Richmond Palladium (Daily), 18 June 1904 — Page 8

EIGHT

RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1904.

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for FR1DA Y, and Jf- SATURDAY,

lit THE

READ Y- TO- WEAR

DEPARTMENT,

Fancy duck Skirts worth up to $2 50 Q Plain white Pique Skirts embroidery !j 4 K fl trimmed worth up to $2.50 for ) I i3U Pain white Basket cloth Suits, brass fljO EZf , button trimmed worth up to $5, for J M5JU 25 plain and fancy Jap silk Waists. $2 25 and $2.50 line for f 2.00 Another let of those 12 itch Embroideiies Friday and Saturday .1 50 pes. fine sheer Lawns and Dimities 4 3-4c All our 50 and 75c silk and wool Challies 35c We are showing vast as-'ortments of new, nobby and stylish Leather Bags, all kinds and prices. Ladies' Worlds Fair Travelling Bags good leather, all colors, with band mirror, card case, and purse. Convenient and easy to carry. ; Worth $3.50. Friday and Saturday $2.50 Peggy From Paris Bag3, good leather, 23c 50c kind ladies' black silk Belts only 39c 25c kind black silk Belts only lc

Toilet Department 60c size Imported Bay Rum only 25c 75c size Florida Water only 5Qc 25c size Florida Water 15c Quart t-ize pure Witch Hazel 33c Pint size pure Witch Hazel lc Lundborg's Perfumes per ounce 20c, half ounce . 10c

You can not afford to pass our store during June.

BOTH PHONES

LEE B. NUSBAUM

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LOCAL ITUMS

W. Rossiter, carpet layer, phone 1381.

Dud Cates is here today. Optical goods at Haner'a. Mrs. W. S. Hiser's shorthand school. Nola Fox, of Grensfork, is visiting here. '. Peter Muth, of Dayton, was in the city yesterday. W. 0. Barnard, of Newcastle, was here yesterday. Miss Katherine Schaefer left today for Indianapolis.

Dr. Park administers gas, 8 north

tenth. Lady assistant; tf

G. R. Dilks returned this morning

from GreeLville, Ohio.

Mrs. Ira Swisher will return next week from Indianapolis. Joe Carter is home from Morgan Park Academy, Chicago. John Zimmerman has gone to South Dakota for a few months. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Bcjd arc visiting at Frenck Lik, Ind. Mrs. Wilson of New Castle is visiting relatives in this city. Meek Zimmerman is visiting friends in. Circleville, InO Miss Lcuise Purcell tinned this morning from Indianapol;s Miss Demorlee, of Indianapolis, is visiting Miss Edna Miller. E. Partington left this morning for

Emerson, Ohio, after a visit. 0. V. Porter spent yesterday transacting business in Logan'jpor.

Dr. L. G. Bowers returned last

evening fiom a visit to Anderson.

E

the family-of. Edward .Maston-oi: ' about two months:

Mr. and Mrs. v Edwin Cates ; and

family who have been staying at Cul

ver and Lake Maxmkuckee for a few days, returned home last night.

Half hour service will be given to

Jackson Park tomorrow afternoon

and evening for McGibeny's entertainment and band concert. Buy excursion tickets at the company's office on South Eighth street. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McGibeny in violin and piano, song and recitation and Milton Concert Band, both afternoon and evening will be fine entertainments. Concert free to street car patrons. Excursion tickets 25 cents round trip for sale at company's office.

Sixty Years of Popularity is the record of Painkiller (Perry

Davis'), but the shops are full of imitations made to sell upon the great reputation of .the genuine; be cau

tious, thei-e fore, when you ask for a

bottle to see that you get the genu-

me. An unfailing remedy ior ougus,

colds, bronchitis.

Closed.

&ur Store wriM

he

MONDAY, to remark and rearrange Stock for our Second Marked-down Sale. Closing out Sale opens Tuesday morning June 21. Chas.H. Smith & Co.

SBCW AMDE)

Mrs. A. tie is the

Addimrton of New Cas-

ist of relatives ..re.

The Pennsylvania pay car was here

yesterday and left the usual, amount

Mrs. Genrty relume I last evening

from a fev days visit in Culver, Ind The finest stock farm in this vicini

ty. Apply to Moore,- over 6 N. 7th St.

14-tf

D. W. Comstock arrived last evening from Indianapolis to spend Sun

day.

Miss Mabel Ellis, who has been visiting 'in Dayton returned -home lo-

dav. , ..

er is the guest of

South Thirteenth

We are in a position and will sell you Dry Goods for less money than any store in Richmond. Remember Saturday is the opening day of our Clearance Sale and your money, is what we want and we will sell you goods less than merchants can buy them. A SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY . Ribbons from 5's to 20 's at 5c per yard From 22 's to 40 's for 8c per yard A fine mill end bleached muslin, values from 10c t9 12c at 5c yard Finest Scotch Lawns for 4Vc per yard Toile Dunord Ginghams, regular values 15c go at 10c yard Laces and Insertions, value Gc, 8c and 10c your choice for 5c yd Do not forget to come first and get the plums, for they are worth more to"btv than what we can sell them. GROCERY DEPARTMENT. 19 lbs. Granulated Sugar for $1.00 20 lbs. A Sugar for $1.00 21 lbs. Light extra C Sugar for $1.00 The finest of new potatoes 50c a peck or $1.85 bu Nice ripe sweet watermelons from 30c to 40c average 35c and 40c and everyone guaranteed. Fresh country eggs 17c ji doz. The finest country butter 16c a pound Macaroni, Pearl Barley, Tapioca 5c lb Do not forget we are the place that saves you the pennies. We also give you the Green Trading Stamp3 with each and every purchase. Free rnd prompt delivery. Store open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday (nights. v i .Yours for More Business and Cash Prices.

Miss Ruth Gar Mrs. Garver of

I street.

A. W. Sample returned iast night

from a trip to Loga import and other

citif-s.

John Emery left this afternoon for Indianapolis where he will spend

Sunday. Ralph Husson, of Indianapolis, ar

rived today to spend Sunday with his

parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Westcott wen

to Indianapolis and St. Louis this

mornin":.

For goodness sake,

the bread with the

eat "Ideal,"

delightful flavor.

You gt quality and quantity when l 1 - - i 1 T-k 1

buying ".ideal ana Motners ureaa.

"Ideal Bread" is a particular

bread baked for particular people.

AN INTERESTING CAREER

Republican Candidate for Lieutenant

Governor Adds Strength to the Ticket.

The strong ticket named by the Re

publicans cf Indiana at their recent

state convention was strengthened by the nomination for Lieutenant Gover

nor of Hugh Th. Miller of Columbus. Ind. Mr. Miller, in all the varied phases of his activity, as farmer, student, college professor, minister, editor, business man and legislator, has given evidence of the possession of qualities which equip him for a career of very great usefulness to tho people of Indiana. Hugh Miller comes of old Indiana stock. His father, John Chapman Miller, was a farmer, minister and college professor. His grandfather, John Smith Miller, entered the

Bread -Cast M Oh the Waters

lOrlglnal. It was In the spring of 1863 that the wife of Colonel Travers, who had fallen in one of the battles of the civil war fighting for the Confederacy, called one of her former slaves into her house and thus spoke to him: "Zach. you have for some time been a freeman; but, unlike the rest of my men and 'women, you have continued to stay with me and work for me. I have not been surprised at this, for you have always served me faithfully. You know that besides this plantation I own a small one in the next county. It Is of no use to me, since I have nc people to work it. The buildings are going to ruin, and, the fences having

been used for flrewTood by the soldiers of both sides, the place is left entirely unprotected. I have determined to give the plantation to you. There is a deed for it. Take It and see whether you can make the gift valuable." , "Wha-wha' yo' goin' to do, mistress? Yo 'goin'to gib away de place widout nottin' paid'fo' It?" "Yes, Zach. I'm going to give it to you, hoping that it may serve as some reward for your devotion to me during trying times, for standing by me through four bitter years of war when your master was away in the army and since you were made free by the proclamation. I still have this large

plantation, but I don't feel that I can

make it pay me anything. I am unused to hiring hands to work, and I

have not the business capacity nor the

capital to raise and dispose of a crop.

You can begin in a small way, doing

some of the work yourself and hiring a

few hands to help you when necessary. Go, Zach. I wish you success."

Mist'ess," said the negro, "if yo'll

PEOPLES X BE

WANTED Four hands to plow corn, work in the harvest and do general farm work.1 Good wages. Tom Mertz, Salisbury Road. Both 'phones. 11-tf.

ironing.

WANTED Washing and

Will call for and deliver work. Mrs. J. Ribkee, 1018 N. H street

WANTED Furnished rooms for light housekeping at occe.' Address X, this office. '

WANTED 50 boys to pass bills Saturday 8 a.m. Murray Bill post-' ing office, sixth street. - . WANTED Immediately, a. young girl to assist in, house work. Mr.

I. M. Husrhes, 323 North Ninth st.

TOR SALE Old papers for sale atthe Palladium office, 15 centa -hundred and some thrown rn. FOR SALE Cheap, av good Palladi-; urn route. Call at this office.

ThelOEL DHMITHHT STOBE

411-415 MAIN ST. Both Phones

Are You iDtemtrd in Ibe South?

Do you care to know of the marvelous development no w going on in

TheGreat Central South?

J Of innumerable opportunities for young men y or old ones to grow rich? Do you want to know about rich farming lands, fertile, well located, C3 a trunk line railroad, which will produce two, three and four crops from the same field each yearf Land now to be had at from $3.00 to $5.00 an acre which will be worth from $30.00 to $150.00 within 10 years? About stock raising where the extreme of winter feeding is but six (6) short ,-weeks ? Of places where truck growing and fruit raising yield enormous returns each year? Of a land where you can live out of doors every day in the year? Of opportunities for establishing profitable manufacturing industries;, of rich mineral locations, arid splendid business openings? If you want to' know the details of any or all of these write me.'- I ' will gladly advise you fully and truthfully. r ' O. A. PARK, General Immigration and Industrial Agent LOUISVILLE & NASHVILLE RAILROAD COMPANY. y

; LOUISVILLE, EX c

Mrs. S vlher is expected to return

today from a two weeks visit in Indianapolis. ' Mrs. Will Cluggish and Mrs. Clark Price, of Elwood, are guests of Mrs. Chelsea Haseltine. Miss Ruth Russell has returned to Springfield, Ohio, after a visit with Miss Grace Robie. Mrs. Emma Vardin, of Newcastle, is visiting her mother, Mrs. I. V. Gause, who is quite sick. Mr. H. J. IIanes leaves this evening for Chicago to be on the ground early

lie is one of the sergeants-at-arms. Second "7ice President Pugh of the Pennsylvania was here yesterday en

route fron St. Louis to Philadelphia.

Mrs. Williamson of Cincinnati

formerly of this city was here yesterda' enruute from Culver, Ind., to Cincinnati.

Make your engagements with Cora

A. W. Lindsay, manicure and ;iropodist at room 5, Westcott block, by Home phone 1376.

Dr. Cropper (Viavi) of Indiana 'O-

lis was with Mrs. E. A. Zimmerman, 121 north tenth street two days Ibis week professionally.

Typewriters, all makes, rented,

sold. Rentals, $3 to $5 per month. Repairs and ribbons for all machines.

Tyrell, W. U. Tel, office. 'Phone 26. Richrnoii'J Commandery conffrs the Order of Knights Templar and Knight of Malta Mondav eveningthen vacation until September 5. For sick headache take ChamberIain's Stomach and Liver Tablets and a quick cure is certain. For sale bv

A. G. Luken & Co.; W. II. Sudhoff, 5th and Main St. Miss Anna E. Miller, daughter of Mr. C. Y. Miller, will leave Monday for Fayetteville, Axk, She will visit

H. T.

FOR SALE Good Palladium route in central part of town. Call at Palladium office. v FOR RENT A furnished room with all conveniences, private entrance, No. 304 North Ninth J-treet. 17-3t FOR SALE Baby cab, cheap, S Ft. Wayne Ave.

FOR RENT A first class modern

residence, N O.104 South Fourteenth street, 8 rooms, hot and cold water, bath, water motor, furnace, etc., for particulars see H. J. Pohlmeyer.( postoffice building), both phones, No. 212.

MILLER.

first land taken up in Ninevah town

ship, Johnson county. On this farm

Mr. Miller worked as a boy, and he

still manages the ancestral acres.

From the farm he entered Butler University, from which institution he graduated in 1888, winning honors in

every department. "Hugh Miller,

says the Butler Collegian, was one of the most brilliant students ever graduated from the college, and for versatility he probably has not been equalled by any student here in the last twenty years." After graduating he spent a year at home, devoting a part of his time to the ministry of the Christian church. In 1889 he began a ten-years' period of service, first as an Instructor, later as a professor in his alma mater, leaving behind him in the institution when he left it to enter business five years ago, a deep impress on the college and those who as students and teachers had been associated with him. It is not surprising that he should have been favorably mentioned for the presidency of the institution when a vacancy occurred some time ago, and that a movement for his election thereto was stopped only by his Intervention. After his retirement from college work Mr. Miller Incidentally served for two years as editor of the journal of his college fraternity, "The Scroll," of Phi Delta Theta, and placed it in the very front rank of publications of this character. The Butler Collegian says of Mr. Miller, that "while a student of prodigious ability, he has never been a book man or grind; he is an all-around man of the best type. His college and old friends are proud of his recent success, but they know he will justify all their hopes for him that is why every Butler man was lined up for

Hugh Miller. He will do honor to his friends and his state if elected, for he is fearless, eminently capable, thorough and incorruptible the sort of man most needed In the administration of our public affairs."

jist let me kiss yo' hand once I'll take

yo' gift and see what I can do with it"

She held out her hand to him. and he

touched it reverently with his lips.

then went out to take possession of his

plantation.

Twenty years passed. The widow had each year made a

desperate effort to raise a crop of cotton and market It. Some years she

had succeeded in reaping sufficient profit to enable her to live and put in

the seed for the next year's crop. But she found that when she most needed

hands the negroes were least willing

to engage, and when she succeeded in

inducing them to do so there was no

way of keeping them up to their work.

The days of the overseer were ended, and the widow had not found a substitute. The consequence was that at last she saw herself an old, broken down woman, her buildings dilapidated for want of having been kept up, her farming utensils either broken or taken away by her hired hands and her treasury empty. Meanwhile Zach had proceeded on the advice given him by his mistress, beginning by working a few acres himself, saving most of the proceeds of his crops, repairing his buildings with his own hands during the winter season and, as his boys grew older, availing himself of their help. Every season he cultivated more acres than the preceding one till the whole plantation was productive. While 'many planters sold their best seed to 'the cottonseed oil manufacturers Zach declined to sell his seed at any price, putting it all into the ground. The result was that he got larger crops, better cotton and higher prices than his neighbors. The time came when he had more money in bank than he cared to use in his planting. Zach had often visited his former mistress and begged her to let him do something for her, but the idea of accepting anything from one who had been her slave was repugnant to her, and she always concealed her impoverished condition. But one morning Zach went to the old plantation and as he entered the grounds noticed that there was not a negro on the place.

Going into the house he found his mistress sitting before a table on which, though it was her dinner hour, there was nothing but corn pone. The tears came into the man's eyes. "Mist'ess," he said, "yo hain't been treatin' me fa'r. Yo' been sayin' yo'

didn't need nottin. and here yo' air

eatin' what wan't fit fo yo field hands in de days when Mars Cunnel

war a-libin. Yo' gib me yo' leetle plantation, and I tuk it. Now yo need meat and bread an' yo' won't take 'em from me. I know I hain't flttin to gib nottin' to a fine white lady who always

gib tings away herself, but this air gottin' into a bad way a mighty bad

way and somepin hes to be done. I hain't goin' to stand it no longer.

I'd come hyer and wuk yo plantation

fo' yo' myself, but I'd haf to hire a

lot of these lazy niggers, and I got

nuff of 'em now. I got a check fo' some cotton dis mawnin', and. I'm

goin' to make it paid to yo. Don't say nottin'; I hain't gibin' yo no moneyonly gibin' yo' back a leetle bit of

what yo' gib me. What I be today

widout yo' gibin' me dat plantation?

While speaking the last words he

was making for a writing desk, and.

despite the old lady's protest, he wrote on the back of the check -the only letters he had ever learned to write, "Zaeh Travers," and laid the

paper before her.

Later, when she s gave a reluctant consent to accent the amount offered.

Zach took the check to the bank, drew

the money and. after making some

necessary purchases, brought it back

to her. From that time forward, on

the first day of every month, she re

ceived from Zach a check for $100.

LAURA EGERTON.

STORAGE Ground

and Main. Vern

door, sixteenth Smith.

ENNETT THEATRE

G

O. G. Murray. Lessee. Manager

-Week June 20

VanDyke&EtonCo.

Monday Under Sealed Orders. Tuesday Carmen. Wednesday A Lion's Heart. Thursday Faust. Friday The Three Masketeers. Saturday Across the Desert.

Daily 10 cent Matinees

uesday, After the Ball; - Wednesday. Camille; Thursday, A Fatal Scar; Friday. Over the Hills to the Poor House; -Saturday, The Two Orphans. - .:;

SPECIAL FEATURES Between Acts.

Roulette, Expert Hoop Rolling; Bessie Jackson, Coon Songs, Willard Foster, Illustrated Songs; McCoy and Gano, comedy musical act.

PRICES Night 10 and 20 cents. Alati-

nee daily 10 cents. Ladies bargain tickets Monday Night Limited to 800

A FINE

LOT On Street Car Line In Boulevard Addition AT A BARGAIN

W. H, Bradbury & Son

Westcott Block.

MONEY TO LOAN.

5 and 6 per cent. Interest

FIRE INSURANCE, In the leading companies. Managers

for the

EQUITABLE LIFE Assurance Society of New York.

THE 0. B. FULGHAM AGENCY

O. B. Fulgham. H. Milton Elicds

Room 3, Taughan Bldg.

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DON'T FAIL To Attend the Friendly j BENEFIT BALL Given for

g DAVE MILLER,

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O THURSDAY, June 23 O

6 I. O. O.F, HALL.

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Music by the HARTZLER'S. Tickets 25 Cents.

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