Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 134, 6 June 1907 — Page 8

IAGE EIGHT.

THE IUCII3IOXD rALLAD!U3I AXD SUX-TELEGRA3I, THURSDAY, JUNE G, 1907. THE NEXT SESSION ST HOPEWELL. OHIO Was Held Captive by Band of Gypsies.

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The ever increasing patron age with which we are fav ored, PROVES EMPHATICAL

LY that our business methods are HONEST, CONVENIENT, and CONFIDENTIAL and that OUR RATES ARE LOWER than can be had elsewhere in the city. We advance money, in sums to suit you, on your household goods, team, livestock or any other personal property, without removal, you having the use of both property and money. We extend you such time and such payments as may best suit your convenience. REMEMBER OUR GUARANTEE: On the smallest yearly loan we will make you, we will save you enough of the price charged by any similar concern in the city, to buy one hundred pounds of good Jlour. Isn't this worth while? Loans made in all nearby interurban towns. Indiana Loan Co. Home Phone 1341 40-41 Colonial BIdg. 3rd Floor Richmond, Ind. About our Richmond Export Beer is sufficient to convince any judge of beer that there is nothing better brewed. It takes but a trial to prove this. There is something about the manner in which the Richmond Export is brewed that makes it particularly delicious. If you enjoy good beer you will enjoy the Richmond Export beer. Minck Brewing Co. Berries Are Ripe All the Newest Things Breakfast Foods MANABRAN BISCUITS, the Food Laxative, good for the young and old; try them. J SWANS DOWN bake flour; Pota toes, cake four. CHASE JL SANBORN, and Ross W. Weir High Grade Coffee. THE FAMOUS BEE HIVE Coffee, the best 25c Coffee in the city. DR. JOHNSON'S Eductor Biscuits, Toasterettes and Wafers. Bee Hive Grocery Co.

Presbyterian Missionary Society Closed a Successful Session Wednesday

REPORTS ARE QUITE GOOD DELEGATES WERE HIGHLY PLEASED WITH THE TREATMENT ACCORDED THEM 'OFFICERS CHOSEN. With the election of officer and selection of the next meeting place, the Presbyterial missionary society of the First Presbytery of Ohio, came to a close Wednesday afternoon at Reid Memorial church, after a day and one half. The sessions were particularly interesting throughout, and it is thought that much good was done for the society. The sessions were large ly attended by visiting delegates and members of the local society. The reports from the seventeen so cieties in the Presbytery were very flattering and showed that all are do ing first class work and doing everything within their power to add zest and interest to the work of the socie ty, namely, aiding both home and foreign missions. Miss Clara Brown, read a paper on A Glajice Backward," in which she reviewed the founding of the society at Oxford, September 26, 1862, and. the great work it . has accomplished sines that time. Miss Brown was the only charter member present at tne local meetings. She siid that since he establishment of the society. $29, 500 had been raised for home and for eign missions. l ne organization ai the present time supports a foreign missionary m l-Jgypt. in addition io aidine all the churches in the First Ohio Presbytery when aid is needed Delegates Were Pleased.. Thp visitins- delegates were loud in j their praises of the manner they have been entertained during their stay m Richmond and pronounce the sessions just closed "the best ever At nonn Wednesdav the ladies of the local society furnished a bountiful dinner in the basement of the church to the visitors. The next meeting of th body will be held at Hopewell, O., beginning the apron r! Tuesdav in June. 1908. The sessions are to be held there on oc casion of the one hundredth anniver sary of that church which is said to be the mother of United Presbyterian congregations throughout this section of the country. The officers elected are: President Mrs. Kelsey, Unity, O. Vice-president Mrs. D. B. Caldwell, Second church, Cincinnati. Second vice-president Mrs Compton, Monroe, O. Recording secretary--Mrs. James Blair, Hamilton, O. Corresponding secretary Miss Elizabeth Allen, Cincinnati. Thank offering secretary Miss Martha Wilson, Fairhaven, O. Junior secretary Miss Margaret Stewart, Monroe, O. Secretary young people's work Miss Jennie Johnson, Oxford, O. Temperance secretary Mrs. Spen cer, Morning Sun, O. Treasurer Mrs. Morning Sun, O. O. Brown, Pa. he starts at early morn To face the wide, blue world, He gets his strength and health By using Rocky Mountain Tea. A. G. Luken & Co. At sea level water boils at 212 de grees F., at a height of 10.mjo feet at lfX degrees F. When Darwin crossed the Andes in lS.v he boiled potatoes for three hours without making them soft. ALL UP-TO-DATE HOUSEKEEPERS Use lied Cross Ball Blue. It makes clothes clean and sweet as when new. All grocers. In tha WaioU She was examining her new waist by the aid of the big mirror. "Dear me." Fhe exclaimed pettishly, "I can't see anything pretty in this!" "Well. I can," chuckled the young man who was sitting on the sofa. "Iteallyl And what do you see pretty In it?" "Why, you." And then she Mushed and said she thought the waist was just foo lovely for anything. Chicago News. Progress. Progress in th3 sense of acquisition la something, but progress in the senst of being Is a great deal more. To grow higher, deeper, wider as the years gc on. to conquer difficulties and to ac quire more and more power, to feefal' one's faculties unfolding and truth descending into the soul this makes life worth living. James Freeman Clarke. Tart Reply. Mrs. Hautton (maliciously) You were snch a charming debutante, my dear, fifteen years ago. Mrs. InglefeWas 1? I only remember you made such a level- chaperon for me when I came out. London Tit-rits. "Any Wife to Any Husband." "nang it all, my cigar's gone out." he said. "It spoils a cigar, no matter how good it may be, if you let it g-1 out. "A cigar." she observed, "is in that matter not unlike a man." New Orleans Times Democrat. A Popular Recreation. "Where are you aroln. Sandy-" said one S-n hnuin to a not Iter. "Doou to the club." aid Sandy. "And wha foory "Just to contradeect a wee bit" Detroit News.

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ANNIE EINSIG. Annie ETnsig, whose picture is here shown, tells a remarkable story of captivity in the hands of gypsies. She was recovered after tne police had raided a gypsie camp at Wakefield, New York.

HEWS OF HIGH SCHOOL; JUNIOR TO PICNIC Will Go to Jackson Park Next Wednesday. SENIORS TAKING EXAMS The Junior class of the high school held a meeting Wednesday and made arrangements to hold a class picnic at Jackson park on next Wednesday. It will be an all day affair. The Seniors, whose grades are doubtful, are taking examinations this week which will decide whether they will graduate with the rest of the class. Prof. W. S: Davis gave aii interest ing talk to the ' members of the 2-2 history class Wednesday on his trip to Pompeii and Vesuvius. Miss May Turner, of the class of '99 of Cleveland, O., visited the school. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea pur ifies the blood, strengthens the nerves. regulates the bowels, aids the kidneys, cures stomach troubles, builds up the nervous force and repairs the ill effects of over eating. Tea or Tablets, oo cents. A. G. Luken &; Co. A hamouo -iQurehead. In 1S34 Captain Elliot, who had been second in command at Lake Erie under Oliver Perry, excited a violent political and partisan demonstration by decorating at the Boston navy yard, the bow of the Constitution with a figurehead of President Jackson. One stormy night his excellency wa3 - decapitated as neatly and deftly as f, the -best tools had with patient labor enlisted the brightest sunshine in the desecration. Marines and .bloejacJtets .were held under dark . suspicion., and the country seethed in a ferment of keen contention. Iiewaxjs.were offered., but in vain, and foe years the secret was well kept. It is said that a seaman was the culprit, not for any political motive, but because of a cherished antipathy to the full length image of a landlubber at the bow while three fine sailors were compelled; -with inadequate busts, to sm;le -grimly at the stern. However, another head was secured to the trunk with copper- bolts so tremendous that for many years age could not wither it nor custom stale the unshaken fortitude with which Old Hickory brine. defied the breezes and the The Wily Fox. A story is related in Bailey's Magazine of a rector of a parish not far from Oxford, who as he was walking across some fields heard the cry of hounds. The pack ran Into an adjacent field, and presently a fox tame toward the clergyman and trotted along by his side as a dog would do. The huutsiuan, looking about, saw Uolhiug but tke ivctor and what Seemed to be his dug, aud cast off in another direction. As soon as the cuast was clear the fox gave' a whisk of his brush j and disappeared through t- bderow1 I L Jamos liazett-

THE WORST OF ANIMALS.

A Strikina Portrait of Man With Schopenhauer's Compliments. Man is the only animal which causes pain to others without any further pur pose than Just to cause it. Other anl mals never it except to satisfy their hunger or in the rate of combat. No animal ever torments another for the mere purpose of tormenting, but man does It, and It Is this that constitutes that diabolical feature in his character which is so much worse than the merely animal. I have already spoken of the matter in its broad aspect, but it is manifest even in small things, and every reader has a daily opportunity of observing it. For instance. If two little dogs are playing together and what a genial and charming sight it is! and a child of three or four years joins them, it is almost Inevitable for it to begia hitting them with a whip or stick and thereby show Itself, even at that age, the worst of animals. The love of teasing and playing tricks, which is common enough, may be traced to the same source. For instance, if a man has expressed his annoyance at any interruption or other petty Inconvenience, there will be .no lack of people who for that very reason will bring It about. This is so certain that a man should be careful not to express any annoyance at small evils. On the other hand, he should also be careful not to express his pleasure at any trifle, for, if he does so, men will act like the jailer, who, when he found that his prisoner had performed the laborious task of taming a spider and took a pleasure in watching it. Immediately crushed it under his foot. This is why all animals are instinctively afraid of the sight or even of the track of a man, that animal mechant par excellence! Nor does their instinct play them false, for it is man alone who hunts game for which he has no use and which does him no barm. Scho- j penhauer. The Falling Leaf. The falling of a leaf is brought about by the formation of a thin layer of vegetable tissue at the point where the leaf stem joins the branch of the tree. After the leaf ceases to make starch and sugar for the tree this tissue begins to grow and actually cuts the leaf off. It is therefore not a mere breaking away on account of the wind bending the dried stems, but an automatic severing of the member no longer useful. The- falling of ripe fruit is dependent upon the same proc ess. Willing to Conform. "Richard, said his precise wife In an undertone, "it is all right for yon to avoid elaborate ceremony in introducing the guests to one another, but I wish you would not say. Mr. Tbrog son. shake hands with Mr. Wtgmore. I do not approve of that style of introduction." "All rijjht. Amaryllis." heartily responded the host. "ITi cut that out. Hello, Flatbush! Awfully glad to see yon. Mr. Flatbush, wiggle flippers with Mr. Skinimerhorn." Chicago Tribune. She Shut the Door. The ardent Frenchman looked tenderly at the fair young mistress of his soul. "Je t'adure:" he murmured. Mayte I'd better." she returned. "You can't never tell who's listening In this yere house." Baltimore Aaaer-

PennIkeir9So 604 to 698 Mam Stt.

CAUSE OF SKIN DISEASES This is Little Understood, but Scientists Say That the Cause for Eczema has at Last Been Found. The cause of such diseases as psoriasis and eczema is little understood. Even physicians still wrangle over it, and some doctors who rank high in their profession have made but little study of these peculiar ailments. The most prominent specialists of Germany and France, however, as well as many leading physicians of this country are now willing to recognize the correctness of the theory of the eminent skin specialist, Dr. D. D. Dennis. The skin is curable through the skin alone, and where the patient suf-1 fers wrom no other ailments it is nonsense to dose the stomach. External treatment with the proper j vegetable compounds offers the only cure for eczema. Wonderful reports j are coming in from all jover the count- j ry of the infallibility of the prescrip-1 tion of Dr. Dennis, known as the D. D. D. Prescription. Hhere is a case: j James S. Erskine, or .Niagara tans, N. Y., writes as follows: "D. D. D. Remedy has done me more good than any other remedy I ever used in all my life time. Have suffered since I was a very young babe. My folks can tell you the -song suffering and agony of that awful eczema trouble. It began, I believe, in my head, until it scattered all over my body. Doctored and doctored until I had a feeling of discouragement in every form." We recommend that eczema sufferers use D. D. D. soap in connection with D. D. D. Prescription. D. D. D. Prescription gives instant relief. Apply a few drops of the Remedy and there is a cooling, soothing sensation that the tortured eczema patient can hardly imagine beforehand. The Remedy may be had from any drug store in your city. What Is a Drop? In medicine a drop is a "gutta,T or a "minim." The words mean the same that is, one-sixteenth of a fluid dram. This Is the official table: Sixty minims (guttae or drops) make one fluid dram, eight fluid drama make one fluid ounce, sixteen fluid ounces' make one pint, two pints make one quart, four . quarts make one gallon. Forty-five drops of water, or a common teaspoonful, make about one fluid dram, two tablespoonfuls about one fluid ounce; a wineglassful Is about one and one-half fluid ounces, and a teacupful is about four fluid ounces. But, my brethren in suffering, how many different sizes of teaspoons, tablespoons, wineglasses and teacups are there in this world of ease? And as for drops, no two liquids If dropped from a bottle in the old fashioned way (holding the end of the finger over the mouth) will drop drops of the same elze. New Vo-t- rv!. He Reclaimed His JeweTs. 6ne day while Rabbi Meir was away from home teaching at college his two children were suddenly taken 111 and died. . When on returning he Inquired about them his wife, Beruria, first gave him an evasive answer and then, leading the conversation to another topic, related to him how a man who had left some jewels in her care had come back to reclaim them. "Am I to give them back?" she asked. "How can you put such a question?" said he. "Of course you are to return them to the owner." Beruria then took her husband into the chamber where the two children, were lying, and pointing to them, while her tears were overflowing and her heart was nearly breaking, she courageously said, "The owner has come today and. reclaimed these jewels in our trust." From the Tal mud. The crnst of the earth Is now believed to be about forty-five miles' thick and its temperature at the lower edge about 2. TOO deirr! F We sell the

Broad Shoulders Neck-Hugging Collars Smartly Cut Lapels Graceful Drapings High Class but Not High Priced

Widup & Thompson Store open Wednesday and Saturday Evenings

Aon OiraDtitiDn) is extended to you by this institution to make use ot any of the banking facilities afforded here. The officers will be glad to give you any pointers on financial matters that you may need. Richmond Trust Co. Capital $250,000 Surplus 25,000

OFFICERS Klgar G. Hibbera, President. ' Adam H. Bartel. 1st Vice-l'rtsident. John J. Harrington. 2nd Vice-President. Walter K. Henley, Secretary and Treasurer.

THMDAY and SATURDAY 7" P SPECIALS H

Fresh Country Butter, 20c pound. Fresh Country Eggs, T5cdozen. 1 8 lbs. Granulated, 1 9 lbs. A Sugar, for $1 .00 Hood's eLader Coffee, a goo done, 15c pound. Hood's Morning Glory Oh what a drink, 20c.. Hood's Fancy Blend and 23 stamps for 25c. Now here's the bargain of all, a fine schoo Itablet, a 5-cent one, 3 for 10c. A regular 1 0c tablet at 8c ,or 2 for 1 5c. Oh yes. " Linoleum! Just one more roll of the 4 yartf wide and it goes at 60c. The best Linoleum in 2-yard widths at 50c. Lace Curtains. Lace Curtains. A very fine assortment, in fact new and right from factory, $1.00 to $4.50 per pair. ' . , Ladies' Shirt Waists direct from New York after Paris styles. C us. , -, .

HOOD'S MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE Trading Stamps with All Purchases. Free Delivery. New rhono 1079; Old Phone 13R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. 411-413 Main StreeL

VIEWERS NAMED FOR 1 WASHINGTON TP. ROAD The county commissioners met Wednesday but transacted only routine business. Cyrus O. Hurst, Wilbur Doddridge and Walter Burgess were named as viewers for a new road in Washington township. W. R. Ward, of Dyersburg, Tenn., writes: "This is to certify that I have used Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup for chronic constipation, and it has proven without a dpubt, to be a thorough, practical remedy for this trouble, and it is with pleasure I offer my consci entious reference." A. G. Luken & Co. The New York fire department has two hand engines still in use. They are stationed with engine company 49 on Blackwell's island." - CASTOHIA. leer. t'as y?ltie 'J Have AioaYS BcSftt Jiga stars

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W&iire We have the most .complete line in the city, everything and of the best quality too. This is the famous "English Granite ware. None like it. Also a complete line of China and crockery ware. Articles sold at reasonable prices.

You're Apt to Forget In this warm weather that youTl need more coal next winter to keep warm, to say nothing of coal for cooking right , now. Know it's cheiper now than it will be? Know that there's no such scurry for it now as later oa? Wise people get and keep ahead of the game. O. D Bullcrdick 529 S. 5th SL Phone 1235 ?9

$15.00 S16.00 - and 3518.00

SUIT 803 Main Street Store open Wednesday and Saturday Evenings