Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 224, 16 September 1907 — Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT. THE RICII3IOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TEIiEGRAijCSAY, WfiM LLCLP o o o o o o 5. amd decide alboult Slaving your store lighted wittn tfltiose wonderful Welsbach Arc Lamnips. Did you notice your neighbor's store Saturday evening? We have only a few left to put out on the same terms. GAS FOR ARC LAMPS COSTS YOU ONLY $1.00 PER 1000 FEET E II II b

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Gas shuts off automatically. Only pay tor what you use. You get a beautiful, soft, mellow light goods. Retains their natural colors. A properly lighted store is the best advertisement you

Bell Phone 35 We Aid Good Resolutions Good resolutions relative to saving money are made by many persons but the actual carrying out of the plan proves difficult and often ends in failure. The change seems to slip away in spite of the best of intentions. As a helper, we invite you to call and get one of our home savings banks. These banks are neat, very strong and can be opened only at our office. We loan these banks to-anyone who opens an account of one dollar or more. Richmond Trust Co. Three per cent, paid on savings. THE BEE HOVE Phone 190-29S Phone 190-298 We are receiving some Fancy Cling Peaches Every day. They are nice for sweet pickling (won't last long). Just received a fine lot of Fancy White New Honey In the Comb. Fancy Plums For Canning, Friday; order early. Major Grey's Chutney Genuine Jersey Potatoes. The Smrlse Of 1.1ft. Infants and children are constantly needinsr fixative. It la important to know what to give them. Their stomach and bowel are not strong enough for salts, narrative waters pr cathartic piUs. powders or tslets. Give them a mild, pleasant, gentle, laxative tonic like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which sells at the small sum of SO cents or SI at drug stores. It is the one crest remedy for you to have ia the house to atve ckiI4rea when they seed it.

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GOOD VALUE In every shovelful of coal from our yard is assured in every ton that we clean and deliver. No rubbish, slate or dirt is mixed with this fuel, so that you get full value for every dollar spent with us. May we deliver a sample ton, any size, to your bin. O. D. Bullerdick 529 S. 5th St Phone 1235 UPHELD BY MEN who recognize a pure article when they taste it Richmond Export Beer holds high place. The object of this ad, is to call your attention to it if you're not familiar with Us many good qualities. Good way to test it is to order a case or two, which will be delivered at your door the very day you order. HI i nek Brewing Co. Jamestown Exposition Xow Complete. Ideal weather conditions in September and October. Pullman sleeper, Richmond to Norfolk without change via Columbus and THE NORFOLK & WESTERN RAILWAY. Leave Richmond (Pennsylvania Lines) 4:55 p. m., daily; arrive at Norfolk next day at 7:30 p. m. For tickets apply any agent of Pennsylvania Lines.

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TWENTY-FIVE LIVES GO OUT IN WRECK Operator Mixes Orders and Trains Crash While Under High Speed.

A VAIN HUNT FOR DOCTORS. ACCIDENT IN NEW HAMPSHIRE WHERE PHYSICIANS ARE FEW, AND THE INJURED WERE LONG UNATTENDED. White River Junction. Vt., Sept.16. Twenty-five lives were sacrificed to a telegraph operator's blunder and thirty other persons were badly injured in a train wreck which occurred just before daylight Sunday morning four miles west of Canaan Station in New Hampshire on the Concord divis ion of the Boston and Maine rail road. An operator at Canaan station by misconstruing orders sent a freight train directly In the path of a crowd ed excursion train. The two trains met in a head-on collision at high speed. The resulting crash made a pile of splinters out of a light day coach which wa3 crowded with women and children who were returning from a tair at Sherbrooke, Province of Quebec, 160 miles over the Canadian border. Engine Crews Jump. The excursion train was rounding a curve four miles west of Canaan Station when the engineer saw the headlight of the freight train. The passenger train was running down grade and had. attained a speed of nearly fifty miles an hour. There was no chance of averting a collision, as the curve at that point is sharp and the trains were within a few feet of each other when fhe engineers saw the danger. Brakes were thrown on and the engine crews jumped to safety. The excursionists did not have a second's warning. The jar caused by the setting of the brakes was followed immediately by a grinding crash and the coaches doubled up a3 If they had been made of cardboard. The baggage car, directly behind the engine, telescoped the coach and reduced it to kindling wood. Men, women and children were caught in the wreckage. Their cries added to the horror of the scene. Those not killed outright begged those who were " attempting to lift the timbers off their mangled bodies to put them out of their suffering. It was hours before tome of the injured were taken from under the wreck. They were taken on a hospital train at noon and until that time were practically without medical attention, as pnysicians are few and far between in that portion of the state. Take Bodies From Wreck. Twenty-four bodies Lave been taken from the wreck. Fifteen of these i

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9 ac are identified. Several persons are still missing. Of the thirty injured, several were so bartiv hrt that it la not thought possible they will recover. The identified dead: Briggs, Mrs. E. T., West Canaan, N. H. Blake, Mrs. F. C. South Corinth, Vt, Barrett, Mrs. John, Manchester, N. H. Barrett, Miss, daughter of Mrs. John Barrett. Congrot, J. L., Somerville, Mass. Duncan, J. G. Bethel. Vt. Gagnon, Mrs. Philip, Sherbrooke, Quebec. Giron, Miss Alvina, Nashua, N. H. Gifford, infant child of Ervin GIfford Concord, N. H. Largy, Mrs. Margaret, Manchester, N. H. Phelps, Fred M., Ochiltree, Tex. Shaughnessey, Timothy, Castle Bar, Quebec. Shaughnessey, Mrs. Timothy. St. Pierre, Miss Annie, Isle Verto, Quebec. Unidentified boy, dead in hospital at Hanover, Vt. Warren, Mrs. E., Haverhill, Mass. Webster, Mrs., Massachusetts. Injured in ths Crash. The seriously injured are: Batchelder, G. A., West Somerville, Mass.; legs broken. Gagnon, Philip, Sherbrooke, Quebec, hurt internally. . - Myers, Mrs., hurt internally. St. Pierre, Charles, Isle Verte, Que bec; both legs crushed. ; Ryan, S. H., . rear brakeman; arm shattered. Shurtleff, Elijah, West Lebanon, N. H.; engineer, of freight train; injured internally by jumping. Aid to the Injured. Both locomotives were reduced to scrap iron. Daylight revealed mangled bodies scattered about and as rapidly as possible bleeding forms were taken from the pile of wreckage and laid in the damp grass beside the tracks. Searching parties were dispatched to find physicians, but as the country is thinly settled their quest was in vain. Some of the, train crew started to the nearest station to telegraph for a hospital train and until it arrived the wounded were forced to submit to the attention of unskilled hands in having their wounds bandaged. Among the West Canaan farmers who aided in taking the dead and injured from the wreck was Benjamin Briggs, who was one of the first at the scene and two hours later he drew out the body of a woman. On turning up the face Mr. Briggs looked into the features of his mother and almost collapsed from grief. When you want a quick cure without any loss of time, and one that Is followed by no bad results, use Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy It never fails and is pleasant to take. It is equally valuable for children. It is famous for its cures over a large part oj the civilised world.

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PRETTY WEDDING TOOK PLACE NEAR CENTERVILLE

Ernest C. Tremps and Miss Lois Kramer, Principals in Nuptial Event. Centerville, Ind., Sept. 16 The marriage of Miss Lois Kramer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kramer, and Ernest C. Tremps took place Thursday evening at the home of the bride's parents, south-west of Centerville, in the presence of about fifty friends and relatives. The ceremony was performed in front of a mass of palms and ferns by the Rev. Aaron Napier, pastor of the Centerville Friends church. Miss Cora Tremps played the Lohengrin wedding march as the bridal party entered. The bride wore a gown of lansdowne and carried t a boquet of white carnations. The house was tastefully decorated, ferns, palms, goldenrod and carnations being used. Supper was served by Marcia Spahr, Charline Burgess, Mamie Fender and Clessie Kendall, and the bride's table was decorated with carnations and star vine. The guests from a distance were, William Kramer and family, Oxford, Ohio; Victor Borradaile, Liberty, Ind; Joseph Spahr and family, Straughns, Ind.; Clessie Kendall and wife, Dublin, Ind.; Miss Edith Ratliff, Montpelier, Ind., and Miss Minnie Wolfe, Oxford, O. A reception was given on Friday to the bridal party at the home of Mr and Mrs. Andrew Tremps which was largely attended. Mr. and Mrs. Tremps left on Friday evening for Montpelier to epend a week with relatives. Leaving Richmond 11:15 p. no. via C, C. & L. lands you in Chicago at 7:00 a. m. Through sleepers and coaches. Tou will like it. apr6-tf Xne Stout Woman I'm not going to let my son run the elevator any more. Custodian of Building Why not? Stout Woman I heard a man Fay yesterday that that elevator weighed 2,500 pounds, and he's too young a boy to le lifting that all day. SyraPorch Swing If you can guess the number of nails in the jar In our window. Swing given free to the first nearest correct guesser. One guess with each 25c cash purchase, 4 Guessing closes Saturday, Sept. 2Sth. Pilgrim Bros. Phone 219 5 Hi and Main, Richmond, Ind.

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....The undersigned will sell at Public Auction at the late residence of Matthew F. Barker, about ONE (1) MILE EAST OF CHESTER, Wayne County, Indiana, on Thursday, Sept. 19,1907 At 1 O'clock P. M. the following personal property, to-wit: 3 head of Horses; 17 head of Hogs; Grain; Farming Implements and Vehicles consisting of. Binder, Mower, Corn Planter, Breaking Plow, Hay Rake, . Corn Plow, Harrow, Road Wagon, Farm Wagon and Bed. Gravel Bed, Steel Roller, Road Cart and other miscellaneous articles.

YES, WE WELL SOON BE SOLD OHJf And the S. & H. people want to show us how they appreciate what we have done for them and so give us trading stamps for one day only. Now just think. Goods at cost price and S. & H. trading stamps, commencing Tuesday night at 6 o'clock and running till Wednesday night at nine Store open every night till nine o'clock also. 1 lb. Hood's Fancy Blend Coffee and 23 stamps for 25c 1 lb. Hood's Baking Powder and 60 Stamps 45o 1 lb. Hood's Blend of Tea and 60 Stamps 60o Come! Come and fill your stamp book. Linoleums goes at 40c yard' Floor Oil Cloth at - 22o Where, Oh, Yes! lood's Kfiodd IDtept Sforc

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MAIN STREET. TEHNESSE LUMP COAL! OF BEST QUALITY AT MATHER BROS. Phones 40 and G4

DICKINSON TRUST CO., Administrator.