Richmond Palladium (Daily), 10 March 1906 — Page 7
THE MORNING PALLADIUM SATURDAY, MARCH 10. 1906.
page seven. BEATS UP 100 EGGS FOR CAKE
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of highest quality trade mark means SUNDAY SERVICES III THE CHURCHES NOTICE TO MINISTERS. To insure their publication all church notices for Saturday's issue must be at the Palladium by 1 o 'clock on Friday. St. Andrew's Church. Rev. Prank A. Roell, rector. Rev. Henry Cadlage, assistant. Holy sacrifice of the mas f at 7:30 a. m., and 9:45 a. m. Vespers and benediction of the blessed sacr1:Taei?X''Vt 3:00 p. m. Tirst English Lutheran Church. Rev. Elmer Q. Howard, pastor. Morning -worship at 10:30 a. m. Evening service at 7:30 p. m. Sunday school at 9 a. m. Lenten Midweek servic Thursday, 7:30 p. m. East Main Street Friends. Alfred T. Ware, Pastor. Bible school at 9 o'clock. Meeting for worship 10:30, Junior Endeavor at 2:30. Senior Endeavor (consecration service) at 6:30.
M Lemon 35 Snaps An appetizing nibble ' with the flavor of the I refreshing lemon. A V revelation in modern 5 baking.
E First Presbyterian Church.
Rev. Thos. J. Graham, castor.
1 Sabbath school 9:15 a. m. Morn-
worship, 10:20. Theme, "The Curse of Reuben. Y. P. S. C. E. at 6:45 p. m. Evening worship at 7:30. Annual meeting of congregation March 15, at 7:30 p. m. Second Presbyterian Church. North Nineteenth and C. CO. Shirey, pastor. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 and 7:30 o'clock. Sunday school at 9 :15 a. m. Earlham Heights Sunday School at 2:30 p. m. Bible Study Class at "2:30, Auditorium. Intermediate and Junior C. E., at 2 p. m. Senior C. E. at 6:15. North A Street Friends. Firstday school at 9 a. m. Meeting for wirship at 10 :30. Evening meeting at 6:30. Topic: John Woolman Whittier. Reading Circle at 7. St. Paul's Episcopal. Rev. H. H. Hadley, pastor. Holy communion 7:30 a. m. Morning prayer, 9:00 a. m. The Bishop will confirm and preach at 10:30 a. m. Evening prayer and address at 7:30. First Baptist. Rev. A. M. Hackleman, pastor. Sunday school 9:15 a. m. Juniors at 2:30 p. m. Young People at 6:30 p. m. Divine worship at 10 :30 a. m. Preaching at 7:30 p. m. All are invited. Trinity Lutheran Church. Rev. Joseph Beck, pastor. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 a. m. and 7 p. m. United Brethren. Rev. M. Hobson. pastor. The services will be held in the K.
There is a story of an old lady who made np a batch of mince and apple plea. Wishing to be able to distinguish one kind from the other she marked the mince pies X IVI for tis mince "and the apple
pies T IVI for taint mince." The baker's marks on the ordinary run of bakery products are of little more value for purposes of identification than the marks on the old lady's pies. But HERE it a trade mark that really identifies that enables you to distinguish the world's best baking the Biscuit, Crackers and Wafers made by the NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY. This trade mark appearing in red and white on
each end of a package guarantees the contents to be pure, clean and fresh. To learn something of what this try a package of either of the products mentioned below.
Butter Thin Biscuit Unique little biscuit in much favor with those who want "something different."
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
of P. Temple on South Eighth street, at 2 p. m. Preaching by the pastor. All are cordially invited to attend this service. United Presbyterian Church. Corner Eleventh and North B Sts. Rev. S. R. Lyons, pastor. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sabbath school 9:15 a. m. Christian Union, 6:45 p. m. First Methodist Episcopal. Rev. M. Swadener, D. D., pastor. Sabbath School, 9:15 a. m. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 a. m. At 7:30 the congregation will join in a Union Missionary meeting at Grace church to be addressed by Rev. McLaughlin, a returned missionary from the Philippine Islands. The lecture will be highly illustrated with stereopticon. Class meeting at 12 m. Minor League 2:30 p. m. Epworth League 6:30 p. m. Special music. A cordial invitation extended to all. HWhitewater Friends Church. O. M. Frazier, Pastor. Bible School, 9:00 a. m. Meeting for worship 10:30 a. m. Evening service at 7 o'clock . Bethel A. If. E. Rev. F. P. Baker, pastor. Sermon by the pastor at 10 :30 a. m. Grace Methodist Episcopal. Rev. W. M. Nelson, Pastor. Sunday school at 9 a. m. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 and 7:30 p. m. Class meeting at 11:45 a. m. Junior League at 2:30 p. m. Senior League at 6 :30 p. m. At 7:30 p. m. there will be a union of the congregations of First M. E. and Grace church in Grace church when Rev. J. L. McLaughlin, missionary to the Philippines, and stationed in Manila, will address the meeting, using a lantern to illustrate. Mr. McLaughlin carries with him more than one hundred views which will serve to make the lecture more vivid. Do not fail to hear him. South Eighth Street Friends. Rev. Clarence M. Case, pastor. Bible school at 9 a. m. Meeting for worship at 10 :30. Meeting of the Mens Social Union at 3 p. m. Special C. E. meeting with the children at 6 :30 p. m. First Church of Christ Scientist. Sevices at 10:30 a. m., subject, "Matter." Wednesday evening ex perience meeting at 7:30. Pvthian Temple. All are welcome. Christian Science Reading Room open to the public every afternoon except Sunday, No. 10 North Tenth street. St. Mary's Catholic Rev. J F. Mattingly, pastor. Rev. Thomas Huffman, assistant. Holy sacrifice of the mass at 6, 8, 9, and 10:30 a. m. Vespers aad benediction rf the blessed sacrament at 3 p. m. Want ads in Patadinm pay,
Graham Crackers Possessing the rich, nutty flavor of graham flour unlike any graham crackers you ever tasted. WOMAN EXPOSES POLICE PAID FOUR FOR PROTECTION IN NEW YORK. Result of Berthe Claiche's Pleading Guilty to Murder Names of Fifty Others. New York March 9. Berthe Claiche, the young French Woman, who yesterday pleaded guilty to the murdr of Emil Gerdron, her alleged master, today was taken from the Tombs prison to the district attorney's office. She had a talk there with Assistant District Attorney Ely. Although no official statement wras made public it was reported that the young woman gave Mr. Ely the names of four policemen to whom she said she paid $2 a week for rotection while leading the life of a woman of the streets. She also gave the names of about fifty other policemen the report stated, who were receiving like amounts from other women in the district where she lived. A conference took place today between Police Commissioner Bingham and Berthe Claiche's counsel, Abraham Levy and Otto Rosalsky. Commissioner Bingham refused to state what was said at this meeting. Starving to Death. Because her stomach was so weakened by useless drugging that she could not eat, Mrs. aMry II. Walters, of St. Clair St., Columbus, O., was literally starving to death. She writes: "My stomach was so weak from useless drugs that I could not eat, and my nerves so wrecked that I could not sleep; and not before I was given up to die was I induced to try Electric Bitters; with the wonderful result that improvement began at once, and a complete cure followed." Best health Tonic on earth. 50c. Guaranteed by A. G. Luken & Co., druggist. A New York collector of scraps has left a fortune of $50,000. Jim Jeffries has made more than that by collecting scraps. Well Worth Trying. W. H. Brown, the popular pension attorney of Pittsfield, Vt.. savs: 'Next to a pension, the best thing to get is Dr. King's New Life Pills." He writes: "they keep my family in splendid health." Quick cure for Headache, Constipation . and Biliousness. 25c. Guaranteed at A. G. Luken & Co.'s drug store. Count Boni threatened to go to work just as soon as he can get a job that pays anything like being a husband in the Gould family. They are asking District Attorney Jerome what he did with his $100,000 campaign fund. He got an of fice.
MRS. NELLIE REESE MAKES AN
ENORMOUS PIECE OF SWEET MEAT. NEARLY AS BIG AS A WASHTl B It Will Require a Knife With a Foot Blade to Cut It For Wedding. Kansas City, March 9. Mrs. Nellie W. Reese, of 1031 West Electric street, Independence, is the constructor of one of the most collossal bride cakes ever produced in Missouri. It was made for the wedding of Miss Marie De Pazza Roberts, who was married at the home of her sister, Mrs. Caldwell Yeaman in Denver, to Charles McAllister Wilcox of that city. Miss Roberts was born and reared in Independence where she was a friend and neighbor of Mrs. Reece. Miss Roberts and her mother, Mrs. Preston Roberts, Sr., have for several years been living in Denver. The cake was sent by express from Independence to Denver. "I do truly hope," said Mrs. Reece, looking out of the window, " that a blizzard will not tie up the train and keep that cake from getting there on time. It would be a great pity for it to miss getting there after all the work I have put into it. "I had made some pretty big cakes, before," continued Mrs. Reese, "some that required eighty eggs apiece, but this time I determin ed to outdo all my former efforts in the cake-baking line, and if what people tell me is true, I have succeeded. "In baking this cake I had to use 100 eggs, and in icing it I used a dozen more. When you remember that a pretty good sized cake can be made Avith eight or ten eggs, you have some idea how big this one was. All the other ingredients, of course, were in the same' proportion. "Before bakir-? it, however, I had to have a cake ; an made to order. It looked nearly J3 big as a washtub and it was all I could do to get it into the oven of my range, which is very large. It took a whole day to make it and a half day more to dec orate it." The solicitude with which Mrs. Reese must have watched that cake as it came out of the oven and for a few minutes afterward, can be fully appreciated only by those housekeepers, who, in that brief but critical period, have seen the reults of hours of patiet and hopeful labor "fall" ignominiously into a flat, heavy mass. But not so this huge confection. It retained its perfect shape and proportions as evidence of proper composition and baking. Some idea of the size of this cake may be gathered from the fact that it is twenty-five inches in diameter and about a foot in height. Somewhere in the depths of it are the customary gold ring, thimble and dime. It is decorated with dainty bride's roses in the purest white and surmounted with a crown of netted scroll work. The cake is to be cut in the ordinarw way of slicing from the outer edge to the center; it will require a knife with a blade more than a foot in length. Better Than Spanking. Spanking- does not cure children of bed wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box W. Notre Dame, Ind., will, send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no money, but write to her today if your children trouble you in this way. Don't blame tbe child, the chances are it can't help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by day or night. NOTICE TO BIDDERS. Proposals for supplies for the us of the Eastern Indiana HospitaVTor the Insane for the month ofLpril, will be received by the Board of Trustees at yi hospitaLJefore 3 p. m. Monday, March 131906. Specifications may at the Second National Bank, or at the HospitaL By order of the Board, S. E. SMITH, Med. Supt
READ THIS! Wanted, Found and Lost, in which personal gain does, not enter, are inserted in thesn columns free, providing they are not over fifteen (15) words in length. No business advertisements inserted free of charge Advertisers will do well to remember that letters directed to Initials Only are not delivered through the postoffic.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS. FOR RESULTS.
WANTED A good grl who will appreciate a good home in family of four. Phone No. 265. WANTED Rag carpet weaving at 112 West Fifth street. Phone 879. 8-3t WANTED Music pupils by an exper teacher. Terms three lessons $1.00. Phone 1111. WANTED A place for man and wife to work on farm. Enquire SOS South Thirteenth street. Samuel Tunis. WANTED Washing for family or Gentlemen. 1215 North G. Phone No. 1614. WANTED $25 Secures a business paying $5 a day. Call at room 1, Brunswick Hotel. WANTED Good pay for earnest workers everywhere distributing . circulars, samples and advertising matter. No canvassing. Cooperative Advertising Co., New York. WANTED Agents, either sex, 50 , V percent commission, every Housekeeper needs it. Sullivan, 138 S. 7th St. WANTED Situation by practical and highly recommended nurse. Phone 153 D Dublin. WANTED There is an opening for a worthy young man to work his way through the Business College. Phone 24(h 2-15-tf WANTED Middle aged woman desires place as housekeeper, practical nurse or core of aged. Address this office. MONEY LOANED. At low rates easy terms. Thompson's Loan and Real Estate Agency, 10 N. 7th street. l-lD-fri&sat-tf FOR RENT First floor Flat. Up to date improvements. 16 South Thirteenth street. Phone 626. FOR RENT Four room Second Floor Flat. Modern improvements. 1237 Main street. Phone 626. LOST Light gray fur boa on Main street. Finder return over 511 Main street. Accidents will happen, but the best regulated families keep Dr. Thomas ' Eclectric Oil for such emergencies. It subdues the pain and heals the hurts. Pat Crowe intimates that he still believes that he kidnapped the Cudahy boy, but in order to avoid trouble is willing to accept the jury's word for it that he did not turn the trick. It is simply astonishing how little Congress knows about railroading from its requests for information. A healthy man is a king in his own right ; an unhealthy man is an unhappy slave. Burdock Blood Bitters builds up sound health keeps you well. PeMffssylvanEa I IMFC . . $17 Trip Richmond WASHINGTON 24th Return It, April 2d. permits days outing. Reduced Fares to LOS ANGELES May 7th to 10th, Bhriners Imperial Council. SAN FRANCISCO July Oth to 13th, National Educational Association Convention. Special low fare ticKets South, Southwest and Northwest. For details about these excursions, fares to any point, and particulars about Pennsylvania Lines passenger service, consult - . ... C W. ELMER, Ticket Rat.. Richmond, Ind.
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FOR SALE-Stallion by Hal Dilliard three years old. For particulars enquire Jesse Schultz's saloon, 23 North E Street. i'OJl 6AL&. Richmond proerty a specialty. Porterfield, Eelly Block. Phone 329. . tf. FOR SALE Shade trees for sale. . Address James Garrett, Fountatin City, Indiana. FOR SALE 1 80-light 110 volt direct current dynamo in first class condition. Adam H. Bartel & Co - .n.am ww m.ju tm urn mmu FOR RENT Seven room flat, both kinds of water, closet, electric lights, over 41 North Eighth st. Phone C26. FOR RENT Store room with 4 room flat on second floor. Newly papered and painted. Bath, elec-,
trie lights. Main and Thirteenth. Phone C26 and 558. FOR RENT Seven room flat with summer kitchen. Closet. Both kinds water, electric lights. Rent $15.00. Over 41 North Eighth street. Phone 626 and 558. FOR RENT Seven room Flat. Lavatory, both kinds of water, electric lights. Over 41 North Eighth St. Phone 626. FOR RENT Six room flat, both kinds of water, electric light and bath. Sixteen and two thirds per month. Possession at once. See McNeal & Ketch. LOST A silk work bag containing fancv work, on South 17th street or between 17th and 14th on Main. Return to 39 S. 17th. - LOST A black belt with a silver buckle near corner N. 10th and A streets. Finder return to 109 N. Return to 39 S. 17th and get reward. .' r LOST Volume I, of Fiske's Discovery of America. Finder kindly return to the Morrison-Reeves library and receive reward. LOST Pair child's shoes between Ryan Livery Barn, South Tenth Street and South A street, or west on A to Ninth or South on Ninth. Leave at Ryan livery barn. . sale the good house fj : : O YY. H. Bradbury $ Son Westcott Block J Dayton & Western Dayton and Return, - - $1.00 Eaton and Return, CO Tickets at above price will be sold every Sunday until farther notice. ad TRADEMARKS promptly obtained to all eooatrlea, or no fee. We obtain PATENTS THAT M adrerUae them thoroughly, ix ouz expenst, neip job v boooob, Bend model, photo or sketch tat FREE rr " on pntenitHrr. to yeart" practice. ejnPASS t ACFERENCES. For free Gtudo Book on Profitable Patent write tt S03-B0B Seventh Qtroet,
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V ffi I SUNDAY .EXCUII I MiiRATKMM J
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