Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 223, 9 September 1906 — Page 9
The Richmond Palladium, Sunday, Sept. 9, 19u6. .
iJage Nme.
LOOKS BLUE TO , THE DEMOCRATS
CAMBRIDGE WAS VIIIIIER
HARVARD DISAPPOINTED
National Committee Seems to be Badly Confused Just Now.
The Boat Race on the Thames Ended
v . .,. . . .
in Favor of the English Crew Which Displayed Superior Watermanship at All Times.
HEW CHAMPION -FOB THE WEST
SUITS MAY BE BROUGHT EIIGUIID TAKES
THE BROAD HINT
STATE AUDITOR TO ACT
D. E. Sawyer Wins the Golf
Trophy in Great Game.
Insurance Companies That Have Failed to Pay Taxes Will Be Proceeded Against in the Near Future
by the State.
BRYAN THE REAL CAUSE
'3
HIS RECENT UTTERANCES RE
GARDING THE
OWNERSHIP OF RAILROADS BRINGS DEMORALIZATION TO HIS FORCES.
P'ibllshers PressJ
Putney, England, Sept " Canf
bridge brawn and muscle combined
with natural watermanship, - triumph
e4 over the oarsmen from Harvard
GOVERNMENT on the Thames this afternoon, in on
of the best rowed races that has ever taken place on the course, according
to the British experts who watched
the match. ..The Harvard crew to
night is disappointed but by no means disconsolate, - and openly declare that
another crew from Cambridge, Mass
university, will cross the; Atlantic
next year to contest" with the'Cantabs
- It was a gallant struggle all the way
witnessed by a record; breaking
crowd, but . Cambridge jumped away
Publishers' Press "Washington, Sept, 8. A decided sensation has been caused by the. action of the sub-committee of the National i Democratic committee dis
charging its clerks and stopping the aj the pistol, faster than the Amer-
sending out of literature and other I jcan boat, and maintained the lead
work In the Interest of Democratic j until the end, completing the four and
congressional -candidates. - I a quarter mile course in 19:16, twen-
The?" advocacy by Bryan of Govern- ty-six seconds slower than the record,
ment' ownership of railroads has set but a full two lengths ahead of Har-
the plans of Democrats all awry, vard
They have thrown up their hands' and ; quit. ; They will have none of the ; Nebraskan. .-..-' For 'some time seven members of I the National Democratic committee, acting as a subcommittee have main- ' tained; offices here adjoining the headquarters of; the ; Democratic Con- ' gressional committee. Ten clerks have been busy sending what was deemed sound- Democratic literature throughout the country. Now Bryan has forrp forward with his new theories zvl the committee is disgusted and has quit work. Robert -Miller, representing the National committee has dismissed all of the ter clerks, only keeping a private secretary. Members of the Demo
cratic National committee openly state their disgust at the trend of events and conributions have fallen off greatly.
LOW RECORD FOR WHEAT
MARKET TAKES A DROP
The Prices Were Lower on Chicago Board of . Trade Yesterday Than at
.' Any Time for a Period of Three
. Years.
ENGINEMEN
r B.
(.Publishers' Press Chicago, Sept. 8. Lower prices
were made for wheat on todays ses
sion than have been seen in the last three years and of course lower than anything since this years crop has
ARE KILLED j commenced to come to market. The
close was at j-bc, lower ior sept., 4c for December, and 5-8 for May. The government report will ,,be. issued after the close of Monday's- session and there seems little left for it to do in the way of knocking prices down. " ,
&' O.' Wreck Yesterday Morning Results Fatally All Passengers Were Uninjured.
Junta's Protest. St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 8. The following telegram was sent to President Roosevelt by the Mexican junta here: "We have seen in the press a telegram from President Diaz asking for your government to suppress Regeneracion and - its ' editors, saying that we are anarchists and instigators of an anti-foreign feeling in Mexico. "We protest energetically against the charges of Diaz, and we assure you that our opposition is only contrary to the terrible tyranny of the dictator. We work for the Mexican people's liberty. We want an honest government in our country. We hope from you, Mr. President, that you take into consideration our protest." Collision on B. & O. Wheeling, W. Va., Sept. 8. Two persons were killed and ten injured in a head-on collision of two passenger trains at Woodlawn, Marshall county, 24 miles south of here, on the Ohio River division of the Baltimore
THE WORK IS UNDER i WAY & Ohio railroad. The trains came to
gether on a bridge over Fish creek. The dead are Richard Parsons and Edward Waegel, firemen of the engines, and the fatally injured are Engineer Dillon and an unknown man found in the wreckage. -
(Publishers' Prssl Baltimore, Sept. S. The Baltimore and "Ohio railway company tonight gave ont .the following official ac-
.q. countoj the Wreck on the Ohio River divisionof the road this morning: -1 .. "The wreck, which occurred on the bridge at Woodland, 24 miles " south of Wheeling, Wtfay in which ' two passenger trains came together, was due to a mistake in orders. All j of the passengers were of course badly shaken up but rone were inv jured. Firemen J. M. Weigal and T. M. Parsons were killed and both
engines and baggage cars were badly damaged. The bridge was only slightly damaged and has already been repaired."
DEFEATED WARREN WOOD
BRILLIANT PLAYING BY BOTH
MEN AT GLEN ECHO YESTER
DAY AFTERNOON DETAILS OF
THE PLAY.
(Publishers Press
Indianapolis, Sept. S. The Auditor of
State will have to do something pret-
ty soon. More than two weeks ago
he sent a demand to the forty-two in
surance companies whose taxes for
the first half of 18S4 were never turn
ed into the State treasury. In all, about $9,000 was retained by James
II. Rice, then State Auditor, and the
State is. trying to collect this sum, worth' as much to the people of the
FROM UNCLE SAM (Continued from Page One. )
the line of the author's experience, the bill proposed the establishment of schools, first in Chicago, then in Washington, and then in New York, to be followed later by smaller schools in 100 other cities, -to test and try
the science of spelling," with special reference to a system "discovered, arranged, and completed" and already tested in twenty-eight living languages by a fellow-citizen of Chicago, and seemingly destined, according to one of the most numerous whereases of the bill, "in the near future to be
(Publishers PressJ Glen Echo, Ills., Sept. 8. D.
United States as steam has been and
system would make all children mas-
and the interest thereon, to the
amount of about $12,000, m- the the
lorv that the comoanies are liable fori t..-
. Saw' these taxes because they paid them to, ' 115
vf-r of thP dhirajrn Holf Club of Whoa. v, r ic" ao 'g, tuu wnung
- , 1 Lilt; AUU11.UI jl aiaLc; I a. Lii 1 1 1 11 u xut.utn.nn v. i . -
. , . . . TJ, , . . . ., . r naa wuiuuBu, uy me ume iney were ton, Ills., defeated Warren K. AVood, the State treasury," as the law pro-jeight years old. in which respect it
Home wood Club of Chicago, for .the viaes. J seems to have -been vastly superior
rtuuauI "uuuu uavc aI1nCU iuc n,ifled o-.,,,., Rnard Pnr tho o.
nouncauon wun me repiy inai iney tablishment of his beneficent institu
are not gumg to uns unauu, tio M hnl rarri nn an.
swer, alleging that they want to inves
tigate; but the great number of com
panies so notified have maintained
what they might call a dignified si-
title of western golf champion atGlen Echo links this afternoon. To win
Sawyer was compelled to play 37
holes, one more than the regular num.
ber of 3. This was due to the fact
that they were all even at 36 - holes.
Wood led to the 34th hole. ' He was
3 up on the morning round of 18 holes hence; at least they have made no re
but Sawyer evened up at the 27th hole sponse to the demand.
in the afternoon. Wood won the 33d
and 34th and was two up going to the
5th. Then he fell off in his driving
and putting. Sawyer came grandly, won on the 17th with a good short ap
proach after he had sliced his iron
shot. Wrood was one up and one to
play going to the last hole. All he
had to do was to halve it. -He top-
propriation of $50,000, and there, too, j
is evidence that the latest scheme is, to use- no harsher term, the work of
amateurs. The remarkable feature of
the matter is that Mr. Lawler. who
had been a ship carpenter earlier
in his careerm an active labor organi-
rn
TO FARMERS and STOCKDEALERS.
i IT WILL PAY YOU TO SEE TH
RICHMOND ABATTOIR CO." WH
YOU HAVE ANY STOCK REY
FOR THE MARKET V WE
PAY THE HIGHEST ARKET DDirr rrr d fsnnn cat c An if
I HIV I w wwxsi v -i w W I
1
nl ir u Tur
Wf A
ALL STOCK WILL
ED, Tl
THE COMPANY
notice
V
r a i
if I
AYS
PURCHAS-
OFFICE OF
L FURTHER
Richmond Abattoir Co. 40 Liberty Ave. Home Phone 535 Bell Phone 24?
MILTON.
Milton, Ind., Sept. 8, (Spl.) Miss
Lula Ward has returned from Atlan
tic City and Eastern Cities where
she spent her vacation.
Miss Quinn of Illinois is the new-
ped his drive and then lifted his bras- ly appointed agent of the Big Four
sie.
THE DAYTON MVESTERIJ
IHAUIIUJ m
Sawyer got a fine drive and laid a
240 sood brassie- within 24 feet of
the hole. Wood then almost holed
his third, a beautifully lofted mid-
iron shot and lay six feet from the
hole. Sawyer laid dead on the like.'
Evidently some of the strenuosity from the White House communicated
zer, and president of the Ship Carpen- itself to the lawmakers at the Capital.
tors Association, failed to get what Incldently the preparation of the ' Jourhe wanted. "Undismayed by lack of nal and Record at the Government success, however, - this - phonetic- pio- 'Printing Office the largest In the
neer still, further inticipated the Pres- w'orld plainly refutes the charge that j change without notlq
ident tvo j'ears later,-by Introducing j the Senate is nothing more than a a concurrent resolution for the use I debating society. In the number of
of a short method of spelling in the bills introduced, reported, and passed.
Government "Printing "Office, which the House could cast no aspersions
measure was wickedly put to sleep by on the Senate
the Committee of Printing.
In effect May 5,
MAIN
Kaion ArJ e..V
R. R. at Milton.
Ernest Doty is home from Indiana
polis.
Dr. I. F. Sweney Is spending a
week with Dayton and Eaton, Ohio
relatives and friends.
The Milton SChOOlS Will resume causa a sufficient niimKor- of hWinc thn Tliirenii of Tnsnlar Affairs and the
i I
W.Alex
Dayton
AM
60
7.05
8.00
AM 6.46 7.60 8.05 0.00
Subject ttf
.ao 9J7
8-6Hh0.06
10.00
11.00
11.00 U.1J
Anyone who can suggest a feasible
.-No one iias yet -seen-fit to write a scheme by which the Philippine sil-
book entitled "The Blessings of Bene-1 ver currancy can be kept In circula-
volent Assimulatlon" for distribution tion without danger of depreciation, among, the Philipinos. . possihly . be-1 will doubtless receive the thanks of
NEW PARICf DRANCH
(THROUGH
Leave Richmond fc
5:50. 6:45. 8:20, 9
a n 19' 91 t'9.a
-m-w . . -i . i : c x x 1 : J.,.. !ltf t . . . I - .... I "
wooa mifcaeu. ins .faix iuui pui uy a , iuuuuaj ci&ux. muuuu nave : not yet been, discovered. They Phillippine government, since tne a.-ig.jQ g.jo 7:20 8:
ici in. i to turn un occasionniiv hnnwor if i (loo (Hid Kiivpr nsos or ijninnrine cur-
Oliver Thornburg and wife have re- has just been discovered, has a narti- rency carried in the country for the
turned from an automobile 'trip to cular blessing all its ,own in the shape use of the insular government must the western part or the state. of a regularly occurring Sunday of be recoined. and. naturalh', the offl-
Mrs. Aaron 5orris and son Robert I thirty-one and one-half hours dura- cials are anxious to. prevent, If possi-
er ran the hole. Sawyer laid well on have returned home from Mt. Lake tion, The length of the day in ques- ble, a recurrence of the present sit-
hia approach and -won the hole ' i-to 6. Park, Maryland where they -attended j tion "Is "not "due to "geographical loca- uation. The system has gotten all
hair for a 4 and Sawj-er tied up the
match.: Sawyer got "a long ball going
to the 37, . while. Wood pulled into
the road on the left of the course.
He missed his recovery and then ov-
P. If.
Tranfere at Ne
Direct connection
4--.
"Lima Limited" trsd
and Lima, leaving 9:00, 12:00 4u m4
CoNNECTIONSH
K0K0M0 NOW OUT OF IT
The Howard County Capital Is Not to
Enjoy the Roller Polo Game This Season.
the Bi-ennial conference of Friends. Irion, earthauakes .or nnv othpr tiatnr-1 out of balance because of the rise In
bamuei aeam is improving tne al phenomena, but solely and directly, the price of 'silver, under which the In. C. St. L. foi
South side cemetery under the direc-1 say ' local experts on the subject, to bullion value of the pesos so much j south. At WcBt
tion of the Ladies Cemetery Asso- J benevolent assimulation, omanating increased that they were worth more I clnnatl Northern
elation. ifrom the nerson of Commander Potts. I to melt uo or exnort for silver than I nnrth and south. Davtnn with Alan.
Misses Mabel and Iva Burns have U. S. N., who is governor and com- they were for money. Exportation trie lines diverging for Troy, Piquh.
ERVICB)
New Parle.
20. 10:00. 11:20,
:20, S: 00. 4:20,
). 9:55 and 11:
Weatvllle.
at Dayton wldf
s for roy, Piqu
chmond at 5:50.
d 8:00 p. m.
t Eaton with
pointa north and xandria vrlth ClnTL tor polnu
Kokomo, Ind., Sept. 8. (Spl.) The
pecial committee of the Alhambra
management held a meeting -tonight
and it is the universal sentiment that
Kokomo will have no polo this year.
The market house proposition of all proposed theaters, Y. M. C. A.,' and
diverse enterprises has the most fa
vors of any proposition for the use
of polo headquarters.
gone to Rush county where they will mandant of this dot in the Pacific, and melting, although strictly forbid-1 Sidney, Lima, Xei
teach school the coming school year. Under his home-made edict, Sunday den, started some time ago, the temp- J lcaibus, Hamilton
Wildey Burns, of Jackson Tenn., is begins at half-past ten o'clock on what tation to reap an easy profit at the Throurh rates
visiting her mother Mrs. Maggie Would otherwise be Saturday night, espensu of Ucle Sam being I all points. For Burns. and keens right on coins until six strong to resist. Naturally there was L.i wm4 phnna
y-v r t -w a. I i 1 ii. x. j J it. a I
unmr juorgan ana aaugnter oi v;m- o ciock aionaay morning, wnat xne oniy one inmg to oe uone, auu me i Arraneementa
ia, Springfield, Co ind CinclnnatL trough tickets ta irther Informatloxi !69. r nartlas. nrlal
cinnati w'ere at Sherman Werking's little brown brothers thinks of this I government decided to do it that is, I car8 etc., call plne or write C. O. this week. " ' '. '. j Puritanical law, which cuts such a I to recoin the pesos, carefully avoid-1 niKwp n. J a xvamt AmJl
Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Lindsay and son chunk out of his week, is not stated, ing putting so much silver in them ajidrla. O. f.
HAS NO ALTERNATIVE
HISTORY TO BE SUCCESS
Call Made for All Articles Contribut
ed to Be in Hands of the Printer
by the Middle of November Cost
of Work Guaranteed.
The History Committee of the Wayne County Historical Association which has in had the preparation of a county history, has notified all persons who are to contribute articles to the work to have the manuscript in ..the hands of the printer by the middle of November. The work is a great one, and will rey.'quire a great deal of editing to put it in shape for the contemplated volume. Prof. Walter S. Davis, who is 'chairman of the committee has done 'a great deal of work in preparation .dor the volume and he anticipates ,-that It will come to a successful ter;'mination. The guarantee list will in-
;.ure the payment of the cost of print
More Bridges Blown Up. . Havana, Sept. 8. Two more bridges on the Western railway were blown up, one of them 12 miles east of Pinar del Rio, near Puerto Golpe, thus cutting off railroad communication with Pinar del Rio. The troop train, which returned to Palacics, resumed its
journey, going ahead of a regular pas
senger train from Havana to Puerto
Golpe. Owing to lack of wire communication there is no news, official or otherwise.
MUST
IMPORT I ARflRFRfs and others
. m w I - . w i 1ttii ii- j
yv nuttue w ai reu anil
Harper are at Franklin, O., visiting The law itself is due to the new li- as to make their bullion value higher
friends. quor regulations, under which it is than their face value. But it the
Robert Morris went to Fairmount an offensive punishable by a heavy price of silver should continue to rise,
Sunday. fine to sell hard drinks on the Sab- no one can tell how soon a second re-
A number of Milton ladies enjoyed bath, and some curiosity is already coinage would be necessary; an ex-
the hosDitalilv of Mrs. Anna jrionk expressed as to whether it would not pensive process, especially of the
Jarboe at her country home east of De wel1 t make that day a week long work is done in this country, with
Jacksonburg Saturday. Among theand thus do away with saloons alto-1 the necessity of shipping . the coins
guests were Mesdames Elizabeth I gether. Blessing number two, as en- both ways. Incidentally the govern-
KimmeU Wm. Johnson, G. W. Calla- Joyed by Guam, may be discovered ment, after recoining the 32,000,000
way, Richard Sills Wrm. Swone I Dy ine person wno aoesnt live mere pesos in question, win una iisn wnu
Wilson, Alice H. Gresh H. L. Jones In me ruling that no saloon may be J sufficient bullion left over to make
caiiea a saloon. Restaurant, care, or quite a tew more man me original
MARTIN SWISHER. Agent
n
SUIiDAYI EXCURSION
ITES.... -
Mil
VIA i
Home Telephone Company Face to
Face With a Situation That Must
be Met Quickly Negroes to-be
Brought to Richmond This Week.
Harry Man-
love are in Chicago. Miss Linda Hinchman of Knights-
town is at Miss Olive Williams.
Hiram Crook and family and Oli
ver Beeson and family are at Bay
View, Mich.
Messrs and Mesdames Chas. Fer
ris, Jack Bishop and - Chas. Davis leave Monday for Northern Michigan.
They will take a cottage at Oden and enjoy an outing on the lake.
buffet are the terms allowed.
number.
PRESBYTERY TO
BEGIN MONDAY r
(Continued From Page One.)
CENTERVILLE.
Treat's Proposition. Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 8. United States Treasurer Charles H. Treat was the principal speaker before the annual banquet of the American Institute of "bank clerks. He- advocated a radical change in the system of gov
ernment credits as a remedy for peri
lng and binding and It is hoped that! odical financial stringency. His idea
.enough extra copies will be sold to
"meet any extra expenses that may be !
-incurred.
GREAT ONION YIELD.
: Twenty-five Thousand Bushels Rais-
ed in Northern Indiana on Tract of
- Fifty Acres of Ground.
Decatur Ind., Sept. S. (Spl.) The town of Berne is all excitement over ".a new industry which has been intro
duced. A year ago there was fifty acres of low muck land near that place that seemed to be practically
.worthless and had not been cultivated for a number of years.
; A practical farmer by the name of " W E. Evans came along and pur
chased the land. This season he has
.raised 2aJ)0Q bushels of onions.
ENGLISH ELEVEN WINS London Footballists Had No Trouble
in Defeating the New York Association. ,
(Publishers Press Livingston, S. I., Sept S. The All-
New York Association football team
proved decidedly easy for the visiting
London Corinthian eleven . here this
afternoon, the visitors winning out by the score of 13 to 0 in a game of asso-
ciation XootbalL . - .
included acceptance by the government of commercial paper with clearing house endorsement as a basis for loans of currency to tide over panics. Fcrce's Sentence. Minneapolis, Sept. 8. Dr. Jacob F. Force, former president of the Northwestern national life insurance, must serve three and one-half years in Stillwater prison at hard labor unless the supreme court grants him a new trial. Judge Brooks denied a motion for a new trlaL ' Dr. Force" was charged with having expended for his personal use large sums belonging to the Insurance company. Emery Wheel Exploded. Springfield, O., Sept. 8. Melvin Prescott, S5, was instantly killed at the shops of the Bettendorf metal wheel company by an emery wheel flying to pieces. One of the fragments struck him in the bowels, causing death. Prescott leaves a widow and three children. His home was north of Lagcnda,. Placed on Track by Robbers. Wheeling, W. Va., Sept. 8. George Lewis of Martin's Ferry, O., and son of a wealthy coal operator, was brutally beaten by a gang of thieves who, in hopes of hiding their crime, placed him on the railroad track In oder that he would be killed by a passing train. James Arbaugh, a grocer, who was coming up the track, stumbled over the body in the darkness. He pulled Lewis to safety just two minutes before the midnight express went ruahliuK na.st- ?
The Richmond Home Telephone j
Company is face to face, with the fact
that laborers cannot be procured, in
Richmond and that the contemplated ,
Importation is the only alternative.
One of the directors of the com
pany said that It would mean a much j ; Centerville, Sept. 8, (Spl.) Mr,
more expensive undertaking than if Joseph Helms residing near. Rich
the labor could be procured right at mond, was the guest on Saturday -of
home. The men imported will have Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Clevenger.
to be brought here at the company's Mrs. Sarah Abden, Mrs. Cora Ran-
expense and will have to be provided j ger, Mrs. Rena McDowell and Mr.
with quarters in wnich to live. B. M. Peelle were entertained at din-
It is expected that during the pre- ner on Thursday by Mr. and Mrs
sent week the company. will send its Charles Brumfield
Mrs. lone Stiggleman of Richmond
spent Saturday with Mrs. Cora De
Moss
Miss Ethel Farley of Indianapolis
is visiting Miss Nola Savage of Mun
cie, who is spending several weeks
representatives into Kentucky and Tennessee for the purpose of engag
ing the services of negro laborers
and they will be brought to Rich
mond as early as possible. Efforts
are now being made to provide quart
ers for the irr)orted laborers in the j with her mother Mrs. Jennie Savage.
homes of local colored people
WTith sufficient assistance to prosecute the work the company antici
pates that the new 'phone system
will be installed before the first day
of next January,
MRS. FITZGERALD DEAD
Was the Widow of Confederate Gentral Who Died Before Rich- ; " ''";'v :' ' mend' In' 1862." .
IPublishers' PressJ Saratoga. N. Y., Sept. S. Mrs. Clara Semmes Fitzgerald, widow of Col. Fitzgerald, and daughter of Raphael Semmes. of Georgetown, D. C. died here today. Col Fitzgerald was formerly of the United States army, but later of the Confederate army. He died before Richmond in 1S62.
Begin Auto Trip. Roy Wilke and Robert Mendenhall
left last evening for Indianapolis
from which point theyjwill start out
on a two weeks automobile tour.
GETS FOREIGN PATENT. Robert W. Randle has received let
ters pattent from France on a road
scraper, for Ji c -Muai. .north of the city.
Mrs. E. D. Barnes of Richmond,
was the guest of Mrs. Elizabeth
Maudlin on Friday and Saturday.
Mrs. Lenna King made a short visit
this week to Mrs. Minnie WThipple at
Portland, Ind. T. E. Nickels attended the fairs held at Connersville and Liberty this week. - H. H. Peelle will spend Sunday with relatives at Lynn. Mrs. Cora Ranger and Mrs. Rena McDowell of Ruthland, Vermont were visiting their uncle Mr. Jesse Brumfield and family several days this week. They left on Friday evening for Indianapolis where they will spend several days. Meletia Stanley and Russell Stanley, of Boston, Ind., will return home on Sunday after a two weeks'- visit with their grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Taylor McConaha. Mrs. Lucy Koon is making an extended visit to her son James Koon, near New Pittsburg, Ind. Miss Mode Brown entertained at dinner on Thursday Miss Ethel Thomas of Richmond who was attending the teachers institute, held here on that day. '""X.
WILL ELECT OFFICERS.
The Mary F. Thomas, W. C. T. XL;
will meet Monday afternoon at 2:30 at the home of the president, Mrs. Martha Little, in the League Flat.
North Sth on D street. The election
of officers will take place.
Even if England furnished a tailor
to cut the clothes for the American Army in the most up-to-date fashion, it looks as if his country were to more
than balance the account In "Ameri
canizing the British Army," so far as methods of "packing animals" and !
managing pack trains are concerned.
Although it seems probable that John
Bull will hereafter have Tommy At
kins do his packing in the Western there he was called to a large and
American style, in use in the army wealthy church in New York state.
of the United States the decision will From there he went to the Bethany not be difinitely announced until Presbyterian church at Philadelphia,
some interesting experiments being I which owes its beginning to the Hon.
carried on at present are completed. John Wanamaker, and has ever been
The .'final test between the American his special joy, receiving constantly
methods and these of West Queens- of his wealth and influence, and
land, Australia, is to be made between which has today a membership of two teams, one from the Legion of 1 3,500 with a Sunday school of over
Frontiersmen, made up the men who 1 5,000.
have gained experience in the West- In the meantime the Winona moveem states in this country, and the ment began and the directors asked other composed of Queensland rang- Dwight L. Moody to tell them of the
ers. Practical proof of superiority be-1 right man to put at the head of the
ing required. It was decided to let mos important department at Wino-
each team make the trip from Lon- na. Mr. Moody said, "J. Wilbur don to Brighton and return, a distance Chapman is the best man that I know of about 100 miles, with fully loaded for the place." The Winona man-
pack train. Time is to be a minor agement had an interview with Dr.
consideration, and if American meth- Chapman and succeeded In securing
ods bring in packs and animals in his services as superintendent of the
better condition, it will be finally Bible Conference, which already has adopted for use in the British army, assumed proportions so- great that American officers assert that there men are- called from all over the can be no doubt as to the result, and world to address the thousands who
feel confident that though we have I gather there from summer to summer.
been shown by England in the mat- j In connection with the Winona deter of army dress styles, the shoe j partment Dr. Chapman was called by
will be on the other foot when it the General Assembly of the Presby-
comes to a question of practical effi-1 terian church to take charge of the
ciency. evangelistic movement which has ac
complished such marvelous results
The first session of the Fifty-Ninth during the last few years.
Congress, following the standard set by nearly everything else during
1905-6, was a record-breaker, a fact
which Is shown by the index of the Congressional Record now in process
of printing. Not only in the Index (Fairview Citizens Take Steps to Re
the biggest one for many a year, but
the Record itself and the House Jour-
Dayton Dayton and
Eaton and R
Western
turn,
Tickets at abol price willbe sold J
every Sunday lVitil fnrti
rf.j, ,. ....... I I l I I I I Til IT
Good F"A AT JJO TO SI 00
. All CtarmoL
Apply to
agr notice.
2
9 I V V
1ER aAc
cnots a t
JSJjlIOCTRE t
M A
IV I i
RICHttCnD
Monuncrcx 33 N. EIGHTH ST BIOHSOHO, XHSk
3 Phone 1457. ry
J
ntter Yi
CLIFFORD O. KEOO
1018 MAIN S
TINNER
General Job Work & Repair!
WANT GARBAGE WAGON.
WM. WAKING Plumber a) Gr
Bicycles
Prion 1482.
Sr'. dries
nal are imposing in the number of pa- j ges contained in each. The Journal,
which is the guide and law of the
House, is the largest ever recorded
lieve Conditions Now Existing That Part of the City.
in
1(7777.
The Fairview Civic League has de-
for the first session, being nearly cided that the citizens of Fairview three times as large as that of the should petition the Common Council
first session of he Fifty-Eighth Con- for a garbage wagon which will congress, since its pages reach the sur- fine its operations in that part of the prining total of 2,600. Although more city exclusively. A committee was care than usual has been given to appointed to see that the petition was the work of getting out the perma- circulated among the people residing nent edition of the Congressional Rec- in Fairview. One member of the ord, it will be ready for distribution League declared that to his. know-
about the usual time. From it can ledge the garbage wagon which Is sup-
be seen that for the length of the j posed to cover the territory west of
first session of the present Congress j the river, had net been In Fairview
seven months more work was done I for a period of five weeks
and more accomplished in the way
of enacting new laws than at any pre-i The Palladium alves a dollar each
vious first session of the same length week for the best piece of news tip-
ox ume in lob History oi tne cumiixy. i ped off to it.
I r.7ooreOrrorn
V
write r ire n orryao insurance. We will iNnyou. Loans from $100 to 500. Phone Home 1589, Bell 53 R. ROOM 16 I. O. O. F. BUILDING.
It has gone out of fashion
to boast of never reading ads. Those who do not nowadays are inclined to keep quiet about it, as they would about any other oersonal shortcoming.
i -
V v
