Richmond Palladium (Daily), 25 December 1904 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT.
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 25, 1904.
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WISHING ALL A MERRY CHRISTMAS
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Prices Furnished by Mather Bros. Co.
Anthracite, aU sizes . . Pocahontas Lump ... Jackson Lump, forked . Winifrede Lump, forked Pittsburg Lump .... Hocking Lump .... Indiana Lump . . . . . Nut and Slack . . .
Per Ton Half Ton . . . . $7.50 $3.00 . . . 4.75 2.50 . . . . 5.00 2.65 . . . . 4.25 " 2 25 . . . . 4.25 2.25 . . . . 4.00 2.15 . . . . 50 l.OO . . . 2.50 l.lO
DELIVERED BY TEAM 25c extra when carried in.
: A SAYINGS ACCOUNT FOB XMAS A SAVINGS DEPOSIT PASSBOOK . 'with a deposit of a suitable amount will be a most appropriate and valuable Christmas gift. One dollar will start an account; we will put the passbooks in neat envolope3 "with your card and mail them to reach your friends on Christmas morning. The interest you know will make Christmas all the time. WHY NOT TRY IT? : DICKINSON TRUST COOPEN TUESDAY EVENINGS.
Veep
When you want anything or have anything io sell send it to the Palladium: One-half cent, a word, for all ads that anybody derives profit from. Otherwise notices will be free. Nothing inserted for less than ten cents, and no notice taken unless accompanied by cash.
WANTED.
WANTED Washing and ironing at 309 south fifth street. Home Laundry. 1314t.
WANTED Boarders and roomers at 32 S. 9th St.
WANTED FurnisUed rooms, central location, good reference. Address Box 156.
WANTED A good girl to work at Mrs. Owen Carroll's, 309 north twelfth' street.
WANTED A girl to do general housework at 1804 N. F. St.
WANTED Five copies of December number of Everybody's Magazine. Depot News Stand. 18-7t
POR SALE.
Richmond property a specialty, McNeil & Porterfield, 920 Main, tf
railroading or telegraphy, will do well to buy this scholarship, which se will sell reasonable. tf
FOR RENT.
FOR RENT House 5 rooms, electric lights and natural gas, hard and soft water, 29 N. 19th st. Home phone 742. eod-tf
FOR RENT 8 room house, 402 N. 19th. Phone 497. 18tf LOST OR STRAYED.
LOST A kid glove with white lining, between Tenth and Thirteenth streets on Main street. Leave at Palladium office.
FOR SALE A good Indianapolis business college scholarship. Call at Palladium. tf
FOR SALE Want ads one-half a cent a word. tf
FOR SALE A life scholarship' in Johnson's Practical School of Telegraphy and Railroading. Any jroung man contemplating practical
LOST A striped lap robe. Leave at this office and get reward. STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING. A meeting of the shareholders in
; the Second National Bank of Rich
mond, Ind., will be held at 1 o'clock p. m., at the banking house on Tuesday, January 10th, 1903, for the purpose of electing nine directors to serve the ensuing year, and the transaction of any other business that may come before the meeting. JOHN B. DOUG AN, President. Dec. 22-20t
LOST One brown fur
turn to 176 Ft. Wayne Ave.
glove
.Re-
LOCAL BREVITIES. ' . 9 Underwear at Fletcher's. tf Drs. Pierce and Chenoweth, Dentists, Colonial Bldg., corner seventh and Main, third floor. Phone 1637. 4-eod-lnio. A new line of Stay and Kokobola Toilet Articles and Perfumes at Adams Drug Store. 17tf. fc 3f r J. H. Ryder went to Springfield yesterday to spend Christmas with relatives and friends. Simmons' "The Old Reliable" 828 Main St., for your Xmas Cigars. 23-2t Gasoline Lamps, 406 Main. 23-eod-7t. 46 "X Bennett Homemade Bread and nice Potato Chips at Hadley Bros. tf. s fc Potato Chips at Hadley Bros. tf Appropriate Christmas music will be rendered in all the churches today. 4fr Xmas Turkeys at Hadley Bros. tf Go to the Coliseum Monday afternoon and evening. All your friends will be there. Join the crowd. Roller skating is the fad. X & Joseph A. Lugar, of Eaton, visited friends in this city yesterday. -X- -XBert Tamlin, of Connersville, is spending Christmas with his parents in this city. - Monday afternoon and evening there will be skating at the Coliseum Muusic by the band. Your friends will be there. 45Take the Dayton & Western cars o the New Cedar Springs Hotel, now open. tf HTypewriters, all makes, rented, sold. Rentals $3 to $5 per month. Repairs and ribbon for all machines. Burr, W. U. Tel. office. Phone 26. ' x Aubrey Hibberd is home from Chicago, to spend Christmas in Richmond. 4fr Try a want ad. Phone 21.1 Be sure and go to the Coliseum Monday afternoon and evening. Everyone will be furnished ball bearing skates. Sheriff Richard Smith and wife are spending Christmas with their son, George and family, in Frankton, Ind. 45- -XMore of those holly seals received at Moormann's book store. fc Children's caps at 25c each, Shar
key's millinery store, 7 South Sev
enth street.
tf
Roland Hughes is home from Chicago to visit his parents, the Rev. and Mrs. I. M. Hughes during the holidays. Dr. Park for high class dentistry, 8 N. Tenth street. Lady assistant. Holly, Holly, Holly with red berries, wreaths, evergreens, etc. Phone 292 Hadley Bros. tf X- -XFred Johnson is at hme visiting friends and relatives. Don't do without polo news. If the boy happens to miss you please phone 21, and we will appreciate it. 4t "X 4fc William McGreevy and family, of Cleveland, are in Richmond visitng friends and relatives. X- -XMusic by the band while you spin around the Coliseum floor on ball bearing skates Monday afternoon and evening. XWilbur Hibberd, of Detroit, Mich., is home to spend the holidays. -x- -xDo you want a good little farm with many advantages. Call on J. E. Moore, over 6 north seventh St. 20-tf. X- -XMr. Charles Bradway and family of St. Louis are here io spend Xmas with his family and friends. 45Take your girl and go to the Coliseum Monday afternoon and evening. Ball bearing skates and a brass band. 45- 41- 45Roller skating is again the fad. Be sure to go to the Coliseum Monday afternoon and evening.
Perfumes, brushes, shavinsr muss
For First Class Plumbing see Wm.
Waking, Phone 506. . 23-eod-7t
. V . i 4f 46- 4 The rain today interfered consid
erably with the Christmas shopping.
Although it rained all dav yester
day there were a number of country
people in the city.
William F. McCoy, of Campbells-
town, O., and Miss Sarah Moran, of
W llhamsburg, Ind., a teacher of a
Wayne county school, were married at noon yesterda3" at Grace M. E. parsonage, Rev. Marble officiating.
They will make their home at Camp-
bellstown.
45- 45- 45Mrs. Swift went to Indianapolis
yesterday to spend Christmas.
A NEW BILL
Will Be Presented by the Municipal
League. Another conference of the officials
of the Municipal League of the
State will be held at the Hotel Eng
lish at Indianapolis on January 11 to consider the tterms of the bill by which it is proposed to increase the
terms of holders of city oifficers from two to four years, thus enabling the present officials to hold over for two
years in addition to the time for
which they were telected.
John O. Wilson, city clerk of Ma
rion, who started the movement, has
sent out letters to all the oflicials of the cities and towns of the State asking them to attend the conference.
J. Fred France, mayor of Hunt
ing, president, and J. O. Willson are acting with the following committee
appointed to draft a bill: George P.
Haywood, city attorney of Lafay
ette, chairman; Frank O. Sweetser,
city attorney of Wabash; W. W.
Mix, mayor of Mishawaka; E. M.
Lee, mayor of Lawrenceburg; C. W.
Sherritt, mayor of Muneie.
The promoters of the measure to
extend the terms of office will con
fer with the members of the codification commission at the ' State House between now and the January meeting.
JEWELS
Belonging to Mrs. Chadwick Have at
Last Been Located.
Cleveland, December 24. The ef
forts to locate Mrs. Cassie L. Chad
wick's personal property, which has been sought since her arrest, at last
are being rewarded. Receiver Loes
er said the trunk and suit case which were smuggled out of the Holland
House, New York, had been traced.
c win jcv.uic mem u-t, uuwc,
Loeser said. They are filled with valuable clothing and jewelry. It has also been learned that other jewelry has been pawned with a New
York money lender. At the Chad
wick home Ave discovered an immense amount of furs, the value of which will run into thousands of dollars. We found a sealskin suit, a beautiful sable coat, boa and muff of great value; a suit of baby lamb chinchillas and hats of fur. I should say there are 100 boxes of hats,
many of them of fur to match
suits."
Arrangements are being made to secure bail for Dr. Leroy S. Chadwick when he arrives here. lie is
now on his way to New York from
Paris.
BEAR LOOSE
Bites Three Persons at Cincinnati
During Holiday Rush.
Cincinnati, December 24. Three
men were bitten and several thous
and shoppers thrown into a panic
when a recently captured bear,
brought here for sale, broke away
from its captors and ran through the heart of the shopping district.
Men and women scattered in every
direction, fighting for the entrances to the various nearby buildings. The animal sought refuge in an alley. It was tackled by a negro wrestler, who threw the animal and put a bag over
its head.
EXHIBIT SALE
Of Oil and Water Color Paint
ings at my studio 327 S. SEVENTH ST.
Frank J. Girardin
A IMrpIislMs li) All .... , -
After the Holidays come and see us for the following :
House Coats Silk Suspenders White Vests Silk Umbrellas Gloves
Neckwear Mufflers Fancy Vests Shirts Suit Cases Caps
Hats
Boys' Suits and Overcoats Men's Suits and Overcoats
All of which can be found in endless varieties and all
the latest styles at MEL CLOTB 00. 709-711 Main Street.
E. B. GROSVENOR.. M. D. SPECIALIST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Scientific Glass Pitting
NEWSPAPER INTERESTS IN COMBINATION.
A recent invention has revolutionized the art of making printing inks, and a substantial reduction in the cost of manufacture has given The Standard Ink Works such a strategical advantage over their competitors in the ink trade that thj editors and publishers who control and largely own the business have decided to invite the financial co-operation of the general public in an immediate enlargement of the working plant. The purpose of corporation is to secure to American newspapers the absolute control of their ink supply independently of any industrial combination or other outside influence, and, at the same time, to make money for its stockholders through the sale of printing inks to publishers and printers in all parts of the civilized world. The corporation owns and operates, in New York City, a printing ink factory having a capacity of 10,000 pounds of printing ink a day. The factory is equipped with the latest nnd most highly improved machinery for the manufacture of all grades colors of printing inks. The corporation owns and operates, " outside of New York, a modern and fully equipped factory for the preparation of the materials from which printing inks are made. This factory represents an outlay of between $50,000 and $100,000 in cash. l has a capacity at present of $100,000 pounds a day. It is the intention of the corporation to bring the capacity of its New York City factory up to the full capacity of the works. By reason of the recent improvement in the quality of the materials and the reduction in the cost of the manufacture, the corporation is able to offer to investors this plain business proposition: It can manufacture better printing inks at a lower cost than any other maker of inks in existence. It can sell good inks for less than it costs other concerns to make poor ink, and still earn generous dividends on its outstanding investment. The profits of manufacture, under the new and more favorable conditions, will range from 100 per cent to 300 per cent. The corporation has no debt, no preferred stock, no bogds. All stock is common stock, full-paid and non-assessable. Only stock actually issued counts as capital. Dividends are paid only on issued stock. The activfr management of the business is in the hands of pratieal and experienced men, all except two of whom have had many year; experience as editors and publishers. The Executive Board of Directors is made up as follows: Major General Oliver Otis Howard, TJ. S. Army (retired), Burlinglon, Vermont ; Robert Hunt Lyman, 53-63 Park Rowf New York City; Henry W. B. Howard, Polytechnic Institute Brooklyn, N. Y.; B. Peele Willett, 142 Fifth Avenue, NewCity; Hiram C. Haydn, 173 Bellflower Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio, Edward B. Smith, 156 Fifth Avenue, New York City; William Wilard Howard, 17 Broadway, New York City. For the purpose of extending its business by the construction in New York City of a larger factory for the manufacture on an extensive scale of all grades and colors of printing inks, the parent corporation now offers for sale a limited allotment of its capital stock at the low price of fifty cents a share (par value, $1,00 full paid and non-assessable.) When this sale is closed (which may be at any time without -ice), the price pf stock will be advanced, to $1.00 a share. Subscriptions to this allotment of stock should be sent to Mr. illiam Willard Howard, Treasurer, 17 Broadway, New York City. , Circulars describing the enterprise in detail will be sent free ,to anv address on application.
LIKE MOTHER USED TO MAKE." Nsk sqch Mince meat In iOc Packages WiihIJst if Valuable Premiums.
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