Richmond Palladium (Daily), 14 October 1904 — Page 2
TWO
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 14, 1904.
SKIN AND BLOOD PURIFlGATIOtJ Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent Cleanse the Skin, Scalp and Blood Of Torturing, Disfiguring Humours with Loss of Hair
JUST BEFORE BREAKFAST
A FEW ITEMS THAT ARE EASILY DIGESTED.
ARE PREPARED ESPECIALLY
WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS
Thousands of the world's best people have found instant relief and speedy cure by the use of Cuticura Resolvent, Ointment and Soap In the most torturing and disfiguring of itching, borning and scaly humours, eczemas, rashes, itchings and Inflammations. Thousand of tired, fretted mothers, of skin-tortured and disfigured babies, of all ages and conditions, Lave certified to almost miraculous cures by the Cuticura remedies when the best medical skill had failed to relieve, much less care. Cuticura Treatment is local and constitutional complete and perfect, pure, sweet and wholesome. Bathe the aCt-ctcd srfacs with Cuticura Soap and hot water to cleanse the skin of crrate and scales wad soften the thickened cuticle, dry without hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Ointment freely to allay itching, irritation and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and lastly take Cuticura Resolvent to cool and cleanse the blood, and put every function in a state of healthy activity. More great cures cf simple, scrofulous and hereditary humours are daily made by Cuticura remedies than by all other blood and skia remedies combined, a single set being often sufficient to cure the most distressing cases when all else fails. fold throughout the world. Cuticii' Resolvent, SJo. fir t.rra of Chocolate Cmted Pilla, per vial of M), m.tiiirnt, c., boa p. 2-Vs. Depot i London, 27 Charter. ,.uw q. ; Paris, .'. Kae lo l.i t'aixt linston. 1S7 Col urn. iu- A. Potter Prtiif and Ohem. Torn.. Sole Props. I J- hend Kir" Skin and B'.ood PrrtJlraiion."
l"2"IIl I,,X"I",IX" JHMX,,X XX,X,,X
T
? Public Sale ?
For People Who Eat Hurriedly and Chew Their Food on the "Way to Their Work.
at the Palladium, effice when a coun
try girl stepped into the offiee carry-j
ing on her arm a basket of eirs. The stenographer thought she wanted to subscribe for the paper and bowed very profoundly to the rural maiden, accompanying the bow with the remark. "Is there anything wanted?" Yes, replied Maud Muller, I've a dozen and a half of eggs here and I'll take sugar for them." "This is a printing office," remarked the stenographer, and the rural maiden blushingly backed her way out.
PMSULARl STOVES AND RANGES
$ Notes
If you are about to hold a pub , Hc sale and expect to take notes , jou should get the risjlit kind o , blanks. We keep blanks especially , for sales, and you can et your, supply here without charge. ( Bring the notes to us after the , sale and will collect them for you. (
We also make loans on these notes' when requested.
tFirst
National
iBank
XRichmond, Ind. 23
t
You have probably noticed that there is nothing more touching than a youth with a struggling mustache. K A person may be left out in the cold here but it does not follow that such will happen in the life to come. vs -Ar It is hard to find a man so deep that he has no shallow spot. -X- w tfIt is wrong to define gossip as idle talk. It is one of the most industrious things you ever saw. w "Why is it Indiana summer pa, This best time of thet year? Where does the Indian come in? Tray tell me, father dear." "Because men hate to waste the time At work we call it so; The noble red man never likes To go to work, you know." a- v t! "A shoemaker is running for gover nor of Massachusetts." "Yes, and I'll bet everybody on the other side is claiming this will be his last run." V K -X- -X- -v Whne a man goes home at night and finds his wife out to a card club and no signs of supper, lie feels like going into the same business himself. The cimax is reached, though, when his wife comes home and says:
"Why George,how early you are tonight." If George had been late for supper what would she have said? "There's nothing half so sweet in life as" oh, no you don't as sugar. Some families in Richmond quit using eggs because the price was so high. Some ( one suggested that the high price was caused by the fact that the eggs were laid so low. 5 5 The limit was reached this morning
HEROIC FLAGMAN
At New Castle Saves a Baby at Risk
Of His Own Life.
The New Castle Courier has the following to say of heroic "Buddy" j
McGrath the flagman at the Pennsylvaniacrossing at Newcastle who is known to every railroad man on the Richmond Division of the Panhandle. "Buddy" McGrath should have a gold medal awarded him for his last bit of heroic work in saving a life at the Pennsylvania crossing on Broad street. The genial flagman has saved over twenty-five persons from instant death on this crossing and Tuesday evening about 5:30 he not only saved a three-year-old boy from being struck by a through freight but risked his own life and barely escaped being run down. A lady, whose name could not be learned, and her young child were walking toward the railroad from the east, the little boy running on ahead of its mother and not paying any attention to the train. When the woman saw that the train was so near, and as she was too far away to rescue her child, she threw up her
hands in despair, expecting to see the little boy killed. McGrath was standing half way between the L. E. and W. and Pennsylvania tracks, flagging for trains on both roads, when' he saw the perilous position of the child. He ran his fastest and grabbed the cloak of the boy, swinging him off the track when the train, which was going at good speed, was but three 'or four feet away. "Buddy" cleared the track just in time or he would have, been struck him
self. A number of people who were wait ing for the 5:40 passenger train, witnessed the narrow escape and thought it hadly possible for the boy to be rescued.
EXCEL
ALL OTHERS In every way. APPEARANCE, QUALITY,
1. ; : : I . .. , , if , I' . - . m. L- nupii i..t,....,.a ml i 1 1 AA I -
PENINSULAR
Sold on EASY PAYMENTS if desired. JONES HARDWARE COMPANY
USE IRISH LINIMENT
27.50 Hot Springs, S. D. and return, from Chicago daily, via the Chicago & Nortb-Western Ry. Correspondingly low rates from other points. The Black Hills region, the great natural sanitarium of the west, is one of the most picturesque spots in the world and well worth a visit. Information and tickets can be secured from your home agent. Illustrated Black Hills Booklet with valuable
map mailed on receipt of 4 cents in
.1 TCVCM J?, DDfl I
J m at- L I L I VX Ull V- a
stamps by W. B. Kniskern, Chicago.
$30.00 to Colorado and Return 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 and Central States and only two 'ights en route from the Atlantic Seaboard. Two fast trains daily. A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, 111.
Merchant Tailors :
No. 516 Main St. The oldest and most reliable tailor establishment in the city. Guarantee every garment made Prices to suit the times.
New Fall Stock Received.
Maud Last night Jack told me that he wouldn't marry the best girl living, unless what unless she took Ilollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Bright fellow. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. v
sylvania Lines. Sunday, October 16th, excursion tickets to Cincinnati will be sold via Pennsylvania Lines at $1 round trip from Richmond going on special train leaving at 7:00 a. m.
E. B. GROSVENOR, M. D. specialist: Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Scientific Glass Fitting
COLONIAL BUILDING
OFFICEIHOURS i 4:00 to 12:00 2:00 to 4:00 7:00 to 8:00 L'Hunday 8:00 to 18:00
ooo
HEffl
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ri-I-I-I-I' H"M' 1-M-M-M-M'
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. .Through to World's Fair Richmond to St. Louis In "The World's Fair Special." Via Pennsylvania Lines. Leave Richmond, Ind., 10:03 p. m. daily, arrive St. Louis 7:22 a. m., in good time for locating at hotels or boarding houses and still have the day to see the World's Fair. Only a few weeks more of the World's Fair. Fifteen-day tickets on sale daily at very low fare for the round trip. Ascertain particulars from C. W. Elmer, Ticket Agent, Richmond, Ind.
World's Fair excursion tickets to St. Louis will be sold via Pennsylvania Lines at approximately one cent per mile each Tuesday and Thursday vntil September 29th, valid hi coaches of through trains, good returning within seven days. These are the lowest fares at which Word's Fair excursion tickets to St. Louis re sold. Fifteen day tickets, sixty day tickets and season tickets sold daily at reduced fares, good in sleeping or parlor cars with required Pullman tickets. For full information,
Cooking Exhibits all next week. Hot Biscuits and Coffee Served Free.
During this exhibit we will give away a set ot heavy steel ware
To. the one holding the lucky n u m b e r. Also a set ot ware with each Range sold.
Send 2 cent stamp for itinerary of pecial personally conducted tours to California, leaving Chicago August .Sth and 25th, via the Chicago. Union Pacific & North-Western Line, account Triennial Conclave Knights Templar at San Francisco. $50 round trip from Chicago. Correspondingly ow rates from all points. A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, 111.
Heaviest and best Material. Handsomest Finish. Economical in Fuel. It will pay you to come.
BETWEEN FIFTH AND SIXTH
I.
