Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 217, 3 September 1906 — Page 3
Every Heart Beat Forces about & ounces of blood out of Ahe. heart, and sends it coursing through the veins to the remotest part of the body. OThis is the amount required by nature to-nourish and sustain your body. Every ounce less
than this means a shortage nature's supply of buildingmaterial. A weak heart canmi meet this demand, and consequently you suffer. If yur heart skips a beat, or flutters, palpitates, pains you, oryou have shortness of breath you may be sure that the hart is working imperfectly. Dr. Miles' Heart O -e win strengthen the heart and nerves. mscles "I had been a rreat 15 yeare. At the time I fferer for ommenced takjT4f Dr. WUe Jleart ure I haa Ieen cont,nei . to my for four mouths. I li&d fruen King spells, e in a day. durfcng- which ray hea ould seem to sJob beKijoK. neeessi fagthe calll;icr of a rrrvsician to r citate m. IWare fiisliinj? the fir. bottle the nkicm R&e-ite tad ceased, and I took: itoKtx.fjf f gvfc wbottlcs for a complete ctir. 1 jsow enjoy perfect nealth, and sm very prauiiul for this -wonderful mrdiciwt. for it Is the means of my feeing -with my family now." REBECCA B23TNET, 1519 Tand 6t.. Indianapolis. Ind. Dr. MHes1 Heart Cure Is sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that the first Lottie will benefit, if It falls he will refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. "Experiment is the secret of success." "Yes, a fellow never knows what be can't do till he tries." Philadelphia Press. - . ' A Poor Flan. Husband-So that new jrirl goes out three nights a week. I'll tell you how to keep her in. Scare her. Tell her a terrible fellow called Jack the Kisser is prowling around, kissing every gir! he can catch. Wife (doubtfully) Well, I don't know, my dear; I was a young girl once myself. I'm afraid she'd be out every night. New York AVeekly. Not Jalons. "Sellers must be getting more than $20 a week," said one salesman, referring to another salesman. "Why do you think so?" asked the gentleman floorwalker. "Because I just told him I was getting that much, and he seemed actually glad to hear It." Philadelphia Press. Sot u Cook. "Does your wife agree with you?" "Much better than her cooking does." Too Ulsli. Tes; klsslns often overdone." She answered him; "it's horrid When men Isuone the lips of one And kiss one on the forehead." Philadelphia Press. A Hint. ,1 "Don't c.tt concealed weapons, especially hammers. Hotel Life. Evolution. j let Darwin's weighty volumes stay Dust cot'ered on thHr shelves. . Men were not made from monkeys; the? Hake moukf-r? of tbtmselves. Catholic Standard and Ttraea. NOTICE. To house keepers, trust and high priests. ; We are In your city wlthfour com pressed air house cleaning machine for the purpose of eleahipe residences, churches lodge hallJf etc. This machine thoroughly clerras without any wear or raising anf dust, and carpets are ieft oh the fiefcr. We clean mattresses, fcillows, upbolstering burlap and tafestry walls, pianos and rugs (oriental a specialty. Two week's work done in one day. For Information call Arlington Hotel Pneumatic Cleaning Co. of Indianapolis. D. S. BRAY. 1-St Mgr. THE NEW PHILLIPS VAUDEVILLE THEATER O. G .MURRAY MANAGER. WEEK OF SEPT. 3rd. DAILY at 3 and 8:15 P. M. A Miss Grayce Miller, Overture. B LAURA DAVENPORT. Cornet Solos. C GLADSTONE SISTERS. Acrobatic singer andyjjancers, O MRS. KEPTNER. Illustrated Songs. E LAUREL & SOUTHERN. Comedy Sketch. F LOTTIE WEST S The Irish Countess, "harcter Vocalist G -LEROY & MORRIS The Trunk Mystery. H THE PHILOSCOPE. Latest Motion Pictures.
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IN A POESON .FACTORY.
The Deadly Xn?f Save m, Fsusclnaisom For tfao Workiaea. - "Slip a this glass 'mask," said the foreman. "You will need it" Hie visitor donned the uncanny mask of glass, and the foreman led. the -way to the cyanide of potassium department We make 1,000 tons of cyanide a tr," said. "A dose of five grains yea fatal one. Thus our annual prodlet Is enough to kill 2,500,000 people.' He opened a door, and a room filled with writhing flames, dense shadows, sparks, BiaoL-e and weird figures In glass masks was revealed. In the cen ter of the room, in a great caldron, 100 pounds of molten cyanide of potassium bubbled and seethed. The flames glinted strangely on the glass masks. -The foreman coughed. "These fumes," he said, "are whole some. The men, you see, are all ro bust. I have known weakly chaps, working here among these strange fumes, to pick up health and strength." In another clean, cool room the finished cyanide was stored. It looked like crystallized white sugar, good enough to eat , , "Good enough to eat" said the foreman gravely. . "Well, we have had men eat it Four-men committed suicide in that way. '"The fumes seem to create in our men a desire to taste the drug. They fight this desire, most of them, successfully, but they all feel it, the same as workers- in coffee piants want to chew the coffee beans, and some feel it so strongly as to succumb." Cincinnati Enquirer. Cllta Island Itestaurant. There are some pretty big restaurants in New York, and some of them feed as many people in a day as would make up the whole population of a Small town, but it is doubtful if any restaurant serves more meals the year around than that on Ellis island, which caters to everybody from the commissioner down to the poorest immigrant who, for lack of cash, is awaiting deportation. On an average 0,000 meals a day are served on tables, to say nothing of the hundreds of meals packed In boxes to be carried away by immigrants going to the Interior. And there are no deadheads. Every meal served except to the restaurant help Is paid for. The commissioner and his chief aids have a special dining room, with silver, china, glass and linen that no hotel would be ashamed of New York Sun. DAMES AND' DAUGHTERS. Pattl sleeps with a silk scarf about her neck. Mrs. E. Hinckley of West Gardiner, Me., is nearly ninety years old, yet she continues to do all the cooking for a family of three. The Marchioness Isabella Lusinl of Pavia has left $3,000 to a local comic paper of which she was a lifelong subscriber and $300 for a banquet to the staff. The Hen. Mrs. Ber,trand Russell. daughter-in-iaw of the late Lord Russell of Killowen, who is interested in matters affecting the poor, for a time worked as a factory hand in a Bermondsey (England) rope walk. Frineess Wah-Ta-Waso of the Iroquois nation, who lives near Montreal where her people are permanently settled, is a charming girl of twenty, well educated and has traveled a great deal, but never has ceased to be proud of her race. Miss Helen Gould has decided to abandon her residence at 579 Fifth avenue. New York. The Gould house was for many years the home of the late Jay Gould. The immediate neighborhood has been steadily invaded by business within the last five or six years. The Countess of Suffolk, formerly Miss Daisy Leiter, promises to become an expert shot. Until she married she was opposed to the destruction of wi:d birds. Now she has become so enthusiastic in practicing with her gun that she is expected to take a prominent part in next season's "shoots." Sophie Wright is a frail, crippled woman in New Orleans who goes about on crutches and incased in steel, yet she is the only hope that a large part of the population of the city has to give them an opportunity for an education. She teaches in a private school part of the day and instructs the poor during the afternoons and evenings. Cold Water For Sprained" Wrist. A simple and efficacioaa remedy for a sprained wrist is to let water run upon It every morning for some minutes, holding the wrist as low beneath the mouth of the tap as possible, so that the water may have a good fall. After this has been done bandage It tightly, letting the bandage remain until the next ablution. The sprain will be re duced In a few days. . The Bfew Mo i. The new moon coming between 2 and 4 p. m. means changeable weather in summer and in winter fair and pleasant weather. Cotble Headsear. In mediaeval 'times, when the Gothic etyle of architecture prevailed, women wore what might aptly be called Gothic headgar. The tall cones, some of them measuring fully four feet in heiant, with veils depending, were in th same lines as the castles and tombs the day. - An Optimist. By Its hopeful example the teakettle cheers Our lot when our cares are depressing. For although in hot water clear tip to its ears It 3icgs as if life were a blessing-. 'Woman's flome Companion. What She Missed. T found a bargain in men's shoes today," said Meeker. "That's more than I ever found," reJoined Mr?; Meeker in a tone redolent with significance. Detroit Tribune. The Whole Thintc. "All the wort-i does love a lover; I'm sure of that said he. "Nell laves me, I discover. And fihe"s all the world to me." Philadelphia Press. Just to Tkin. First Tramp I t'jnk I'll go inter de Insurance business. Bill. Second Tramp Huh! Dere's nuttin doin 1n dat First Tramp Exactly! Judjfe-
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STUDY FOR SCULPTORS.
Modern , IMco Thrower Strikes a Grnertnl Attitude. "If any-of . ocr-sculptors a:-i seeking for a new-subject." reniarked an artist who was sitting through aset of ath letic games at -.whicii Martin J. Sheri dan was giviogan exhibition of .his skill at throwing the discus, "there Is the man for them to study. Just watch him the next timebe throws the thing from my point of view and see if you don't think they would be rewarded for their study." The spectator to whom this remark had been addressed kept his eye oa the hero of the Greek games from the viewpoint of hi3 sculptural possibili ties, and this is the impression he re ceived: A tall young man in a white. sleeveless Jersey, running trunks and black spiked shoes stood quietly out in the middle of the field while a smart summer shower dampened his black hair until it was streaked down over his low forehead, nis chest was unusually broad and deep, his shoui ders square, the muscles of his leg having their greatest development ia their long sinews rather than in cir cumference. His repose was the most striking thing about him after his muscular development, for he rarely moved, talked little, and laughed or smiled less. It wasiplain he took his work for the moorent seriously. Nor when it camehis time to, throw the discus did he alter his manner, except to grow more Intense, if any thing. Grasping the circular disk of wood and metal, he made one pre liminary and wide sweep of his body and arms, the movement being no ticeably slow, and then as he gathered the necessary momentum he twirled with almost incredible speed twice around on his toes, the second revolu tion carrying upward until it seemed as if he must necessarily leave the ground and fiy up into space, so full of the suggestion of flying was the tense, beautifully graceful figure. As he rose on his togs In one of those revolutions of his body his fig ure had more grace than that of the classical "Discus Thrower" and suggested flying more than does Diana on her tower or the angel fluttering before Sherman as he marches to the sea. Any sculptor who can create . that effect In bronze Is likely to be ranked among the masters of- his kind and will do something far and away above the tinkling golf players or football warriors that so far represent the highest flights of our sculptors in works In the field of sport. New York Press. SOME GOOD STORIES. Kot For Her Told of Hark Twain, Diplomacy. A story Is told of a young wife who knew little of housekeeping! She was In consequence of that inexperience disposed, to stand a bit in awe of the butcher, the bakei1 and the candlestick maker, for she felt sure they must be aware of the extent of her ignorance In household matters. She ordered on ly such things as she was absolutely sure of, snd she made her interviews with the tradesmen as brief as possi ble. One morning there came to her house a collector of ashes. "Ash-ees, ash-ees I" she heard him calling in stentorian tones. As the cry was repeated again and again she became more and more perplexed as to what "ash-ees" meant Finally she went to the gate in the rear and opened it "Ash-ees?" came In guttural question from the man. The young wife hesitated for a moment; then, drawing herself up to a dignified attitude, she replied coldly, "No, I don't think I care for any today." At a recent dinner Mark Twain, according to an English report made a most amusing little speech which was responded to as follows by a lawyer who was present: "Doesn't it strike the company as a little unusual," he Inquired, "that a professional humorist should be funny ?" When the laugh that greeted this sally had subsided Mark Twain drawled out, "Doesn't it strike the company as a little unusual that a lawyer should have his hands In his own pockets?" ENGLISH ETCHINGS. Never in the history of parliament have the full number of members been present at one sitting. The salaries committee of Stockport, England, has advanced the salary of the municipal draftsman $2.50 a year about 4 cents a week. For throwing a bottle from the window of a carriage on the London and Southwestern railway, between Surbiton and Vauxhall stations, a man was fined 60 shillings and 40 shillings costs. On the beach of Norwich, England, the children enjoy one of the finest sports possible tobogganing down a steep sand hill. The sand bluff is 130 feet high, of soft sand, and the coasters slide down by hundreds. The first death in Westminster abbey Blnce that of Henry IV., who died there in 1413, recently occurred during a meeting under the chairmanship of the dean. Rev. Mr. Shepard dropped dead Just as he had finished his speech. Tommy is such a sweet child, said a doting mother, "that I often thin ti will be a miracle if he lives to grow Dp." "It will," said the candid neighbor, with, a baleful gleam In his eye. Her Specialty. She couldn't make a custard p'.e " Nor bake a loaf of bread, Kor put a wash out on the lin, Kor sweep, nor make a bed. She couldn't boil potatoes right Nor just plain hash prepare. Nor turn a plate of toast out crisp Kor cook a beefsteak rare. Not one of these was in her line; She wasn't built that war. lou d think the man who married her Would for deliverance pray, Uut she could rustle out each week And bring: in thirty per, jivsd that's the reason why the men If you have good "opportunity eyesight" you will . find some things in the want ads today which most people will overlook. Before "you throw The Palladium aside, look over thq. classified advertisements.
The Richmond Palladium, Monday, September 3, 1906.
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1 t "4 Miss Maude Morris, with "The
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Night, September 10.
7 HE. SQAft -SYSTEM. hr, Ism Fct ;T "Silcb Gijc an Ides of Ita - tfiimenarf ly. In all-the heavens, with the excep tion (ft passias.s.E-tcors r meteorites, not one body- occupies a position closer to earth .-thRnthe moon, which is some 240,000 jViMJes away very far, of course, ,-slile" by aide with any earthly distances, Jbut a mere fraction side by side wifli'etfeeriaytronomical distances. Next to the.jnoon;our nearest occasional neighbor is - Venus, end then Mars. Both 3 Venus - andj Mare,: however, ar often 'farther, away if rom us than the sun, wnicn remains always at somewhere about .the same distance, rough ly at from 90,000,000 to 93,000,000 miles. 4 This dlTidin'g" space between sun and earth is of igreptf importance In think ing about the -stars, and it should be clearly impressed upon the mind. Next to the sun in point of nearness come the more distant planets Jupiter, which is about five times as far from the sun as our earth is; Saturn, nearly twice as faras Jupiter; Uranus, nearly twice as far as Saturn, and Neptune, nearly three times as far as Saturn. All these planets belong to pur sun, all are members of his family, all are part of the sokir system. The size of the solar system as a whole, consisting thus of the sujj and his planets, includ ing our earth, may be fairly well grasped by any one taking the trouble to master two simple facts. They are these, that our earth is roughly about 92,000,000 miles away from the sun and that Neptune, the outermost plan et of the solar system, is nearly thirty times as far distant from the sua aa our arth Is. Chambers Journal, JINGLES AND JESTS. A Prophet Vindicated. Bill Jones he looks uncommon1 wise An' takes a squint toward the skies An' says: "We're goin' to hev some rain. "Tain't no use tryin' to explain," Says Bill, 'jes' how I come to know. But take my word for It. it's so." We wait awhile an" wait in vain; Fur days there ain't no sign o' rain. But Bill he doesn't change his tune. "I didn't promise jes how soon 'Twould come," says he, "but come It will." You jes' can't help admirin' Bill. He knows the meanin' of eaeh cloud That comes a-hoverin o'er the crowd Of oaks an' cedars 'croet the bay. An' if the weatljer goes astray An breaks the rules there in the hills, . Why, that's the weather's fault 'tain't Bill's. Washington Star. Worse IMIffht. Hes been talking golf so much here lately he seems to be actually going crazy." "Gracious! Then what must be the condition of.tfee people he's been talking to?" New York Life. - As Others See Cs. The observers all igrigsrled and laughed As back to her many kisses he waughed. "Oh, they're just wed. Or married; thry said. 'And the fellows a little bit daushed!" GQWN GOSSIP. Embroidered vests are very mncn worn with boleros. Some of the new shoes have bows on the side instead f the front. Plain shirt waists of heavy material have a patch po'clfet on the left side. All over lace In designs that can be separated' are an Inexpensive way to get medallions in quantity. Fancy waistcoats are a great feature In spring garments, and they give ad opening for much hand work. Most materials are being embroider ed, often in open hole work, the patterns outlined with a narrow gold braid. Sailor shapes multiply. The latest sailor is of the very short brim variety and is tilted from the side or back. Flower crowned sailors, with narrow straw brims, are seen. New York Globe. THINGS THEATRICAL. Ellen Terry is to be brought over for a farewell tour next season. Annie Russell will be seen next sea son as Puck in "A Midsummer Nisrbt's Dream." Yvette Gullbert and Chevalier have joined forces and will appear togethei next season. E. II. Sothern and Julia Marlowe will have a repertory of nine plays next seasonIt is reported that Marie Tempest and Ellis Jeffries will star jointly in America next season. Iiouis Mann and Clara Lipman have decided that ia the future they will present only plays from the pes. of Miss lizuiSUL.
V4 V:-'.ff . - J - W'4 o if , ami af-iSTTsest jsuimt.
Hall-Room Boys," at the Gennett Monday
Fitting. "Eoblnsontellf 'tme that he is gin; to marry Miss Waal thy." "What a jay like' him?" "Why not? ; He says she has money to throw at the birds." Poems You tOug.h to Forget. A bullfrog sat In.aturnippatch; He found- ltrather sr.dy, While Mrs. Frdiffi satis a snatch Of Yankee -Ubtodle- dandy. , . -.--cS -Bo Mr. KrossieftedtHe, pond. For he. lofpfctoUh-Johtt "rBull, Bir. Of YanUeewni'ibV wasn't fond; Of raeV'they 'ma'de him full, sir. Bo there. he satvwlth sullen mien, A lily pad"esfcae-'hlm. Till Betty carhfhim slick and clean And took h'lm'-home and fried him. Saw the Utility. "Ever see the sign, This place has changed hands?" "Sure." "Well, a fellow over on South street has -made it read. This place has changed feet.' " "I wish they would hang out that sign over at the home of my best girl." 1 Getting Even. "We are not allowed' to play with the children, across the street." "Why not?". 'Cause they are not allowed to play with us." She Didn't Go. Is Mrs. De Styles going to Palm Beach?" "I think not. I ovetheard her husband urging her to go." Without Plantiiig It. "Raise anything in his garden T "Well, he raised his voice when the neighbor's hens came over and started to give a scratching party." - He Needed It That man seems to have a good opinion of himself." "Well, it's a good thing. He's the only one who' has It." FERT PARAGRAPHS. A reputation for good nature causes a man to stand for many a touch. No confirmed bachelor la a job too ftard for a widow to tackle. v THE UNLETTERED PHILOSOPHER. I seen a man In Cueumvllle Who hadn't r.ever went to school. But still he dene, the best he could And wasn't anybody's fool. He didn't know that two times two ' Is six, or. anything like that. But still he had a heap of sense And always knew where he was atHe were so irU f good advice It almost st cut through his ears. And you coulo -at ely 4:akfe It too; He never gave you; co,wroEg steers. He seen, you might sy,at a glance The very thiSg that ehould be did. And there -was never -no complaint When people done the thing he bid. He'd tell them when to sell their hogs. He'd tell them when to cut their oats, And in the fall, as like as not. He'd tell ttiern how to cast their votes. He wouldn't never take no pay; He only done It to be kind, To see the people get along And sort of help to lead the blind. Which shows it ain't all In the books. That there are some few tricks outside. And so !f you can read and spell You needn't be puffed up with pride. And, though you went to public school. Don't riever of your learning boast. For some men have a kindly heart Who don't know grammar f rorli a post. The Magia Charts The Magna Charta was wriften with ordinary black ink on very heavy parchment. It is a curiousf fact, as stated by an eminent Englishlhistorian, that of all the baroas who sfened that most important document nof one conic write other than his Kignatart- atd on); two were able t write even that. FOR SALE. Two male, one female, thoroughThey are Hoovers bred Englisn Bull Terriers crackerjack?. . Call at and see. MILT ELRODE. 1-4L
Palladium Want Ads Pay.
ORIGIN O F N EWYO&K. NAM A
Sew Dorp Replveed Tw " Tbrle JJeatvvyed-by tire. There are some names of places In Greater New Yrk ceoamon enou.ch on the modern tongueibst the origin ot which is not se genrcafly known. New Dorp, on StateuIshud,wa3 so named by the Dutch to distinguish It from Oude Dorp (OUT Dorp"!, the first Dutch settlement on the Island, which w? thrice destroyed oy the Indians. Old Dorp stood to the northwest of Fort Wadswortb. about where Arrochar now stands. Two miles to the west of the ruins of Old Dorp, the persistent Dutch built their New Dorp. The northeast section of StatCn Island, which until 'the formation rt Greater New York was known as Catleton, and is still generally so called, takes Its name from the fact that It once formed Governor Dongan'i "manor of Castleton. Pongan the Dongaa hills are named frem him was of th family of the Earl of Limerick, and th seat of the earl In Ireland was Castletown, la the Connty Kildare. Many of Governor Dontan's descendants still live on Staten Island, some of them occupying and owning houses on the land of the old manor. At first Governor Dongan merely had a hunting lodge or. Staten Island," and it is significant of the state of that portion of New York city at the end of the seventeenth century that at a meeting of the colonial council the governor was entered on the minutes as absent,' being engaged at his hunting lodge on Staten Island killing bear?.",;.: Bedlow's island, on which the statue of Liberty 'sta&5s. was purchased In 1716 by an EgViihrnan named Bed low, who had amazed a large fortune in th East rhdj titgde andjwaa an acquaintance of thethejaTgovernor, the notorious IrdOrnbuoBedlow received from Cornbury the privilege of victualing the British fleets which frequented New York. It'.was aTraost profitabl monopoly, bavlngin it "great possibilities of 'grafL Cornbury.' is supposed to have "stood with Bedlow. Whea Bedlow died suddenly Cornbury stra all his papers, collected all the outeta ndtngjdetys dtierhetcpritractor, aad kept ' everything of ;gbflo v's ."he could lay his hands onleaying'Bedlow's widw and children' In poverty. Bedlow's !sland-waw boqghjtaudAued by the contractorNvhilehtevfctuhleii the fleets as a depot for hlaggpa. Corlear's udok .talces Its name from Jacob Corlear, ?thai city trumpeter . in the old Dutch': days. Kjovernor?Beekman bought it.fpfgn hini. The governor also bought asc4antry?estate, the site of which is cominemorated by Beekman street. ' ".. The true raeaningcf Abe word Man-;, hattan, originally spelled variously 'as Mana-ha-ta, Manhattoes . and Manhattan, sls "hid la mystery. . It.is.not even certain whrether it Was the name of the place or of the tribe which inhabited it, or of both. The old idea that the word meant Place of Drunkenness has been satisfactorily confuted, but what doe the word mean? New" York Press. Spencer and Colors. Herbert Spencer's' notions of art were very crude. His , favorite .color was what he ' called ' "impure purple." He wore "impure parple" gloves and, finding that the furniture was a little somber, had a binding of "impure purple" pasted round Tit by a seamstress. He cut the first strip himself and showed her how to stick, It on with paste. He had his vases filled with artificial flowers. He wished to have everything bright about him;and oonsequentry enJoyed color.' Whcn itTtVas suggested he could get that 111 real flowers he re plied: "Booh I They would want co: stant replenishing:" He wanted mo know why the -petjpto should objecjr tc artificial flowers In n room any yEore than to an artificial landscape. 'jOom t .ifa With Herbert Bnencar." Ia the Doctor's Waltlna-Jhs-om. Doctor (futgkng suddeir) Which of you has -Waiffedjjongttt? Shear (sniiuiyj l. inave waire six.monuis, and you bavea't pald?m for that last r-i'i rstr f PEnrnwrpiLLs E 9 TIM . IMlta orl miol maSltc bo t. esiad' with IfUfrop. TkatTker. ur tiiw it id k for W.TEB E!teUKH, tM nam Btt&ink MI.IJL fi IK DR. HAMILTON NORTH TENTH STREET
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"Curme's Special
Is the sensation of th ear in the Richmond shoe
er sale than any other shoe ever sold WHY? Eecause it la a strictly $3.50 shoe for BEST shoe made for the money, and
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Parlor fflrnitBre, Mattresses and touches, tasv Chairs, etc : :
PatfrvThree.' MMMMM r 1 PICNIC SUPPLIES. f Jt X Baked Ham (Cookey Done Wi Potato Chiss (AIvwlys 'Fresh ir Picnic Plate JL nr Paper Napkins. Fancy fcswfts. Jf f DAlkitY BROS ; . W Phone 29JT
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I J Ur IO lis lUUU NORTHERN MICHIGA
To PETOJKEY oi TRAVEBT6E CITY I UtbUAT, otlf I cIYlbcn II, GR. & I. iNNUAL 'EXCURSION stations Richmond Elusive, good to re:i. Secure folder givNation from any G. BS address. C. L. LOCKWOOD. General Passenger AgL. Grand Rapids. Mich. AT IE MII1S "THE HALL ROOM BOYS." Gennetl Manager Ira t Swisher ot the Gen nett, through his New York repress entative, has secured real novely In the music comedy line for the nlghl nf Mnndav. September 10th. "The Hall Room Boys" company is compos, ed of fifty people, headed by Tom Whlffen, and '-William Clifton. Including a chorus party of thirty beautiful girls and the dancing ponies. Chas, M. Holly, the proprietor and mana ger, has expended over $30,000 oil scenic, electrical effects and costume, genuine song hits and beautiful music indicates that the "standing room only" sign will be out for this engagement. Musical comedy promises to be more popular than ever this season and Genett patrons are to see some of the best. Vaudeville at the Phillips. Patrons of the vaudeville at the New Phillips will not have black face, acrobatic or musical comedy stunts this week, but instead of these, which havev been prominent . fon many of the bills in the past, there has been provided a variety of entertainment that will be found just aa pleasing. Laura Devenport, one oi the best cornett players, in vaudeville, will handle this instrument to the delight of all those who enjoy real corenet music. The Gladstone Sisters have a pleasing turn in the way of acrobatic singing and dancirfT. Laurel and Southerti, reputed to be a team of exceptional ability, will provide Vie comedy sketch. Lottie West Symonds. who isnot unknown ' In Richmond, and who has the title of "The Irish Counte," will appear as an Irish character A-ocalist. Leroy and Morris have a trunk mystery, that will arouse ' ch-. interest. In addition . there be illustrated songs and motion clures. - , Palladium yanMdS'Pay. 1 DpnaiS'nn - - - r- m STRI n in the Cit, $2.50, fa more than battsTacxrn u 1 AWNINGG, oitnges, I Repair wefk a pecialty. I .
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