Richmond Palladium (Daily), 6 February 1906 — Page 5
LOCAL BREVITIES;
Charles Roser spent last Saturday "with friends in Dayton. Clamor Bartel left j-esterday for California for his health. ' Fine assortment of valentines from 1 cent np to elegant novelties. Moorinann's J'ook Store. W. K. Iiarton of Pittsbnrjr spent Sunday at his home in New Paris. Finest line of Valentines in the city. Moormann's book store. Hubert Suavely spent Sunday with friends at Fountain City. Mis. Austin's famous pancakes. Really delicious. Mrs. Mi Kiiilhoff and rhildren of Cinchirnti are viiiintr Mr. and Mrs. John Kutrcnieyer of South Fourteenth street. Harvard Dentists, 9th and Main tf Mis. AuiH'S Love left yesterday to ppend six months abroad. Dickinson Trust Company has money to loan on real estate at favorable terms. We do not loan over one-half the value of property. Oath Freeman spent Sunday with friends at Kni-rhtstown. Mrs. Austin's famous pancakes. Really delicious. Ralph Hall, who attends Business College spent Sunday at Winchester. The Business College dropped Pitman Shorthand years ao, because it was out of date. They have now dropped f 5 retrar. because Chartier is the shortest practical system on earth. Saves from 50 to $100. 2-6-1 w Kenneth Mijrhley spent Sunday with friends at Dayton. See Dickinson Trust Company for loans on real estate. Favorable terms on loans of less than one-half the value of property. Colonel J. A. S. Graves of Cincinnati spent yesterday with friends in ; this city. CASH BEALL, KIBBEY & 00LOEHR & KLUTE, ; WTDUP & THOMPSON AND THE BIG SJOBE HANDLE THE RICHMOND HAT. . . : : Roy Dennis visited friends at Dayton yesterday; Kyle Gard, a student, of Business College spent yesterday with his parents at Winchester.''-"' Money to loan on farms or city property on favorable terms. We do not loan more than onj-half the value of property. ' . Dickinson Trust Co. ' ''!,;, 1-';' v . Miss Alice Marlatt visited friends at Greensfork yesterday. Howard Horton of Columbus, 0., is here spending a few days with his mother. George Mills, who attends Business College spent Sunday with his parents at Winchester. J. W. Maxin of New Castle was in thu city Saturday. Miss Esther Calhoun is visiting friends at Xenia, O. Fred Jones is home from Indianapolis for a visit with his mother and other relatives. Henry Ottenjohn of Cincinnati spent Sunday in this city with relatives. Ilenry Bulla is home from Rockville, Ind., for a few days visit with bis parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Bulla of North Ninth street. Miss Nina Wilkinson left yesterday for a visit with friends at Xenia, Ohio. Mrs. Allen Fouts of Hagerstown is visiting in this city. Earl Tout of East Gennantown visited friends in this city Monday. The standard blood-purifying medicine. In usual liquid or new tablet form. SarsapariSIa n n nn tp L23-U.UJ.U 03-50. PER
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Mrs. Wilfred Jessup and children haire returned from artwo months visit; with, relatives, at Washington, D. C. V -
John Dingley was yesterday. in Cincinnati Mrs. J. A. Greenstreet left yesterday for a visit with friends at New Castle. Dr. Bond went to Indianapolis yesterday to deliver a lecture to the Students of the Indiana Medical College. Miss Marie Kaufman lias returned from a visit with friends at Indianapolis. Ben Bartel returned from Martinsville yesterday. G. II. Gilchrist made a business trip to Indianapolis Monday. Miss Mary Friedley spent with friends at Indianapolis un Ja v Mrs. (!. II. Gilchrist and ton of Anderson are visiting Mr. and Mrs. ( has. Marlatt of North Ninth street. 10CIAL EVENTS Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Vosmeier delightfully entertained Sunday at their home on South Fifth street. Progressive Euchre was a feature of the evening. Prizes were won by Miss Martha Geier and Mr. Andrew Torhcek. Consolations were awarded to Mrs. Andrew Torbeck and Mr. Wm. Torbeck. A dainty luncheon was served. CALL FOR COUNTY CONVSNTIO The Prohibitionists of Wayne "ounly are called to meet in Mass Convention at Richmond in Rhoda Temple Thursday, Feb. S, at 10:30 a. m. to hear reports of officers, appoint delegates to the State Convention, nominate a county ticket, reorganize as needed and attend to such other business as may properly come be fore such a meeting. There will be a short forenoon session, when a good program .will be win bea general fmblie meeting at : ... . '"' 1'.. which Prof. Lough and wife will eing and he will lecture. Let, every Prohibition man and womatt itthe'; county take special aim to be , present at the day meeting. . QWf '"":'f COUNTY CHtoMA CASTOR I A Pel T. Jits and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of 4 NOTICE TO BIDDERS. Proposals for supplies , for the; tise of the Eastern Indiana Hospital, for the Insane for the month of March will be received by the ' Board of Trustees at the Hospital before 3 p. m. Monday, February 12, 1906. Specifications may be seen at the Second National Hank, or at the Hospital. By order of the Board, S. E. SMITH, Med. Supt. : DEATHS AND FUNERALS FRANKS The funeral of Miss Anna Franks took place " Sunday afternoon from the home, 323 South Fourth street, and was largely attended. Services were also held at Trinity Lutheran church, the Rev. J. Beck officiating. Burial was in Earlham cemetery. GROSS Roland E. Gross died Saturday at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Gross, south of the (" piano factory. Death was due to tuberculosis. He was 26 years of age Two brothers and one sister, besides his parents survive. The funeral will take place this morning at 10 o'clock. Burial will be in Lutherania. ATTENTION Unorganized carpenters and mill men. There will be a meeting of carpenters and mill men, unorganized, held at 511 Main street, third floor, Thursday, February 8, at 7:30 p. m. All are cordially invited. By order of Committee. tu-wed-th. rn n n n UJ U3 JJ
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LADY WARWICK, THE SOCIALIST COUNTESS WHO HAS STIRRED ENGLAND. Many European noblemen have espoused Socialism, but the beautiful Countess of Warwick is the first woman of patrician blood to take a leading part in
the cause. Her recent touring of England in her automobile, her appeal for the;
clock laborers' parliamentary candidate lunch with her at her palace have made TOR WOMEN'S JAIL BUT WILL NOT TAKE ACTION TILL WEDNESDAY. - ' - ADDITION TO PRESENT JAIL Considered to be Most Expedient 7 Arrangement Don't Want it Located at tha Home. - The County Commissioners were in session yesterday at the Court House to consider the plans and specifications which have been drawn up. for the women's jail. All three of the members were present, and although nothing was decided at the meeting Ycsf erday . the Board of Charities wishing to present a plan, the Com missioners discussed the question as v'i '. . . . . 0 the location and it is understood that it is their intention to build the new jail as an addition to the pres ent jail building this plan being con sidered the more expedient. Elwood Clark, Commissioner from the Western District, said last night that the Commissioners would meet with committee, from the Board of Charities next. Wednesday afternoon at the Court House and at that time the matter will, be definitely settled The Board of Charities is in favor of having the jail located on ground belonging to the Home for the Friendless and to. be under the same management. It .also contends that there is a moral question to be set tied in having the women prisoners under the care of a sheriff. The commissioners feel that in building a jail on ground not belinging to the County they would be liable at some time to lose possession of the' building. According to law this may not be allowable, and as it is not their purpose to buy the lots at the Home for the Friendless, they think it better to have the women's jail near that used for the men, and appoint a matron to have charge. While this would be an added expense which would be done away with at the Home for the Friendless there would never be a question as to the ownership of the building. As soon as the location is decided upon, an appropriation will be made and work commenced at once. o Bears the Signature of Tha Kind Yob Hr.3 Always Bought nn LMJ
COMMISSIONERS CONSIDER PLANS
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3". - ' if? : and her invitation to street laborers to a great stir in conservative England. TBALL UNFIT college: SO SAYS PRESIDENT ELIOT OF HARVARD IN HIS ANNUAL REPORT. WORSE THAN PRIZE FIGHTING And a Lot of Other Fighting Gives Many Reasons for Taking I Suck a $tand. Cambridge, Mass., Feb. 5. The American game of football as now played is wholly unfit for colleges an schools, according to an opinion expressed by President Charles Eliot of Harvard, university in his annual report to the board of overseers of the university. . Dr. Eliot declares that as a spectacle for persons who know the game football is more brutalizing than prize fighting, cock fighting, or bull fighting; and for the contestants he believes the rules governiing football to be far less humane than the rules which govern the prize ring. He adds that it is childish to suppose the athletic authorities who have permit ted football to become brutal, cheating, demoralizing the game can be trusted to reform it.
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The report declares the game has fessor and wiIi pay her devotions at reached a point where it sets up a the feet of a Catholic Archbishop, wrong kind of hero; that there is no I The Pope has firmly declined to such thing as generosity between j concede to King Alfonso any modificombatants, any more than in war, cation of the procedure usual in reand that all the evils of fottball have ceiving royal converts into the Holy descended into the secondary Roman church. Nor is it improbable schools, where they are working that Queen Christina brought this great moral mischief. about. "Regarded as a combat between princess Ena will go to Rome and highly trained men," says the re- remain at the Spanish embassy, port, "the prize ring has great ad- From there, accompanied by her vantages over the fottball field, for mother and her suite, she will drive the rules of the prize ring are more in a papal carriage to the Vatican, humane than those of fottball, and where the Pope will receive her in they can be, and often are, more his private apartment with royal strictly enforced. The fight in a honors. The Princess, then nn obeprize ring between two men facing dient daughter of the church, will deeach other is perfectly visible, so part from Rome without visiting the that there are no secret abominations King and Queen of Italy at the Quiras in fottball. Yet prize fighting is inal. illegal." I Princess Ena has already been inContinuing, the report declares , structed in the Catholic religion by a that football causes an unreasonable barefoot Carmelite friar attached to number of serious injuries and the Carmelite church close to Ken-
death: that the public has been kept ignorant concerning the number and gravity of these injuries; that. many of the serious injuries are of such nature that in all probability they never can be perfectly repaired; that violations of rules of the game by
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I fhighly profitable and are constantly i Ierjetrated by all parties, and that Iacts of brutality are constantly committed, partly as a result of passions naturally aroused in fight inr, but often on well grounded calculations of profit toward victory. "It is clearly the duty of the colleges which have permitted these monstrous evils to grow up and become intense." the report continues, "to purge themselves of such immoralities, and to do what they can to help the secondary schools to purge themselves also. Intercollegiate and interseholastic fottball omrht to be prohibited until a rea sonable crame has been formulated ! and thoroughly exemplfied in the ; practice of individual institutions. YOUNG RULER'S MOTHER DISLIKES HIS CHOICE AND MAY CAUSE TROUBLE. SCORNS PARENTS' SELECTION Boy Monarch Eitterly Disappoints Royal Family by Hi3 Refusal to Marry His Cousin. London, Feb. 5. That Queen Christina of Spain scarcely tolerates the compact that will make an Eng lish Princess King Alfonso's royal consort, is : well known here, and in all the courts of the continent of Europe. Queen Christina, whose devotion to her son during his minority was never excelled by a peasant mother, is bitterly disappointel that Alfonso refused to marry the woman she chose for him liis cousin, the young Archduchess Gab rielle Maria Theresa of Austria. At an Sebastian and Biarritz, the, Queen pother displayed only , the barest, most formal politeness to Princess Ena of Battenbergv and her mother, Princess Henry . (Be-f atrice.) ; So the prophets of evil foresee Ihat Princess Ena will be far from happy deprived of her mother-in-law's affection, dwelling in the blighting atmosphere oi; Spanish etiquette and ever threatened by anarchists, who, seeking her husband's life,( will not spare hers. In her mother's ntive land " Princess Ena's enforced acceptance of Roman Catholicism as a condition precedent to her marriage is arousing Protestant hostility. Church of England divines in high places are writing to the newspapers imploring King Edward to interfere to prevent "this Spanish marriage, an event of evil omen in English history." These Protestant clergymen point out that if Princess Ena ever revisits j England as Queen of Spain she will ha nmnniri Kv rihrv,n r. sington palace. She now awaits only her formal reception into the church by the Pope. Private letters describe Alfonso as a gallant lover. The nobles of his suite are convinced that he really is in love. The Princess, a girl of
coaches, trainers, and players iare
ALFONSO'S BRIDE FACES ROUGH PATH
COME SEE!
THE HEW 1906 PATTERNS OF AND E2 Our west window is showing some select patterns. Then come in and insp e c t the complete line & & WE SELL THE RICHMOND BED EVERY PATTERN A WINNER 927-329 MAIN ST. FURNITURE . . . BEDDING ...PICTURES... WEEKLY PRIZE. The PALLADIUM ..wants the news, and will pay ,4one dollar ($1.00) for the best piece of local news mailed, 'phoned, or .deliv- , ered EXCLUSIVELY to. this . office. ,on or before February 7.. Get busy and earn the dollar. . I charming freshness and sweetness of disposition, responds with charming modesty. "'' ; , In the -trial 'of their wills, the1 King proved his stronger than his ' mother's, for while she peremptorily demanded his return to Madrid, he declined to go as long as his fiancee remained at Biarritz. 1 ' A musical organisation representative of Richmond's high standing In the arts ........ TETRAUQ... CONCERT 'QUARTET The only quartet engaged for dally eonoerts at the World's Fair St. Louis, 1904 . . .... . Ill I A Rising People. An English vicar raises bis voice and declares that unless the automobile learns to act in a more ladylike man ner In the near future there will be a great uprising of the people. We had feared aa muchand as there is no prospect that the buzz wagon will mend its ways the people should begin at once to look for a soft place to light, for we may say that the uprising has already begun. Under the impulse of this great monster frequently the oldest men In the community Join the rising generation for at least a few minutes, though they may repent it later on in the hospital. For raising families it haa also been found to be unequaled in the quickness of its work, although the quality is somewhat subject to criticism. Trnely it may be said that in the history of the race there has never showed up a booster quite like it; Praises His Luck. When the enow fs on the hillside And the coasting is Just great And the Ice i3 smooth and glassy Where the fellows go to skate. When the air is keen and nipping And the lazy smoke wreaths curl. Then a boy is mighty thankful That he was not horn a girl. The Final Judge. "He has appealed his case to the court of last resort." "Put it up to Ms wife, has her
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