Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 132, 4 June 1907 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT.

PRINCIPAL IN FAMOUS TRIAL. Iwe sen the ggMmnn)TrD(girDhig5!nrDgg

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Broad Shoulders Neck-Hugging Collars Smartly Cut Lapels Graceful Drapings High Class but Not High Priced

btVidup & Thompson

Store open Wednesday and Saturday Evenings

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$15.00 and SIS. OO PER SUIT

803 Main Street Store open Wednesday and Saturday Evenings

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Berries

Are Ripe

All the Newest Things in Breakfast Foods MANABRAN BISCUITS, the Food Laxative, good for the young and old; try them. SWANSOOWN bake flour; Potatoes, cake flour. CHASE & SANBORN, and Ross W. Weir High Grade Coffee. THE FAMOUS BEE HIVE Coffee, the best 25c Coffee in. the city.

.DR. JOHNSON'S Eductor Biscuits,

Toasterettes and Wafers. Bee Hive Grocery Co.

GRANTED NEW DECORATION.

- Two Columbia students have been

making about -$20 a week each ever since the first signs of spring. Each! has organized a boys' club, recruiting!

members from among the children of the rich who have passed the nursemaid age and are quite a care to their always socially occupied mothers. The students take these youngsters out for two hours on threeiafternoons a week to Central Park fora romp or a game of tag, to a nearby vacant lot for a game of shinny, or-to the Bronx Park Zoo. The parents know that their boys are in good hands and gladly pay ; the club manager for his work. New York Sun.

"j A ; 1 . ' - 1 Jtrifc tori i

EDWARD PORTER CHOSEN

Elected to Membership on

Hagerstown School Board.

SUPERINTENDENCY VACANT

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

Baron Speck von Sternberg. Baron Speck von Sternberg, whose

picture here appears, is the German Ambassador to the United States. He has just been granted a new decoration by the King of Saxony.

Hagerstown, Ind., June 4 At the regular meeting of the town board last night, Edward T. Porter was elected

to place on the school board made

vacant by the expiration of Hugh Al

len's term. Mr. Porter is a grocery

man, well known over the county and is regarded as well qualified to discharge the duties of the office. The

old board, of which Hugh Allen, B. A

Carpenter and H. C. Keagy are mem

bers, will hold over until August. The

old board will be charged with em ploying a superintendent for the Hag erstown schools. ,

JOYS OF LIFE IN HAWAII.

The Real Difficulty. Boarder You can divide a chicken with mathematical accuracy, Mrs. Hashingtoa. Mrs. Hasbington Dividing it is easy enough. I wish I could multiply It. London Answers.

Jear.",e ' liw Kind You Have Always Bought

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A new consignment of Single and Bed Davenports just received. The very kind, you have been looking for. We carry the Simplicity, The Gate End, and The Automatic. The most practical makes. The frame work of these Davenports are solid Quartered Oak, Golden, Genuine tMahogany, Early English, or Weathered Oak, or Imitation Mahogany, which ever you prefer. The upholstering can be had in Genuine Leather, -Pantesole, Boston Leather or the plain weaves in Verona, Corduroy or 'Tapestry. Come In and sec our variety. Prices from $18, $22.50, $28, $38, upward to $60.

K(0Mey9

Furniture Bedding Pictures

925-927-929 Main Street.

Mosquitoes the Only F!aw Not Evsf a Sarvar.t Problem. Birds are everywhere in Hawaii. Their music fills the quivering air. Ono womlers why -we do n&t all live In this paradise, where life seems to stretch out before one In a long, languid dream of delight. Suddenly through your dreaming comes a- rude awakening. The Ha-

waiian mosquito, the one flaw in th

gem, the only tborn In the garden, has called to make your acquaintance and bid you welcome to his domain. The houses, with their broad verandas filled with palms and flowers and furnished with tables, chairs, hammocks and grass rugs, are a paradise to the weary traveler. It is here that the Honolulu people enjoy their glorious climate. The iawns, thick and velvety as carpet, were kept in perfect order by the j-ard boys, for experienced servants Chinese, Japanese and Portuguesecan always be had. In fact, the servant problem causes no worry to the housewife, who has but little anxiety in this land of plenty. Everybody seems to take life easily. The offlr-s close very early, and no one seems to know what care is. The sugar barons, their capital once rightly invested, draw their dividends, and the rest of life is required to spend them. We stop at the home of our friend, a bungalow that is the picture of comfort. One end of the veranda Is used as a sun parlor, sheltered by windows and screens, for what they call cold days 68 degrees above zero. Numerous rooms connect with this, the dining room being a veranda at the other end of the house and the kitchen a separate building, though connected by a roofed veranda. The guest chambers are cottages by themselves. The bath Is hewn ont of solid stone, with a shower above. Servants are provided for In quarters apart frem the house. The whole, in fact, greatly reminds one of an old southern plantation home with modern improvements. Just in front of the house, spreading its great limbs at least sixty feet in diameter, is a great monkey pod tree, and under its protecting branches the children, and older ones, too, enjoy the swing3 and hammocks In an atmosphere which lulls to sleep. As we sit here at midnight, dressed in the thinnest of summer clothing, with never a wrap, watching the moon rise out of the sea, we understand why the Hawaiian so loves his islands. World's Work,

MIXED IN EDDY CASE.

mm and ceto

BLACK

TEAS

GREEN

Iced or Hot. A Luxury Within Reach ot All ONE TEASPOONFUL MAKES TWO CUPS. ;iOOse or in Sealed Packages. All Grocers, LPublished by authority of the 1 ndia and Ceylon Commissioner.)

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Theodore Tilton. The announcement that Theodore Tilton, whose picture is here shown, ws dead in Paris, recalls to many the Tilton-Beecher trial In 1870, that filled columns in the newspapers of the country.

WOMAN'S BEST FRIEND

All the, Horrors of Change of Life for Five Years. Leucorrhea for Ten Years.

USED 20A-PH0RA

After Physicians Failed to Cure. That Was Five Years Ago. Still . Praising Zoa-Phcra. Woman's best friend is one that will give her the degree of buoyant health und strength that nature intended for

her. Zoa-Phora is that friend. Isot

a "patent cure all," but just a medicine, scientifically prepared for women on

ly. One that acts directly on the dis-

aased organs through the blood and

nervous system, replacing tne oia

worn-out tissues with new, and remov

ing congestion, inflammation and un

natural discharge.

Zoa-Phora is the well woman's

friend too, because it keeps her well.

Mrs. Edwin Lee, of Addison, Michi

gan, says: "Pen and ink can never tell

what Zoa-Phora has done for me. It

is Indeed a true and tried friend and has never failed me once." Whether you are sick, ailing, or well, keep a bottle of Zoa-Phora in the house all

he time. It will prove a friend in

ueed.

Mrs. Alice Brown, of Valley Junc

tion, la., wrote on May 27, 1902, "I

wish to tell you that Zoa-Phora has

been a wonderful blessing to me. I have been a sufferer for the last ten years from leucorhea, and for the last five years with change of life and all its horrors. I took treatment from

local physicians in Elkhart, Ind., but

received no benefit. Finally I was induced to begin taking Zoa-Phora,

and after taking four bottles my health is restored. I can now do my

You're Apt to Forget In this warm weather that you'll need more coal next winter to keep warm, to say nothing of coal for cooking right now. Know it's cheaper now than it will be? Know that there's no such scurry for it now as later on? Wise people get and keep ahead of the game. O. D. Bullertiick

S29 S. 5th St.

Phone 1235

J: A ., -

About our Richmond Export Beer is sufficient to convince any judge of beer that there is nothing better brewed. It takes but a trial to prove this.

There is something about the manner in which the Richmond

Export is brewed that makes

it particularly delicious. If you enjoy good beer you will enjoy the Richmond Export beer.

Kllinck Brewing Co.

fill

Ex-Senator W. E. Chandler. Former Senator W. E. Chandler, whose picture is here shown, is taking an active part in the Eddy case, in Concord. New Hampshire. When called a liar by one of Mrs. Eddy's counsel. Senator Chandler responded: "I have been called that by greater men.'

MRS. ALICE BROWN, Valley Junction, la.

own" work, and can never thank you enough for the benefits derived from your wonderful remedy." On April 22, 1907, nearly five years later, Mrs. Brown writes, "You may still refer any

woman to me. I will gladly recom

mend Zoa-Phora." Does this not prove that the benefit was permanent?

This letter is strong proof of the

merit of Zoa-Phora. The only way that you can become positively convinced that Zoa-Phora will do as much for you is to try the medicine yourself. Go to your druggist and

ask him for Zoa-Phora; no other expla

nation will be needed. You will receive the medicine already prepared, compounded in just the right proportions, and pvit up in a sealed, sterilized, one dollar bottle. In each package will be found a copy of "Dr. Pengelly's Advice to Women." a medical book giving interesting and instructive information about all diseases of women and the way to successfully treat them. You can. now treat yourself in the privacy of your own home and need not tell your troubles to any .one.

No fewer than six automobiles, patterned after the euphoniously named Long Island Scooter, are said to be building for various Arctic explorers, who will use them in attempts to reach tht pole during the summer months of l'.toS. Two of them are under construction for Dr. Frederick A. Cook, of Brooklyn, who once accompanied Peary, and a third is for Anthony Flala of Ziegler expedition rame, while the remainder are for other expeditions

The ever increasing patronage with which we are favored, PROVES EMPHATICALLY that our business methods are HONEST, CONVENIENT, and CONFIDENTIAL and that OUR RATES ARE LOWER than can be had elsewhere in the city. , ' We advance money, in sums to suit you, on your household goods, team, livestock or any other personal property, without removal, you having the use of both property and money. We extend you such time and such payments as may best suit your convenience. REMEMBER OUR GUARANTEE: On the smallest yearly loan we will make you, we will save you enough of the price charg-

fed by any similar concern in

the city, to buy one hundred pounds of good flour. Isn't this worth while? Loans made in all nearby interurban towns. Indiana Loan Co. Uome Phone 1341 40-41 Colonial Bldg. 3rd Floor. rt. Richmond, Ind.

OfiAHKMdls Pfflintted'SttccE (Ealvaensedl Stteell Easttemni Graeitte Carey's Magimcsna AmmatiMe EMfrlbeir Tarred- Beflfts (Gotttters Sponifinimg Coedmctlors, EttCo Jones Hardware Co.,

TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY SPEOAILS Linoleum ! Linoleum ! Linoleum I The best of Linoleums we are going to sell at 50c a yard and $1.00 worth of Stamps with each yard. Lace Curtains, the nicest lot to be found, from 90 cents a pair to $4.50. Come and make your selection. Grocery Specials Fine hams ----- 90c to $1.00 Eggs, per dozen - -15c Nice smooth potatoes, per bushel 90c Fine large strawberries, green onions, lettuce, pie-plant, asparagus, green peas, pineapples, oranges. HOOD'S MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE Trading Stamps with All Purcha ses. Free Delivery. New Phono 1070; Old Phone 13R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. 411-413 Main Street.

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ROLLS OF THE CRISP KIND i where are they? You want them not only for breakfast, lAit for lunch and dinner, with your soup. But where are they to be had? Answer easy: At Zwissler's bakery. Cakes, pies and pastry, too.

Zwlssler's Home Bakery and Restaurant, 908 Main St. Phon 366

The. Stability Of An Unsftitattnoim is founded upon its management. The Management of the

is in th2 hands of John B. Dougan, President of Second National BankJonas Gaar, Pogue, Miller &. Co. Edwin H. Cates, Cashier of Union National Bank. Elgar G. Hibberd, President. Charles H. Land, Treasurer of Gaar, Scott & Co. Henry Gennett, President of Starr Piano Co. John M. Eggemeyer, Grocer. George L. Cates, President of Union National Bankf Mnuiiprf rimr.hrll. PriHnt nf flaar Hrrttt A. C.O.

John' J. Harrington, Saddlery and Leather Jobber. f George H. Eggemeyer, Vice President of Second Nat.-Bankr Adam H. Bartel, President of Adam H. Bartel Co. All of whom are well known citizens and-experienced In financial affairs. . Savings' Accounts are Solicited. 3 per cent, interest paid.

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