Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 146, 30 April 1914 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE, RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1914
DEPUTIES ON GUARD AT ASTOR WEDDING
BY LEASED WIRE POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., April 30. Never waD a feudal castle more closely guarded by its sentries from dusk to dawn than was the Tudor mansion of Robert P. Huntington in which William Vincent Astor married Miss Helen Dinsmore Huntington today. The reason for this vigilance, with sentries parading back and forth across the wide grounds of the Huntington mansion, was to protect from any possible intruders the fortune in jewels which Miss Huntington had received. The great pearl necklace from Mr. Astor, alone worth a ransom, would have made guardianship imperative. But aside from this, there were .numerous others which had arrived at the home too late to be placed over night in safe deposit" vaults. They included pendants, tiaras, necklaces and jewel studded ringa, pins and watches. , Three-fourths of all the furs trapped on the North American" continent are shipped. to St.Xouis bouses to be sold.
FATHER AND SON SIT AS COMRADES nV DANnilCT
I UttllUULI
WOMAN REFUSES OPERATION TclU How She Was Saved by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Logansport, Ind. "My baby was over a year old and I bloated till I was
a burden to myself, I suffered from fe
male trouble so I
could not stand on my feet and I felt
ike millions of
needles were prick
ing me all over. At last my doctor tol.l me that all that would save me wa a n operation, but thin I refused. I
told my husband to get me a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham'3 Vegetable Compound and I would try it before I would submit to any operation. He did so and 1 improved right along. I am now doing all .ny work and feeling fine. "I hope other suffering women will try your Compound. I will recommend it to all I know." Mrs. Damei, D. B. Davis, 1 10 Frank I in S t. , Logan sport, Ind . Since we guarantee that al! testimonials which we publish ere genuine, ir if. not fair to suppose that if Ly n. V. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound !uv I":. , virtue to help these women it. v"' y ( -any other woman who i3 suffcrl.-r; k like manner? If you are ill do not dra z.lc?.( ur.tf! an operation is necessary, brt r.z once take Lydia E. Pinkham's VerclcLl Compound. AVrito to L,ylia T Pinliham Med icinc Co., (con f i cl en t ia 1 ) Lyn n, Mass. Your letter wil be opened, rend and answered byawoman and held in strict confidence.
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Fathers and sons sat together in a spirit of comradeship at the Y. M. C. A. last night. , .. Two hundred men and boys of Richmond gathered at the long banquet tables which filled the gymnasium to talk things over. This banquet, due largely to the efforts of H. A. Pettijohn, marked the first step in a movement to bind the father and son closer together, to make them friends and conx.dants. That the father should . know his son as his playmate knows him and set an example which will make the boy the kind of man he wants him to be, was the burden of the talks by Rev. George Florey, of Covington, O., Charles W. Jordan, E. M. Learner, H. Hanson, assistant state secretary of the association, and H. A. Pettijohn.
RUMELY PAYS TAXES
M. Rumely company paid $7,578.11 late yesterday to County Treasurer Chamness as the first installment of taxes on their holdings in Richmond. This represents the half of the total tax on stock on hand March 1, 1913, real estate and buildings owned by the company then. The company was running its factory full force at that time with the warehouses fulL The assessment this year will be materially cut through the shipment of most of the stock and machinery to other plants. The entire tax this year will be about $15,000. SPECIALS VICTORS The Hoosier Specials walloped the Bartel Warriors, 7-3, at the playground diamond last night. Feature of the game was a three base clout from off the stick of W. Schnelle. Batteries were: Hoosier Special, Longstreet and Eadler; Bartel Warriors, Wiesahan and Huss. The Hooslers would like to arrange games with some other commercial teams of the city. For games, call Hoosier store.
TAFT HAS GOUT
BY LEASED WIRE NEW HAVEN. Conn, April 30 Former President William H. Taft is ronfinort tn his home here todav
i with a slight attack of gout in his
left root, a return oi me conauion which troubled him when he was at the white house.
WANTS REFERENDUM
Trade Body Asks Definition of Power.
A referendum vote on one of the clauses of the proposed bill for the establishment of an Interstate Trade commission and outlining the powers and duties, Is asked of the Commercial club by the national Chamber of Commerce. To conduct an investigation a committee of J. T. Giles, R. G. Leeds and Piatt Robinson has been appointed. ' ; The club is asked for an expression as to whether its members believe the proposed trade commission .should be authorized to inform all applicants whether new companies conform to the Sherman anti-trust act. The bill as It now stands says the commission shall not give opinions on that legal question. There, is a national division on the Question and as a result a vote of all commercial organization affiliated with the National Chamber of Commerce is asked.
LANSING TOUR IS TOO EXPENSIVE
Owing to the fact that the expense of the trip would be too great, it is Improbable, that the high school orchestra will make the proposed trip to Lansing. Mich., for a concert. The car fare along for the trip would be in excess of $600, and the other expenses attached to taking the sixtyseven members of the organization to that city would be too big an undertaking, for the promoters. C. , P. Brown, of Lansing, who has ben the promoter of the plan to take the local organization, to that city, has not given up the idea, however. He is trying to secure the co-operation of musical bodies of several of the surrounding cities.
GIANTS TO PLAY
EXHIBIT HAND WORK
An exhibit of the manual training work that is being done in the city schools, will be given .at the art gallery at the high school. The exhibit will open May 14 and close May 29. Miss Alice G. Locke, art supervisor of the city schools, will have charge of the exhibit. She will be assisted by Miss Kiturah Parsons, head of the domestic, science department; Miss Bond, supervisor of girls' manual training; C. O. Mays, head of the boys' department of manual training; Chas. Towle, instructor in printing, of the high school, and Miss Electa Henley, Miss Carrie Lesb and Prof. Voyle Hybarger, of the Garfield faculty. The exhibit will include work in sewing, cooking, forging, mechanical drawing, freehand drawing, metalwork, wood turning and printing. All of the work will be done by students of the city schools.
Percy Griffin's Union Giants are billed to hook up with the Westsiders Sunday at the Westside park. Both teams are out for the semi-pro championship of the city, and fur will fly when the teams come together.
Palladium Want Ads Pay
NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC. In the matter of the estate of Theodore R. Woodhurst, Deceased. In the Wayne Circuit Court, April Term. 1914. Notice is hereby given that Mary V. Woodhurst, as Administratrix of the estate of Theodore R. Woodhurst, deceased, has presented and filed her account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same,, will come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 16th day of May, 1914 at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Mary V. Woodhurst, Administrator JOHN L. RUPE, Attorney. wkly 23-30-7
L. IVf . HAYS, Paper Hanger Call Conkey Drug Co. Phone 1904.
We Will Clean everything cleanable at prices that are surprisingly low, considsidering values. French Benzole Dry Cleaning THE CHAUNCEY CLEANING CO. Auto Delivery.
MearJLHoaiii1ters MERCHANTS DELIVERY Conkey's Drug Store, Phone 1904
Phone 2501
1030 Main
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Clean-Up Week
KNOLiENBERG'! STORE WAXIT
Make your old furniture look like new with "Waxit." Apply with a rag. No washing, no hard rubbing. 25c 6 oz., 60c pint, $1 quart. Edith Metal Polish Special for Clean-up Week 5c can Electric Cleaner A great preparation for cleaning carpets and rugs. Its effect is almost magical; eats out the dirt, brightens the colors. "'Massage" your carpets with Electric Cleaner. 25c a can. Sanigenic Oil Mops, at $1.50 O'Cedar Mops, at $1.50 Red Star Mops, at $1.50 O'Cedar Mops, at $..75 L.V.D.Mops and Polishers, at .-. $i.50 Carpet Sweepers and Vacuum Cleaners The largest exhit in Richmond. Kankakee Vacuum $7.00 Duntley Sweepers $7.50 and $8.50 Kranz $7.50 Rotary Suction $20.00 Bissel's Sweepers at $3, $3.25, $3.50, $4.25 and $5.25.
401 & 402
EMEYE!T
1017 & 1019
Needful Clean-up Helps ECONOMY IN CLEAN-UP SUPPLIES
OLD DUTCH CLEANSER You know what it is Always Dependable A real dirt chaser 2 Cans, 15c 12 Cans for 85c
BROOMS BROOMS At a Clean-up Price Leader Brand Good quality 22c Each Three for 60c
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SPECIAL CLEAN-UP EXTRAORDINARY 75 Good Scrub Brushes All sizes, shapes and makes, odd numbers, sold regularly at from 10c, 15c to 20c While they last: Two Brushes for 5 Two Brushes for 5
LIQUID VENEER The Furniture Polish Always a Standard Regular 50c Bottles One Day Only 39c Bottle Very Special
LYE, LYE, LYE, LYE Red Seal Lewis Babbitt's Potash Monsoon Your' Choice of Any 2 Cans for 15c
MICE MAKE LUNCH . ON MATCH HEADS
A family of mice which lived in a nest built in an old mattress In the rear of 14 South Fifth street, started a lively blase about 9:30 o'clock last evening while making an evening lunch on some choice match beads. After a half-hour's fight the firemen succeeded in subduing the blaze. The loss has not been estimated. Francis Brown slept in the storeroom where the Are started, but was not there when the blaze broke out. A quantity of store fixtures were ia storage in the room. Yesterday afternoon the fire companies were called to 2027 North F street, where a shed was burned. It caught fire from sparks from a burning heap of, rubbish. The loss was small.
GENNETT MONDAY, MAY 4 Presenting Prof .Richard B. Harrison, enchanting dramatist and reader, ably supported by Mme. M. D. Harris, a charming opera singer. Admission, 25 cents.
CLEAN
UP SALE I
The Greatost Marked Down Sale of Ladies' Suits 'and
Junior and Misses Suits, $9.98. Values $15 to 20. Women's Man Tailored Coat Suits at $15.00 . Values $22.50 to $30.00. Coats, $5.00, $9.98, $12.50. Waists 98c. Have all these Bargains charged to your Credit.
Coats.
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533 Main St.
GET THESE Money-making Secrets
H Farm Journal
H. & H. CARPET SOAP The Soap Marvel for Cleaning Carpets and all kinds of Silk, Woolen Goods, also a moth exterminator. A perfect cleanser and a quick dirt remover. Special Price Per Dozen, $1.253 Bars, 35 Cents
Vulcanol Stove Polish Large 10c Cans For this day only 1 Dozen Cans, 75c 6 Cans, 40c 3 (10c cans), 20 Cents
CLOTHES LINE All Grades for the Day 50 ft. for 10c 50 ft. for 15c 50 ft. for 25c 65 ft. Wire Line 25c
SPECIAL MENTION FOR HOUSECLEANING Quickly Prepared Lunch
Baked Beans (all brands) Canned Soups (all brands) Canned Sardines Saratoga Chips
Cooked Ham Cooked Tenderloin Cheese of All Kinds. Pickles, Relishes and Olives
FEATURE SPECIAL Oil of Cedar Hardwood Floor Dustless Mop The best Mop proposition ever offered in Richmond. A Complete $1.50 Mop with a Pint Can of Cedar Oil Free. All for 98 Cents All for 98 Cents.
John M. Eggemeyer & Sons
Two Stores
Two Stores
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Is this cock froferly hell t "Ptultry Secrets" tells hvuu t tarry on. Is, and ether secrets far mart important.
CARM JOURNAL ("cream, not skim milk") is the great little paper published for 36 years in Philadelphia by Wilmer Atkinson. It is taken and read by more families than any other farm paper in the WORLD. Its four million readers (known as " Our Folks ") are the most intelligent and prosperous country people that grow, and they always say the Farm Journal helped to make them so. Their potatoes are larger, their milk tests higher, their hogs weigh more, their fruit brings higher prices, because they read the Farm Journal.
Do you know Peter Tumbledown, the old fellow who won't take the Farm Journal ? fcy showing how NOT to run a farm,Peter makes many prosperous. Nobody can go on reading the Farm Journal and being a Tumbledown too. Many have tried, but all have to quit one or the other. The Farm Journal is bright, brief, "boiled down," practical, full of gumption, cheer and sunshine. It is strong on housekeeping and home-making, a favorite with busy women, full of life and fun for boys and girls. It sparkles with wit, and a happy, sunny spirit Practical as a plow, readable as a noveL Clean and pure, not a line of fraudulent or nasty advertising. All its advertisers are guaranteed trustworthy. The Farm Journal .gives more for the money and puts it in fewer words than any other farm paper. 3 1 to 80 pages monthly, illustrated. FIVE years (60 issues) for i.o$ only. Less than 3 cents a month, No one-year, two-year or three-year subscriptions taken at any price.
The Farm Journal Booklets have sold by hundreds of thousands, and have made a sensation by revealing the SECRETS OF MONEYMAKING in home industry. People all over the country are making money by their methods. ' POULTRY SECRETS is a collection of discoveries and methods of successful poultrymen. It gives. Fetch's famous mating chart, the Curtis method of getting one-half more pullets than cockerels, Boyer's method of insuring fertility, and priceless secrets of breeding, feeding, how to produce winter eggs, etc.
HORSE SECRETS exposes all the methods of "bish-
oping," "plugging, cocaine and tricks of "eros ' and swindlers, an
unsound horse. Gives many valuable training secrets.
gasoline doping, and other a enables any one to tell aa
CORN SECRETS, the Rreat NEW hand-book of Prof. Holden, the "Com King," shows how to get ten to twenty bushel more per acre of com, rich in protein and the best stock-feeding elements. Pictures make every process plain. EQQ SECRETS tells how a familv of six can make hens turn its table scraps into a daily supply of fresh eggs. If you have a back-vard, get this booklet, learn how to ase up every scrap of the kitchen waste, and live better at less cost. THE "BUTTER BOOK" tells how seven cows were made to produce half a ton of butter each yer year. (140 pounds is the average). An eye-opener. Get it, weed out your poor cows, and turn the good ones into record-breakers. STRAWBERRY SECRETS is a revelation of the discoveries and methods of L. J. Farmer, the famous expert, in growing luscious fall strawberries almost until snow flies. How and when to plant, how to fertilize, how to remove the blossoms, how to get three crops in two years, etc.
GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your backyard
supply Iresn vegetaDles ana iruit, now to cui aown your grocery bills, keen a better table, and get cash for your surplus. How to
plant, cultivate, harvest and market.
DUCK DOLLARS tells how the great Weber duckfarm near Boston makes everv year 60 cents each on 40.000 ducklings. Tells why ducks pay them better than chickens, and just HOW they do everything. TURKEY SECRETS discloses fully the methods of Horace Vose. the famous Rhode Island "turkey-man," who supplies the White House Thanksgiving turkeys. It tells how to mate, to set eggs, to hatch, to feed and care for the young, to prevent sickness, to fatten, and how to make a turkey-ranch PAY. The MILLION EGG-FARM gives the methods by which J. M. Foster made over $18,000 a year, mainly from eggs. AH chicken-raisers should learn about the "Rancocas Unit," and how Foster FEEDS hens to produce such quantities of eggs, especially in winter. DRESSMAKING SELF-TAUGHT shows how any intelligent woman can design and make her own clothe, in the height of fashion. The author has done it since she was a girl. She now has a successful dressmaking establishment and a school of dressmaking. Illustrated with diagrams. SHALL I FARM? is a clear, impartial statement of "both advantages and drawbacks of farming, to help those who have to decide this important question, it warns you of dangers, swindles, and mistakes, tells how to start, equipment needed, its cost, chances ei success, how to get government aid, etc. These booklets are 6 m finches, and profusely illustrated. Farm Journal FOUR full years. L aL tnv. tl flfl with any one of these booklets . DOU1 lOT yi.UU TVtBssawnar HOT ssU separatab aly wk Fans Jeans' Be sure U say WHICH booklet you want.
What Our Folks Say About F. J, "I have had more help, encouraeement and enjoyment out of it in one year than I did out oi my other papers in te years," says C. M. Persons. It is a queer little paper. I have sometimes read Hthmaghand thought I was done with it, then pick it npagaia and find something new to interest tnc," says Aliroi Krogh. "Farm Journnl is like a bit of sunshir.e in our home. It is making a better class of peop!e out of farmers. It was first sent me as a Christmas present, and I think it the choicest ptesent I ever received," says P. R. LcVallcy. "We have read yonr dear little paper for nearly 40 vears. Now we don't live on the farm any more, yet I still have a hankering for the old paper. I feel that I belong to the lamilv. and every page is as dear ana familiar as the faces of old friends," sas Mrs. B. W. Edwards. "I fear I neglect my business tr read it. I wish it could be in the hands of every farmer ui Virginia," says V. S. Clin. "I live in a town where the yard is only 15 x 1 feet, but I could not do without lh Faim journal," says Miss Sara Carpenter. "I get lots of books and papers, and put them aide for future reading. The only paper I seem to have in my hands al! the time is Farm Journal. I can't finish leading it. C an't o make it less interesting, so I can have a chance at my other papers? " writes John SwaiL "If I am lonesome, down-hearted, or tired. I rr to Farm Journal for comfort, next to the Bible," sajs Mabel Dewi'.U "Farm Journal has a cheerful vein running through it that makes it a splendid cure for the "blues." Vin coming home tired in mind and bodv, I sit down and read it an J I: rttat to give me new inspiration for hie," writes G. E. Haiderman. "We have a brother-in-law who loves a joke. We live in Greaser New York, and consider ourselves quite eft i fie .1. SO when he sent us the Farm Journal as a New Year's gilt w nearly died laughing. 'How to raise hogs' we who only use baron in glass jars ! 'How to keep rows clean" when we as condensed miik even for rice podding I 'How to 'ant onions' hen we never plant anything mora fragrant than li'ies of the valiev. I accepted the gift with thanks, lor we are too well-bred to look a gift horse in the mouth. Soon my eve was caught by a beautitul rem. I began to read It, then bcn I wanted the 1 aim Journal found my husband deeply interested in an article. Then my oldest son began to ask, 'Has the Farm Journal come vet f He ht a jeweler, and hasn't much time for literature; but we find so much interest snd uplilt in this fine paper that we appreciate our New Year's gitt more and more," unites Elia B. Burkman. "I received 'Corn Secrets and Toultry Secrets. and consider them worth their weight in gold," says W. G. NewaU. "What your F.?ir Book tells would take a beginner years to learn," says Roy Cbaney. "Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on duck raising," says F. M. Warnock. "If vour other booklets contain as much valuable information as the Fgg-Book. I world consider thesn cheap at double the price," says F. W. Mansncld. "I think your Egj-Book is a wonder," says C P. Shirey. "The Farm Journal beats them all. Every Nsue has reminders and ideaa worth a year's subscription, writes T. H. Potter. "One vear asro I took another aricuhural paper, and it look a whole column to tell what Farm Journal tells ia one paragraph," says N. M. Gladwin. "It ought to be in every home w here there is a chick, a child, a cow, a cherry, or a cucumber," tars I. D. Eordus.
WILMER ATKINSON COMPANY. PUBLISHERS FARM JOUKNAU
v. ashh.gton square. Philadelphia.
Special Combination Offer Rural subscribers of the Richmond Palladium. The Palladium to Rural Mail subscribers is $2.00 per year. If you subscribe now, new or renewal, we give you The Richmond Palladium for one year and The Farm Journal Four Years, with any one of the Farm Journal Booklets.
All Fop
If you are now taking the Farm Journal your subscription will be moved ahead for four II years. (If you name no Booklet, the Farm Journal will be sent for Five years.) To get both papers fill out order herewith and send it to us, not to the Farm Journal.
Richmond Palladium, Richmond, Ind. I accept your special offer. Please send me the PALLADIUM for one year and FARM JOURNAL,
Four years, with this booklet
.ALL , FOR $25
My name Is
Address Are you now taking the Farm Journal?
(Write "Yes" or "No.")
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