Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 359, 6 February 1907 — Page 7
he Richmond Palladium, Wednesday, February 6, 1907.
Page seven.
Weakness The action of the heart depends upon the heart nerves and muscles. When from any cause they become weak or-ex-hausted, and fail to furnish sufficient power, the heart flutters, palpitates, skips beats; and in its effort to keep up its work, causes pain and distress, such as smothering spells, short breath, fainting, pain around heart, arm and shoulders. Tbe circulation is impeded.and, the entire system suffers from lack of nourishment. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure makes a heart strong1 and vigorous by strengthening these nerves and muscles. "I had palpitation and pain around my heart, and thi doctor said it was Incurable. I don't bllv It now. for sftsr taking; six bottle rt Dr. Mills' Heart Cure, three bottles of theNervln and thre boxes of the Nerve and I.iver Pill I am entirely cured, and feel better than I ha-e for five years, and It Is all due to thef remedies. I want you to know that your medicines imred m. It relieved me from the first dose, and I kept rljrht on till the. pain In my chet was gone, and I kept on feeling- better even after t ouit taking it." JOHN H. SHFCRMAN. Beldlnr. Mich. Dr. Milea Heart Cure 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
EXECUTOR'S SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY. Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned, executor of the last will and testament of "William Henry Atkinson, deceased, will offer for sale at public auction, at the late residence of said decedent In Clay Township, Wayne county, Indiana, about two (2) miles north east of Greensfork, on Tuesday, February 12th, 1907, the personal property of said estate consisting of 4 horses; 2 milk cows; C heifers; 1 calf; work-harness; farming implements; about 300 bushels of corn: about 2 tons of clover hay; 16 stands of bees; wheat In granary; house-hold goods; and numerous other articles. Sale to begin at 10 o'clock A. M. TERMS: All sums of five dollars $5.00, and under cash in hand, over five dollars a credit of nine months will be given, the purchaser executing his note therefor,- hearing 6 per cent interest after maturity, waiving relief, providing for attorney's fees, and with sufficient sureties thereon. WILLIAM II. ATKINSON, Executor. A. M. GARDNER, Atty. 306 NOTICE. Sale of Electric Light Plant. Notice is hereby given , that the board of commissioners of Wayne County, state of Indiana, will on Saturday, March 23, 1907. offer for sale at public auction at the court house door in the city of Richmond, the court house electric light plant, com vlete consisting of the following: One 60 II. P. Russel engine. One dynamo, 30 K. W. 125 voltage. Switchooard, etc. Capacity of 600 lights. Said sale to commence at 10 o'clock a. m., of said day and date. Terms made known on day of sale C. E. WILEY, , JOHN P. DYNES, THOS. E. CLARK, Commissioners of Wayne County. 23-30-6 i GIB H. SCOTT I INVESTMENTS REAL ESTATE RENTALS LOANS and General Brokorago 707 Main St. RICHMOND, IND. t mUmt amB SlXsl mLm MLm mLml s S . alBi Ca sSa bbBb SSS Si m, k S L fS "J? SPP SW PB SBSJ SBBBJ FOR SALE. Verv doMfrnhla TCt RMa ram. "f .g. Idenco at northwest corner of .j, b Main and West Seventh streets. 4 4 VV. H. Bradbury & Son .J. 1-3 Vtcott Block .3. ' . How Delicious That HOT CHOCOLATE is at Greek Candy Store. It's just like all their Chocolate Candies -They are so good I ! 1 1 1 M' ! ROBT. HERFURT & SOU Repair All Kinds UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE 1237 MAIN. PHONE 1717. ?
WOMAN AND FASHION A Fleaalmar Waist. The waist sketched Is of soft silk, with a tucked yoke and bands of lace Inserted. The aleeves may be finished short or long:, and as little or much trimming may be used as- desired. An all over lace or plain silk may serve for the yoke, with a bit of hand embroid-
TOR DKKSS OCCASIONS. ry or some medallions to beautify It. For the medium size three and a quarter yards of twenty-seven Inch material are needed. The style is one which would become any one. as the tucks in back lend tapering lines and the fullness In front Is only ample enough to be pleasing. Comffmlmm Sleeves. Sleeves In the simple gowns are rare ly conspicuous in design. Medium in else, they are much trimmed or rather severe in finish, with the close fitted unlined cuft. They are cut below the elbow, but are not long, and In the newest the drooping style Is to be noticed, and. although it Is generally unbecoming, for the moment It is fashionable. With all smart afternoon reception frocks short sleeves still continue popular. They are fuller on the shoulder and have a general appearance of froufrou. It is a chilly fashion for winter wear, but is undeniably la mode. j Cm(i aad Skirts. The vogue that attends the plain cloth coat topping a plakled skirt seems bound to continue, if one Is to Judge by the number that are seen. All sorts of pretty though sober shades In broadcloth or In velveteen are employed for the coat, and the skirt plaid repeats the coat color in its dominant note. Dalatr Roim Gwi. The waist of this very attractive little gown is closed Invisibly at the left of the front,, so . allowing of exceedingly effective trimming, while there are additional pieces, the edges of which are arranged under the plaits and which extend over the shoulders to give the broad and drooping line that Is one of the latest decrees of AN ATTRACT! VJL OOWV. fashion. The skirt is cut in eight gores, with a double box plait at the front, back and each side. The threequarter sleeves are exceedingly rretty and becoming and unquestionably the most fashionable for indoor wear, but long ones can be substituted if for any reason they are preferred, while almost every seasonable material used for Indoor gowns is appropriate. Fashions In Fun. Dark furs are. generally speaking, smarter than light ones, and ermine: has not anything of the vogue which it , enjoyed two seasons ago. It Is very j much used for trimming purposes, fori evening furs and for making little jaclets to wear with white dresses. For KTeniaa; Wcv. Lace 6leeves are to figure In evening dress fashions. They are either made very short or they end at the elbow. Sequlned lace sleeves, berthas and shoulder straps aire much In favor for evening gowns. Use artificial gas for light and neat 10 tf If you have good ."opportunity eyesight" you will find some things in the want ads today which most neople will overlook. Before vou throw The Palladium aside. look ovtr the classified advertisements.
JAPAN STILL CALM I! SPITE OF TALK Rumor s of War in America has Excited Neither the Press Nor the People.
BELIEVE IN ROOSEVELT JAPANESE PEOPLE REFUSE TO HAVE THEIR FAITH SHAKEN BY SENSATIONAL STORIES ON PART OF CERTAIN PAPERS. Publishers' Tress. , 'j, rco. . me press is still silent over the war cry-in-.$ome papers In the United States. Not. 4 her slightest excitement was apparent here after the war talk was .transmitted here, and it was generally ignored. It is believed that the anti-Japanese agitation by a portion of the press in the United States will afford proof of the futility of an effort to shake the confidence Japan reposes in President Roosevelt. The Japanese training squadron, consisting of three cruisers, which left Japan Jan. 15 for Honolulu, returned in distress, damaged by storms, and will be dispatched to Australia and New Zealand, via Honolulu, instead of to the United States. It is said the Japanese government will Increase the number of permits for immigrants to Hawaii. The number was reduced to 2,000 per month, then raised to 2,975 monthly. It is proposed to Increase the number to 4,000 monthly wijthin five or six months. Japan's budget for 1907-08 is severely criticised by "Japanese newspapers. Apart from the fact that the total sum of $303,000,000 is required, $60,000,000 more than last year and twice as large an amount as was required to cover all expenses prior to the Russo-Japanese war, several extraordinary appropriations are made for which no provision is In sight. The budget provides large appropriations for naval and military increases. DAMES AND DAUGHTERS. Mrs. Roosevelt has very severe Ideas on the subject of a woman's duty, be lleving that the most of her time should be given up to her husband and her home. Mrs. Delia Thure of Caledonia. O. has been appointed receiver for a large flour and mill firm by Judge Young She has been a practical miller siner her girlhood. Waneta Toskotomba, a full blooded Chickasaw maiden, well educated and v)rth $100,000 in her own right, hap decided that she will never marry, but will devote her life to charity work. To prove the nightgown was her own and not Mrs. Joseph Gordon's, who charged her with theft. Mrs. Levsi: Hamilton of Washington. Pa., put U right on and paraded in it before tin court and won her case. The Countess of Minto, who did so much to extend the work of the Victorian Order of Nurses in Canada, ha now undertaken a similar work In India, where her husband succeeded Lord Curzon as governor general. Mrs. Livingstone Bruce, the daughter of Dr. Livingstone, has gone to Rhodesia on a visit to the Victoria falls, where her father's initials. "D. L.." carved by himself on a tree on a small island overhanging the falls, can still be seen. There are three women on the pen sion rolls of the government who are daughters of Revolutionary soldiers. They are Rhoda Augusta Thompson of Woodbury. Conn.; Phoebe M. Palmeter of Tallette, N. Y., each eighty-flve years old, and Mrs. Sarah C. Hurlbutt of Little Marsh, Pa., eighty-eight years old. CHURCH AND CLERGY. There are 73,000 Baptists in Massachusetts. Bishop Berry of the Methodist church has charge of seTenteen conferences. A Young Men's Christian association building costing $300,000 Is soon to be erected In Detroit, Mich. For every dollar contributed by Baptists for the repair or rebuilding of churches in California, when the $75.000 mark shall have been reached, Mr. Rockefeller will contribute another dollar. A syndicated letter published weekly in 300 labor magazines is one of the latest efforts of Rev. Charles Stirle, the head of the department of labor of the Presbyterian church, to bring the workingman in closer touch with the church. The smokeless condition in Berlin is ascribed to the preponderant use of smokeless fuel in the form of coke and briquets, the skillful, scientific construction of boiler furnaces and chimneys aud finally to the high standard of skill taught and enforced among firemen who stoke furnaces with coal for steam and other purposes. Canine Pmarlllst. Little Willie Say, pa. what are the dogs of war? Pa Almost any two strange dogs when they meet, my son. Motherhood. In Schenectady. When a plumber man up In Schenectady Found a hot water pipe disconnected he Plussed It up with his thumb. If he blasphemed quite sumb He didn't do more'n you'd expect, did he? Ridgway's. TroDbtm of fhe Rich. Baker How long have you had that horrid dyspepsia? Barker I inherited my fortune in 1900. New York Life. ..
A Statesman's SaliloTOf melancholy sotrreclrs The saddest tla to contemplateA railway pass of other days Unused and wholly oot of date. iWaa&inctaa Star.
CLUSTER OF CURRENTS
Plucked From the Vibrant Vires of " Telegraphic Communication. Cincinnati, O. Frank Titus.. TO. froze to death at threshold of his home. Chester. W. Va. Thieves cracked i 6ae in barn of electric railway and ! got ?150. who has been ill. was able to leave his be. Tuesday. New Orleans. United States D:strict Court Jud?e Charles Parlange died suddenly of apoplexy. Toledo. O. Toledo Yacht club j house, valued at $75,000, including furnishings, destroyed by fire. Lincoln, Neb. Nebraska legislature went on record as opposed to the ship subsidy bill before congress. Dublin. The Irish parliamentary party unanimously re-elected John Redmond chairman of the party. Cincinnati, O. Mrs. Margaret McAulifTe, aged widow, burned to death. Accidentally overturned lighted lamp. Troy. N. Y. Mrs. Russell Sage of New York gave $1,000,000 to the Emma Willard school for girls In this city. Rochester, N. Y. Mary S. Anthony, 80, sister and life-long co-worker oi the late Susan B. Anthony, died at her home here. Dayton, O. Agnes Elizabeth, 2, daughter of Harry Yost, died of injuries received by falling into a tub of boiling water. Fremont, Neb. August Anderson, 78, and wife, 88, found dead in their home. Asphyxiated by fumes from heating stove. Indianapolis, Ind. Indiana senate passed $1,000 liquor license law; $600 to go to school fund and $400 to city or county corporation. Martinez, Cal. George "Wiley, 50 for four years treasurer of Contra Costa count), shot and killed himself at his home here. Native of Ohio. Pelham, N. Y. Mrs. Richard Vaughn and infant child and F. M. Mitchell, stableman, lost their lives in destruction of Vaughn's stable by. fire. Vaughn escaped. Cincinnati, O. By a vote of 60 to 6 the Cincinnati congregation of Zion, founded by Dowie and nutured by Voliva, determined to secede entirely from the parent church in Zin City. WOMAN SUFFRAGE. New York organized twenty new clubs within the past year. A woman suffragist club has recently been organized among the Bohemian women of Chicago. So far as we know, the Toledo (O.) Woman Suffrage association is the only woman suffrage association which has held meetings regularly for thirty-seven years. The International Woman Suffrage alliance issues a bulletin containing general suffrage news. It Is published at Rotterdam and is edited by Martina O. Kramers, one of the secretaries of the association. Progress. Discolored Marble. To remove discolorations from marble topped tables,, bureaus and the like, coat with a paste made from sodium carbonate, two parts; pumice stone, od part; powdered chalk, one part. Mix with water and apply. For a Brnlaed TFlna-er. If your finger is shut in a door or bruised put it at once in water as hot as can be borne. Change the water aa It cools, and keep the finger In for (U teen xnJnutea,
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UP TO CHICAGOAIIS Council Decides on a Franchise and it Now Goes to the Vote of the People. CITY CAN BUY THE LINES COMPANIES ARE GIVEN TWENTY YEAR FRANCHISES WITH UNDERSTANDING THAT CITY CAN TAKE OVER THEIR HOLDINGS. Publishers Pressl Chicago, Feb. 5. The city council, by a vote of 56 to 13. passed an ordinance which, if approved by the voters at the April election, will settle Chicago's traction question, which has been before the people more than 10 years. The ordinance provides that the city shall issue 20-year franchises to the Chicago City Railway company and the Union Traction company, with the understanding that on six months' notice at any time the city may purchase the street railways controlled by these companies for $50,000,000 plus cost of rehabilitation. The companies are to reconstruct and re-equip all lines under the supervision of three experts, one to be appointed by the city and the other two by the two street railway companies. Under the new ordinance the street railway companies, for the usual fare of 5 cents, will grant universal transfers to all parts of the city. The city will receive 55 per cent of the net income of the street ralwavs in question. Sand Man's Slaughter. Little hands grow very quiet. Heavy hang the dark fringed lids. Stilled the racket and the riot. Half a dozen little kids Drop their playthings with a clatter. Close their eyes of blue or brown Mercy, what can be the matter? Oh, the sand man's come to town! Half a dozen little faces Take a look of deep distress When they are lifted from their places And receive a soft caress. Not a word from son or daughter , When the g-od of sleep comes down. Really, there's a dreadful slaughter When the sand man comes to town. Vicarious Happiness. What makes you so happy?" "There are so many miserable people In the world." "You hard hearted wretch!" "Not at all. They can't be happy, so I am being happy for them." A Success. "Is marriage a failure?" "My dear fellow, It Is rery profitable."Wbatdo you mean?" "It is? accountable for a large yearly alimony." Pisa's Leasing! Tower. Th Leaning Tower of IMsa Is ITS feet in height and leans fourteen feet out of plumb. Orfcni. It appears from the testimony of Gervae, the monk of Canterbury, who flourished about the year 1200, that organs were Introduced more than a hundred years before this. time.
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For Infanta and Children The (ind You Have Always Dought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years I MoorcGOcborn Write Fir and Tornado Insur J a nee. We will bond you. Loans from $100 to $2,500. Phone f Home 1589. Bell 53 R. I ROOM 16 I. O. O. F. BUILDING. H. R. DOWNING & SON .. UNDERTAKERS .. 16 N. 8th St., Richmond 1. Both Phonos 75 CABINET MAKER $ AND REPAIRER. Make your old brcken furniture Ilka new .and make new if i you want It. S. A. L0TT. 9 South 6th. Phone 1219 WM. WAKING Plumber and Gas fitter I Bicycles and Sundries t Phono 1482. 408 Main Ot Palladium Want Ads Pay. oo Purpose.
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