Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 102, 30 April 1907 — Page 8
Done Finhff".
The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telegram, Tuesday, April 30, 1907.
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Knollenberg's Store
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A Founir Pays9 Sale If
May 1, 2, 3 and 4 THIS WEEK. 02 Special Eotterestt to ttHue Ladies ITEM 1 13 pieces Pin Stripe and Check Panama Cloth, all wool, 48 inches wide, splendid Fabric for Jacket Suits, Separate Skirts and Separate Jackets, and well worth $1.25 per yard; will be on sale at 88 cents. ITEM 2 -5 pieces. Cream Ground with colored checks, beautiful fabric for Shirt Waist Suits, worth $1.25 per yard, to be closed at 68 cents. ITEM 3 Four pieces 56 inch Coatings, just the thing for
Short Jackets, will be sold at 78 cents per yard.
a.
ITEM A 3 pieces Skirtings, splendid Cloth, 50 inches wide, worth $1.50 per yard, sale price only 78 cents. ITEM 520 pieces50c and 60c Dress Goods, suitable for Misses' and Children's Dresses, Jacket Suits and Skirts to be closed at 43 cents per yard. ITEM 65 pieces Glove Skin Mercerized Cloth, regular 25c quality to be sold at half price, 12c per yard. Come and Sec These Splendid Values This Week. Tie (Geo. I. IMolemlbergi Go.
Original.! Who Is there who cannot look back to some trifling incident that changed the whole course of his life? If A had not happened to meet B on a street corner on a certain day twenty years
ago, B would not now be As son-in
The City in Brief. Butterick's Patterns, Morris & Co. Telephone the Rlcnmona Steam Laundry to get your laundry. t2 Take your laundry to the Richmond Steam, Laundry, 919 Main SU Phona 151. Carpets Cleaned. July31-tl
Have vou noticed the improved serv-
trt f"hinjro via the C C. & L?
law. If C had not seen a certain ad- Through sleeper leaves menmona ai vertisenient for a partner with a thou- 11:15- P. M daily arrives in Chicago , . at 7:00 A. M. Try It. apr6-tf
i r i t 1 1 1 1 i i u t-j na irnii lti mil. ii n lg ' -
nvjly a Few IRA ire IHays
IRfUn'Sm Swan's Goohoinig cDvool Wednesday Will be Particularly Interesting. (Quanck Breakfast at 2:3 slhairip Bread IBakSmg at 3 o'clock. And Souvehires. Better Come. ' IRncfovnomd 1 Light, Meat and Power Oompanny.
MAY FIRST
SI
EREST DAY
Savings Depositors Bring in your pass books for balancing and credit of interest. This has been a prosperous six months for many of you and the amount of money to be paid to our depositors in interest this time will be the greatest we have ever paid. 1 Our Savings Department is LARGER, STRONGER and BETTER than everDickinson Trust Company The Leading Trust Company in Eastern Indiana.
the multimillionaire owner of a gold
producing patent. If D bad been a fine penman, he would now doubtless have been a bookkeeper instead of managing partner of his firm. So it goes. We think we know what shapes our end, but we don't. In not one of the cases referred to would the person affected for a moment consider tho cause given the correct one. One day Jim Beverly, a countryman who had been long hunting for a job in the city, becoming discouraged, made up his mind to go home before his funds were completely exhausted. Jim had come to town with a trunk that had to be held together by a rope. He had got rid of the country clothes in it and thought he would like to take back one of those suit cases which he saw so much used. Going to a shop, he bought a secondhand one at a reduced price. Besides being secondhand, it had the letters "V. T." painted on the end. He was told that a redheaded man wealing glasses and a striped waistcoat had turned it in as part payment for a new one. That was a lie. The man bought a new one and left his old one to be put In the cellar.
Beverly got it cheap, took it to his
room, put his belongings in it ana wpnt to the train. A man took a seat
beside him who kept glancing out of
the corner of his eye at him. "How are y', Torbert?" he said presently in a low voice. "How did you know my name was Torbert?" asked Jim, suspecting a conflHpncR came.
"By several things initials on suit
rnse. red head
"Well. BUDnose I am Torbert What
then?" "Got the stuff in the case?" "Snnnose I have."
"I'll be on hatd at XI to take It off tour hands. Three days. Better not
hurry. Say Friday, 11 at night." "WhM-p?" -
"Why, at the Northfleld House, you
know, as arranged."
The man got up and left the car ar. the first stop. While the train was rolling through the city limits a couple of men came down the aisle, looking here and there at passengers. Beverly's suit case was on end before him. One of the men looked at the letters
on the suit case, then at him suspiciously. "I'll trouble you to open that case, said one of the men. Beverly demurred at first, then opened the case. There was nothing in it but the remnants of a few underclothes. The man looked disappointed. "You've got a red head," he said, "and the letters on your case are V. T., but you're not the man." "Of course he isn't the jnan," said his companion. "I know the man we want That's not him."
Now, it was on the tip of Jim's nnmie to tell the whole story so far as
'it has been told here, but It may be
Judged from his dialogue witn tne mau who had sat beside him that he was better adapted to receive than to give information, so he hold his peace. The men went on, and Jim got out "when the train reached his station. Jim took into his confidence a couple of detectives, and they all went to N. three days later. Jim entered the Northfleld House half an hour before 11 o'clock, but he was not Jim Beverly; he was a man with white hair and beard. He sat down in one "of the office chairs. It was not long before he. saw the man who had sat beside him on the train come in. He, too, sat down and, taking up a newspaper, read it till a man with a red head, glasses and a striped waistcoat entered, carrying a brand new suit case. The latter went to the desk and called for a room. A little later the other man arose, yawned and. going to the desk, looked,
at the register and went upstairs. Beverly went to the door, called in hia men. and. noting the number of the room 'assigned the newcomer, the three went upstairs. Five minutes later they knocked at hjs door and, receiving no response, kicked it open. They found him taking $150,000 out of his suit case. They ai rested him. and he turned out tn be Vincent Torbert, absconding cashier of the th Na
tional bank. Jim Beverly pocketed $20,000 reward by the transaction find, going back to the city, thought he would see if it would be easier to get on there with money in his,pocket than without. He got a position In the bank to which he had restored its lost funds, the, president promising to advance him. Jim proved capable and became cashier. He married the. daughter of one of the directors. She Inherited her father's stock, in the bank, and this eventually made Jim president. He is now manager ar.d part owner of a trust company end ia a noted financier. The question is. What would have become of Jim Beverly had he not gone into a certain , shop on a certain day and bought a certain secondhand suit case The chances are that he would have been , a tiller of the soil, up before day. out in storm and sunshine, selling his best products aod living on bU poorest He would have been Fsrmer Bverly, instead of James G. Biverlj, millionaire. ELINOR T. BOYD.
Free advice given on. the germ dis
eases of domestic animals. Write the National Medical Co., Sheldon, la.
Artificial gas, the 20th Century fueL iO-U
Vocabulary Supplied. The man who had visited San Francisco to view the ruins and the beginning of the restoration sat looking out of the car window with an expression of wonder and bewilderment on his
"Seen great things out there, haven't
your said a genial stranger, wno naa slipped into the next seat. "Now you're going home to tell about it." irs it's marvelous it's unbeliev
able, such courage such well, words fail me," said the man from the east;
ommorinp- in Ms xcitement.
"I knew they'd fall you," said the ron strnnsfir in a confidential tone,
"but I can obviate all your difficulty. t rloTi't wish to press it on you, but I
Imvp here a little book of 100 pages
called 'The Right Word In the Right
Place, handy for the pocket or the tine and mstinsr only 23 cents. Ah, I
hm'itrht so! Thank vou!" And the
genial stranger moved up the car toward an old lady who was wiping
her eyes with a damp ball of handter chief. Youth's Companion.
RHEUMATISM CURED IN 24 HOURS t t Riarkmore. of Haller & Black
TVftcmrr Pa. savs: "A short
UU1D, iihum.bi , I nrocured a bottle of Mys
lc Cure. It got me out of the house
. -i hnnrn. I took to my bed wltn
Iheumatism nine months ago and the
rfystic Cure is the only medicine tnat id me any good. I had five of the
nhirctaTis in th eitv. but I re-
oitrH vpt-v little reif from them.
now the Mystic Cure lo be what it Is
-presented and take pleasure in recHim? It to other poor sufferers.
iclA Hit A fj T villi fill & CO.. DlTlggtstS.
i ouiu J .JO ,
Artificial gas, the 20th Century fuel.
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PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
CdDAL
The Phone Will Bring It If You
Call Up...PHONE 1235
Prompt Attention Given phone Orders.
to Tele-
AT
WP ARE SELLING COAL
VERY LOW PRICES FOR YOUR NEXT WINTER'S SUPPLY.
0. D. Bullerdick
529 South 5tli St. Office, BuIIerdick's Cannery.
ST-
JOHN F. WELLENKAMP, Jeweler Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Carefully Repaired. SPECIAL O ER WORK. 519 Main Strt. AtRoulh's KlutlcSton. New Phone 561 Richmond, Ind.
t STOP AND SEE. 1
Our price as low as the lowest. Quality the best Z that money will buy. A. Harsh Coal & Supply Co. Bell 113. Home 794. X
Law.
The New Pure Food and Drug
We art nlpnsr tr announce that
Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs, colds and lune troubles is not affected
by the National Pure Food and Drug law as it contains no opiates or other harmful druss. and we recommend it
as a Rnff rpmwlv for children and"
adults. A. C. Ijiiken & Co.
Artificial gas, the 20th Century fuel.
10-tI
' (QnDdDQ
j j II This stove will Mt f if JJ U verkealtkerooa. if
, The kitchen work
this summer will be lessened, your fuel expense
reduced, and your mtcnen cooler, 11 you usc a NEW PERFECTiOW Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove It is the improved oil stove the nelv oil stove. Up-to-date in every particular. Lighted instantly. Gives the hottest flame produced by any stove. Made with one, two, and three burners. Every stove warranted. Write our nearest agency if not at your dealer's.
THE
mr household use. Made of brass throughout and beautifully nickeled. Perfectly constructed; absolutely safe ; unexcelled in light-giving power; an ornament to any room. Every lamp warranted. If not at your dealer's, write to our nearest agency. STANDARD OTJL COMPANY U CO MP HAT RIO
Wedtaiescflsiy "amdl" '
TtaiFsdlsiy A regular 10c roll of Crepe Paper in all colors, 5c; 6 for 25c Seethe Big Bargains on our 5, 10, 15, 25 and 50c Tables. LINOLEUM Linoleum for two days, at 50c per yard; $1.00 worth of stamps with each yard. . n Model Paint, best in Richmond..-. - ------ .--v-51 .00 Tile-Like for Furniture and Floors and Inside Wood Work. , Come and see colors and sample. Double Stamps on all Shirt Waists and Parasols or Umbrellas sold this week: Remember, Floor Oil Cloth at last years prices. ' Red Onion Sets, 10c qt.; 3 for 25c. White Onion Sets, 11 cents per quart.
HOOD'S MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE Trading Stamps with All Purchases. Free Delivery. New Phoae io79i Old Phone 13R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. 41 1-4 13 Main Street.
Richmond Trust Company ... Open Tuesday Evenings Until 8.
Adam H. Bart el. Howard Campbell. Edwin H. Cates. George L. Cates. , John B. Dougan, George H. Eggemeyer. john M. Eggemcyer. Jonas Gear. Henry Gennett John J. Harrington. Elgar G. Hihberd. Charles H. Iand.
The Board of Directors fully realize that they are responsible to depositors and to the general public for the safety of the institution. They give careful and personal attention to all its affairs and investmeets.
Three Per Cent. Interest Paid on Savings.
An Ounce
Of Satisfaction! i
Is Worth a Ton of Talk SATISFACTION goes with every Drink ol Richmond Export
For sale at all leading Cafes. Minck Brewing Co.
Taken at Random Irom Our Large Stock oi Good Things to Eat Canned Gooseberries Pineapple Chunks Duhkley's Crawford Peaches Swan Down Cake Flour, Underwood's Deviled Ham. Junket, U-AH-N'o Mints, Walnut Meats, Shelled Almonds, Peanut Butter, Holland Toast, Triscuit Svea Wafers, Canned Soups, Pickles of all kinds, Baked Ham, Baked Tenderloin, Cream that will whip.
Give Us Your Orders And Get the Best. Bee live (Grocery Co.
i I
1
fr !! & 1 ! !
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.I
