Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 351, 26 January 1907 — Page 5

The Richmond Palladium, Saturday, January 26, 1907.

Page Five. 3C 13

Social and Personal Mention

The Daughters of the American Revfilution will meet this afternoon with Mrs. George Dougan, of East Main street. Mrs. Ida Lemon and the Misses Mary and Ella Lemon will receive informally this afternoon at their home on South Seventeenth street in honor of Mrs. William Nicholson of Framingham, Mass., and Mrs. Everette Lemon. No Invitations have been issued. Miss Mabel Steinkamp entertained charmingly at cards Thursday evening at her home on South Seventeenth street. The guests numbered twenty mid prizes were won by Mis3 Marie Davis and Mr. Thomas McCarthy. In the guessing contest the prize was awarded to Mrs. Arnold Klein. The partners for supper were secured by matching boquets. The company Included Misses Lillian Shafer, Marie Davis, Etta Luken, Marcella Luken. Blanche Luken, Alice Griffin. Katheryn Conroy, Esther McKone and Katheryn McCone; Messrs. Thomas McCarthy, John Harrington, George McKone. James Goldrick. Howard Karap, Albert Ringhoff. Carl Ringhoff. H. B. Loper, Joseph Kenney, Walter Steinkamp. Lawrence Luken and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Klein. The G. F. C. club was pleasantly entertained last evening at the home of Miss Hallle Markle, north of the city. There were guessing contests and games and a most enjoyable evening as spent. A supper in several courses was served. The next meeting will be in two weeks. Miss Lela Burdsall was given a pleasant surprise party Thursday evening by a number of her school friends at her home In West Richmond. After an evening of games and music, n supper in three courses was served. The guests were Misses Grace Morfanstein. Juanita Wickett, Iris Worman, Pansy King. Marguerite WilExceptional IH you to en gag. i tteai r.stat Fir Insurance Opportunity busineis. i caci'ai rqwr& Ion Ton Mr honest and Ambitions. I aMt jrou In esiabllabtuff an ?ncf n your own: many are matin? irom ai.SOO.tM TO S-.N0.00 YEARLY, tn this t)tn. I (clra yon valuable ln(nrmatlnn tbat bas cost me roars cf lime tod many dollar to obtain : I assist yon In i.tttnc tha aol agency for your town of tba tlftgettand best Fire Insurance Companies; luallfyyoa to do CnnTcvsncmg, Moriytffngr. Writing of Policies, co-operate and rlc with you. Write me today for free mlcata- about my New and Original ethod. Fallarw impossible. Address, Ozman A. Tarbell & Co., South Bend. Ind. CREAM TO WHIP ! j: IX fextca' Heavy.) Home made Bread, brown and white. Phone 292. HAD LEY DROC.

Favorable comments by the score have reached the ears of the PALLADIUM management over the comic supplement, which made its appearance last Sunday for the first time. The supplement has become a regular feature in the paper and none should miss it For next Sunday the PALLADIUM offers, first of all the newiest paper in the Sixth district, a serial story, a page story,

66 The

well illustrated, by Charles K

kins, Treva Etters, Irene Johnson, Irene Shuman, Jeanette Towle, Merle Bowsman and Ruth Haller; Messrs. Waller Evans, Curtis Wickett, Oro ! Bell, Horace Ryan, George Reid, Ce- ' cil Burdsall and Chester Burdsall. Miss Margaret Starr entertained the members of the Bridge Whist club yesterday afternoon at her home on North Tenth street, in honor of Miss Lerena Ohr, of Indianapolis. There were twelve guests present and beautiful prizes were awarded. Prof, and Mrs. E. P. Trueblood entertained the Tourists last evening at their home on Central avenue. The subject for the evening was Sweden, Gustavus Vasa and Gustavus Adolphus Mrs. Howard Dill: "Should Senators be Elected by Direct Vote of the People?" Mr. Stephen Strattan. Mr. John Nicholson. The next meeting will be in two weeks. The Athenaea society met with Mrs. John Stranahan at her home on South Fifteenth street yesterday afternoon. She was "assisted by Mrs. Clementina Seager. The following program was carried out. "Religious Fiction" Mrs. Charles Francisco. "Review of Religious Novels" Mrs. Edgar Mote. Reading of Serial Stories, Part IV Mrs. Jennie Dalby. The discussion was led by Mrs. Miriam Doan, several other members of the club taking part. The next meeting will be with Mrs. Marguerite Wickett of South Nineteenth street Miss Blanche Huff of Martinsville, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bartel. v Lewis Emmons will spend Sunday in Hamilton. PERSONAL MENTION. Wilnier Wilson who at one time was located here with the Panhandle but who for tho past four years has been with a railroad survey company in Idaho, will return home t'ae first of next week for a visit of several weeks. Miss Alice Harrington is the guest of friends in Indianapolis. Mrs. Elizabeth Rankin of Cambridge City is the guest of her parents for a few days. Miss Lucy Hardy of Indianapolis is the guest of Miss Ruby Hunt. Dr. B. B. Ludwick of Connersville Is visiting in the city. Miss Mayme Owens of Fort Worth Tex., Is the guest of local friend?. Miss Jean Waltman has reiurne-1 from a visit in Chicago. M. A. F. Runyaa is tisit?n friends In Roioffio. Misa Lulu Liki&a i3 ths sraest cf ft1ond3 in Kagtitatctwi - Miss Anna Howard l v?itl.l? friends in Cincinnati. Fred Miller has returned' from a business trip to Peru,

Brotherhood

Moser; a page for women, and a number of

WEDDING A PRETTY AFFAIR Miss Lucile Ranck and Irvin Doddridge Were Married at Six O'clock Thursday Evening. Doddridge Chapel, Jan. 25, (Spl.) The marriage of Miss Lucile Ranck and Mr. Irvin Doddridge was solemnized at the home of the bride's parents, Mrs. Frank Kordell, of Doddridge Chapel, at six o'clock on the evening at January 24. The ceremony was pronounced by Rev. Ernest Naftzger of Muncie, in the presence of about SO guests. The house was decorated with carnations. The bride was dressed in white albatros. Miss Marcia Spahr, a cousin of the groom presided at the piano, using Lohengrin's wedding march. . The guests from a distance were as follows: Rev. Ernest Naftzger, Muncie; Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Leab, Liberty; Mr. and Mrs. Will Gan3. Pittsburg; Mr. and Mrs J. W. Judkins, Cambridge City; Miss Nora Doddridge, Greencastle; Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Leab, Brownsville; Mr. Will Martin and family. Rush county; Mr. Joe Spahr, New Castle; Miss Rboda Wright, Cambridge City; Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Pinkerton, College Corner, O. The list of presents were:. 12 solid knive3 and folks Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Doddridge. 6 solid knives and forks Mr. and Mrs. H. II. Homeworth. 6 solid teaspoons Mrs. Fanny Kramer. 12 table napkins Mr. Frank Kordell. Table cloth Sam Clevenger. l'able cloth Mrs. Reigle. Cream ladle Freddie, Orville and Thomas Martin. Sugar spoon Mr. and Mrs. Curti3 Ranck. Cold meat fork Paul Hurst. China sugar and creamer Mr. and Mrs. J. Spahr. China fruit and salad dishes Mr. and Mrs. Will Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cheeseman, Miss Rhoda Wright, Mrs. Cora Leab, Mr. and Mrs. i Will H. Gans. Ouve dish Ross Doddridge. Celery dish Emil and Ben Doddridge. - Table cloth Wilbur and Nora Doddridge. Battenburg centerpiece Cora and John Spahr. Ornamental vases Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Judkins and Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Judkin3. Table cloth Mrs. Matthais Ranck. Salt and pepper Carrie and Hugh Cheeseman. Gravy ladle- Mr. and Mrs. Harry McCoy. 6 desert epooni Mrs. Leab. China salad bcirl Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Pinkerton. Sugar shell and batter kaif Jas.. J Doddridge and family. " Nut cracks Mrs. Mary Wright. j Sugar spoon Mrs. Gelispe. , I .Orange rooa Miss Pearl Davis. I

Beautiful large clock Mattie, Florence and Alice Spahr. Cold meat plate Mr. and Mrs. Jas. II. Spahr. . China sugar and creamer Mr. and Mrs. Dick Spahr.

VACTo L iW LINES Over a hundred counties In Texas have gone "dry" by local option. Peary says If you want rabbits to taste good you should lire on dog meal awhile. Since last year the coal companies of India have advanced prices nearly 100 per cent. Fifty yenrs ago flour was $10 a barrel, pork $S0 a barrel and butter 50 cents a pound in Minnesota. The Russian navy has fifty-three admirals, vice admirals and rear admirals and only eight battleships. The "Who's Who' for 1907 is snch a bulky volume tbat the London World says the question now does not seem so much who's who as who isn't. Some scientists believe that Nortl America was in contact during prehistoric ages with Africa and with Europe, the former connection comlnp first. No live creatures except bees will l carrlod by post between Great Britain and Nicaragua, according to a parcel:' post agreement just concluded betweeithe two countries. There is in India a large element of wealth which ij wholly inactive. The hoarded wealth In the form of orna ments, jewelry and buried treasure has been estimated at many millions. It Is largely held by princes, rajahs and other nobles. It has been stated that the average earnings of the laborer in India is 27 rupees or about $9 a year, but a table In the Indian directory of 1000 enable one to figure out the average earning for the cooly laborer to be 5G rupees, or about $19.66 a year. During the early fall, when the negroes of the south are shocking corn, they build the shocks over several large, ripe watermelons, then leave ! them until Christmas. The shocks pro- j tect the melons from freezing and also j keep them cold enough to be fresh. Japanese articles are stated by a Russian editor to fail to make much beadway In the Mr.nchurla markets, being fcr the most part articles of luxury, such ns silk textiles, cabinet and toilet accessor?, which are beyond the means of the mass? cf the pet'Pkv ProMMv th smallest inhabteJ house in the iuntry is at Llnnuyssnl. South ! Wales; Built by the owner, a bachelor, who occnpie.s it, it has a frontage of five and a half feet, is six feet from front to back, six feet from the ground to eaves and about four feet more to the ridge. Near one entrance of the Cathedral of Seville han;rs a patched and paint 2d crooodi!e. which cue served as a princely lore token that failed of its mission.' la lLf.0 it was serit by the sultan of l!:ry;.i ;i iM-sutlfni pr.ncess of wis d-lined a suitor whos first rresesiT -iuld -.-:. rn-lv lx ajici to (dm a "ffpotioi

of

short stories, in addition to the comic sheet.

The t:ct iu.it America, ttirougd its missions.-puts as much money into India as En.-rland docs and draws out nothing, v.v.ereas England draws out $100,000,000 a year, was cited by Mr. W.. J. Bryan as evidence that the United States was the most altruistic nation in the world, when this statement was challenged by a group of AngloIndian officials in India. The rapid reconstruction of a trestle was recently carried on at Galveston. Tex. Fire destroyed 400 feet of the long railroad trestle which extended from the mainland to the city and stopped traffic. The construction forces and materials were immediately started to the work, and by midnight of the same day the trestle was sufficiently repaired to allow traffic to be resumed. Some of the most noted Parisian artists have contrived to transform Edmond Rostand's country home, Arraga, in the south of Fiance, into a fairyland. The walls of his magnificent apartments, whose windows look out over the crests of the Pyrenees, are covered with the very delightful tales which Hans Christian Andersen and the Grimm brothers have immortalized. Germany and Japan have made good use of the idea, first suggested in the United States, of equipping ships with products for sale abroad and sending the vessels to the ports where trade miebt be developed. In that way. acFor a Disease This offer goes out with every bottle of Liquozone. Do you suppose we would do that if any known germ could resist it? Liquozone is for those who believe that a germ disease calls for a germicide; that tho germs must be killed before the trouble can end. You have doubtless tried the old wars, and you know the results. We ask ou to try the new way; to try it at our expense. Use what millions have used and leara what they know about It. You are not fair to jourself until you do that. What Liquozone Ss. Liqno?one is a tonic-germicide, the virtues of which are derived solely from oxide pases. No a'ciol, no ucrcotic. noihins b".t gas enters into if. The process of making requires la'-g? anparatr.s, r.nd ccr.sum3 i4 days" time. Tr-e object is to so combine the gases with a liquid es to carry their virtues into the system. The result is a germicide so certain that we publish with every bottle aa effer of $1,000 for a disease serm thai Llquorone cannot kill. It destroys them because germs are of reeetable crigin. But to the tody Liquozone is eshillraffr.g; Tlraliiir.e, ptsr5-fylns-That is ii5 main distinction. Common wnnirides are iKisons when taken internally. Th? y are impossible,

99

coramg ivj ..juri irausumieu dj Consul General Michael. Japan got her first order from the Argentine Republic, with which she now bas considerable trade. While preaching In Pueblo, Colo., a few years ago Rev. Edward J. Wilcox found himself in the embarrassing position of being uuable to pay his debts. Knowing that if he stuck to the pulpit he would have sniull chance of getting even with the world, he quit preaching and went into the mining business. Today he owns mines in Colorado worth $3,000,000. besides a great deal of other valuable property. It has just been discovered that Gashavaut G. Pandit, a very wealthy high caste Hindoo and a protege of the gaekwar of Baroda. Is working as a common laborer in an acid factory at Roscoe, N. D. Pandit, though said to be worth millions, works and lives as the other laborers do. Industrial conditions in India are in a deplorable state, be declares, and it is his Intention to take part In the task of revolutionizing them in his native land. It has now been settled without question, says the Brass World, that the best trolley wheels are those which contain no lead. The constant arcing of the wheel and wire burns out the lead and causes the wheel to wear rapIdly. If a trolley wheel Is found which contains lend it is certain that It will

Germ That Liquozono Cannot Kill.

for they destroy the tissues as well as the germs. Tbat Is why medicine proves so helpless in dealing -vith germ diseases. Liquozone, on the contrary, acts as a remarkable tonic. We Paid $100,000. For the rights to Liqulzone, after thousands of tests bad been made with it, after its power had been demonstrated for more than two years in the most difficult germ diseases. Conditions which had resisted medicine for years yielded at once to It. and diseases considered incurable wero enredThat was five years ago. Since thru taillions of people In every part of the world have shared in the benefit. of this invention. Nearly every hirelet. every neighborhood, has livin.; examples cf its power. Now wc vk you to let It do for you what It did for them.. Germ Diseases. Most of our sickness ba3. in lite years, been traced to germ attacks. Some germs as in skin troub'es directly attack the tissues. Some ere-! ate toxica, causing aucli trouble ai ; Rheumatism, Blood Poison, Kldce" Disease and nerve TTeakness. Sojr.e destroy vital orgaii3. as in Conatrmption. Some liki; the germs of Catarrh croaif; Inflammation; toray cause Indigestion. In one of these ways, nearly every .-serious' ailment it is j a genu result- . .

wr out rapiuiy. it is very aiiniu.i , t obtain scrap metals on the tnarlmt which do not contain lead. For this reason trolley wheels must be manufactured from new metals.

DEPARTMENT DISSATISFIED Will Not Take the Decision of New York Judge in Soldier's Uniform Case as Final. Washington, Jan. 25. The war department does not Intend to be guided by the decision of the New York magistrate In the case of Sergeant Higgins and others who were denied admission to a skating rink at Plattsburg, N. Y., because of the fact that they wore the uniform of the army.' That decision was adverse to the contention of the soldiers. The Judge adrocate general has the case in hand and it was announced that in view of the department's construction of -the New York bill of rights an. appeal from the decision of the lower court will be taken. DANCE. Social dance given at Odd Fellows hall Saturday evening. Given by Harrold & Ward. Admission 25c. 2t-3t Such conditions call for a germicide, not for common drugs. Liquozone does what other means cannot accomplish. And It Is wrong to rling to old ways when millions of people know a way that Is better. 50c Dottle Free. If you wish to know what Liquozone does please send us this couix"-n. We will then mail you an order on a local druggist for a full-i?ize bottle, and will pay the druggist ourselves for it. This is our free gift, made to convince you; to let the product Itself fhow you what It can d. In justice to yourself, please accent It lo daj. for It places you under no obligations whatever. Liquozone costs 50c and SI. CUT OUT THIS COUPOH Kiil It oat nd ro-'tU It I" Th Llqoozon-Comr-nny. 4--4l Vhth Av.,c'!i cago if V fi i-rf8IK ! . I linve ne er lrl-d the Llouoz-n, but If vou wil supply tn- a ;c bottl free 1 will take It. TTearenowrfUtttnpout tn lmp-oted Ll-qoMoni--, hawd r.n nVe Ve.r of eperior. Anrt ffen old osr rna.vnccpt tbbo ofTer, to learn bow mucU better ttie new p:otui new Pur r ood Law. AnvchntHin or h -lanital nnt vnt uiltlf LliJCoe wtll b? gladly mir-pUed for ttl