Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 266, 23 October 1906 — Page 3
Page Threc; ATT TIME TBUBAITElgg. jf(j ' FA1LIHG IS LOST BONDS RECOVERED FINDS VALUABLE PAINTING ALCOHOL PRICE IS FIXED "Girl Knitting" Stolen From Art Gallery at Cincinnati Recovered and . Thief Arrestad. GROUND TO DEATH WERE OF GREAT VALUE DISTILLERS' AGREEMENT
'The Richmond Palladium, Tuesday, October 23, 1906.
SKIN ECZEMA IN WORST FORM
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Blamphltrt anr Hehry high class vocalists at the New Phillips this week.
Vaudeville at the Phillips. Owing to the mishap at Hamilton, Ohio, the Ileim children, wonderful juvenile actors, are not able to take their turn on the vaudeville bill at the New. Phillips this week, but Manager Murray was able to secure an act In their place for last night's performance In Nellos, juggler. It is probable that the Heim children will be presented on a future bill. After a lapse of a week, the patrons of the New Phillips again flocked to the liouse yesterday afternoon and night to see their old time favorite vaudeville. They were not disappointed as the program 13 quite pleasing. Kretore In a musical act; Corregan. and Hays, singers and dancers; Blamphin and Hehr, high class vocalists; Miss Ruby Cohn, in illustrated songs, and the Philoscope, with three motion picture films, doing their very best to please. Miss Cohn's songs this week are pretty and delightfully illustrated. They are entitled "The Little Old School House on the Hill" and "You're the Sweetest Flower that Grows in Tennessee." Tomorrow there will be a souvenir matinee and on Saturday a special matinee for children. A double performance will be given Saturday night. Guy Stock Company Gennett. The return of the Guy Stock Company for a weeks engagement In the city was welcomed with great interest. This was manifested by the appreciative audience that greeted them In their opening play "My Jim". This 6eason Manager C. XV. Mercer has surrounded Mr. Guy with a stronger company than any previous season. Mr. G. Carlton Guy in the title vole of "My Jim" received a hearty ovation on his appearance and in this character he is seen in one of the best rural plays ever written and his ability in blending comedy and pathos is remarkable and wins for him well deserved appreciation and favorable commendation from the audience. His portrayal of an easygoing, whole hearted country lad was excellent. The usual daily matinees will prevail during the week. The vaudeville features this season are good. This afternoon for matinee they will pre sent "The Bankers Fate" and at AL. H. HU 7 NortkNi i has some good valfe to Real. Es tate. : Rents collecvd and every attention given the property. I Delivery I Headquarters : lliff's Store orej t Phone 72 rnp
The FaBDaidSyinni
EVERY SUBSCRIBER .
.'ITO .-w night, owing to the many requests "Dr. Jekyle and Mr. Hyde", will be the offering. "Way Down East" Gennett. ' Is there anyone who ever visits the theatre in this city who has not seen "Way Down East?" It is doubtful. Year after year, this good old comedy drama of rural life in New England goes through the country with increasing popularity and doesn't seem to mind even the wear and tear of time. It is a veritable gold mine for Vm. A. Brady, its producer. The question was put to that astute manager a short time since as to how long he thought "Way Down East" would last; he quickly replied, "As long as Uncle Tom has." The cast and production to be seen during its one night stay at the Gennett Theatre next Monday night is the same as seen here in past seasons and includes Phoebe Davies, who created the part of Anna Moore, Robert Fischer, Mabel Strickland, Ulric B. Collins, Ella Hugh Wood, Frank Cprrier, Mary Davenport, Frank Bell, Estelle Ward, Jas. T. Galloway, Peanne Millard, Burt Flansburg and the village cBoir. sr. vW a G. Carlton Guy as Mr. Hyde at the Gennett Tonight. Painting: and Drawing;. Sir Frederick Leighton once supplemented words of advice and encouragement to a struggling young artist by handing him an envelope containing a check - for $250, with , the,; remark, "One day, my friend, I do .not" doubt that you will be able to draw even better than this." This reminds one of the anecdote told of the visit of old Joseph Gillott, the pen man, to Turner 'I have come to swap some of my pictures for yours," he said. "What do you mean?" exclaimed Turner. "You don't paint T' "No. I don't, but I draw," said Gillott, unfolding a roll of Bank of England notes, "and here are some of my pictures." Mutual Satisfaction. "What's this I hear about the plumber and the paper hanger in the next block? Have they been trading houses?" "Not exactly. They did a lot cf work for each other and each had to take the other's houe for his pay ' Chicago Tribune. . . . MADE A
Piece y if ps fifiD!gei?if 99 to Ofc
London Banker Announces Suspension of His Business Then Suicides.
DELIBERATELY PLANNED UNFORTUNATE MAN ' WALKED INTO DARK TUNNEL AND LAID DOWN BEFORE THE APPROACH ING EXPRESS. London, Oct. 22. P. McFadyden, head of McFadyden, bankers, whose suspension was announced, committed suicide within an hour after posting the notice of the failure on to the door of the -bank, by throwing himself before a train in -a tunnel about half a mile away from his place of business. Mr. McFadyden appears to have gone direct from his bank to a station of the City and South London railway, to have entered the tunnel unobserved and deliberately lain down in front of an approaching train. The engineer reported having run over an obstruction in the tunnel, and a search revealed a shockingly mutilated body, which was identified as that of Mr. McFadyden. It is rumored that the failure of P. MacFadyden & Co., the London house of Arbuthnot & Co., bankers of Madras, was connected with the cotton market, but as Mr. MacFadyden was the sole partner in Europe, it is difficult to obtain information on the subject. LITTLE: OTA EENGA. The African Pygmy In Xew York; and the Controversy Over II 1 m. Ota Benga, the African pygmy brought to this country recently by Dr. Samuel P. Verner, has been the subject of a curious controversy. It was Dr. Verner who was in charge of the party of pygmies which was a feature of the world's fair at St. Louis. He returned these pygmies safely to their home in Africa, and little Ota, another member OTA BENGA AND A CHIMPANZEE. of the Iillfputian community, wished to come to America, so the ethnologist brought him along. He is twenty-three years old, but about the size of the average American boy of twelve. At first Ota Benga stayed at the American , Museum of Natural History In New York, as hf: was an object of much Interest to the ethnologists there. Then he was given quarters in the New York zoological park. It was then that trouble arose. One day Ota appeared in a big cage with a monkey. Immediately a protest was made against the exhibition of a man In a cage with a monkey, or other animal on the ground that It was brutalizing. Director HornaCay of the zoological gardens explained that Ota's appearing in a cage was merely a matter of convenience, as most of the time he had his freedom to run about the park and slept in a good room and took a bath every morning. He said that Ota was learning English readily, was bright and was rapidly becoming Americanize1'. BUSINESS CHAN Invest $10.00 in Land xiprovement Stock worth $1004)0. "JiDarly inconn $200.00. Postal . caA jffings- explai tions. No scheme. A conservajrve business proposition. West Lusher Street, Elkhart, Ind. f 23-lt Use artificial gas for nd heaL 10-tf REPO
FarnCo
KTEp . . . PRISE THl3WtiiuU"
ealthy Cleveland Man Sets Down Valise in Traction Car, and When He Leaves He Finds Exchange Has Been Made. . , "
Cleveland, Oct. 22. George C. Bel'. a wealthy citizen of Chagrin Falls, O., near here, lost a valise containing. $4S000 worth of negotiable bonds while coming into this city on a suburban car. Another valise almost like his was left in its place by a stranger who sat close to Bell. Bell did not discover his loss until he got off tne car and he then made a report of the affair to the police. After working on the case the police arrested Leslie Odell, a railroad fireman, in a nearby suburb, and found the bonds in his possession. Odell said the thing was all a mistake and that he had riot even opened the valise. He was greatly surprised when shown the fortune which he had in possession. All the bonds were intact. Odell was, however, locked up charged with grand larceny. Two Dead in Collision. Toledo, O., Oct. 22. An incoming Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton passenger train collided with an outbound car on the Toledo & Indiana traction line at the crossing on Dorr street, three miles west of this city. The locomotive struck the rear end of the car, smashing it badly. The engine was thrown from the track and one of the crew buried beneath it. The dead: T. Howard, Chicago; Louis Kraus, Toledo. A dozen persons were injured. The Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton train had the right of way. Conductor Gilbert of the interurban misjudged the distance and thought he had plenty of time to cross the tra-k ahead of the train. Motorman Whalen disappeared after the collision. Coal and Railroads. Knoxville, Tenn., Oct. 22. Judge Judson S. Clements of Georgia and James S. Harlan of Illinois, members of the interstate commerce commission, formally convened a hearing for the commission in this city. It isto ascertain the relationship of the Southern railway to the coal mining industry in the Tennessee-Kentucky field. The investigation is similar to inquiries recently made as to the Pennsylvania, Baltimore &. Ohio and Chesapeake & Ohio roads and their relations to the coal industry. It is understood a number of complaints have been made as to the Southern railway"s method of car supply for the coal mines.. COLLEGE AND SCHOOL. St. Louis is pushing the erection of large modern schoolhouses. Two thousand British schoolteachers have applied to Mr. Mosely, the London publisher, to join his prospective party which will visit the United States and study educational methods here. Dishonesty in the written examinations at the University of Chicago has resulted in the faculty virtually abandoning the honor system, which has been in vogue ever since the foundation of the university. The trustees of the Rhodes scholarship fund of London have requested Dr. Edmund J. James, president of the University of Illinois, to act as chairmau of the committee of the Rhodes scholarship trust: for the state of Illinois. A recent convention of learned men at Berlin has advised the government to establish two kinds of lyceums for girls, one of eight years, corresponding to a high school In this country, and another with a supplementary course of four years, preparatory to the university. ShovFlngr Fa Up. My name Is Johnny. I'm the boy Who asks all sorts of things So pa. can make those bright replfM With, real sarcastic flings. I've got to ask about dlvorc So pa can start his buns; I've got to ask of politics , So pa can loose his tongue. They ain't the things I care about; I've got a thankless part To waste my time on silly stuff So pa can pose as smart. Now, this Is what I often think And makes me wonder Why don't they print the things X r That pa don't even know? ask It is really one of the most wonderful tonics for developing the figure and soothing the nerves ever offered to the American people. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. A. G. Luken & Co.
New York, Oct. 22. A valuable oil painting . entitled "Girl Knitting," which was stolen from the art gallery in Eden park, Cincinnati, on October 6, was recovered here. A young man who gavie his name as Clarendon Henri, was arrested when he attempted to dispose of the picture to a Fifth avenue art dealer. Henri first visited the dealer last Saturday and suspicion was aroused when he demanded $250 for a painting which apparently had been cut from its frame. Henri told the police that the picture was given him by a man in Berlin, Germany.
Humor and Philosophy Br DUNCAN M. SMITH WHEN THINGS ARE COMFORTABLE. When the price of stocks goes tumbling And from Wall street comes a cry From the lambs who have been slaughtered And whose cash is more than shy Ton can smile and say you wonder If the weather will be fair. If you were not in the market When the price went In the a!r. It is easy to be jolly. In philosophy to dip. When you hear about a shipwro If you do not own a ship. You can carry load3 of troubl Without feeling mad or sore. If It is the private trouble ; Of the gentleman next door. Oh, you do not mind the weather, ' Though it Is a rainy spell. If you have a good umbrella And a mackintosh as well! . Rubber bootsies on your tootsies And good mittens on' your mitts. Then you do not care a cooky If the blamed thing never quits. ' Tou can stand It very nicely In the wild financial crash. When the banker skips to Europe And his old bank goes to smash I With complacency unshaken The performance you can see If you haven't any money In the bank that used to be. Doesn't Burn It That Way "I thought you said that man Is deeply in debt. Why, he has money to burn." "ne Is in debt." "Then why doesn't he pay up?" "Then he wouldn't have money to burn." . Couldn't. "There, you pay your money and you take your choice.' "No, I don't." "Why?" "Because it isn't here." Couldn't Drown Him. "I feel safe to go out on the lake with Charley." "Is he a good sailor?" 4 "No, but father says he was born to e hanged." - Vhat He Got, "He is the champion watermelon eater of the state." "Does he get any medal for that?" HNo; just the stomach .che." Wrong KenneL "Did you advertise for a lost dog?" "Yes, but you don't resemble him in the least." ' The Modern Anthem. It is hurry, hurry, hurry, In the morning, noon and night; Human atoms dart and scurry Up and down in rapid flight. Hurry lest some get the better Of you in the daily grind; .Hurry lest some other fretter - Find that he has changed his mind. This might leave you badly stranded At the ebbing of the tide Just when you had thought you'd landed High and dry your prize beside. So it's hurry, hurry, hurry, Night and morning and at noon; Human atoms dart and scrry. Resting not 'neath sua Artificial gas.lhe 20th Century fuel. 10-tf Palladium Want Ads Pay.
TRYTO WIW THE .
Those Interested Are Preparing to Fight Against the Corporation of Interests Which is Said to be Acting Unlawfully.
Baltimore, Oct. 22. Large buyers of alcohol, distillers and others interested are preparing to fight, by appeal to the department of justice at Washington and by congressional action if necessary, the recently formed "Distillers Securities Corporation," and the high price it is charged that corporation intends to maintain for denatured alcohol. William Colton, an attorney who has the matter in charge, says he represents distillers, handlers and others interested in alcohol in this and several other northern and southern states. Mr. Colton states that his clients have collected evidence to be submitted to the federal authorities that have conclusive evidence of the existence of an agreement among those identified with the Distillers' Securities corporation under which tha price of alcohol is arbitrarily and unlawfully fired. Three Persons Shot. Cole Camp, Mo., Oct. 22. While Mrs. Alice Winemiller, a widow, was sitting with her five children in their home seven miles from Warsaw, shots were fired through a window and Mrs. Winemiller was Instantly killed. Her son, aged 14 years, was badly wounded. Felix Crawford, a neighbor, who heard the firing and hurried to the scene, was shot and died two hours later. His son-in-law, J. A. Long. Is charged with having done the shooting, using a shotgun. A posse headed by the sheriff, is scouting the Pettis county hills searching for Long. GIRL SHOT BY A BURGLAR Robber Tried to Silence Her and Failing Drew His Revolve Wound May be Fata!. Dayton, O., Oct. 22. Miss Sarah Graham, aged 18, was shot In the right breast directly over the heart, by a burglar whom she caught in the home of her parents, and 'will probably die. She and an older sister were alone in the house when they were awakened by the noise of someone rummaging around. They began to scream and call for help, and the intruder, fearing capture, shot and then fled, after vainly trying to threaten the girls Into silence. Pottery Worker a Suicide. Cleveland, O., Oct. 22. B. M. Bell, a pottery worker of Coshocton, killed himself In the Hawley house. He was found in his room with a bullet hole in his head. No reason is known for the suicide. Bell came here from Coshocton Friday. His former home was at Steubenville. The New Phillips
O. G. MURRAY, LESSEE AND MAN AGEI
" WEEK OF OCT. Saturdays 3, 7:45 A MISS RUBY COHEN. Overture. B KRETORE. Musical Act. C CORREGAN AND HAYI Singers and Dancers. (The best what is.) D BLAMPHLIN AND HEHR. High Class Vocalists.
Special matinee each Saturday; children 5 cents. All other matlneea 10c, except to children under 5 years. Souvenirs Wednesday matinee.
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One Week, starting Monday Night, 22
Matinees daily starting TUESDAY.
MR. CHAS. W. MERCER PRESENTS THEadPAMOUS
BJND ANCH)RCHETRA
30R6ple in Repertoire Featuring. , Iff. G. and Miss Inez MerrejSpecial Opening bill "My
Popular Prices 10 20 30 cents. Matinees 10 cents. Ladies Free Monday Night under usual conditions. Seats on Sale at the Westcott Pharmacy.
Black Splotches AH Over Face Produced Severe itching Year's - Treatment by Physicians Did No Good and Became DespondentAffected Parts Now Clear as Ever Alabama Lady's CURE BYTHE CUT1CURA REMEDIES
"About four years ago I was afflicted with black splotches ail over my fa and a few covering my body, whic produced a severe itching irritation. which caused me a great deal of ann anceand suffering, to such an extent tbftt I was forced to call in two of the leading physicians of my town. After a thorough examination of the dreadetLioniplaint they announced it to bm akin eczema in its worst form. Thev treated me for the same for the lengtkfof one year, but the treatment did me no good. " Finally I lieeanie despount and decided to discontinue their Cervices. Shortly afterwards, mv hiishanfl in read ing a copy jot a weekly w York he Cutipaper saw an advert isrmei; cura Remedies. He puiyt the entire outfit, and after usig e contents of the nrst bottle of C-ulicuj Resolvent in connection with tbe I) leura rxap and Ointment, the brfakii out entirely stopped, li continued tae ue of tha Cuticura Remediesfor : months, and after that fcvwy plc cone and the affcc"ted was entirely ! were left a clear as ever. havcj iot felt a sympt om of t he ec zemft sine hich was three vears atro. "The Cuticurl IWmcdics not only cured me of tliav dreadful disease, eczema, but othct m plicated troubles as well; and I half been the means ol others being curelfof the same disease by the Cuticura Remedies, and I don't hesitate in saying that the Rcsolvcn is the best blood medicine that the world has ever known." Lizzie K. Sledge, 540 Jones Ave., Oct. 28, 1905. Selma, Ala. bold throughout thr world. Cuticnra Soap. tAc, Ointment, H', KnoireM, V. io form of Chnromts Cotd Fill,, Sic. prr vial of ', niv br had of all dranrtita. rimiT i'iui alia tirnx. k (tip., ntiir rivp.-i dvwii, ., HO(OI, Ala. skia Hook," d mr Blailra w, I n I'ullrart liof to Cura lUQguxluf llumora." (D) ROUND TRIP TO ..CINCINNATI .. C- Caf&L. 1 SUNDA OCT. Train leaves Ftthmond 9:05 A. M. Returning leaves Cincinnati 7:00 P. M. For particulars ask, C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. A. PHONE 44. Vaudeville Theatre 22nd; 3 and 8:' and 9:" ISTRATED SONGS. Iiss Ruby Cohen. F HEIM CHILDREN. Comedy Sketch. G PHILOSCOPE. "Broken Idyl," "Soldier." nia Holdup." 'Calif or . TTyTTTT P aaa IDA SWISm'J IRA SWIS Lessee an 4 z t 30. Carlton Guy the talented young actor .scenery for each play presented.
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