Richmond Palladium (Daily), 29 August 1904 — Page 2
TWO
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1904.
enXaa an Aft W - - - bLi " "A" v n ili
1.(D)03)
Round Trip
TO MUNCIE, MARION, X PERU. f Sunday, Aug, 28. -2-
4- Train leaves Richmond 4- J 0:45 a. m. Returning, J
arrives at Richmond 8:15 T
p. m.
C. A. BLAIR,
P. & T. A.
BLAZE AWAY Who cares? I'm fortified with an "El
rado" laundered collar, "The kind
hat don't melt down."
The Eldorado steam Laundry No. 18 North Ninth St. Phone 147 Richmond. Indian
Nasal
MY'i
CATARRH m
a t- ."V r'
V -.a, ll- 1 . A. 9 - kJ
Bhoald bo cleanliness. CvTYl Itf W
juys vream issun
BE1- t
tieansea.ooothos&nd heal tka diejcaaei membrane.
It cures catarrh an (ii'j iv. B .V-ZiV v
ftwif - cold iii tha 1ig-.1 W1 W
tjoickly.
Cream Balm U pl.ir.ctl Into t'ua n-"st tpread sTrer the membrace and Is absorbed. i.)6t la lia mediate an J a cure follows. It !a cot drying loe. not produce a ncozlng. Large Size, 50 cents at Drug gist or by mail ; Trial SLss, 10 ceuH by mnV. JELY BROTHERS- 55 U'.trran Street. New York
Are You Looking For a Farm? I have a number of desirable farms for 8 ale. All sizes and all prices Remember the name and place. T. R. Yl OODHURST, 913 Main St.. Richmond, led.
INNOVATIONS IN
POSTAL AFFAIRS
TO BE RECOMMENDED TO POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT
ASKED TO ADOPT SAME
Hubbard Bill Recommended One
Dollar Bills to be Used For Money Orders.
At the Postmasters convention at
Niagara Falls recently, some very important matters were discussed,
and two or three innovations will be recommended to the postoffice department for adoption. One relates to the issuance by the Treasury Department
of one-dolar bills to be used in the
place of money ordei'S. If a person
desires to send one dollar by mail all that will be necessary will be to place
on it the name and address of the payee, the same as in a monejT order,
nd the receiver can have it cashed
by signing his name to it. This bill may be sent through the mails the same as apostal card by affixing a one-cent stamp to it. After the "bill" has once been cashed it goes out of circulation. This will mean a curtailment of expense in the money order departments.
Another matter that was favorably
reported on was with reference to the Hubbard Bill. This provides for the
ssuance of blank postal notes, to be
filled out for any desired amount, and to be used in lieu of stamps. If a
person desires to send stamps in payment for a purchase a note of the character referred to is filled out for the required amount, and the note can
be exchanged for stamps or cash.
Regarding special delivery letters
the Postmasters recommended that this class of mail be placed on the
same basis as that of Canada. The
Canadian Government does not now
say any attention to special delivery
stamps of this country and vice versa.
The rural letter carriers enlisted
the support of the Postmasters to
have appointments made by the Postmasters instead of by the department
at Washington.
It was concluded to try and have
the postoffice department change its
present method relative to the pro
bationary period of clerks and car
riers. The rule is that the probation
ary period of six months begin after a substitute has been appointed to a regular, and that during that time a clerk or carrier may be dirscharged if
le is found to be deficient in any re
spect. The postmasters want that privilege to be exercised before the
suubstitute has been made a regular.
COTTAGE GROVE. . Glenn Heard has returned from
the St. Louis Fair.
The resident teachers of this place
spent the week attending institute
at Liberty.
Mrs. J. H. Martin of Richmond was the guest of Mrs. M. C. Keffer
Friday.
Joe Clark, C, C. & L. brakeman,
is spending a lew weeks at the home of his father. Miss Roxie Clark and her guest, Miss Jessie Clark, of Moreland, spent Wednesday with Hester Grave.
Mrs. M. C. Keffer spent several
days the past week with Mrs. H. W. Gear, of Oxford. A transfer of real estate was made Friday, J. W. Holland purchasing a farm of George and Emmet Connor, and the Connor Brothers taking possession of Mr. Holland's store, livery
stable and other property.
DYSPEPSIA. Someone has called this complaint
"the national calamity." It does
seem to be an American product, due in great measure to our rapid civilization. We seem always to be in haste, even in our pleasure, but par
ticularly so in our eating. We "hurry up" the dinner, "hurry" down the food, and not infrequently some one
must "hurry" out for the doctor.
Whatever form dyspepsia may take.
it is promptly relieved with a dose or
two of Phen-a-mid Tablets. Phen-a-
mid is a safe remedy that may be
used by anyone. It is mild in its action and agrees with the most deli
cate.
Dr. E. L. Herbert, of Brooklyn, N.
Y., write: "For the relief of headaches, pains in general and nervous
indigestion, I must say that I found nothing to equal Phen-a-mid.
Dr. H. B. Akins, Steve, Ark.,
writes: "Phen-a-mid has been carefully tested by me. I am so well pleas ed with the results that I enclose
$5.00, for which send me another sup-
ply."
We have scores of letters to prove
that Phen-a-mid, the great pain destroyer, is a positive cure for indigestion and dyspepsia, and for all forms of pain, including headache, neuralgia rheumatism, sciatica, etc. Phen-a-mid is put up in tablet form. 25 cents a bottle at all druggists, or by mail from the manuufacturers, Osborn-Col-well Co., 46 Cliff Street, New Yoi&
A FINE
On Street Car Line In Boulevard Addition AT A BARGAIN W. H, Bradbury & Son Westcott Block.
Harness For Show and harness for eve'y day use mean a difference in quality in some makes here they are identical in strength and durability. More style, of comse, in fancy
. driving harness, but all our harness is
- made from good
stock, and every" set maintains our repu-
ration as to woncmansmp ana nnisn. ah
sorts of horse equipments at very moderate prices - - - - The Wigrgins Co,
MONEY LOANED
From 5 to 6 per cent. Thompson s Loan and Real Estate Dctacy, Main and seventh streets.
No Substitute Offered
Say what you wfll about druggists offering something "just as good" because it pays better profit, the fact still stands that ninety-nine out of a hundred druggists recommend Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy when the best remedy for diarrhoea is asked for, and do so because they know it is the one remedy that can always be depended upon, even in the most severe and dangerous cases. Sold by A. G. Luken & Co., and W. H. Sudhoff, Fifth and Personally Conducted Tour, Tent City
Main streets.
San Francisco and Return $67.50. From Richmond, Ind., going one
way via. Canadian Pacific railway, through the world's famous Candaian Rockies with their 600 miles of siupn-
dous mountain peaks, awe inspiring canons and mighty cataracts.
Tickets good to go August 15th to
Eeptember 10th. Proportionate rates
from all other points. All agents can sell tickets by this route. For further information and illustrated literature write ts-1 A. C. SHAW, General Agent, Chicago.
San Francisco and Return
From Chicago, Dl., $61.00 going one
way via Canadian Pacific Ry., through the world's famous Canadian Rockies with their 600 miles of stupen pendous Mountain Peaks, Awe Inspir
ing Canons, and Mighty Cataracts.
ickets good to go Aug. 15th ,to Sept
10th, Proportionate rates from all oth
er points. All agents can sell tickets
y this route. For further informa tion and illustrated literature write,
To Petoskey and return $5.00 on
September 13th, 10 day limit, on G. R.
& L $6.00 to Mackinac Island.
You can't expect to do away with face blemishes in a week's time. Keep on taking Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. You'll have a lovely complexion. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets.
A.. G. Luken & Co.
CLIFF DWELLERS
Miracle Workers at the World's Fair,
St. Louis. The World's Fair at St. Louis is
teaching no lesson with greater effect than the one which tells the white
man that he does not know everything It is for our Caucasian ideas of superiority a somewhat harsh lesson
and comes home with added force when it happens that some simple son of the desert, some remote dweller in the cliff, some humble worker in the obscured vineyard of humanity of a
race differing much from ours, shows
himself possessed of special talent which long ago we concluded was entirely our own. It matters little how
this special talent manifests itself.
It comes upon us always with start
ling suddenness, all the more, when going about an enormous, wonderful exhibition like the World's Fair in
St. Louis we feel that our people, our race, our nationality or whatever binds us primarily together is the
force that brought the great Fair into being. Moving about in that great fair, the greatest of all fairs past, present and future, well may we feel
a little dashed in spirit when we, for instance, enter such a wonder-domain as that of the Cliff Dwellers and there see an aggregation of marvels and a display of primitive ingenuity the very existence of which not one out of a thousand of us ever had cause to even suspect. The Cliff Dwellers Concession offers to the visitor the only show at the World's Fair in which the original inhabitants of the present soil of the United States can be found living exactly as they live today in their mountain homes in the Painted Desert of the Colorado in Arizona and Xew Mexico. Traces of these Cliff Dwellers have just been discovered by Dr. Busch, a truly great scientist in the far interior of Northern Mexico in the wild, almost inaccessible Sierra Madre Mountains. They lived there thousands of years before the white man came and the ancestors of
tne same Cliff Dwellers now at the World's Fair had tluir cliff, cavern and cleft habitations in the Colorado Painted Desert thousands of years before Columbus discovered America. Their hundreds of centuries of cliff life made them a people to whom the manifestations of Nature appeal with force and thus we find today among the descendants of these almost extinct people wonder-owrekrs, necromancers and thaumaturgists such as can be seen in no other department of the World's Fair. Chief among these almost miraculously gifted men is Shungopavi, Moki prestidigator and medicine man, to whom belongs the credit today of having achieved the most ornate personal triumph among all the many wondrous persons whom the great fair has gathered in the metropolis of the Mississippi Valley. He lives in the Cliff at the Cliff Dwellers in a home he built himself and to it he attached a temple in which he displays his marvelous art. Three hundred of his tribesmen are with him not one of whom has ever
before been within the confines of civ
ilization. Altogether the Cliff Dwellers Concession in uninque and unap
proachable in the particulars of strange and out-of-the way human
interest. To have brought Shungopa
vi and his people from the Painted
Desert of the Colorado to the World's Fair for seven months' stay is little
short of a managerial triumph.
j Try a loaf of the new Salt Risin? '
Bread made only by Richmond Bak- '
ing company.
J Read J CT band.
Do you like to eat dye ? Never mention cochineal nor coal tar to a catsup man. He'd rather talk of something else. We don't mind, for we do not use coloring matter in Columbia, "The Uncolored Catsup." Nothing but the honest red of the perfectly ripe tomato. You will enjoy " tomato catsup.' ' COLUMBIA CONSERVE COMPANY.
I
s. brumley Bills DistributedPhone 312 No. 17. Ctb WORK GUARA5TED. RATES REASOJABLI
The Palled mf or Job
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
nn
o
o
o o o o o o o o
o o o o o
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
o
'lie O. O. & L. R. R.
"The Stratfat Line." NEW SERVICE TO CINCINNATI AND THE SOUTH
Peru.
vvvw
2 Thru Trains
Via C. C. & L. DAILY Also thru car service via Cottage Grove and C. H. & D. to Hamilton and Cincinnati on afternoon train. 9:05 a. m. dally 4:05 p. m. except Sunday 8:15 p. in. Sunday only
v
With the shortest line and the shortest schedules we are naturally tho MOST CONVENIENT ROUTE To Cincinnati and the South. Ask agents for Rates.
GinZtnricih..
W. B. Calloway, G. P. A., C. C. & I,., Cincinnati, O.
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Establ'ed 1884
Jones Hardware Co.
Merit Wins
North E and Tenth Streets
READ ALL OF THIS Sold only by us
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS.
Glade for the Pan Who Wants the Best.
The Great ITJesikera Endless Apron
& Sprtader.
JS
A RT r I n A tS kirn of manure regarfls of thr!r con Virion, handles tarnyard manure that has been tram ped o kard that
itack bottoms, whether rotted or n-A. Cuw manure freshfrom ttic trMrr. heet manure, lime. Siit. a&he. and in r m IcintK o manure anritertilsan J dt sit quicker, bet.-eraad more evenly than r-y kaTxi. spread as much manure ia on af la
i.-j inv v ttana. r.-reAi is trie largest i".-a mint mining .c ..nvi.ui omuutc k wjw -.' -e l-e-rer results. UftU DtllfP't I Ql C DIVC 'tn ffrms hopperai- fc;tus ail hard chunks of manure fa contact I e-v fc. t iatxrfcascu H JR"DU R UiiADLC tlflfVU with beater until thorMy pulverized before discharging, there, re "., Inr hinir or CKH! CCO 1DDHII one continuous apron (Not J$ apron I and therefore is always ready to load, me -nv.,rfc. The Hfl'JLCOO ArnUll no turning tic into position th crank or Uftfili lUfl PHIl C1TF reserve treirs to catrse Dreakare. Apron does njt eiteni telow le. The CotnUnei IIUWU BWU LRU OBI. kee-s m-n:.rearav from t eater hile I..'iine. T-rerents chekio? of beater when starting and acts as a hood and windshield ia spreading, fcrirts tie manure in the rivrhtcirectivn. tlierefne s;eads more eecly. It hmm m jrrsdnatlit leer aa4 eaa Lr r sulatcd to'Dre-ad tbiek or thia It ta 2i loads r aer while la tloa. ft eateae tae aapBta svjlo u I PJT nQICT 'st teu3ethe load is nearly erjaJlyUalanced cn front and rear heels. 2nd. Tneteata :,iiiifle ! -c L.U.tl Utiftr I Is as near load as it can work. ird. Front and rear ailrs are same length and wheels track. 4Uu Beater thainns in a be! I and .eket keariase. therefore no friction. Heater is 83 inches ia diameter. Hasashijpe tiit sw-it:T-!y throws roachiaeiato and out of gear and holds it toere. OTOCMOTU 111 ft 1)110 I Q 1 1 ITV w mH freatturnsoi rr -hen loading. Machineturnsin its own length. ' W I iibllll I a hHU UUIlftDlU I I. cJnneJ made so strop that it is almost impossible to break it Erery piece l made extra ctronsr regardless of coat. Every gear ana
torocket heel b keved en. We use no pins or cheap crontrivance to coroe loose, get ou
muni IITrr . should anv Dart break, wear out. or tret oct of
md describes it fully. Gives S4 reasons why the tires. Wewterm Eaaleaa Aarwa Xaaarc area4r is thebest aad i
4 rte machine maae aoa wny yea snouia nave oa. Ai&o leus aoir u apcy soaaara so secure
. . IU
coroe loose, get ou cf order, creak ana cause
LARGE CH1L0GUE chs;
MaUe4
o
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
