deeply fascinated by all this that I forgot my seamanship and let my oar strike the boat's rail with a sharp sound. Instantly the music ceased, and I was tortured l.,v a perfect silence. This was a:: emergency, and I knew it. The ringer might be at tl:at r.mn.cnt escaping by tci::i' secret pr.tli among the rocks. .Tor a moment i was near to the deadly banality of addressing her, apologiU, introducing myself, committing I know not what absurdity. Then, it occurred to my mind that since there undoubtedly was a way of escape for her it might possibly be permissible for me to sing. There have been serenades in all ages, and undoubtedly at cae time or another women have listened to worse voices than mine with- very kind actvptame of the offering for the sake of the spirit in which it has been made. So" I s::ng the first tiling that came inio my had. and it happened to be a ballad called "The Evening Star," quite trivial in every way, that I used to sing to Sibyl long ago. It is well known that in moments of excitement one speaks above his usual pitch, and this law of nature worked to defeat me in the present instance. The man who wrote "The Evening Star" would never have dared to publish it in the key that I hit, for he would have found few that could sing it. I think a special dispensation must have been granted me. Kr I got through the first stanza like a nightingale, but I perspired reely with terror. Then I waited, and by my sensations of duration it s'lould have been 4 o'clock in the next afternoon when I heard a blessed sound from the shore. It was the guitar, aud presently the lady sang again. She had chosen "Heart's Delight," a quaint little, melody, and Sibyl's favorite of all, as I remembered. I have strong faith ih the power and the will of chance to deceive a man, but to take this for coincidence was an impossibility. It could be only Sibyl that sang to me, and I must have been less susceptible to emotion than was the wood of the boat that bore me if I had not thought .tenderly of the little girl who had wept in the dark at "Heart's Delight" in the old days. In the voice itself there was nothing whatever that reminded me of Sibyl. It was not girlish, and of course I could not fully realize the difference that the years had made. She was still a child to me, and the voice was womanly. I would have said the singer had been taught not only by thoroughly competent masters, but by her own emotions; well taught by both, and in the school of the heart one gets no degree at 19 it is indeed an early age to be admitted. I made no analj'sis at that time; I merely thought that it was strange. Therein it was the more agreeable. I did not wish to reduce this adventure to the level of the known. It was all I asked to sit there in the red ray of fire and speak the language of music with a dream girl incarnated from the June night. There Avas an interval of silence. Obviously it was for me to break it, and I suddenly began to ransack my brain for a good song. That was the wrong place to investigate. If I had ieft my brain at Mrs. Witherspoon's it would have been better. Promptings that are worth obeying at such times arise from the deep seated, unerring region of instinct. I could not think of the right song, but if I had sung without thinking there would have been no chanes of mistake ' (To be continued.)
Women as Wei! as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis courages and lessen-, ambition: beauty, vigoi -tv.it i cheerfulness scon ii'f-' ' j5) oixappenr vion the kid-Tbm.3--'t riv,:5 are clc of rdc l-ine scalds the flesh c n the chileacr.es an age vnen it snouia ce aDiv icontrol the passage, it is yet affheted with Ded-vetting, depend upon it. the cause of :he difficulty is kidney trouble, and the firs' j-ep should be towards the treatment c hese important organs. This unpleasan trouble is due to a diseased condition of thf kidneys ard bladder and not to a habit x. nost people suppose. Women as weli as men are made mis rable with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect o 5wamp-Root is soon realized. It is so'o oy druggists, in fiftycent and one dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle by mail free, a.lso pamphlet tell Home of Swamp-Root. ing al! about it. including many of the thousands of testimonial letters received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmei c Co.. Binghamton, N. Y., be sure anc rneriticsn his mivr Money Loaned Vom 5 to 6 per cent. Thompson's Loan and Real Etat4 vgency, Main and reventh streets.
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Ladies Only; It Iq Women Who Need Most Relief From Little Irritating Pains and Aches,' Dr. Miles' Anti-rain Pills are foe women. "Woman's delicate nervous organism' tingles to the least jarring influence, and some ache or pain is the result. . -The remedy is at hand Dr. Miles' Anti-rain mis. They act most marvellously on woman's nervous organism, and relieve and cure the pains to which she is a martyr. Headaches, neuralgiac pains, monthly, pains, and all kinds of pains disappear, as If a gentle hand had lightly soothed them away. Dizziness, Rush of Blood to the head. Toothache, Backache are all cured by these "Little Comforters.", Cured without danger of disagreeable after-effects; cured quickly; cured without unnatural action on liver, stomach, or other Internal organs. Dr. Miles' Anti-rain rills please the women, and the children take them because they are easy to take and soothe all their sufferings. "For years I had spells of sick headache, at times suffering untold agonies. I could not endure any excitement. Going to church, and even visiting, brought on these terrible spells. I tried numerous remedies without relief until I tried Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain rills, and they have cured me. When I feel symptoms of sick headache I take a pill and ward off the attack. When I am tired and nervous, a pill soothes me." MRS. SARAH WAT KIN SON , Blairstown. Ia, rrice, 25c a box. Never sold in bulk.
TP'OfT1 Write to us for Free Trial X XVXjXj rackage of Dr. Miles' AntiPain Pills, the New Scientific Remedy for rain. Also Symptom Blank. Our Specialist will diagnose your case, tell you what is wrong, and how to right it. Free. DR. M1LS MEDICAL. CO., LABORATORIES, ELKHART, IND. The census bureaus estimates that approximately 9,200,00 acres were under irrigation in Juljr of last year. This is an increase since the irrigation season of 1S99 as reported in the census of 1900 of 1,GG0,433 acres. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ss. Lucas County. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that, cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. -D. 18S6. (seal) A. W. Gleason, Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J, CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. "A local gentleman" of Kilmarnock admitted to the provost of that town the other day that he was the author of the bogus letter regarding the gift to Kilmarnock of a Burns temple, at a cost of 500.000 pounds, from Andrew Carnegie. He gave the provost $250 for the local hospital, and the incident was officially closed. Best Remedy for Constipation. "The finest remedy for constipation I ever saw used is Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets," says Mr. Eli Butler, of Frankville, N. Y. "They act gently and without any unpleasant effect, and leave the bowels in a perfectly natural condition." Sold by A. G. Luken & Co., and W. H. Sudhoff, corner fifth and Main. 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. mar26 Knfsken, P1 T. M., Chicago, HI. Suicide Prevented. The startling announcement that a preventive of suicide had been discovered will interest many, A run down system or despondency invariably precede suicide and something has been found that will prevent that condition which makes suicide likely. At the first thought of self destruction take Electric Bitters. It being a great tonic and nervine will strengthen the nerves and build up the system. It's also a great Stomach, Liver and Kidney regulator. Only 50c. Satisfaction guaranteed by A. G. Luken & Co., druggisis. Ten thousand demons gnawing at one's vitals couldn't be much worse than the tortures of itching piles. Yet there's a cure. Doan's Ointment never fails.
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