Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 142, 16 June 1906 — Page 5
The Richmond Palladium, Saturday, June 16, 1906.
Page 5.
TOP
imday's
Dessert
DISH of Kuth's fine
strawberries and cream and sugar Strawberry ' tarts better still a fine
'strawberry shortcake Kuth's strawberries lend attractiveness to any dessert large well flavored.
Cherries
We will have aXine shipment of
home grown herrles on hand
Tuesday free jfrom worms fine
for canning, fjse the telephone freely vfchen frdcring of us we
cheerfully deliver all goods free.
Today's peclal:
Queen Bees crackers lb .. .. 10c. 3 lbs for f.J 25c. Spring onions 2 for 5c. Cucumbers" 2 for 15c. Radishes, crisp 2 for 5c. Lettuce, tender per lb 10c. Cherries ..,. 1 qt 5c. Gooseberries 2 qts 15c. 0. A. Harmeier Phone 1 1 1 y 1030 Main
x
ff . A. lbrTT 9 s. 6th CABLET MAKER a 1 fast - J n ff
St.
Fine CabirVJ Work and Repairing
CLIFFORD
1018 MAT! TIN!
KESSLER
STREET ER
General Job.Wfrk & Repairing.
W. P. O'
....Tho Fruit
mv MAlNrTREtT
t A full line of Ifuit. Vegetables,
i Candies, Cigar
Groceries. K
to
L
ARY
rchant..;.
Tobacco and
DELIVERY,
Durlnf the paat 1gi
I omclatea mi u . s th most '
uriaes ui
months we have
10 weddings of
inent
Ichmond
Yon know them. them aboot oar work. If you want the muilcal program of your wedding artistlo and complete, Call up TcL No. 1506 Tet-rauq Concert Quartet
Social and Personal Mention MISS EDNA BAYER DELIGHTFULLY ENTERTAINS FOR HER GUEST, MISS KRUCKEMEYER OF CINCINNATI MRS. EARL MANN ENTERTAINED AT DINNER FOR MISS BERTHA HILL MRS KOLP WILL GIVE DANCE AT CEDAR SPRINGS TONIGHT ALUMNI BANQUET HELD.
..WALL PAPER.. fine Line GradAtlng Presents. TBADIIfft STAMPS Moormani?QBook Store B20 IVlA.it St.
THE RICHMOND
NO. 29 Nortft 8th St.
1
:For Home
Cooled food
m M .
111
andd
Ptjnnnri urvle ! eater Aa the"
&t" f r l
ittbest trade only. Business Men'sri
i
B lunch our specialty.
1 !
: Sewing
iviacniires... REPAIRS and SUPPLIES. R.jLacey 718 MAIN ST. Home Phon 1242
-
..Strawberry..
Seas
Fresh berriesper qt. JOc Canning, 3 ens for 25c Raspberries 5er box, 10c Tbone oSRef J faithfully filled and prompt we jive red.
IICHM0QH TEA, COFFEE
AND G.10GERY GO.
Phone 138 1 715 Main St
. C
Miss Edna Bayer gave a delightful drive whist party yesterday afternoon In honor of her guest, Miss Kruckemeyer of Cincinnati. The rooms were charmingly arranged with cut flowers, the color scheme being pink and white. Miss Ethel King won the first prize, Miss Deborah Sedgwick tfie second and the consolation was given to Miss Elsie Beeler. After . the games a two course luncheon was served. The guests were: Misses Alice Harvey, Ethel King, Jessie Beeler, Elsie Beeler, Marjorle Pennell, Bess Thompson, Tlllara Haas, Mary Peltz, Deborah Sedgwick, Ann Dilks, Ruth Mashmeyer, Edith Taylor, Ethel Taylor, Haley Harold, Blanche Luken, Anna Harrington, Marie Knollenberg, Ruby Wilson, Ellen Swayne, Grace Smith, Ethel Marlatt, Rena Haner and Mrs. C. J. Collins. Mrs. Earl H. Mann entertained with a dinner yesterday afternoon in honor of Miss Bertha Hill, one of the June bride's. The house was decorated in cut flowers and vines, the dining room being In green and pink, with a center piece for the table of mosses and pink roses and candlesticks holding white shaded candles. The guests Included Misses Lulu Likins, Mary Lemon, Laura Johnson,. Ruby Hunt, Mrs. Fred Bartel and Mrs. Clarence Gennett.
This evening Mrs. Charles Kolp will give one of her series of dances at the Cedar Springs Hotel and it is expected that a large number of local young people will attend the affair. The dance was to have been held last evening, but was postponed owing to the fact that it would conflict with the high school alumni banquet.
High School Hall never looked more beautiful than last night, when the
former graduates banqueted the mem
bers of the class of '06. The com
mittee who were In charge, certainly
are to be congratulated on the ar
rangement of the various rooms. The Botany room where the tables were
placed, was converted Into a perfect bower of beauty, the walls being en
tirely covered with green boughs. The
only decoration on the tables being the white candles surrounded with smllax. The north room on the sec
ond floor was also decorated with green, with a bower of maple bows
where the punch was served. The walls of the East room which was used for dancing were draped with flags. The program was as follows: Piano Solo Nacht Stircke op. 23, No. 4 Schuman Miss Hasemeier. "R. H. S. Alumni"... Prof. T. A. Mott Vocal Solo Howard Kamp Address. .. .Hon. Wra. Dudley Foulke
Piano Solo. Le Papillon Galifer Lavelee Miss Hasemeier. "San Francisco District" Prof. Davis Stereopticon Views Prof. Fiske After the program there will be several special social features. Refreshments were served In the Botany room. The following members of the Junior class served at the tables: Misses;Ruby Haner, Haze: Gadbury, Marguerite Doan, Mary Dickinson and Florence King; Messrs. Stanley Schafer, Carl Eggemeyer, Jolin Morgan, Jesse Miller. At the punch bowl were Miss Marguerite Doan and Ralph Cain. After the banquet dancing was the feature of the evening till a late hour White and Wilson furnished the mu"?lc. Mrs. Albert Gayle will entertain with an informal luncheon Monday at he home on North Twelfth street. The music programme furnished by the Starr piano player this evening at the Keramic League exhibit, will be as follows: William Tell Rossini.. rorgotten Cowles Cavaleira Rusticanna Mascagnl Narcissus Nevln Tannehauser Wagner Toreador Monet on-Caryll . . Csardas Joseffy Valse op 69, No. 1 Chopin j .. Miss Marie Campbell delightfully entertained , a small company of friends at her home on East Main 3.reet last evening. k Mrs. Joseph M. Bulla and Miss Sophia Marchant will give a reception Thursday. June 21, at the home of Mrs. Bulla, on North Ninth street.
fhe hours are from 2 to 4 and 4 to 6. Mrs. Edward R. Beatty will entertain with a card party Friday afternoon, June 22.
At the homo of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. King, Miss . Carrie King and Mr. Frank Wr. Nordyke were quietly married Thursday evening. The Rev. E. G. Howard performed the service. Mr. and Mrs. Nordyke will be at home at 306 North Twentieth street. The Dorcas Society will meet Monday afternoon with Mrs. George Eggemeyer of East Main street x Mr. and Mrs. William P. Haughton will entertain with a picnic at their home in Spring Grove this evening. - ' Mr. and Mr3. Ed Clark, one mile south of New Paris, entertained twen-ty-flve guests yesterday in honor of the thity-flfth birthday of the host. Among those who went from Richmond are Frank M. Clark and family and Jefferson Clark and family.
PERSONAL MENTION. Miss Mary Jay will arrive from Chicago next week to spend the summer. Miss Jay has completed the course in the Chicago Kindergarten Training school and will accept a position in the Richmond schools for the coming year. Mrs. R. C. Rogers of Springfield, who has been the guest of Mrs. Louise White and Miss Elizabeth Nixon, returned home yesterday. Leonard O. Lemon of Knoxville, Tenn., is the guest of his mother, Mrs. Ida Lemon, of South Seventeenth 6treet. A party of twenty automobilists were in the city yesterday from Wacco, Texas, enroute to Buffalo. Mr. and Mrs. Cooper T. Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Davis and Miss Evadue Davis, of Indianapolis, were in the party. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hire are going to Indianapolis to spend Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Evans and Miss Anna Evans are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Woodard. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Elliott, and Miss Susan Elliott have returned to Knightstown. Mrs. Ross Tyler has returned to
Cambridge City.
Mrs. Henry Rupe, who has been visiting in Centerville, returned home
yesterday.
Mrs. I. N. McCarthy of Brookville, is the guest of Dr. and Mrs. Harding,
of West Richmond.
Miss Ruby Brehm left yesterday
for Cincinnati, to attend the com
mencement at Notre Dame.
Horace Starr and Marcus L. Hasty
are in Buffalo, attending the National
T. P. A. convention. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bond have re turned to Connersville.
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Wlssler will
spend Sunday in Hagerstown.
Miss Irene Elliott and Miss Lillian Brooks who have been visiting
friends in the city, returned to Cam bridge" yesterday.
John Vaughn will leave Monday to spend the summer with his daughter
in Sangatuck, Mich.
Misses Louise Boyd, Edith Doney and Louise Ebert, have returned to
Cambridge. Everard Knollenberg arrived yes
terday from Dryden, Tex., to be the
guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs Henry Knollenberg, for a few weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer H. Walker of Lafayette, are te guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Thomas of West Rich-,
mond.
Thomas L. King and family have re
turned to Centerville. Harry Carroll has returned from Ada, Ohio, where he attended school.
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Its not what you make but what you save tfeff counts. We can save you
money over what you have been paying elsewhere, and will demonstrate it to
your satisfaction. COME, SEE!
Ask your neighbors about us, tjfen come and see for yourself927 - 929 Main Street. v
Sunday Services in the Churches
c Bean tho Signature Of
STOHXA.
Ths Kind You Have Always Bought
SXrs? . ?.
A ALM SICA
L
MONDAY
GIVEN BY STARR COMPANY
Members of the Art Association Will Get Their Yearly Musical Treat Exhibit Will Not be Closed to the Public That Night,
Next Monday evening the Starr Piano Company will give its annual musical at the Garfield School building for the benefit of the membership
of the Richmond Art Assc ition. The
program that has been arranged is a splendid one and will be a treat that the music lovers of this city will greatly relish. The art exhibit will not be closed to the general public on this occasion, the entire lower floor of the building will be open to anyone that cares to view the pictures. The following is the program that has been arranged: Recital by Miss Elizabeth Warder Lemon, Soprano. Miss Nora Baker, Contralto. Miss Harriet Fisher, Violinist. Miss Florence Surface, Pianist, Miss Alvia Lou Owens, Reader of the Indianapolis Conservatory of Music, Edward M. Cawley, Director. Programme. Tarantelle Op. 27, No. 2. .Moszkowskl The Silver Lining Willeby "The Theatre. Party-, and. "Mr.
Bobb" Hegan
From Mrs. Wiggs or the Cabbage Patch.
Romanze Wieniawski Elizabeth's Priyer Wagner
Perpetual Motion Weber
The World Within Thy Heart
Eversole
"The Toads" and "The Warts"
Shute
From the Real Diary of a Real Boy.
Air Wilhelmj Bolero Bohm
Afterglow Metcalf
At the Concert. .Edmund Vance Cook The Hen Edmund Vance Cook
Tremelo Gottsccalk
The Pianoforte is a Sta
CASTOR! A
East Main Street Friends. Alfred T. Ware, Pastor. Bible school at 9 o'clock. Meeting for worship 10:30. Junior Endeavor 2:30. Senior Endeavor 6 p. m. Whitewater monthly meeting fifth-day morning at 9:330 o'clock. Gospel meeting on the lawn at 7:30. Special music. If the weather is unfavorable the meeting will be held in the church. Come, you will be welcome. First Presbyterian. Rev. Thomas J. Graham, Pastor. Sabbath school 9:15 a. m. Divine worship 10:30 and 7:30. The pastor will preach. Subjects: "The Sheep and the Goats" and "The Preparation of the Gospel of Peace." Prayer meeting Thursday 7:30 p. m. Welcome. i Grace M. E. Church. ' Rev. Wilbur M. Nelson, Pastor. Sunday school at 9 a. m. The Richmond camp of Modern Woodmen of America will attend the service at 10:30 a. m. Class meeting at 12 m. Junior League at 2:30 p. m. Senior League at 6: SO p. m. The Richmond Lodge of Railroad Trainmen will attend the service at 7:45 p. m. All are cordially invited. First Baptist Church. Sunday School at 9:15 a. m. Preach Ing at 10:30 by Rev. Chas A. Francisco. B. Y. P. U. at 6:30 p. m.
South Eighth Street Friends. Clarence M. Case, Pastor. Bible school at 9 a. m. Meeting for worship at 10:330. The C. E. at6:330 holds its monthly session for study of the history and doctrines of the Society of Friends. Monthly business meetng of the church Thursday at 7:30. On Sunday, June 24th, the morning service will be devoted to a rally and roll-call of the entire congregation. - Christian Church. Rev. T. H. Kuhn, Pastor. Services at 10:30 and 7:30. Twenty minutes practical talk by the pastor. Public invited. i First Church of Christ Scientist. Services at 10:30. Subject: "Christian Science." Wednesday evening experience meeting at 8 o'clock. Pythian Temple. All are welcome. Christian Science Reading Room opened to the public every afternoon except Sunday. No. 10 North 10th street. First Methodist Episcopal Church. Corner Main and Fourteenth Sts. Owing to the absence of the Rev. R. J. Wade, the pulpit will be supplied in the morning by the Rev. W. W. Brown of Williamsburg and in the evening by Miss Lucy Gray, representing, the Indiana Children's Home Society.
0
ORDERED
ACTION DEFERRED
North Fourteenth Street Clos
ing Still Hanging in Balance.
ANOTHER PROTEST MADE
W. N. GARTSIDE MAKES ARGU
MENT THAT CITY IS CLOSING OFF NORTH SIDE BY PROPOSED ACTION.
Fc
-.ts and Children.
The Kind You Hare Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
The Board of Public Works at its
session yesterday again deferred action in the proposed vacation, of North Fourteenth street as petitioned for by the Hoosier Drill Company until Thursday of next week.
In the meantime, it is believed,
there may be some amicable adjust
ment of the differences now existing between the Hoosier and other manu
factures.
Another Protest. . W. N. Gartside, proprietor of the
Diamond Clamp and Flask works, who
is one of the manufacturers affected by the closing of the street, has made his protest against the vacation on the ground that not only is his property
and those of other" manufacturers damaged, but that the city is fast closing up avenues to the north side of the city. Mr. Gartside sent the fol
lowing statement yesterday to the Palladium: Editor Palladium: Fourteenth street has been an open street for thirty years, and when Mr. Jones and Mr. Evans and myself located our plants on this street, we
had the right and still have the right
to expect that this street shall be maintained as an open thoroughfare.
On streets running north and south,
Eighth street is open, and there is nobody who would dispute that the travel there Is congested. Ninth street, Tenth street and Eleventh street are permanently closed. Twelfth and
Thirteenth streets are open, but by virture of the fact of the number of tracks and constant switching across them, these crossings are shunned by everybody who can get across the railroad at any other point Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets are not open and never will be open. Nineteenth street is a good way out, and a safe crossing. Fourteenth, Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets are good crossings, and aside from the damages and injustice of closing Fourteenth street, resulting directly to the three shops located on this street, there wants to be remembered that the manufacturing interest is not inconsiderable on the north side of the railroad. In fact, the manufacturing interests on F street In aggregate and volume are fully as great as the manufacturing Interests on E street; E street Being the first street ea&t a&d west south of th rallroaH.
and F street the first street east and west north of the railroad. The Board of Public Works wants to remember that all the fire apparatus in this city is located south of
the railroad, and wants to remember that it is not an unusual thing, a thing that happens every day, to find for a period of five minutes or more at a time, that either Fifteenth or Sixteenth streets or "Fourteenth or Fifteenth streets may be blocked by freight trains.and it wants to be remembered
that all of the properties north of the railroad are more or less jeopardized
in their fire protection .on account of the obstruction of the streets, and it certainly wants to go very slow, before it undertakes to obstruct and for
ever close one of the three thorough
fares that is used regularly, and the
only three thoroughfares that are in
general use between North Eighth
and North Nineteenth streets.
This matter does not hinge around
whether Mr. Carr has or has not offered the writer or Mr. Jones or Mr. Ev
ans a sufficient compensation to warrant them in giving their consent to closing this avenue that is of general convenience to all the public who may want to cross here, and in a case of that kind, even if there was nobody in
terested but the three parties named
(and there are many more), if the
American Seeding Machine Company is to settle for these damages this pro
position should be in writing, and be accepted by these parties before this street is closed. Otherwise, if this is not done, then th9 city is liable for the damages, and the expense of litigation that would immediately grow
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HirawbeBToes
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We control two of the lamest 1erry plantations in
Wayne County CM. C. Crull and Jf. W. Gates) which enable us to have fresh fruit m the time. We receive from growers three tirras daily, the finest ber
ries that come to the city i(fome and see us when
you get ready tonan
TC
fruity
FRUIT
Jelly Glasses, Can'
Sealing Wax.
IS 01
ALL KINDS.
nd Rubbers, Paraffine and
BEE-HIVE GROCERY CO. 1017-1019 Main St.
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V
Consultation am HE TREATS SUCCES
DR. J. PX. WALLS
the Specialist
At Homr Office, 21 S. 10th
nd ay , Tuesday,
aynd Saturday each week.
ILLY
Lungs. Kidneys, Liver and Bl.
the blood, Epilepsy (or falling
Month's Treatment Freo.
11 forms of Chronic Diseases that are curable. Diseases of the Throat,
Rheumatism. Dyspepsia and all Diseases of
Cancer. Scrofula. Private and Nervous Dis
eases. Female' Diseases, Night Losses, Loss of Vitality from indiscretions in youth
or maturer years, riles, Fistula, fissure ana ulceration oi me isxcium, wiuioui detention from business. Rupture Positively Cured and Guaranteed. Office, No. 21 South Tenth St., . - RICHMOND, IND.
out of the act of Its servants, the Board of Public Works, In ordering this street closed, and they, as Its servants, certainly are not justified in doing a thing of this kind. Respectfully, W. N. GARTSIDE. Diamond Clamp & Flask Co.
Centennial Association.
lAal As-
m
L'fcnt at
ffcil on
al80
fto the
All members of the Centei
sociation are urged to be pn
the meeting of the CitytCoui
Monday evening, June lit o'clock to lend their d'-P
request made for Van anufbrn-iation of $5000 toward the expenses a the Centennial. It is espeqdalTy desired that all members who can be present in order to show the representative nature of the Centennial Association. CYRUS W. HODGIN, President.
O Signature
Tho Kind You Have Always BoiigM
y5
SETS CORRECT STYLE.
Publishers' Press! Washington, June 15. President Roosevelt this week set a seasonable example to the sllkhatted, frock-coated diplomats. When they called at the White House they found the Chief Executive clad all in white, except his shoes, which , were tan. He wore a coat of white linen and trousers, of the same material. His shirt was of some soft, white stuff and he was guiltless of a vest. His trousers, were held up by a white .leather belt. Altogether the President looked cool and comfortable and the picture of health. The diplomatic corps is now expected to Bhed its fine feathers for the summer and don flannels.
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