Richmond Palladium (Daily), 30 December 1904 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT.

RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 30, 1904.

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lams

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LOST Saturday night on Main street. A gold watch and fob. Please return to Iliff's Store and get re

ward.

Comforts

Cold Weather Snaps FRIDAY and SATURDAY

1 4 Off

ALL COMFORTS, Worth $lto$4. ALL WOOL BLANKETS, Worth $4.60 to 7 pair. . ALL COTTON BLANKETS, Worth 50c to $3 pair.

'

Children's Tam O'Shanters, worth 50c, only Fancy Poppertrees, to close, worth 10c to $1, at just ........ 10 c Fleeced Wrapper Goods, special, per yard . ........

Heavy Outings, worth 12c, light and dark patterns, special . CCrJt

1 4 Off

. . . . . 39c Half Price ...5c

iM4'H''H''l'l 'M"M 'I Ma-'1"M"I"M"M

Prices Furnished by Mather Bros. Co.

Anthracite, all sizes . . Pocahontas Lump . . . Jackson Lump, forked . Winifrede Lump, forked Pittsburg Lump .... Hocking Lump . . . . Indiana Lump

Per Ton Half Ton . $7.50 4.75 2.50 . 5.00 3.G5 . 4.25 2 25 . 4.25 2.25 . 4.00 2.15 . 3 50 l.OO . 2.50 1.40

DELIVERED BY TEAM 25c extra when carried in.

ft

UI-I-I'-I-I1 ! ! I ! I ! I1 1 II X I I 'I'M1 I I'M M-I-I-M-I-

JA1ARY 1ST, SUNDAY JANUARY 2ND NEW YEAR'S HOLIDAY. All deposits made on January 3rd, 1905, will draw interest from January 1st, 1905, on account of the New Year's holidays the first and second of the month. Start the New Year with a Savings Account. DICKINSON TRUST CO.

p?Sl!ia!lglUl!IMl

When you want anything or h ave anything to 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 10 men in each State to travel, tack signs and distribute samples and circulars of our goods salary $75.00 per month, $3.00 per day for expenses. Kuhlman Co., Department W. d28-2m

-WANTED Boarders at 32 S. 9th St.

and roomers

FOR SALE Want ads one-half cent a word. tf

FOR SALE A life scholarship in

Johnson's Practical School of Tel

egraphy and Railroading. Any

young man contemplating practical

railroading or telegraphy, will do well to buy this scholarship, which

will sell reasonable. tf

Neff & NusbaumV shoe-store. Return to 916 Main street. Reward.

FOUND A door key at Fletcher's.

FOUND Ladies' dressing

Owner can have same by at 311 S. 12th street.

jacket calling

LOST Pair spectacles between S.

5th and A and K. of P. Temple. Return to 110 S. 5th or Palladium office and get reward. 30 -3f

LOST White kid purse -trimmed

with itinsel and containing one

dollar bill and two ad one-half dollar bill and two and one-half

10th and get reward.

FOUND A ladies' purse. Call at

Grand Hotel and describe same and receive purse.

Adams, is a playwright of no mean

ability and has written a number of plays. He wrote a large majority of the "Royal Chef, which was seen here recently and owns his plays. "The Jolly Barou" is now being played in Chicago. Joesph Loher, of Brookville, is visiting his sister, Mrs. Tena Williams, during the holidays. Robert Alexander, traveling salesman for the D. P. Lesh Paper Company, of Indianapolis, was a business visitor in the city yesterday. Miss Carrie Patterson, of St. Louis, is visiting Miss Alice Knollenberg. 45David Sutton will leave for Detroit

today. Mr. Sutton has accepted a position with a bridge company and will be permanently located in Detroit. 3fr John Sinex is confined to his bed

with an attack of heart failure.

LOCAL BREVITIES.

Underwear at Fletcher's. tf I. S. Laning has returned from

Eaton, where he visited relatives for a few days.

5 Next Monday night Mrs. Gertie

Kolp will give her New Year's dance at I. O. O. F. hall. Class dance from

7 to 9 o'clock. Dancing after that

hour. Music by Wilson & White.

-xDrs. Pierce and Chenoweth, Dentists, Colonial Bldg., corner seventh and Main, third floor. Phone 1637. 4-eod-lmo. Roy Dyke is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Morris at Anderson. Gasoline Lamps, 406 Main. 23-ood-7t. Arthur Hackleman s the guest of Anderson friends for a few days. A new line of Stay and Kokobola Toilet Articles and Perfumes at Adams Drug Store. 17tf. -5 Take the Dayton & Western cars o the New Cedar Springs Hotel, now

visiting in Mr. ! J. H.

makes fine

WANTED A girl to no general housework at 1S04 N. F. street.

WANTED Furnished 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 1S04 N. F. St.

FOB SALE.

Richmond property a specialty, McNeil & Port erfield, 920 Main, tf

FOR SALE A good Indianapolis , business college scholarship. Call I ftt Palladium. 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 Two houses, good condition, one new, N. 17th St. Call 1S04 N. F. street.

FOR RENT Furnished house. Call at 304 north fifteenth. Home phone 1291.

FOR RENT S room house, 402 N. 19th. Phone 497. IStf

LOST OR STRAYED. LOST Monday night, in Ft. Wayne avenue, between Sixth and Eighth streets, paokae of clothing. . Return to 211 North Sixth street.

LOST Ten dollar bill somewhere between Nixon's candy store and

open. Jfc 5 4fr Miss Emma Leeson is Anderson, the guest of Jones and family. -XEmmons Tailoring Co.,

suits and overcoats at $15 and $18. 30-2t Typewriters, all makes, rented, sold. Rentals $3 to $5 per month. Repairs and ribbon for all machines. Burr, W. U. Tel. office. Phone 26. Try a want ad. Phone 21. I want the cash to make the fol

lowing loans, with all good, firstclass mortgage loans: two $450, one

$S00, one $1,100, one $650. 29-6

Miss Mary Austin made a business

trip to Indianapolis yesterday.

XPerfumes, brushes, shaving mugs For First Class Plumbing see Wm. Waking, Phone 506. 23-eod-7t Children's caps at 25c each, Sharkey's millinery store, 7 South Seventh street. tf XDr. Park for high class dentistry, 8 N. Tenth street. Lady assistant. J. Y. Poundstonte left yesterday morning for Steubenville, O., to visit his sister. 4fr

If Santa has brought you a violin, mandolin, or Guitar see Henry F. Kamp for lessons. 28-6 Mrs. Seth Lucas and daughter, Miss Maud, have returned to Williamsburg, after visiting Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Harris. -XDon't do without polo news. If the boy happens to miss you please phone 21, and we will appreciate it. -x Dr. J. A. Walls and brother, J. C. Walls, of Camden, Ohio, left Tuesday night for Converse to attend the funeral of their sister. X- 4fr 4fr Do you want a good little farm with many advantages. Call on J. E. Moore, over 6 north seventh St. 20-tf. Winston Harris has returned to Fountain City, after a visit with local friends. X- -X- -XToday six students of Chicago University will visit Walter Fulghum. One of the young men, Frank

LADIES FREE AT NEW PHIL

LIPS TONIGHT.

READ PAGE 5 REGARDING

CLOAKS AND FURS. THE MASH MEYER STORE.

New Kentucky Township. Louisville, Ky., Dee. 30. At a

meetinsr of the Boar Commissioners

of Dubois county today a petition

for the incorporation of the town of Ferdinnnd will be decided upon. Fer

dinand is a prosperous little community in the southern end of the county and about sixty miles west of New

Albany, Ind. Every voter in the town

is Democratic except tbe postmaster,

ORANGE SALE SATURDAY, 21

CENTS DOZEN. HADLEY BROS

30-2t

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY

CLOAKS AND FURS. READ PAGE 5. THE MASHMEYER

STORE.

Surprised Friends.

Miss Addie Hill, of Centerville and

Mr. John Nixon, of Cambrige City,

surprised their friends on Wednes

day by going to Muncie and getting

married. The bride is very well

known in Centerville and Richmond

She is the daughter of Lloyd Hill and

a sister of Mrs. John Hoerner, of this city. Mr. Nixon is engaged jn business in Cambridge City and the

young couple will reside there.

TURKEYS, CHICKEN & DUCKS

AT HADLEY BROS. 30-2t

ANOTHER ORANGE SALE SAT

URDAY. MEYER BROS.

Deaths and Funerals.

Mueller The funeral of Elizabeth Mueller will take place tomorrow at

9 o'clock at St. Aandrew's churcl Burial at. St. Andrew's cemetery. -X-

Klopp The funeral of Mrs. Anna

KLopp, widow of Henry Klopp, sr. will take place this afternoon. Serv

ices at the home, 423 South Eighth

street, at 1:30 and at St. Paul's Lu

theran church at 2 o'clock. Buna at Lutherania. X- -X- -X-

Rash The funeral of Didana Rash

will take place at the Margaret Smith

Home this morninjr at 10 o'clock

Burial at Earlham.

.i j?.

Droste The funeral of Raymond

Droste will take place tomorrow aft

ernoon at 2:30 from the home of his

grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Graham

154 South West Second street, and

will be private. Burial at Earlham

cemetery.

LADIES' WALKING SKIRTS

$1. READ ABOUT CLOAKS AND

FURS. THE MASHMEYER STORE

CHLNA FREE WITH PURCHAS

ES OF $2.50, $5 AND $10 DURLNG

THE GREAT CLOAK AND FUR

SALE BEGLNNING MORNING. SEE PAGE MASHMEYER STORE.

FRIDAY

5. THE

that City is " to be

To Be Married, It has been announced Treasurer Charles Tennis

married in the near future to Miss Ella Maple, of this city. Both the bride and groom have a large circle of friends in the city and they are extended the best wishes of all.

FRANK LANE FOR NEW YEAR TURKEYS. PHONE 773. 30 2 1

MISTLETOE HADLEY

BROS.

LADLES FREE TICKETS FOR BERRY STOCK CO., NEW PHILLIPS TO NIGHT, MUST BE SECURED BEFORE 6 O'CLOCK.

NEWSPAPER HiTERESTSTNXJOMBnfATION.--.

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 the 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 purpcse 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 print-' ing ink factory having a capacity of 10,000 pounds of vrintiti? ink a day. The factory is equipped with the latest and 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. It 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 bonds. 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 activf management of the business is in the hands of pratical 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, U. S. Army (retired), Burlington, Vermont; Robert Hunt Lyman, 53-63 Park Row, New York City;-Henry W. B. Howard, Polytechnic Institute, Brooklyn, N. Y.; B. Peele Willett, 143 Fifth Avenue, New City; 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 of stock will be advanced to $1.00 a shar. 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 any address on application. , : j ; :

HEALTH!

Is

the

Most lmp9k&i&t.

In buying food-articles, you must consider several things : Economy, Results, Easy Handling, Reliability ; but the most important is Health. Health means,every thing. In clothes, furniture, etc., if the buyer gets a poor or imitation article, the only harm is loss of money. In buying food-articles, if imitations are supplied, there is a loss of 'money, and probably an injury to health which is beyond price. Remember these facts when buying baking powder.

YAL

BAKING POWDER ; - ABSOLUTELY PURE

LIKE MOTHER USED TO MAKE." NOPRE SUCH MINCE MEAT In 10c Packages with List of Valuable Premiums.

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