Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 131, 25 June 1908 — Page 2

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND JSUN-TELEGRA3I, THURSDAY, JUNE 25. 1903., MISS IDA BEESON IS P(EnnkeiP9s IPdDfltery SaiHe MAKING GREAT RACE Contest Has Been Delayed Two Days Owing to Unavoid- " able Circumstances Interest in the Contest Is Increasing Daily.

A.GE TWO.

We have just received one hundred sets of 100 piece dinner ware direct from the pottery. We purchased the lot at away less than the potteries prices. Their loss on these goods will be your gain, so come here Friday and Saturday and get your choice of these remarkable dinner set bargains. Here are the prices. Remember less than the pottery sells them to the wholesaler

' . ' f IS ... $f!C'

In the Palladium's Niagara Falls and Canadian trip contest, Miss Ida Beeson of Greensfork is making a great race for the leadership. Yesterday Bhe increased her lead to about 42,000 ballots, but the other contestants are steadily handing in ballots and Miss Beeson has no cinch on first place. Her nearest competitors are Miss Jennie Wine, Miss Goldie Myers and Miss Iucie Benton. Owing to unavoidable circumstances, the contest will be continued until five o'clock on the evening of July 2 instead of closing at the same time two days previous. After five o'clock on the evening of July 2, votes will be received in the writing room of the Westcott hotel. Interest in the content is increasing. Tb rt.la: ballots will apDear in each issue, entitling the lady voted for to one vote. Remember you can enter the contest any time you wish to, so "get busy r.nd keep busy." The conditions of the contest are as fol

lows:

CONDITIONS.

One year's subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 2,500 votes On3 six months' eubccr r tion, paid In advance entitles the lady voted for to 1000 vote One fifteen weeks' subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 500 votes One month's subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 100 votes

Ida Beeson, Greensfork R. R. 22 141,312 Jennie Wine, 1117 N. G street 119,071 Goldie Myers, Centerville R. 11 115,062 Lucie Benton, Fountain City 111,450 Goldie Dadisman, 402 S. 12th street 91,534 Maude Pettibone, 409 N. 16th street 45,687 Elsie Wyatt, 1114 N. G street 28,608 Rosa Kuehn, 17 South 8th street 28,356 Hattie Lashley, Centerville 23,606 Marie Kodskin, Cambridge City 18,110 Lena Cornthwaite, Cambridge City 10,701 Ethel Wysong, Lynn, Ind 8,619 Ruby Hodgin, 25 South 7th street 6,101 Estella Coates, 201 N. 8th street 5,773 Adda Study, Williamsburg, Ind 4,119

This Ballot Not Good After 5 p. m. June 30 Palladium and Sun-Telegram Niagara Falls and Canada Voting Contest.

ONE VOTE COUPON

NAME

ADDRESS

Carrier Boys are not permitted to receive Ballots from patrons; put the name of the lady of your choice on this Coupon and bring or send to this office before the expiration of the above date or it will not be considered a legal vote.

Ballots Deposited Today Will Appear In Tomorrow's Count.

DAIRIES ARE CONDEMNED BY AN INSPECTOR (Continued From Page One.j

the Pardieck Brothers, Harry Smith and J. L. Kugh. The latter dairyman worked all night to improve the conditions of his dairy and when it was inspected this morning it was rated poor instead of bad. He will be given until Saturday to make further improvements. If he does not do so by that time his dairy will be condemned. Smith will retire from business while

Pardieck Brothers were given a week to improve conditions. Mr. Owens is the state's authority on milk and he is regarded as a perfectly fair-minded official. He grades dairies as follows bad. poor, fair, good and excellent. As can be seen by his report the majority of dairies he inspected yesterday were graded either fair or good. Thoss dairies which he condemned were in such a;i unsanitary condition that they endangered the health of their patrons. Sent Here by State. "I wish the newspapers would vxplain that I have been sent her by the state not as a result of any local movement for milk inspection, but I intend to see that, "pure milk is sold here. In providing for milk inspection the state does not work with the object of weeding out the - smaller dairies and permitting two or three of the larger ones to have an th busi

ness. The object of milk inspection

is to make all dairymen keep their

dairies in perfectly sanitary condition. This can be done without any lavish

outlay of money and the health of the

community demands that such condt tions be maintained," stated Mr. Owens.

anted Thirty men, Twenty-first

and Main street. 7 o'clock. Friday,

June 20. Central Union Telephone

Company.

SHERIFF'S GRAFT TO BE ELIMINATED

Blf NEW STATE LAW

Continued From Page One.)

tives to attend the feting proposed to form such a state organization. It

is understood that tVU meeting is to be held some time in September, and that the Commercial bodies of the state will take action looking toneeded legislation and also act as a liit in other matters of common interest.

POTTERY

For a 100 piece dinner set, pure white, former prices were $8.00 and $9.00. Such bargains are seldom given.

POTTERY SALE PRICE

For a 100 piece decorated dinner set, former price $10, $11 and $12. This is a real bargain purchased direct from the pottery.

We also have a number of fine open stock patterns at very low prices, either in white or

POTTERY

PRICE

For a 100 piece decorated dinner set, worth $12.00, $14.00 and $15.00. These sets are real bargains.

POTTERY SALE PRICE

For one lot of $16, $17 and $18 decorated dinner sets, direct from the pottery, at less than pottery sale prices.

One hundred piece Haviland dinner ware, the finest on the market, in both white and decorated, the latest patterns, for only

aild

GEo Wo BEUKER, 604-608 Maine tt

WHO WILL WIN?

NATIONAL LEAGUE.

Won

Chicago 33

Pittsburg 35 New York 32

Cincinnati 31

Philadelphia 25 Boston 25 St. Louis 24

Lost 20 24 25 26

Pet. .623 .593 .561 .544 .481 .424 .407

AMERICAN LEAGUE.

Won Lost Pet.

St. Louis 35 Chicago 35 Cleveland 33 Detroit 32 Philadelphia 26 New York 24 Boston 26 Washington 21

24 24 25 26 30 32 85 86

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won Lost Indianapolis 43 24 Louisville 41 24 Toledo 39 25 Columbus 34 31 Minneapolis 2S 31 Milwaukee 28 37 Kansas City 27 39 St. Paul 17 46

.593 .593 .569 .552 .464 .429 .426 .368

Pet. .642 .631 .609 .523 .475 .431 .409

CENTRAL LEAGUE. Won Lost Dayton 30 23

Evansville 32 Grand Rapids 30 Terre Haute 20 Zanesville 2S South Bend 27 Ft. Wayne 25 Wheeling 14

Jo 24 26 26 27 27 37

70

Pet. .566 .561 .556 .527 .519 .500 .481 7

RAILROADERS ARE

MAKING

MERRY

Annual Picnic of Richmond Division Employes Being Held at Eaton, 0. SPECIAL TRAINS ARE RUN.

ESTIMATED THAT BETWEEN FIVE AND SIX THOUSAND RAILROADERS ARE IN THE PREBLE COUNTY CAPITAL TODAY.

' .

With the accession of Professors Capps and Abbott, the classical department of Princeton University will enroll twenty-four professors, preceptors and instructors, being probably the largest and strongest classical faculty in America.

Dressed turtle and fish. Fish, market. Phone 1535.

Mutbs

RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. Pittsburg 5, Cincinnati 3. Chicago 2. St. Louis 1. Philadelphia 3, Brooklyn 1.

First Game New York 4, Boston O. Second Game

New York 7, Boston 1. . American League. St. Louis 7. Detroit 1. Cleveland O, Chicago O. WashingtonS. Boston 2. New York , Philadelphia 6; darkness. American Association. First GameToledo 6, Minneapolis 1. Second Game Minneapolis r. Toledo 0. Columbus , Milwaukee 2. First Game ' Kansas City 4, Indianapolis 1. Second Game Indianapolis 2. Kansas City, O. Louisville 7, St. Paul 4. Central Leaque. South Bend T, Evansville 4. Zanesville 10, Dayton O. Grand Rapids o, Terre Haute 2. First Game Ft. Wayne 3, Wheeling. Second Game Ft. Wayne 3, Wheeling 2.

Don't worry about your looks. You look all right to your friends, and the rest of the world doesn't care how you look. Chicago News.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

Those who had occasion to go to the union depot this morning, looked for the station master he was gone. They looked for the Nnion News Agent he was gone. They looked for the porterhe was gone. Some wandered upstairs into the di

vision offices. They peered into each room, usually well filled with of

ficials and their busy clerks. Ev

erything appeared deserted. Just a few men were found at their desks. What was the matter? Had the Pennsylvania railroad gone into the hands of a receiver and the receiver had suspended operations on the Richmond division? Filled with dismay at this thought you dashed downstairs to the ticket agent. Ah, what a relief he was still doing business at the old stand. "Where is everybody?" you asked him in faltering tones. "Gone to the picnic held today at the Eaton, O., fair grounds by the employees of the Richmond division." he answered you as he patiently informed a corpulent, anxious woman that the 9:40 train left at 0:44). It is estimated that there are between five and six thousand railroaders and their families at Eaton today. About nine o'clock this morning the employees and their families who make their headquarters at Logansport and other points on the northern end of the division, pulled into the city. When the train left Richmond for Eaton it consisted of fifteen coaches. They were all crowded to the guards. About five hundred merrymakers boarded the train here. There were lunch baskets taxed to standing room only with chicken, jelly, cake, pie, some more pie and other eatables too numerous to set forth in this limited space. Then there were wives, sisters, sweethearts, grandmother, big babies, little babies, fat babies, thin babies and there were pale faced clerks, brown faced yardmen, trainmen, shop men and sporty dressed ".high moguls." From the interiors of the cars arose a sound similar to the hum of a thousand hives of bees. Was everybody happy? What a foolish question. On the regular train which left Richmond this morning at 10 o'clock, there was another big detachment of picnickers on board. This afternoon at 1 clock, a special was nut from

Richmond to Eaton and there were about 200 on board that train. All today there were athletic sports of various kinds and there were two games of baseball.

WA

HORRORS

WILL BE PICTURED

Old Soldiers Will Tell Campfire Tales Once More at Annual Picnic.

Richmond, Wednesday, July I

10 BIG

IH1W DK1 K1

Expenses Daily $3,500. $10,000 in New features and Animals 300 THOROUGHBRED HORSES. 100 MINIATURE PONIES

ft

JUDGE F0RKNER SPEAKS.

HAS BEEN SECURED TO ADDRESS WAYNE COUNTY VETERANS SATURDAY, JULY 4 WILL BE BIG OCCASION.

The annual basket picnic and rally of the ex-soldiers of Wayne county will be held at Jackson Park, Saturday, July 4. Preparations are under way by the committees for an appropriate observance of the date. Judge M. A. Forkner of New Castle will deliver the principal address. A program consisting of musical numbers, recitations and other featurta will be presented. All the former soldiers of the county are urged to attend. Veterans of the Spanish-American war will be just as welcome as those of the civil war. This occasion is one of the greatest to the former bands of Wayne county warriors. The gathering hosts are expected to bring well filled baskets and the picnic dinner will be one of the features of the day. In the afternoon the program of exercises will be rendered from the speaker's stand south of. the pavilion. It will be a

! great event for a great group of men. Many a good campfire story that was j not thought of until after the last pic

nic became history, has been recalled to memory and will be related by the one who cherishes it. The old soldiers will tell of their long hot marches in the summer time or the equally long cold jaunts of the winter months. The women will be there and they, too, will be busy relating anecdotes of their experiences during "war days."

f?r?c

4 Big Circuses! 4 Big Rings!

300 CIRCUS ACTS 10 MALE RIDERS 20 SENSATIONAL ACTS 12 MANEGE ACTS 10 BROTHER ACTS HIGH DIVERS

300 CIRCUS ARTISTS 10 FEMALE RIDERS 20 FEMALE FEATURE ACTS 20 TRAINED HORSE8 FLYING . HORIZONTAL BAR ACT 30 TUMBLING &. LEAPING ACT8

THIRTY VOTES SURE FOR WM. H. TAFT. Indianapolis. Ind., June 25. The family of Wm. Potts, at Mishawaka, Ind.. will cast 30 votes for Wm. Howard Taft for president Potts'has nine sons who are republicans. He has 17 nephews who will vote the republican tlckeL He has enough republican brothers to bring the total for Taft up to 30. Tho'Eotts family gave McKinley 20 voter and -Roosevelt" 26.

HOST OF HIGH WIRE AND SENSATIONAL ACTS. 3 - Enormous Menageries in One - 3 COMPLETE WILD WEST! avalryEvery Known Wild West Sport and Pastime. Battle of Wounded Knee. Hanging Horse Thief. Stage Coach Robbery. 50 Cow Boys and Indians. Company of Ex-U. S. Cavalry. Troupe of 10 Female Bicycle Riders. The Great Kiser Aerial .Troupe. Troupe of 10 Japanese and Arabs. Two Herds Educated Elephants. $300,000 FREE STREET PARADE! 300 Horses, 100 Ponies, 50 Cages and Dens, 13 Tableau Wagons. 2 Steam Calliopes, Steam Organ, 2 Herds of Elephants, Drove of Camels, 4 Brass Bands, Steam Calliope, Wild West, Company ex-U. S. Soldiers. Battleships of Past and Present.

TWO

Doors Open at 1 and 7 P. M, Rain or Shine,

CHEAP EXCURSION

On all Railroad Lines.

Palladium Want Ads-Cent a Vord