Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 363, 15 March 1907 — Page 5
ine Kfcnmona palladium, Friday, March 15, 1907.
Page Five.
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Social and Personal Mention
An Easter market will be held by the' members of the Ladles Aid society of the Christian church: on the Saturday before Easter, in some room on Main street, arrangements being made at a meeting held yesterday 'afternoon in the church parlors. A- large number were present and several other items of business were transacted. 5 The meeting of the Crescent club which was to have been held yesterday afternoon, has been postponed and wjitmeet in two weeks with Mrs. William Fry at her home on South Fourth street. Mrs. George Theurer entertained the Carnation club yesterday afternoon at. her home ou N. D. street. ' After a-contest at cards. Mrsl Wayne Horn tend jMrs. Will Bennett were awarded,.-the prizes. A two course luncheon was served. Next Thursday Mrs. William Hufford will be hostess at her home on North Sixth street. 4 Mrs. Edward Cooper entertained the Martha Washington club, Wednesday afternoon. , at., .her home on South Twelfth . street. A delightful social time with refreshments made tht; afternoon pass in a pleasant manner. In two weeks, Mrs. Howard Ridge will, entertain the club at her home on North Sixteenth street. Mrs. Rhoda McWlnn entertained the riiscilla Sewing circle yesterday afternoon at her home on North Nineteenth street. Sewing with a luncheon were the features of the meeting. In two weeks Mrs. C. T. Peck will be the hostess at her home on North Twentieth street. 4. 4. Miss Ruth Bartel entertained the members of the Alpha Phi Alpha sorority of the high school last evening at her home on South Twelfth street. A most enjoyable evening was spent
Don't neglect your coughs Statistics show that in New York City alone over 200 people die every week from consumption. And most of these consumptives might be living now if they had not neglected the warning cough. You know how quickly Scoff 9 j'
o o
Emtttsfion enables you to throw off a cough or cold.
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ON
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SPECIAL Insist on getting your 10 per cent, discount -Insist on getting your McCall Pattern Free if either should be overlooked by the clerk waiting on you.
joOs)h)oirDyr
socially and with games and music. Refreshments were served. In. two weeks the "society will meet again. J "Tennyson" was the subject of a paper by Mrs. Edward Dennis which was read at the meeting of the Occult Research society, yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. John Miller, on South Eleventh street. The paper created much Interest as well as favorable comment from the large number persent. Miscellaneous articles were also read by different members of the club. 4. 4. Much interest is being manifested at Earlham college, as well as in the city, in the concert, which will be given Saturday evening by the musical students, attending the classes of Misses Francisco, Edwards, Jay and Kirk. The program promises to be a brilliant one and It is thought a large number will be present. No admission fee will be charged. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Schultz will entertain the Saturday Evening Pedro club tomorrow evening at their home on South Eleventh street. A six o'clock dinner will be served, followed by cards. A luncheon will be given by the Young People's society of the First English Lutheran church this evening, the hours being from five to eight. It will be held in the church parlors, which will be decorated in green and white. St. Patrick day colors will al so be carried out in the menu as far as possible. The public is cordially invited to attend. .j. 4. 4. ' Harry and Kenneth Karns entertained a company of friends Wednesday evening at their home on North Eighth street, in honor of Mr. Tom Karns, of Parker City. Ind., who will leave soon for Goldfield, Nevada. Dancing made the evening pass in a pleasant manner , and a two course luncheon added to the evening"" - o o o s z o o o o o 50c. AND $1.00. JL
STOR
ALL ure. The guests were thevMisses Nellie Bulach, Rhea McCullough, Hannah Hershey, Frankie Melrose and Messrs. Edward Thomas and Sidney Karns. 4 4 ; A meeting of the Flower Mission will be held this afternoon at the home of Miss Adah Hadley on North Ninth street. It is hoped that all members will be present as the annual election of officers will be held. Any one wishing to join the society is cordially invited to be present. 4, 4, 4 A thimble party will be given by the Ladies' Aid society of the First Presbyterian church this afternoon in the church parlors. It will be the first meeting of the new year and it is hoped all members will be present. Refreshments will be served. 4 4. 4 Miss Jennie Gifford will entertain the Audubon Society at its regular meeting this evening at her home on South Twelfth street, at seven o'clock. Miss Emily Windle will have a paper on "Two Water Thrushes." 4. 4, 4, The Ladies Aid society of Grace M. E. church will give a china shower Friday afternoon from two to five o'clock in the church parlors. A musical program will be given and refreshments will be served. All members of the church and their friends are cordially invited to be present. 4 4. 4, Mrs. Charles Hebbler entertained the members of a sewing club of Trinity Lutheran church Wednesday afternoon at her home on North Eighth street. The needlework which was done will be for sale at the annual fair of the church. A luncheon and social time followed the needlework. In two weeks Mrs. John Knollenberg will be the hostess at her home on South Eighth street. 4. 4. 4. An all-day meeting of the Ladies' Aid society of Whitewater Friends' church will be held triy at the church. Needlework he done. 4 : The Frances E. Willard W. C. T. IT. will meet this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at Rhoda temple. A large attendance is desired as some particular business will come up for consideration. 4. 4 4 An evening guest meeting of the Good Cheer club was held Wednesday evening at the home of the president. j Mrs. Thos. Dolloff, north of the city. I The guests included the husband3 and families of the members and numbered sixty. An oyster supper, consisting of two courses was served. An Interesting feature of the evening was the collection of ten dollars which will be given to the Y. M. C. A. fund. 1 During the course of the eveninsr a most delightful musical program was j given, those taking part being Miss j Nettie Pickett, Miss Mona Elliott, who gave instrumental selections; Messrs. I George Elliott, Frank Elliott and Wil-i j Ham Thomas, who rendered several I selections on the mandolin and guitar; 'little Master Forest Elliott, who ren dered two vocal solos, and Mrs. Agnes j . Miles, whose numbers were much en-' joyed. Among the guests was Mr.; j Harry Warden, of Marion. lad. The i next regular meeting of the club will t be -in two weeks with Mrs. Eliza! Burk. ' j The second d3nce of a series which Mr. and MrjB. Charles Kolp are giving, will be held this evening In I.
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I O. O. F. Hall. Piano and drums will provide music for a long program of dances. DANGER IN DELAY. Kidney Diseases Are Too Dangerous ' For Richmond People to Neglect. The great danger of kidney trouble is that they gel a firm hold before the sufferer recognVzes them. Health is gradually undermined. Backache., head ache, nervousness, lameness, soreness lumbago urinary troubles, dropsy, diabetes and Blight's disease follow in merciless succession. Don't neglect your kidneys. Cure the kidneys with the certain and safe remedy, Doan's Kidney Pills, which has cured people right here in Richmond. L. F. Cooper, of 714 North Thirteenth street, Richmond, Ind., says: "For two years there existed sharp pains in my loins and sides and a continual feeling of soreness. It was hard for me to stoop, lift or bend over and when I caught cold it always settled in my kidneys. The secre tions were irregular and much too frequent. The medicines I used brought me no benefit until I began taking Doan's Kidney Pills. I used two boxes of this remedy last winter and since then have been free from all troubles with the kidneys. I am, therefore, glad to recommend the use of Doan's Kidney Pills." For sale by all dealers. Price 'to cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo New York, sole agents for the TTnlted States. "- Remember the. name Doan's and take no other. , MORE HARBINGERS ARRIVE Wild Ducks Appear Along the White-j water River Bound to the Northward at Good Speed. Several wild ducks have been seen on the Whitewater, both in Richmond and rural communities. One lover of the rod and gun said yesterday that he heard the calls of a flock of wild geese Tuesday evening, and saw a flock of more than twenty going northward. The ducks, which have made their appearance on the Whitewater in this city, are of diving varieties, however, and are not very good for eating purposes, but afford great sport for the hunters on their trail, as they are exceedingly hard to capture The visit of the wild ducks and geese is welcomed by Richmond people, not so much tat they give to the sportsmen amusement, but because they are harbingers of spring, and the appearance of the ducks and geese flying toward the north, it i3 said, is a sure sign of early warm weather. It Is safd further tl-.- : -banslng seasons can be judxfd 'ic- movements cf these birds to a greater degree of accuracy than by any ether. Stricken, With Paralysis. Greenfield, Ind., March 11. Everest Caldwell .thirty-five.- years old, was stricken with paralysis while putting on his apron to take his watch in the Guymon House saloon. His condition is critical
GETS $50,000 SALARY AT THE AGE OF THIRTY Relative of Unthank Family Draws Big Pay.
EXPERT MINING ENGINEER The story herewith printed, taken from an exchange, will be of great interest locally on account of the subject of the write-up being a relative of the family of Charles R. Unthank, ex-sheriff of Wayne county. "How many Hooslers receive a straight-salary equal to that of the President of the United States? If there are any besides Oscar B. Perry of Bloomington, Ind., it is certain that there Is none who, at his age, 30, receives $50,000 a year for his services. ""This young man is paid that much for his brains, and it is not an excessive salary from the standpoint of the corporation which employs h!m. The investment of 550,000 a year has brought returns approaching the millions. It is a remarkable storj- of an Indiana boy who made the best of his talents and his opportunities, who made a college education count for all that it was possible to get out of It, and who now holds a position that few men of his age seldom attain. And he has been out of college buten years, having graduated at the age of 20. Mr. Perry, an expert mining engineer, is general manager of some half dozen of the Guggenheim mining enterprises of Colorado, California, Canada and Alaska, the combined capitalization of which represents many millions. He has been with the Guggenheims about four years, his selection for tho important position he now holds having been made by John Hays Hammond, long the right hand man of Cecil Rhodes in South Africa and recognized as one of the foremost mining experts of the world. His attention was attracted to Mr. Perry several years ago. "After graduation from Indiana University at Bloomington from the department of physics in 1897 Mr. Perry took a year's graduate work at the institution, then ented the school of mines of Columbia University, from which he took the E. M. degree in 1900. Soon after. In company with his father, a wealthy owner of. stone quarries in the Bloomington district and one of the first to demonstrate the beauty and value for building purposes of the Oolitic limestone, he went to California and became interested in dredging for gold. He studied the dredges with the eye of an expert and made so many improvements that the machines soon came to be known as the Perry dredges. "His inventions soon attracted the by him for the Guggenheims was the attention of Mr. Hammond and led to his employment by the Guggenheims. One of the first enterprises handled Pacific -Gold Dredging Company of Oroville, Cal. He was soon operating for this company a fleet of five dredges, all eminently successful from the start. .Connected with, this fleet of five dredges is the Indiana Machine Shop of Oroville, one of the largest of its kind in California. Other large paying properties of which Mr. Perry is general manager include the Carbo Consolidated Hydraulic Mining Company of Bullion, B. C; Yukon Consolidated Gold Fields of Alaska, Northwest Hydraulic Company of Alaska and Atlin Consolidated Mining Company of California. Ordinarily Mr. Perry travels 30,000 to 40,000 miles every year. In 1905 he visited Yukon, but traveled under an assumed name In order to better study mining conditions in the famous gold field. Last year he went again in one of the first boats in June, and during the four months after his arrival there accomplished results unheard of before in so short a period. From Alaska, near the close of the mining season, he went direct to the Canadian properties, traveling some 150 miles on horseback. From there he returned to New York city, where he spends his winters filing his reports, consulting with other engineers of the Guggenheim companies and outlining plans for the coming season. "In addition to his other duties Mr. Perry is final arbiter upon all the Guggenheim properties offered for sale. His word consummates or Rejects the deal. "Notwithstanding his great success es, Mr. Perry is as modest and unassuming as when a student at the university. He is a member of the Beta j Theta Pi fraternity and was the only j member of his class to take his de-i gree from the department of physics. While he was delving in" pnystcs as FREE SOUVENTR SAMPLES
TIRED AND SICK YET MUST WORK "Man may work from sua to sun but woman's work is never done," In order to keep the home neat and pretty, the children well dressed and tidy, women overdo and of tea suffer in silence, drifting along from bad to worse, knowing well that they ought to have help to overcome the pains and aches which daily make life a burden. It is to these women that Lydia E. Pink hat in' Vegetable Compound, made from natire root and herbs, comes as a blessing. When the spirits arc depressed, the head and back
aches, there are dragginff-down pains, nervousness, sleeplessness, a ad reluctance to go anywhere, these are only symptoms which unless heeded, are soon followed by the worst forms of Female Complaints. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound keeps the feminine organism ina strong- aad healthy condition. It cures Inflammation, Ulceration, displacements, and organic troubles. la preparing for child-birth and to carry women safely through the Change of Life it is most efficient. Mrs. Augustus Lvon. of East Earl, Pa., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "For a long time I suffered from female troubles and had all kinds of aches and pains in the lower part of back and sides. I could not sleep and had no appetite. Since taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and following the advice which you gave me I feel like a new woman and 1 eaanot praUe your medicine too highly." Airs. Pinkham's Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are Invited to write Mrs Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. Out of her vast volume of experience she probably has the very knowledge that will help yeur case. Her advice is free and always helpful.
few State University students have ever done before or since he played quarter back on the eleven and caught for the baseball nine. And he was. a star in both games. He looked to the body as well as the mind. Now he is able to manage the business of several big companies, rush hither and thither from one ore bed to another, now in Colorado, next in Alaska, then Canada, then New York, all the time figuring and planning and looking to the future, and he still looks as youthful and carries the same enthusiasm as when he piloted the cream and crimson to victory on the gridiron." NO PROFIT IN SIRUP MMMMMMBSfc Costs More to Make it Than the Article Brings Owing to Very Low Prices. Greenfield, Ind., March 14. Many owners of sugar camps in this vicinity will not open them this spring. John H. Binford, of this city, who has a grove of more than one thousand trees, says It costs more to make sirup than the sirup bring3 on the market, owing to low prices, because of the sale of imitations. On account of the high price of labor, he says, pure sirup can not be manufactured for less than $1.23 to $1.40 a gallon. . LOCAL POLICE CALLED ON Dr. Horace Marvin of Dover Delaware, Offers $25,000 for a Return of Kidnapped Child. The local police have been appealed to by Dr. Horace N. Marvin, of Dover, Delaware, to assist in rescuing or obtaining clues as to the whereabouts of his four-year-old son, Horace N. Marvin, Jr., and to capture the parties who kidnapped the child at the doctor's country home, seven miles east of Dover, on the morning of March 4. 4. Chief Bailey yesterday received a large circular containing the missing boy's photograph, his description, a brief account of the kidnapping and an appeal to the Richmond police to keep a constant lookout for the appearance of the child and his kidnappers in this vicinity. The $25,000 reward for the return of young Marvin to his grief-stricken father is the largest offer ever received at tbe Richmond police headquarters. The splendid picture of the boy in the circular shows him to be an extremely handsome little fellow, light blonde hair, big blue eyes, beautiful teeth and well formed features. He wears In the photograph a brown Buster Brown suit. Thank Offerings. Fountain City, Ind., March 14. The Fountain City auxiliary of the ' VV. F. M. S. will hold its thank offering service at the Fountain City M." E. church Sunday evening, March 17, at 7: CO o'clock. The program consists of recitations, reading, dialogues, solos and singing by the choir.
EXHIBITION - . Products and Premiums Closes Saturday Evening KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS TEMPLE
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TO LADIES
MRS. AUG. LYON PETIT JURY HAS RECORD During the Past Term of Court thai Body Got in But Six Days of Actual Work. Next week County Clerk Penny anf Deputy Clerk Huey will begin the task of preparing for the April term of court, which Is the longest of the three terms of court, . lasting until next October. New , cases will be placed on the docket and cases not tried this term of court will be continued over to the April term. The task of preparing the docket is not an easy one. Week after next the petit and grand juries will be drawn. Only Six Days' Work. On examining his records Shcrtrf Meredith discovered that during this term of court the petit jury has only been In session six days. The Jury sat four days on the Holder case and two days on another cas. This is almost a record. Several years ag when jury trials were more in favor than court trials the petit Jury would average at the minimum twenty days in each court term. This term of court lasts two weeks longer but the Indications are that the jury will not be called Into service again. Trustees in Session. The trustees of the various townships In tho county met yesterday at the office of Superintendent Jordan and heard an excellent paper read by Trustee Martin Coffman, of Jackson township. Mr. Coffman'a subject was "School Enumeration," and he went into the subject exhaustively. After the reading of the paper there was a general discussion of the question. No other business was transacted by the trustees. HEME xL!j iUZili The ideal beverage. A scant teaspoon makes two cups. Steep five minutes only. Are sold leoee or In sea lea pack tts by Great Atlantic A Paclflo Tea Co., 727 Main. (Published by Authority of the India and Ceylon Commissioner.)
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