Richmond Palladium (Daily), 1 September 1904 — Page 8

EIGHT

RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1904.

44

Are You Interested T Lace Curtains Now is the time to buy. Complete Fall Showing. Newest Styles and Designs at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES FOR THURSDAY AND FRIDAY SELLING See our Fine Nottingham s from 50c a pair to ....... . S5.00 See cur Dainty Brussels Nets from J3.95 a pair to 12.00 See our Beautiful Irish Points from $2.98 a pair to ..... . 10.00 See our Nobby Arabian Nets from f 3 50 a pair to S.OO See our Pretty Floral Madras from $1.00 a pair to . . . ... 6.00 bee our Neat Ruffled Swisses from 50c a pair to . 2.25 An Important opportunity for those contemplating New Lace Curtains for Fall. Reduced Prices Curtain Piece Goods For Doors, Sash Curtains and Window Decorations. Fancy Colored Madras, Oriental Lace, Nottingham Madras, Plain Nottingham, Boblnets, Fishnets, Count d "Esprit, Fancy Swisses, Scrims, etc., 5c up to $1.00 a yard. The largest and most complete showing in Richmond. All Especially Reduced For Thursday and Friday.

BOTH PHONES LEE B. L O CAL ITJEMS aeaeasajaeaeasasaeasaeaeasasasasas ae WTalter Rossiter, Carpet Layer. Phone 1381. S. E. Thompson returned from Anderson last night. Ml-s. Lynn Mather is home from Bay View, Mich. Cash Beall is attending the St. Louis Exposition. K Richmond ... Business College will open next Tuesday. - . , 304 Dr. Weist will return from the East tomorrow at 1 p. m. , . : " Mrs. E. B. Clements and daughter ' left for Cincinnati today. Miss Maude Helm is the guest of local relatives for the week. Elsie Stanley and Jesse Snyder have returned from Newcastle. ,

Mta Mn,y rTpfgesMaiuned to Knightstown after a visit here. , (Continued From First Page.) Dr. Park for high class dentistry, 8 N. Tenth street. Lady assistant. ivQry tints. A special decorative feaMrs. T. M.. Handle and Miss Lillie ture is made of , the sounding board Hunt of Newcastle are visiting here, and proscenium arch, having a beautir Take the Dayton & Western cars fu gracefully aranged panel of decorto the New Cedar Springs Hotel, now atl flowers. As a whole, the int tenor will be equal to any metropolitan theater throughout this country. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Mat- The entrance of the lobby is being thews, 422 Main street, a girl, fourth treated in dull golden tints in strict child. harmony with the elaborate decoraMisses Medora Hopkins and Louise 'tions of the auditorium, and will not Summers, of Muncie, are the guests lack in artistic taste displayed in

of locai relatives. ' '7 Fine farms in Wayne and adjoining counties can be bought through J. E. Moore, over 6 North Seventh street, Richmond.

All the schols of Wayne county buildings and to have a firm of this open on Monday, September 5. Ev-kind do this work, will unquestionpry thing is in readiness and the build- ably assure its artistic success, iugs are all in good condition. The exterior of the theater will also Married, on August 28, by Rev. Hi- he ewb' repainted, the prevailing colrnm Johnson, at his residence, in Eat- or be liSht STO stone trimmed in ton, EH Donthnire and Miss Amanda a Pale Seen. Shade, both of Preble count v. 0n aecount of the extensive changes that are to take place at the theater, Typewriters, all makes, rented, it win be impossible for Manager old. Rentals, $3 to $5 per month. Swisher to have a formal opening beEepairs and ribbons for all machines. tore about the first of November, then Tyrell, W. U. Tel, office. Vhone 26. an cf the decorating and painting Albert Schneider, 25 years old, in, will have been completed, the new the family of John Schneider, 615 seats will be in place, and everything south J street, citv, has typhoid fever in first class shape. Manager Swisher This case was contracted in this city, will offer for a formal opening, an , , r , " 'attraction that will be one of the best Prof. Cleveland W. Chase and wife attractions paving cities, and he is arrived home from Santa Cruz, Call- Lertainly very 'fortunate in securing fomia, where they spent the sum- sam . mer. They report having a delightful, jntne mean time, several attrac-irae-J tions will be put on the boards while All those expecting to enter the the remodeling of the theater is goBusiness College should, if possible, ing on, the first of which will be "On call on Saturday or Monday and ar-jthe Suawnee River," on Wednesday range for entering. The school opens evening of next week, the announce-

Tuesday. 504 Thomas MFurphy has returned to work as station master at the Pennsylvania depot after a week's illness, during which time Michael Meagan had taken his place. Mrs. Irene V. Webb of Indianapolis was in the city yesterday in the in - teres! of the Indiana Childrens' Home Society. She reports every thing moving along nicely. The Cuban bloodhounds, Tramp and King, owned by Commons & Mitchell, of New Paris, were in the city this morning. These dogs have a wide reputation. They are under the management of a Bloodhound Protective Association.

NUSBAUM Superintendent C. II. "Wood, late of the Valparaiso schools, is here attending the Chautauqua. Benjamin Eshleman, of Germantown, -has decided to remove his family to this city this fall. Mrs. S. E. Wood, of Dayton, is visiting her friend, Mrs. W K. Young and attending the Chautauqua. Superintendent O. L. Voris, of the llagerstown schools, Is in the city this week attending the teachers' in stitute. . . Mr. Walter Sullivan of Lead, South Dakota, and Mrs. Scott, of Centerville are visiting Mrs. C. M. Wilson, of South Ninth street. comparison with the decorative work performed in the mam auditorium The decorations are being done by the well known firm "The William Eck hart company,, of Chicago," whose specialty is the decorating of suck ment oi wmen win De maae in xne theatrical columns of this paper. Looking for Moses. Mrs. Moses Miles called on Super intendent Gormon this morning for transportation to Indianapolis. She saja uer husband left her to look for UVork and she had not heard from . iiira. Her home is in Indianapolis. she was told to write home for money " I to take her back, as she did not belong here. HERE THY ARE. Genuine Colorado Rocklord Nnnmegs To morrow Klornin;. EIEYErX DUOS.

BENNETT THEATRE

MAKES CHANGE

SCANDAL

REVIVED PRINCES LOUISE PROVES THAT LOVE SCORNS LOCKSMITHS OLD FLAME RENEWED Berln Court Circles are Reveling in a Bit of Scandal That Excites ' All Europe. (By Associated Press.) Berlin, Sept. 1. Princess Louise of Coburg, daughter of the king of the Belgians, whose relations with Keglevich Mattasitch, the former lieutenant of the Austrian army, caused a great scandal in European royal circles seven years ago, and who has since been kept under the closest restraint, has vanished from Bad Elster, where she has been taking the cure. It is presumed that the princess is in the company of Mattasitch and is seeking to gain an asylum where she will be safe from recapture. The escape. of the princess was accomplished in a mysterious and romantic manner. Ladders and a swift automobile were brought into play to effect her release from the hotel, where she has been immured almost as a prisoner, and to convey her to some refuge, regarding the location of which nothing is known. Not the slightest trace of the whereabouts of the pair has been discovered, and nothing is known beyond the fact that the prin cess and another guest of the hotel, believed to havg been Mattasitch, have disappeared and with them the jewels of the prijjeess and an automobile. The escape' of the princess, with an air of mystery, has created almost as great a sensation here and in Dresden and Vienna as did the original scandal. Detailed accounts in the newspapers of her flight overshadow tho dispatches from the far East. CRISIS EXPECTED (Continued from First Page.) have been expended many times. St. Petersburg, September 1. The order to fall back on the fortifications was probably lue to the news that the Japanese had crossed Taitz river, twenty miles northeast of Liao Yang. They marched west toward the railroad. The strength is supposed to be in one division. Two Russian divisions were placed to prevent this movement. General Sakharoff says the force that crossed the Taitz river advanced toward Liao Yang in two bodies, one due west and the other by way of Yontai mines. St. Petersburg, September 1. Masozovsky was seriously wounded in the battle of Wednesday. BASE BALL Scores of Current Games In the Three Big Leagues. NATIONAL LEAGUR. At Cincinnati, 2; New York, 3. Second game, Cincinnati, 1 ; New York, 4. At Chicago, 0; Brooklyn, 2. At Pittsburg, 7; Boston, 3. At St. Louis, 7; Philadelphia, 1. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Washington, 1 ; St. Louis, 2. At Boston, 10; Detroit, 2. At Philadelphia, 1; Chicago, 0. At New York, 3; Cleveland, 1. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Kansas City, 1 ; Indianapolis,' 4. Second game, Kansas City, 3; Indianapolis, 6. At Milwaukee, 2; Toledo, 1. At St. Paul-Louisville Rain. At Minneapolis-Columbus Rain. Miners Didn't Go Out. Knoxville, Tenn., Sept. 1. The contract between the coaf miners and operators of District No. 19 expired last night and no agreement has yet been reached as to a new wage scale. However, work will not stop, as it was agreed that the miners in this district shall continue work pending the set tlement of a wage scale which shall date from today. Caught at the Crossing. Warren Ohio, Sept. 1. Dr. Albert G. Miner, one of the best-known men In northeastern Ohio, and his wife, were killed last evening in a grade cCTna? I mDS n a , crossing collision here. Their vehicle was crushed by the collision with a passenger train, death being Immedl-

RETREAT

ORDERED

I ate in both cases.

HELD IN

CONTEMPT

Retail Druggists' Association Fined by Chicago Court. Chicago. Sept. 1. Twenty-five hun dred retail druggists in the United States were declared guilty of contempt of court by Judge Dunne of the circuit court and the National Association of Retail Druggists jf which they are members was fined $2,000, while Thomas V. Wooten, secretary ol the organization, was fined $500. The cases against five wholesale druggists of Chicago, also charged with contempt, were continued until the full term of court, when it will be necessary for them to take additional proof into court to purge them of the contempt charges. The injunction under which the druggists association was fined was secured by Isaac Piatt, a retail drug gist of Chicago, in November, 1902, and restrained them trom interfering in any manner with the securing ol supplies by Piatt, who had incurred the association's displeasure, It was charged, because he would not join it "Piatt has been deprived of the right in this community to sell goods," Judge Dunne said in rendering his decision. "Nothing can be more clear. It Is a combination that has prevented him from securing supplies, and this court enjoined the defendants in this case from carrying out their plans to 'prevent Piatt from obtaining goods." Piatt charges vhat he has been blacklisted and boycotted by the association, and that through its influence all the wholesale houses in Chicago hav5 refused to sell him supplies. The association made its defense upon the plea that Piatt was attempting to sel? goods at wholesale, thus cutting the prices. Piatt has fought the association for two years in the courts, and it was charged in court that the association several times asked him to give up the fight and join the alleged combination, asserting that they would then cease to molest him. The Charge Against Him Could Not '9 Be Sustained. ITargrave, the Dayton colored man, who was arrested in Glen Miller last Thursday accused of selling liquor, and whom charges were filed against by District Attorney Keeling, of Indianapolis, had his trial before United States Commissioner Reaves this morn, ing. Byram Robbins defended Ilargrave. The case was dismissed because there was no evidence to sustain the charge. The Number Issued During the Month of August. The building permits issued by City Clerk Taggart during the month of August were" not as much in the ag gregate as those issued during July. The total amount issued during the last named amounted to $78,950. This included $5S)00 for the government building. During August the permits issued amounted to $18,300. "With the $58,000 deducted from July permits it amounted to $20,950 , leaving $2,G50 increase over August. Indiana and the State Fair. (Editorial from Indianapolis Morn ing Star.) Preparations for the Indiana S;ate Fair, which will be held this month, are already far advanced and are snid to indicate that the display will in all respects be one of the best on record. This is as it should be. Complaint has sometimes been made that agricultural fairs do not improve from year to year, but have a monotonous same ness. This may have been true once It is no longer so. The successive exhibits in a general way, of course, are necessarily simi lar; but improved products, new vari eties, new methods of treatment all have had their influence in making the display representative of ad vanced agriculture. Besides, they hold the interest of intelligent farmers who find in trem the best means of comparing progress in their calling. Indiana is one of the great agricul tural states. Its farm products are so varied that its State Fair should be and commonly is an exhibition wel worth coming far to see. That the prospect this year is for a fair of unusual excellence is gratifying. The fact that so many persons are expected to be exhibitors proves the existence of a general interest that will also insure a large attendance. You can't expect to do away with face blemishes in a week's time. Keep on taking Hollister's Rocky c . ?11 , , ,1 Mountain Tea. You'll have a loyely complexion. 3o cents, Tea or Tablets.

HARGRAVE

FREE

BUILDING

mm

I A. G. Luken & Co.

ABOUT CAM ON

lEETfflG

After the meeting a public reception Avill be beld at the Coliseum for Mr. Cannon, the affair being charge of the vice presidents. The public is invited and all that desire are requested to attend the reception and met Mr.Canon. It has been thought more advisable to hold the reception at the Coliseum than at the West cot t. The last of the minor preliminary arrangements were completed this morning. "With everything in fine order, and with excellent prospects, the meeting should be a great one," said Chairman Converse of the Wayne county central committee this after noon. Meeting Notes. Doors open at seven. Doors open at 7 o'clock sharp. Stage reserved exclusively for vice presidents. A loll corns of ushers will be on hand. Mr. Cannon and Mr. Watson arriv ed this afternoon. Come early, with great enthusiasm, and help make the meeting a hummer. Quotations From O. G. Murray's Ex changeClosing Prices Chicago Market. "Wheat. September 1.06 4-8 December .1.09 Corn. September 53 7-8 December 52 4-8 Oats. September 32 2-8 December 33 3-8 Pork. a , - September .. 11.15 October 11.30 Receipts, hogs 9,000; left over, 2,142; prospects, steady; light, 5.15 to 5.G0 ; mixed, 5.0o to 5.55 ; heavy, .65 to 5.50; rough, 4.65 to 4.85. Receipts, cattle 6,000, steady. Receipts, sheep . Kansas City 3,000, steady. South Omaha, G,000, steady. LOCAL MARKETS. Wheat Market. (Price paid by the Richmond Roll er Mills.) Grain Prices. (Paid by Wm. Hill.) WheatBeef steaks, 15c to 18c lb. Fresh pork, 15c per lb. No. 3, red $0.90. Inferior, $0.40 up. Corn No. 2, 56 lbs. (shelled) to buahel 43c per bushfcl Timothy, new, baled, $10 to $12. Clover, baled, $10. Clover seed, $5.00 to $6.00 per bu. New Oats, 2Sc to 30c per bu. Corn, 53 to 55c per bu. Straw, $6 to $7. Provisions at Retail. (Paid by Beehive Grocery.) New Cabbage, 5c per head. Meats at Retail (Furnished by P. J. Miles.) Beef, 8 to 14 c per lb. Rib roast, 15c per lb. Chuck roast, 10 to 12 l-2e per lb, Beef to boil, 8 to 10c per lb. Pork chops, 12 l-2c per pound. Bacon, 15 to 20c lb. Roast pork, 12 l-2c lb. Veal, 12 1-2 to 20c lb. Smoked ham, 15 to 25c lb. Lamb, 15 to 20c per lb. Fish, 8 to 15c lb. Lard, 10c lb. Fresh sausage, 12c per lb. Smoked sausage, 12 l-2e lb. Country Produce. (Prices paid by Beehive Grocery.) Eggs, 13c doz. Butter, Creamery 23c lb.; country, 121-2 to 15c per lb. Potatoes, 60c per bushel. Poultry Pricees. (Paid by the Bee Hive Grocery.) Dressed, old chickens, 12 l-2c lb. Eggs, 16c doz. Country butter, 20c to 25c per lb. Creamery butter, 25c per lb. Bananas, 10 to 20c per dozen. Apples, 25 to 50 c peck. Spinach, 10c lb. Radishes, 5c bunch. Tomatoes, 10c quart. Onions, 5c bunch. Cal. Oranges, 20 to 50c doz.

MARKET

mLm

UKJ, IND. One of the most successful Frepar&tory Schools in the West. Best advantages at moderate expense for a limited number cf we-1 bred L03S. Separate sc-orl for little boys. Rtfeis to many Richmond patroi Hefore deciding write for illustrated circular to REV. J. H. MCKENZIE, Rector. PEOPLES EXCHANGE STORAGE Ground floor, eixteeatl and Main. Vera Smith. 1 JX)R SALE-Old papers for sale at the Palladium office, 15 cena hundred and some thrown in. FOR SALE- -10 horse-power gas en gine in perfect repair. Richmond Cream Co. a2-tt WANTED A place to work for board, by a student. Call r-hona No. 240. FOR RENT-One-half of a hoae a short distance from this eity to man and wife, address E. D.,ean of the Palladium office. WANTED Position as stationary engine fireman. Call 437, south. , ninth street. l-2t. FOR RENT House on Wet Sewn tit street. Equire at comer Wet Seventh and National avenue. IX)ST A bunch of keys, about Eleventh and Main. Leave at 3S North Eleventh and get reward. X)R RENT House ,at 426 S.vitb Twelfth street at $16.66 per mouth. Enquire at T. J. Newkirk's office in court house. "WANTED Girl to do house v-or!c. Call at 227 North Tenth street. Lemons, 20 to 30c dozen. Maple syrup, $1.25 per galloa. ,: Rhubarb, 5c a bunch. - " Asparagus, 5c bunch. Blackberries, 14c quart. New Potatoes, 20c peck. New Beets, 5c bunch. Green peas, 10c 1-4 peck. Green beans, 10c 1-4 peck. Pineapples, 20 to 25c. Richmond Livestock, (Prices Paid by Long Bros.) Hogs, 200 lbs., top, heavy, $5.00, cwt. Hogs, 400 lbs., common and rough, to 4 l-2c lb. Choice butcher steers, 5e lb. Choice butcher steers, 5c lb. Choice cows, 3 to 3 3-4c lb. Cows, 2 1-2 to 3 l-2e lb. Veal calves, 4 and 4 l-2c lb. Sheep, fine extra, 5c per lb. r Lambs, 5c lb. The Small Things of Dress Discussed. There are men who spend $100 or less per year for their clothes and al ways look well dressed. There are men who spend ten times as much for their clothes and never look well dressed. The secret of good dresmjr is attention to the small thing. An expensive suit, supplemented with dirty linen and unpolished shoes, looks shabby. A comparatively chea suit, set off with shining shoe and immaculate collar and cuffs, gives the wearer the appearance of being well groomed. Old trousers carefully pressed and cleaned look better than newer trousers which are dirty anl baggy. A spotless last year s hat looks better than a this year' tile which has upon it all this year's dirt. Tn o nnnof tit oil AroaeoA ' 4Astft DAinft M. J 11 V V. i-ri v - " ' I rather than money. Personal neatness has a commercial as well as an aesthetic value. An employer does not like to have about him men who look unkempt and seedy. They make it appear that he either will not or cannot pay good wages or salaries that he is either elose fisted or unprosperous and thereby his bus iness is injured. Other things equal, the young clerk or bookkeeper or salesman who no matter how mall his pay, always keeps himself looking clean and well dressed, is the one who will be selected for promotion. Clothes don't make the man. They have helped in the making of many men. Reduced Rates to all Points via C C. & L. On account of Labor Day the C, C. & L. has made reduced rates to all points of one first class fare plus 25 cents for the round trip, to points where regular one way rate i less than $1.00, one fare rate will be used. Selling date September 5th, "good returning September 6th.

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