Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 128, 31 May 1906 — Page 5
The Richmond Palladium, Thursday, May 31, 1906.
Page 5.
Tfemr Nerve It is nerve energy that runs the organs of your body. The storage battery is the nerve cells in; the brain and spinal cord, and from this, battery nerve force is sent outlHrough the system" 61 nervesTo keep the body healthy you must have plenty of nerye force; if you have not, the rgans work imperfectly, the circulation is sluggish, digesticA bad, appetite poor, kidneyinactive, and aches, pains anfl misery are thft penalty. You can keeb the system strong with Dr.JMiles' Nervine. It assists in generating nerve energy; it arengthens the nerves and rrfekes the whole system rongjand vigorous. "I takft Dr. Mites' leai In recommending" trvlfft to those sunerlnjr from norv and xueli rostratlon, ineomnia r. After neverai ronths iuixeuj irom aeove aiseascs trini this medicine and found Imme loriths nine from afcove diseases diate relief. It aoothen and strengthens the nerve. eha.se away the gloomy and depressing thoughts and gives the uft.erer renewed strength, and hope. It In a superb nerve reetorer." JUDGE JACOB BEEMANN. Madlaon, Wisconsin. Dr. Miles' Heart Cur Is sold by rour drugqlvt, who will guarantee that he first bottle will benefit. If It falls he will refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind Pennsylvania LINES SPECIAL LOW FARES TO ST. PAUL May 27 to BO Women Club Meeting juiy 28, st, as HaengerDuna DOGTQ May 81 to June Mi&lcal and First Church of Christ, Scfemlit. Conventions Stopovers at F ew York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington. NEW HaVEN June 8 to ft Kntgjfti of Columbus LOUISVILLE June TTftii, in Tlne-comln Week: PORTLAND, ORE. June 17 to i-irotcl Men's Meeting OMAHA DENVER July (M-It. Y. P. V. July 1M4 B. P. O. E. , MILWAUKEE August 10, 11, 12 Eagle Grand Aerie MINNEAPOLIS August 10. 11, H-Q. A. R, If Interested, ask C. W. ELMER, Tloktt Aft. , KICIIMOJCD, IND. rings EL NEAR flEWrARI8, OHIO Home of tfrNavahoe Water Dam iioul t, ciud House Pool, nilllarifl. Bowling Alleys and all out door sports. CHICKEN DINNERS a Specialty. , 75 CENTS ; . Maxson & McDannald, Props. I N i siiuiuy FYmiRQinM J wwii wn i bnwwiiwiun RATES mm VIA . J Dayton & Western J Dayton and Return, $1.00 . a a iSAton ana .eturn, - .60 1 . J Tickets at abore price will be told J every Sunday until farther notice. ANVfHING AOD WANT INJIIEyf ARM LINE. Improvetfrarcfe, Large or Small Call oVj. E. MOORE Ovr 6 N. 7th 8L Richmond, Ind. PERSONALLY CONDUCTED TOUR Chicago, Union Paclfio & Noth-West-ern Line. Twelve exclusively first class personally conducted parties will leave Chicago, under the auspices of the Tourist Department of the Chicago, Union Pacific & North-Western Line, July ?th,July 18th, and August 4th, for Colorado, Utah, Yellowstone National Park, Portland, Puget Sound points. The Vosemite. San Francisco and Southern California. All expenses of the Journey are Included In the 'Initial cost All arrangements for hotel accommodations, train schedules, etc., are provided for. in advance. Write for Itineraries and full particulars to S. II. Hutchison, Manager Tourist Department, 212 Clark it.. Chlcaro, I1L ivAy 20-tn FINtt hollow ground X RADIlylTE RAZOR FREE , Ttf fch purchaser of tho D(HlAft RADIUMITE STROP M r SlMnfatr Court HouM ill. jm 'Afuiyivjy pharmacy f
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Alleged Land Swindler Says That He Will Make Good All Losses in Time. HE HIMSELF, A VICTIM ASSERTS THAT HE WAS DECEIVED BY NORTHWESTERN LAND AND EMIGRATION COMPANYGAVE THEM THE MONEY. , U. B. Kellogg, alleged to have swindled a large number of Indiana peoplf In a land deal In Canada, among them whom was was Dwlght North of Milton, is under arrest at Bloomington, Ind., the scene of his operations. He voluntarily returned to Bloomington where he is being held awaiting his attorneys from Chicago. ' He claims that he has been deceived by the Northwestern Land and Emigration Company, operated by two men by the name of Smith and Rogers. After he . collected the money he says that the two men were paid all but 5 per cent of it and actual expenses, and they have made away with it, the total amount being about $7,700. Kellogg states that he had no suspicion of the company until a few days before the excursion from this city was to start for Canada. When the money to pay for the tickets and Pullman car did not come, he went at once to Chicago and St. Paul and other points in search of the promoters of the company. Claims To Hold Receipts. He further says that he has receipts from the company to prove that he turned over the money. He has worked up excursions at Bloomington, Lafayette and Maryland, Wis. He has been at Maryland and arranged to pay back the amount. He says that he has made constant effort to straighten out the difficulty since the failure of the excursion, and if opoprtunity is given to hm he will pay back every cent in time. He asks that he be not placed in jail and he calls for a conference with all the interested men who put up $50 each on the land prop osition. SVORXA. Bwitha of The Kind Yon Have Always Bought A Protective Precaution. ; "Don't you know," defiantly asked the socialistic orator, "that the people are now crying out for Justice to keep her eye . on the , lawbreakers - in high places?"" "- "I don't care for that," returned the millionaire rebater, "as long as her .bandage doesn't slip off." Baltimore American. " i Ownership. . "When I was younger," said Mr, Cumrox,' "I looked forward to having a home of my own." , "Well, haven't you got It?" "Well, it's mine legally, but I don't feel like using It much except when mother and the girls haven't company." Washington (Star. " Accent on the "Man. "Well," he said during their quarrel, "I suppose you'll be wanting a divorce next." "Really," she replied coldly, "I don't see why It should be necessary In this case. A woman doesn't need a divorce unless she has been married to a man." Philadelphia Ledger. Family Ileaemblancea. She Did you ever seen the Homer twins? ne Yes. She Don't you think the boy is the picture of his father? He Yes; and I also think the girl is the phonograph of her mother. Minneapolis Journal. In the Beginning;. "Yours is certainly an unusual case," said the lawyer, "and it will be necessary to consult a number of books." "So?" queried the client. "Yes,' answered the legal lisht, "and we will begin with your pocketbook." Detroit Tribune. t Getttnar Alonar. "1 8 that timid young congressman making any progress 7" asked Grayce. "Some," admitted Gladys. "After talking about kisses for a week he finally asked tor leave to print" Louisville Courier-JournaL CASTOR! A IV T.Jits and Children. The Kind You Hats Always Bought Bears the Signature of Tbe Blir Cloek of F"ri The works of a clock made for the Cathedral of St Gervais d'Avranches weigh two tons. There are five sets of wheels, and the hours are struck on a bell weighing over six tons by a clapper of 220 pounds. There are four faces to this clock, which is the largest In France. I tfca Doetor'a Waiting; Rtnm. Doctor (entering suddenly) Which of you has waited longest? '-Shears (sulkily) I. I have waited six months, and you haven't paid me for that last suit yet I " I Tba Flrat Soa. Nodd I can't make up my mind what college to send that toyf mine to. Todd IIow old is - bar : Xodd Nearly three weeks. ) " - -
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PLUCKY QUEEN HELENA OF ITALY. The recent bravery of King Victor Emmanuel and Queeft Helena in visiting Naples and the other distressed cities iu the region of Vesuvius during the destructive eruption of the ancient mountain has endeared the sovereigns to their Italian subjects. The queen is the daughter of Prince Nicolas of Montenegro apd is a daring sportswoman, a mountain climber and an excellent shot. She is a head taller than her royal husband.
THERE IS STYLE IN TOMB STONES Change Now Taking Place Is One Which Comes About Once in a Decade. OBELISK GROWS POPULAR COST OF MAKING STONZS NOW LESS THAN IT WAS TWENTY YEARS' AGO DUE TO NEW MACHINERY. - After ruling with an iron hand during each of the three score and ten years of life, Dame Fashion takes a final fling at the departing Bpirit by setting a mode in tomb stones. Coffins are built according to the latest Parisian models and tomb stones also fol low the whims of some stone cutter's genius. y ' " " Unlike the race that first commenced the use of stones to mark the place where its dead lay buried, the American people bow to . style when selecting monuments. Beauty counts for much but style ranks above art and If a brick tower were to suddenly become popular, it would be placed ahead of all the Grecian stone carving ever made. As it is, styles change about once a decade and anyone who has any knowledge of the different stones which have been in vogue from time to time, can tell at a glance when passing through a cemetery, at about what year this or that stone was erected. Change Taking Place Now. The character of tombstones is undergoing a radical change now, from the heavy, low-set mass, to the taller and more graceful stone known as the "Cottage Monument." The former stone is Called the 'Sarcophagus," a Greek word, de rived from two words of ancient Greek, meaning originally a tomb cut out of a kind of lime stone, in which the body was placed and the character of the stone caused it to be entirely eaten up within a month. This stone has been popular for ten or fifteen years, and still about one third of the monuments which are being put up are along this line. It is gradually giving way however to what i3 thought to be the more natural and modern cut The first monument ever In use was the shaft, modeled after the obelisk. This style gave away to the cottage monument, and then to the heavy form which is just passing out of style. The next style after the rottage monument which is now the "correct thing" will probably be the obelisk, showing the return to ancient tastes and customs. Cost Is Much Less. The cost of fancy monuments is much less now than it was twenty years ago. All stone carving is done with a pneumatic tool, instead of by hand, as formerly. The finest of carving can be done with this tool, at a comparatively low price. Ninety per cent, of the granite used comes from Vermont and is very expensive. In carving, the style also changes, and the old time rose and lily are now relegated to the back ground. Lettering designs are not as elaborate as they once were, either, the tendency being toward a plain, yet rich looking stone. Odd Markings Are Found. Some very odd markings are often to be found on tomb stones, but one which was made on a stone for the grave of a woman in New Madison, Ohio, by a firm in this city, is best of all. Tha frill of the dead woman provided that the inscription should be as Jo" -ws: In Memory of Lydia Mills Hutton, - Who lived a life as pure as that of Ihe ' "" t Virgin -Mary . and in memory of Mark T. Mills, Mary Ann Bloom, antt her connection who lie -by her side. " J-.V" - Lydia Mills Hutton raid for UlIji monument 7 ' "
TRIBUTES TO . THE DEPARTED Many Graves in Addition to Those of Soldiers Were Decorated. THOUSANDS AT EARLHAM THE BEAUTIFUL CEMETERY SEEMINGLY COVERED INTO A GREAT FLOWER GARDEN DURING THE DAY. Not only were the graves of the soldiers dead bedecked with flowers yesterday, but the last resting places of hundreds of other dead were strewn with beautiful blossoms during the day. Decoration Day, primarily the day for paying this tribute with flowers to the dead soldiers and sailors, is more and more becoming recognized at the day of general decoration and of paying silent and beautiful tribute to the departed. , All the cemeteries near Richmond were thronged with people yesterday and Earlham cemetery in particular was fairly covered with a mantle of blooms. In no previous year were graves so generally decorated as yesterday. In the morning while committees from the Grand Army and auxiliary organizations were at work in Earlham cemetery bedecking the graves of the soldiers with the American flag and with beautiful boquets, there were scores of jother persons, who, in sim ilar fashion recorated the graves of their own beloved. All day long the stream of visitors continued and late in the afternoon the beautiful cemetery had seemingly been converted into a great flower garden. Many of the floral tributes were of elaborate design and were composed of the finest hothouse blooms; others and in fact the greatest number how ever, were simple boquets of the more common, yet none the less beau tiful, varieties of flowers that grow in tne doorways of many homes. Bert th h8 Kind Yo" HavB AlwayS ca Signature of THE HUMAN BRAIN. It VndrKoea Wonderful Chan K -9 Dvrins Ita Growth. The wonderful changes which the hu--man brain undergoes from the moment when it first appears In the embryo until it becomes the perfected laboratory of thought characteristic to the matured human being has been commented upon by several of the leading writers on biology, physiology, etc. During these successive changes, or, rather, transformations from the lower to the higher sphere, the human brain not only takes upon itself the general shape and form of the brains of various representatives of the lower classes of animals, but appears to have the same structural constituents,' at least to a certain degree. Thns it has been found that the original germ of the brain as it appears in the human embryo has the exact outlines of a serpent's thought factory. After that the changes wbicb take place while the brain Is assuming the various shapes which It must undergo before It becomes perfect give It a decided resemblance to the brains of fishes, .birds and tnammiferous animals. - " . - "Hcins "Thoughts on the Structure of the Human Brain" and Wilson's "Anatomy of the Human Body" both mention these queer transformations, as does also Hugh Miller in bis famous work, "Testimony of- the Rocks. Miller puts It In this way: "It has long been known that the human brain Is built up by a wonderful process, during which It assumes in succession the form of the brain of a serpent, a fish, a bird, and lastly, before it assumes the characteristic human form. It takes upon itself the outline of a mammiferous quadrupwFs brain. Hence the remark made by scientific writers that "man Is the sum total of all animals."
ARRANGE
A GRAND EXHIBIT Richmond Art Association Prepares to Eclipse All Its Former Efforts. ART JURY IS SELECTED PROMINENT ARTISTS AGREE TO COME HERE TO AWARD THe FOULKE PRIZE RECITALS AND ADDRESSES. At a general meeting of the Richmond "Art Association .held last even ing, all preliminary arrangements for teh big exhibit, which opens the even ing of June 12, were. completed. It) is an assured fact that the exhibit this year will be a larger and more inter esting and complete than any that have ever been held in this city. Tickets have been placed on sale at 50 cents each and a canvass of the j city for the purpose of posing o j them will be made at once. Through out the two weeks that the exhibit will be open a series of special enter tainments will be held and anyone purchasing a ticket will be entitled to attend these functions without extra charge. This offer is made as a spe cial inducement in hopes that a largo number of tickets will be disposed of. A Flq Day Program. On the eveifng of the opening, June 12, a reception and private view of the exhbit will be held. On the evening of June 14 the Daughters of the American Revolution will give a program appropriate to Flag Day, which occurs on that date. On the evening of June 16 there will be a mu sical program- by an orchestra.- On the evening of June 20 the annual meeting of the association will be held. On the evening of June 22, the Starr Piano Company will tender a complimentary musical recital by art ists from the Indianapolis Conserva tory of Music, and on the evening of June 23 another musical program will be rendered. In addition to these entertainments, W. D. Foulke will give an address on Italian Art," and Mrs. J. W. Morrisson will talk on the exhibit of etchings which will be given under her auspic es and direction. ' Art Jury Is Selected. One of the most important actions taken by the committee . last night was the selection of a jury which will award a prize of $50, known as the Mary T. R. Foulke prize for the best picture exhibited by any resident Indiana artist. This jury, as selected, will be composed of the following prominent artists. . Charles Francis Brown, of the" Chicago Art Institute, who is an nstructor and a landscape artist; Frank F. Frederick, teacher of painting and designing at the University of Illinois; William N. McCord of Cnclnnati, a noted painter of landscapes. These critics have consented to come to Richmond without any compensation except their expenses. The picture exhibit proper this year will consist of 126 paintings, nearly sll of which have never been" hung in this city before. There will be 30 paintings by Philadelphia artists, 15 paint ings from the brushes of prominent New York artists, 45 paintings by lo cal artists and 36 paintings by Indiana artists outside of Richmond. One feature of the exhibit will be the large canvass "Plowing the First Beam" by Horatio Walker. This painting took the gold medal prize at the St. Louis Worlud's Fair. It will be placed at the east end of the first floor corridor and is sure to attract much attention. Catalogue is Completed. The catalogue has now been com pleted and is in the hands of the printers. The reports made by the chair men of the various committees last evening were favorable in every respect. The following additional committees were named last evening. Textiles and Leathers Miss" Emma Bond, Chairman. Miss Juliet Corwin. Mrs. W. O. Wissler. Miss Elizabeth Williams. Hanging Mrs. M. F. Johnson, Chairman. J. E. Bundy. Mrs. James Morrisson Mrs. Paul Comstock. Frank GIrardin. Miss Carrie Lesh. Music Prof. Will Earhart, Chairman. Mrs. Will. Earhart. Mrs. Henry Gennett.Clarence GennetL Henry Runge. Manual Training W. S. Hiser. Chairman, Miss Emma Bond. Miss Alice Winder. Miss Alvina Steen. Miss Marguerite 1 1 ill (Miss Martha Homey. Miss Kate Morgan. Miss Grace Simpson. Mrs. Clara Graves. Etchings Mrs. J. W. Morrisson, Chairman. Mrs. H. H .Weist Mrs. Jesse Reeves. Miss Gwendolyn Foulke. We don't cut t i price becaus 1 don't substit adu ! Quigley swabylon I Druggists t 41S N. 8th. Pbont 143
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