Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 119, 20 May 1907 — Page 4

The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telegram, Monday, May 20, 1907 JAPANESE WARSHIP, CHITOSE, OF RUSSIAN WAR FAME, NOW IN AMERICAN WATEftS. RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. Palladium Printing Cc, Publishers. Office North 9th and A Streets. RICHMOND, INDIANA. Fifty Yoairo dCzo CtorcZcjn PRICE Per Copy, Daily 2e Per Copy, Sunday 3c Per Week, Daily and Sunday 7c

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IN ADVANCE One Year , $3,50 On Rural Routes (one y?2r) $2.00 Entered at Richmond, ln, Postoffice As Second Class Mall Matter. WELL DELIVERED REBUKE. A business man of Richmond, who i.; a small stockholder in the Unitel States Steel corporation, has delivered one of the best rebukes to the directors

of that corporation in regard to their attitude towards Coj-ey, we have yet heard of. Last week this business man clipped from a newspaper a cartoon depicting Corey as he really is the man who discarded the wife who was good enough for him, in his estimation, while he was poor, to marry a footlight favorite when be became lien." The business man pasted this cartoon on a piece of paper and beneath it wrote, "The above cartoon represents very clearly my own sentiments. I am only a small stockholder in the United States Steel corporation, yet I know of a great many more fmall stockholders of the same corporation living in Richmond who express the same sentiments the above cartoon does." And then this business man enclosed the cartoon and attached note, and mailed it to the directors of the steel corporation. What the feelings of the directors will be when they receive this communication we cannot foretell. But we do honor this Richmond business man for his action in thus protesting to the board of directors of the steel corporation about tho despicable conduct of the president of that corporation. Ir more stockholders would act likewise, Corey would find himself out of a job, and justly so. j The man who will discard the wife of his days of struggle in the days of his wealth, who cares no more than that for his family ties, is not the man for president of any corporation. Such a man is not only unworthy of the respect of decent people, but is unworthy of their confidence and: should not be allowed to remain in the position of trust he now occupies. REMEDY FOR NERVOUS EXHAUSTION. Are you weakened and exhausted "by overwork, worry or disease? The Mystic Life Renewer will quickly renew your strength and vitality. It Is the Greatest Nerve Builder known. It is a marvelous vitaiizer and strengthener. It quickly and certainly cures Loss of Appetite, Indigestion. Nervous AVeakress, Palpitation of the Heart and faiiirg health. It 13 indeed a wonderful LJfe Renewer and Life Strengthner. Sold by A. G. Luken & Co Druggists. No 3 d&w MASONIC CALENDAR. Week Commencing May 20, 1907. Monday Richmond Commandery No. S. K. T. "Work in the order of the temple. Tuesday Richmond lodge No. 196 F. & A. M. Work in Master Mason's degree. (2) Wednesday Webb lodge No. 24, F. & A. M. Work in Fellow Craft degree. REPORTS WERE NOT EXAGGERATED. As Many People of Richmond Are Testifying. fhe Root Juice instructors made many lasting friends while in Richrnontl. Their wonderful remedy has done worlds of good at this point, and reports of cures are being circulated from every direction. A. G. Luken's drug store is more busy than ever wrapping up Root Juice, and listening to the many flattering reports of the great good it is doing. Mrs. Sarah Collins said: T used to bloat so at times I could hardly get my breath, sour gases would form in my stomach and dull heavy headaches were at times so bad I felt I would go crazy; my tongue coated and I always had a bad taste in my mouth. My hands and feet were cold at times and at other times they would burn like fire, but, thank my good stars, after hearing so much about Root Juice, I went to the drug store and bought a bottle of it and after using the first bottle I went back and bought two more bottles. I have used it all and lon't think I will need any more as I lYel as well as I ever did in my life." Root Juice seems to be good for any. trouble of the stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels or blood. A. G. Lukens drug store has the exclusive agency. It is sold for $1 a bottle, 3 for $2.30. Chicago passengers using C, C. & L. trains land at 12th st. (Illinois Central) Station; most conveniently located. Remember this. C-tf NEWS ROUTE FOR SALE. For sale, good Palladium newspaper route, snlendid location. Address 'X. Z., care Palladium.

Norfolk, Va., May 20 This is the first time in history that Japanese warships in full fighting trim, with seen "in American waters. The Chitose, now here under the command of Admiral Ijuin, was one of Togo's ships at sank two of Rojestvensky's warships. ... . ,

How Primitive Man Ground His Wheat Used Rugged Pestle and Toiled Laboriously For "Staff of Life." In primitive days, man ground his precious stock of wheat in a rude mortar with a rugged pectle. Laboriously he toiled to gain his "ssff of life," and he ate in simple forms. Between then and now, great changes in the preparation of wheat as food have ta ken place. It was found that the principal carbohydrate or starch of wheat is a great strength maker, and wheat was therefore classed among foods as a 'force-producer." It was also discovered that malt extract changes the starch of wheat into maltose, which is the starch predigested, ready for immediate assimilation by the human system. This discovery is utilized by the makers of Malta-Vita, the first and best absolutely pure flaked whole wheat food treated in this manner. The richness of wheat in carbohyj drates, strength-makers for body and brain, give to it a greater value than any other food produced by nature, (n Malta-Vita this entire food value is retained. Not a single nourishing element is lost or thrown away. In making Malta-Vita, the "perfect food," the whole wheat is thoroughlv washed, cleaned and steam cooked. It is then mixed with pure barley malt extract, which changes the starch to nourishing maltose just as saliva does from the starch of good wheat bread when it is thoroughly chewed. Bread or other wheat food must be chewed thoroughly to develop sufficient maltose for the body's needs. In Malta-Vita this necessary maltose is developed when the food is made, and is ready to be absorbed by the blood without effort as soon as the food is eaten, whether it is chewed or not. The endorsement of Malta-Vita by physicians is a recognition of its valuable food qualities, which among all flaked wheat foods are peculiar to Malta-Vita alone. It contains every element re quired by mankind from the cradle to the grave. Sold by all grocers. Artificial gas, the !0th Century fuel. lOtf Richmond Commandery, Knights Templar, will confer the Order of the Temple and Knight of Malta this evening.

STOPPED POLICEMAN FROM CLUBBING PRISONER.

tf--, j.Si JACOB ! New York. May 20--Jacob Sehiff

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lo-trjtne notea-banker, yesterday interfered

THE CHITOSE.

RECORD FOBJHE WEEK Tuesday Was the Warmest Day Much Cloudiness. Last week was marked, so far as the weather is concerned, by the warmest day of the year, that of Tuesday, when the thermometer registered S:i. The next two days the mercury kept sinking until 00 had been reached as a maximum and the minimum 38. With the exception of Sunday and Monday, the days were cloudy and during the entire week the sun shown but spasmodically. On Wednesday, .21 of an inch of rain fell, while Saturday .SS fell, making a total of one inch and nine hundredths precipitation for the week. The rain early Saturday morning was accompanied by a severe hail storm, whick lasted for several moments. The record for the week follows: High. Low. Sunday, May 12 T.'i 37 Monday May 13 SO r2 Tuesday, May 14 S3 VA Wednesday, May 15 7 40 Thursday. May 10 GO oS Friday, May 17 77 :W Saturday, May IS 74 fy? Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. There is probably no medicine made that is relied upon with more implicit confidence than Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Dur ing the third of a century in which it has been in use," people have learned that it is the one remedy that never fails. When reduced with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Went to the Rudy Funeral. Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Williams attended the Rudy funeral at Hagerstown, Sunday. A number of Masons of Richmond, were also present. HERE IS RELIEF FOR WOMEN. If you have pains in the back, Urinary, Bladder or Kidney trouble, and want a certain, pleasant herb cure for woman's ills, try Mother Gray's Australian Leaf. It is a safe and neverfailing monthly regulator. At Drug gists or by mail 50 cts. Sample package FREE. Address, The Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y. .VS .tic-: 5: 1 SCHIFF. ami prevented a policeman from-bru-tally clubbing a prisoner.

Flews of the Railrostds Lrocal and General.

WANT THE TIES SAWED. PENNSYLVANIA CHANGES ITS ORDERS IN THIS REGARD. It Is Necessary to Make the Most Possible Out of Available Material. Farmers and wood choppers along the Pennsylvania who have been furnishing the ties, have been requested to have the ties sawed instead of hewn as has been the custom. Husbanding of available tie material, which is rapidly disappearing, is the reason given by the railroad for this suggestion. It is shown that out of a log 16 feet long and 15 inches in diameter, only two hewn ties can be secured, while if the same log is sawed, four good ties can be secured. Several years ago the Pennsylvania requested that all tie furnishers should give the road only hewed ties as it was thought then that they were not so susceptible to the weather, but it is said the scarci ty of tie material is the reason for the latest move. INCREASE IN LUMBER. The roads running east from Chicago have announed that from June 1, lumber will be charged at sixth class rates, which to New York will be an increase of 25 per cent., to Philadelphia 27.7 per ccYit. and to Buffalo, 20 per cent. , FREIGHT OUTLOOK GOOD. Athough the passenger business on the C, C. & L. has not grown by leaps and bounds since the road was; run into Chicago, the road promises to be an exceptionally good one for freight, far beyond the dreams of the most sanguine of the officials. The freight business of the road has already picked up wonderfully and within two years it is expected to have a heavy freight business, both out of Cincinnati and Chicago. It is said that in the near future the passenger COUNTRY CHILDREN SUBJECT OF PLEA State Supt. Cotton Asks Better Educations for Boys And Girls of the Farm. INSTITUTES ARE ONE HELP. HE ADVOCATES A CLOSER RELA TIONSHIP BETWEEN THE SCHOOLS AND THE MEETINGS OF FARMERS. In his annual bulletin to the school officials of the State, giving sugges tions on improving school work, Fassett A. Cotton, state superintendent of public instruction, enters a plea for better education for country children and urges tbe county farmers' institutes toward this end. Mr. Cotton considers that now is the opportune time to bring about a closer relation between the school officials and the institute associations. "Indiana," says Mr. Cotton in his bulletin, 'is entering upon a new era in public school education. The newschool laws require higher qualification and better pay for teachers, make provision for an extended syfetem of training schools for teachers, authorize the consolidation of schools and tbe free transportation of pupils to and from the central schools, provide for uniform courses of study for the noncommissioned high schools and for additional funds for the poorer school corporations so that the educational advantages of the school children will be more nearly equal throughout the state. "The State Board of Education ha3 recommended more rational and more practical courses of study, including nature subjects, manual training and

ithe elements of agricultural and do-

Japanese crews aboard have been the battle of the Korean strait, and

equipment will be renewed and the track straightened at points so that the road can make a stronger bid for passenger business. STATION AGENTS ELIGIBLE. Station agents will hereafter be eligible to membership in the Order of Railway Telegraphers, according to the ruling made at the convention just closed. This will bring several hundred and even thousand station agents into the body, and especially is this true of those agents in the larger cities where the station agents are not telegraphers. It was also decided to have all- the literature of the order with the exception of the magazine printed in English, Spanish and French. A large number of Mexican telegraphers call for the Spanish language. RAIL EVIL ATTACKED. Owing to the fact that inferior rails manufactured at the present time by the large steel companies, are being placed on all railroads of the country, because the latter cannot help themselves, the Railroad Gazette devotes several pages to the bad rail evil, in its latest issue. The article is a comprehensive one and sets forth the causes and remedies for the present rail situation. BRINGS FEW SUITS. It has been a noticeable fact that the Pennsylvania in the last year has never been plaintiff to a suit for the violation of railroad laws, with the exception of the full crew law, which was recently passed by the Indiana legislature, and the present suit is one to simply test the law. The safety appliance law is fully obeyed by the Pennsylvania and the fact that no! suits have been filed against the road speaRS weu ior me equipment ine sylvania has been entirely free from,

and all stock shipped over that road spots floating before eyes, have disis watered and fed regularly. afrrponh1e rlvir catarrhal drain.

mestic science, which will prove of es pecial benefit to the rural, consolidated and township high schools. "It is especially gratifying that these recent measures for the promotion of education are not foisted upon an un suspecting or indifferent public, but are really the result of the united demand on the part of school officials and teachers and intelligent school patrons for an educational advance all along the line a demand for a system of public education which shall connect with practical life when the boy or girl leaves the school at the age of 14 which shall insure equal educational opportunity to all children. "The farmers of Indiana are rapidly coming to realize and assert that their sons and daughters are entitled to just as thorough, practical and complete an education in their home schools as the children of cities and towns. This sentiment has often found expressions of late in farmers' institutes and farmers' clubs and in resolutions adopted at the meetings of the State Grange and at the annual conferences of farmers' institute workers." FIT THE GROCER Wife Made the Suggestion. A grocer has excellent opportunity to know the effects of special foods on his customers. A Cleveland grocer has a long list of customers that have been helped in health by leaving off coffee and using Postum Food Coffee. He says, regarding his own experience: "Two years ago I had been drinking coffee and must say that I was almost wrecked in my nerves. "Particularly in the morning I was so irritabla and upset that I could hardly wait until the coffee was served, and then I had no appetite for breakfast and did not feel like attending to my store duties. "One day my wife suggested that inasmuch as I was selling so much Postum there must be some merit in it and suggested that we try it. I took home a package and she prepared it according to directions. The result was a very happy one. My nervousness gradually disappeared and today I am all right. I would advisa everyone affected in any way with nervousness or stomach troubles, to leave off coffee and use Postum Food Coffee." j "There's a Reason." Read "Th Road:

to Wellviiie, in pkgs.

i

MODEIS

A Cream of Tartar PovjcSop Made From Grapoo Q ALUM

AUTHORS TO BE HEARD Noted Writers of Indiana on One Program. Lafayette, Ind., May 20 James ram

In all stations of life, whose vigor and vitality may have been undermined and broken-down by overwork, exacting social duties, the too frequent bearing of children or other causes, will find in DR. PIERCE'S FAVORITE PRESCIflPTKffl the most potent, invigorating, restorative, strength- gfescr ever devised for their special benefit. Nursing mothers-will find it especially valuable in sustaining?thexr strength, and promoting an abundant nourishment for the child. Expectant mothers too will find it a priceless boon to prepare the system for baby's coming and to render- thc.ordaa) comparatively easy and painless. It can do no harm in any state or condition of the female system.

Delicate, nervous, weak women, who suffer from frequent headaches, backache, dragging-down distress "7 . pamtul or irregular montmy pe-. j riods, gnawing or distressed sensation in stomach dizzy or faint spells, see imaginary specks or ulceration, prolapsus, anteversion, retroversion, or other displacements of womanly organs from weakness of parts, will, whether they experience many or only a few of the above symptoms, find relief and, generally, a permanent cure, by using faithfull' and fairly persistently Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. This world - famed specific for woman's weaknesses and peculiar ailments is a pure glyceric extract of the choicest native, medicinal roots without a drop of alcohol in its make-up. All its ingredient are printed in plain English on its bottle-wrapper and attested under! oath. Dr. Pierce thus invites the

im

Sttamrnp Salle May 20 to 26

20 Stamps with one 2 oz. bottle of A. and P. Extracts at 25c.

(BO Stamps With one IS oz can of A. & P. Baking Powder at 50c

10 Stamps with 2 lb3. of Gloss Starch at Zc a lb. 10 Stamps with one pkg. of Crushed Oats at 10c a pkg. 1112 Great Cl Pacific 727 Main Old Phone 53 W.

Whitcomb Riley, George Ade, Meredith Nicholson, Charles Major and: Elizabeth Miller, Indiana's ladincauthors, have consented to appear hero Wednesday night as a compliment to Miss Evaleen Stein, the gifted port. Seldom In the history of Indiana has such an array of talent appeared upon a program.

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fullest investigation of fcfs formula knowing that it will be fouad to contain only the hest agents known to the most agwxcsd medical science of all the different schools of practice for-the-our of alt woman's peculiar weaknessesmnd ailments. Dr. Pierce Lot&a Tabkrts-and Antiseptic Suppositories may also be used with great advantage con jointly with the uee of the "Favor ite Prescription " in all cases of ulceration, and in pelvic catarrh. They cost only 25 cents-a box each, at drug stores or, sent by mail, post-paid on receipt of price in stamps by Dr. Pierce whose address is given below. If you want to know more about the composition and professional endorsement of the "Favorite Prescription," send postal card request to Dr. Rl V. Pierce, BuCalo, N. Y., for his free booklet treating of same. You can't afford te accept as a substitute for this remedy of known composition a secret nostrum cf unknown composition. Don't do it. 10 Stamps with one half pint bottle of Worcestershire Sauce at 12c a bottle. 10 Stamps with 2 pkgs. of A. and P. Washing Powder at 5c a pkg. 10 Stamps with one can of A. and P. Spice at 13c a canAtlantic Tea Co. Street Nw Phon 10

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