Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 187, 30 July 1907 — Page 8
x-AUE EIGHT.1
THE KICII3IOND IAiLAJDIUjx oU-xitiiiAJI, TUESUAl", .JUL.Y :, 1!M)7.
H PROJECT GOIIE OVER ATMEETIKG Enthusiasm Is Shown in Matter of New Location for The Chautauqua.
MILLIONAIRE ARMENIAN MURDERED.
MAY GET MRS. MAYBRICK.
AN EFFORT IS .PROBABLE TO STILL FURTHER STRENGTHEN THE PROGRAM PREPARED FOR THIS YEAR.
The chautauqua executive committee met Monday night in the Commercial Club rooms, and the matter of securing the Hawkins Springs site for the lf8 chautauqua was thoroughly and enthusiastically gone over. It was the concensus of opinion that the board should
Immediately proceed to secure the addition, that the buildings and everything could be erected in time for the '1908 event. It is understood that the committee will go about securing privileges from the street car company while remaining options will probably be secured if the owners of the land do not hold up the chautauqua committee on the price. If such an attempt is made, the committee will abandon the site, for the time being at least.
The plans, has have been published from time to time, were rehashed at the meeting Monday night, but nothing new was brought before the meeting. The committee has in mind making the place an ideal summer resort and these
plans will be carried out if the land is secured. May Get Mrs. Maybrick.
This year's chautauqua program was pne over and Secretary James Shaw, who was in attendance, stated that he
thought this year's sessions would be
IS fK -
"' Swjj)
Prn Lyen's
The whole country has been horrified by the cold blooded murder of Hovannee Tawshanjian, millionaire Armenian merchant, because he refused to submit to the demands of a black-mailing bank of his countrymen. In the picture are Mr. Tavshanjian, his widow, and their beautiful five year old daughter, Arpinee.
roan
'ALU.
PERFECT
Tooth IPou&ir
Cleanses and beautifies the teeth and purines the breath. Used by people of refinement for over a quarter of a century. Convenient for tourists. PREPARED B
OTHER VICTIMS APPEAR
Former Ohio Mayor's Crimes Are Piling Up.
Kenton, O., July GO. It is now revealed that former Mayor Black also worked the false mortgage scheme on Misses Anna and Elizabeth Hawley of Columbus for $200. Black is a cocaine
CLERK DISAPPEARS;
IS
MONEY
MISSING
James E. DeLain Gets Away With $149 Belonging to C. K. Alexander.
ALSO TOOK SOME CIGARS. HAD BEEN EMPLOYED AS A CLERK ONLY A SHORT TIME BEFOREPOLICE ARE MAKING EFFORT TO CAPTURE.
fiend. Where mystery.
the money went is a
Home Treatment for Women
The Prescription of a Great Physician
VALUE PROVEN
During Twenty Years of Actual Prac
tice.
WEATHER CONDITIONS
AGAINST THE FARMERS
rrrJeT?orirn''hL"J.fthoseiet Several Bad Days Interfere
lged
He recommended Mrs. Florence JIaybrIck as lecturer for the second chautauqua Sunday, and the program committee will make an endeavor to secure her services on that date. Mrs. Maybrick was convicted on the charge of murdering her husband in England and served eighteen years in prison. She was pardoned eventually, it being proven that she was innocent. She
is a woman of interesting personality and speech and she would be a valuable acquisition to the chautauqua program.
With Threshing.
LAST TWO ARE BETTER.
HAVE YOU PILES? Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid Is an internal Remedy that entirely removes the cause of Piles, and cures to stay cured any case, no matter how long standing. If you have Piles, and Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid will not cure you, you get your money back.
A tnousana dollar uuarantee goes with every bottle of Hem-Roid sold. $1.00. Leo H. Fihe, Richmond, Ind., or The Dr. Leonhardt Co., Niagara Falls, N. Y.
MADINE GETS INTO FIGHT. Erstwhile Hartje Coachman Fined for Assaulting a Clubman. Pittsburg. July 30 Thomas Madine, erstwhile Hartje coachman, was sen
tenced this morning to ten days in jail or $10 fine for a fight last night with James O'Neill, a clubman, over two "ladies" with whom they were dining.
The continued bad weather condi
tions of last week, placed the farmers
in a "hole" with their harvest work
The past two days have been good for
harvest and farmers residing in the
Immediate vicinity of Richmond have
taKen advantage or tne changed conditions and labored to get much of
their back work done. The quietude
of the country districts was broken
Sunday by the click click of the mow
ers while the buzz of the binder chimed in the harvest song. Oats, which have been standing longer than any other grain, is now being harvested. The timothy hay is In critical condition and the farmers are now laboring to get it cut and under cover. But little threshing has been done up to date in the immediate vicinity of Richmond. Wheat is not yet dry enough to market and for this reason the farmers who generally haul their grain immediately upon threshing it, are making no effort to secure the machine on their farms, till the grain has thoroughly dried. With the continued cool drying air threshing will begin in
earnest in the course of the next few
daj-s.
GATES THROUGH WITH IT
Says No More of Wall Street
For Him.
New York. July 30. John Tv. Gates
and wife, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles G
Gates, sailed for Europe today. "I'm going to spend some of the coin I took
from the book-makers this summer.
he said. "I'm through with Wall
Street for good."
TWENTY-ONE ARE DEAD
Christie Street Tenement Fire
Cost Many Lives.
New York,
are now dead
tenement fire.
July ; in the
10 Twenty one Christie street
"SILENT AUCTION." The Y. M. C. A. will sell to the highest bidder the two brick buildings now situated on the lot recently bought of Albert W. Reed on the South West
corner of North A and Eighth streets. Said buildings to be torn down and all material and debris removed within thirty (30) days after said buildings have been vacated. Sealed bids, only, will be received up to August 10th, the Secretary reserving the right to reject any and all bids.
HOWARD A. DILL, S0-2t Secretary Building Com.
A BOILER TUBE BURSTS
One
I m mm a
Miiea ana iwo Hurt on
The Wilmington.
Washington, July 30. A dispatch to the navy department today says a boiler tube burst yesterday on the
United States gunboat Wilmington at Nanking China. Fireman Hind was
killed and two others burned.
COLLAPSE OF ROOF FATAL
DOREN WAS FINED FOR DRUNK.
Chas. Doren, a resident of Center-
vllle, was arrested by Officer Ying-
lins Monday night on the charce of
drunk. He was In company with Roy TWO Killed and SlX Bllried
Cale when arrested. He was assessed
$1 and costs which he. paid.
in
The Debris.
fit
hi1 P
IFOIR ICE
it'
8 '.is'.
New York, July 30 Two were killed
and six buried beneath the debris in the collapse of a roof of a five-story building at Eighth avenue. Forty men who were working on the construction escaped by being out to lunch.
INDIANA FEARS SMALLPOX-
TEA
ft
USE
PERRI - WALLA TEA To be had only at oar store. GINGER ALE GRAPE JUICE LIME JUICE BEE HIVE
GROCERY CO.
1
,. IS 1 I
; , ;ks at "a! H :t;
1 1 State Health Secretary Urges Precau
tions Against Epidemic.
Indianapolis, July 30 Indications point to smallpox this fall and winter, according to Dr. J. N. Hurty, sec
retary of the state board of health. The June figures showed many more cases of smallpox than during June, 1906, and the preliminary reports for
July now coming in at the office indicate many smallpox cases this month. N- .
MAY OPPOSE CHAS. LANDIS.
H. M. Caylor Considers Entering Con-
gressional Lists. H. M. Caylor, a well-known republi
can politician or Mammon countv, is
likely to be a candidate for the congressional nomination against Charles B. Landis in the Ninth District.
Should Mr. Caylor decide to make
the race he will be the "veteran sold
iers' candidate" in the district. Mr. Caylor was department commander of the Indiana G. A. R. In the early nineties and has a wide acquaintance among the veteran soldiers.
Probably one of th9 most successful
medical specialists In the treatment of
women's diseases was Dr. Pengelly
He formulated Zoa-Phora by using i
number of medicinal ingredients
which experience had shown him to be the best, and combined them in just the right proportions to produce the
desired effect on woman's delicate or
ganism. During more than twenty
years of actual medical practice, he
Invariably prescribed Zoa-Phora for
th9 alleviation of pain and for the per
manent restoration of health to sick
and ailing women.
Success to a marked degree attend
ed his treatment of all those diseases
and derangements of the genital or gans which are peculiar to women on
ly. It is not necessary to enumerate here the various forms of weakness
and disease all women know what
they are which Dr. Pengelly treated
so successfully by the. use of Zoa Phora.
Further proof of these statements, if
desired, and more detailed information
as to the results obtained from the use of Zoa-Phora, can be obtained by writing the Zoa-Phora Company, Kalama
zoo, Mich. They will gladly answer all inquiries and will send you copies
of letters from many women who vol
unteer words of praise for the doctor's treatment. Within a short time the
demand for Zoa-Phora brought about by the recommendation of women who
had been blessed by its use, became so great that the doctor could not per
sonally attend each patient, and now Zoa-Phora is being sold by reliable
druggists nearly everywhere. It comes in sealed, sterilized, dollar bottles, already prepared, and compounded in
just the right proportions. There can be no mistake if you ask for Zoa-
Phora. 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 In the privacy of your own home. You need not tell your troubles to any one.
ON LONG AUTOMOBILE TRIP
FINED THE USUAL FOR DRUNK
Joe Carroll, arraigned for drunk was fined $1 and costs in police
court.
A SCIENTIFIC BREAKFAST Easily Prepared.
DANCE, CAMBRIDGE CITY. There will be a public dance given
Wednesday evening, July 31, at Red Men's Hall. Music by Callaway &
Morrison. 2S-3t
HOME.
30 Rev.
g.s .ays irg"8; ya s a a org a s.b g-rg-g w-
INTEREST OF MEMORIAL
Williamsburg, Ind., July
M. A. Harlan, of Warren, Ind., occupied the pulpit at the M. E. rhurch
Sunday in the Interests of the memorial Home for the Aged of the M. E. church. Rev. Harlan was formerly pastor of the charge here and has a host of friends at this place.
Rightly selected food will alone
cure many diseases. Try a scientific and healthy break
fast: Fruit of some kind, preferably
cooked; a dish of Grape-Nuts with
cream; two soft-boiled eggs; (Put two
eggs in a tin pint cup of boiling water.
cover and set off for nine minutes
Whites will then be the consistency of cream and most easily digested; s-lice
of hard crisp toast, cup of Postum
Food Coffee.
On that breakfast jou can work
like a horse and be perfectly nourish
ed until noon. Your nervous troubles, heart palpitation, stomach and bowel
troubles, kidney complaints and var
ious other disorders will gradually dis
appear and firm solid health will set
in.
Why? You have probably been liv
ing on poorly selected food, that is,
food that does not contain the requir
ed elements the body needs. Thai sort of food, and coffee, is the dfrect
or indirect cause or more than nan
the Ills the human body acquires.
Grape-Nut3 is a perfectly cooked
food and both that and the Postum Food Coffee contains fine microscopic particles of phosphate of potash obtained in a natural way from the grains of the field and by scientific food experts incorporated into food and drink. That element joins with the albumen in food to make gray matter, which is the filling of the brain cells and the nerve centres throughout the human body. A man or woman thus fed is scientifically fed and rapidly grows in vigor and vitality, and becomes capable of conducting successfully the affairs of life. To produce a perfect body and a money-making brain, the body must have the right kind of food and the expert food-specialist knows how to make it. That is Grape-Nuts and Postum Food Coffee, produced at the pure food factories of the Postum Co., at Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville, In pkgs. "There's a
Party Will no From Richmond to Duluth, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Goelitz of Cincinnati and Mr. and Mrs. Will Kelley
have left for Duluth. They will make
the trip in an automobile and will be
gone about four weeks.
James E. DeLain, who for three days
up to Monday afternoon was a cigar
clerk in the store of C. K. Alexander, 817 North E street, has left with $14: and three boxes of cigars belonging to his employer. DeLain had been hired by Alexander to fill in as clerk while
one of his regular men was taking a vacation. He began his duties last Friday to get a line on the business, and Monday, the first day he was left in full charge of the store, he betrayed his trust and carried away with him a large share of his employer's money. DeLain, about three o'clock Monday afternoon, called a friends into the store and asked him to watch the store a moment while he went to the Pennsylvania station. He left the store carrying with him a small package, supposed to have contained cigars. The man whom he had asked to watch the store, waited for Mr. DeLaln's return for almost two hours, and until Alexander came to the store. Alexander was then told that DeLain had left a
few hours previous on the pretext of going to the station. Alexander thought something wrong, and went to the safe and found the money draw
er rifled. He became alarmed and notified the police of the robbery. It was afterward learned that DeLain had goine to his boarding place and changed coats and from that point went" to the Pennsylvania station. He did not purchase a ticket, and It Is supposed
that he climbed aboard the Cincinnati train leaving Richmond at liuCt.
DeLain enlisted in the army at the
local recruiting station some time ago
and was sent to the barracks st Colum
bus, O., where he was refused, as his
weight was not sufficient. He came
back to Richmond and secured the po
sition in the Alexander cigar store
DeLain received several letters at the
local army headquarters, one of which
was addressed to a man by another
name, apparently an alias which De
Lam had assumed. A letter now
awaits him at the local army headquar
ters bearing the postmark "Cincinnati." and it Is supposed that he has a
sweetheart in that city and went there Monday afternoon. As the robbery was not discovered until two hours aft
er it had occurred. DeLain had ample time to make his get-a-way and the po-
ice are still searching for him with
scarcely a clew as to his whereabouts.
WM1W
From 6 o'clock Tuesday evening until 6 o'clock Wednesday evening, and goods cheaper than any store in Richmond and JUST AS GOOD. One Quart Standard or Mason Jars, per dozen 45c One Quart Lightning or Economy Jars, per dozen $1.00 3 Dozen Tin Cans, the Star, for $1.00 1 Gallon Milk Pans, round bottom, each 5c 17 lbs. Granulated, 18 lbs. A, or 19 lbs. Ex. C Sugar, $1.00 4 Cans Best Richmond corn for 25c Best Square Crackers or Ginger Snaps, per lb 5c Best Vanilla or Lemon Wafers, per pound only 10c IN OUR DRY GOODS DEPARTMENT we have a new line and more complete than ever. . C our 10-cent line of Misses' and Ladies' Hose. Pictorial Review Patterns. Open Tuesday night for Double Stamps.
HOOD'S MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE
Trading Stamps with All Purchas. 1079; Old Phon 13R, Store Open
Saturday Evenings. 11-413
Free Delivery. New Phon Tuesday, Friday and
Street.
Main
I1
Paid Up Capital and Surplus make up the financial strength. Careful, Conservative Management make up the moral strength. Dickinson Trust Co. has the FINANCIAL and MORAL STRENGTH. LET US HANDLE YOUR BUSINESS.
GIRLS WILL HAVE A PICNIC. Milton, Ind., July 30 The annual
picnic of former Milton high school
girls will be held at Jackson park on Thursday, August 1. There will be visitors from Cambridge City, Milton, Dublin, Richmond, Chicago and In
dianapolis.
mi
E
RATLIFF SUPERINTENDENT
Chosen to Fill Place at the
State Fair,
"VTalter S. Ratliff, of this city will
be one of the two superintendents of
the fruit pavilion at the state fair this
year, having charge or the fruits, flow
ers, plants, bees, honey and culinary
articles, such as cakes, bread and pies.
Owing to Mr. Ratliffs close study of
fruits he will make an admirable su perintendent of such exhibits.
Itching, torturing skin eruptions, dis
figure, annoy, drive one wild. Doan's Ointment brings quick relief and lasting cures. Fifty cents at any drug store.
Do Yous Know Dood & Struthers sell 30,000 feet of their Pure Copper Cable every day to the farmers. Twenty j-ears experience, 500,000 customers and not one case of Lightning. We guarantee every job and refund the money if it does not do the work. PILGRIM BROS. PHONE 210 Cor. 5th and Main, Richmond. Ind. Dealers for Wayne Co.
TO
get along well In the world; to be
prosperous; to have money ahead; to become one of these fortunate individuals, it is only necessary for you to cut down your expenditures until they are less than your income, and bank the surplus. Try It. It Isn't difficult after you have once started. Bring regularly to the Richmond Trust Co. as large a portion of your earnings as you can spare, and it will not be long before you obtain that comfortable feeling of financial independence. Three per cent, interest is paid here. -
Is It money you want? We have plenty-of it and will loan you whatever amount you may need for any length of time, on your household goods, team, livestock or any other personal property, without removal.
WE HAVE TO OFFER YOU LONG TIME, EASY PAY
MENTS, UNEQUALED TERMS,
ENTIRELY SATISFACTORY
METHODS, CONFIDENTIAL
DEALINGS AND A LOWER
RATE THAN CAN BE HAD OF
ANY SIMILAR CONCERN IN
THE CITY. Investigate our methods and rates;
then you can Intelligently decide where
your best interests may be served. Quick service and courteous treatment guaranteed. LOAN CO. Home Phone 1341 40-41 Colonial BIdg. 3rd Floor. Richmond. Ind.
Are aptto go up In smoke, but you want to be careful to keep this ono resolution. Patronize the cafe that has t
RICHMOND EXPORT
on draught. It will mean year of
complete satisfaction to you.
Minck Brewing Co.
WE
SOLICIT YOUR TRADE.
on all kinds of coal, for heating and cooking in the house, for the furnace in shop or store, for steampurposes, in factory or mill, fully confident of the quality of our fuel, its cleanliness and our faculties for prompt delivery. We will appreciate a trial order. O. D. Bullerdick 529 S. SlhSL Phone 1235
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
Men's, Boys and Children's
Malts, Caps, Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery, Tics, Collars
and such that are suited for the
Season's Wear
THE (GLOIBIE
WTOUP & THOMPSON
803 Main St., Richnond, Ind.
ReasoruT : 1
