Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 220, 6 September 1906 — Page 5

The Richmond Palladium, Thursday,' Sept. 6, 1906.

Page Five.

is a constitutional disease originating in impure blood and requiring constitutional treatment acting through and purifying the blood for its radical and permanent cure. Be sure to take Hood's Sarsaparilla Nasal and other local forms of catarrh are quickly . relieved by Catarrlets, which allay inflammation and deodorize

discharge. J Hood's Sarsaparilla, all druggists, $1 Catarrlets. mail order only, 50 cts. For testimonials of remarkable cures tend for our Book on Catarrh, No. 4. C L Hood Co., Lowell, Mass. rcw Suggestions ICXICS at this time of year are especially en joyable, and never more so than when. If the day be hot, you have1 along some cool clous fruit such as musk or water melons. Home Grown Tomatoes,0c bu We will cheerfully deliJfer any of the foregoing or foil upon receiving your order-Zprompt delivery too. Potato chips, Hnq Rockeyford muskmelons. Maiden Blush Apples, Bananas, Plenty Sweet Corn with tender grains. Rattlesnake water Melons, sweet, ripe and i cold as Ice can make them. 0. A. Harmeier Phone 1 1 1 1. 1030 Main ROM HPS The Romey Furniture Co. Are you a business man? " Do you use modern methods? The Sectional Book Case was conceived to aid the work of the office force and it does this beautifully. Every office requires such a case, be cause where real business is done there has been a constant cry for more room for the care of books and things. You can buy one section at a time.' Price is always an inducement at ROMEY'S Furniture Bedding Pictures 927-929 Main Street i neaaquarters tor fin perfumes. In addition tofall the popular odors we hfve the ! X exclusive sale for Thclma, DoroCiy Vernon, Lady (Alice Rose of Shar QUIGLEY & BABYLON 4 Prescription Druggists. 415 N. 8th. Phone 145 , Open all day Sunday. LOST Saturday on the 6:30 interurban to Cedar Springs Hotel, a white mother of pearl fan, valued as a gift. Finder return to Palladium office and receive a reward of $10. 4-tf. ....

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IGORRDTE MANAGER FACES PUNISHMENT Grand Jury at Memphis Charges Him With Fleecing the Poor Black Men.

GOVERNMENT AFTER HIM IT IS ALLEGED THAT HUNT, THE MANAGER TOOK PRESENTS FROM HIS CHARGES, CONTRARY TO CONTRACT. fPubllshers' Pressl ' jviempnis, Teen., Sept. 5. Upon the testimony of Feloat and DengaF, fullblooded Igorrotes, members of the band which visited Memphis last year. Indictments charging larceny and 'larceny from the person," a fel ony in this state, were returned against Dr. 'TYuman"K.'J'Huntrby' the Shelby county grand jury. Applica tion was at once made for requisition papers, directing that they be sent from Nashville to Chicago, 111. for service. The united States government is the prime mover in the criminal prosecution. The Igorrotes and an in terpreter, a half-breed Igorrote, arriv ed in Memphis Aug. 100, from Chicago, in charge of Fred E. Baker of the war department, who is conducting the prosecution against Hunt for the government. The indictments againt Dr. Hunt charge him with the larceny of $28 from Feola, and with feloniously tak ing $17 from the person of Dengay. The alleged crime is said to have been commuted wniie tne victims were members of the band of Igorrotes which was exhibited at East End park in July, 1905. , It is also alleged that the money taken from the Igorrotes was given to them as presents and that it is specifically stipulated in the contract which Dr. Hunt secured from the government when he brought the Igor rotes to this country that they be al lowed to keep all moneys and articles given to them as presents while on tour. The original band left the Philip pines in March, 1905.- The party num bered 50, and all but six have been sent back. These will be retained in the United States to be used as prose cuting witnessed against Hunt in Memphis and in Chicago, as it is al leged by the government that Dr. Hunt violated his contract with the government by wmcn ne was permit ted to bring the Igorrotes to this coun try for exhibition purposes. . According to statement made by Mr. Baker Dr. Hunt has violated sev eral provisions of his contract with the government. He is now being civilly prosecuted in Chicago. (YS and players. Samr Bernard has decided to remain iwithf Charles Frohman next season. James Brown Potter has been gaged for an American tour of elve weeks. Lew Fields has secured control of the Herald Square theater, New York, and will turn It into a music hall by next September. A new corporation started in New YorK with the idea of encouraging na- J tlve born plays Is called the Playver I association. Charles Dalton is to play the role of Ahaseurus In P. J. Kennedy's production of "Mizpah," which is to open early in September in Chicago. Haddon Chambers, the English playwright, is paying a visit to this side for the purpose of arranging for the production of his "Sir Anthony." ARMY AND NAVY NOTES. ,.The latest French cruiser has been named the Ernest Renan, a fact that would amuse the famous man If he were alive to know it. Germany's army on a peace footing aas 03,000 horses with the cavalry and 86,000 with the artillery. Every horse In the German empire is registered and available for service. The Japanese army is recrnited by conscription, but only twenty-five of the strongest and healthiest are pick ed out of every hundred men called up for service. The remainder are sent Into the reserve. The question is being discussed in London whether the war department or the navy department has the legal right to buy and operate airships for fighting purposes. .Some suggest a new department of national defense the "aeralty." THE FLOWER GARDEN. The Kenilworth Ivy makes a beautiful, graceful trailing plant for a basket or for drooping from a box on 4 banister. Those who have little time to devote to the cultivation of flowers should plant biennials and perennials. Many of them are very attractive, and none requires much care. Flower seeds should not be sown thickly, as crowded plants are invariably thin and weak. Either sow apart or thin out, as each plant must have rull space for development. The oriental pappy Is a very deslr able hardy herbaceous plant for tt:t flower and shrubbery border. ,TIw flowers are brilliant scarlet, six inches In diameter nnd nre borne on stems twe feet bi"h ts-in'nhia Ps CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bough! Bears the Signature of

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FRUIT NEEDED AT PANAMA!

Governor of Jamaica Cahs on His Ag ricultural Society to Investigate the Matter ixntlisher Press Kingston, Jamaica. Sept. 5. Gover nor Magoon of the Panama canal zone, notified Sir James Alexander Swettemham. governor of Jamaica. that there is a great scarcity of fruitf and vegetables in the canal zone anc suggests that planters of Jamaica arrange to supply the demand. The matter has been referred to the local ag ricultural society. Chinks Go' to Annapolis. San Francisco, Sept. 5. Chen Shei Ting and Ten Fong Ten, Chinese boys, arrived here en route to Annapolis, where they will enter the United States naval academy. Accompanying the students were Drs. S. W. Tchan, Chow Kwai Sang and Ho Kan Yuem, who are en route to Buffalo to attend the convention of the military sur geons. To Succeed Adams. , Madison, Wis., Sept. 5. John M. Nelson, Republican,' was 1 elected to succeed " the late 'Congressman JnHlirC. Adams, by about 5,000 over Grant Thomas. Nelson was also nominated at the primary for the sixteenth con gress, beating M. S. Dudgeon by 4.000. A Snail's Sense of Smell. Professor E. Yung of Geneva discov ered that the keen sense of smell attrib uted to the ordinary snail is distributed over the entire body not covered by the shell, the two pairs of tentacles, the Hps and the edges of the feet being particularly sensitive. In the experi ments made a brush dipped in various odorous substances in turn was brought near the different parts of the body, and responses were noted at distances of one twenty-fifth of an inch to several Inches. Only in exceptional cases was odor perceived as much as fifteen or twenty inches away, showing that smell cannot guide these creatures to food far removed. The Mulberry Tree. Silk is the great industry of northern Italy, and the plains of the quadrilater al are dark with mulberry trees. The mulberry tree is the hardest worked piece of timber in the world. First its leaves are skinned off for the worms to feed on, then the little branches are clipped for the worms to nest in, then the large limbs are cropped for charcoal, and tne trunk has not only to produce a new crop of leaves and limbs for next year, but must act as trellis for a grapevine. HIa Bucolic Business. "That was a perfectly lovely gentle man I met last night," declared the pretty milliner. "He has a good, reli able business too." 'What is it?" asked her friend. "Why, he sells farm Implements,' continued the pretty girl. 'What kind of farm Implements?" 'Buckets nothing but buckets. He told me he kept a bucket shop." De troit Free Press. """ They Scorned Doctors. " The learned ladies in olden times tooS great comfort and pride in their skill In medicine. With true professional scorn they looked down upon the regu lar doctors as upon quacks. "For God's sake beware what medicines ye take of anyfyssissyans of London. I shall never trust to them because of your father and my uncle, whose souls God assoil." So wrote a lady in conscious pride. She knew she could have saved the lives of her unfortunate relatives If she had only had a chance to dose them with some of her wonderful con coctions or to have put upon them some such plasters as those for which Dame Margery Paston was famous. ner husband sent for one of her plas ters for the king's attorney, James Ho4bafHFe5 In his knee, and to whom Sir John Paston felt himself sentimentally indebted. He is the man who brought you and me together," he wrote to Margery, 'and I had leaver than 40 that ye could wit your plaster part him and his pain. GTease In Wool Fabric Few" persons realize when they put on woolen garments wnat a large amount of animal fats wool contains. for to the touch woolens are not greasy In the big clothing shops where men's garmentg are cut, however, the floors around the tables where electric knives clip out the odd shaped pieces soon become as slippery as though they were waxed for a dance. - 'Why do you wax the floors to keep the fabrics clean?" is a common query from visitors. But the clothing cutters explain thai tnis accumulation or grease comes from the friction of wool cloth over thn wood. The wood's pores soon become so charged with it that they feel greasy to the touh, and even the harder woods in the cutting taoles absorb from the woolen fibers so much of the animal fat that to all appearances they might be in stead.v use in the rendering de partment ot an abattoir. New York THINGS THEATRICAL. Helen Bertram' is appearing in vaude ville. . The Danites" is to be revived by McKee Rankin. Mande Fenly Is to star In the Illu sions of Beatrice." Blanche Rlas is to star in "Doll Dollars" In the fall. Charles Klein's latest play is called 'Daughters of Men." A new play of life on the plains i called "The Coyote Doctor." Frank Xorris' "McTa-rue" has been dramati-cd fcr Wilton Lackaye. The sum raised for the jubilee fund for Ellen Terry was over $40,000. A. II. Woods will have fifteen attrac tions on the road in the coming season. ; Julia Sanderson may be featured in a new piece called "The Motor Girl." Olga Xethersole has announced her Intention of playing Portia next sea sonThere will be two companies pre senting "The Gingerbread Man" tkt coming season. ........ .

FRIGHTENED TO i DEATH BY DREAM

One of the Most Remarkable Fatalities on Record at Columbus,' 0. DREAM WAS HORRID ONE! WOMAN THOUGHT THAT SHE WAS BEING ASSAULTED BY NE GRO, AND WRINGING HANDS AP PEALED FOR HELP fpubllshers Pressl Columbus, O., Sept, 5. Frightened to death by a dream was the peculiar fate of Miss Anise Morgan, 37, at the home of her uncle and aunt. Thomas Michael and wife, in this city. Miss Morgan, a niece " of Mrs. Michael, lived with the Michaels, and had a part interest in Mr. Michael's grocery in which she clerked. Her age and the circumstances' connected with the case make t a remarkable instance among many cases of death caused by fright. Mr. and Mrs. Michael were awak ened by screams followed almost Im mediately by the appearance of the young woman In their bedroom. She was wringing' her hands and appeal ing for help, and seemed ' to' be suf fering intense agony. Between her sobs and cries she vividly related a dream in which it seemed" that he was being brutally assaulted by a negro. In her imagination she could still see the negro and a search of the prem ises was made to see if anybody had actually entered the house, but it proved that her vision was only a i dream, as the house had not been en-1 tered. A physician was promptly called but the frenzy was so intense that til efforts to quiet her were unavailing, and Miss Morgan died in 30 minutes. The coroner attributes death to heart disease. Miss Morgan had been ill three weeks, and it is thought her illness was the cause of her sleep being dis turbed. She came to Columbus several years ago from Lawrence county. The Under Side ot Fltb, Experiments have been made witfl flounders In order to determine whether the whiteness of the under sides of those fish is due to the exclusion of light, and the presence of color on their urrfr sidps to pmosnri in liirht Thp fish experimented upon were kept livlna- in a elass tank, havlnir a mirror placed beneath, so as to reflect light npon the under sides of the fish. On of these prisoners survived for three years under conditions so strangely different from its ordinary habits of life, and all of them exhibited the development of spots of pigment on their lowei surfaces. The experimenters conclnded that it is exposure to light that causes the coloration of the upper parts of the bodies, not only of flounders, but of other fish, and, conversely, that it is to the comparative, absence of light thnt the whiteness of under fides of fish is due. They extend the Bame principle to explain the colorless condition of the skins of many animals that pass all their lives in caves. Bird Sons"Naturalists have long been puzzld ts to how birds learn to sing. Does it come natural to a bird of a certain 6pecies to sing the song common to Its kind or does it learn to imitate whatever song it most hears during the early days of Its life? Experiments made bv n xvtll bnnvn fetriiltknt nf hirrt life Proved that most birds simply learn bv ,mItotinn tt r.in Vrt, iinT1a tn PAr1 hv Blrl!lrlra ,lnrfrB utlarks and other breed and m ' case the linnet learned the song of his foster parents." Again, a number of linnets were reared where they had no chance of hearing the song of any J bird at alL In due course they began to sing, but their song was entirely original. The cuckoo, however, seems I be an exception, for although it is "Krai, miuiiauijr L t'UIfU uy XOBier parents of any species but Its own. It always sings to perfection its own Peculiar song, quite uninfluenced by e TocaI efforts of its guardians. COLLEGE AND SCHOOL. will found an industrial school In SL Louis to be modeled after the Massa chusetts Institute of Technology and will be one of the finest industrial schools In the country. Professor A. W. Wright retires from active service as professor of experimental physics and director of the Sloane physical laboratory of Yale college at the close of the present academic year. He graduated from Tale J in 1S59. I Professor Charles F. Johnson, who has for twenty-three years been professor of English at Trinity college, Hartford, has tendered his resignation, I to take effect at the end of the year, He is the author of a number of books on the teaching of English. Professor W. R. Hart of Nebraska In a recent address took the ground that the study of agriculture in our public schools would afford the best possiblo material for mental discipline. Tie naid: "What knowledge the courrv child has is certain and vivid. He has been dealing with realities instead of with symbols and abstractions. ' Had Use For Her. 'Could you recommend a hired girl to me?" ' T have one here," said the suave employment agent, "who is a brick." 'Well" said the lady doubtfullr. "1 mieht trv her on scourine the knives I and forks." See how what you have heard in print and get a dollar for doing itj Win the news "tip" prize.

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Social and Personal Mention

MISS ELLA WINCHESTER ENTERTAINED INFORMALLY YESTERDAY AFTERNOON MISS RUBY REID AND MRS. CHAS. IGELMAN WILL ENTERTAIN FOR MISS FLOSSIE HARPER OF FRANKFORT TONIGHT

The Ladies' Aid Society of the First English Lutheran church will meet Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs- Bennett,. 204 North 22d street, : Miss Cora and Flora Dickman entertained Tuesday evening at their home on South 9th street in honor of Misses Viola and Luella Kridler. Music and games were the features of the evening. Among the guests were Misses Nettie Boerman. Mae Jzwissler, Leona Buenning, Clara Nuechter, Mildred Lichtenfels, MarIgaret Englebert and Geslne Kennepohl; Messrs. Joseph Smedinhoff, Geo. Thomas, Michael Rotterman, Geo. Zwissler, James Dillon and HowI trd Grier. The Lutheran Home Circle will meet in the chapel Friday afternoon. Members are requested to bring recipes. The Frances E. Willard W. C. T. TJ. will meet Friday afternoon at 2:30 at Rhoda Temple for election of offi cers. -5The Ladies Aid Society of the Trin ity English Lutheran church, met fuesday evening with Mrs. John Igan at her home on South 4th street. The next meeting will be in October, with Mrs. Geo. Deuker, at her home on South 7th street. Mrs. Henry Luring entertained the tv trjo-r. ivneci Qrtot F1t r h,,rh t her home on South 15th street. The meeting was devoted to the election of officers for the coming year and are as follows: President, Mrs. U. B. F. Ewing; first vice-president, Mrs. R. G. Wade; secorl vice-president Mrs. Ridenour; re6ording secretary, Deery; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Turner. Miss Ora White gave a charming dinner party at her home on the Paris pike Tuesday evening complimentary to Miss Ross ot Logansport, wno is the guest of Miss Mae .Newman, ice other guests were Miss Katheryn Gift and Messrs. Maurice White, Ed. White and Harry White, jl u. m. Miss Ella Winchester delighfully entertained with a small informal parjty at her home on North 11th street yesterday afternoon in honor of sevjeral out of town guests. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bell. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Dougan, Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Ellingham, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Smith. Miss Elizabeth Patterson and Miss Edith Smith have returned to their homes in Decatur af ter attending the Leeds-Smith, wedding Tuesday evening. Mr. Erman Smith entertained informally at dinner at the Country Club last evening in honor of his guest, Mr. Hooker of CIncinnatL Dr. and Mrs. Walter W. Wilson left yesterday morning for a honeymoon trip to Cincinnati They will be at home after October 1st, at number 162 North A street. 4 ,7 Mis Edna wickett, Edna Moore, Else Conroy and Mae Borton of Centerville.

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PEHSONAL MENTION. Arch Street was In Hamilton on business yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. John Wilson, of Pittsburg, are the guests of James Wilson and wife. Miss Merle Weeks has returned from a visit in Indianapolis. Edward Dingley has returned to bis home in Pittsburg. Phillip Robbins attended the Fall Festival at Cincinnati yesterday. Miss Gorgia Harland. who has been the guest of friends in the city, returned to her home in New Castle yesterday. Miss Mildred Manners, of Wlnamac, is the. guest of Miss Merle Weeks. The Rev. W. W. Row has returned to Williamsburg after a visit with friends in the city. J. A. Alderman returned to Cincinnati yesterday after a visit with his mother, J. W. Addlman. Mrs. A. Wilbraudt and daughters who have been the guests . of J. W. Koogle and family, have returned to St. Louis. , . Mrs. Geo. Mc. Whinney and Miss Edith Clark have returned from a visit at Fountain City. Dr. Park has returned from a trip through the East. A. J. Frost, of Portland, was in the city yesterday. Edward Wilson has returned from Pittsburg. Miss Laura Hill, of Cincinnati, spent yesterday in the city. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Cook are the guests of friends at Anderson. Miss Maude Schmitt has returned to her home in New Castle. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Cook will leav tomorrow for Indianapolis. Miss Emma Symons, who has been the guest of her sister. Miss Anna Symons, has returned to Chicago. Miss Lucile Jones, pf Greensfork is the guest of Miss Alice Marlatt. Miss Lucile Larkin, of Lafayette, is visiting in the city. Harry Ross is visiting at Martinsville. Miss Ross, of Logansport, is the guest of Miss Mae Newman. Mr. and Mrs. U. K. Godd and daughter Margaret, have returned tc their home in Bluff ton. Mr. and Mrs. French Quinn havi returned to Paragould, Arkansas. Mr. and Mrs. Sajior returned t their home in Eaton last evening. Mrs. Will Ryan left yesterday fc Indianapolis where she will visi" friends for a few weeks. Miss Eva Lictenfels went to Cin cinnati yesterday where sne will at tend the Fall .Festival. Leaves Louck and Hill. Frank Whitesell, who has been fore man for Louck & Hill for the nasJ twelve years, has resigned his posi tion, and will leave soon for Dayton where he has accepted a position with the Cash Register Company. Mr. Whitesell will be employed In the wood working department. See how what you have heard lookc in print and get a dollar for doing it. Win the new "tip" prize.

of Dress - t FOUND, GAGGED, ROBBED WHILE HER HOME BURNED Woman at Covington, Ky., Tell Story of Cruelty in Which Man, W man and Boy Are Implicated One Wanted to Burn Her. Publishers' Press Covinrton.' Ky., Sept. 5Mrs. Pearl Grant was bound, gagged and robbed of $70, and as she lay in a nearby vacant lot helpless, saw her home burn, according to the story she told the police, after she revived. She said that a man, woman and a boy committed the deed and that the woman wanted to leave her In the burning bouse to die, but that the boy interceded and saved her life. The robbers made their escape. Mrs. Grant's husband is in the Philippines on business, and ah was alone In the house. Fishing Smack Controversy. Washington, Sept, 5. The state department cabled to Ambassador Thompson at . the City of Mexico to look into the' facts connected with the recent seizure by the Mexican gunboat Progresso of the American fishing smack Aloah, near the coast of Yucatan. The department received a telegram from Manager Munn of the Gulf Fisheries company, with headquarters at Galveston, giving a state ment of facts corresponding precisely with the report in the press, dispatches which were in substance to the effect that the smack was not fishing within forbidden waters but became becalmed, and drifted within a marine league cf the Mexican shore. Flattered Them. "I don't toe why sh dotes so oa baseball when she doesn't understand, a thing about the game." "Then you don't understand human nature. It makes the men swell up like a balloon with importance whei th?v tt1- - tr Vrr." Thousands flare Kidney Trooble and never Suspect it How To Find Out. Fill a bottle or common glass with your water and let it stand twenty-four hoars ; a sediment or settlingindicatesaa . unhealthy condition of the kidneys; if it stains your linen it is evidence of kidney trouble ; too frequent desire to pass it or pain in the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of order. What To Do. There is comfort in the knowledge SO often .expressed, that Dr. Kilmer' Sjsginp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fuISlls every viph in curing rheumatism, pain in the Lack, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often faring the day, and to get up many iffafes during the flight. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Rool is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cores of the most d:s S tressing cases. If you need a meaicmt you inouiu oavc iuc uw uuiu uj v legists in fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes. Yon may have a sample bottle and a book that tells all about it, both sent free i by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., BingCSinlbn. N. Y. When uniting mention this paper and don't inake any mistake, but remember tne eiame. Dr. KilmT's Swamp-Root, ana tbe address, Bingham ton, K. Y

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