Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 244, 1 October 1906 — Page 5

The Richmond Palladium, Monday, October 1, 1900.

Page Five.

3pilepsy

Fits St. Vitus Dance Are nerve diseases, and unless checked, lead to (destruction of both mind and body. The weak, shattered nerves must have something to strengthen and'build them back to,health. Dr. Miles'-Restorative Nervine is a remarkable nerve tonic and stimtdant. It strengthens the nerves, relieves the nervous strain, and influences refreshing-body-building sleep and rest. Persistent use seldom fails to relieve these afflictions. "I was taken with epileptic fits; had eleven in less than 12 hours. My father sent for our family physician, but he could do very little for me, and I grew worse every day, and at last they had three doctors with me, and I still grot worse. My father heard of Dr. Miles' medicines and bought a bottle of Nervine and a box of Nerve and Liver Pills. I had taken only a few doses until I began to feel better. I took. 12 bottles, and it cured me sound and well. It has been worth all the world to me. I recommend it wherever I fro. You may use this as a life-long- testimonial to the merits of your medicine, for I am enjoying the best of health, and feel that my life and health is due to this wonderful . medicine." LEVY WILLIAMS. R. F. I. No. 2, Boston, Ga. Dr. Miles' Nervine Is sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that the first bottle will benefit. If it fails, he will refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind Artistically Metropolitan :: In every detail Is the J Weddinn? Music :: . X Furnished In Richmond exclusively I bv Lawrence w. Deuker's Tet-rang Concert Quartet Essence Pompadour! The Latest Perfume rare in Fragrance, Delicious and Very Lasting. Call and test it for Yourself. A pleasure to show you. : M. J, Qulgley, JiSSniS?" Baked Ham and Tenderloin.. (Cooked Done.) Potato Chips. Cream to Whip, Extra Quality. Phone 292. HADLEY BROS.

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Social and Personal Mention

MARGARET SEDGWICK WILL ENTERTAIN AT A HOUSE PARTY THIS WEEK MR. AND MRS THOS ADDLEMAN ENTERTAINED AT DINNER YESTERDAY MISS HALCEY HAROLD GAVE A DINNER PARTY YESTERDAY FOR HER OUT OF TOWN GUESTS.

Miss Margaret Sedgwick will entertain the following young people at a house party this week: Misses Edna Chandlee, Nina Harris, Hazel Freeman, Pearl Hasecoster, AliceHill, Gertrude Le Fevre, Edith Moore, Hilda Shute, Florence Shute and Ann Dilks. if vr -5f Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Addleman en tertained at dinner yesterday at their home north of "Whitewater. The table was decorated in wild asters and autumn leaves. The guests were: Mr. and Mrs. James Addleman and family of Lynn, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Addleman of Kokomo, Mrs. Jane Addleman, Miss Mary Addleman and Mr. Hosea Addleman of Mt. Vernon, O., and Mr. and Mrs. Adam White and family of Eaton. 5f Mrs. Emily Chandlee entertained the Misses Mary Stubbs, Edith Chandlee and Rae Chandlee of Indianapolis yesterday at her home in West Richmond. -3 Miss Nina Pennell will entertain in formally with a dinner this week in honor of Misses Bess Bosler, Norah Heron, Isabelle Heron, Fredericka Faulkner, of Connersville, Lucy Hardy of Indianapolis and . Mrs. Jessie Edwards McKee of Pittsburg, who will be Miss Ruby Hunt's house guests the latter part of the week. A merry crowd of high school people called on Alice Marlatt Saturday and spent a jolly evening. 45Miss Sarah Manley will entertain at cards the coming week in honor of Miss Myrtle Hedrick, whose marriage to Dr. Coffield will take place Wed nesday, Oct. 10. Muncie Star. Among the out of town guests will be Miss Elizabeth Townsend of this city. if vS- -XAmong the dinner guests at the Westcott yesterday were Miss Lillian Henley and Mr. Arthur Binford of Carthage. v Mrs. Chas. Lamb entertained a company of relatives at-her home on South 14th street Sunday, September 30. The out of town guests were: F. C. Smith and wife, T. G. Smith and daughter, Robie of Atlantic, la., Mrs. Ellen Bradberry of Hamilton, O., Maud Brooks of Indianapolis, Mrs. Dave Curray of Winchester, Indiana, Mr. Frank Hunt and family of Lynn, Mrs. May Puckett, Mr. Tom -Smith and family, Mr. Hugh Poling and wife, Mr. C. R. Hunt and wife, Mr. Jim Smith and wife, Mr. J. C. Smith and wife of Muncie, P. G. Bly and fA

family, Mr. Jim Gordon and wife, Mr. Nathaniel Johnson and wife, Mr. Albert Gordon and family of Richmond, Mrs. Dave Persley and son from Huntsville. 4 Miss Halcey Harold entertained Miss Gertrude Hastings of Buffalo, N. Y., Mr. Adam Renner and Mr. Henry Schneider of Cincinnati and Miss Esther Bessleman at dinner yesterday at her home on North 10th street.

PERSONAL MENTION. Amer Whelan will go to Cincinnati on business today. Amos Ware of Eaton attended Yearly Meeing yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Saurs of Anderson are visiting in the city. Mrs. John Little of Bethel attended Yearly Meeting yesterday. Robert Conner of Muncie was here yesterday the guest of friends. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Hunt of Cincinnati spent yesterday in the city. A. S. Sprague and family of Spiceland attended Yearly Meeting yester day. Miss Corrine Comer of Liberty was the guf; of friends in the city yes terday. Miss Alice Lawson of Logansport will come this week to visit with friends. Harry Williams of Indianapolis was the guest or his mother over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Morton Gains of Cam bridge were the guests of friends here yesterday. - t Miss Alice Curtise of West Lebanon was here yesterday to attend Yearly Meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cartright of East Germantown were the guests of friends in the city. Omer Whela- .ill go to Cincinnati of Cincinnati pent yesterday in the city the guest of Mrs. Haley Harold. Miss Lottie Commons who has been the guest of friendds at Earlham has returned to her home int Rushville. Miss Edith Chandlee has returned to Indianapolis after visiting her mother Mrs. Emily Chandlee of West Richmond. Miss Rae Chandlee and Miss Mary Stubbs who have been the guest of Mrs. Emily Chandlee of West Richmond will return home today. The Palladium gives a dollar each week for the best piece of news "tip ped off" to it. Ut

F course you have often been impressed with the attractiveness STARR PIANO COMPANY'S window advertising. If there is

attractive store window in Richmond or Eastern Indiana than either of our windows come in and tell us about it and we will try to profit by your suggestions. Is there anything more beautiful than a STARR Upright Piano, with its highly polished case of the finest of wood? Our beautiful warerooms at all times contains a score or more of them.

Wly Stamp Piams Excel .

You have often read that they do excel, but do you know why? First, because only the highest quality of material enters into their construction ; Second, because the plan upon which a STARR Piano is built more nearly approaches the very pinnacle of scientific construction than that of any other make; Third, because the workmanship is the most skilled that can be obtained ; Fourth, because the finished product is not only attractive to the eye, an adornment to any house, but the tone qualities, which form the very soul of the piano, are beyond doubt the richest that any piano company produces.

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SOMETHING OF MUCH INTEREST TO WOMEN; GOVERNMENT FINDS POPULAR MARRYING AGE

Publishers' Press Washington, D. C, Sept 30. "Go to Milwaukee for beer and Washington for statistics," is the popular saying, and, whatever may be the casrr in the first instance, it is certain that the capital could supply the whole world dazzling compilations of figures vnd then have some left over. About every fourth man here is some sort of a statistician and the only excitement he can get in the summer is through compiling statistics. The latest to be given to the anxious public are found in a compilation showing what chance a woman has to marry at any given age. They are based on figures gathered by the Census Bureau and make matrimonial insur ance comparatively simple, provided anyone cares to undertake such a business. Between the ages of twenty COLLEGE AND SCHOOL. The board of health of Buffalo has disinfected all text books in use in the public schools. John S. Kenyon, Thayer scholar and instructor in English at Harvard, has been elected professor of English literature at Butler college. : , . There will be no GreeK letter fraternities in the new Carnegie. Technological institute if Director. Arthur Hammerschlag can prevent it. He would establish school clubs instead, .without the secrecy feature. , . . A petition presented by Boston teachers to the school committee asking that body to discontinue the separate.schools for boys and girls gave as reasons that discipline is much more easily maintained in mixed classes and that the work of teachers in boys' schools appears Iri an unfavorable . light when compared with that of teachers in girls' schools. TRAIN AND TRACK. Waiting rooms with beds are a specialty of railway stations in Sweden. The porter calls the sleepers ten minutes before the arrival of their trains. By a recent regulation smoking is no longer to be allowed in German railway cars marked "for nonsmokers," even when all the occupants give their permission. Since the 1st of August trains are taken through the new Simplon tunnel by electric power. Many tourists in Switzerland cross the pass Into Italy and return by way of the tunnel. A giant locomotive constructed at Munich, which is capable of pulling a railway passenger train at the speed of ninety-three miles an hour, is being exhibited at Nuremberg, and the German state railways will shortly make experiments with the new locomotives for regular pprvi" in throuch routes. smi&y lb

951-955 MAHKT STREET.

and twenty-five a woman is more likely to marry than during all the rest of her life, according to these figures, for her chances in this period are 52 in 100. The. period between twenty-five and thirty is next in order, accounting for 18 per cent, thus showing that in thv? country at least the tendency is not toward early marriages. A woman is just about as likely to marry between fifteen and twenty as between thirty and thirty-five, the chances being 14.5 per cent in the former case as compared to 15.5 per cent in the latter. After that the prospects of matrimony become rather hopeless. A woman between forty-five and fifty has only three-eights of one per cent of her chances left, while in the ten years from fifty to sixty, they are only one-fourth of one per cent. What the chances of a man may be the statistician does not say, although it is hardly likely that such figures will be long deferred.

GETS A REGULAR CHARGE Clarence Flynn Will Preach at Putnamville and Attend De Pauw University as Well. Clarence E. Flynn, formerly a student at Earlham college and licensed as a preacher in the M. E. church in July was, during the session of the present Indiana conference at Greensburg, appointed to the pastorate of the M. E. church at Putnam ville, Ind. The charge Is only five miles from Greencastle, where he will reside during the week as a student in De Pauw University. He will leave Thursday or Friday and assume his pastoral duties on Sunday morning. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. Hereafter the routes of the Palladium in Richmond will be under the charge of a route manager, and carrier boys will not collect from patrons they serve. From this time on, the collections will be made at regular intervals of two weeks by this route manager. Under no circumstances are carriers boys authorized to collect for subscriptions. If you have good "opportunity eyesight" you will find some things in the want ads today which most oeople will overlook. Before you throw The Palladium aside, look over the classified advertisements. pirotifty ng

WO R WWGWO MEN Their Hard Struggle Made Easiei Interesting Statements by a Young Lady in Boston and One in Nashville. Tenn.

''All women" work; some in "their homes, some in church, and some in the whirl of society. And in stores, mills and shops tens of thousands axe on the never-ceasing treadmill, earning tneir aauy bread. All are subject to the same physical laws ; all suffer alike from the same physical disturbance, and the nature of their duties, iu many cases, quickly drifts them into the horrors of all kinds of female complaints, tumors, ulceration, falling and displacements or perhaps irregularity or suppression, causing backache, nervousness, irritability ond lassitude. They especially require an invigorating, sustaining medicine which will strengthen the female organism and enable them to bear easily the fatigues of the day, to sleep well at night, and to rise refreshed and cheerful. How distressing to see a woman struggling to earn a livelihood or perform her household duties when her back and head are aching, she is so tired she can hardly drag about or stand up, and every movement causes pain, the origin of which is due to some derangement of the female organism. Miss F. Orser, of 14 Warrenton Street, Boston, tells women how to avoid such suffering ; she writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I suffered misery for several years with female irregularities. My back ached; I had bearing-down pains, and frequent headaches;

Lydia E. Pinkham's Ve&etaMe Compound Succeeds Where Others FadL

16 and 17 Colonial Building- 'Phone 1634.

Prices Reasonable and

pllsuiinio Ibturft ihfc no

of the a more

I could not lwp and could hardly 'draff around. I consulted two physicians without relief, and as a last resort, 1 tried Lydia K. ; Pinkham a Vegetable Compound, and to mr surprise, every ache and pain left m. 1 gained ten pounds and am in perfect health. Miss Pearl Ackers, of 327 North Summer Street, Nashville, Tenn., writes; J Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I suffered with painful periods," severe backache, bearing-down pains, pains across the abdomen; was very nervous and irritable, and my trouble frrew worse every month. "My physician failed to help me and I decided to try Lydia K. Pinkbani'a Vegetable Compound. - I soon found it was doing me good. AU my pains and aches disappeared, and I no longer fear my monthly period n Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the unfailing cure for all these troubles. It strengthens the proper muscles, and displacement with all its horrors will no more crush you. Backache, dizziness, fainting, bearing-down pains, disordered stomach, moodiness, dislike of friends and society all symptoms of the one cause will be quickly dispelled, and it will xnaks you strong and well. You can tell the story of your sufferings to a woman, and receive helpful advice free of cost. Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. The present Mrs. Pinkham is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twentyfive years she has, under her direction and since her decease, been advising sick women free of charge.

Satisfaction Guaranteed.