Richmond Palladium (Daily), 30 March 1904 — Page 3
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ailroad Restaurant n2I s?.r,h PIUCES REASONABLE. EVERYTHING UP-TO-DATE.
iaiTnTS
On Monday and Thursday afternoons at the NEW MUSICAL STUDIO Mrs. C. L. Andrews ocal and Instrumental MusicTaught. NO. 28 NORTH 11th
E. B.Grosvenor M.D., EYE EAR, spca"st NOSE and OFFICE HOURS: -- II Q AT" 9 to 12 a.m. 7 to 8 p. xn. I rlnUnl 8 to 4 p. m.; SUNDAY t to 12 SCIENTIFIC Colonial Building. 7th and Main Sts. GLASS FITTING
. ire er less Madecirb, OLIVER C. Feedall of kinds always on hand.
READ! READ! READ! And wt posted in the prices we give you from the only low priced store in the eity. Last week was the second largest week's business that we have had in your city. Here are a few of the many Low Prices we will give you for the first three davs of the week: BARGAINS IN TOWELS. .. ". Huck Towels, HO inch long:, and a great sacrifice at 5c each. SCOTCH LAWNS In all the leading colors, stripes and figures, go at this sale for only per yard, 24 yards to a customer. FANCY WHITE GOODS 30 in. wide, 10c quality for only 44? per yd. 24 yards to a customer. Suitable for Waists, children's dresses and Aprons. IN OUR GROCERY DEPARTMENT:: We are in better shape to serve you than ever before. Our Stock is complete in every particular. The finest Potatoes that ever grew,$1.10 per hu Fancy New York Baldwin Apples, $1.35 per bu. ' Silver Leaf" Flour 70c per sack.$2.75 per cwt. Every sack guaranteed. Same as our famous "I Am Boss" which you all know is first class. 7 lbs. Famous New York Buckwheat for 25c. ON WEDNESDAY WE WILL SELL. YOU 13 Bars Snap Soap for 25c. 9 Bars Swift's Pride for 25c. - ' " ; , T- J 5 Bars Lenox, Santa Claus, Green Seal 25c. 6 lbs. hand pieked Navy Beans for 25c. 61bs. Scotch Green Peas for 25c. Our Famous "Leader" Coffee, 15c per lb. The Morning Glory, the best Coffee you evnr drank for 20c per lb. Also we will sell you to introduce for this one day, the Quaker City Package Cofiee 10 lbs. for $1.00. Granulated Sugar, 21 lbs. for $1.00. A Sugar 22 lbs. for $1.00. Light Extra C 23 lbs. for T1.00. Come one, come all. Remember you are not restricted. SPECIAL -1 lb. Young Hyson, Japan Imperial Moyane Tea 50s per lb. 20 extra stamps with each pound sold. Get your order in early or telephone to us the day before and we will fill it on BARGAIN DAY at those prices. We are always looking for more business. Prompt delivery and courteous treatment. Both Phones. Me MOM, DEPARTMENT SfOl
Botli Phones.
1 "l-IVIU VnL R00MS!33 and 134, COLONIAL BUILDING T. J. COOK, O. D. ScientificIOptician Cured all errors of refraction without dilating the'pupil. Eyes tested free. All work guaranteed.
Office Hours 8 to 12J:3(Tto 5:30;7 to 9 B ELECT B0ABj)iyG Mesdate Smith & Conley Homo like Menu. Rates Reasonable ZI " 30 N. Eleventh St. ; L
Bills Distributed - KOKK GlilRMTEED BATES RElSDllBMi
Voices Tested Free Flour MOORE of The River Roller Mills MILTON, IND. 4x1-4x5 Main Street.
A GREAT TROUBLE with some coal even good looking coal is that it won't burn, a prime requisite of black diamonds " that at all repay buying No such "fluke " possible here, because otu coal quality guarantee, goes with every ton leaving our yards. J. H. MENKE 162-164 Ft. Wayne Ave. Home Phone 762 Bell Phone 435
FROM 1002 MAIN STREET TO
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM,
LOCK YOUR DOORS 40 CIllin This Way 40 You shall know more about it tomorrow. Katerine Willard. One of the most notable dramatic events of the present season will be the apeparance at the Gennett theater on Monday, April 4th of Katherine Willard in Theodore Kremer's successful romantic drama, "The Power Behind the Throne." As an actress of the first-class, Miss Willard has firmly established herself in ?:he hearts of the theater-going 'pub lic. Endowed with a remarkably melodious voice, pure in its tones and elocutionary powers, which have .at tracted th attention of the leading dramatic critics, Miss Willard has scored a most "ratifying success wherever she has appeared. Her reading of her lines is at all times admirable, and there is no attempt at exaggeration in any of her work. She possesses a marked degree of personal magnetism, a charming stage presence and is destine to become a celebrated actress. The Kansas City Times, in referr ing to Miss Willard 's performance, pays: "Miss Katherine Willard was given a reception at the Grand opera house yesterday afternoon such as is accorded few actresses in this eity. At the end of the third act of "The Power Behind the Throne," she was called four times before the curtain, and even then the audience continued to applaud. It was a great success for the youug actress. Her supporting company is excellent, and the costumes and scenery give the play a striking good furnishing. Proper Treatment of Pneumonia. Pneumonia is too dangerous a disease for anyone to attempt to doctor himself, although he may have the proper remedies at hand. A physician should always be called. It should be borne in mind, however, that pneumonia always results from a cold or from an attack of the grip, and by the proper treatment of these diseases a threatened attack of pneumonia may be warded off. There is no ques tion whatever about this, as during the thirty years and more that Chamberlain 's Cough Remedy has been used, we have yet to learn of a single case of a cold or attack of the grip having resulted in pneumonia when this remedy was used. It is also used by physicians in the treatment of pneumonia with the best results. Dr. W. J. Smith, of Sanders, Ala., who is also a druggist, says of it: "I have been selling Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and prescribing it in my practice for the past six years. I use it in cases of pneumonia and have always gotten the best results." Sold by A. G. Luken & Co., and W. H. Sudhoff, fifth and Main. APRIL COSMOPOLITAN. Every Catholic reader in the country will find much to intercut him and to think over in an article in the Api'il "Comopolitan," "P;n X. ;iiid the Problems of His Pontificate." The author is said to be an eminent French ecclesiastic, but u:.i-?r a penname he is able to write with great frankness upon the pre.so'it needs of the Roman Catholic chu-tb and the necessity for reform, especially in catechetic teaching and the ailiiude of the priesthood toward the people. His analysis of the new Pope's personality and character is nvjbably the finest and most complete I hit h;i? et appeared. How soon the great rock r.f Gibraltar, Britain's "Keeper of tfie lvislern Gate," may again stati 1 thr? ti-s of hostile assault none con tell. Yet it may come soon, and the illu;h;t!f d article in the April "Cosmopolitan," in which Broughtou Brandenburg describes the famous fortrc.', if vast system of defense and suhiernine.in passages, and gives biis ,V :-n ils billing history, makes into-estiiv loading. The list great si. ge to avI ieli Gibraltar was subjectel Listed Lin years.
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 1904.
PRIZES OFFERED Canadian Government Hangs Up Tempting Purses for Hoosier Editors. FOR THE BEST STORIES Pencil Pushers Will be Given an Incentive to Keep Tlieir Eye Open on Coming Trip. Details Tor the Summer Excursion to Canada Itapidly Nearing Completion. Indianapolis, March 30. The committee having charge of the Canadian trip which will be taken next July by the Allied Editorial association of Indiana is gradually completing the arrangements. The Dominion of Canada, 'the Winnipeg Industrial Exhibit association and the companies over whose lines the editors are to travel, are furnishing a great deal of literature concerning the route to be covered. The department of the interior of Ottawa has added to the original itinerary and proposes to cover more points of interest, allowing at least one day and a half at Baniff, a beautiful mountain resort. The trip will last about two weeks. To lead the editors to keep their eyes open, the Canadian government offers $200 in prizes to the editors writing the best stories oa the trip. The money will be divided into five prizes as follows: First, $60; second, $50; third, $40; fourth, $30; fifth, $20. RAILROADS HEAVY LOSERS Flood Played Havoc With Tracks In Monroe County. Bloomington, Ind., March 30. Detailed reports fro3 the flood in Monroe county show that the loss will be many thousand dollars, in addition to the loss of time and labor in stone quarries and mills. On Bean Blossom and Salt creeks, which run on opposite sides of the county, the water was never known to be so high. Fences were swept away, floodgates era gone and many barns and outbuildings in the lowlands were washed away. The loss to pikes running in all directions from the city is very heavy, as they are washed out in many places. The quarries are flooded with waver, some filled with water over fifty feet deep and pumps are going day and night to empty them. The contractors working on the Indianapolis Southern railroad have heavy losses. New grades have been washed away and embankments torn down by the rushing waters, and it will require hundreds of dollars to put them back in good condition. May Never Come to Trial. Terre Haute, Ind., March 30. Judge Piety has ordered an allowance of $250 to the attorneys defending Benjamin Springer, colored, and an equal amount to the attorneys for Jerry Duggins, both of whom now are under sentence of death. This will exhaust the $500 appropriated by the county council, and there is now talk of dropping the prosecution of the eighteen men indicted for riot, growing out of the attempt to lynch Duggins, because of ,the heavy expense entailed. It is also said that justice has been sure and swift with the murderers, and that as a lesson has been taught, the cost of proceeding against the rioters would be greater than the object warrants. A $30,000 Fire Loss. Connersville, Ind., March 30. A destructive fire came in the burning of one of lae two large factory plants of the Ansted, spring and axle works, causing a loss exceeding $30000. The axle works department was burned and the other was saved only by great effort on the part of the city fire department. The insurance is $10,000. Sixty skilled workmen are thrown out of employment. Fred Landis Renominated. Peru, Ind., March 30. Frederick K. Landis was renominated-by the Republicans of the Eleventh district as their candidate for congress. But one ballot was required. This showed 78 delegates for Landis and 43 for Steele. Landis was declared the nominee on motion of Steele and the nomination was made unanimous. Rural Carriers' Monthly Roll. Indianapolis, March 30. Frank L. Richmann, cashier of the Indianapolis postoffice, has finished making out the checks for the payment of rural carriers in Indiana for the month of March. There are 1,563 carriers on the pay roll this month and they will draw $75,000 for their month's work. Strange Subject of Mortgage. Terre Haute, Ind., March 30. A chattel mortgags was filed in all seriousness on a gambling house outfit, naming faro layouts, roulette wheels, craps tables, etc. The mortgage was given by a saloon keeper named Houtchins to the Terre Haute Brewing company. Capt. Cornick Drowned. Evansville, Ind., March 30. Capt. John Cornick, of the steamer Kenois, plying in Green river, 'fell overboard and was drowned. The body wai not recovered.
THANKFUL PEOPLE. They are Found in Every Part of Richmond. Many citizens of Richmond ave good reason to be thankful for burdens lifted from aching backs, which they bore patiently for years. Scores tell about their experience publicly Here's a case of it: Mrs. L. Aldrich, of 407 . L 13th street says: "For several years my kidneys were out of order and. two or threee times each year I was laid up and had to take medicine. I had at such times constant aching pains through my loins and in the Hdneys. I could not rest comfortably and in the morning was lame and sore all over and was often scarcely able to get up. Learning about Doan's Kidney Tills I secured them at A. GV Luken 's drug stoie and began taking them. I soon felt better and continued to improve steadily until cured." For sale by all dealers. Price 50c. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other.
THE BOOKLOVERS MAGAZINE FOR APRIL, 1904. The April number of The Booklovers Magazine appeals to a wide variety of tastes. There is solidity without heaviness., entertainment without shallowness, and instruction without pedantry in its pages. The articles have a vivid present timeliness and a permanent value besides. Talcott Williams contributes a masterly statement of the real meaning of the Russo-Japanese war to the April number. It is not, in his opinion, a mere war for territorial aggrandizement at least on the part of Japan. The struggle is ultimately to maintain or to overthrow the "world's last great powerful despotism." and incidentally to preserve Asia for the Asiatics. Dr. Williams' article is without question one of the most authoritative and illuminating that has , so far appeared in print in reference to the contest in the Far East. The second article on "The Two Pacifies," by Harold Bolce, continues his valuable observations on the industrial value of the Orient. The Apr.il installment tells of the foreign exploitation of China's marvelous resources, and points out many of the present and profitable opportunities that confront the alert Western business man in the Flowery Kingdom. Incidentally Mr. Bolce draws attention to the newly discovered value, strategic and commercial, of those "stepping-stones to the Orient," the Aleutian Islands. This discovery opens up a new field for commercial exploitation nearer home than China, and those interested will do well to read Mr. Bolce 's description of it. Lovers f ml n-ill find much to delight them in the April number. There are reproductions, in color, of five of the most important pictures shown at the recent exhibition held at the Carnegie Institute at Pittsburgh; an article on the art of John W. Alexander, the portrait painter, with examples of some of his later and most characteristic work; Mrs. Wiederseim presents three pictures, in color, of "The Out-of-Door Girl," and the article on "England's Moated Houses" is richly illustrated by Herbert Raiiton's exquisite pen-and-ink work. ATTENTION, FARMERS ' Why remrdn in the North and stay in doors six months in the year consuming what you raise, during the other six months? Go South where you can work out doors every month in the year, and where you are producing something the year round. If you are a stock raiser you know your stock are now "eating theii heads off" a id, besides, have to be protected from the rigors of wintei hy expensive shelter. Economical stock feeding requires the combination of both flesh-forming and fat-forming foods in certain proportions. Alabama and Florida prodace in abundance the velvet bean and cassava, the first a flesh producer, and the latter a fat producer, and thev are the cheapest and best fat tening materials known to the world. More money can be made and with less labo, in general farming fruit and berry growing and truck gardening along our road in the South than in any other section of the Union. If yon are interested and desire further information on the' subject, address G..A. PARK, Gen'l Immigration and Industrial Agent, Louisville & Nashville R. R. C, Louisville, Ky. Remember that "Ideal Bread" has a Ren, White and Blue label on every loar, none genuine without it.
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A Practical Magazine for 7 HE GENTEEL. HOUSEKEEPER EACH 1SSUS CONTAINS BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED DISHES. DECORATIONS POR THE TABLE, DAtNTY MENUS FOR ALL. OCCASIONS. ETC. It is the amzrjcan authority on culinary tosics and fashions. Current Issue 10c. $1.00 Few Year TABLE TALK PU3. pO., Phila. Harness for show and harnens lor every n v a sn may mean difference In quality In some makes here they are Identical In streneth and durability. More styie, of coarse, in fancy drlrlng harness; but all our harness la made from good stocK and every set maintain! oar reputation as to workmanship and Union. All sorts of horse equipments at very moderate prices. The Wiggins Co. A BIG BUNDLE Of trouble is often lifted from the shoulders of the housewife by sending her BIG BUNDLE of "rough dried" clothes to a reliable, up-to-date Laundry. The Eldorad SUCH IS No. 18 North Ninth St. - Phone 147. Richmond, Indiana. THE SHIRT WAIST is agitating QUESTION . . . . .the men. Not bothering us much, however. Carpents Cleaned by a New Process, shirtwaists, we will do the laundering. THE RICHMOND STEAM LAUNDRY , The greatest money making inventions have been suggested by minds tamiliar with the needs of the age. . THE AMERICAN INVENTOR will keep you in touch with subjects of current interest in the line of new inventions and experiment. It will aid you to develop ideas of practical value. Issued on the 1st and 15th of every month. - Twentv-eieht cages each issue. Sold at Dews stands 1 0c per copy or sent by mail $ 1 .50 per year. THE AMERICAN INVENTOR. Sample copy sent free. Washington. D. C W, PXPERIENCS Trade Marks Designs Copyrights &c Anvone sending a pketoh and description may quickly ascertaii. our opinion tree wiietner an invention is probably patent r.hlo. Communifa, tiotis strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest asrency for seouriMfr patents. Pateuts taken thronch Mann & Co. receive rperial notice, without charge, in the Scientific flfiicricau. A handsomely lllnstrated weekly. I.nreest osculation of any soient'.Hc journal. Terms. year : four months, $ L. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co.3G,Broad New York Branch Office, 625 F SU WasbUiirton, D. C VJHEH JH CHIGIGO Stopatth Baths & Hotel Combined 8 floors. Fine, new rooms. Meals a-la-Cart at all hours. , BATHS OF ALL KINDS, Turkish. Russian, Shower, Plunge, etc. The finest swimming pool in the world. Turkisb Bath and Lodeinir. 1.00. Most inexpensive first class hotel in Chicaeo. Right iu tht, heart ot the city. Booklet on application. Now Northern Baths & Hotel 14 Quincy St. CHICAGO Near State' Stops more pain, relieves more &ufferiiig', prevents more heart aches and liseases than any other remedy. That's what Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will do. 35 cents in tea or tablet form. A. G. Lnken & Co.
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