Richmond Palladium (Daily), 10 June 1904 — Page 8
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EIGHT RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1904.
w i om y ;jr . -n. if SnClirS Jl CL1T 4 CCjr U W
touches it up. gives it new life,
color, and makes it soft and glossy. Cures danarutt.,u
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JUNE OFFERINGS EXTRAORDINARY OPPORTUNITIES Friday and Saturday Two Record Breaking Bargain Days. Get your summer needs now; you can't afford to miss this unprecedented BARGAIN GIVING. Wonderful Reduced Prices throughout entire store. Just a few cf the many sacrifices for Thursday and Friday:
10c Fancy Lawns, per yd Fine White Dimities, per yd
Yard Wide Percale, per yd 2 yards wide UrJbleachcd Table Linen, worth 65c, per yd Fine Wide Embroideries, up to 12 inches wide, per yd . .
60c Ladies' Girdle Corsets Ladies' fine ribbed Vests, taped neck and sleeves, worth l2c special, - 72c box Cuticle Soap, guaranteed as good as Cuticura or money refunded, per box Ladles' crush leather Belts, all colors, 35c kind,
Ladies' black and colored Voile Skirts, worth $;.f)0, special, Fine quality India Linen, per yard, I LEE B. o
OOOOOOOOOOOXOOOOOOOOOOO
'Tis well to remember that the Only WAY TO:GET AHEAD In the world is to save a part of your income regularly. A deposit ith the DICKINSON TRUST CO.
f Will earn you 3 per cent, interest. om pounded semi-annually, May I and Nov. J. Ready cash has
saved many a man. A aavmg account is always Ready. SAFETY DEPOSIT BUILDING.
Coffee! Coffee! Coffee!
People who have used Hood's Brand of Coffees know that they are Al and superior to other Coffees which are 25 per cent, higher. Now we are going to offer you the best of all that we have for Saturday, only we will give you a better price than afterwards. Our Mocha and Santos Coffee which we will sell you for 25c is the regular 30c goods, and with each two pounds we will give you one Haviland China Chocolate Cup and Saucer. With two pounds we will give you one China Tea Cup and Saucer; with 3 pounds we will give you one China Coffee Cup and Saucer; with two pounds one Haviland China Pie Plate; with two pounds one 5-in. Plate; with 3 pounds one 6-in. Plate or one 7-in. Plate. We have the balance of the different pieces composBoth Phones, Open Tuesday, Friday and 411-415 MAIN ST RlnclhiinmonDdi
MODE HEPfflMIf STOBE
Chas. H. Feltman rjULM5!P Geo.W.Deuker
X Men, we have a fine line of Work Shoes, prictd so low as to make the cost to you of little consequenceyou want a good work stoe, we have it. Special Kangaroo Calf -i tit. - tt cn MICp IJUC1J, nr. t tut) tf.vs Other Work 5 hoes, in wearers, for $1 50 to $2.00.
TheHorthuuester jwataalliife Ins, Co iSaS J. 6 BARBER, General Agent, "u&ol53&?"t
vSometimesriiatureineeds littIe help--Ayer's Hair Vigor. It repairVthe hair,
brings back the old dam erCo. Mm. o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 41c o o o o 4?c 6c 35c 10c 25c 6c .23 o o o o o o o o .20 $?.98 45c beautifully trimmed, o o o NUSBAUM o ing a full set of Haviland China Ware and intend to continue selling this coffee as it has been the biggest seller of any at our other stores, especially with the way that we give the Haviland tliina away, bee our win- j dow as Ave have it displayed ready j tor you to look at, then oi course, you will come and buy. Do not fail to see the Big Bargains in Laces and Embroidery at only 5c a yard. Dressing Sacques from 4Sc up. The prices on our other goods remain the same and we want all of our customers to take advantage of the extreme Bargains that we are giving them in this Coffee. Come and see us and we will save you the dimes and pennies. Yours for more business, Satnrday nights. - Both Phones Sthunxs . Congress shec for founders and i n n iw 4.v v. congress, lace, and buckle eood
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W. Rossiter, carpet layer, phone 1381. Optical goods at Haner's. Mrs. W. S. Hiser's shorthand school. 0. B. Fulghum returned last night from a trip to Newcastle. Mrs. Beatty returned last night from a visit in Pendleton. Lena Stanbach returned yesterday from a visit to Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Westcott went to New York this morning. Harry Hatfield, who has been visiting in Greensfork returned today. Wilmer Wilson who has been visit ing in Marion, returned home today. Dr. Park, the only one price den tist in Richmond, 8 N. 10th st. tf Miss Grace Stayton left last night for Champaign, 111. She attended Earlham college. Mrs. Harry Nye has returned to Chicago after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Pogue. Paul Mason, former state news editor of the Indianapolis Journal, is visiting in the city. C. C. Bradbury returned this ov enins: from Purdue University. He graduated this week. Miss Mamie Hill, who has been visiting in Anderson, returned home yesterday afternoon. Miss Mary Albert, of north Four teenth street, left for a visit in Ham ilton, O., last evening. Miss Grace Forrey, of Fort Way no, formerly of this city, arrived las night to visit relatives. George Hamilton lett tor lireenville last evening to spend the sum mer with relatives there. Gaar Williams, who attends Ihe Art School at Chicago, will return soon to spend the summer. Raymond Nicholson arrived from Purdue this evening. Mr. Nicholson is a graduate of this year. Miss Eleanor Shinnick returned this evening from Glendale college to spend the summer vacation here. Mrs. G. H. Bunyan went this morning to Marion in the interests of the Woman's Home Missionary Society. Miss Nellie Fulton, who attends I. I. D. B. near Indianapolis, returned home last evening to spend the summer. Miss Juliet Swayne has returned from the Music Conservatory at Champaign, 111., which she attends, to spend the vacation. The best farm in this vicinityt; $40 per acre buys it. Before buying a farm apply to Moore, over 6 N. Seventh street. 2-tf Miss Anna Taylor, of Charlestown, W. Va., is visiting in the city enroute home after attending the wedding at Newcastle. Heller-Typewritei-s, all makes, rented, sold. Rentals, $3 to $5 per month. Repairs and ribbons for all machines. Tyrell, W. U. Tel, office. 'Phone 26. For sick headache take Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets and a quick cure is certain. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co.; W. H. Sudhoff, 5th and Main St. DEATHS AND FUNERALS Doudy Margaret, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Doudy, died last night at the home of her parents, 54G north thirteenth street of diphtheria, at the age of five years. The funeral will be Saturday morning from the home and will be private. Interment will be at Oxford. DESERVED DPROMOTION. Mr. Paul B. Wilson, son of Dr. C. S. Wilson of this city, who has been connected with the engineering corps of the Panhandle for some time past with headquarters at Peoria, has been promoted to the head of the engineer ing force with headquarters at Johet, 111. The promotion is a deserved one and goes to show that Richmond boys will always land at the top. WILL RETURN TO JAPAN. Will Vaughan, who has been living in Tokio, Japan, for the last six years, returning here several months ago, is preparing to go back, and he will establish the lirst automobile agency in Japnn. lie believes that the war between Japan and Russia can not be prolonged six months, and he expects to be ready for business when the boom comes. SUIT FILET). Attorney Byram Bobbins filed the suit of the Farrand Organ Co. vs. Warren T Markle, trustee. Demand $50.00. '
YOUNG OLD MEN!
The Arabs of Northern' Africa IJLrv ' ' Spry at n Hundred. Perhaps it is the nomadic, outdoor life they lead or perhaps it is merely due to heredity, but the fact remains that the Aral.s of northern-Africa are among the most long lived people in the world. "I saw a lot of queer things during my wandering through Morocco. Algeria and Tunis." said a man who recently returned to America from a long tour in the north of Africa, "but the quetuvst thing of all was the multitude of centenarians. They were as common as blackberries here ia August, and a man or a woman had to be at least 150 to enjoy any sort of local reputation. "It is quaint and refreshing to step aside for a moment from the bustle of modern life and make acquaintance with men whose fathers or grandfathers were Barbary corsairs. It is a treat to drop into coffee houses, where public story tellers rivet the attention of a crowded audience and where the jars of Ali Itaba are still in common use; to frequent public squares, where snake charmers, barbaric musicians and other story book delights are a commonplace; to meet a cadi riding to court on a white mule and to mix with people who tell you stories of djinns as if they were everyday ocurrences. "All this and more you can enjoy in Morocco, Algiers and Tunis, though the French are doing their best to spoil the old world charm of the last two countries. But of all the strange things I saw there the strangest were the old people. There are so many of them, and they are so strenuous! Every traveler in the Barbary States, as they used to be called, is impressed by this remarkable abundance of centenarians. "A gray bearded old man of seventy who is trying to sell curios to a tourist for thrice their value exclaims, 'By the beard of the prophet, may my grandfather die if what I tell you is not true!' Looking at his gray beard, you think he is quite safe in calling down that curse upon himself, but when you make inquiries you find that he really has a grandfather living, aged about 110, and that the old gentleman is still going about doing business on market days. Life is not wearing in Moslem Africa. A man never does anything in a hurry there. Naturally he does not even grow old in a hurry. When he is seventy he is beginning to get over the first hot flush of youth. lie is no longer counted as one of the boys, but not until he is at least ninety does he expect people to pay honor and reverence to him as a veteran, and even then he must take a back seat and listen deferentially when the hale and hearty centenarians approach." Chi cago Chronicle. Qneer Continues In Koren. In his book on Korea Angus Hamilton thus describes the costume of Korean women: "Tbe upper garment consists of an apology for a zouave jacket in white or cream material, which may be of silk lawn, lawn or calico. A few inches below this begins a white petticoat, baggy as a sail, touching the ground upon all sides and attached to a broad band. Between the two there is nothing except the bare skin, the breasts being fully exposed. It is not an agreeaule spectacle, as the women seen abroad are usually aged or inJJrni. At all times, as if to emphasize their fading charms, they wear the chang-ot, a thin green silk cloak, al most peculiar to the capital, and used by the women to veil their faces in passing through the public streets. Upon the sight of man they clutch it beneath the eyes. The neck of the garment is pulled over the head of the wearer, and the long, wide sleeves fall from her ears. The effect of the contrast between the hidden face and the naked breast is ludicrous." Traimfer of Music Throngrh Drama. The following beautiful experiment, described by Professor Tyndall, shows how music may be transmitted by an ordinary Avooden rod: In a room two floors beneath his lecture room there was a piano, upon which an artist was playing, but the audience could not hear it. A rod of deal, with its lower end resting upon the sounding board of the piano, extended upward through the two floors, Its upper end being exposed before tbe lecture table. But still not a sound was heard. A violin was then placed upon the end of the rod, which was thrown into resonance by the ascending thrills, and instantly the music of the piano was given out in the lecture room. A guitar and harp were substituted for the violin and with the same result. The vibrations of the piano strings were communicated to the sounding board, they traversed the long rod, were reproduced by the resonant bodies, the air was carved into waves, and the whole musical composition was delivered to the listening audience. The Story of an LCnprntcenieiit. Of Field Marshal Count Waldersee It Is said that he proposed to Princess Noer, who became his wife, under the following circumstances: The princess had been shopping and had a small parcel in her hand when he met her, saluted and turned around to accompany her to the door of her residence. The princess held out the parcel to him. He looked distressed. She affected not to understand why. He reminded her of the severe rule prohibiting military men of every degree from carrying in the street parcels or even hulies' wraps. She told him that the rule was absurd, and that in this instance it mnst be disregarded, or elseHe laughed, took the parcel and called next day to know what penalty he would have incurred had he not broken the rule. . She made a saucy reply. Both bandied words half gay, half sentimental, with the consequence that the visit ended in an engagement
Quotations From 0. G. Murray's ExchangeClosing Prices Chicago Market. Wheat. July 86 Sept 80 4-8 Corn. July 48 7-8 Sept 47 7-8 Oats. July 39 5-8 Sept 31 1-8 Pork. July ...12.42 Sept 12.65 Lard. July G.72B Sept. .6.90 Spare Bibs. July .7.10 .7:30 Sept. NOT INSTRUCTED. (By -Associated Press.) Richmond, Va., June 10. Democratic state convention refused to endorse Parker delegates to the St. Louis were not instructed. KNOX IS QUAY'S SUCCESSOR. (By Associated Press.) Harrisburg, June 10. Governor Pennypacker today appointed Philander C. Knox as the successor of the late Senator Matthew Stanley Quay. FINAL SETTLEMENT. Linville Wallace filed final settlement in the estate of Oliver Wallace deceased. STILL ON TRIAL. The Simmons road case from Dalton township is still being tried in court. GATH FREEMAN. Gath Freeman of Evansville, Ind.. formerly of this city has accepted a position with the Clarkson Concession Company of St. Louis. HEALTH OFFICE. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Frank, 433 south fourth street, abov, fourth child. Success crowns the original while the imitations go begging. Buy Richmond Baking Co. 's Ideal or Mother's Bread. Modern Woodmen. Richmond Camp will hold memorial services at their hall Sunday, June 12, 1904, at 3 p. m. Every member is expected to be present and friends of the order are cordially invited. N. C. Heirouimus, Clerk. 10-2t. If you have been a user of Richmond Baking Co.'s original Mother's or Ideal Bread, you can easily tell the difference from the imitations, as much so as between a calico and silk dress. Competition is lost when it comes to the par excellence of Richmond Baking Co. Ideal & Mother's Bread. Atmings. upholstering and furniture repaired. A. E. Jones & Co., 506 Main, Home 'phone 178. MARKET NOTICE. The South Side Market opens Saturday afternoon, June 11; the East Market Tuesday, Jnne O. E. Mashmeyer, Market Master. Canoe Trips Lake Trips River Trips Rail Trips EAST TO The Thousand Islands Laurent ian Mountains Land of Evangeline White Mountains Green Mountains Atlantic Coast. WEST TO The "Rockies" The "Selkirks" Puget Sound Alaska California Also to Great Britain and Ireland,. Hawaii, Fiji, Australia, Japan, China and the " Philippines.' ' For further information and illustrated literature write to A. 0. SHAW, Gen'L Agt. Pass. Dept., Canadian Pacific By.,. 1 CHICAGO.
SUMMER OFFERINGS
PEOPLES EXCHANGE;
WANTED-A big second hand leather satchel. L. J, Smith, 138 south sixth street. r WANTED Small family washings and gents' washings also at 320 S. 8th street, upstairs. ' WANTED Good girl for housework at home of Chas. Stetson, 2 miles northeast of Greensfork. A good home and good wages. Address R. T? 1 .( WANTED-Furnished rooms for
Address X care Palladium office. S WANTED A good girl at 120 north' vj tenth. Good wages, no washing, I
ironing or baking. FOR RENT Furnished room. All conveniences. Private entrance, 301 north ninth street. FOR SALE-Cheap, a good Palladium route. Call at this office. FOR SALE Good Palladium route in central part of. town. Call at Palladium office. LOST Red silk umbrella between sixth and seventh streets on Main, Saturday eveninsr. Finder will please leave at Palladium office, 922 Main street. 10-2t X)R SALE Old papers for sale at the Palladium office, 15 oeule hundred and some 'thrown in. STORAGE Ground noor, Btxteentl Mud Main. Vern Siiaiio. HARMEIER Is Mere With the Goods The very latest green vegetables now on the market, GREEN BEANS, LETTUCE, PEAS, EtcWith everything in Fancy Groceries. Come and make your stomach glad. O. A. Harmeier. Phone 1 1 ii. Lucas Coldwater Paint.
On walls and ceiling gives much the f
eflectof Jcigraiu Paptr at much less cost. Any one who can use a brash can apply it successfully. It does not prevent the use of paper afterward, if desired. A trial convinces. CALL FOR COLOR CARD. HORNADAY'S Hardware Store, Phone 199. 816 Main St.
Notice to Non-Resident Property Owners. J To W. F. Hornoday, Martha J. Harris, heirs of Sarah V. Overman, deceased. You and each ol you are hereby notified that Arthur A. Cnrme, Sr.. Jesse H. Brooks, William K. Young, David Hawkins and John F. Daren- . port, oommifwioners duly appointed by tbe Jndce of civil circuit court of Y ayne county, Indiana.la accordance with the provisions of an act of tbe General Assembly of the State of Indiana en- ; titled. "An act in relation to the laying out, open -s infr, widening, altering and vacation of streets, I " allevsand highways, and for strait h ten ing or altering of water courses by the cities of this state, and providing for the appointment of commissioners to assess benefits and damages, providing their duties, and the method of procedure, and providing for the collection of benefits, and payment of damage, and prescribing the duties of city omcers in relation thereto, and providing remedies in such matters," approved and signed March 17, 1875, and acts amendatory thereof and supplementary thereto, will meet in the office of the city clerk in the said city of , Richmond, on Friday, the 8th day of July, A. D. 1W4, at 10 o'clock a. m.. for the purpose of estimating the injuries and benefits to the property sought to be appropriated, and also the benefits and amagP8 to all real estate injurious-
change or imorovement. to wit: , Laying out and opening of Linden avenue from the wtsl end of Linden avenue to West Flith ktreet, in the city of Kichmond, Wayne county, Indiana. . - The common Council 01 tne sam i.ity 01 Richmond propose to lay out,open and widen the said avenue a width of fifty, i50) feet, as prayed for by a TMtitinn nnw rm fll in the: office -Of tha (Tirv
Clerk. By order of the Common Council. 4Witness my band and the seal of taer City of V
Richmond this 2Hth day of May. 1904 fv$ 87 8-10 . JOHN F. TAGQART.CitJ tfcik. w . . . ... . n .ifc ; W ..
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