Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 137, 9 June 1907 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PA ILADIUM AND SUX-TELEGI? A3I, SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 1901-

PAGE FIVE.

REGRET EXPRESSED By WESTHELD HEWS .'Story That Earlham Has Been Taken From Its NonHazing Pedestal.

THOUGHT IT WAS IMMUNE.

THE NEWS SAYS HAZING IS AKIN TO WHITECAPPING AND THAT THERE IS TOO MUCH ROWDYISM IN THE COLLEGES.

(Westfield, Ind., News.) The News regrets very much that f-taid old Earlham college has been

dragged from her pedestal, although j

against her free will. Some unruly boys have been expelled for hazing,

and were even, in- the police court fori

assault and battery. They sadly mistreated1 some theological students, and they did this when tne president was away. We have held up for Earlham as the one college where hazing was not tolerated, but the record was broken finally. However, we wish to' commend the course of the college officers in expelling the boys who did the hazing. Of

course, "boys will bo boys," but there 3s absolutely no sense in being criminals, and in causing possible permanent injury to other students. Hazing is akin to wbitecapping and sometimes is almost as severe in form. There is too much rowdyism in most of the colleges, and it will be broken up. or the colleges will lose in attendance. The public sentiment back home is very much against this tomfoolery. What is wanted is a class of young men who can obey the rules at school, and the Jaws at home, and who can be gentlemen at all times. J lazing should go, and should not even be commenced at Earlham.

WEALTHY WIDOW IN FAMILY QUARREL. ' VSNc : ft iW '

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HEALTH IS WOMAN'S WEALTH

Don't Trifle vwiih It, Don't Neglect It, Guard It As Ycur Dearest Treasure.

MRS. DANIEL O'DAY. Mrs. Daniel O'Day, owing to a family quarrel, -was not present when her stepdaughter, fluth, became the bride of William 'Butler Boyd, of New Brunswick, X. J. Mrs. O'Day is the widow of the very wealthy Standard Oil magnate.

ZOA-PHORA

For Maiden, Wife and 'Mother. Watch First Indications of Disease or Derangement of the Delicate Organs. Dear daughter, sister, wife or mother, do you realize that health is more to you and your family than all other earthly blessings? Do you know that to have perfect health and keep it should be your greatest desire.

Why? Because health a woman's

normal health will enable you to be and to do and to feel just as a woman should. That's what you want, . isn't

it?

Now listen! Zoa-Phora is made for women. It is admirably adapted to assist nature in building up her deli

cate and beautifully constructed con

stitution. For . the well and slightly ailing it is a nerve-tonic and tissue builder. It contains no opiate or narcotic drug to injure the system and is used with perfect safety by the young daughter, wife or mother. For the

more seriously afflicted women suf

fering with any form of womanly-

weakness or disease Zoa-Fhora is

worth its weight in gold, as is test!

tied by women everywhere. Hun-

lreds of these women live in your own state some of them right in your own neighborhood. Ask them about ZoaPhora. On March 7, 1003. Miss Retta Griffith of Columbiaville, Mich., wrote, "I

will gladly send my testimonial for

Zoa-Phora, as the greatest, most strengthening tonic! I have ever known for women. I suffered with leucorrhea and painful menses for nearly six years. I took different kinds of medicines nd doctored with three different doctors, but tbeydid me no good.

Social and Personal Mention (Conducted by Miss Florence Corwin. Office Phones, Both 21; Residence Phone. Home 1310.

mf w )

Following is the social calendar for

this week:

Monday Mrs. Maude li,ggemeyer

will entertain the Dorcas Society at her home on North Ninth street; the TrifoTlum Literary Society will meet In the church parlors of the First English Lutheran church; Miss Anna Horn will entertain the members of the Hiser-Miller bridal party at a six o'clock dinner at her home in Spring Grove. Tuesday The Home Missionary Society of Grace M. E. church will meet at the home of Mrs. M. C. Price on the National road. Tho art exhibit will open. Wednesday The wedding of Miss Edna Miller and Mr. Ben Hiser will take place at Grace Methodist church; the Missionary Society of the First English Lutheran church will meet in the church parlors; the Home and Foreign Missionary Society of St. Paul's Lutheran church will meet.

Miss Ketta Griffith, Columbia)-ille, Michigan. fTbey said I would have to have an operation, but thanks to Zod-Phora. it

Ihas nearly stopped -the pain and has entirely cured the discharge. I was to weak when I begaji'' taking your ....... . . . . I

meaicme mat i cquiu not sit up a whole day at a time, but now I am en

tirely well." OnApril IS, 1007, Miss!

in the Starr Piano company s room. Thursday Miss Ethel King will entertain the members of the Octopar Card Club at her home on South Ninth street. Friday The Keramic League will open its exhibit in the rooms of the Starr Piano company; flag raising exercises will be held at the Garfield school by the D. A. R.; the Richmond High School. Alumni Association will give a dance at Jackson Park.

Saturday The Primary Union will meet at the First English Lutheran church. Miss Agnes Karns entertained in a charming manner the members of the Violet Club Saturday, afternoon at her home on North Eighth street. The hours were from two to five, the time being spent with needlework and socially. A two course luncheon was served. 4 4 3 After several weeks the weekly card party will be resumed attSe Country Club on Mondays, and a large number

of the members will probably be present at the one given this week. Mrs. John Lackey and Mrs. G. F. McCurdy will be the hostesses. Bridge will be played. The dance which was to have been given Friday evening by Mr. Charles Kolp and several young men of the city was postponed and will not be given until a more opportune time. It was postponed on account of the many things going on in the city. ' 5 Invitations have been issued' by Mrs. Frank Land for areception to be given next Thursday afternoon. June 13th at her home on North Twelfth street. The hours are from two to six. Among the out-of-town guests will be Miss Nellie Morris, of Piqua, Ohio, and Miss Irene Commons, of Columbus, Ohio, who, with Miss Juliet Corwin, will as-

i sist the hostess in receiving a large j number of guests. In the dining room

company s rooms, ana wnicn were made expressly for this exhibit by the Rookwood company. They are all fine specimens of their pottery and are all expensive, one being $50, one $75

and one $33. The three glazes are the Iris, the Vellum and the Painted Mat,

the first being a Japanese plum blos

som design, the second a Japanese bird design and the third a modeled dragon design. While these vases will be interesting features of the exhibit, the Japanese pottery which will be loaned by a number of Richmond peo

ple will attract many. Among those

who will loan their pottery to the ex

hibit will be Mrs. C. K. Chase, Mrs. H. C. Starr, Mrs. Jennie Yaryan, Airs.

James Morrisson, Mrs.. Richard Sedg

wick, and Mrs. W. p. Foulke. Col. J. F. Miller will also loan a collection of Rookwood pottery of a Japanese de

sign. 4

As one of the manyr festivities con-

Mrs. Grace Gorman will give a recitalpnected with commencement exercises

at Earlham College was the elocution

entertainment which was given Satur

day evening in the chapel. A large number of the friends of the college

and the students were present. Several young ladies of the college acted

as ushers. The program consisted of

musical numbers and recitations, those taking part being Miss Angelina Wood, Miss Maria Francisco, Mr. C. Haworth, Miss Marjorie Hill, Miss Louise Estes, Miss Beulah Kaufman,

Mr. G. Hoelscher, Mr. Thurman Overman, Miss Carol Wood, Miss Edith Shugart, Mr. Walter Miles, Miss Katie Cochran, Miss Edna Gordon, Mr. Harold Chapman and Mr. Byron Huff. ' 4 At the business meeting of the Ladies Aid Society of Grace M. E. church which was held Friday, arrangements were made for the annual June dinner, which will be given in the church parlors- soon. 4 4. Arrangements were made for the annual picnic at the meeting of the Ladies Aid Society of the Reid Memorial Hospital which was held the past week with Mrs. Charles S. Farnham at her home on North Tenth street. It will be held this month and the trustees and their families will be

guests.

HEWS OF EARLHAM;

WEEK ISJUSY ONE It Is Hoped kf Make Alumnj

Tea One of Most Successful of Such Events. WALTER WILSON LEAVES.

BACCALAUREATE ADDRESS WILL

BE DELIVERED BY PROF. EL

BERT RUSSELL NO GIFT BY GRADUATING CLASS.

The alumni tea at Earlham this year

is to be held on the college campus, and the committee in charge hopes to make it one of the most successful events of the kind ever held at the school. Miss Katie Moelk will serve the banquet, following which will be a

number of informal toasts. A large number of former gradxiates are expected from outside the city. Just

who is coming, is not definitely known and for this reason there will be no set program. The "tea"' is to begin promptly at six o'clock. The committee in charge of the affair Is composed of the Rev. Clarence M. Case, Dr. Frank Harold, Mrs. Mabel Hough Bartel, and the Misses Magdalena Engelbert and Louise Kammski. Walter Wilson, who for the past two years has been athletic director at Earlham, left Saturday for Minnesota, where he will be engaged in practical engineerHig work this summer. Before leaving the members of the football team presented Wilson with a gold watch fob, on which was engraved his name and the years he coached at the college. . Wilson's plans for the fall are not certain. He has a chance to take an dnstructorship at Yale, and may do so. ' Prof. Elbert Russell will deliver the baccalaureate address to the graduating class at Earlham' at Lindley hall this morning. Much interest attaches to the sermon, as Prof. Russe. is recognized as one of the broadest and

most logical students of the new school which is fast taking hold of Quaker affairs, j The graduating class at Earlham this year will not present a gift of any kind to the school. There is no set prece

dent on this point, some of the classes in the past having remembered the college and some having departed without a gift of any kind. v The athletic season will close at Earlham next Tuesday, when the college team will cross bats with the Richmond independent baseball team. The college lads are hopeful of winning over Jessup's aggregation once more. Their victory last Thursday has given them plenty of confidence. The elocutionary recital at Earlham Saturday night was attended by a good sized audience and was very entertaining. The program was carried

out as announced in the Palladium

Thursday. Saturday's game with Franklin was cancelled because of wet grounds.

Smart Shoes

for WeBB Ores

People

IV Hi

i

The new low shoes ready now at Fcltman's. The "Innovation" Pumps and Oxfords at $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50, are setting feminine Richmond astir. Never before did shoes at such "modest" prices look so surprisingly like the higher-priced sorts. But that is what we are here for to give you SMART STYLES, as well as the best qualify of material that can be put in Patent Kid and Dull leathers. 2.50, S3 and $3.50

Last week we received a special shipment of LADIES AND CHILDREN'S TAN OXFORDS. This, the handsomest display of all, will be ready for you this week at prices that are making the people BUY HERE. PRICES $3.00 and ?3.0O.

3

FOR THE MEN

Men, as- well as ladies, like style; but their first consideraiton is FIT. We have made it a special point to combine these two thereby giving you TRUE FOOT STYLE and CAREFUL FIT. Our shoes also carry quality with them we guarantee all our leathers. SHOES FOR MEN-$r5.r0, $4.0 and $-.. SEE FELTMANS SPECIAL ??.rH SHOE FOR MEN.

Chas. H.

.Fdflniai

724 MAIN STREET. Williams Old Stand

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A fox was seen coming down a pass in the hills followed by a rabbit, which came along at a smart pace and seemed impelled by an overpowering curiosity. Fox and rabbit presently disappeared Into a patch of covert, and almost immediately the fox was seen to emerge ! with the unfortunate rabbit dead In its jaws. The whole tableau was witnessed by persons of unimpeachable veracity, one of them a very careful observer of wild life. It was perfectly evident to them that the fox had in some way fascinated the rabbit and was consciously following out a plan devised for its destruction. As for the rabbit, it was clearly incapable of avoiding its doom. Country Life.

. The managing director of a London cab firm with 1,300 horses told a county court judge they' worked their horses seven days a week in the London streets. The average life of a cab horse in London was about six years, but some would go only three months. Some wouiil Vt twelve years.

SUED FOR $100,000.

FRAUD UPON BUYERS $008 JO BE ENDED Action Taken by the Customs Authorities.

the assistants w ill be the Misses ,Ma-

Griffith writes: 'You may refer any "e.amp ena V -

4 4- -

ryn

one to me and t will still gladly rec

ommend Zoa-Phora." Does,, this not' prove that the resttlt9fr6m the use,or Zoa-Phora are permanent? j

"L , i viw oasu'ru ev and Brown, on Main street, that Zoa-Phora will help you is to go;sum of mon?y was cleared.

and begin the treatment at onci ac-

PLAN TO BOOST PRICES. New York, June S. Action has been taken by the customs authorities which it is believed, will put an end to a loug continued and systematically conducted prs?tiee of fraud up-'

jon buyers cf-foreign paintings and t other works of art. i .

The plan, which appears to have

A mnrkpt was e-ivn Satnrdav bv the!

members of the Christian Endeavor j been " Prosecuted. ' successfully for. Union at the hardware store of Seazi-i 't ars without detection, has been to

A large J rnvoiee pictures and other art objects

! at prices many times the intrinsic val- : ue of the importations, pay the high

5 4

9s

r i

i Mrs. Iwis D. Stubby resident of ad valorem duties, and exhibit to pros-

cording to plaiu directions -found in Htcl,im Kramie L.nu has- i -eooivt-d j pfctive puvchastrs a copy of the offiackagt. Just ask for Zoa-Phora no i thi-e iit-cts of i.ciu-rv from In Hook- i i:tl invoice as proof of rh i.rice paid

wood Potiery, at Cincinnati, illustiat-! lf,r til'i production. ing three different glazes whu-h they

other explanation will be needed and

no mistake will be made. You will receive the medicine aneady prepared, compounded in just the ri.aht proportions, and put up in scaled, sterilized one -dollar bottles.

use. all of them Japanese in design. I ALL UP-TO-DATE HOUSEKEEPERS They will be placed on exhibit in thf.Use Red Cross Ball Blue. It makes

Keramic League exhibit which will j clothes clean and sweet as wfcea jm-fins the Princess de Moptglyon

open on i naay iat the fctarr l'ianoAlI grocers

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UNIVERSITYIS PLANNED May Include the Leading Hebrew Institutions.

New York, June 8. The Jewish Theological seminary is discussing the establishing of an American university to include the leading Hebrew institutions of learning. For the support of the institutions now in existence of their professors, scholars and investigators, whose vocations naturally require them to live on small incomes, a fund, such as is maintained by ihe General Educational Board, was suggested. It was said that fl0,000,000 would be needed.

A CLEVtfi BURGLAR.

Princess de Montglyan. Her puss have succeeded in involv-

m a

fcuit for 1109,000 damages.

How He Foolod a Man Who Thought H Couldn't Be Robbed. "B. P. Hutchinson used to say no burglar :ver could get into his house without waking him," paid a centra! station detective the other day, according to the Chicago Record-Herald, "but it remained for Chief Simon O'Donnel! to put one over the famous trader. "You know, Mr, Hutchinson was famous in Chicago's commercial life years ago and was known popularly as 'Old Hutch. He prided himself on the fact that burglars never bad got lntc his house and often boasted of thc fact to his intimites. One day while he was at lunch with Chief O'Donnell anc a number of other friends the company fell to discussing a crime that had bean committed the night before. " 'I'd like to see anybody get into my bouse. Mr. Hutchinson said. 'Why, I

hear every tick of the clock all night- ; " 'I'll bet you a dinner for this crowd, said the chief, 'that I can produce n rasa who vri!J enter your house and you wHl v.ot know of his visit till morning. "Mr. IIut'-'iKUSon accepted tbe wager, nnd it was .ngreeil thnt he was to let the chief have a late h key, so that the burglar couki gst i:i without being distorted by some pntroknan. Mr. Hutchinson also ajrreed to leave some article of vnltie in the parlor where it conld be found readily. Th? chief said tberobbery wosld bo committed within the following ret-'.;. "Three days lr.tc-r Mr. Ilutch'nson awoke in the mcrnlr.g and discovered thst both fhf ts of bis bod. which had been in place when he retired, were gone. Co wrs a little antique clock he had left on thf mantel. He hurriedly dressed and hastened efter breakfast

to the clilcrs cSce. O'Dcuncll saw him j coming and. as he entered the 5ee. i

greeted him with: " 'Mr. IIsitcMr.an, I have two sheets and a cloc'i thnt belong to yoa. We will have the tlinner today. "The burg!ry was done by a former criminal who at the time had refnad. He did the job at tLe request of the chief. How did L get the under sheet? He rolled Mr. Ilut'-blu-ion over, rolled ti shet af'er Iiini anl then

rol!d him back."

A COMPLETEDIRECTORY The Federation of Labor Is Preparing One. Des Moines, June S. The federation of labor of the state of Iowa, has begun the compilation of a directory which will slve the name, residence and occuprtion of every workingman In the state. It will also give his union connection, if any.

No matter how intently a wife may listen when her husband Is talking lu bis sleep, she very seldom learns anything of real importance. And tbe result would usually be about tho same

if she should listen to everything he says while he is awake. Somervillo Journal.

CITY IN BRIEF

FOR WOMAN SUFFRAGE.

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Butt?rick's Patterns, Morris & Co'n. Miss Mae Rose Is the guest of her brother at Chicago. Telephone the Richmond Steam Laundry to get your laundry. tf Miss Marie 'Morgan of Hamilton, im visiting relatives and friends In Richmond. Miss Id?. Mauger has gone to Columbus, O., to visit her parents for a few woeks. Mrs. Herbert Marlatt and daughter Elizabeth, and Mrs. J. F. Kauffmaa are spending a few days with Mrs. H. D. Brown of Economy. By an agreement of attorneys in th case, there will be no prosecution cf the suit of. Isaac Jenklnson against

Martha Reddish et al., for foreclosure of mortgage. Edmund C Dickinson, of Jacksonville, 111., is home for a few dajt' visit with his parents. . Mr. Dickinson is private secretary to Supreme Chancellor Barnes, Knights of Pythias. Thomas J. NewUIrk, of this city, who Is connected with the" real estate department of the Rock Island railroad, is here to spend a few days with ni.family. Mr.'Newkirk is located In Arkansas. Have just returned from tbe Oxy. Hn-Parlors, of Dr. Taylor on South 10th street where I saw four patient under treatment at the same time. This Oxylin Machine is a wonder; tho work It is doing is a far greater wond?r. All our people who are nervous and weak fchould call and scu lur themselves.

Mrs. Harriet S. ElatcU Mrs. Harriet Sianion Blatch, rianghter of Elizabeth Cad y Stanton, is erganizing a league of club women to

-iit for women suffragc-

Hia W3 Hirder. It was In a country tavern, where newly arrived commercial traveler wns holding forth. I'll lwt my cn.e of samples, he said, that I've got the hardest came of anybody in this room." An old farmer In the background shifted his feet. Yi will, will ye?" ho drawled. "Waal, I'll have to tak y up. I'll bet $10 ngninst your tamples that my came'll beat yourn." "Done," cried tbe salesman. 'Tve got tbe hardest nans. It is Stone." The old man was game. "Mine." he said, "is Harder." Philadelphia Ledger,

Starting It Earl. Starting with his bride oa thIr honeymoon, a man enlered a railway office and, as always in the past, bought only one ticket. The bride noticed the oversight at once. "Why, you bought on'.y one ticket, dear, she said. "That's so, dear," h answered. "I forgot ail about myself." Tit-Bits. "

" ' An Expert Accountant. "Do you not think. Miss Smiles. fiw pleaded, that ia time you might learn tf love me?' fc Possibly .'Vth &lr! replied. "If yon .,uld render u.e m stuteujtit of What you are worth, Mr. Giles, I might learn to love yoa. I'm very quick at flsures." London Mail.