Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 224, 10 September 1906 — Page 5
The Richmond Palladium, Monday, Sept; 10, 1906.
Page Five.
Girs instant relief ia Nasal Catarrh allay inflammation, sooth tnd heal mucous tnembrao. iwweten tho breath, lsoat gargle for sore throat. 50c. Druggist or mail. yspeplets Quickly relievo Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Nausea, all forms of TntJigMtioa and Dyspepsia. Snjrar-coatwl tablets. y.i". or -j.v. C. I Hood Co.. Lowell, Jtlass. If 31d.e by Hood It s Crooil. A , few Suggestions ICNICS at this timebf YJ J year are esnecially en year are I M joyable, and more so than when. If the daybe hot. you have along some cMol deliclous fruit such as muk melons or water melons. Home Grown Tomatcjs, 40c bu We will cheerfully dfiver any of 2 the foregoing or flowing upon If u receiving your ordcffprompt dellvery too. sr. Potato chips. Fine Rockeyford muskmelons. Maiden Blush Ap ples, Bananas, Plenty Sweet Corn with tender grains. Rattlesnake water Melons, sweet, ripe and cold as ice can make them. 0. A. Harmeier Phone 1 1 1 1. (030 Main X Artistically Metropolitan I In every detail Is the X Wedding tVlusrlc 1 Furnished In Rlchmoni exylvely hv I xwrrnre If- fcukff'S J Tet-rauq ConcertUnartet t eMM' Essence Pompado Th LatestPerfume Jare In Franrance. Deliciousand Very Lasting. Call ra test it for Yourself. Ml. erasure to show you I U I Hiilnlov Court Mouse IN. Jm vuiyivj, pharmacy J SUMMER SPECIALS. Ratrrf Ham. fCooked done.) I Potato Chips .(Extra Fine.) Paper Napkins Wood Plafcs ana rancy tiw. Phone 292 HADLEY B AL. H. HUNT 7 North Ninth has some good values tate. Rents collected attention given the prop ! I 'V l 'I' j HARRY WOOD I WIRING CHANDELIERS and z ELECTRICAL 8 Heme Phone 1543. E ARLINGTON HOTEL Ba.i"Bef- Shop! I First class work by first class bar tbers, tinder strictly sankary condf Jtion?. Your patronagsolicita. J t JEFF MEYERS, VR
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EVERY SUBSCRIBER . . I 7?RY TO WIWTHE . . . ... MADE A REPORJiR I Jf - I . . PRIE THIS WEEK
Social and Personal Mention
MISS JULIETTE SWAIN ENTERTAINED AT DINNER AT CEDAR SPRINGS LAST NIGHT IN HONOR OF HER HOUSE GUESTS MRS. GEORGE GAY ENTERTAINED AT DINNER IN HONOR OF MISS TILLARA HAAS, A COMING BRIDE.
Miss Juliette Swayne entertained with a dinner at Cedar Springs last evening in honor of her house guests. The tables were attractively arranged with clusters of Fall flowers. The guests included Misses Helen Calhoun of Champaign, Alice Logan of Phllaia, Roumaine Hardcastle of Chi , Messrs. Marvin Geist of Chica go. Homer Harper of St. Louis, Car los McMasters of Champaign and Tom Kaufman. Mrs. George Gay entertained most charmingly at dinner last evening at the Westcott in honor of Miss Tillara Haas, whose marriage to Mr. Harry Smith takes place Wednesday evening at the First English Lutheran church. The guests were Miss Blum of Chicago, Miss Youngerman of Indianapolis, Miss Grace Smith, Messrs. Harry Smith, H. J. Haines, Walter Craighead and Tom McCarthy. -55- -Jf Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Deweese and Mr. and Mrs. J. R. DeWeese of Dayton, formed a dinner party at Cedar Springs last evening. - " John Breem of Dayton entertained the following gentlemen at dinner last evening at Cedar Springs; Messrs. H. J. Edwards, H. L. Ferneding, H. A. Ohnier and J. F. Ohmer. - Miss Marguerite Wilke of New York and Mr. Robert Seager were among the dinner guests at Cedar Springs last evening. The U. L. Sewing club will meet Wednesday of this week at the home of Mrs. Frank Davenport south of the city. j, The Spring Grove Sewing Circle will meet Tuesday afternoon with s. Lizzie Hodgin, north of the tyMiss Ruby Reid and Miss Florence Harper of Frankfort, will go to Day PLAYS AND PLAYERS. The' success of "Brown of Harvard," rst play, has been instrumental In uring for Rida Johnson Young a ntract to write a comedy for James K. Hackett De Wolf Hopper, who has presented "Happyland" this season both at the Lyric and at the Casino theaters, In New York, has returned to the Majestic for a third metropolitan engage ment. Jefferson De Angelis was named after Joseph Jefferson. He was practically born and bred on the stage, his people having been famous in the early seventies as the De Angelis family of crobats. W. H. Thompson has achieved a suc cess In "Money Talks." Mr. Thompson's role Is that of a wealthy westerner who has been brought to believe that greenbacks will buy anything In the world. Nellie McCoy, who continues to appear In "The Earl and the Girl," has been immortalized in a song entitled oy Nellie McCoy." The words of the Had are by Arthur Sherman and tho usic by n. A. Hardy. "I hear your boss expects 'to raise your salary this month." "So he says, but he hasn't succeeded In raising all of last month's yet," New York Life. Their Romano. ?fs see; wasn't there a romance mected with their courtship?" "Yes; the one he told her about his wealth."
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NEW CASTLE FIGURING ON 20,000.
New Castle, Ind., Sept. 9. The population of New Castle is now above the 6,000 mark, as shown by figures compiled by the Dale Printing company, who will next week issue a new city directory. During the past six years the population of this city has increased nearly 50 per cent, not counting the many people who have come here since the
beginning of construction work on the The statistics gathered show city is 6,037 as against 3,406 in 1900,
taken. The next year is expected to see at least a gain of 2,000, made possible by th location of several factories; and also by the building of new interurban lines. Predictions have been made that the city will have 20,000 before 1910, and this is entirely possible. Factory propositions are now being considered and are in a fair way to succeed, which alone will increase the population over 1,000. No town in the state can show as complete employment of labor as at the present time, men being scarce.
ton next week to be the guests of honor at a dinner-dance.
PERSONAL MENTION. Miss India Van Dusen has returned to her home in Pittsburg after being the guest of Mrs. Eugene Price over Sunday. Dr. Cofield of Cincinnati is the guest of friends in the city. Miss Myrtle Hedrick of Muncie, is visiting In the city. H. T. Carlysle of Columbus, O., is visiting Howard Ryder and family of South Fifth street. Misses Anna Bailey and Mary Roberts of Dayton, were the guests of Miss Ora Wiggins of West Richmond yesterday. Robert Williams and family spent yesterday, the guests of friends in Dayton. Mr. and Mrs. William Hill" have returned from a visit with their daughter, Mrs. Oscar Symons of Minneapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McGrath of Connersville spent Sunday in the city. Miss Ada White is visiting friends in Ft. Wayne. Mrs. Lewis Frost of St. Louis, will arrive next week to visit with friends. Albert Ageo of Hamilton, was in the city yesterday. , William P. Haughton has returned from a business trip,, to Chicago. Mrs. Charles H. Bond and infant daughter, who have been the guest of Mr. and Mrs C. W. Morgan, North Tenth street, left yesterday afternoon on their return home. Miss Clara Morgan accompanied them and will be absent two months, visiting in PhiliadelDhia and other Eastern points. Miss Pearl Moss has left for Flora, Ind., for a couple of weeks visit. SHORT STORIES. The Canadian wheatCelds are the largest in the world, being 300 by 900 miles. The president of Mexico Is elected for four years, and there Is no restriction upon his re-election. Postmaster General Cortelyou prona Ises by July 1 postal notes for 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 cents, and so on graded by C and 10 cents up to $1. The buttermilk from the West Paris (Me.) creamery is thrown into a brook, and it is said that the trout in the brook thrive on it. The fish taken from the stream In the vicinity are remark ably fat. About twenty to twenty-five years ago the United States was the principal foreign contributor to the cheese supply of Great Britain, but Canada has since outstripped this country as an exporter of cheese. Reports from the United States Naval academy at Annapolis Indicate that the midshipmen have abandoned hazing and propose loyally to obey the academic regulations. A new edition of these is in preparation by a board. They will Include the new law relating to hazing. A thoughtful hostess gave a children's party and decided It would be healthier to serve only mineral waters. One little girl tasted of her carbonic and laid the glass down. "What's the matter, dear? Don't you like charged water?" "No, ma'am. Please may I have Hpome water that you've paid for?" interurban. that the present population of the when the government census was
EDITORIAL FLINGS.
We have noticed that any reportei can take his typewriter and show large profits in farming. Topeka Cap itaL We warned Stoessel not to return to Russia. We have warned the czar to run. Now, if he insists on remaining and losing out he can't blame us. Chicago Record-Herald. A man In Camden, N. J-, got a postal card which had been mailed to him in that city, twenty years before. The postal service may be slow in New Jersey, but Just think how sure It is. New York Press. A farmer must not touch a deer, no matter how much it may be trampling and devouring his crops. He may, however, drive it out of his fields If he can do so without hurting its feelings. Boston Transcript. Boston does not seem to realize that in making slighting remarks about the leading industries of other American cities she Is calling attention to her two ball teams, concerning which the less said the better for Boston. Chicago Inter Ocean. NEW YORK. Did you ever stop to think what sort of water washes the shores of New York city? Daily 4S8,000,000 gallons of sewage go Into It. The New York clearing house, with about $92,000,000,000 In annual clearings, does more than twice as much business as all the other clearing houses In the United States. New York is the only city In the world that has three life saving stations within its borders. There is one near the village of Rockaway, one on Coney Island and one at the west end of Rockaway Beach. "Money" Is the basis of mote talk In New York city than any other dozen subjects During one hour in a car, on the street. In two shops and one office seventy-three conversations," and sixty-four of them involving money were counted. New York Herald, Steamboat Mfd'i Salaries. The pay of captains of five of the principal transportation lines In New York harbor is, by the month: Sandy Hook line (X. J. Central), average jie? Long: Island sound boats 190 Municipal ferry to Staten Island 160 New Jersey Central ferry 135 Pennsylvania ferry 133 The captains on the Sandy Hook and sound lines receive in addition their meals. The rates per annum paid to engineers of various ferry lines are as follows: Thirty-ninth street ferry, Brooklyn.. $1,440 Williamsburg- ferry 1,325 Pennsylvania railroad 1,440 Union ferry 1,440 Central Railroad of New Jersey 1,440 Municipal ferry $1,800 and 1,630 On the municipal ferry eight hours is the schedule. On the other lineseight to twelve hours are required. Nautical Gazette. I'nainknble Steamers. Five steamboats are being built for a Kiel shipping company which artsaid to be wholly unsinkable. A recent trial of one of the boats was carried out in the presence of representa tives of the imperial navy and many shipping firms. The vessel was fully laden to represent 200 passengers and It was assumed that in consequence of a leak caused by a collision the entire engine room division In which water was pumped had filled, while a hole was made in the exterior to admit water freely. The ship accordingly sank, but when It was full of water It had still about a foot of freeboard above the. surface, thus satisfying the conditions imposed. A' .' Te n i 1 1 1 ? P sr flern. A new fog horn 'signal has been In stalled In the lighthouse at the Noedles, Isle of Wight. It consists of reed trumpets blown by compressed air. It can be heard ten miles. This Is a distinct advance on the existing fog bell, the warning note from which does not penetrate more than three miles. When a fog descends the new appa ratus can be started Instantaneously from air vessels held In readiness and charged at 100 pounds pressure. The duration of the blast Is five seconds in every fifteen. irresistible. Summer Hotel Proprietor Gad! W never had so many men guests before. D'you suppose Ik was my advertise ment of fine air that brought 'em? His Partner No; my advertisement of fine heiresses. Puck. In So Mood to Affree. "Do you believe that intense heat is a factor In future punishment?" 'My friend," was the pathetic rejoin der, "isn't the present bad enough without worrying about the future?"Washington S;nr.
HEW RULES PUZZLE GRIDIRON ROOTERS
Michigan Football Coaches and Followers Speculate Over "Reforms." YOST CANNOT "DOPE" IT CHANGES IN GAME CAUSES EXPERTS TO WONDER WHAT SPORT WILL LOOK LIKE. Publishers Press! Ann Arbor, Mich., Sept. 9. Nearly everybody has been up in the air since the tinkers with the rules got through with their job, and it has been V case of by-guess and by-gosh as to just what the game would be like. A fellow would take the guide and dessect the new-fangled thinks and then would rest his chin on his hands, make a noise like a book of conundrums and wonder what's the answer. Even Yost has been wondering down the give-it-up side of Puzzle alley. The - three great innovations this year will be the "ten yards," "forward pass" and the "on-slde" rules, although the "time-out" regulation is one that Yost says will help the interest in the game, and which he asserts is one of the best hits of legislation, that the rules committee enacted. Yost has always been a great sticker for fast play, and in Fitzpatrick he has been a man who could condition the men for the whoop-it-up whirlwind, point a minute playing. No Faking, Hurt, Under New Rule. "You've seen men on a team that Is being rushed off its feet lay down and pretend to be injured so that they can get a rest," said Yost. "Wei they won't be able to fake it much under the new rules. Those fellows that lay down make the spectators think that they are badly hurt and then somebody gets out a hammer and proceeds to knock on the game. "I look for many surprises during the early part of the season, as one team will have systems and plays that their opponents never dreamed of. The game has been so radically changed that it will take time to develop the defense to stop these new end runs. With the one-side play, where any one of the side kicking the ball may grab it after it has touched the ground, it means that those low straight balls just over the rush line will be used and the defense will necessarily be obliged to draw some of their .men back to the line. This will weaken the defender's line and it will give opportunities for the offense to buck the lines for those ten yards." THE CMAMELtOri. It Has Trro Complete ana Independent .Nervous Sj-stems. There are few instances of double birth in which two individuals are inseparably joined together, but among animals It Is a common occurrence. A case in point is the chameleon, long famous for its power of changing color. The nervous centers in one lateral half of the chameleon go on independently of those in the other. Notwithstanding the strictly symmetrical construction of the animal as to Its two halves, they move quite Independently of one another and convey separate impressions to their respective centers of perception. The consequence is that when Jie animal is agitated its movements rese.nbie thoe of two animals, Jr, rather, perhaps, two halves of animals glued together. Ench half wishes to g its own way, and there Is no concordance of action. The chameleon, therefore, is the only four legged vertebrate that is unable to swim. It becomes so frightened when dropped into water that,all faculty, of concentration ts lost, and the creature tumbles about &s if in a state of intoxication. The chameleon, moreover, may be fast asleep on one side and wide awake on the other. Cautiously approached at night with a candie so as not to awaken the whole animal at once, the eye turned toward the light will open and begin to move end the corresponding side to change color, whereas the other side will remain for a longer or shorter time in a torpid, motionless and unchanged state with its eye fast shut Exchange. v
DIET DELUSIONS.
Fner Come Down to Ca From tbe Old IXarbxrona Tribes. Some diet delusions are of most modern date, while others are of most respectable antiquity. Among the latter Is that very ancient survival, the notion that particular foods are agood" for particular things or effects. This is an almost direct descendant of the notion, held with greater or less unanimity by nearly all savage and barbarous tribes, that the flesh or viscera of birds and animals possessing particular qualities will be likely to produce the same qualities in those who eat then. Thus Nero used to banquet on nightingales tongues in the hope of Improving his voice, and the savage cut out and devoured the heart of the bear, the liver of the buffalo, etc., believing that the strength and courage of these animals would thereby be transferred to himself. It is probable that the most grewsome of ancestral rites cannibalism was largely due to the same belief, although, of course, In Neanderthal days primitive man would have no more hesitancy- about eating his enemy after he had killed him than he would in devouring a bear or a deer. In fact, the early converts of the missionaries in the South Sea islands referred to their favorite dish as "long pig." Every known race has at some Kme been cannibal. McCluxe'a Magazine. THE HALL OF FAME. M. Delcasse, ex-minister of foreign affairs of France, Intends to visit tb United States soon. George D. Monlton of Alfred, Me., has had only nineteen birthdays during his long life of eighty-two years, lie was born Feb. 29, 1824. John D. Rockefeller has promised $250,000 toward the reconstruction of the Y. M. a A. building In San Francisco, provided a like suci Is ralsed. Clarence Eddy, the organist, played his own wedding march in New York city. When he had finished It be walked to the altar and joined his bride. Then they were joined. General Samuel M. Mansfield, lately head of the engineering work of the national government around Boston, has been appointed by Governor Guild of Massachusetts harbor and land commissioner of the state. Mrs. Ida McKinley has presented to the First Methodist Episcopal church of Canton, O., four memorial windows in honor of tbe late President McKinley. A small brass tablet marks the McKInley pew in the church. Lord Wolverten Is one of fortune's favorites. Eighteen years ago he was comparatively a poor man, with an Income of a thousand or so. Ills elder brother died unezpectedjy, and he succeeded to an estate of more than $230,000 a year and a title. - Nathan Ilawk, a veteran of the Mexican war and the man who In 1848 first brought east news of the California gold discoveries, Is a hale and hearty citizen of Folsom, Cal. lie lives a few miles . from the ; spot where James Marshall dug up the first goM found In the state. Terry Belmont of New York ha been elected au honorary member of the French Jockey club. There are only six or seven honorary members of this committee. King Edward is one of them. Although there are n few American members of the club, no American till now has been admitted to the committee. . Mrs. Wilhelmlna Faton Fleming, who has been so successful as a curator of astronomical photographs for Harvard university, has been elected b member of tfie'Iloyal Astronomical eo ciety of London. She is a native of Dundee, Scotland, and has been connected with" the Harvard observatory twenty-seven years. I)ovi Eel.-TT. "That fellow Pecksniff cerAisIy has got his fiancee hypnotized. She thinki he's too good: for tlls world." "And sbe's tixfct. .The proper place for him is a certain locallty fa the next world." Catb&I'e Standard and Times. Caller Yocr sister expects me to stay to sepper. doesn't t be. Willie? Willie Sure, and she sr. id If you stayed as loiig as you did last nlgiii she thonsht ehe xro:;Ii ask yon to to breakfast .-t'r nci c:vt.U Enoulrer.
"Cuirme's Special
Is the sensation of tha year in the Richmor
er sale than any other shoe ever sold WHY? Cecause it Is a strictly $3.50 shfe for
BEST shoe made for the money, nd edore than fills the guarantee. CURME'S SHOE STORE," WAW street.
What is aJJackache? IT IS MATUBFS WARKHS TO WOUEI Diseases of Woman's Organism Cured and Consequent Pain Stoppod by Lydia E. Fiakhan'o Vegetable Compound. It seems as though my back woulA break." Women utter these words over and over again, but continue to drag along and sirffer with aches in the small of the back, pain low down in the side, " bearing-down" pains, nervousness and no ambition for ovny task-
Miss Maude Morrs They do not realize that the back U the mainspring of w oman's organism, aid quickly indicates by aching a di. eased condition of the female organ or kidneys, and that the aches and pains will continue until the cause U removed. Lydia E. Pinkham'o Vegetable Com pound has been for many years the one and only effective remedy in such cases. It speedily cures female and kidney disorders and restores the fe male organs to a healthv condition. I have sufTerod with female troubloa foi over two -yewr, suffering intense iin each month, my hack, ached until it seemed as though it would bmk, and I Mt no weak all over that I did not find strenRth to attend to my work but had to stay in ed a largo part of the first two or three day every month. I would bave sleepless niffhU, bad dreams and evere headaches. AU Uii undermined "y. health. "Wit eommlterl an old familvthvsician. i advised that I try Lydia K Pinkbam's V table Compound. 1 liegan taking it rejootrly md soon found "that I could slwp of A eat better than I had done for month. Avithin two months I becama regular and Iff longer suffer from haekache or pain." f J Mamie Morris, Bee. Ladies' Aid and MiaWk Society, S5 K. Hunter St., Atlanta, ua. MERTZ'S RAYER. I want all t hogs, cows, sheep, horses, ilizing purpos es. uoth phone when you hav they will be dead animals, promptly hauled -ay. 'Phone or write a card to the Palla dium of the little piece of news your neighbor told you and get your name in the news "tip" contest for thit week. It Is having a larg-. in $2Z0, is GUARANTEED to be
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MADC AT Tnfc Git ATV WATCH WOnWAATVI ( CAMTOM Jjfitroi Tha dealer wbcO f fsen't have DUtE2R-HAMDEN yf WATCHES may t you they are not the W . He f it's human nature. jf Before buying, AskTeV dealer who has them, f Chas. HUiiaiier
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