Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 195, 12 August 1906 — Page 10

PagerTen.

The Richmond Palladium, Sunday, August 12, 1906. rcxE 12m liirnMicfcfa a mi mm mi Fir irod

Eno)

REDUCTIONS REDUCED. Men's $1.50 and $1.00 fine Negligee Shirts, now 69c

V Men's fine $1.50 and $1.75 silk Mohair Shirts, collar and cuffs attached. Now $1.13 Men's splendid suits in Velour Finished Cassimeres, all sizes; these suits are positively worth $13.50 or ycur money back; in this sale $7.43 All Straw Hats at half price. Men's fine suits in Cheviots and Scotch Plaids, worth $12.00 or your money refunded at any time, during this sale . .$6.48

The bargains are simply irresistable, the quaSities up to the highest standard and the

prices throughout the many departments are a third to a half less Ulan regular.

You Can't Possibly Afford to IVlsss This Sal

Hundreds and hundreds of people have taken a-:' vantage the past week, and they came not only from Richmond, but from all ovej

Wayne County and surrounding counties FROM FAR AND WEAR to attend ...THE BIG TORNADO SALE

Ladies' fine White India Linen Shirt Waists, $1.50 value now 98c $3.75 to $4.50 White Butcher Linen Shirt Waist Suits now $2.98

Ladies' Eton Suits, Strictly harm tailored, worth up to $12.50, now $5.98

15 and 18c China Matting,

iw.

,9c yd.

ssa n E3

10c Gas mantels with either Wire or Cap. now , 5c Lenox Soap, 9 bars for 25c ICc cake White Ribbon Toilet Soap it floats, now 3 cakes. . . . .... 10c Extra large So. Jelly Glasses with tin lid, now.. .. .. . 15c doz. 50c 12 qt. heavy enamel ware Dish

pans, now.

1Z

ii n fi in niifti f i

mm

IK

WW

IS HUNTING FOR DOZEN BRAVE

MEN

Dr. Wiley, the Investigator of Food Products, Plans New Campaign.

FORMING POISON SQUAD

TWELVE MEN WHO TAKE THE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE WILL BE FED EVERYTHING BUT PURE FOOD.

Publishers Press Washington, August 11 For the everlasting good of the race. Dr. Wiley, the astute Investigator at the head of the Uureau of Chemistry, is beginning a gumshoo quest for twelve bravemcn who, commencing next October, will be come voluntary members of his "poison squad" for a series of experiments to determine the effect on the human stomach of certain chemicals. The government generously undertakes to board these twelve men free provided they eat nothing except what. Dr. Wiley gives them, in his endeavors to determine just what is and what is not harmful to the human stomach in the line of chemicals preservative and otherwise. This is not Dr. Wiley's first poison squad, his previous investigations in this line having been noised abroad, but this year, instead of selecting his men indiscriminately, the test, when It bobins in October, will be made on employes of the Uureau of Chemistry only. In this way It Is hoped that the enthusiasm of martyrs will be brought to the cause through personIt! interest. The men will be required, however, to give their word that they will consume nothing except from the menu of Dr. Wiley, for in the past their predecessors were known to partake of viands elsewhere a step which, while not harmful for them, was extremely tough on the experimenter. The food given at the scientific boarding house will be the best afforded by the markets, nothing being used that in its natural state could make any healthy person ill. It is only the chemical additions made by Dr. Wiley that will cause an occasional feeling of seasickness, but as it is all done in the interest of science and the pure food law, the results will undoubtedly bo worth while.

HORTICULTURAL

WORK

The August Meeting of the Wayne County Society Held Yesterday at the Court House.

The Wayne County Horticultural Society held its regular meeting at the Court House yesterday afternoon. Several reports on the general condition of fruit, grains and vegetables were read by the various members. Secretary Walter Ratliff read a history of horticulaural work in Eastern Indiana for the past century which was ordered to be published. The next meeting of the society will be held at Jackson Park, September S. It was announced to the tneemhers that the State Ho-ticultural Society will hold its summer meeting at l!rimi:c1d, Ind.. is near Koine City, the luth and 17th of this month.

30LF TOURNEY BEGINS

Only Few of the Preliminary Events Were Piayed at Country Club Yesterday.,

In the first round of play in the golf tournament at the Country Club yesterday II. Dill was beaten by Geo. Seidel, 5 up and t to play; T. A. Mott was beaten by J. Gates 6 up and 5 to play. Four days will be taken U play oil the preliminaries.

CALLED TO N0BLESVILLE

Charles S. Neal's Brother Badly Injured in a Runaway Accident There Yesterda

Mrs. Charles S. Neal left for ?Tf blesville yesterday to visit Mr. Xeal's brother, Edward E. Xeal and family. Just before leavinp They received word from Noblesville that Mr. Xeal brother had been seriously injured in a runaway accident. While riding with his sister-in-law, Mrs. Fred Tucker, the horse became frightened and could not bo controlled. Both occupants of the buggy were thrown out and Mr. Xeal is though to have been internally injured. Mrs. Tucker received a broken arm. Mr. Xeal is one of the bet known Republicans in Indiana and as a candidate for clerk of the Indiana Supreme Court before the last Republican convention.

ARRESTS MADE FOR SHOOTING

Young Men Who Fired Into House Where Wedding Was in Progress.

CAMBRIDGE MEN ESCAPE

BRIDEGROOM AND BZST MAN NARROWLY MISSED BY BULLETS ROWDYISM RAMPANT IN EATON, NEAR MUNCIE.

Muncie, August 11, (Spl.) As a sequel to the shooting scrape at Eaton Wednesday night at the wedding of Miss Sarah King, of that place and Ralph Taguc. of Cambridge City, which nearly caused the death of Mr. Tague and the best man. Roy Paul, of Cambridge City, Ray Minnich. Roy Zimmerman and James Osenbaugh, all well-known young men of Eaton, were arrested Thursday on a charge of trespass, fast driving and pointing deadly firearms. They were fined on a charge of trespass Thursday and their trial on the other two charges is set for Tuesday. Minnich is said to be the person who did the shooting and the citizens of Eaton are considerably wrought up over the affair. The shooting was clone after the wedding party had retired to an upper room of the house to escape the attentions of friends who were bent on riding them about the streets in a wagon. The shots which were fired narrowly missed both Tague and Paul and had they taken effect their deaths would have been practically certain. The charge of trespass was preferred after it was alleged that the three young men had stolen a freezer containing ten gallons of ice cream, which was to have been served as part of the refreshments of the wedding guests.

FIRE RATES TO GO HIGHER

OW

The Indiana Underwriters Make Formal Announcement of the Increase.

THE CLASSES AFFECTED

THE LOCAL INSURANCE AGENTS RECEIVE FORMAL NOTIFICATION OF THE NEW SCHEDULE IN THE RISKS.

The Richmond fire insurance underwriters have received formal notification that the new schedule of rate is now effective. The classes of risks included in the advance are as follows: 1. On Iron and Metal Works, 30 per cent. 2. Colleges and School Buildings in protected towns and cities unless same have been rated under the May 1904, special schedule, 25 per cent, to take effect at once and hold good until same are rerated under schedule referred to. 3. Boot and Shoe Factories, unsprinkled. if not rated under the January, 1906 schedule, 4 per cent. 4. Paper Mills to be advanced r0 per cent. !5. Churches in protected towns and cities unless rated under the school house schedule should be advanced 20 per cent. 0. Terminal Elevators and Contents 20 per cent. 7. Flouring mills to be advanced 20 per cent. 5. Furniture, Chair, Coffin, Piano and Billiard Table Factories, unsprinkled, to be advanced 13 per cent. 9. Summer Hotels to be advanced 2T per cent. 10. Saw- Mills to be advanced 1," per cent. 11. Stocks of Merchandise in brick and frame buildings to be 'advanced 20 per cent. This advance docs not apply to towns without water works, which are now receiving coi- a-tion.

TEACHERS ARE SELECTED

School Board of Centerville Selects Its Staff For the Coming Year.

Centerville, Aug. 11. The Centerville school board have selected the following named teachers for the corning school year: E. E. Oldaker, Superintendent. F. M. Dean. Principal. Colwell Miller, Asst. Principal. Miss Elizabeth Lashley, Grammar room. Miss Mode Brown, Intermediate room. Miss Thomas, Second Primary room. Missy Carrie Townsend, Primar room.

FAREWELL SERMON By REV. MR. FRAZER

The Friends' Minister Will Say Good Bys to Congregation Today.

SIGNIFICANT ACTION

MONTHLY AND QUARTERLY MEETINGS HEARTILY ENDORSE YOUNG MINISTER BY GIVING HIM CREDENTIALS TO VISIT.

WAS RELEASED ON BOND

MAY ELIMINATE REBATE EVILS

The Indiana General Assembly Is to Be Called Upon to Act.

LEGISLATION IS NEEDED

INDIANA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES DEEPLY INTERESTED AND SO ARE THE POLICY HOLDERS IN COMPANIES.

John Goodwin, charged with petit larceny, was released on $200 bond yesterday and will appear tomorrow morning when the hearing of the case is called. It is alleged that Good win picked up a purse on Ft. Wayne

! Avenue which had been dropped by : a young lady. It contained less than $2.00.

To Flcg Preacher. Durban. Natal. Aug. 11. An Ethiopian preacher has been sentenced to six months' imprisonment and to receive 25 lashes for alleged sedition. He offered up prayer in a native kraal at Harding asking that the natives be gicn strength to drive the whites across the sea. Hit Himself. Jennings, ha., Aug. 11. Drew Dobbins, while despondent, took a revolver containing three loaded cartridges fired the first bullet at his wife and missed, then aimed at his baby, but again missed, then sent the third bullet into his own body, dying in a few-seconds.

Indianapolis, Aug. 11. It is expected that the members of the next Indiana General Assembly will be asked to enact a law that will prevent the giving or receiving of rebates on insurance policies. This is one of the laws adopted by the New York Legislature, following the Armstrong investigation, and more than half of the states in the Fnion have similar laws. Of interest to Indiana insurance companies will be the fact that this anti-rebate law will furnish the means of doing away with so-called special contracts and agency schemes of one sort and another. For the most part insurance commissioners of other states that are trying to eliminate the special contract, are proceeding under the law prohibiting rebating. The law in most states is so worded a to cover the special contract condition. The section relating to antirebating is practically the same in all the States and says, in effect, that there shall be no discrimination "between the members of the same class of insurants." Under thjs. insurance commissioners are stopping the issuance of the special contract.

This morning at Whitewater Friend's Church in the north part of the city, the Rev. Oliver M. Frazer will preach his farewell sermon to the congregation over which he has presided for the last year. Mr. Frazer announced his retirement following the controversy that resulted from the determination of the pastoral committee to displace him because of his alleged unsoundness of doctrine. When the matter came before the congregation, however, today two weeks ago, the pastoral committee made no charges against the pastor, though insisted that he be not recalled for the approaching year. In spite of the fact that many members of the

congregation 'were deeply opposed to the pastor giving up the charge and they stood ready to uphold him in any event, the Rev. Mr. Frazer determined that rather than permit a serious breach in the body he would witlv draw. The retiring pastor likely will not allude in his sermon today to the unpleasant things that have arisen, for he feels that there would be no benefit to result from a resume of his which he thoroughly touched upon in his sermon two weeks ago. It is reported that the Rev. Mr. Fraser has received a call from a Friends' congregation at New Castle, and it is understood also that his pastoral services would be gladly received in various other places. Significant Action. The Iowa Yearly Meeting of Friends will be lu ld the latter part of this month and the Rev. Mr. Frazer wi'j attend the sessions which are to he held at Oskaloosa. There is considerable significance attached to the fact that the young minister has received a minute from the monthly and quarterly meetings and from the quarerly meeting on ministry and oversight, w hich endorses him as a prt t.ch- :! of the gospel and permits him go'n? to the Iowa meeting to perform v.ueh labors as may seem expedient.

This hearty endorsement coming just at this time, indicates that the Friends governing bodies have no complaint ; o offer against the doctrine as expounded by the Rev. Mr. Frazer, for ; were he considered even a trifle unsound in this respect, no such endorsement could be given.

DENIES DIVINITY OF THE SAVIOR

Cincinnati Episcopal Clergyman Creates Sensation in Church.

UTTERANCES ARE UNUSUAL

DECLARES HIS UTTER UNBELIEF IN THE VIRGIN BIRTH OF CHRIST AND IN HIS BODILY RESURRECTION.

fPublishers' Press Cincinnati, Aug., 11. A great deal of talk has been caused among the clergy and the laity of the Protestant Episcopal Church by a letter sent to Bishop Vincent, of the Southern Ohio Diocese, by Rev. George Clark Cox, rector of Calvary Church, Clifton. The letter was not given out by the Bishop but was sent, it is persumed, by Mr. Cox to a church publication in Chicago and printed in its issue of a recent date. It is asserted that the letter was offered to two other church periodicals, but was declined on the ground that, as it was not an open letter, nor one addressed to a church council, but was a personal communication to the Bishop, it was not an epistle for the public. However, the third paper to which it was offered published the communication. The fact that the letter asserts an unbelief in the virgin of Christ and His bodily resurrection, and contains other declarations in reference to the creed and ritual of the Episcopal Church, at once caused many who read it to believe that there was no escape for Rev. Mr. Cox from a trial for heresy. Inquiry, however, among those best qualified to speak revealed th fact that that does not necessarily follow.

SIRES AND SONS.

Louisville Socialists. Louisville. Ky.. Aug. 11. Charles Dobbs, a Louisville newspaperman, was nominated for congress by the Socialists of the Fifth district. The convention passed resolutions of sympathy for William D. Haywood, Socialist candidate for governor of Colorado, and Moyer, Pettibone and St. John, officials of the Western Federation ot Miners, who are in an Iiaho prison on the charge of complicity in the assassinrtion of former Governor SteuneD-berc

Arthur J. Tialfaur has an expert knowledge of mr.sic Bach and Handel are his favorite composers. George Wost'n:ghoiis the inventor of the air brake, has been described as "a hundred horsepower man." It is estimated by a Wall street authoiity that Jehu D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil rtrx k brings him in nearly $47,000 for every business day in the year. Edor.ard de Reszke is not only exceedingly clever ia successfully imitating the voices of people and animals, but can also imitate a violoncello, producing with his voice the entire range of the instrument. George A. Gleason of Colebrook, N. II.. is probably the pioneer of all living singers i:i choirs of the Granite State. For lifty-nine years he has sung ia the choir of the Congregational church at 'olebrouk, beginning when but a boy of sixteen. Alfred S. Nile:-, who has been made a jmlg-'i by .Governor Warfield of Marykind, w as b rn in York. Pa., in lSt.0. He is a graduate of Princeton, has practiced law in Baltimore for many years and for two years was dean of the Baltimore Law school. Professor Ado'.ph Ilarnack and probably Dr. Koch will be among the Germans to visit the United States in 1007 as guests of the Cnrnegie institute of Pittsburg at the opening of its main building in April. Many distinguished foreigners are expected to be present. Howard F. Ma j hew, rich and twentytwo years old. is working as a mill hand in New IV-dford. Conn., his object leing to acquire a thorough knowledge of col ton spinning. He toils for fifty-eight hours a week and generally passes hi-j evenings in the New Bedford Textile school. General Luis Terrazas. whose wealth is conservatively estimated at $200,000.X, celebrated the seventy-fifth anniversary of his birth at his home in Chihuahua, Mexico, a few days ago. He is th" largest individual landow-ner in the world, his estates in western Mexico approximating more than 15,000,000 acre-

Mrs. Ollie Elliott of Bellevue, Ky., is in the city visitins the families of J. T. Elliott and J. F. Haner.

WELL KNOWN EDUCATOR

George P. Brown, Once Superintendent of Local Schools in the City Yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Ceorge P. Brown, of Bloomington, 111., spent yesterday in the city the guest of friends. Mr. Brown was superintendent of the Richmond schools for a period of ten years, ending in 170. At this time he is the editor of the Home and School Educator.

1

Deaths and Funerals. NEAL The body of Norman E. Neal who died in Michigan, arrived here this morning at 4 o'clock and was taken to the home of his mother, No. 2 1 :S South B street. The funeral services will be held there Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The burial will be in Earlham cemetery.

ELL The funeral of Mnthtas Ell who died Friday night at the home of his grandfather seven miles southeast of the city will take place Monday morning at the home at 10 o'clock sun time. The burial will be at Earlham.

COBLE The funeral of Schelner Coble, who died at the home of his mother, Mrs. Frank Coble. 121 North 3rd street, Friday, will be held at the home this afternoon at 2 o'clock. The burial will be at Earlham. DECKER The funeral of the infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Decker, of West Richmond wan held yesterday at 3:0 o'clock. The burial was in King's cemetery.

THE CITY IN

All straw hats Co.

JR(EP

Vs

price, Kibbey & 12-2t

Mr. and Mrs. Nettleton Neff are

the parents of a nine pound boy,

born Friday in Chicago.

Burglary Insufcanet written by

Dougan .fc Co. PV1F No. 139

dly 12-1 4-1 G.

W. D. Wiggins, engineer of the Pittsburg division of he Pennsylvania lines, is in t,he city the guest of

his sister, Mrs. I). S. Coe

Burglary Insurance yritten by

Dougan & Co. Phone NV 139.

dly 12-14-16.

Art Martin, of Economy, who had planned to make a balloon ascension last Tuesday during the old settlers picnic, and whose hones were blasted by the burning of the balloon, has

A FEW EXTRAORDINARY ARTIGLEfl F0R Y0UR SUNDjY TABLE. Cal. Ox heaR Cherries. Cal. White Bherries. 1 Penn. Huclf Berries. Cal. else Plums. TomMpnsfjl Seedless Grapes, (LargU cIsters.) Genuirn M iptop Canteloupes. Lima En ?a n s. New Sweet Potatoes. Large fancy Cauliflower.

1

DRESSED CHICKENS

J. M. EGGEMEYER 4th and Main Sts.

tf mm

arranged for another balloon and is arranging to nuie an ascension next Saturday in Ecnom-y.

Burglary Dougan &

dly 12-14-K

insurance, written 'by

Phone No. 139.

Last night was one of the quietest Saturday nights that the police department has had in many a week. Though there were numbers of people on the street, order was as near perfect as could be wished.

Manager Swisher or the Gennett is booking a number of superb attractions for midwinter as well as many that will appear earlier in the season. Every indication points to a successful dramatic season.

Mrs. Blanche Study Cisco, of Ft. Wayne was in the city yl-sterday a brief time en route- home from St. Louis where she has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Joseph Harper. While here Mrs. Cisco was the guest of Mrs. Elmer Eggemeyer.

The Old Settlers' picnic at Centerville next Saturday will draw the usual crowd. The people of Centerville take pardonable pride in the annual events and despite the fact that few of the real pioneers are left, there is great interest manifested in the gathering.

NEC

We always carry tjie finest assortment in (he city.

THE

LATE

ST

m1m

Desians and Patterns Can be Found

at nwwore.

Store closed every night but Saturday during July, August and September