Richmond Palladium (Daily), 20 January 1904 — Page 8
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1904
EIGHT. DESERTED OTES afterward forcing open his strongbox with an ax and extracting over '$ 20,AN INHUMAN Bacon has fully recovered from the s operation for appendicitis, but will 000 to satisfy court judgments against not be able to assume bis official du the railroad company, officials of the Logansport division have received instructions from headquarters at Pittsburg not to permit the newspa ties for some time. ; inn mil MOTHER STATE HOUSE pers to publish the pay car schedule hereafter. E PROVIDED FOR IN THE WILL OF PETER G. FLINN. v PAMlRlI HI ARRESTED IN PATTERSON, NEW
aid mows
XHIBT
JERSEY, ON CHARGE
need
red
Off Peep
Who have taken the advantage of the wonderful bargains that we are offering during this great sale of the stock we bought of M. Cohen & Co., 1222 Race street, Cincinnati, Ohio, at
ON THE DOLLA Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Ladies' and Gents' Furnishing Goods, Etc. Sale continues for ten more days.
f Shoe and Clothing Co., SftiSS st' Open evenings. Look for the red signs in front of the store, 704 Main street, Richmond, Ind.
Trip
MUCH GIVEN TO CHARITY
First Wife's Name Perpetuated and the Next One Handsomely Provided For.
-sir
ooooooocr
LJ
in ""N ""N """N ""N
4 I II II 11 II il M
V,., V V,
o o o o o o
Why Don't You Buy
o
ABurningQuestion --- - - - - - - - O
o o o o o o o n
I MATHER BROS. CO. lM o L o
o
From the
BRANCH YARD
39 south sixth st
Pltone 516.
o o O
OOOOGOOOmOQOOOOOO
Railroad Restaurant ft s?.r,h ,1 Upkicbs reasonable, everything up-to-date.
Marion, Ind., Jan. 20. The "Peter
G. Flinn estate" is to be perpetuat
ed under the will of Peter G. Flinn, filed yesterday for probate. A six-
story hotel and business block 132 by
132 feet in size, is vto be the monument to the memory of Mr. Flinn
John D. Conner, jr., of Wabash, and
Dr. H. D. Reasoner, president of the First National bank of Marion, are
trustees to whom is assumed the work
of erecting1 the biff business block.
Mr. Flinn wills that one-half the
net revenue of the building shall go to
charity, setting out that deservin
women of thirty or more who have
been deserted by their husbands with
out cause, men over thirty who are in
jured or in bad health and unable to support themselves, and boys and girls
who seek an education, but are without means shall be beneficiaries. The trustees are given full power not only to distribute the money as they see
fit, but they are empowered to use
the money of the estate to fight any
contest of the will by relatives, bene
ficiaries or heirs under the law.
The deceased also wills that $15,-
000 shall go to the Twentieth Century club, an organization of Marion
widows, to be used in building a home
for acred women in Marion. A site
for this home was given by the deceased some years ago and the home is to be known as the Emma Flinn Home, in memory of the first. wife of
the deceased.
The widow is left the home prop
erty, with certain rents, and $340 a year during her life.
One-half of the profits of the hotel,
designed by Mr. Flinn, will go into the Flinn estate, to be invested and
handled and controlled by the trus
tees and by their sucessors perpetually. The trustees are empowered to name their successors. In the event of failure so to do the court is asked
to provide for the vacancies as they occur. John D. Conner, jr., of Wabash, is the executor of the will.
IT'S NEVER QUITE SATISFACTORY to borrow from a friend. He may say he is glad to accommodate you, when be is not. He may be greatly inconvenienced and not admit it. You never know just how he feels about it. A little misunderstanding may cost you his friendship. Business is business. When you need money the best way is to borrow a certain amount for a fixed time at a fixed rate of interest, and to be paid back in a fixed time. Then there can be no misunderstanding; then you are free from the unpleasant feeling that you have imposed on your friend's liberality. We loan sums of ten dollars and upwards on the afore-mentioned basis. We loan to salaried people without security. We loan on small articles left in pledge. We loan on many kinds of personal property without removal. . ,.j Hers are some of the terms of our new weekly payment plan, allowing you fifty weeks in whicti to pay off your loan : 60 cents Is the weekly payment on a S25 loan f 1 .20 is the weekly payment on a 50 loan $1.80 Is a weekly payment on a $75 loan 2.40 Is the weekly payment on a $ 100 loan
ntVii- nmnnnis tliA samp rrorortion. 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. Room 8, Colonial Bldg, HOME PIIOXE 44 5
Subject
luilLy 1 till
j 13 JJ
Work Done on RoadWill, Con nect Two Continents. Mexico City, Jan. 19. Charles M.
Pepper, representative of the United States Government for the projected Pan-Amerian railway', has left here for home after a journey of 23,000 miles and visiting the capitals of
twenty-one different governments.
lie was cordially received here by
Government officials and private-cr.i-zens. ' Mr. Pepper says of the Pan-Ameri-can railway being built by Americanin the southwestern part of the republic that it is today within 105 miles of the Guatemalan line, aid when completed, Guatemala and Nicaragua will build lines in continuation
and this will form a part of tha new road. Mr. Pepper says he looks to
see the road built more rapidly from
south to north than from north to
south.
Argentina is doing most effective
work in railroad construction, where it is part of the national spirit of the
day. The country's agricultural and
rrrazinsr resources are immense, and
are proving singularly profitable. It
has become the national idea to speak and write of a railroad from New
York to Buenos Ayres.
Chile's roads are tendinsr north
ward. Some 1,200 miles have been
built, and later on the straits of Mag
ellan will be reached. Brazil is plan
nincr a jrreat railway, which is to
reach and pierce the Andes.
MURDEF ING LITTLE SON
Discovery Made by the Father, -Who
Returned Late She is Believed to be Insane.
(By Associated Press.) Patterson, N. J., Jan. 20. Mrs.
Arthur Aswald was arrested today on
a charge of murdering her eight-year-
old son at her home in Oakland. The
murder was discovered by her hus
band on his return home late last
RAILROAD NOTE
If vou have not usf d Mother's Bread, do not fail to give it a Irial.
No exnerse is stared in its manufacture, and we know it is as fine a loaf as it
r - t ' jlble to produce ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT nd if he has not Kt it, ttll him to call New Phone 3d, Old Phone Red 379 at: d get it. Respectfully, V
RICHMOND BAKING CO-
The freight traffic at the Yandalia
railroad is on a greater boom this
winter than ever before. In a con
versation Avith one of the company's
dispatchers this morning, he stated
to a representative of this paper that
he never saw business so good. Espec ially there is a big coa Irun this sea
son, which accounts for the business
rush on this system. According to the
dispatcher's statement a message was
received from Terre Haute yesterday
to the effect that five hundred loads, consisting mostly of cars of coal, were lined up in the Yandalia yards at that
city awaiting movement. 1ms mornling another message came in at the
local office, stating that three hundred
loads had been forwarded to Logans-
port. The company has leased several large engines from the Pennsylvania
and these will propel the shipments
of coal and other freight to this city.
Here, it will receive prompt atten
tion, and over half of the freight will
i be transferred to the Pennsylvania
and Wabash for other points. The
shipments billed to points on the T. II
& Ij. or the L. & T. divisions of the
Yandalia line., will be sent forward
promptly so as not to crown the local
yards any more than possible. There
are at. present, about, two hundred cars of coal in the Logansport yards
of the Yandalia, many of which are billed to local dealers', and the offi
cials are awaiting orders to switch
the supplies to a siding where they
can be unloaded.
Logansport fuel dealers seem to be
very crowded in their coal yards now
and are not able to receive their ship ments. From all appearances coa
1 It X 1 . j I
isnouiu oe very i-ncap mis season.
j Logansport Journal.
Logansport, Ind., Jan. l!). IVnrinir
a repetition of the episode in whic
Shentf Lewis lJeckle3' held up the paymaster of the Pennsylvania railroad in this city in November, and
THE RIGHT OF WAY. (From the Washington Pots.)
One of the prerogatives of a United States senator is that when he steps aboard an elevator in the senate wing of the capitol he is carried immedi-
ately to his destination, no matter in which direction the elevator may be
lound or who may be aboard. Three
rings on the bell indicate that a sen
ator wants to ride, and the conductor
oses no time in responding to the
call.
One dayT last week Mr. Barnes, the
assistant secretary of the President,
stepped aboard a Senate elevator
from the ground floor. In a portfolio
under his arm he carried a message
from the President of the United States to the Congress.
"Senate floor," said Mr. Barnes, as
the conductor shut the door.
Just then there were three rings of
the bell and the indicator showed
that a senator wanted to be lifted out of the terrace. The elevator went
down instead of up, and Mr. Barnes
went along. The senator in the ter
race only wanted to go to the ground floor. As he stepped off, however, there was another senatorial ring from the terrace. This senator wanted to go to the gallery floor, and the elevator went there without stopping.
As the car started down there were three rings from the ground floor, and
again the car failed to stop at the destination of the President's secretary. Fortunately for Mr. Barnes,
this senator wanted to get off at the Senate floor, and the Congress, after a long delay, received the message from the President.
From Indiana CapitolIndianapolis, Ind., Jan. 20. D. II.
McAbee, state factory inspector, is
preparing to make an exhibit of the
work of his department at the com-
St. Louis exposition. Mr. Mc
Abee made exhibits at both the Paris
exposition of 1900 and the Buffalo ex
position the following year. At the
Paris show Mr. McAbee captured the
gold medal for the best system of collecting the data of his office. No awards in this work were made at
Buffalo but Mr. McAbee received many letters congratulating him on
the thoroughness of his methods from
visitors to the exposition.
The exhibit contemplated by Chief
McAbee is ot the methods he employs in his work. The inspection bu
reau Tins tn rlr with pnndifions in the
night. He found the headless body ot factorics and work shons of tlie state. the boy on the dining room floor, also Chief McAbee has desismed a' series
his pet dog, which had been beheaded f bJanks , , d b the d
ana ms wire in oea singing soiuy ties in collecting data relative to the
mc n Ci institutions thev msneet and on
which they make their reports to headquarters. The series includes thirtv-three blanks. Mr. McAbee be
lieves his system is the most com
plete in vogue anywhere in the coun
try. He has compared it with the
methods employed by similar depart
ments in other states and believes it
will surpass any of them. His system was worked out only after care
ful study and consideration of the methods employed in other states.
The best ideas in use elsewhere he em
bodied in his own plan with many
improvements of his own suggestion.
That is why he feels confident of
making the best display at the expo
sition.
Chief McAbee will probably be the
only Indiana officer to make a dis
play at the exposition. The work of
other departments does not admit of making exhibits. The exhibit from
his bureau will be placed in the so
ciological department.
dren were asleep in the crib. She could not understand what was said
to her. She is believed to be insane. LlfEfOlSIDE
TO CURE LUNGS
SYRACUSE GIRL SITS ON VER
ANDA IN ZERO WEATHER.
LIVING IN ADlRONDACKS
She Has an Excellent Appetite and is
Gaining Every Day in Health and Strength.
THE VIXENISH
WOMEN OF KOREA.
(From Outing.) - ' The women of the commonalty are voluble and vixenish and ever ready to slayr a handful of stars into the eyes of a husband or into those of a timid and shrinking tourist should the occasion arise. The women of the upper class are rigorously excluded from masculine eyes and a heartyr vote of thanks is due the committee who fathered this unwritten law. The dainty little Japanese musmee, teetering along in sandals or on wooden geta, is a genuine relief to the eye after a view of the uncomely Korean female, and it is a pleasing reflection that Nippon is slowly but surely spreading her standard over the hermit realm. ! Until Korean boys are married and acquire the pseudo dignity of the topknot, their hair is worn girl fashion in twin plaits down their backs. So much do they resemble girls that it is sometimes difficult to determine the sex., and one is oftentimes uncommonly surprised to observe what, he is positive are twa girls sprawling and viciously fighting in a Korean street. 50c Men's Shirts lor 39c at Inol!eiilerg;' Clearance Sale. Sec them.
Fonnd a Cure for Indigestion. T use Chamberlain 's Stomach and
Liver Tablets for indigestion and
find that they suit my case better
than any dyspepsia remedy I have
ever tried and I have used many dif
ferent remedies. I am nearly fifty-
one years of age and have suffered a
great deal from indirestion. I can
eat almost anything I want to now.
Geo. W. Emory, Rock Mills, Ala. For
Syracuse, N. Y., Jan. 20. Miss sale by A. G. Luken & Co., and W.
Mary Whitelam, who lives with her H. Sudhoff, fifth and Main.
parents at No. 300 South avenue, is
the first Syractisan to practice the
outdoor treatment for lung trouble.
Miss Whitelam had been living in the
Adirondacks for four months prev
ious to her home experiment. She
pined under the separation from her
family and finally determined to come
home and try the Adirondack method
of living. She has now been at home
for a month and declares that she is growing stronger every day. Today she was at home on the veranda,
where she spends all her days, reading,
sewing, writing or chatting with her
friends who drop in to see her.
"I am perfectly comfortable out
here," she said, "and zero weather
is" a luxury. You see I have fitted
up this veranda as comfortably as I
could. I tacked up this large can-
. 1 1 ii 1 i
vas -across tne enu aim along tne
side partly as a protection from
Otip lot clioice st les in
Neckwear lor 19c. They
are bargains. The Geo.
II. Inolienberg Co.
People's Exchange
STORAGE Ground floor, sixteentM
and Main. Vera Smith.
TOR SALE Old papers for sale at
the Palladium office, 15 cents a hundred and some thrown in.
TOR SALE OR TRADE A trood
new 8-inch well boring machine and complete outfit for making water wells. Have made two wells a day with a machine like it. Must quit work on account of age. S. B. Huddleston, Dublin. 14-tf
draughts and also to secure privacy. LOST Thursuay afternoon at the
Gennett, a fur boa. Finder may
JL 1 OU 1 J V. Ll L. Ill VJ OH l-VW UUl JJLi X rangements might attract unpleasant
attention. I should like to sleep out
doors, too, Dut tne iront veranda is the only place available, and of course, I can't sleep here. So I make my best substitute that I can by
Keeping my oea close to the open
window and the temperature as far
below the freezing point as it is outside. I sleep as we do in the Adiron
dacks except that I have a roof over
me. I am wrapped in a fur coat and my feet are kept warm by a heated soapstone. I spend at least ten, hours
a day out of doors. In fact, I never go in except to eat. I have an excellent appetite, feel strong and cough very little, and am altogether a different girl from what I was when I bejran."
DR. BACON FULLY RECOVERED. Indianapolis, Jan. 20. When the Kev. Dr. C. E. Bacon, presiding elder of the Indianapolis district, appeared yesterday at the Methodist ministers' meeting, he was greeted with a great clapping of hands and conducted to the rocking chair usually occupied by the venerable Dr. T. A. Goodwin. Dr.
leave at this office and get reward. 16-3t
FOUND A purse at Gennett Tues
day evening. Owner can have property by calling at Railroad store and describing same
LOST A silver watch on north E
street, between twentieth street and Railroad store. Reward if returned to Edna Shorkitt at Railroad store.
FOR SALE Some choice young thorough-bred Poland China male hogs. See C. Shepherd, five mile3 northwest of Richmond, R. R. Nb. 7. FOR SALE A nice established business in Richmond that will support a family. Price $-"0, 414 south fourteenth street. 'Phone 1003. 3l Bargains in every department during: the Clearance Sale. The
Geo. II. Kiiollenberg Co
V
