Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 131, 4 June 1906 — Page 5

The Richmond Palladium, Monday, June 4, 190B.

Page 5. .

j SCHNEIDER I

4 CARRIAGE FACTORY I 47 NORTH EIGHTH ST. Ruil? ill Wnd of new vehicles to rder. Repair proinpt'y done. Rubber Tlre Patched and onty tjLe best of new ones put on at lowest ra i a. : r ' nsylvania -BINES eni V SPECIAL LOW FARES f TOST. PAUL May 27 to 80 "A'omw't Club Meeting July 2IJ, 2425 Sicntrbund BOSTON Mar 81 to Jna'e Medical and First Oharch of Chrlit. Hcltntlst. Convention Htopovert at New York, Philadelphia, Ualtlmofo, W anhlngton. NEW HAVEN June 3 to p KnlghM of Columbus LOUISVILLE Jure 11. l, la Home-coming Week PORTLAND, ORE. June 17 to 21 Hotel Men's Meeting OMAHA DENVER July B.l-R. Y. P. U.' Joly 11-14 B. P. o. K. MILWAUKEE Aogutt 10, 11, 12 Eagle Grand Aerie MINNEAPOLIS August 10. 11, 12-0. A. K. If interested, a sic C. W. ELMER, Ticket Agt. RICHMOND, 1MB. SUNDAY EXCURSION rates. VIA Dayton 2cf Western Dayton and Return, Eaton and Return, - $1.00 .60 A ! Tickets at b$ve price will be 6old etery Sunday until further notice. ANYTHING' YJUMVANT IN Tllf FARM LINE. Improved farrrrif Large or Small Call on? X E. MOORE Over 6 N. 7jth St. Richmond, Ind. rr WILSON W DOWELL H Avenue illorse-Shoers" A I.L WORK OTARANTEED. 8 Ft. WayntTAve. Phone 489 Horses cnlJeU for and delivered. W We tion't cut the Z t price t because we adulterate goods. f Quloley S Babylon ... I Y Druhglsts f 41S N. 8thJ Phone 143 o FIRE HOLLOW GROUND t I' RiDllMITE RAiOR. FREE I To each purchaser of the DtLLAR RADItjMITE STROP J. .Quigljy, REDuring the past jblght months we have omclated at ill the weddings of the mult prominent Brides ft' Richmond You know the tOa ik them about our work. If vou wiuithe musical program of your wedding artlstle and complete, Call up Tel. No. 1896 Tet-ranq Concert Quartet ..WALLf PAPER.. Room and f icture Moulding STAMPS MoormanVs Book Store ' B26Main St. pica pl 'I tried all kinds of Wood wmsdtes which fslled do me nnrpoud but 1 hv to and th riht thine My fc w. full f pimple. nJ blackhestl. Artr taking C-r.t they all left. 1 am voiittnatng th n.a nf th.iu ami racoramendmg hm to mr friends. I fl line whftn I ri 'n th jnotnin. Hop to hava a chaaea to recommend CaacareU." . i'rtxl C. Wttten, 7t Xlm 6t., Kevark. N.J. Plaaaant. Palatable. Potent. Taite GxxV rx flood, Foer Stckea, Weaken or Gripe. 10c, lie. io. Neref sold in bulk. The g-ftintne tablet atampad OOU Uuaranteed to ear or yyur money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or 14. Y. 505 AM M UAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES

aa Mill . I

( ir e Dowels

Osw canov cathartic

Social and Personal Mention MARRIAGE OF MISS ADA FOX AND MR. LOUIS HIRSCH OF INDIANAPOLIS TOOK PLACE LAST EVENING AT ' HOME OF BRIDE MISS FLORENCE ENDSLEY ENTERTAINED AT COUNTRY HOME FOR MISS LOUCK.

CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK. Monday Afternoon. .;;. , - Mrs. Hastey will entertain . . for Miss Lulu Irwin whose marriage takes place Wednesday evening. Monday Night Miss Fred Miller will banquet the members of the Whist Club. Tuesday Evening. . I Mrs. E. Ti. Grosvenor will be the hostess for a whist party. Wednesday Evening. The mprriage of Miss Bessie Louck to Mr. Roy Taylor of Indianapolis will take place, also the marriage of Miss Ada Elliott of Knightstown and Mr.. Isaac Woodard, formerly of this city. Thursday The W. O. D. Sewing Club will hold its last meeting with Mrs. Geo. Roberts two miles north of the city. Friday. There will be a whist party at the Country Club. Saturday. Mrs. J. G. Greenstreet will give a reception. At a very quiet service held at the home of the bride's parents, 128 South 15th street, at six o'clock last evening, Miss Ada Fox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sol Fox, was united in marriage to Mr. Louis Hirsch, of Indianapolis. The ceremony was performed by Dr. Messing, of Indianapolis, and was witnessed by only a few relatives. After the wedding service, a supper was served by Miss Moelk. The bride and groom then mysterioitsly disappeared, not giving out the destination of their wedding tour. They were the recipients of many handsome presents. The guests of the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. George Fox. Mr. and Mrs. Sol Fox and daughter, Miss Jessie, Mr. and Mrs. . Henry Rawitsch, of Indianapolis and Mrs. Hirsch, mother of the groom, of Indianapolis. Miss Florence , Endsley gave a pic ric party last evening at her beauti ful country home six miles south of the city, in honor of Miss Bessie Louck, whose wedding to Mr. Roy Taylor, of Indianapolis takes place next Wednesday. Saturday evening a kitchen rush was given for Miss Hildah Werner at her home on South 11th street. Many useful presents were received and a general good time was enjoyed by all A two course luncheon was served. The following were present: Nettie Cook, Rose Brinker, Alice Jarris, Carrie Schwegman, Clara Pitman, Ada Thomas, Theresa Wimmer of Piqqua, O., Hazel Pitinafc, Clara Wimmer, of Piqua, O., Nellie Burton, Anna Blickwedel, Minnie Nichter, Clara Twehus and Hilda Werner. 45The annual class banquetg of Earlham College were held on Saturday evening and were very successful. The Sophomores entertained the Seniors at The Westcott. There was an PASTOR PRAISES ORDER REV. SHIREY'S SERMON Tells Knights and Ladies of Honor That Their Society More Nearly Approaches the Ideal Than any Other Fraternal Organization. Fifty members of the Knishts and Ladies of Honor attended services yesterday morning at the Second Presbyterian church, and listened to a timely and interesting sermon by the pastor, the Rev. C. O. Shirey. The value of Christian citizenship was elaborated upon by the Rev. Mr. Shirey and he spoke of the relations that should exist between fraternal organizations and Christianity. In leferring to the Knights and Ladies of Honor the pastor said that insofar as his personal observations were concerned he felt that this order mor-3 nearly approached his ideal of what a fraternal organization should bo than any other. Ho ook this view of the facts that the Knights and Ladies of Honcr do not confine their members vo the men, but admit all members of a family. Preparing to Increase. " The Knights and Indies of Honor -re preparing to increase the memberrhip of the local todse. W. J. Tobin, of Missouri, Supreme Deputy Protector is now in Richmond in charge of the work and he hones to be ablo to present a class of between 50 and 100 for initiation on the night of June ?7 which date has 'jeen et for the event, uprome frotector Lockhart and Supreme Secretary Tate, both of Indianapolis are expected to attend the ceremonies on that night. The Board of Vestrymen of the St. Paul's Episcopal church has not yet selected a rector to succeed the Rev. Mr. H. H. Hadley, whose resignation took effect a week ago. The Board is working on the matter and hopes to make a report soon. Yesterday, one of the Vestrymen read the regular service, but there was no sermon. Why wait for your friend's friend to come and look at your house week after next? You can sell it with a To Let ad in The Palladium.

excellent program of toasts following ihi terviuK of the dinner. At the Ctfdar Spring Hotel., the Freshmen nd Junior3 held forth. " hey were served with an excellent 'I hirer and pt-ut the veninn with the various onviseiGents offered at the Springs. Prof. Ed arm. Star Luck off peroned tha party. itSaturday evening Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Weller entertained the members of the Whist Club at their home on North Eighth street. Drive whist was played at three tables and the prizes were won by Miss Ruby W. Hunt and Mrs. Geo. H. Dilks. 7.1lss Annie Dilks was a guest of the club. The next meeting will be with Miss Maude Thistlethwaite, Saturday evening, at her home on North 11th street Miss Ella Lemon will give an informal dinner this evening for Miss Bessie Louck. Mrs. Lewis Klute will entertain this afternoon with a kitchen rush for Miss Bessie Loucke. 5f - PERSONAL MENTION. Mr. Edgar Hiatt is the guest of his sister, Mrs. Frank Gilbert, of North D street. Miss Ola Cummins of Middletown, who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs. Foster Hoeffer, of South Eighteenth street, left for her home this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Land, who have been the guests of Miss Charlotte Kellar of Columbus, Indiana, will return home today. Miss Coral Grimes of Indianapolis, came yesterday to visit Mrs. Ado Mansfield. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Morrow left today for Springfield, Ohio. Karl Kepler, who has been attending , school at Mercersburg, Pa., has returned home.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Cates let yesterday for Hot Springs, Va., to spend two weeks. Harry Dilks, George Coale and Harry Doan, who have been attendng school at Purdue, came home Saturday to spend their summer vacations. Mrs. Charles Stutson, of Greensfork, spent Saturday in Richmond. Miss Mary J. Schramm, who has been visiting Miss Edna Veregge, on South -, Seventh street, returned home yesterday to Hamilton. Russell Gaar, who attends school at the Miama - Military Institute, Germantown, Ohio, will be home this Mr. Harry Westcott, who has been spending several weeks in Florida, is home. Gay Balfour left last night for Chicago ,and from there will go to his home in St. Paul, Minn. He has been spending several months with his brother, Matthew Balfour, at the Westcott. James A. Carr, of Springfield, formerly of this city, spent Saturday and Sunday here. THE OPEN AIR SERVICES INNOVATION OF FRIENDS East Main Street Church Undertakes New Method to Arouse Interest of the People The Opening Session Last Night a Decided Surf:ess. The first of a series of out door services at the East Main Street Friends Church was held last night and the attendance was much larger than expected. Between four and five hundred persons were present, far more than attended any other evening service in the city, showing the popularity with which the open air services are starting., The idea is a new one in this city, but the experiment showed to the pastor and to the members of the church that the meetings will be very successful. A platform has been erected between the two Main doors and arc lights strung above. In the open space in front of the church, pews and chairs were placed, and ev ery seat was filled. A chorus of about jfwenty-five sang several selec tlons and there were some hymns by a quartet and a double quartet. The idea, as outlined by the pastor. is to make the services popular, and by so doing, have plenty of music and but a short address, or sermon. A piano was used for the first time in connection with services at the East Main street Church. It was on the platform, and all songs were accom panied with Instrumental music. The address of the pastor, the Rev. Mr. Ware, was on the responsibilities of life, and he took as his text a verse from the chapter of James. Gets an" Increase. Because of the growth of business during the past year, postmasters in many Indiana towns gets increases cf salary for the next fiscal year. The only increase in Wayne County goes to Knode Porter, postmaster a tHagerstown who gets $100 added to his annual salary. Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Atkinson, cf Economy, will arrive in Richmond thif morning from Los Anselos, where they have been spending severa! months. They will visit Mr. and Mrs II. E. Williams before going to their home in Economy.

' M pk i L"? V ! WSav.

HENRY E. HUNTINGTON, THE MAN WHO MADE LOS ANGELES. Over thirty years ago Henry E. Huntington, favorite nephew of Collis P. Huntington, was wedded to Mary Preston, the stepdaughter of that famous railway king. Recently the couple were divorced. II. E. Huntington is known as the man who made Los Angeles. He inherited most of his uncle's fortune. Mrs. Huntington is the sister of Princess Hatzfeldt The Huntingtons have four children, all grown. The unmarried daughter has gone with her mother to live in Japan.

SIRES AND'SONSr George A. Ilearn of New York has Ret askle $100,000 as a permanent fund for the purchase of works by American artists. Ben Pitman, whose system of shortband is used! more than any other in the United States, is still living in Cincinnati. He Is eighty-three years jld. Sir Ralph Payne-Galwey, a baronet of Yorkshire. . England. Is believed to be the best archer in Europe. He has' frequently shot an arrow a quarter of a mile and struck the center of the target. The largest individual maker of clothespins in the world is Lewis Mann of Bryants Pond, Me. He started with a capital of only $400 and bought an old disused mill. He has amassed a comfortable fortune in the business. Sir William Crookes, the British scientist, was one of fhe earliest amateur photographers, eagerly experimenting with the camera as long ago as 1855. In those early days he was always saying to his wife, "Sit" And she used to reply, "It sounds like a hen." Walter Wellman, who is to make an attempt to reach the pole In an airship, will start in August. The gas bag of the ship will be 164 feet long and 524 feet in diameter. The ship will weigh 2,800 pounds and the motors and fixings 7,500 pounds. It will carry a crew of five men. Attorney General nadley of Missouri is still extremely youthful in appearance. Some time ago a veteran Mlssourlan came In and inquired of the prosecutor for Attorney Hadley. "I am Hadley," he was informed. "Say, sonny," flared the caller, "you may be Hadley, but I guess my business is with your pa." Robert A. Smith, who has been reelected mayor of St Paul, Minn., has served six or seven terms In that office, five of them consecutively. Mayor Smith is seventy-eight years old, not a youngster as mayors go, and as, besides his various terms as mayor, he has filled other offices, a good part of his life has been officeholding. SCIENCE SIFTINGS. "Science of Common Things" la authority for the statement that all bodies contain latent heat at all times, even Ice and snow. The 'center of earthquakism appears to be very close to the parallel of 40 degrees. San Francisco is on the parallel of 38 degrees north. Vesuvius is Just on the short side of 41. Dr. W. J. Goodhue, medical superintendent of the -leper settlement at Molokal, has written a letter to a friend in Toronto, saying that he has discovered the germ of leprosy in the mosquito and in vermin. Dr. Goodhue was born at Habaskaville, Quebec, Oct. 8, 18G9, and is a personal friend of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. An apparatus that makes it possible to mensure the seventy-millionth part of an inch has been invented by Dr. Shaw of University college of Nottingham, England. It Is so delicate that it cannot be used while there Is traffic in the streets. Even the buzzing of a fly hag made it necessary to repeat an experiment. THE COOKBOOK. Sausages should be served with apple sauce or baked tomatoes. Either makes them more easily digested. To bake potatoes quickly boil them In salted water for ten minutes, then put in, he oven. The boiling water will heat them through so they cook in a short time. One of those escalloped dishes which are' such a boon to the housekeeper with left overs on her hands is made in layers of cooked hominy, tomato sance end parmesan cheese. Repeat till the dish is, full, then cover with buttered cracker crumbs and bake until brown. A French housewife does not add flour to her gravy which she prepares from the savory drippings of roast meat The Jellylike particles that float In the beef drippings should not he stralued off with .the rest of the sediment as vhey are both appetizing and nutritious. As to the Hen. Her actions most Industrious Have made her juite illustrious And have Justified the Hklugr For her we Ions have had. Kor ahe with insularity Has made fresh egg no rarlty And has put the storage avrUelo awbllmeiljr tqtheb4. .

Changra From a Flah to a Bird. The story of the early life, transformation and final death of the Chinesn quail is the most remarkable that ia found in the ornithological literature of the world. The narrative In all its unreasonableness is found in the story of om chung, which is the name the Chinese quail is known by when at homo in the Flowery Kingdom. Celestial authorities on bird lore declare that no specimen of om chung was ever known to live a year; that they do not iay eggs, as all other known species of birds do, and, finally, that their progenitor is a slimy, four jointed worm, which has a red head and a sting on the end of Its tail. This queer seacoast worm, according to the curious legend of om chung, lays 100 eggs annually.

Fifty of these become fish and the other fifty are worms of the same species as the parent. The fish that has come Into existence In this curious manner also lays 100 eggs a year. Fifty of these become water denizens after the image of their parent, and the others become birds of the famed om chung family. These om chungs, or Chinese quails, never breed, and are only brought into existence as above related. We give the above not as a literal fact but as a specimen of the Chinese idea of evolution. niog-raplilea mu m. Stimulus. We cannot help living in some degree the lives of heroes who are constantly in our minds. Our characters are constantly being modified, shaped and molded by the suggestions which are thus held. The most helpful life stories for the average youth are not the meteoric ones, the unaccountable ones, the astonishing ones, like those of Napoleon, Oliver Cromwell and Julius Caesar. The great stars of the race dazzle most boys. They admire, but they do not feel that they can imitate them. They like to read their lives, but they do not get the helpfulness and the encouragement from them that they do from reading the lives of those who have not startled the world so much. It is the triumph of the ordinary ability which is most helpful as an Inspiration and encouragement The life of Lincoln has been an Infinitely greater inspiration to the world than the life of Napoleon or that of Julius Caesar. O. S. Marden in Success Magazine. Bnlldotra a Menace to Health. The bulldog is a menace to health. We have this on the authority of a noted French physician, who says that because of his large mouth the bulldog Is a great purveyor of disease, especially of consumption, diphtheria and the like, as the dribbling from the heavy, loose jaws is incessant Those who fondle bulldogs do so at a great risk. He traces many cases of infectious disease, especially among young children, to households in which bulldogs are kept as pets. When we add to this the invariable ferocity of the beast, the danger to which children and other innocent and defenseless people are exposed whenever he roams the streets or highways, we have an argument in favor of his disposal that cannot be gainsaid. Away with bulldogs! If City JVolsea Jar Yon. Get some spermaceti, roll a wad large enough to fill the ear orifices, put It ia a piece of fine cotton cloth tied with thread and insert into ears on retiring, pressing it quite firmly therein so that the ball of spermaceti will closely fill up all the air space In the ears. You will find it quite effective for barring noises, and hence inducing "nature's sweet restorer, balmy sleep," to get in Its good work. This ear ping is harmless and cheap. It helped me out greatly years ago amid the city's din. my sense of hearing being intensely keen and temperament neurotic. It is worth a trial, and I have no patent on "v New York nerald. Varietr. Sh. ton't you get tired of this modern life, with its heartburnings. Its longings, its croel disappointments. Its tinutterable Inadequacy? He Oh, yes, but always Just about that time some new girl comes along. Life. Flrr Stafaa. Tha Captain That's a handsome woman! Is she unmarried? The Belle Oh. yes! (Captain Indulges In pleasing refiectt'ins.) She's been unmarried several times! London MaiL Glory is like a circle In the water, which never ceasetL to enlarge itself till by fcroad spreading it disperse to naught Shakespeare.

IF you want to be up to the times" in regard to financial mattersif yoa are progressive t if you want to know how our successful men make their money if you want to know these things, send for a free copy of my book, en titled "HOW FORTUNES ARE HADE." CVmplUd br a nUrmi K.w Kaiaad haakarJr In a hundred aryone little ways it A. put you on the riyf track. Just oneA-ftle bint which iyymains may make yJ a rich man or woyin. I aTveery anxious to pvythis book in the jynds of all who want fo succeed. FREE. Write now. You can. not afford to forget it. A postal card will do. Just say "send me your TREE BOOK' postage prepaid." It will take the next train back. GEORGE C PORTER No. 763 Bread Street Newark. N. J.

1

ROBERT H Upholster Repairing & RerinistfcJ. destsner HARRY G. SMITH. DR. A. H. GIST 16 ti. 10th St. Phone 1U19

KRFURT

Ed Fraril

I mWf Show ; , gg8480aw' ' Cases ... .tisr Store ana

I El La SP

J WATCHES Ac LOOKS : JEWELRY

Watch, Clock ant Jewelry Repairing a Specialty.

704 QAirf LIFE'S LITTLE THINGS. They Go a Verr Lone War Towirt Kaktag. (br World flvs T. A wild bird's song Is a little thinglost in the deeps of a frowning sky. And yet as it falls on a listening ear and leaves Its message of melody earth's green -ems brighter and life Is tweeter all through nn" autumn day. The coo of a babe is a little thing meaningless ound from a vacant mind. Rrtt 'tis the only sound that all nations heedthe one clear language that ill races Know. A mother's lore Is a little thing too oon, alas, forgot! But it typifies to blind humankind the love and trust and hope divine that bear with patience calm and sweet the willful wrongs in these lives of oars. . A passing smile Is a little thing lost In a world of toil and care. And yet the soul with gloom oppressed and the life grown wearied with burdens hard will happier be In the afterglow of a smile that Is warmly kind. A kindly word is a little thing a breath that goes and a sound that dies But the heart that gives and the heart that bears mny know that It sinss anH Kins and sings till at last It blends with the wild bird's song and the coo of babes in what men call the celestial choir. Milwaukee JournaL

7

7

Jr., Manufacturer of iture and Mattresses. 315 S. fifth St.' Phone 325. f URN IT IRE and dealer PHONE 278 NTIST New Method to Deaden Sensattve lientlna 221 CER 4 i -I STREET. Humor and Philosophy By DUNCAN M. SMITH PERT PARAGRAPHS. -a Do nnto yourself what yon -would have others do to you. Diplomacy is the work of a cleve wrson trying not to 1 rudely untruthCnl. Love Isn't won In an Instant or lost by a trifle. House cleaning is bard on the car pets and dispositions alike. - People afflicted with chronic ignorance ere apt to be subject to acnt attacks of superstition. ' No girl Is so beautiful but $1,000,000 la an added charm.