Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 352, 27 January 1907 — Page 7

Pane Sever,

The Richmond Palladium, Sunday, January 27, 1907.

FACTS IN NATUBE. Hot Only So We CJet Inspiration. From Nature, But IIeith as Well.

ous, who suffer from indigestion or dvsI i.,.. nnitoH tnnnrim wilh ftittPF tfl.SU in the mornint? and poor appetite, it be comes Iiei essary u, lurii ui sumc huk. ftrenefthciKT which will assist Nature arul help them to pet on their feet and put tho body Into its proper condition. It is becoming more, and more apparent that Nature's most valuable health - giving agents "are to be found in forest plants and-roots. " Nearly forty yeart ao, Dr. R.V. Pi""! now consulting physician to tho Invalids JIotl and .Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., discovered that by scientifically extracting and combining certain medicinal principles from native roots, taken from our American forests, he could prodticfs a medicine which was marvelously efiicient In curing cases of blood disorder and liver and stomach tronble as well as many pother chronic, or lingering ailments. This concentrated extract of Nature's vitality he named "Golden Medical Discovery." It purifies the blood by putting the atomac-h and liver Into healthy 'condition, thereby helping the digestion and assimiUtidii of food which feeds the blood. Thereby it cures weak ttomach, indigestion, torpid liver, or biliousness, and kindred derangements. If you have coated tongue, with bitter or bad taste in the morning, frequent headaches, feel weak, easily tired, stitches or pain in side, back gives out easily and aches, belching of gas. constipation, or Irregular bowels, feel flashes of heat alternating with chilly sensations or kindred symptoms, thev point to derangement of your stomach, liver and kidneys, which the "Golden Medical Discovery" will correct more speedily and permanently than any other known agent. Contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs. All Its ingredients printed in plain English on wrapper. The sole motive for substitution Is to permit the dealer to make a little more profit. He gains; you lose. Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." Constipatifin causes and aggravates many serious diseases. It Is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative; two or three are cathartic. MULE A TROUBLE MAKER Young Stout Declares That Hi Father Sold Animal Without His Consent For $25. A Ions eared mule was a potent factor in getting John Stout into trouble. A young son of Stout declares that he is the owner of the aforesaid mule, and without authority from Thim the elder Stout sold the animal for the sum of $25. Stout was to have had a hearing In the city court yesterday afternoon, but owing to the sickness of Prosecutor Jessup the case had to he postponed. 5Ince the world began there have fteen written perhaps 100 supremely oods works of fiction. Assume ' that the, first of these was the Iliad, now about 3,000 years old. One hundred good stories in 3,000 years is story very generation. Since the battle of Waterloo, then, there have been rather less than three of them. Probably we are overstating tho number rather than the contrary. When you consider the matter, three supremely good stories in n hundred years is a Tery high average. Julian Hawthorne in New .York American. George . Compere has come back from China with a parasite that will speedily destroy the red scale that has been such a pest in the citrus orchards of California. The discovery of this parasite is of inestimable value to horticulture in this state. No orchard pest in the, souths rn counties has been so persistently, had as the, red scale, and no enemy of the fruit growers has cost them more money in the efforts i that, have been put forth to save the trees and fruit from this blight. San Francisco Chronicle. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Sealed proposals will be received at the offle of Pres. R. L. Kelly, Earlham College, Richmond, Ind., on or before 12 o'clock noon, Feb. 20, 1907, for rurnishlng all materials and erecting a dormitory at Earlham College, . Richmond, Ind. - - Each proposal must be accompanied by a certified check for $300jOO, made payable ' to A. K. Hollowell., Pres. Board of Trustees, as a guarantee that the bidder, if awarded the contract, will enter into a contract and give a satisfactory bond within 10 days. Plans can be seen at the office of W. S. Kaufman, architect, Richmond, Ind. R. I KELLY, Pres. Earlham College.-

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To borrow moaey if you have to pay such a high rate of Interest for it that yon cannot use it to your advantage. If you ar in ned of money you can get it tit the vwry lowest rate: if you INVESTIGATE THE TERMS of the various companies before taking out the loan, for they do not all loan at the same rate. Ve loan money in amouats of $5 and upward on yonr household goods, piano organ, team, live-stock, etc., etc, without removal, and on diamonds and watchen left in pledge, at a LOWER RATE, on LONGER TIME, and on EASIER PAYMENTS than it ba had anywhere else. Here is one of our many weekly payment 'plans, giving you 60 weeki in which to pay us back. , 60c is a weekly payment on a $25 loan. $1.20 is a weekly payment on a $50 loan. $1.80 is a weekly payment on a $75 loan. $2.40 is a weekly payment on a $100 loan. Other amounts in like" proportion. If these plans do not suit yon, we have many others which we think would, that we would gladly explafn to you if you call upon us. If this is not convewlent, write or 'phone us.'aTtd wo will gl'dlr call on you and explain our terms fully. REMEMBER. NO RED TAPE; MONEY WITHOUT DECAY; "that is --ray the people borrow their money from us. We loan money in the towns on the Interurban lines out of KichmoncL. Courteous treatment and absolute secrecy guaranteed.

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Established 1005. Homo Phone 445. . Room 0, Colonial Building. RICHMOND, IND.

COLONIST TRAVEL

FOR NEXT SPBIIIG Pennsylvania Officials Making Preparations for Very Heavy Business. PASSENGERS COMPLAIN CLAIM THAT ON SECOND CLASS TICKET3 SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO RIDE IN FIRST CLA8S PULLMANS. The Pennsylvania officials in this city are already making preparations for the colonist travel for the coming spring, and a heavier business is looked for than in any previous year, although Wayne county and surrounding communities' have always furnished more than their quota to the colonist traffic. The bulk of such traffic will be handled during the months of March and April. Each year about seventy five persons buy colonist tickets at the local station, for points in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona and California. The tickets sold, however, call for only second class passage, but between Richmond and the coast fifteen to eighteen dollars can be saved on car fare. The tickets do not provide for sleeping cars but a holdej of second clas3 tickets may by paying the full Pullman fare ride in a , second class Pullman car. Considerable complaint has been heard by those who have made the second class trips, they saying that those persons paying full Pullman rates should get better class of cars to ride in as the result.: Owing to the understanding between the railroads offering the colonist rates, the Pull man company is allowed to charge the full Pullman rate, which will average between twenty five and thirty cents per hundred miles, for passage on second class and sometimes cast off Pullman sleepers. Several Richmond people . have, already expressed their Intention of purchasing colonist , tickets for the far west.' The majority of them, however, will make the trip for pleasure and not for any "business purposes. Thunder, just because it is a noise for which there is no visible cause, has always excited- the imagination of the unscientific. One old writer explains the belief of his day that "a storm. is said to follow presently when a company of liogges runne crying home," on the ground that "a hogge i3 most dull and of a melancholy nature and so by reason doth fofsee the rain that cometh. Leonard Digges, iu his "Prognostication Everlasting" (1556) mentions that "thunder in the morning signifies wind, about noon rain and In the evening a great tempest. Not very long ago there was on the coast of Lancashire, England, a, cottage and boathouse that were made almost entirely from the remains of a score or so of whales that had been driven ashore some yeum before The framework of , the edifice consisted wholly of whalebones, and the dried skins of the huge Qreatures were neatly and strongly fastened as a covering for walls and roof. There is another building of exactly, tho same kind in Scotland, and in this case the skulls of the whales and uome.nf the heaier bones are used with great citect as outside ornaments. At a meeting of the Geological Society of Liondon there was exhibited by Prof. Seely the upper bone of the leg, or, paddle, of a plesiosarus which had been almost completely turned into opaV the mineral having replaced the substance of the bone. The fossil was found in an opal mine In New South Wales. The plesiosaurus was a long-necked inhabitant of the sea in the age of the great reptiles, or Jurassic Time, and sometimes attained a length of thirty feet. . Artificial gas, th ZOtli Ontury fueL 10-tf

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This cut illustrates the embarrassing" situation in which an American in Mexico found himself while on "his way to keep an engagement ' on the field of honor. He was kidnaped by servants of his half sister who was trying to prevent his fighting a duel with his half brother. He was ignorant of the fact that he sustained this relation to either of them. - .Tie mystery is unraveled In The Knife Throwers, our next serizl story, by Frederic Van Rensselaer Dey, author of Not Like Other Men. . " Begin Tuesday JAMESTOWN - EXPOSITION (Continued From Page Four, yond, vast forests tenanted by strange and savage men; bays and lakes 'and water-courses, and bir 1s and beasts innumerable; all thfso were the man;-? festations of a 'teeming, a newer. md an overpowering nature, and the deep er harmony of d-s'gn as set forth in the Jamestown exposition e.n1ronmpnr pnnrcmiiiaips , annve mi j mins . . . - " rsof its location.. Nature and art are ! ing. No exposition has yet offerediiso much of natural beauty to astonish and charm the spectator. The location Is altogether ideal, situated on Hampton Roads that r ' splendid arena of knightly encounters, gentle breezes sweep the expanse aAd break the waters into wavaie'.s upon a fringe f golden beach. This water frontage extends for half a mile and offers an animate! picture of busy ; commerce. When the great government -pier-is completed, and the ships of the navi-i of the' world $sLri: their glisfcenLig i.e in circles Ik, it this beautiful rpoi-, there will Lc r-i-taled a pan rama of natur3 and art, pomp and pageantry unparalleled in the history ol any similar festive!. Even in the rear ing the scene of these promised wonders is one of singula: and impress! ? bouty. The ve.v tencc which s-ur-l -i , dr. the gro ia-.'.a :a itself a thing b to admired; -1 iro and a half v ilea long -co.i-f J- 01 farm .cnl barbed wire, built eigM ;Vet in height and covered w;th hardy flowering vines. The grounds inside. the livid ? wall of flowery greo;i exierd in statel: vistas of sylvan beauty . aJtogethr suggestive of tranquility and comfort. Trees, mosses, vines and evergreens appear in wanloa profusion, but a closer investi&.Uti! reveals litis psvilgality to be one to which design has given exquisite harmony. If, a clump of the natural forests stand in seeming neglect,' it has een left as a touch in the general effect of enchantment, a parenthetical grace as it were, without which the picture would be incomplete. The' best result of garden craft and arborculture are everywhere apparent. Shrubs and flowers have been planted by the mile, and trees transplanted by the thousands; and forms and. masses,: blending . here and, contrasting there, tell " of the sense of proportion and refinement of taste Involved in the planning. Here a stately elm of conventional respectability nods greetings to a rugged oak that perchance John Smith himself looked on, and with the flowers beneath, and the foliage above, and the green masses of the hedges through which glimpses are caught of fairy structures rising on every hand, It Is a safe assertion that for park-like splendor, few spots os earth can rival the grounds of the Jamestown exposition. In this respect it will offer a pleasing contrast to the preponderating artificiality of other expositions. : The" architectural and industrial aspects of this great celebration do not come within the scope- of this" article and the accompanying illustration of the buildings must therefore speak for themselves, but the fact that many of the buildings are of brick and stone. and designed to remain as permanent structures for the future town of "Pocahontas," or whatever name It will j be called, must be Impressed upon the ' reader as a revelation of the charac ter of the great work5 now underway. The entire grounds are underlaid with sewers and water pipes with the ultimate view of utility when the exposition shall have closed. Undoubtedly the people of Virginia '. and the city of Norfolk will offer for th nlpasure and admiration . of "" the IUC hJXK- U . cuu .. " w. .

unique expositions of civilization. The ; perons Indians in this country, said grand assemblage of , the navies 'and Mr. Meagle. "There are 1,300 of them armies of the world with their pomp j Dn our reservation." and a short distand .ceremony, and glittering pagean- j ance away are 200 Poncaa. All the try,, would alone suffice to certify-this Santees are farmers and some of them claim, but beyond- all this is the . are growing wealthy. This year one of crowning appeal to the Heart of Amer- the tribe, a young man, raised 2,400

ican patriotism m me aeep iiisvun significance of an . event inviting his homage and reverence at- the shrine of the birthplace of his nation,, , o 3? m x -V-. rTtN Imi itai Haw Aiays Becj3

ARE III FAVOR OF

LESS OSTENTATION Movement to Cut Down Expense Connected with Garfield Commencements. STUDENTS APPROVE PLAN SUGGESTED TO THE SCHOOL COUNCIL THAT PRINCIPAL'S OFFICE BE IMPROVED BY SOME CHANGES. The Garfield council met Friday evening at the las period. The four standing committees made reports Thedecoration committee proposed a plan for improving the appearance of the principal's office. It advised the recoloring of the wood-word and the furniture of the office and chansons the style of the book cases and also placing glass in front to give more light in the corridor. The consideration of the plan will be taken up at the . next meeting. . The financial committee recommended paying $36 on the picture debt This report was approved by the council which leaves th debt at 123. The committee also asked the "council to vote 35 cents to the fund for establishing baths at the public play ground. The object of thi3 was. to, make the fund;, an even $150. The council voted the amount. The social educatfon committee reported in favor of commencements being made as simple as possible, requesting the pupils to pledge themselves to refrain from all unnecessary expense. The report was approved. The general exercise committee reported that the present method of owtion of council was satisfactory. But it recommended that two 7A's.and throe SB members be chosen to hold office for two terms. l ms report win Tip rHscnssed dv council at us next meeting. ; The boys' basket ball and polo teams will play their final game4for . . . TDIH I frill llcAL X 1 1 torm tipt Friday night. ine TOatch games, and they hope to end The senior polo team win piay me Item carriers, whom they defeated before the holidays. Both the junior and '- senior basket ball teams are arranging games. ? . The girls have played but one game this term, with the high school freshmen, which resulted In a victory for the Garfield team. They are trying to arrange another game which will probably be -played next 'Wednesday evening. : v ;.";- . -The demands -apon the Garfield printing department, have grown beyond all expectations. Several jobs are still on file waiting' their turn. Next term mut e time and space will be devoted to printing and it is noped that the increasing ' demands -can be met and more boys given a chance to nractice. An order book has been begun, InT which will be kept a record of work' done and of the boys who did it. Samples of each' will also be preserved, so that reference may be had to them at. any time for instruction or comparison. J Mrs. Hill was out of school three days this week on account of a. cold. Mr. Heironimus wa3 out of the city Thursday," attending the funeral of a relative at Wabash, Ind. ; : 4 In England much interest has been shown" of late by" the army and navy authorities in a newmethod of preserving flour hy means of compression. With hydraulic pressure apparatus the flour - is - squeezed into the form of bricks, and experiments are reported to have shown-that the pressure destroys all forms of larval life, thus preserving the flour from the ravages of insects, while it is equally secure front mold. Three ' hundred pounds of compressed flour occupy the same space as 100 pounds' of flour In the ordinary state. Dr. Charmichael, the new, bishop of Montreal, is an Irishman a native of Tipperary. He tells a story about a clergyman who was examining a Sunday-school class and who chanced to ask one of his small pupils why It was cruel to cut off dogs , tails. One child replied that it was cruel because of the text In the Bible. "What text, my dear?" asked , the puzzled, clergyman. The child was thoughtful for a' moment and then replied; "What God has joined to let no man put asunder. The greatest deer hunt on record in Canada was that in the wilds of Ontario in the open season in. last November. From the latest returns received by the Grand Trunk railway system, the lines of which tap the best territory, in the province for fish. and game, it appears that the hunters had fulliicf- monenrp nf siirfpss ' Tt the fifteen days of the -open - season of 1896 "the Canadian Express company alone transported 3,100 carcasses of deer, having an aggregate weight of 318.215 pounds, all of these being ship ped from points on-the northern and Ottawa divisions of the Grand Trunk. W. K. Meagle. of Santee, Neb., superintendent of the Santee and Ponca Indian reservations in that state, is on an annual visit to confer with the InVliUU VJltlVl. ' . uu " - - " Dusneis oi corn; ana on anomer ianu. owned by" three brothers, there were 5,000 bushels harvested. The -Indians, for the most part," attend strictly to business. They speak ' English and have adopted the dreBS and customs of the country. I doubt If a dozen dancing costumes coeld -be- foond-tm- the reservation." Washington Post. -0

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1 1 V ! . Every One WORDS CAUSE OF MUCH BAD BLOOD (Continued From Page Four.) ordered "without questioning the legality or justice of any act of the president in relation thereto." . While the undiplomatic, ungentlemanly, and altogether asinine action of Governor Swettenham of Jamaica in brusquely declining the assistance offered by Admiral Davis to the stricken residents of Kingston, hat stirred up the. conn try. It has been received here with the attention, or, lack of attention, that it deserves. In fact, the United States government has given to the world an example of mannanimi ty in refusing to make an international question out of this direct affront to its Navy. So far as the administration is concerned, the Incident is closed, although, really, it never was regarded in the light of an incident. If anything the British representatives at the capital feel the, indignity far more than the government of the United States. Arthur P. Statter, who succeeds Charles H. Keep as assistant secretary of the treasury, was sworn in this week. -Sir. Statter's appointment is further proof that President Roosevelt is living up to the fact that he believes in "the young man's administration, for the new assistant secretary is only a little more. than thirtyyears of age. Mr. StatteT is a native of Carlisle, Eng, coming to the United States in. the early 'SO's.' He lived for some time on a ranch near Sioux City, la., attended the public schools' and the high schools of "that city, and later, attended Cornell College at Mr. Vernon. la. For six years he was in newspaper work, being connected with the Sioux City Journal, and later as city editor of a daily Taper in Walla Walla, Wash. He has been private secretary to Secretary of the Treasury Shaw, and has made an enviable record in that position. -. Chairman Burton of the house committee on Rivers and Harbors this week lifted the flood gates, and tumbling onto the floor came the greatest appropriation bill ever presented in the American congress for the development of the nation's waterways. Probably no bill of the present session has received such exhaustive and searching attention as this measure. The country at large .recognises that if present prosperity is to continue the waterways must be developed to provide a new means of transportation, for it has been shown plainly and pain fully that the commerce of the United States has far outstripped, the railroads', capacity to handle It. There is certain to be much acrimonious debate over the passage of the bill, for the reason that a vast number of meritorious enterprises believe they should be recognized more generously. This will lead to. a rapid cross-fire of debate, but it is morally certain that it will not In any sense imperil the passage of the. measure because of the general recognition that the subject requires a broad and patriotic consideration If the nation's rivers and harbors as a whole are to be steadily bettered. Congressman Joseph F. Ransdell, of Louisiana, as president of the National Rivers and Harbors congress has labored for years to obtain for waterways improvement the recognition its importance demands. As a result, his colleagues are extending their hearty congratulations on the extent of the present bill. Mr. Ransdell declares, however, that the National Rivers and Harbors congress will not relax its efforts nor modify its demand that an annual appropriation of not less than $50,000,000 be made to carry on this great work that is of such vital importance to the business interests of the entire country. ' On exhibition In the files of the civil service commission Is a letter just received from a New Yorker who recently took an examination for a government position " and who failed to pass. The circular letter of commiseration that accompanied the report showing nl sorry rating evidently impressed the recipient with the idea

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ONES

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WPVT Sold and Set Up on, a

HARDWARE C0)

that commissioners were worrying over his laok of luck. In a somewhat lengthy note in reply he urged the commissioners not to be down-hearted but to look on the bright side of things. In closing, he said: ; "Be a perennial optimist. Who knows, even a civil service commissioner may be ambassador extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to the Isle of Bong-bong and be served up, rare, with hair-oil sauce, for the enlightenment of the heathen. Think It over and Join the 'Dont WTorry Club.' The civil service commission has filed the good advice in Its curio cupboard. ' The disastrous results accompany ing tho floods in the Ohio Valley have caused concern here in Washington. It is recognized that the cutting of the forests has had much to do with tho annual recurrence of these floods, and careful study of conditions is beng made in the hope that some means may be found to prevent thenu To this end, it is probable that the principal engineers in the country may be asked to submit ideas. While no steps yet have been taken, it is understood that W. G. McAdoo, of New ork, who conceived and superintended the construction of the great tuifnel : under the Hudson river, will be among those asked to submit an opinion. It is unlikely that Mr. McAdoo will be able to make a prompt report, for he is at present at the Homestead hotel In Hot Springs, Va., where he Is taking the mineral baths in an effort to recover his health, which is not altogether satisfactory. He is reported to be making rapid strides to a recovery, however, and it Is probable that' he wll stop here on his way back to New York for a conference with the proper officials. The immense loss in lives and money chargeable to these annual floods has stirred the administration to the necessity for taking some decisive action. -; - 4 ; ;;':. - 'Phone or write a card to the Palladium, of .the. little piece of , news your, ne'shbor told you and gt your name In the news tip" contest for this week. 7 ".. :' I And see our beautiful line of Antique Mahogany DAVENPORTS AND PARLOR STANDS at the.. ANTIQUE FURNITURE GO. 334 Main St. Cor. 4th and Main Sts. : Richmond Monument Co. I 33 North Eighth St. i 4 t 'Phone 1457 Richmond. Ind. CREAM TO WHIP ! (Extra Heavy.)Home made Bread, brewn and white. Phone 292. HADLEY BROS.

VERSATILE AND IMQIE In Exclusive Originality l the RECEPTIOn rcuoic '.- Fnrnlsbed ' try towrence W. taker's Tet-racq Ccscert Quartet t

THEY ALL TAKE OFF THEIR .HAT When they see it is Peninsular

Guarantee. X GIB H. SCOTT INVESTMENTS REAL ESTATE RENTALS LOANO and f General Drokrag 707 Main Ot RICHMOND, IND. i How Doliciouo That HOT CHOCOLATE Is at Greek Candy Store., It's just like all their Chocolate Candies They are so good ! CABINET MAKER J AND REPAIRER. A. t Make your old broken furniture f ... I . mm 4 IlKe new ,ana miKiimw ir t you want it. S. A. L0TT. . t 9 South 6th. Phono 1219 d American Dry Clcaninc Company 1120 C. Mcln Ct. 4 4MM i: -orchano, ; ESol Ivory ': Headquarters Dlitv'o Sftoro ;: Phono 723 m Tt. nm n tii T II iino nti t leUULU ItlAI MAIIUd Ull is more dangerous than t most people imagine Why not try X COLD TADLETO? TI-. .... A'itra fiAA rioVit ruff of your system and it does X not come back. If they do j ? not, we refund the money. Price 15c Per Dottle I ADAMS' DRUG STORE. 4 iI DR. HAMILTON 4 T r ' I 1 2C n erth Tenth O t.

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