Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 241, 28 September 1906 — Page 3
ine Richmond Palladium, Friday, Sept. 28, 1 908.
Page Three
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ITCHING SCALP FALLING HI Came Out Constantly Hair Finally Had to Be Cut to Save Any Scalp Now in Good Condition and No
More Itching Another Effective CURE BY THE CUTICURA REMEDIES ' "I will gladly give ylli all the information concerning mvl case. I used the Cuticura .Soap andJlJintment for a diseased scalp, dandnm, and constant falling of hair. Finally I had tq, cut my hair to save any Jut all. J ust at that time I read abit the Cuticura Remedies.' Once evefV week I shampooed myhair with tlfc Cuticura .Soap, and I used the Ointntnt twice a week. In two months' time iy hair was long enouzh to do up m t rflich twist. 1 hat is now five years ai and I have a lovely head of haiij The length is waist line, my condition, and itching of the mx inches below mi scalp is in very go no more dandrun ftcalo. I .used other ; medies that were recommended to me eood, but with no results. If youj wish to publish any of what I hav are welcome to do written you, you I am, respectfully, Airs. W. F. Cj kess, Clay Center, .Neb., Oct. 23, 1U05J FROM THE HO R OF BIRTH 'i j Mothers Should, Use Cuticura Soap, thelVVorld's FavoUite Mothers are assurA of the absolute purity and unfailing flficacy of Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, the great Skin Cure, in the preservation and purification of the skin, scalp, hair, and hands of infants and children. For baby eczemas, rashes, itchings and ehafings, as well as for annoying irritations and ulcerative weaknesses, and many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to mothers, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are priceless. Sold throughout the world. Cutimm So.p, 25c., Olnt. jnrnl, Me., KMolvent, S"c. ii form of Cnocol.ta Co.trd Fill., 2Sr. pr UI of ), m.y be had of .11 drureit. Tortrr lrur nd C'hem. Corp., ol Propi., Hoirton, Mm, WdT M.iltd t ree, " The Great Cuticura Skin Buck.'" AT THE THEATERS "A Stranger in Town" Gennett. "A Stranger In Town", with that noted comedian Frank Beamish in the title role, will bo the attraction at the Gennett tonight. Mr. Beamish comes under the personal direction of Harry B. Linton, one of the best known theatrical managers in the country, and it is the belief that the entertainment will be one of the theatrical events of the season. Certainly no lover of comedy can afford to miss this opportunity for an evening of real pleasure. "Rufus Rastus" Gennett. r'rnest Hogan, the premier of all colored comedians, and his merry aggregation of artists, in every department of musical comedy purpose, is touring his second season under the Hurtig and Seamon banner, with a degree of genuine success, such as is rarely recorded and from reliable sources it is learned that the same vehicle, "Rufus Rastus,' which served him so extremely well in the past as a fun offering of tuneful importance, is commanding the finest kind of enthusiastic consideration. "Rufus Rastus" with Mr. Hogan and the original company together with all the splendid accessories which , have always characterized its production, will be at the Gennett next Tuesday night. Vaudeville at the Phillips. There will be the usual vaudeville performances at the New Phillips tonight, the program having been suspended only one evening to make way for Al , Reeves', entertainment. This weeks vaudeville bill has proven very pleasing and the patrons of the 'New Phillips have shown their appreciation by a liberal patronage. Tonight the k amateurs will contribute to the program. For next week manager Murray has secured another pleasing offering that will be announced tomorrow. There will be no break next week. Leola Cotton, said toffee the world's greatest in mental telepathy, will be one of the attractions and Gardner, West and Sunshine, presenting the only piccaninny before the American public, will be another. Palladium Want Ads Pay.
Th PallaidlSyirini
EVERY SUBSCRIBER . .
HURRICANE BLOWS OVER GULF REGION
Telearaoh Lines are Torn Down and in Many Places Washouts Occur. TWO STATES AFFECTED STREETS OF NEW ORLEANS AND OTHER CITIES WERE FLOODED RICE FIELDS ARE CONSIDER ABLY DAMAGED. New Orleans, Sept. 27. For more than 12 hours a tropical hurricane has been blowing at a speed varying from 25 to 60 miles an hour. The telegraph wires are all down between here and Gulf of Mexico points, where the storm is reported to have struck the heaviest. Washouts are reported on several railroads in that direction. The damage reported thus far, is confined mostly to the havoc of the tide driven by the wind upon the gulf coast to an unusual height. : At the mouth of the Mississippi river, pilots were compelled to abandon their towns. Seventy-five Austrian fishermen and their families spent the nights in boats on Doullets canal to escape the water, which is rising over the lower Mississippi delta and threatening their cabin. The rice fields are considerably damaged in this section. No vessels have attempted' to enter at the mouth of the Mississippi river since Tuesday night, but are riding out the storm in the open gulf. A washout is reported on the Louisville & Nashville at Lake Catherine, and no trains are running. The New Orleans and Northeastern railroad reports its track under -water at several places. The damage in New Orleans is small, bo far. Lake Pontchartrain is five feet above the normal. The wind has swept away a few fishing shacks. The West End city, a pleasure resort, has been damaged. Three barges were sunk in the Mississippi river at Southport above here. Weather Bureau's Report. Washington, Sept. 27. The weather bureau reported that the tropical disturbances has reached the Mississippi and southeastern Louisiana coasts, where it was central as a storm of great severity. Reports from Mobile and, Pensacola are missing by reason of the general prostration of telegraph wires in the storm-swept territory. High winds and rain prevail over Alabama, Mississippi and southern Louisiana, a maximum velocity of 48 miles an hour from the northwest being reported from New Orleans. The tropical disturbances will probably move northward during the next 24 hours and cause general rains in the Mississippi valley and south of the Ohio, attended by higher winds in the lower Mississippi valley, the Gulf states, and probably Tennessee. Raided the Town. Eagle Pass, Texas, Sept. 27. A telephone message received here from Jimenez, 30 miles up the Rio Grande river, state that 40 armed men raided the town, placed the mayor, chief of police, treasurer and other city officials in jail and are now in control. The telephone wires were cut before the message was finished. Government troops have arrived on a special train and are hastening to Jiminez, Advices of a battle are expected at Eagle Pass any hour. Examine Thaw. New York. Sept. 27. Harry Thaw, who killed Stanford White, was examined mentally and physically by the same alienists who examined, him a few days ago, Dr.-Britton D. Evans, medical director of the state hospital for the insane at Morris Plains, N. J., and Dr. Charles G. Warner, superintendent of the state hospital for the insane at.Binghamton. The specialists made no public statement. Indorsed by Labor Party, Butte, MOQt., Sept. 27. The state Labor party convention endorsed the nominees of the' Democratic party, T. J. Walsh of Helena for congress and Judge J. J. McClerman of Butte for associate justice of the supreme court. The Populists state convention nominated J. H. Calderhead, former state auditor, for congress. The judicial nomination was left to the executivc-eommHte
. . . MADE A REPORTER
FIGHT ON NEUTRAL LAND
HOPE TO AVOID THE LAW Walcott and Rhodes Will Meet for the Welter Weight Championship Several Miles from Leavenworth, Kan., Next Sunday. Leavenworth, Kan., Sept. 27. All arrangements for the fight next Sunday between Walcutt and Rhodes for the welterweight championship have been made. The contest, it is planned, takes place on a strip of neutral land, several miles from Leavenworth. The jurisdiction of this land has never been determined. It pays no taxes and a saloon has flourished on it for years unmolested. Governors Hoch and Folk combined to prevent the fight scheduled for last Sunday. Meat Inspection Ruling. Washington, Sept., 27. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson received from the attorney general the text of an important opinion, the latter answering in negative the question submitted to him as to whether or not the meat inspection law passe- at the last session of congress applied to meat products imported in the United States from foreign countries. Mr. Moody held that the provisions of the meet inspection amendment" have reference entirely to domestic slaughtering and meat packing establishments. Another Victim. Danville, 111., Sept. 27. Mrs. Dollie Waldman of Guelph, Ontario, is dead from the effect of the burns received in the wreck of the Wabash railroad train at Catlin. Her death is the seventh caused by the accident. Three children of Mrs. Waldman were badly burned, but will recover. Mrs. Luther Shoemaker of Spencerville, Ind., whose eight months old baby was killed, is lying at the point of death. She is burned about the head. The other injured passengers will, it is believed, recover. Rural Delivery Notes Illinois will probably be given the credit of starting the first rural free mail delivery by automobile. It has been started at Plajnfield, Will county, on a twenty-six mile route, covered by II. W. Ritzenthaler. The car that the carrier uses looks like an open buggy. Fatrons of the rural free delivery routes throughout the country have been notified by the postoffice department that in the future they may provide themselves with suitable boxes which are weather proof and fit receptacles for mail. The patrons of the rural routes will be allowed the privilege of making their own boxes or buying them from any manufacturer. Since free delivery of mail in rural districts has been established I have been pleased to discover two or three pairs of bluebirds nesting undisturbed in mail boxes by the roadside, says a writer In St. Nicholas. It is gratifying to know that the birds allowed themselves to be disturbed two or three times a day and yet not abandon their nests. But the thing that gives the bird lover the greatest delight Is the fact that no one robbed the nests. The establishment of the rural free delivery service in Minnesota is tending to bring about a better condition of the country roads traversed by the carriers in a way that is unexpected. Carriers Alfred Johnson and Frank Watts, who have routes 3 and 4 that run out of Mankato, report that the farmers along those routes have improved the roadways by the use of drags. It is expected that the farmers on other routes - will follow the example set. E. L. Finl:. a rural mail carrier of Grant county, going out of Medford, is the first man in Oklahoma to use an automobile in the service, installing his machine a few days ago. Mr. Fink has purchased an eight horsepower vehicle, of the low speed, which can be run at the rate of thirty miles an hour at four horsepower. As a result of a roadmaking campaign which has been on in that county for the past three seasons good roads obtain in that section of the territory, and this makes it convenient for the use of the automobile in the delivery of rural mail. Mr. Fink can cover his daily route now in about half the time it formerly required. Grfif as tarrn. Toung geese usually lay from eighteen to twenty-four eggs the first season, and old geese will lay from thirty to forty during the season. Young geese very seldom get broody the first season.
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WOMAN IS FOUND
rfl HrH KM UUMU III IIUII ULU Attendants at Minneapolis Hotel Find Corpse with Wound on the Head. LOOKS LIKE A MURDER MAN THOUGHT TO HAVE BEEN THE WOMAN'S HUSBAND HAD ENTERED THE ROOM ' WITH HER HE HAS DISAPPEARED. Minneapolis, ,Minn., Sjept. , 27. At tendants at Glenwood hotel broke ia to a room which' had been occupied by a couple who registered as Fred Tyler and wife. They found on the bed the dead body of a -beautiful young woman. Blood was oozing from a wound in the top of the head and apparently she had been dead for several hours. It is said that the man who accom panied her was seen leaving the hotel, but no one can give an accurate description of him. The dead woman was Identified later as the wife of Harry Sussman, who for some time had been a photographer on a local newspaper. The couple are said to have separated two months ago. A few days ago Sussman returned and he and the woman went away together. The police are looking for the husband. THE ROYAL BOX. The czar of Russia rules over nearlj one-sixth of the total land surface of the globe. King Edward is probably the only motorist who is regularly driven by a policeman. His majesty's car is always in the hands of skilled policemen -chauffeurs from Scotland Yard. The waist of Queen Maud of Norway measures tyit seventeen inches, and she Is so ethereal in appearance that even in England, where the cult of thinness has as worshipers practically all the women of the kingdom and most of the men. she is called rather too frail and delicate in appearance. Emperor William of Germany is getting gray. One day the past summer when the kaiser was cruising in Norwegian waters he visited the yacht of M. Menier. where he fell into conversation with Dr. Berardi, who was his fellow student at Bonn university. Dr. Berardi remarked upon the increasing whiteness of the emperor's hair. "Yes," the latter replied, "that is true enough, but I would rather be all gray than to become bald." Telegraphers Demands. Chicago, Sept. 26. A grievance committee of the Telegraphers union, which has had under consideration, terms offered by employes by the Postal Telegraph Company, recommended their acceptance, thus practically assuring a peaceable settlement of the controversy which threatened to cause a strike of all operators employed by the Postal company. The Telegraph company is said to have conceded 24 of the 32 contentions raised by the operators. Might Have Known. "He started on the road exhibiting a mummy." "Did it prove a drawing card?" "No; it wrs " '"-""I nn." WASHINGTON DEMOCRATS William Jennings Bryan Endorsed for Presidency and Willie Hearst i Is Cheered. Seattle. Wash., Sept. 27. The Den: ocrats of Washington in state con vention endorsed William J. Bryan fo the presidency in 190S, cheered Wi! liam R. Hearst and placed congres sional and judicial tickets in the field Dr. P. S. Bryens of Spokane, Dudley Echelman of Tacoma and William Blackman of Seattle were nominated for congress. The convention was the smallest held here in years. Several counties were unrepresented. See how what you have heard looks in print and get a dollar for doing it Win the news "tip" prize.
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CENTERVILLE.
Centerville, Sept. 27. (Spl.) Word has been' received here by relatives that Mrs. John Rohe and. children arrived safely at Malvern..' Pa., and that they are much pleased with their new home. Miss Emma Bradbury of Indianapolis, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Lashley. Mr. r'and Mrs. Emmet Mason are moving into William Rodenberg's house on Main street. Mrs. Reece went to Richmond on Friday to be the guest of her sister Mrs. Jesse Brooks, and also to attend the Indiana Yearly Meeting. A. P. Thomas of Richmond, was the guest on Wednesday of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Williams. A number of friends gave a reception Tuesday evening at Jackson Park in honor of the birthday anniver sary of Miss Myrtle Charman. Music formed one of the features of the evening. Refreshments were served. Those present were Mrs. Chas. A. Porter, and her house guest, Mrs. Edwin Higbee of Chicago, Mrs. Franklin Young, Mrs. Edward Savage and Misses Hattie Lashley, Fannie Savage, Myrtle Appleton, Nellie Ryan, Jeannette, George and Mary Beck. Jacob Myers and John Medearis will give a dance next Saturday night at Jackson Park. ARBA. Arba, Ind., Sept. 27, (Spl.) Miss Cora Mann, who is attending High school at Union City came home Sunday to visit her parents. Mrs. Brawley of Vinegar Hill, is the guest of her sister Mrs. King. Mr. and Mrs. Emsley Short of Muncie, are visiting friends and relatives of this place. Miss Gaynelle Smock Is working for Mrs. Moore this week. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Thornburg, who have been visiting in Ridgeville, returned home Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Home of Bartonia visited Frank Home's Sunday. Misses Maude Hockett and Agnes Clarke called on Miss Vina Mann, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Rollie Overman called on James Robinson's Sunday evening. WEBSTER. Webster, Sept. 27, (Spl.) Isaac Steddom and wife visited Mr. and Mrs. Jabez Kenworthy at Williamsburg last Sunday. Miss Minnie Tingler and Mrs. Orange Steddom attended the State Fair also Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Hairley Mr. Haisley bought a car load of cattle while there. Divorce Congress. Philadelphia, Sept. 27. Another meeting of the national congress on uniform divorce laws will be held in this city beginning Nov. 13. The congress will consider the draft of a statute which it will seek to have adopted in every state in the union. Arson Charged. Lebanon, O., Sept. 27. Dr. A. D. Spence of South Lebanon was arrested on a charge of arson and released on $500 bail. Fire, which was extinguished by neighbors, was discovered in the bedroom of the physician's residence. Strike at Car Shops. Marshalltown, Iowa, Sept. 27. The entire force at the car shops of the Iowa Central railway are on strike. The men demand the removal of Foreman John Greene and say they will remain out until he is removed. Fire at Gallipolis. Gallipolis, O., Sept. 27. Fire destroyed two grocery stores of L. M. Sheets and W. H. Boster. The loss is about $3000. TO THE POlflT J. C. McBurney of Boise Idaho, right eminent commander of the Knights Templar of Idaho, has mysteriously disappeared. In a practice game of football at Lawrenceville, N. J., John P. Kennedy, 21, captain of the Lawrenceville team, was kicked on the head and killed. Two lives were lost in an explosion n Picone's fireworks factory, in New (Orleans. Frank Picone, tie proprietor, and his baby, were the victims. Officially, announced that since Ja. 1, $283,073 has been collected by the government from railroads granting rebates or conspiring to give rebates, W. S. Carter, Peoria, 111., was elected grand secretary-treasurer of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen. John F. McN'amee of Celumbus, O., was re-elected editor and manager of the official magazine.
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rfENNETT THEATR
VCI IRA SWISHER,
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBERS 8
Harry B. Linton presents the Rollicking Farcemedy
"A STRANG With the noted Comedian FR pany of artists. A fine scenic pr and music. Absolutely a guaranteed attract Prices, 75, 50, 35 and 25. Seats at The New Phillips
O. G. MURRAY, MA NAG El
WEEK OF SEPT. 24tn. A MISS RUBY COHAN. Overture. B STARNO & CROUMER. Hand and Head Balancers. C LAURA JONES. The Nightingale Whistler. D LEO & SULKY. In. "Casey's. Troubles.. ,Nc Breakway Boxine Act. E MISS RUBY COHAN. Illustrated Songs. f
Special matinee each Sattd children 5 cents. All other matinees 10c, except to children under 5 years. Souvenirs Wednesday matinee.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
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Bought, and which has b has borne the has been made under supervision since its Irancy. no one to deceive yovin this. Signature of 39 Richmo rshoe trade. It Is m largIn t City. Is GUARANTEE re than fills the gu 724 MAIN 7, lUldl Cost Mah4IIu 02xi - - 02.00
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& POWER Managtr. ISH and a capable cor , filled with laughter- come Wescott Pharmacy. VaudevilleTheatre 3 and 8:rd p. F Harry jUrt & Collins Lithe SpeciaJy perfection, in their great and Xfonderful comedy novelty cly new to the world. IK AND HERBERT TRIO. rbmedy. Acrobats,. Singers, and IT THE PHILOSCOPE. J Latest motion pictures. THIS WEEK
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