Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 139, 3 July 1908 — Page 8
PAGElEIGHT.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1908.
V
The Sale
Everyone Has Been Waiting For Begins Tuesday, July 7. Store closed all day, Monday, July 6. Railroad Store Yhe Hub Of The Body. - The ortfan around which all tbo other organs (revolve, and npon which they are largely dependent for their welfare, is the stomach. "7 hen the functions of the stomach become impaired, the bowels and liver also become deanared. To core a disease of the Btomach, liver cr bowel get SO cent or SI bottle of Dr. Cald--.oU's Syrup Pepsin at your druggist's. It '.z thi promptest relief for constipation and dy p&psia ever compounded. CHICHESTER'S PILLS fdidkMl Al'l Jf lir Vrucrlit ( A'V.lm U Rrd ni Veld wallic i m-occ-ter Visaod Jim nrun, waKxl bli.e Ribbon. Dinar, jsur r ronr inr V Jrl. Aw Tof til l. Ift -TER'3 IAl?M IIR.AM FILJ.H. for 8a ymikronu Et. Safest, Alws Rcllihls SfiLi K rfGiST5 EVERYWHERE SPECIALS CHICKENS TO FRY BAKED HAM BULK OLIVES. HADLEY BROS. Reduced Rates Via C. C. & L. R. R. On account 4th oi July j Selling Dates, July I 3 and 4. Good Re- t turning July 6. For particulars call Home Tel. 2062 Plumbing and Heating Contractor Charles Johanning Cor. Main & 11th Phone 2144 SEEOUR SPRING LINE of ! GO-CARTS at HASSENBUSCH'S . Moore & Ogborn Insurance, Bonds and Loans, Real Es.tatetand Rentals. oth phones. Bell 53R. Home 1589. (Room 161. O. O. F. Bldg. 1 I INSURANCE, REAL ESTATE J LOANS, RENTS 2W. H. Bradbury & Son H" Rooms 1 and 3, Westcott Blk 1
New RFF H1VF I cw Phones DJ-' "IWEi Phones !S 1 GROCERY j8 company
,We are Headquarters lor 41h July Supplies Baked Ham, Baked Tenderloin, Cheese of all kinds, Pickles of all kinds, Olives In Bulk and Bottles, Fancy'Crackers and Wafers, Baked Beans, Saratoga Chips, Sardines, Salmon, Lobsters, Potted Ham, Deviled Ham. Lunch Tongue, Corn Beef and Picnic Plates, Fancy Peaches, Plums, Orange3, Bananas, Pine Apples, Apricots, Grape Fruit, Fancy Tomatoes, Ginger Ale, Lemon Sour, ' Sarsaparilla and Grape Juice. Store closed all day the 4th July.
LEADERS JBE HAPPY Everything Indicates That Republicans Will Poll a Good Majority.
COMMITTEE HAS MEETING. Indianapolis, Ind., July 3. Republicans from every part of Indiana gathered in Indianapolis yesterday. It was a gala day for republican politicians. Nearly every member of the Republican state committee was present to attend a meeting of the committee. The general sentiment of the gathered politicians was that Indiana has no need to fear a democratic invasion this year that under the leadership of W. II. Taft, Indiana, with other republican states, will turn up the usual big majorities. James P. Goodrich presided at the meeting of the committee. All of the members were present except Oliver P. Ensley of the Seventh district and Haary L. Bender, member from the Eleventh district. Mrs. Ensley is ill in Ohio, and Mr. Ensley is with her. The committee accepted the resigna tion of John L. Moorman of the Thirteenth District and ratified the election of his successor, A. G. Graham of South Bend, former law partner of the late A. L. Brick and former chairman of the St. Joseph County Republican committee. Chairman James P. Goodrich an nounced that he had appointed the fol lowing executive committee, which will be active during the campaign: Owen Carr of Rushvillc, Judge James E. Piety of Terre Haute, John L. Moorman of Knox and Charles Remy of Indianapolis. Carl W. Ridriick, secretary of the state committee, reported the result of the six months' poll recently taken. "All but six counties have reported," said Secretary Riddick, "and each one of them showed a large republican gain over the six months' poll of two years ago." TRACTION LINE MOST UHBOSSWGS Greenfield Mayor Will Issue an Edict. Greenfield, Ind., July 3. The city council at Its meeting last night instructed the mayor to have the T. H. I. & E. street railway company make crossings at all the street intersections. Since the street car company has been working on their tracks ev ery crossing in the city nas been torn up and until the last few days there were only two that were passable. These were at Pennsylvania and State streets. The crossings have abolit worn the patience of the people threadbare and they clamored for more crossings. HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE DROWN IN CHINA Large Relief Fund Now Being Raised. Hong Kong, July 3. Detailed re ports from the floods in southern China show that hundreds of people have been drowned and thousands are btarving in the destroyed villages. Chinese and foreigners have com bined to raise a large relief fund. Large sums and quantities of food are being consigned nightly from Hong Kong. The government has made a grant of $30,xx and the Standard Oil com pany has subscribed $3,00. 'CHILDREN'S RIGHTS," WARLS SUBJECT He Speaks at Open Air Meet ing Sunday. On the lawn of East Main Street Friends' church Sunday evening at 7:30 o clock Alfred T. Ware will speak on the subject of "Children's Rights". He will present it in its varied phases from a gospel standpoint. Miss Burns of Chicago, a teacher in the normal department of Earlham college will sing a solo and the male chorus will present two numbers. .Mica MlulnK. Mica mining is one of the greatest Industries in North Carolina. Mica is found in all sorts of blocks of various thicknesses and-shapes and can be split and resplit almost ad iaflnKum or until it becomes the thin, flexible wafer of commerce. The material' is by nature imbedded or scattered through the feldspar in masses lnrge or small, close together or far apart, and-is 'blasted from the rocks by means of dynamite, the purer veins being fouad between walls of slate. From the mines it is taken to the shops, where it is split Into thin sheets, trimmed into regular forms and made ready for the market, the price varying with the size and color of the sheets. The average size is about 4 by 6, though rare sheets of 24 by 18 inches are sometimes found. Gold iieda Flour leads them all.
C. C. & L. PREPARES FOR BUSY SEASON
Shops at Peru, Ind., Are Running With Extra Force of Men at Present. IMPROVEMENTS PLANNED. OFFICIALS OF THE ROAD ARE TAKING UP MATTER OF WATER SUPPLY AS PRESENT WATER CAUSES DAMAGE. Peru, Ind., July 3. The C, C. & L. shops in Peru are working more men than ever employed in the history of the road, and are doing so much work that the situation breaks the record for a considerable territory. Official information shows that the shops are now being pushed to their utmost. The work is nearly all in repairs and maintenance of rolling stock, and comes from the natural wear on equipment. No matter how hard the times may be, a railroad has to keep its stock in repair if it keeps in operation, and that fact gives an advantage to Peru in the work at the shops. All the work of the system, from Chicago to Cincinnati, is being done at Peru. The near approach of crop-moving time necessitates the putting of equipment more generally and thoroughly in repair than at ordinary seasons, and the shop force is profiting thereby. All work is being done here. A Hammond firm bid $4,000 each for repairs on twelve engines but was unsuccessful. Hundreds of cars are having about an average of $200 worth of work each done on them. Some improvements are in contemplation at the shops, but they are not to be very extensive. Some additional machinery may be added, but there Is no special good to come from that, as the labor saving devices will cut off just that much labor, which Peru men are now getting. One of the worst difficulties at the shops is with the water supply, the salt in the water being very bad upon the boiler flues. Some engines can not make more than two weeks before having to get back to the shops. The officials are now taking up some kind of change of water, but when it is done and the trouble corrected there will be less work for the boiler makers. A hot water well is to be installed, which will he a saving in time and energy in firing up boilers. It Can't Be Beat. The best of all teacners is experience. C. M. Harden, of Silver City, North Carolina, says: "I find Electric Bitters does all that's claimed for it. For Stomach, Liver and Kidney troubles it can't be beat. I have tried it and find it a most excellent medicine." Mr. Harden is right; it's the best of all medicines also for weakness, lame back', and all run down conditions. Best too for chills and malaria. Sold under guarantee at A. G. Lunken & Co. drug store. 50c. THE CITHN BRIEF Get Ice Cream for your picnic dinner at Price's. Walter Hossiter is home from a business trip to Lima, Ohio. He will spend the Fourth in this city. Buy your fine box candy at the Greek Candy Store. Misa Helen French of Logansport is visiting friends in this city. Get one of those Egg Chocolates at Price's. They are fine. Eva Demond, of Oxford, Ohio, is visiting in this city for a few days. Crushed fruit poach ice cream and eight other flavors at Price's. Mr. Charles Lemon of Chicago will arrive in the city tomorrow. Delicious Ice Cream at the Greek Candy Store. Miss Burns will sing at the open air meeting of the East Main Street Friends' church Sunday evening. Take a box of Price's Chocolates with you. Helene Roach of Liberty came today to spend the Fourth in this city. Try our "Special" Pineapple Ice, the finest made. The Greek Candy Store. Miss Edith Duke returned yesterday from Indianapolis. Late Valencia 'Oranges, very juicy; they are fine; you get them at Price's. Miss Genevieve Newlin and Miss Ruth Friedgen are spending the week with Miss Mary Amos in Rushville, Richmond Country club, July 4th celebration. Japanese and American fireworks, picnic buffet supper, music and dancing. Notify club steward. 2-3t Miss Jennie Williams and Miss Lulu Moorman, two of the Richmond teachers are spending a few Gays at Washington City. From there they will go to New York and attend a summer session at Columbia University. The grand lodge of Masons In Ireland is the oldest in the world, with the single exception of the grand lodge of England, and the ritual used and ceremonies practiced are older than those in vogue under the grand lodge of England, and it was the first grand lodge to furnish lodges with charters. SUNDAY OUTINGS. Pennsylvania Lines, July 5th. Round trip from Richmond to New Castle "Sets., Anderson 90cts.. Elwood $1, Kpkomo $1.25, Logansport $1.50.
HOLDS CONFERENCE
Speaker Cannon and Secretary Cortelyou Pay a Visit to Taft. DISCUSS COMMITTEE WORK Washington, July 3. Two conferences of importance were held yesterday by W. H. Taft, the first being with Speaker Cannon and the second with Secretary of the Treasury Cortelyou. Concerning neither conference was much disclosed. Speaker Cannon, at the conclusion of his talk with Mr. Taft, said he had called on the republican standardbearer merely to pay his respects and to renew his assurances, given in his telegram the day of the nomination, that he could be depended upon to furnish any assistance in his power to insure the election of Taft. The interview with Cortelyou covered a wide range. Primarily it was Taft's idea to talk with Cortelyou about the work of the national committee, of which Cortelyou was chairman, in the last presidential cam paign. Cortelyou gave Taft much valuable information concerning the practical workings of the committee. Incidentally, although the subject of the national chairmanship was not considered at great length. Cortelyou urged the selection of Frank II. Hitchcock. The committee appointed at the Chicago convention to notify Taft of his nomination will meet in Cincinnati July 28. Judge Taft will go to Cincinnati from Hot Springs to receive the committee's notification and will return directly to Hot Springs. About 6 o'clock last evening Mr. and Mrs. Taft went in an auto to the home of Gen. and Mrs. J. Franklin Bell, Ft. Myer, Va., where a dinner was given in their honor. The Taft's, accompanied by a clerical force and servants, will leave Washington this afternoon. I PRESIDENT ENTERTAINS ON NIGHT OF FOURTH Blue Jackets May Participate In House Party. Oyster Bay, N. Y., July 3. The blue jackets of the yacht, Mayflower, will probably figure in the Fourth of July celebration Saturday night at Sagamore Hill. The President and Mrs. Roosevelt will entertain a house party of the children's friends and invite a party of the neighbors to the number of probably 100, as in previous years. GREAT VOYAGERS. Aa a. General Rale, Tliey Came From Ihe Smaller Countries. Portugal is a small country, with a land area one-third less than the state of New York, but it has turned out in its time celebrated navigators, Cabral and Da Souza among them. It is a somewhat peculiar circumstance in the history of ocean navigation that the chief navigators of Europe have usually been natives of minor kingdoms and without the advantages which would naturally accrue to a representative of one of the larger governments. Christopher Columbus, as every schoolboy knows, was a native of Genoa at the time when the Italian peninsula was subdivided among numerous petty governments. John Cabot was a Venetian,, who sailed In the service of England, aa Columbus had sailed in the service of Spain. Amerigo Vespucci was a Florentine, who sailed originally in the service of Spain and afterward transferred himself to the Portuguese service and then went back to the Spanish service for a second time. Vitus Bering, after whom Bering strait was called, was a Dane by birth, who served under the naval flag of Russia. Magellan, after whom Magellan strait was named, was a native of Alemtejo, in Portugal, and was the first to complete the circumnavigation of the globe, in 1522. Verazzani was a Florentine, whose voyages of discovery were undertaken under the protection of the flag of France. Hendrik Hudson was an Englishman, and it seems surprising to many persons in this day familiar with the pre-eminence of England as a maritime nation that he should have been in the service of the government of Holland when he discovered Manhattan Island. Bottles. Ancient bottles of glass, stone and metal have been found in many parts of Europe, Asia and Africa. Perfume bottles of glass have been discovered in great numbers in the tombs of wealthy ladies of Egypt. Many bottles, tumblers and other drinking vessels have been dug from the ruins of Pompeii. The most common bottle of the ancients, however, was of leather, the skin of a calf, goat or ox being taken off the carcass with as few cuts as possible and made into a receptacle for holding water or wine. The largest glass bottle ever blown was made at Leith, in Scotland, in 1747-48. Ita capacity was two hogsheads. Bad Habit. "So you lost your position 7 we ask of our young friend, who has demanded our sympathy. "Yes; the firm told me I would have to quit" "What reason was given 7' "I smoked cigarettes." "Why. that seems hardly a sufficient reason for such drastic action." "Yes, but I was smoking the boss' clgaretteSj and he caught me at it."
rSoda Crackers that crackle as good Soda ra Crackers should A
With WELCOME TENDERED James Schoolcraft Sherman Warmly Received on His Arrival Home. WAS BIG DEMONSTRATION. Utica, N. Y., July 3. The homecoming last night of Congressman James S. Sherman was made the occasion of such a demonstration as has rarely been seen in this section of the state. The welcome to the republican nominee for vice president was nonpartisan and to a great extent personal, for the congressman's recovery from his illness gave added reason for rejoicing at his return. Mr. and Mrs. Sherman and Dr. Carter reached here at 9:18 p. ni. As his train drew in, the bands played, fireworks were set off and church chimes rang. Mr. Sherman stepped from the train slowly, looking pale and worn. But he had stood the journey, his physicians said, very well. A monster procession escorted the candidate to his home. The line of march covered a mile. The route lay through the principal streets, the buildings of which were elaborately decorated. A dozen bands furnished music, fireworks added a spectacular feature and tens of thousands of persons ranged along the route shouted themselves hoarse. At the Sherman home the formal welcome took place, the principal speaker being Maj. J. D. Kernan. REV. I. W. WILLIAMS TESTIFIES Rev. I. W. Williams, Huntington, W. Va., testifies as follows: "This is to certify that I used Foley's Kidney Remedy for nervous exhaustion and kidney trouble, and am free to say that Foley's Kidney Remedy will do all that you claim for it." A. G. Luken & Co. A. G. IS CRITICALLY ILL Family Despairs of Recovery Of Well Known Man. Announcement was made today of the critical illness of A. G. Campton, former county assessor. Recovery is despaired of by the family and physicians. Mr. Compton has been In very poor health since last February and for the past month his condition has teen regarded as exceptionally serious. He is unable to take any nourishment except by means of tubes. He is wasted in flesh and very weak physically. vibqivia: Oold Medal Flour makes delicious baked stuff. Rhoda. 15c and 18e RED SEAL DRESS GINGHAMS 334c Yd And a thousand other bargains at Railroad Store Sale begins Tuesday. July 7
Uneeda Biscuit
meals for meals between ifr In dust tight. moisture proof packages Neper sold in bulk.
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
MEY L0S Are not all alike. Some make their money by taking advantage of the borrower's misfortunes. We have built up a big business by helping our clients out of difficulties instead of inducing thera to "jump out of the frying pan into the fire." We have the best class of clients in the city. Our rate is low, payments easy and business strictly confidential. We advance, money on salaries We also loan on household goods and office fixtures without removal and on jewelr.y watches, etc., left in pledge. Here are some of the terms of our new weekly payment plan, allowing you fifty weeks in which to pay off your loan: 60c is a weekly payment on a $25.00 loan. $1.20 is a weekly payment on a loan of $50.00. $1.80 is a weekly payment on a loan of $75.00. $2.40 is a weekly payment on a loan of $100.00. Other payments in the same proportion. If these payments do not suit you, call and see us and we will be pleased to explain other plans we have. Mail or 'phone applications receive our prompt attention. RICHMOND LOAN CO. Established 1895. Home Phone 1545. S. E. Cor. 7th and Main. Room 8, Colonial Bldg., Richmond, Ind.
The Richmond Home Telephone Co.
Secret Long Distance
AWSm) j 3vv l(w JM, 2a pwh0 Jo
We take pleasure in announcing to the public that our new Automatic underground system-is now complete. This system in connection with -our absolutely fire proof central and sub-stations has been pronounced by experts among the finest and most up-to-date plants in the world. We are now rendering our patrons the most perfect service possible by any telephone system, and on the merits of our service we respectfully solicit your local and long distance business. Our long distance operators will give your calls prompt attention and we assure you courteous treatment at all times. Our rates are from $15.00 to $36.00 per annum. Telephone or call at the office regarding further information.
..Headache Cured. Headache, Backache, Sleeplessness, Dizziness, Loss of Appetite, Irregular Heart, Lots ef Memory, Stomach, Kidney and Bowel Disorders, Blood Poison, and all Nervous, Functional, Blood and Respiratory disorders are speedily and permanently cured by this most wonderful remedy. OXYOLINE Ask those who have tried this new treatment. Trial treatment free. DR. J. E. TAYLOR 30 South 10th St. Richmond. Ind. Honrs: 9 a. m.lo 8p.m.
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