Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 305, 30 November 1906 — Page 2
Page Two
The Richmond Palladium, Friday, November 30, 1906.
THE CURTAIN IS RUNG DOWN ON BUT A FAIRLY S UCCESSFUL SEASON OF FOOTBALL
HIGH SCHOOL WINS ITS FINAL GAME
Football Results.
Rushville Defeated in an Interesting Contest by Score of 5 toO.
IT WAS A CLOSE SHAVE
RUSHVILLE REFEREE REFUSES TO ALLOW RICHMOND TO USE NEW STYLE OF FOOTBALL THUS HANDICAPPING TEAM.
fie Champions of Eastern Indiana." Such Is the proud title the Richmond high school football team is claiming since its victory over the
strong Rushville high school team at Rushville yesterday by the score of 5 to 0. The team has won honors this year and will next year be recognized by both Shortiidge and Manual Training high schools of Indiauapolis, the two schools who rather looked down on the football team of Richmond this 3"?ar with disdain. With no discord among the members and all working for the best interests of the school the team has tarried its colors to victory, over every Indiana team it has met on the cridiron this season. Only twice has
its colors been lowered and both of these defeats were administered by the strong Steele high school team of Dayton. Duiing the first half Richmond could not get together and played in apparent apathy although when their goal line was threatened five different times during the half they stood as a man to protect it. In the second half Richmond played a much better game although they were not up to their usual standard. It was in this half that the Richmond boys worked a long forward pass and made forty yards, but owing to the fact that the Rushville pigskin pushers were not up to the new rules their referee would not permit the gain, and the locals had to be contented although they were somewhat anery at the decision. The ball was at this time in Rushville territory and the Richmond boys played like demons to score before tlie end of the half. They worked an onside kick wh'ch netted them thirty yards, but
as'ain the Rushville referee who was
Richmond High School 5; Rushvi
H. S., C. ; Massillon 10; All Western 4. Pennsylvania 0; Cornell 0. ' Indians 18; Virginia 17. Georgetown 16; George Washington 6. Holy Cross 15; Fordham 6. Nebraska 41; Cincinnati 0. Gettysburg 10; Franklin and Marshall 0. Lafayette 26; Dickinson 6. Manual Training H. S. 22; Shortridge H. S. O. 0 ,
... G .ASD DISPLAY OF
GRIT BY PEIIBSY
WIZARDS OF MEMORY
FAMOUS MEN WHO HAD WONDERFUL POWERS OF RETENTION.
MSSLO
WIN NER
BY A CLOSE SCORE
All Western Stars Were Defeated in Close Game at Chicago Yesterday.
Six Times Cornell Tries to Make Three Yards and a Touchdown but Fails.
MET A "WALL OF STONE''
The Remarkable and Authentic Caea of Leonard Enter, the Mathematician ; MajBrliabechl, the Literary Frodierj". and Kev. Dr. John Wallia. Writers on psychology and philosophy have cited many examples of prodigious memory. No doubt some of these are exaggerations, others are fabulous, and oniy a comparatively fewadmit of verification. Recently I have
found in my reading three cases so j
well authenticated that they may be I extraordlna'v memorv.
used to illustrate the wonderful power canon Jaw at Bologna and then went m 1 lit A- . ...... ! . "
or a wen cuiuvaieu memory in a ujiuu of strong native endowment. In each ! instance, too, this remarkable reten- ;
tiveness seems in no way to have re-
Metapuysles ana Loge." lie mates the statement and cites Muretus as authority that a young Corsieaa could repeat in either direct or reverse order or begin at any point and repeat both ways a list of 3G.000 nanes. It is related that both Horace Vernet and Gustave Dore could paint a portrait from memory. There is also a story that is more than tradition that Wolfgang Mozart set down the -whole of the Sistine Miserere from memory, and that, too, from hearing it but twice. Giovanni Fico della l"randola, rascal, Ben Jonson, Leibnitz, Scaliger, Neibuhr and Maeaulay all were men of marvelous memories. Almost from
childhood Mirandola -vas noted for hie
He studied
&
00XXXXXX '
Is your baby thin, weak, fretful ?
Emufafon
Make him baby.
WITH DESPERATION ITHACANS FIGHT IN SIGHT OF GOAL LINE BUT WHISTLE SOUNDS TO END EFFORTS.
Publishers' Press. Philadelphia, Pa., Nov.
tarded the fullest development of other mental powers. f Probably the mot remarkable of the ' three was the memory of Leonard ; Euler. Euler was a native of Basel, j but most of his life was spent in St. i Petersburg. He was born in 1707 and ! died in 17S3. He was a teacher of j great power and a most prolific writer. More than half of the forty-six quarto volumes of mathematics published by ' the St. Petersburg academy between 1
29. Al-1 1727 and 17S3 were from his pen. At j
though Pennsylvania failed to beat Cornell, or to even score on the Red and White Franklin Field this afternoon yet she closed the season in a blaze of glory that will live in the memory of Pennsylvania for years to come. That the Ithacans did not
FORMER MICHIGAN CAPTAIN i u was aue to a wonaerrui aispiay
or .Pennsylvania grit. In which they
HEST0N BROKE HIS LEG
SUFFERS SERIOUS INJURYTEAM WORK OF OHIO TEAM CAUSE OF VICTORY.
Publishers Press. Chicago, Nov. 29. Heston, of the University of Michigan football team, suffered a broken leg while playing with the All-Western' Eleven against Massillon here this afternoon. The Massillon team won by a score of 10 to 4. Though the All-Western players included many of the stars In the Western football firmament, the absence of training in teamwork made the eleven remarkable rather as a gridiron curiosity than as an effective fighting machine. The field was too soft to permit of fast work. Massillon made the first score on a goal drop-kicked by Davidson. The All-Westerns worked hard during the rest of the half but Massillon outgeneraled them and there was no more scoring until near the middle of the second half, when Hare, of Indiana, for the All-Westerns, kicked goal from the 30 yard line, tieing the Massillon team. Hestons leg was broken in a fierce scrimmage a few minutes later and he was carried from the field, after actually regaining his feet and trying
behind the new rules, called the team j to resume the game.
back. Richmond at this point braced and decided that if the Rushville team wanted to play under the old rules, it would give it a taste of it and by a series of short lint bucks which, in the hands of fullback Haas, halfbacks AllisJn and Graves, the ball was quickly forced from the fifty yard line to Rushville's goal line. Rushville at this point made a valliant effort to stop Richmond's steller back field, but was unsuccessful and halfback Graves was forced over for the only touchdown of the game.
NOLANS DEFEATED AT CAMBRIDGE YESTERDAY
The Nolans, a football team composed of pupils at the St. Mary's school met defeat at the hands of the Cambridge City team yesterday afternoon nt Cambridge by the score of 33 to 0. The local boys were no match for their heavy opponents and were outweighed about twenty pound? to tha man. .
Pennsylvania Relief Fund
prevented the Cornell team from carrying the ball over for a touchdown, although the latter were requested to make but three yeards and yet failed in six tries to gain the distance and beat Pennsylvania. In the first half the Red and Blue surprised her supporters by playing the entire time in Cornell territory
( and the half ended with the ball in
Cornell's possession on their own fifteen year line. Neither team changed the lineup at the beginning of the second half, but Cornell showed much better form and outplayed' the Red and Blue eleven in every department of the game. Taking the ball at midfield after fifteen minutes of play in this half Cornell was able to carry it by straight line plunging and a forward pass by Gibson to Pennsylvania's fifteen yard line. Being on the side line Cornell was prevented from attempting a field goal and Jamieson tried a quarterback forward pass, llolk-uback caught the ball f-it fumbled, and Vara Onman fell upon it eight yards in front of Pennsylvania's goal posts. Watson, who had but a few minutes before relieved Babcock, was chosen to carry the ball over and he took it seven yards. With the ball on the one yard line a score seeminely certain Watson was again given the ball but this time the Pennsylvanlas were
braced for the onslaught and they be'd firm. Again Watson took the ball, but once more the Pennsylvania line was faltering and it was Penn- ' sylvanias ball on downs but a few
inches from the goal line. Holenback attempted to kick out but the strong southwest wind carried the ball out of bounds on Pennsylvania's four yard line. Cornell was desperate and when after two tries she had carried the ball to the one yard line. Coach Wa-er tried another trick by sending Gardiner in to relieve Jamieson. His object was to carry Instructions for the next play, but in this he failed, as the Pennsylvania team . again recovered itself and got the ball on the downs within half a foqt of their goal line a3 the whistle sounded' th ;
Publishers' Press. end of the game,
New York, Nov. 29. Architects and
builders here are taking warning 45 5.25 AN D TOUCHDOWN
from many recent accidents caused by collapsing concrete buildings. Leaders In the movement for safer construction are demanding that New York's building code, which is about to be revised, shall contain such stringent provisions as to prevent the erection of flimsy structures of this type. The debris of the Long Beach, California, hotel disaster, had not been cleared away before this week's Rochester collapse occurred, adding
sillon toward the end of the half ana they ended the game with 10 points in their favor to four for the mixed team. '
DEMAND SAFER BUILDINGS
Warning Taken from Rochester Con crete Collapses and Similar Accidents in Other Cities.
La Fayette Makes First Score in Game with Dickinson in Remarkably Fast Time.
I Publishers' Press.
Easton, Pa., Nov. opened Its last game
with a 45, a 15 and a 25 yards run and in ihf siirressi ve nlavs marl. tniT?.
three to the growing death list and a ! d fairly taking Dlckjnsoa.3 dozen to the roll of seriously injured breata a The vsitors then ,av. chargeable to falling concrete build-,eJ brilliantly at tImes and on several mgs. In the Rochester disaster the ; 00,a nno- T
his death he left more than 200 manu-
; script treatises. r j In the later years of his life he was i totally blind. Then, and probably ear- , ; lier, too, he carried in his memory .a i table of the first six powers, of the j 'series of natural numbers up to a hundred." It is related that on one oc- j caslon two of his students attempted to j calculate a converging series. As they ' progressed they found disagreement in i their results. These differed by a unit j at the fiftieth figure. The question was referred to Euler, who decided to make J the calculation. He did this, mentally, I
I and his result was found to be ! rect.
! It was not only In mathematics that : Euler gave proof of a prodigious memory. He was well read In general liter- j ature and was an excellent classical ' scholar. Virgil was one of his favorite ; writers. It is said that he knew this ' author so well that he could repeat the ; "Aeneid" "from beginning to end with- ; out hesitation and indicate the first ; and last iine of every page of tlie edition which he used." j The seventeenth century furnishes the other two instances, to which I call especial attention. The first is that of the Italian scholar Antonio da Marco ' Magliabechi. Magliabechi was the literary prodigy of his time. - Royalty and other distinguished personages paid tribute to his wonderful learning. His contemporaries have said that his
memory was so prodigious that he was ; able to retain verbatim most of the ! contents of his "multitudinous books." j A comparatively recent writer has declared that Magliabechi could name all the authors that had written upon any 1 subject, giving the name of the book, the words and often a page. This Is doubtless exaggeration; but, on the other hand, It should be remembered that the number of books on any subject were much fewer then than at the present day. Resides thisV there are two stories that have come down from Magllabecbi's time to ours that give color to its truth.. On pne occasion. a gentleman of .Florence desired to test. Magliabechi's memory and ascertain for himself whether the; wonderful stories told were truth or fiction. He gave him a manuscript to read; then, some days after its return, pretending to have lost it, he asked Magliabechi to recall it, which, it is said, he did with remarkable' exactness.' At another timo the grand duke of Florence asked if he could procure a certain book for him. Immediately came the response: "No, sire; it is impossible. There Is but one In the world. That Is in the grand : seignior's library at Constantinople and j is the seventh book , on the seventh shelf on the right band as you go In." The other instance In the seventeenth century is that of the Rev. Dr. John i Wallls. It is not, however, as a theo--; logian that Wallis' name is enrolled in the temple of fame, but as a mathema- ' j tician. In , mathematical history he
ranks as the greatest of Newton's Eng-M lish precursors. He was started on his : mathematical career by reading Oughtred's "Clavic Mathematical . but the ' special bent of his genius came from
29. LaFayette Torricelli's writings on "The Method of of the season Indivisibles." To this he applied the ,
Cartesian analysis and produced his ; great work, the "Arithmetica Infinitorium"- "the most stimulating ma the- ;
matical work so far published in England." Here he makes the successful attempt to solve a number of the more
to Ferrara, where he mastered theol
ogy and the different systems of philosophy and became proficient In Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Chaldee and Arabic. The wide range of his learning is best illustrated in the 900 theses he proposed as subjects of controversy at
Rome in I486. Pascal says he never forgot anything e read. Ben Jonson tells us that could repeat all he had ever written and "whole books" that he had read. The same feat, too. is credited to Niebuhr, the historian. It is also told of Neibuhr that in his youth while employed In one of the public offices of Denmark he was able through his memory alone to completely restore a book of accounts that had been partly -destroyed. Leibnitz, like Euler, is said to have been able to repeat the whole of the "Aeneid." The many stories told of Macaulay's almost portentous memory have been related too often to bear repetition. Not a few of them are on seemingly certain authority. William H. Prescott, who met Maeaulay about 1850, has told us some interesting things of his memory. I shall mention but one. This was related to Prescott by Henry Hallam, who said that Lord Jeffrey had once told him "that hn vlncr trlnnnl
1 ' o -i , j up Maeaulay in a quotation from 'Par
adise Lost two days after Maeaulay came to him and said, 'You will not catch me again in the "Paradise," at which Jeffrey opened the volume and took him up in a great many passages at random, in all of which he went on correctly repeating the original. Was it not a miraculous tour d'esprlt? Maeaulay does not hesitate to say now that he thinks he could restore the first six or seven books of the 'Paradise In case they were lost." There can be no doubt of the truth of this and many of the other stories told of Macaulay's memory. He was a man of splendid talents. Hla knowledge of English history wag unsurpassed, by his contemporaries. John William Perrln in New York Herald. !
Tlie Head of tlie Table. In the article on the Glengarry branch of the Macdonalds James Logan, in his "The Clans of the Scottish Highlands," says: "At the castle of Aros the lords of the isles held their parliament and passed the regal decrees, which distant , tribes were bound to respect The slmpie form In which Important rights were conveyed by these princes may be" Illustrated by the following brief but binding charter, which loses In translation from the original Gaelic: I, Donald, the chief of the Macdonalds, sitting on the hill of Dun Donald, give the MacAodh a full right to Kilmahomag from this day till tomorrow, and so on forever. A lesson was afforded by one of these lords which might greatly benefit some sticklers for precedency. He had at a banquet been placed by mistake at the bottom of the table, on perceiving which considerable emotion arose among the company, who dreaded the conse
quences of the supposed indignity, but
a Scoffs
S
Scoffs Emptsion
and HypbphospHt
easily dieVstecLfi
o
is Cod Liver Ofl
eft prepared so that it is
y little folks.
Consequently the baby that is fed on
Scoffs Em tils ion is a sturdy, rosycheeked little fellow full of health and vigor. ALL DRUGGISTS t 6O0. AND St.OCr.
oo&oxxxxx
WANTED. WANTED Seventy-five men and five young women at Gennett theatre.
Call at stage door tonlghL
WANTED 3 nice furnished
for light housekeeping, pr
ject if suited. Address ladium. WANTED Furnished
board. Address "G."
f rooms
Lfe no ob-
"h F." Palraom and
miladium.
orlrs
I
id
at $1.C0
meters, etc..
and upward,
Good camps teady work Grand Rap
WANTED Wood chop per cord. Loggers, T
wages $1.70 pervday board $3.00 per wlhk, and good board, ano
the year round. Ta
ids a Indiana Ry., to Simons or An
Antrim, Michigan. Antum Iron Co., Mancelona, Michigan. tf
WANTED A young man in office.
Must be good at figures. Address in own handwriting Office, care Palladium. 29-2t
WANTED Woman cook immediately
at Brunswick Hotel. . 28-St WANTED Yong girl to assist In housekeeping. Small house and small family. Apply . 1315 isouth A
street. 27-Tt
FOR RENT. FOR RENT 5 room house, bath etc., on Richmond avenue. Denj. F. Harris. 24tf
FOR RENT
S29 North E
ore room.
treet.
Call at 23-7t
FOR RENT urnished rooms, eleo
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' 14-tf ;
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FOR RENT Furnished or unfurnish-; ed, single or suite rooms, centrally ; located and desirable. Reference ! exchanged. Address "W, Palla i dlum office for information. 21-tf
WANTED Cabinet mak
Rowlett Desk Mfg. Co street.
FOR SAL
Richrfioni prop
Porterfield. Kelly B
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. IN
7
at the
orth 10th
13-tf
specialty Phons 12V tf
FOR SALE First class Upright Universal $500.00 piano, cheap. Ad
dress A. 13., in care Palladium.
29-7t
FOR SALE One small
heater with gas burner.
burner, old fashioned,
the Home for Friendlesl
FOR SALE The count
wall show cases from ry store, for sale at
storage room, over Main street.
Everybody buys r o party troxv Woodhursu 913 MaltklL Telephox
191. Vt JuneS tf
m ft
leet iron
One base
Lh oven, at
29-2t
and large
llrst's Jewel-
B. Hunt's
grocery. 603 23-tf
quences pr me supposea maignity, DUt; i the great ceanncinnidh (head of his FOR SALE A level far4 of
rac speedily allayed their apprehen
sions ,by exclaiming emphatically, 'Where the Macdonald sits, know ye, gentlemen, that is the head of the table. "
The monthly report of the Employes' Relief Fund for the Pennsylvania
JVBlllUtlU ""'i-liij o .v.., ; r.1rtnt; ! l .. ' ' - " ' ..v.. v- .v, .w.
Pittsburgh and Erie shows that the 1 K,l"J , Fayette was within a yard or two of simple problems of the calculus by the , iiiofuibi. " . . -when tho Rrninnrt nc wnrulwnrl.- u.-ri; .. ...
ne goal line. ; summation or series to inanity, Ihe Davis, for Dickinson, played a star ' work was one of great Influence. Newgame, but LaFayette kept a good up- ton read It while an undergraduate at per hand and won by a final score cf the university and from It Immediately
r . t 1, t Jnls4-tVkAT
190b, amounted to $lu3,10o.0b. Of this djwn of (
pmouni ,113.7. was uu twui.i death and represents the payment of death benefits to the families of members, and the further payment of $73,939.14, in benefits for the relief of members disabled and incapacitated for work in the Company's service. Since the or?nization of the Relief Department, February 13, 1SS6, there have been paid in death benefits $6,575,629.31. and on account of disablements $9,20S,347.36, or a total of $13,-GS3.976.S7.
supporting woodwork was
and floors crashed
own weight, although a
month had been allowed for the concrete to harden. On the heels of the Rochester disaster it is remembered that the leading engineering authority of this city was recently quoted as asking: "Are these concrete buildings an engineering mistake? Are the engineers and architects and contractors who are putting them up, building wisely and safely for themselves and for the owners; or may they look back some day
and be filled with sorrow and regret
26 to 6.
Two Fights Yesterday.
derived his binomial formula. The power of concentration and of memory were both very strong with Walli3 so strong, it is said, that on one occasion
Ft. Wavne. Ind.. Nov. 29. Jimmie 1 Ue square root of a number of fifty-
Gardner of Lowell .Mass., knocked out three P1?0!5 to tweQty-seven terms and
Otto Sieloff of Chicago in iho third rouiwwiu uaJS uner
round tonight-
Worcester, Mass., Nov. 29. Jimmie Murray of Cincinnati knocked out Kid
because of the destruction of life and i Barry of Boston tonight in the second
property?" One or two accidents
like that at Rochester would not have
vacation in the city.
I round.
Miss Florence Davenport of De
Pauw, is spending the Thanksgiving snaken faitli in reinforced concrete fsPI IT
, 9 M
construction, but like collapses have ! occurred with such regularity of late j
j mat auvocaies ui mis iorin or con
struction are now placed on the de-
ifensivc.
EVEN ON GAMES
a Si
m mm
rs tj. i ' a-i i i 1 1 si .
r F I- M M II III! .
U ELliX SLUMS
I h4 tnnbl with raw bwls wieh in.de tn bloo is par. My f-"e wu eorerea with pimpie wb:i-n no citornat rrao.1y could remove 1 triec farr-fMt nJ irr.t my jor -when thDtmp.e .rpTK.rrd I ft-r a raoriih 't-dT use 1 hv-4 r-i TitindrJ them to a mJ friend. Ea qau a tew hT found relief." - C. J. tutch. m Park Atb., New Tork Ciij.S.X
fBest For
- P1aa.au. Palatable. Potent. Tat Good. P OoM. Werer Sicken, Weaken or Orlpe. 10c. JJc. Wc. Sere eold la balk. Tbe rnnln tablet .tamped CCtt ttnaraate ta ear or joor money back Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 600 AfirUAL SALE. TEH ULUQC COXES
WENT HORSEBACK RIDIMG
Fountain City Won and Lost in Basket Bali with Hamilton, Ohio, Team.
President Took Recreation Instead of Attending Divine Worship Yesterday.
Publishers Press.J Washingt6n, Nov. 29. President Roosevelt and the members of his family did not attend any divine service today. The president went horseback riding with Secretary Root and Senator Lodge. The Thanksgiving dinner was served at 7:20 this evening. Congressman and Mrs. Nicholas Longworth occupied prominent positions at the table.
The Coliseum team of- Hamilton, journeyed to Fountain City yesterday for two games of basket ball, one in the afternoon and another at night. The teams split even on the games, Hamilton winning in the afternoon by a score of 30 to 27 and Fountain City
at night by a score of 3S to 20. The
Hamilton team claims the champio;
ship of Southern Ohio.
'Phone or write a can to the JrUadium of the little piece of new your neighbor told you and get your name in the news "tip" contest Yor this
week.
Use artificial gzs Xor
if
1
and neat. 40-tf
! ward.
These examples of retentive memory ire quite well authenticated and give plausibility to the possible truth of others frequently cited. Pliny tells ns that Cyrus the Great knew the names of all his soldiers, and Cicero in his
"De Senectute" says that Themistocles j-could call by name the 20,000 citizens i Df Athens. From Cicero, too, we learn ! something of the remarkable memory
of Sophocles, who in old age when Judicial proceedings had been instituted to detennlEe his mental competency recited to the judges the "Oedipus' at Colona to prove his mind was not failing. " Plato makes Hlppias boast that he couldrepeat 500 words after hearing thejB once, but this is nothing compared with the claims of Seneca. In
is declamations in speaking of the
former tenacity of his memory he says
that he was able to repeat 2,000 namea
in the order in which they had been given to him. lie relates, too, that on one occasion in his student days, after the different pupils of his preceptor had recited 200 unconnected verses, he repeated them in a reverfe order that Is, he began with the lasl and proceeded to the first uttered. A still more remarkable instance is mentioned by Sir William Hamilton in his "Lectures on
The Orig-In of Mr. and Mr. In earlier times the ordinary man was simply William or John that is to say,' he had only a " Christian name without any kind of "handle" before it or surname after it. Some means of distinguishing one John or William from another John or William became necessary. Ni inames derived from a man's trade or his dwelling place or from some personal peculiarity were tacked on to his Christian name, and plain John became John Smith. As yet there were no "misters" in the land. Some John Smith accumulated more wealth than the bulk of his fellows became perhaps a landed proprietor or an employer of hired labor. Then be began to be called In the Norman-French of the day the "malstre" of this place or that, of these workmen or of those. In the time the "maistre," or "maister," as It soon became, got tacked on before his name, and he became Maister Smith and his wife was Maistress Smith. Gradually the sense of possession was lost sight
of,, and the title was conferred upon any kind by mere possession of wealth
or holding some position of more or
less oonaideration and Importance.
55 acres,
good soil and well located, 1 mile from town, price $60.00 per acre. Also a splendid stock and grain farm of 200 acres, with good buildings, at $43 per "acre. C. C. Hawley, New Paris, Ohio. 28-4t
L08T. LOST Black knit purse on Interurj
ban car from Indianapolis to Richmond. Purse contained $22.00 and some small change. Reword it returned to Palladium. LOST Black Knit Purse on interur. ban car from Indianapolis to Rich mond. Purse contained $22.00 and some small change. Reward it returned to Palladium. LOST Ladies gold watch and chain, Waltham, 7 jewel movement, between Webster and Doran Bridge. Liberal reward for Information concerning same. H. W. Folen, R. R. No. 26, Fountain City. Ind. r -29-2t LOST Saturday evening near 6th and Main, a gold locket set with brilliants forming the letter S. Return to 27 South Ninth. 26-3t FOUND. FOUND A coal bucket and box of cartridges. Owner can have by calling at Al King's barber shop, 23 South 5th street. 29-2t FOUND A bunch of keys, 7 In number, such as are usod by traveling men for their trunks! Owner may have by calling at toe Palladium office. I 29-2t
Money L Low Rates,' easy
sou s Loan and
Wide Stairs. 710
-A
4
Mart
ned.
rms. Thorn p-
Estate Agency. street. 13- thu&Frl-tf
AL. m HUNT, 7 If. 9th
1,200.
ALE Several good
for $1,000 and
Quick.
AL. H. HUNT. X
GREENSFORK. Mrs. Melissa Evans of Richmond is visiting her sister, Mrs. Janette Foland.
R. E. Swallow spent Sunday at jus
home in East Germantown.
Greensfork defeated WTIllianrsburg in the basket ball game Friday night
by a score of 15 to 14. .
Miss Inez Doddridge haf returned
to her home in Milton mter a visit
with Miss Stella Hunt.
Artificial gas, the
s
Century fuel.
10-tf
Palladium Want Ads Pay.
JACKSONBURG. Jaacksonburg. Nov. 29. (Spl) Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Blose and Earl Graves of Whitewater visited Joseph Bloso and wife over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Will Scott and children visited Mr. and Mrs. Charles Savage of near Richmond Sunday. Mrs. Steward Tompson visited in Richmond several days last week. The school here has been closed, the teacher, Joseph Blose, having the measles. Go! die Helms from near Penvllle has b&en visiting Mr. and Mrs. Venton dilbert.
yes
Svswt a
Modern. "Is muffler getting a pretty fair salary? ; "Oh, yes; enough to keep body and soul and automobile - together." New Sork Life. "
Bad Jaidaraaeat. - It was a case of love at first light, wasn't itr Yes. If the poor boy had only been gifted with second sight," Pick Me Up. . - . BqbhA to Buret. . Gunner Do you think It lucky to pick np a horseshoe? " . : Chauffeur Not If you pick It up with your automobile tire. Chicago News.
- 0e Conf ort. Johnny was dreadfully seasick. : Im glad I ain't a cow anyway, he groaned. "She's got four stoma ens!" Minneapolis Journal.
X More Secret. "He used to be in the secret serrlee. -Why Ad be give It np?" "He got married.' Cleveland Plain Dealer. - - '
ROLLER SKATJNGI-i
COLISEUM
Friday morning and afterr
Saturday morning, afternoon and evening.
MUSIC BY THE
RICHMOND CITY BAUD.
11
Admission, Gents 15c a
Ladies free. Skates 10c.
1
4
1
4
4
4
4
ai
8 RORTH TBRTH. RICHMOND, IND. .
