Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 238, 25 September 1906 — Page 5

Page Rve. DOWIE DELIVERS ft

me Kicnmomr paiiamum, Tuesday, sept. 25, 1906.

Men Who Arc

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harry end worry as they

co in was country.

Hood'sSarsaparilla cures dyspepsia it has "a ma trie touch " in this disease.

For testimonials of remarkable cures

send for Book on Dyspepsia. No. 5. . C L Hood Co.. Lowell. Mass.

Talked About

Copyright by J. E. Purdy, Boat on.

SECBSTABT BOSA- .

PAKTE.

HEARST HAS MANY

PLEDGED VOTES

He Will Go Before Democrat

Convention Today as a Strong Candidate.

JEROME STILL CONFIDENT

MAYOR McCLELLAN AND OTHER

FOLLOWERS

HAVE CONFER

ENCE WITH FIGHTING ATTOR

NEYEXPRESS SATISFACTION.

'' Buffalo, N. Y., Sapt. 24. Delegate

to the Democratic state convention,

which will be held in this city bes-;n

ning Tuesday, arrived on every train

from various sections 01 tne state.

The 103 delegates from New York county, generally termed the Tam

many delegates, reached the city eafiy

la the morning. Upon the outcome of

the caucus of this delegation depends much as to the situation in the convention. The day was largely devoted to measuring the strength of William R. Hearst, nominee of the Independence league, and whose name will be presented to the convention with more pledged votes than any other candidate. W. J. Connors, one of the Erie delegates, whoss proposal to the Independence league that its nominations be deferred until after the Buffalo convention, was voted down, declared that Mr. Hearst has 175 delegates. The entire number of delegates is 450, with 226 necessary for a nomination. District Attorney Jerome , had a number of conferences with some of the delegates and his followers, including Mayor McClellan of New York city. They declare they are entirely

Satisfied with the situation. If the so-called "regular" Democrats prove unwilling to accept either. Hearst or Jerome because of their independent attitudes in the past, there Is much speculation as to who they will bring before the convention. There ha3 been talk of Mayor J. N. Adam of Buffalo, John P. Stanehfteld of Elmlra, former judge D. Cady HerTick, who was the Democratic guberA t 1IJ. 1 A .1

umuriai muuiuaie iwu jears agu, hum Justice William J. Gaynor of Brooklyn. Justice Gaynor has been urged because of his independence. He ani Hearst are political friends, and last fall it was said Hearst ran for mayor only because he was unable to induce Gaynor to taTie up the fight. Within the past week - there was Quite a movement In favor of the nomination of Congressman WUl''am Sulzer, whose name will be presented to the convention by his friends in Tammany Hall. Timothy D. Sullivan is said to favcr h's nomination , EDITORIAL FLINGS.

Slowly bur surely approaches 'the time for investigating society bridge whist. - Duluth News-Tribune. There can be a constitutional amendment for the regulation of divorce, but no constitutional amendment can prevent foolish marriages. - St. Louis Post Dispatch. The theatrical syndicate has decided to drop Shakespeare. That is the bard's punishment for forgetting to pot a double sextet and a leap for life into each of his plays. - Baltimore Herald. The New York legislature wants to enact a law for the taxation of tax dodgers. This will add another tax to dodge. What the dodgers fear is enforcement of the law, not legislation. - Chicacro Ken1-:- ' ! !

HARLES I

BONAFARTH,

secretary of

the navy, who ha3

been expressing his

views on the punish

ment of anarchists,

was noted as a stu

dent at Harvard for the excellence of bis

stories of the Mun

chausen variety. One

of them concerned a

hoop snake. "There

wasa farmer, young

Bonaparte would be

gin, "who was' out hoeing. H Tas

hoeing at the foot of a hill. All of a

sudden he heard a noise, and, looking

op, there was a hoop snake rushing

down on him like the wiad. Its tail

was in its mouth, and in JLe form of a

perfect circle fne snake rolled down the

hill upon him.

'The farmer was frightened, brt he

put up a good flght. He whacked the snake with his hoe. It let go" of Its

tail then and made a bite at him, but

he warded off the bite with the hoe

handle. The fangs of the Infuriated

reptile sunk into the handle very deep,

and the farmer, with a heavy rock.

killed the enake.

'Then he took up the hoe and began

to work. After a while he noticed that

the handle seemed thicker than uaoaL

He looked at It. Actually It was swell

ing. Yes, it was swelling (so powerful

was the hoop snake's venom). This hoe

handle before the afternoon was over

bad grown to the thickness of the farm

er's leg."

The railroad which Joseph Ramsey,

Jr., former president of the Wabash,

plans to build from New York to Chi

cago will be the first American trunk

line to be equipped at the start with electric locomotives. It will have an

advantage in not having to dispose of

any old stock In order to utilize electric equipment. The Ramsey project

is the sensation of the hour in rail

road circles. It will be shorter than

any existing route between New York

and Chicago. Mr. Ramsey's tight with

George J. Gould over control of the .Wabash occupied the center of the

stage some months ago. It was settled

In favor of the noted multimillionaire.

and Mr. Ramsey got out of the Wa

bash offices. Time was when Mr.

Ramsey was a great favorite with Mr.

Gould and others in

the Wabash direc-

torate. A record

breaking achievement in the move-

ment of freight when he was with a small Pennsylvania road brought

him to their atten-

tion.

"We've been want

ing a good general superintendent for

come time,"- they said, "and we'll go

after this man Ramsey, who does snch

wonderftil things.'

A cpmmittee of prominent Wabash

officials was sent to Pittsburg.

"Wherell we find Mr. Ramsey?" they

asked at the office of his road.

'Out there under that locomotive,

was the reply.

The eminent gentlemen picked theh

.way over ties to a locomotive standing

on a siding. Underneath the locomotive was a man pounding away at a

repair. Pretty soon the man crawled

out and stood before the eminent gen

tlemen. He had on' overalls and a

Jumper that were grimy, and his hands

and face were dirty and oily.

'Are you Mr. Joseph Ramsey?"

asked one of the visitors.

I am," was the reply. "What can

I do for you?"

"You can give up your job here and

be the general superintendent of the

Wabash," the spakaunan replied. "We came' over here to look you over. and

decide about you later, but we've

changed our minds. We want you right away. An official who knows how and Is not afraid to repair his

own rolling stock needs no other

recommendation." FACTS FROM FRANCE. ,

FAREWELL ADDRESS

Leaves Zion City for Mexico

But Says That he Will Return to His Own.

JOS. RAMSEY, JR.

AND

CEYLON TEAS

Green drSlacft These teas satisiV M.aJre them right. One teaspoonfulfur two cups. dd absolutely Boiling Water. Steep 3ve minutes. Never Boil these teas. Are sold loose or In sealed packits by Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea 2c. 727 Main. (Published by Authority of the In- ' dia and Ceylon Commissioner.)

Esperanto is to be taught to the ca-

dets at the French military college of

St. Cyr.

In consequence of the increasing

abuse of opium its sale in France harbor cities has been forpidden.

A boy of twelve in the custody Of the Paris police told them that It is their business to find out his name and ad

dress.

The French people are the greatest

consumers of cheap wine in the world.

It is used more generally than milk in the United States. Even the little chil-

dren drink It. The public schools give it to the pupils. The servants insist on

the daily allowance for wine.

Yellow spectacles fiir weak eyes were recommended by Dr. Motals in a paper

he read before the Academy of Medicine at Paris. The doctor declares that yellow is very soothing to weak eyes and that for fifteen years he has prescribed glasses of this color with excellent results. Spoiling Its Reputation. After being for years a sort of house-

hold pet and standard amusement with

which the inhabitants drQYe.awaydul!

care, mosquitoes and such pests, the South American revolution has broken out violently and killed any number

of men. This is annoying to say. the least. Just when the people thought they had it trained to eat out of their hand and do the cake walk to have it runnint amuck through the cities of Central America was euough to make tht?n feel that they had placed their cacti dence where it wouldn't draw d'vi dends. Heretofore a South American revo tntion has been supposed to be something like a pink tea or a French duel not as violent as golf as an exercise or as strenuous as a presidential campaign or as noisy as a fish peddler.

but still the man who had engaged In 1 It was suppased to come back home feeling as thousra he hd been slapped

on the wrist.

SCORES HIS BETTER HALF

SAYS THAT FOR TWENTY FIVE

YEARS HE LIVED WITH MRS. DOWIE AND WAS ABUSED EV

ERY DAY IN THAT TIME.

Chicago, Sept. 24. John Alexander

Dowie, delivered his parting message

to his followers in Shiloh house. Ha

expects to start for Mexico on Tues

day. He talked of his plans to return

to Zion City next summer and build

a great mansion for the coming of

Christ and the dawn of the millenium.

But he said it was possible that the Lord might call him home before that time. "I am not going to Mexico to

stay," he said. "I shall come back and

come into my own. My attorneys have appealed my case and I feel that the

Lord will not desert me. I am not a

sick man in many respects. My dis

ease is a broken heart, I have lived

with Mrs. Dowie for 25 years a brok

en hearted man. She abused me everv

day. I do not know that I ever'shall

see her again."

A REAL SEA SERPENT.

JkLLIL TfflfflS' WEKISl

Tliiii One la Vouched For by Two

, BritiMh Xatnraliata.

A sea serpent story which comes

from England has aroused more than

ordinary attention because it was told

before the Zoological society by two

naturalists, who vouched personally for the experience related. They are E. B. Meade and M. J. Nicoll, and they

Take no

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Wool Dress Goocfs, 36 inches wide, selved

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66

Open Evenings. FJext StH St SHosc Mouse

MARINE MONSTER SEEN OFF BRAZIL.

stated to the learned scientists whom

they addressed that while on the yacht

.Valhalla, off Para, Brazil, they had

observed a strange creature which

thrashed the sea violently and for some time traveled in the same direc

tion as the ship. It had a neck

some six feet long, surmounted by a

great Jurtle-l Ike head, with large eyes.

The serpent seemed to be giving the

ship a careful inspection.

Social and Personal Mention

DORCAS SOCIETY MET YESTERDAY AT HOME OF MRS. JOHN EGGEMEYER ON SOUTH FOURTEENTH STREETSPRING GROVE SEWING CIRCLE TO MEET WITH MRS. J. EDWIN WELLER MR. AND MRS. THORNTON CAIN GAVE GOLDEN WEDDING DINNER.

Poultry on the Farm.

It has often been stated that Id.

conditions for poultry raising exist on the farm, and yot there is no other

class of stock so neglected by tho average farmer.

AH the other stock U provided with

comfortable quarters, which are kept

clean and free from vermin, while tha

henhouse is well supplied with cracks,

broken -windows and lice and has not

been cleaned for two years. Ask any

of these men why they don't keep more hens, and" you will be told that they don't pay, that they only keep

a few -to supply eggs for home use

and have to buy eggs in the winter Now, Vow psn these objections be removed and poultry be made to pay on

the farm?

First. j-By replacing the mongrel

birds with thoroughbred stock. This

can be done at small expense by purchasing eggs and using the scrub hens

as incubators. .

Second. By providing comfortable

houses for- the birds. This d6es no, necessarily mean expensive houses.

Buildings good enough for all practical

purposes can be built of one inch lumber, pine or hemlock, new or old, with Inside surfaced so that they can be

readily whitewashed and outside covered with building paper with battens over cracks. s

Third. By keeping the Interior of

the poultry house In a clean and sanitary condition.

Worne Pllsht. 'He's been talking golf so much he:

lately he seems to be actually goi

crazy."

'Gracious! Then what crnst be ti

condition of the ppople he's been tali Ing to?" New York Life. t

CIRCUS DAY.

&Ik about ycur great excitement And ycur bustle and your noise That m:k?s every one take notice And attracts a cro-vd of boys. That makes people quit their busincst And o rushing up and down. Surely there is something doing "Vhen the circus comes to town. When the band gets loud and busy In the giddy street parage.

....J'lar.kcd with-panut elands and plactM

v nere mey peaaie lemonaae. And the elephants go taarchlng With their keepers black as n!ght And the Hon cage Is open It Is something of a sighL Nearly everybody follows The procession to the spot Where the tented city rises In some ample vacant lot, An-J they listen to the barker' Who upon the boxes clira. Telling ail about the sideshow . That will cost you but a dime. Peon the ticket wagon opens. Ar.d th? man who sells the cards That edrrf you to the circus Hsr.ds licm out with his regards. And. though you had quite determi-M You could not afford to go. You plank down ycur half dollar ' And stes in and see the chow.

Tlss Kind tea Haw Atoare &iu$t

Seari ti

Mr. John Poundstone was the hos

tess for a bridge party at the Country

Club yesterday afternoon. Cards were

played at six tables. Mrs. Richard

Lackey and Miss Alice Forkne'r were awarded the prizes.

The Spring Grove Sewing Circle

will meet this afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. Edwin Weller in North 8th street.

Owing to the fact that a number

of the members of the N. L. Sewing

club have gone away to school, the meetings have been discontinued and

the club will not reorganize until

next summer. . .

Miss Juliet Swayne, Miss June El-

mer, Mr. Tom Kaufman, Mr. Henry

Bulla and Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Elmer formed a dinner party at the Westcott Sunday evening.

The Dorcas Society met yesterday

afternoon with Mrs. John Eggemeyer

at her home on South Fourteenth street.

Those present were Mesdames Geo.

H. Eggemeyer, Maude Eggemeyer, Edward Haner, Richard Moore, Edward Crivel, Albert Rost, George Eggemeyer, Geo. Mashmeyer, Lee B. Nus-

baum, Fred Bartel, John Marshall,

Edgar Herily, Misses Ruth , Mashmeyer, Esther Bessleman, Alice Knol-

lenberg and Jesse Fox. The next meeting of the club will be with Mrs.

Maude Eggemeyer at her home in North 9th street.

Mrs. Emma Coalter entertained

with a dinner party at her home on

the new Paris Pike the past week in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Logan SJldith, of Lincoln, Neb. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stevenson

Misses Eunice Coalts, May Steven

son, Mildred Flook, Mary Flook, Messrs Robt. Flook Alexander coalter,

Harry Coalter, Roy Coalter, Guilford Flook, and Mrs. Josephine Flook.

Mr, and Mrs. Walter, Cole entertain-

ed the members of the family at dinder Sunday in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Hamlin I. Bemon, of Milwaukee, who are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lemon.

Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Cain entertained at dinner yesterday at noon in honor of their fiftieth wedding anniversary at their home in North 11th street. The table was beautifully decorated with golden glow and ferns and great clusters of the yellow flowers were placed throughout the various rooms. The guests were Mr.

and Mrs. Walter Cain of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cain, of New York, Mr. and Mrs. Hartley Dickenson and familj-, Mr. Chas. Jenkins and son, Russell Mr. and "Mrs. Walter Hutton and family, Mrs. Emily Hutton, of Philadelphia, Miss Maggie Wickett and Mr. Heron Winder. A pretty wedding took place at the iome of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Adams, 1122 North J Street, last Saturday night when their daughter Julia Neal was united in marriage to Mr. Ed ward Smith. ': . The house was prettily decorated, and an elegant wedding supper was served. There were several out of town guests present. Kern's orchestra furnished the music for the occasion, i The young couple will be at home to their friends after October 1st at their home on North Sixteenth street

PERSONAL-MENTION. Mr. W. J. Rohe and daughter Miss Grace have returned from Petasky. Judge Comstock went to Indianapolis yesterday on business. Mrs. Mary Anderson, of Muncie, is the guest of friends in the cil Orville Moss, of Indianapolis, spent Sunday with his parents, Daniel Moss and wife. Mrs. Walling left yesterday for Logansport where she win make her future home. Miss Florence Harper who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs, Chas. Igleman, has returned to her home in Frankfort. E. L. Culbertson has returned to his home in Centervllle. Charles Roser has returned from a visit with friends at Williamsport. Mrs. Loomis, of Eaton, is the guest of her; daughter, Mrs. Frank Vossler. Geo. Toler has returned to New York after a visit with relatives in the city. ' " 1 Merle Gehn, who has been employ

ed at Bradford Junction, returned yesterday and will enter Earlham this winter. . Miss ' Elsie McGill spent Sunday at Indianapolis. Mrs. Fred 4 Haas who has been the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hangerford, has returned to her home in Logansport. " Miss Adeline Ross and Mr. Joe Schlentz, of Indianapolis, have ro turned home after visiting the Misses Blanch Schattel and Carolyn Greene. Miss Florence Hunter, of Piqua, is the guest of Mrs. Frank Corell.

Mrs. Emma WInsett is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Nora Campbell, of

Milton. . - Mr. and Mrs." E. G. Hibberd have returned from Oden, Mich. ' Miss Julia Henchman of St. Louis, is the guest of her parents, C. T. Henchman and wife. - Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cain, of Indianapolis, are the guests of Thornton Cain and wife. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Martin, of New York, are the guests of Judge and Mrs. Comstock. . ' ' Rev. S. R. Lyons and daughter, Migs Flora have returned from Oxford, Ohio. - ' Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cain, of New York are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Cain. Mr. and Mrs. Newton Tracy and Mr. D. A. Tracey, of New Castle, are the guests of friends in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kapp have returned to their home in Cincinnati.

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