Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 170, 16 July 1906 — Page 5

The Richmond Palladium, Mond, July 16, 1906.

Page Five.

I'

Specipls

OMETHfNG new for the housewife who la looking for tenjptlng tablo features, specially deslgn-

for cold ilincheons during

They come in

these warm da

pound boxes, lrfcents per box.

CraigsSdda Wafers The finest prcGluct of its kind

on the market

continuously orfAand.

A fresh supply

Sugar Ccred Hams

Our sugar curflf hams are sweet

and tender, thlkiest In the city.

We pride oursaiks on keeping the

freshest and

supply in Rich

mond.

Extra Fine Celei

Cucumbers, Peas. i Beets, Beans. Onions, Pickles. Radishes, Tomatoes. Cucumbers, Pineapples. 0. A. Harmeier Phone 1 1 1 1. 1030 Main

Social and Personal Mention

MRS. SIMMONS GAVE SMALL INFORMAL DINNER FOR HER HOUSE GUESTS LITTLE MISS HELEN JOHNSON HAD PARTY MRS. JOHN L. RUPE GAVE DINNED AT WESCOTT LAST NIGHT.

I We still have a few X more boxes of t

I VIOLET DE PARMA SOAP

At 25c

A flesn brush Watis

T with each box.

CUIGLEY & BAB

415 N. 8th.

Phone 14

If you are tired, weak, cannot eat you need

Try Beef Iro

50c Per

I HI I fllllnfPV IJurt House

j ... Pharmacy

sv n

' M

W W W W w w

61 rc and I tonic.

m

n nniv

Drfttle

Wine I

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

Mrs. Harry Simmons gave a small Informal dinner at her home !n South ISth street Saturday In honor of her house guests Misses Edna and Grace Pugh of Columbus, Ohio. The other guests included Misses Ethel and Ruth Booz of Cincinnati, and Mrs. Merle Weeghman. 3f Little Miss Helen Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Xim Johnson, entertained eight of her little friends Saturday afternoon. The occasion being her sixth birthday, anniversary. The table was charmingly decorated with ferns and flowers. The center piece being the birthday cake with bearing six lighted candles. Many beautiful little gifts were received. - Mrs. John L. Rupe delightfully entertained at dinner last evening at the Wescott in honor of Mrs. J. C. Long and Mrs. Harry Moore of Philadelphia. Covers were laid for twelve guests. X Miss Esther Bessleman will give a recital this afternoo.nn at 2 o'clock for her music scholars in the parlors of the Starr Piano Company. The parents nd friends of the pupils are

cordiilly invited to attend.

V:

iss Marie Oarretson and Foster

Sfidder of Knightstown. Miss Martha

tersdorf, Miss Smith and Mr. Oril

eagen of Indianapolis formed an

utomobile tmrty that took dinner at

he Wescott yesterday.

Vr -TP Miss Ella Lemon who has been the guest of friends in Anderson will return home today. Miss Lemon has been the guest of hoor at several social functions the past week.

Quite a number of young people

from this city and from several Ohio

towns attended the dance given by Mrs. Kolp at Cedar Springs Saturday evening. Next Saturday the music will be furnished by the Heidleburg Orchestra of Dayton. PERSONAL MENTION. Mrs. N. C. Heironemus and children left Saturday for a three weeks' visit in Montpelier, Ind. Mrs. Charles Pierson of South ISth street, is visiting relatives in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Land spent Sunday in Cincinnati, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Holton.

Clinton Routh has returned from a visit at Lynn. Miss Estelle Dalby, who has been teaching in Huntington, Ind., is the guest of local friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Scott McDonald are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Bell, east of the city on the National Road. Mrs. Gardner of Newark, Ohio, who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs. John Garrison, of iast Main street will return to her home today. Mrs. E. H. Brownley of Marion, is visiting in this city.

Merle Pierson Winchester.

has returned from

Clem Thistlethwate arrived Saturday to visit his father, on North 11th street. Mark Thistlethwaite of the Indianapolis News, spent Sunday in the city. Mrs. Charles Smith has returned from a visit in Muncie. Miss Alice Jones of West Richmond is visiting at Cambridge City. Mss Maude Meckle has rteurned to Marion after being the guest of Mrs. Forster Hoeffer, of South 18th street for several days. Mrs. Ernest Findlay is entertaining guests from Economy, Ind. H. O. Barns and Will Wright of Connersville, spent Sunday in the city. Miss Edna Littenhouse, Miss Endora Smith and Miss Lillian Eckstern, who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Campbell, will leave for their homes in Chicago this week. Gaar C. Williams, who came to attend the Corwin-Campbell wedding, left for Chicago last evening. Fred Bates Johnson, who has been the guest of his parents, B. B. Johnson and wife, of East Main street, for the past two weeks, left last evening to resume his work on the Indianapolis News. Mr. and Mrs. Judson Rupe who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Willard Rupe, at Montezuma, Ind., will return home this evening. Mrs. Everett Jones will return to Denver today after being the guest of her sister, Mrs. Will Campbell for several weeks. Mrs. Milo Ferrell and son, Taylor, leave this evening for Washington, D. C, to be the guests of Mrs. Ferrell's mother and sister, Mrs. A. L. Marshall and Miss Marjorie Taylor. E. G. Hill has returned from a business trip to New Castle.

THE HALL OF FAME.

John PeruginL for many years identified with light opera as a singer, has become a Wall street broker. George O. Starr has succeeded the late James A. Bailey as manager of the big Barnum & Bailey circus. He ia a former rhiladelphian. President Roosevelt Is sitting for a portrait in oil to be made by Irving R. Wiles of New York at the suggestion of the emperor of Germany and others to be placed in the University of Berlin. The Earl of Harrington was born sixty-two years ago and succeeded his father in the title in 1SS1. He is one of the peers who have dabbled in trade. In 1894 he opened a fruit shop in Parliament street in London. The only negro officer of the army who is a West Pointer is Charles Young, at present on duty as military attache at Tort au Prince, Haiti. Captain Young entered the Military academy in 1884 and was graduated in 1889. To Ralph Talbot, Jr., a second lieutenant of the Twelfth cavalry, belongs the distinction of being the youngest commissioned officer of the United States army. He was born in 1SS4 and was commissidned five days before bis minority expired. Richard Burke, the Englishman, has given up hunting and will sell his establishment and go to San Francisco to help in the reconstruction of his damaged property there. He Is part owner of many buildings in San Francisco and is married to a wealthy American, Miss Donaghue. Bennet Burleigh, the English war correspondent, has about recovered from a long siege of pneumonia. Mr. Burleigh is the oldest of war correspondents now on the active list, having first smelled gunpowder In the civil war over forty years ago. Since then he has served in half the countries of the world. M. Jusserand, the French ambassador, since his ridence in Washington has largely added to his reputation as an orator. He has always been known rather as a profound scholar and student, but ia the speeches he has made in this country he has shown originality of research and a high degree of forensic ability.

FURNISHINGS FOR USE IN THE WARM MONTHS

EDITORIAL FLINGS.

If the earth must quake, why doesn't It turn in and rip a nice, wide crack across Panama? Richmond TimesDispatch. The Smoot trial has cost the govern ment $23,000. Sometimes it takes more money to get a man out of the senate than it does to put him in. Toledo Blade (Ind.). Some day somebody will Invent a model street car, and then people will complain because it doesn't provide any place for anybody to stand up. Boston Globe.

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

Willow furniture enameled in stunning colors will be used extensively in summer cottages this year. The pieces chairs and rockers and settees are made on the same lines as those that have been vogue for several years, but enammelins in bright shades gives them such an entirely different appearance, that they look as if they were some new pattern. Those done in a soft light grey are delicate enough in that tint to be used in a reception room upholstered in a striped jute that corresponds to the enamel, they are decidedly effective and almost two delicate and handsome for the roush out-door use that is given most willow pieces. The upholstery is of the simplest kind, nothing but two cushions, ne at the back and the other for the seat, plainly lufted. If desirable a two tone red jute used for cushions for the grey pieces makes a handsome combination, especially if a red summer rug is laid on the flood. Green enameled pieces appropriate for library, dining room or for a porch and upholstered in a small figured jute are very neat and decidedly useful in a room

where a family spends most of the day. Sets in deep maroon with cushions in a material that matches, are stunning for a library, for dispite the warmth of the coloring, the willows prevents the pieces from looking either heavy or hot. Vivid orange enameled chairs, settees etc.. are unusual and will be most effective on large shady porches. In the large rugs to be t-sed in the center of the room on a hard wood floor, or on a porch where a room is fitted out on it, the large Shakls

are most servicable and are particu

larly effective, for they come in such pretty browns, greens, tans, with just a suggestion of color in the body, made by the conventionalized Indian arrows, a combination of delicate reds, pinks, greens, oranges, etc. Across either end they are finished

with a border in tones to match the colors in the arrows and in a white

fringe. These rugs are servicable and

the colors are all fast and for that

reason they will be found particularly

satisfactory for use on a porch jhv where they are constantly exposarf to

the rain and sun.

Why wait for your friend's friend to come and look at your house week after next? You can sell it with a To Let ad in The Palladium.

Moore &

General InsLran

Companies

A

I Moy

vau.

wk OSborn :

During the past eight months

omoiatiea ml su too wvuuu the most prominent

Brides of Rioumond

Ton know them. As'

work. It you wan of your wedding

Call up

iiialA&I nrarnm

io snd complets,

No. 1 596

Tst-rauq Concert Qna

..WALL P

Fine line GradlaEfig Presents.

TBAJDlKA'ArS

Moormann' aBook- Store C20 Main St.

NO. 29 North

We will bo

ROOM 16 I

in Standard to loan. Real Estate.

0. F. BUILDING. I

c c c r 1 1 d I I M tz-Ki

W W I hi

FOLDING

, Jf... i

3

GO - D.

From $1.98 up.

best in the city.

Croquet Sefrom 50c up.

Bicycle lyes from $1.50 up.

A full line oXeather Shoe findings.

bbletv Sets 50c, a Bargain.

Jtvoles, Tacks, Cement.

Just received a big shipment of Lajoie Base Bail Bats. THF f.FH RDFHM TO 17 Main Street

BjagmsazsgsaggsEmi

I

r y

it

fth St. I

7 food andi'

vl cater to the!

11 i

Y

THE RICHMOND

For Home Coo

good service.

iabest trade only. Business Men'sui

(g-lunch our specialty.

I Sewing' f

inds... I

1 Machi

IR

nr Inn i

1 ivsrima ana

i s!jrLIES

r. ntjf 1

Lacey t

718 MAIN ST.

I Homo Phono 1242

It has gone out of fashion to boast of never reading ads. Those who do not nowadays are inclined to keep quiet about it, as Ihey would about any other personal shortcomina.

11

IPnm

CD

IMS(B((U3

STARR STYLE V.

The Rflechanisrn is the most perfect of any Riano built. They are more durable and keep in tune longer. The action is the easiest, yet simplest in csnstructi

The tone qualities are the most beautiful.

Quality

f

THE STARR PIANO is a Factory-bought Piano. It is not sold to you through an agent, t

means a saving to the purchaser. Visit our salesrooms this week and see the beautif

TO THE COUNTRY FEO OF JifMIE STM PMA7S

STARR CONCERT GRAND.

CS1 Ey

hdrefore

7

sz.

the saving on the agent's profit

lisplay of high grade instruments

m

ESIDENTS of smaller towns in the county and country ?folk5T who reside on the rural routes can buy pianos

equally as advantageous as the citizens of Richmond, andon precisely the same terms. A small payment

down, and small monthly payments will buthe finest piano our stock, or, if the farmer prefers, payments can be made semi-annually or at the end of the -crttE seasons. Anyway to suit the farmer s convenience. Piano delivered to your country home when first payment i? mada Thf Starr Piano Rest Rooms and Parlors are designed especially for the comfort of the country people. WlAn jfou are in the city, come to our warerooms 931-935 Main street and make our Rest Rooms your headquarters during your stay . . . . . .

.aff.g,.,iunlin.

L IF'

Tea as

M beautiful assortment of Piano Benches now on display in window will be sold at a Special Discount of IS Per Cent..

(&(Qa

' RICHMOND STYLE 23.

S&L&SROOIWS: 931-935 Ml AIM ST.

M. ' II ''-L-Tn - 'I It I P1

STARR STYLE A.