Richmond Palladium (Daily), 1 April 1904 — Page 4
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RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1904.
pCENTR At, UNION
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
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PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY. EXCEPT SUNDAY. AT 922 JVJA1N STREET.
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CUNIQNfef)LABEL
Pjames R. Hart. Editor. (js M Rutherford. Business Manager
(John S. FltzglDbons. City Editor.
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Business would flow in from the most unexpected quarters, and when . we took time to investigate we could always trace it direct to some of our advertising. Col. Geo. aierritt, of Waterbury Watch Co.
EASTER.
Mtanee, but as surely " just too late.
'Christ' resurrection was a m- Thus two years passed. The deer sa-e for Ms world as w, .1 as for that has finallX been found and captured. which is to come. In Hi. rising the a piano box in ait unused room of world rose. That triumph ever the dewberry hotel the "white pilgrave which said to me, -'There is a S baa taken refuge that is to life wlrch is superior r the corrup- say .the corpse had, for it. was but the tion of death V;says also, "There is mrtal part that remained, well prea life which'is superior to corrupt served, but awfully; terribly dead. livin"" " j Living, its price would have puro ' i i ' ja tao r. ;c ir-nth chased an ordinary museum. Lifeless So strongly, indeed, uoes tms trutft . t i , xi ai Pn-,i iit at was stui f great value. Deputy lay hold upon the Apootle aal that . . ,; i A ;,-v v.i tTTToK.-.i vvarden Coulter had received a quiet
f the whole way of the Christian Pointfr where the prize was to be
life. Every Christian is to him a rei-
found, and, walking in, arrested it in
i. 3 wu r-T,-;o;, 14 ;c Q lts improvised catacomb. It is now urrected man. The Christian lite is a . , . i-i i-- i. j- j j r a ,4 m possession of Game Warden Chaplife which died and rose again. Aid r progress in Christian life i a '- " . . .,. tinual 4eath and a continual rising.! - The Christian dies dailv tocsin and THE DIAMOND SUPPLY; rises irr the same way to righteousness j The people of the United States And the thought is tr.o. Death lies take the larger portion of the $400 between every life and a fuller or 000,000 worth of diamonds which the better life; death between the grain South Africa mines have added to the of corn and the new life which world's supply. In 1903 the diabringeth forth much teuil ; death be- mnds brought directly to the United
tween the acorn and the oak: death . oiaies xrom uie ape oi uooa nope
between the man of the ilesh and the man. of the Spirit; Gol Frkliy and the cross between the T-pnl of Christ's humanitj- and the Easter of he rism Lord. Examine any good tiNg'iHto which you may be urged; is it not true, lhat what is hard for us, m doin that good thing,- is a dying fo :i worse thing, and what is joyful in doing it, is the conscious rising to a higher and better life? The rise into generosity
were worth $8,403,222, and in 1902
tle total importation was $17,687,195 Bough 'diamonds are usually cut and polished at Amsterdam, Antwerp London artd "New York. There are so many larfe fortunes in the United States that a great deal of the money seeks investment in diamonds, though they draw no interest. They are considered nice to have, and are regarded as good stuff to" lay by for a "rainy day" or an emergency in Wall street. In the heat and rush of
is hard because it mearis ihe death of
nness; it is joyfu', because it!our prosperity it is easy to account ns the opening of tho heart inlo"a' for the absorption of so many beauti-
mea mea
larger, richer life. The vi-e'into cheerfulness of spirit is onl hard because it means a relentless killing of the spirit of complaining; it is joyful in that the life if enlarging into a more angelic living. The rise into helpfulness is death to selfishness. The rise into truth is death to cunning. Virtues are hard to get just because thers is told over in them once again the story of Gethsemane, the
cross, the death and the resurrection. I
Let; this Easter, then, bring its message in such ways unto us. Flowers and anthems; bright garments and cheerful greetings; and beneath all these some such thing as this; a new struggle with death, and a new glory of resurrection. May God give us this for our Easter blessing. Samuel T. Carter.
ful gems. It requires, too, a good
many diamonds to keep third-rate actresses advertised. The paste articles will do for entertainers of a lowei
WHITE DEER Regarded as a Priceless Rarity Was Found Dead in a Piano Box. (Detroit Tribune.) Like a white crow, a snowy blackbird or a black tulip, a white deer is a rare creature and worth many times its weight in murderous lead. Occasionally srch a deer has been seen in Michigan and such a deer slain, and if the slaughter took place in the closed season more pains was taken to conceal the fact and the deer than a feudal assassination in Breathitt County, Kentucky. During the "shut" season of two years ago a hunter near Newberry leveled his law i " n - -i i i . , .
is nue aim Drougnt nown one ot 41,- r,ntriQ ti,
these rare creatures It was worth a of printing from plates as smooth as fortune the matter was skillfully ?ass is this-water and grease won't managed. But a thing hke that was mix. The text is put on in ink, the too good . to keep and rumors kept basis of which is grease. Enormous coming to the Game Warden's De- pressure is used, the typewritten piece partment. Immediately the force was of paper being laid flat upon the zinc ashr to wptnre both the hunter and plate and placed under heavy rollers, prize. But the lawbreaker proved In printing the ink rollers pass over harder to track than venison out of the entire plate, but leave ink only the snow Benson. He must have taken upon the inked impression, for the to the cre.-k, for the i authorities never .rest of the plate-all the spaces becaught him. But the white deer! It tween the letters-is covered with'
413 Mu3 dS a politician, as ( water, from a water roller, which ab
grade.
NEW METHOD. Of Printing Does Away With the Various Metal Types. (New York Press.) There are three companies in New York and Brooklyn that are about to put on the market devices for printing without types. One is capitalized at $10,000,000. The process is as simple as a, b, c. To begin with a typewriter with' the standard keyboard is used to "set up" the copy, not in letters, but in perfr an endless strip of paper. The completed tape looks somewhat like the music used in automatons that play the piano. The strip of paper is passed through a machine which prints, with justification, sheet after sheet of matter of the required size a book page or a newspaper. "Impressions of this printed stuff are then made upon aluminium or zinc plates as thin as ordinary sheetiron, which are placed with equal facility upon both the bed-and-platen and the cylinder presses. , One of these typeless machines is called the "planograph" and another the "lithotype." I have forgotten
ephemeral as a dream, as vanishing as
a pre-election promise. Here, there, yonder and back again sped the white deer, a swift footed ghost, and the sleuths sped after always in the dis-
hors ink. As many as 164,000 impres
sions have been taken from one plate. Job work promptly done at the Palladium.
IDR WESTER!
NEIGHBOR
THE SOCIAL REALM AT CAMBRIDGE CITY GONE OVER.
AND SPECIALLY GLEANED
7
For the Palladium by Our Enterprising Correspondent Things That Interest People.
Mrs. Clra Reigel was in Richmond Wednesday. Mrs. Miller and daughter, Maude, visited Mr. and Mrs. Richard Scott yesterday. Miss Marie Rudicel has accepted a position in Frank Luddington's cigar factory. George McConkey, of Dublin, made a business trip to Richmond yesterday. , " The Baptist society held an all day quilting t the home of Miss Lizzie Lemberger today. An elegant dinner was served. Mrs. Horace Ellabarger was in Richmond yesterday. Harry Stombaugh, of Indianapolis, is the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Stombaugh. Mrs. Will Hastings, of Richmond, visited her sister, Mrs. R. W. Hall, yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Geathers, of Greensfork, wTere the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Tyler Wednesday. ' Charles Griffin and Miss Grace Myers attended polo at Richmond Wednesday evening. John Fair is having his residence, on west Main street, painted, which, with the new veranda, adds "much t the appearance, making it a very modern little cottage. Willard Ulerich made a business trip to Indianapolis yesterday.,;. L. E. Halm left Wednesday on a
NURSING MOTHERS " A richer milk than milk " is good food for nursing mothers. Scott's Emulsion is the rich cream of cod liver oil, and contains ten times as much cream as milk does. The nursing mother must eat with the purpose of producing good, nourishing milk for her baby. A little Scott's Emulsion is often a very wise addition to her daily diet. If through nervousness or weakness her milk is a failure, Scott's Emulsion will help make it a success. The baby gets the benefit, too, when the mother takes Scott's Emulsion. The same remedy brings new strength and nourishment to both. r We'll send you a sample free upon request. SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl Street. New York. business trig in the northern part of the state in the interest of Krahl and Morris., , 5 . j Mrs. Oliri Boyd, of St. Louis, is visiting friends and relatives in Cambridge and vicinity. Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah , Ellebarger visited relatives in, Richmond this week. - Mr. arid Mrs. Weaver, of Milton, were the guests of friends here yesterday. Messrs. Bolenbaker and North, of Bloomington, are the guests of Ray Bertsch. Mr. and Mrs. Hoosier, of Knightstown, were in this city yesterday. Charles P. Doney is assisting his father in his real estate office. Mrs. Gehring visited friends in East Germantown yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Hull were called to Richmond yesterday on account of the death of their niece. Mis.s Fern West. Miss Lcrena McLane risked her parents, near Pleasant Hill today. T Walter Vanderbeck, of New Lisbon was ;n this city yesterday Nat Moore and Miss Stella Taylor were married Wednesday evening. . ,
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Western League Standing. .
Pet. .57S .554 .554 .524 .405 .402
Clubs. W. L. Richmond -. . .... . .48 35 Muncie. 46 37 Marion ...46 37 Anderson 44 40 Indianapolis 34 50 El wood 35 52
Games Last Night. Muncie, 6; El wood, 5. Marion, 3; Indianapolis, 2. We, the undersigned, agree to close our millinery stores on Wednesday
nights:
Miss L. M. Porter, Mary P. Austin, Lena Rohe & Co. Mrs. R. R. Van Sant, Mary A. Klute, Rose Sharkey, Mrs. Ella Swain.
AT BOSTON. - On Saturday-night .Judge Abbott will deliver the commencement address at Poston. As the judge's ability in ilii liiie i well-known, com--merit is unnecessary. CHRISTIAN REVIVAL. Five persons were biptizJ last night at. the Christian c!;:uch One
of the largest audie.ice's tluving; the
meetings neara .evangelist Le-g n the subject, "Wise Men IV.0IUI1 Men." It was truly a great sermon, stirring and eloquent. Thj lar-'! au-
Idience listened with r-tpt attention
to the end. Mr. Legg's subject tonight will be, "To What Church Did Peter Belong?" Services at 7:30.
AS OTHERS SEE NEW CASTLE. No matter how well anything is done elsewhere, New' Castle alwa3's tries to go them one better. They have the biggest rains, the highest floods, the best paved street, the meanest groundhog, the dirtiest streets, the highest price sewers, the most reliable madstone, the meanest
pvic 111 U IIC OllCtlj I11C . 1 V C V piano factory, most greenhouses and now come to the front with a forger named Jay Gould Jay. Had he been the victim of a forger, he probably wouldn't have had any more respect for this vicinity than to have given his name .is plain John Smith. Well, one thing certain, if New Castle don't get a hump on herself, she will not be able to pull off. an explosion as big as the one at Knightstown for some time to come. Rushville Republican. "Ideal Bread" is just like mother used to bake at home; a close grain and substantial. Any kind of pork, sausage and lard. All our own makes and killing. Schwegman's. 1 2t Don't, forget to look for the Red, White and Blue label when buying breads '-'Ideal." . -
TOR SALE Old papers for sale at the Palladium office, 15 cents a hundred and some thrown in. JOB WORK PROMPTLY DONE AT THE PALLADIUM.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OP THB . SECOND NATIONAL BANK At KlchmoDd, In the State of Indiana, at the close of busl ness, March 28, 1904. RESOURCES. Ixansand Discounts. fflflO,!553 38
uvururaics, seeurea ana unsecured S.733 m
u .a. uonas to secure circulation Stocks, Securities, etc Banking-house furniture, fixtures. Due from National Banks not reserve agents Due from State banks and bankers Due from approved reserve
agents 233,(r 15 Notes of other National banks.. 32,000 00 Fractional Paper Currency, nickels and cents 44 82 Tjawful money reserve in bank, viz:
specie ji!;o,M) (X) l Legal tender notes. . .$ 74,0W 00 J Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer 5 per cent of circulation,
150,000 00 liU0 00 .10,000 00 15,240 59 88,516 69
191,000 60
Total..
7,500 00 $1,841,386 1
LIABILITIES.
Capital Stock paid in $ l50,ou 00 Surplus fund 150,000 00 Undivided profits less expenses and taxes paid 28,0fi6 7 National bank notes outstanding 1450 00 Due to other National banks 4,557 80 Due to state banks and bankers. f,7o7 W Individual deposits subject to Check 1.08S.549 37 Demand certificates of deposit 313,954 89 Total . ".'.I' . . .V. . .wV. $1J1,; 61
State of Indiana, county of JVVayne, ss.: r,.
1, samuei w. uaar.'jcasnier 01 tne aoove -named bank, do solemnly: swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. ' , SAMUEL W. GAAR, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of April, 1901 s t ' !(YERETT E. LEM()2f V; Correct Attest: ' Notary Public.
HOWARD CAMPBELL, i CLEM A. GAAR, Director. 1 JOHN B. DOUQAN,1 '
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The
tDIT
At 704 Main St. Richmond. Ind.
Clothing, Ladies' and Gents' Furnishing Goods, Hats, Shoes, Etc., In fact everything in our, entire stock .will go at great sacrifice prices. . '. "' : ; ivi' ' $1.00 of Accumulated Stock for 33c vThis is unquestionably the greatest commercial sensation-bearing record in the annals of Richmond merchandising, not particularly on account of being forced in itself, but by record the great slaughter of this enormous stock. We quote here a few prices that should clean us out in one day: , .
CLOTHING
Boys' Suits, regular $1.50 values .
42c
Boys' fine Suits, substantial and well made, in mixed cassimeres, worth $2.50, Famous Sale fiAprice jOwC Extra fine Boys' Suits in homespuns, clay worsteds, serges, cassimeres, worth from $3.50 to $5.00, Famous QQA Sale price wOw Men's good Working Pants, regular $1 50 value, Famous Sale Cp price .......... .... .i .. .. UOU
Men's Trousers in good cassimeres, well made and trimmed, regular $2.00 and $2.50 values to be closed cut Q Extra fine Men's Tailor-made Pants in the very latest styles, all sizes and shades, worth from $4 50 to $6.00 a pair, Famous Sale Q Men's regular suits $5 value at $1.87 Men's Suits, substantial and well made in cassimeres and worsteds, worth $8.00 and $9.00 a suit, Fam- dJQ Q Q ous sale price . (pOiwO Extra fine Men's Dress Suits for spring .and summer wear, in granites, cassimeres, homespuns, in sacks or square cut, single or double breasted, actual value $15 to $16.50, to QQ be closed at vDO,Ow
Men's and Ladies' FjrnLhing Goods Men's good S xsks, regular 10c value 1c Men's Collars, regular 10c value .. . .1c Extra fine Men's Socks, worth up to 50c pair, yours while they last at.....9c Handkerchiefs, 5c and 10c values 1c Extra fine men's Handkerchiefs, worth up to 40c, yours while they last .... 3c Ladies Walking Skirts, $2 50 and $3.00 values, Famous Sale price 79 C Extra fine Ladies Skirts in the very latest . styles and shades, worth from $4.50 S : to $6, to be closed out at $1 . 98 Also slashing prices in men's odd coats and vests, men's, ladies and children's SHOES ladies' shirt waists, etc.
Be on time tomorrow and save your earnings. Remember the place
t She Famous Shoe and Dlothm
704 MAIN STREET, RICHMOND, IND. Look for the Red Signs in front of the store Open tomorrow night until ten o'clock
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