Richmond Palladium (Daily), 20 September 1904 — Page 2
TWO ?
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1901.
Do You Want to Know
about the most delightful places In this country to spend Bummer?
A region easy to get to, beautiful scenery, pure bracing cool air, plenty of attractive resorts,good hotels,good fishing, golf, something to do all the time economical living, rest, health and comfort. Then write today, (enclosing two cent stamp to pay postage) mention Hits paper and we will send you our 1VU4 edition of "Mic iganin Summer" containing 64 pages 200 pictures, maps hotel rates, etc., and interesting information about this famous resort re glon reached via the Grand Rapids & Indiana R y "THE FISHIN LINE "
PETOSKEY WEQUETONSING BAY VIEW MAuKIN G I'D NORTH FORT WALLOON LAKE HARBOR PT TRAVERSE CITY CROOKED LAKE
A fine train service, fast time, excellent dining cars, etc., from St. Louis, Louisville, Indianapolis, ChlcagoC. L. LOCK WOOD, GEN. PASSENGER & TICKET AGT Grand Rapids, Mlcb.
EARNS FAME AS. DETECTIVE
ONE OF INDIANA'S CHARMING
DAUGHTERS
IS SUCCESSFUL-SLEUTH
absconder was arrested and placed in jail. Unfortunately for the young sluth, they are building a new jail at Bedford, and Rhodes was incarcerated in a temporary structure. When thejailer went to call on him for breakfast next morning he found that hi
man had escaped during the niht,.
Miss Noble has taken up the case again and says she will have Rhodes if she has to follow him all orer the country. And the detectives say she
will, too.
(Miss Jsoble is now visitino- Mrs
Griffith at 219 north tenth street.)
Has Sold a Pile of Chamberlain's
BLAZE AWAY Who cares? I'm fortified with an "El
crftdo" laundered collar, "The kind
xirt don't melt down."
The Eldorado steam Laundry No, 18 North Ninth St. Plone 147 Richmond. Indian
Nasal CATARRH la all its stages there should be cleanliness. 1 Ely's Cream Balm eiea&scs, $oothe and heajf. fhi diseased membrane. Jt caret catarrh and drives away a cold In the head $uick!y.
Cream Balm is placed Into the nostrils, spread over the membrane and is absorbed. Aellefisim mr&late add a cure follows. It is not drying doei tot produce sneezing. Large Size, 60 cents at Drug fittts or by mail ; Trial Size, 10 cents by mail. LT BROTHERS W Warren Street. New York
Are You Looking For a Farm? I Lave a number of desirable farms for 8 ale. All sizes and all prices Remember the name and place. T. R. WOODHDRST, 918 Main St.. Richmond, ltd.
She is Now on a Hunt For Man Who
Has Deserted His Family Other Exploits of the Lady.
Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 18. One of the prettiest girls in Indianapolis
and a maid belonging to one of the
best families of this state, a descend-
Cougl
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.
I i J couise, in fancy HBfSMgaSyi driving harness, but
' made from good stock, and every set maintains our repution as to workmanship and finish. All its of horse equipments at very moder9 op Ices . ..
V. 7 1 -I f M kj
The Wiggins Co
Cough Remedy.
T 1 11 "M 1 1
x nave sum iiaujuenain s
uemeciy lor more tan twenty years and it has given entire satisfaction. I have sold a pile of it and can recommend it highly. Joseph McElhi-
ney, Linton, Iowa. You will find thi
remedy a good friend when troubled
with a cough or cod. It always af
fords quick relief and is pleasant to
take. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co.
ant of one of Indiana's most re- and VV. J. Sudhoff, litth and Main
cnpf A1 sons, is makinp a great reDU- I Streets.
tation as a sleuth. She is a Miss Su
san B. Noble, a grandniece of James
Noble, who was United States Sena
tor from Indiana from 1816 to 1831,
and of Noah Noble, who was Gover nor of the state from 1831 to 1837.
Miss Noble's first exploit was to
arrest two men on the street and de
liver them to the desk sergeant at
the police station.
She is employed by the Charity
Organization society, and for several months there were complaints about two men who were begging at houses and on the streets. The two men ap
peared in different disguises, some
times as cripples, sometimes as the
A 1.1 L V 1 J
sons ot weaitnv parents wuo nau
cast them off, sometimes as unfor
tunate investors in the West who
were trvinsr to eret to friends in tue
East.
Miss Noble became satisfied that
the two men were working together
and after the police had tailed to
bring them in she started out to find
them. Her search was painstaking
r 1 1 i
and tor nearly a wees was Kept up dav and night.
Her First Capture.
One evening while passing along
Washington street she spied one of
ler men. She walked up to him,
caught him oy the lapei oi nis coai and demanded that lie accompany her
to the police station.
The fellow pulled back, but she
tightened her grip upon his coat and
menancingly pointed to a big police
man at the corner.
"If you don't go," she said, "I'll
call that policeman and have you ta-
cen down in the patrol wagon."
The man looked at her, and seeing
determination in her manner, walked
with her to the police station and
was turned over to the officers as a vagrant. He refused to give his pal away, but Miss Noble judged that the
other man was not far away at the
ime of the arrest. This thought came a ji i i
o her trom the way xne man nau
looked across the street when she first accosted him. Going back on the opposite side of the street she recognized the fellow's partner and arrested him, and in twenty minutes he, too, was slated at the station house for vagrancy. A more difficult piece of detective work has just bee naccomplished by
STOCKS AND ELECTIONS. Philadelphia Telegraphy.)
With rare exceptions Presidential
years are periods of depression in the
security markets, and have shrinkage
in the volume of trading, but prece
dent loses all its force when condi
tions as they exist today are consid
ered. Instead of depression we are having extraordinary buoyancy, and in place of shrinkage in tradine the
o
nnanciai centers are experiencing
phenomenal activity. It is in many
respects a repetition of 1892. It was
in that year that President Harrison
said that- 'the high-water mark of
American prosperity had been reached."
Today none of the disturbing influ
ences that characterized recent campaigns serve to admonish the financial and business world that it must cease expanding. Political prospects for the election of President Roose
velt are bright. The money situation
is strong and the harvest will be
bountiful. Not since 1898 has the country approached the harvest sea
son with such abundant funds.
True, the wheatcrop has been cut
down to 539,000,000 bushels from
637,000,000 a year ago. This would
make for depression and gloom were
it not for the fact that the harvest
of all our farm products will far exceed any recent periods, providing,
of course, that corn maintains its'
prospect for a bumper crop. Combin
ed, the Nation will grow 232,000,000 more bushels of cereals than it did in 1903. These facts are closely con
nected with the business of the coun
ty, and after such a brief analysis it is easy to understand why the feel
ing of optimism is growing, why in
dustries are resuming, and why se
curities are advancing. ' Ordinarily
this is not the time for rising markets, and while conditions justify the change for the better, it is easy to carry the spirit of exuberance beyond
the point warranted by the underly-
FRONT OF THE BEAUTIFUL LOTTA ENTERTAINMENT.
Calif ornina. The Chicago & Northwestern rail
way has issued a new publication en
titled "California." It contains a
beautiful colored map of the state, a
list of hotels at California Uurist re
sorts with their capacity and rates;
and a most interesting series of pic
tures showing California's resources
and attractions. The prospective visitor and settler should be in possession of a copy of this profusely illus-
rated folder. Sent to any address
on receipt of four cents in. stamps. One way tickets on sale daily Sep-
ember 15 to October 15, only $33.00
Chicago to the coast. Correspondine-
y low rates from all points. A. H.
Waggener, Traveling agent, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago, Illinois.
Bears the
Signature
of
STOniA.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
For forty years Dr. Fowler's Ex
tract of Wild Strawberry has been
curing summer complaint, dysentery,
diarrhoea, bloody flux, pain in the stomach, and it has never yet failed
o do everything claimed for it.
n
msr tacts.
CONSUMPTION IN SCHOOLS.
Dr. S.1 A. Knopp, a high authority,
outlined recently in an address before
the American Academy of Medicine
her, though the prisoner escaped at the at Atlantic City some of the means last moment through the bungling of which ought to be adopted by public
men. A man named Rhodes deserted his wife and four children. Miss Noble was sent to catch him. She learned that Rhodes spent much of his time with a woman who kept a boarding-house, but the woman positively denied any knowledge of his whereabouts. Wjthin a short time she also disappeared, and Miss Noble believed that she had gone to join the absconding husband. She started out to locate the couple, but it was a month before she could find even a slight trace of them. Searching For Wife-Deserter. A relative of the woman inadvertently remarked that the boarding house keeper had gone to Martinsville, and Miss Noble followed, but no trace of the fugitives could be found. She made several trips to that city and finally the postmaster remembered that he had forwarded a letter to the woman at Morgantown. Miss Noble went to Morgantown, but the parties were not there. After days of search she went to the railroad station, described the woman to the agent, and was told that he had sold such a woman a railroad ticket to Bedford. Miss Noble followed to Bedford, but there nothing could be learned of the couple. She spent several days in the search, and at last was rewarded by meeting a quarryman, who said that such a man as she described was in Quarrytown and had recently been joined by his wife. Going to Quarrytown, she found Rhodes and the woman living together, and the
school officials and teachers to prevent the spread of consumption among pupils. The school building should be on a high point where the i rry t l i i l.
air is goou. mere snouia De connected with it either a large playground or a roof garden. The rooms should be kept cool and well ventilated. A gymnasium every public school should have, and, if practicable, a swimming tank, and regular exercise should be obligatory. Precautions should be observed against overtaxing boys and girls at the critical period when they are verging upon manhood and womanhood. When the weather is good classes should be heard frequently in the open air. Pupils of every age should sing a good deal. The German army authorities have of late much encouraged singing while marching as an effective means of repelling pulmonary troubles and raising the general health and vigor of their troops. Tuberculous children are removed from French, German, Italian, and Dutch' schools and placed in public sanitariums, where they are both treated and fed, and Dr. Knopp
advocates the adoption of a similar plan in this country. In the census year 1900 the people who diet! of consumption in the United States numbered HO.OoO, more than were carried off in the same year by appendicitis, railway accidents, diphtheria, grip, cancer, and typhoid combined. Any and all measures which promise to check the mortal ravages of the "great white scourge" are worth trying almost regardless of cost.
Excursion Rates to Northern Resorts.
Excursion tickets at unusually low
rates good for the season, on sale dai-
y to Milwaukee, Madison, Waukesha,
Green Lake. Devil3 Lake. Goo-ebin.
7 O 7 Ashland, Marque'te, Superior, Du-
uth, St. Paul, Minneapolis and many
ther cool and delightful lake resorts
reacnea oy The North-Western Line.
Information and tickets can be se-
ured from your home agent. Booklet
entitled "The Lakes and Summer Re-
orts of the Northwest" mailed upon
receipt of 4 cents in stamps, W. B.
Kniskern, P. T. M. C. & N. W.
Chicago, 111.
R'y,
HOME PRIDE RANGES
1W ji:in.jni Y TiT ' 7Hj
See it. None Compare.
Johnson & Roland 'It 5J?ii. 6th
jD
-A.. ZE3. FBIQE flu Crews inl Bridz Work. TSX COUKZiL.
Dentist
The florrthuu ester fJataal Liif e Ins. Co
J. O BARBER, General Agent, RoolBR5cSSfoIa.,lld,
Milwaukee,
Wisconsin.
Two million Americans suffer the torturing pangs of dyspepsia. No need to. Burdock Blood Bitters cures At any drug store.
A HALF MILLION ACRES. $30.00 to Colorado and Keturn. Via Chicago, Union Pacific & NorthWestern Line. Chicago to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo, daily throughout the summer. Correspondingly low rates from all points east. Only one night to Denver from Chicago. Two fast trains daily. Tourist sleeping cars to Denver daily.
E.
B. GROSVENOR, M. D. SPECIALIST . Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Scientific Glass Fitting
COLONIAL BUILDING
OFFICE HOURS l . :00 to 12:00 2:00 to 4:00 7:00 to 8:00 Runday 9:00 to 1J:00
he
iiimFoi; Job iWnrft
PENINSULA MEANS EVERY
THING GOOD IN A RANGE OR STOVE JONES
NNSULA&
HARDWARE COMPANY.
