Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 158, 1 July 1907 — Page 8

KAGE IGIIT,

TIIE RICII3IOND PALLADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, JTTEY 1, 1907.

We don't have Automobiles, but we have LAWN MOWERS, SCYTHES, SNATHS and SICKLES that Aeto Mo (Grass with but very little power behind them. Call and see or telephone .your order to PILGRIM BROS. PHONE 210 Cor. 5th and Main, Richmond. Ind.

Here is something that you need RICHMOND EXPORT Read well and then you will come to the conclusion that the eminent physicians who declare that coffee is a form of slow poison, a pernicious drug, are correct in their opinion. Mi nek's beer is properly brewed of malt and hops and fully aged the most healthful and delicious beverage. Drink it today and you will feel satisfied as to the correctness of this assertion. Minck Brewing Co. 'Suit r1T n v ht? U' NO MOSt 1 ' NO MOSt IX J ' NO LlSi I WHY PAY MORE? It's not easy to save. On the contrary, it's rather . difficult. But that's just the reason why the man who does save rises above his fellows, gets out of the rut, achieves independence. You can begin to save today, if you wish by depositing a dollar in this strong Institution. 3 per cent interest. Absolute Safety Richmond Trust Company Puts a Spring Into You MYAL'S PEPTONIZED samd Wiie An honest medicine sold on its merits. Purifies old and makes new blood. Drives away languor and "that tired feeling." Price 50c a bottle. M. J. QUIGLEY, Opposite Court House. WHEN YOU PUT COAL IN your house or factory, you pour in comfort with the "solid blacks" if the fuel is hauled from our huge pilfs of the material. Our superior grade costs no more than the other sort, lacking in many heat units. When buying, why not buy the best. O. D. Duller dick 529 S. 5th St. Phone 1235

IS TO REMAIN III JAIL Police Have a. Problem on Their Hands in One of the Latest Arrests. CANNOT SPEAK ENGLISH. MAN WAS RELEASED AFTER A SHORT IMPRISONMENT BUT RETURNED AND TRIED TO BREAK INTO A PRISON. Amone the questions of huge propor tions which the police department has had on its hands in recent weeks, the one now looming up before it is the greatest and seems incapable of solution. The source of the trouble is an apparently harmless Hungarian who can not speak a word of Eng lish; neither can he write. The cot-ton-tonned Hunyak is also very desir ous of remaining in jail and this, too, is bothering the police officers. Officer Ross Lamberson corralled the Hunyak in the C, C. & L. yards Saturdav nieht. Lamberson was un- i able to decipher the unintelligible! Drattle of the foreigner, but finally in duced him to go to police headquarters by motioning and using force. There the "Yak" was locked up. Sunday morning he was released and given the deaf and dumb sign to "scoot." He "scooted" out the front door of the city building and then as fast as his legs would carry him, "scooted" again to the jail in the rear of the city building where he was found kicking on the door in an endeavor to onc3 more find a logding. This ttime a man was detailed to lead the foreigner away from the jail which he did, but Sun day night he was found in the south part of the city, attempting to break into a barn to find a place to sleep. Officer Longman once more took the troublesome individual into custody and escorted him to the police station. where the man was overjoyed to find that he was again back to his favorite resting place. Sergeant McManus is endeavoring to locate a Hungu.ian who can translate the man's talk but has thus far been unsuccessful hence his name and occupation still remain a mystery to the police officers. The police are inclined to think the man is slightly demented, and his ac tions are decidedly queer. They thought for a time he might be the Hungarian wanted in Cincinnati for the theft of $125, but his personality does not tally with the description sent out by the Cincinnati police depart ment. GREAT RESULTS AND GOOD WORK CONTINUES. Root Juice Has Proved Its Great Mer it to Many. Many people of Richmond, as else where, are no longer incredulous, they are simDlv amazed at the results ob tained from Root Juice. When the remedy was first introduced to this community and so many were being benefitted by a few doses, it was generally thought that the-medicine would only give temporary relief, but as tinKpasses and many that were ailing are no longer complaining, but are advising their sick friends to try Root Juice, confidence in the great medicine is becoming positive. Root Juice makes so many remarkable cures by removing a few causes and giving t nature a chance. It tones and heals the stomach, bowels liver and kidneys; it creates a healthy appetite, and by its toning action on the blood-making and blood filtering organs, good, rich blood is made to nourish every weak part of the body. If your stomach, bowels, liver or kidneys are out of order, they will be pleased to tell you all about it at Luken's drug store. Root Juice $1 a bottle. It has proved all that is claimed for it. He was a i-eat bare n-utl was talking to a crowd about the coming local election. ' Said he: "Glbbs is ;i j:ood man. He is capable, honest. iV:i !e.;.s and conscientious. He will n::::. ihsvery kind of representative we ueed He once saved my life from drowning." "Do you , retUly -vrsmt-Ao e Gibbs elected'" sakl-a solemn faced old man. "I do indeed. I'd giTe anything to see him elected," answered the bore. "Then never let anylxnly know he saved your life," eounseled the solemn faced man.Imf1?n Tit-Kits. TAKE THE POSTMASTER'S WORD FOR IT. Mr. .F. M. Hamilton, postmaster at Cherryvale, Ind., keeps also a stock of general merchandise and patent medicines. He says: "Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is standard here in its line. It never fails to give satisfaction and we could hardly afford to be without it." For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Yoa needn't suffer with sfcTt headache. indigestion, constipation or any other troubles arisingfrom a disordered stomach. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin will cure you and keep you well. Try it keep it on hand the year around. C. S. FARNHAM DON'T NEGLECT Placing your order for your supply of ..COAL.. PRICES WILL SOON ADVANCE. A. Harsh Coal & Supply Co. No. A and ilnd Sts. Bell 113, Home 784

HUNYAK

ANXIOUS

iwmm

FORMER FINANCIER FIGHTING TO KEEP CHILDREN.

l tl'v VsS'J ...

Daniel Xe Roy Dresser at one time prominent in New York financial circles, is making a fight to keep his children at a result of his wife's separation. Mr. Dresser is shown at the left and at the right are his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Vanderbilt.

THEPRISDNS Fearful State of the Criminals Confined In Them. ALL PRISONERS FETTERED. Some From Cruelty Become In Appear ance as Vild as Beasts of the Forest. Punishment, For Purposes of Extortion, That Kills Many. . The first thing which impresses the European visitor to the Chinese prison Is the absolutely flimsy character of Ohe structure Itself. If one gets permission to visit the prison in Canton, and shoals of globe trotters do wend their way thither after they have seen the execution ground, it will be found to be a ramshackle building of no pretense whatsoever. The question will be asked, "By what means are the prisoners held in safety if the structures in which they are incarcerated are so flimsy and Insecure?". The answer, says the East of Asia Magazine, is brief. Without exception the prisoners are fettered. Many have chains on the legs only. These are the les dangerous and have been guilty of the less important crimes.- Others, in addition, have fetters on the arms, which make it impossible for them to escape. Lastly, a few prisoners were not only manacled on the ankles, but wore, a chain around their necks, at the danjling end of which was attached a block of granite. The prisoner would walk from place to place within the courtyard, but ere he could move beyond the length of his chain he must stop pnd lift the stone and, carrying it in his shackled arms, drop it again where he wished to stop. Iu. addition to the chains worn by day, all the nmle prisoners are further shackled at night. By means of two heavy beams, in which holes have been made for the ankles of the prisoners, a rude but effective method is discovered for detaining the prisoners in absolute security. The prisoners, who during the day have been loafing in the courtyard, are in the evening driven into the wards and made to lie side by side on a raised platform. The upper of the two beams is then raised, and each man is compelled: to place his ankle in the hole made to receive it, whereupon the upper beam is replaced, and the prisoners are held by the feet in these rude stocks. There is no possibility ot escape. They are allowed bricks for pijlows, and in this uncomfortable position they pass the hours. In addition to this, however, special Druelties are perpetrated on certain prisoners who, for some reason or other, are exempted from capital punishment. Prisoners there are whose appearance becomes as wihl - as the beasts of the forest; who, with heavy cangues on their shoulders, are incarcerated in a filthy dungeon for the term of their natural lives. I have seen them moving to and fro like caged hyenas In their dens at a menagerie. Their appearance ia .revolting Night and day. as far.as I remember, ooth asieep and .nwak.e. this benvy burJen rested on their, shoulders, through how it was possible to sleep therein 1 was unable to understand. On the other hand. In a prison I visited a few weeks ago I was. informed that the cangue was removed. at clouts that the prisoners might sleep. A crowd ia the prison quadraBgie. with their unshaven heads. .their unwashed faces, thel: clanking fetters, their hopeless looks their diseased bodies and their bebrut ed souls, can never be forgotten. But, although under the recognizee" system of punishment Chinese prison ?rs must live a life which to us of tfc west would be unbearable, it woulc not lie so to the:n if they were fairl.. treated and were saved from t'je eav lit-ns and barbarities to which thc; nre exposed nt the Lands of their rn pa clous keepers. When a prisoner first goes Into tht wards the warders claim his cloth? and his money, and he Is left with th barest rags to cover his nakednes.Ile is robbed of all hi3 cash, as a niii. ter of courst. Those who are ecu tenined are conHjeiied. nndec a thread

III CHINA

n tue .. ... Lfcgug letters to their relatives requesting them to forward money. If the unfortunate man hesitates to iccede to this ' demand, the warders, issisted by some oC the" oldest prisoners for It appears that inmates of more than twenty years' residence lave accorded them certain privileges take the man in hand during the aight. The hands of the prisoners are fastened by a rope, and the other end )f the rope is then passed through a ring which hangs from the roof of the ward. The warders then hoist the unhappy wretch, who is left hauging In midair by the hands. Should he attempt to ry out his mouth and throat are fillet" vith ashes. When the breath has almost left his body and be is choking he is lowered, and under the terror of re: lewal of this torture he Is eager to ;roitee almost auytElng. Many die under this ordeal. But a t is assumed aning the mandarins .hat TDita4!ty- must be high and as mo Bctal probing is" ever dreamed of a ;oneral statement as to natural death is sufficient. '

The Cashless Engagement. "I hope you won't insist upon a long engagement, dearest," he said tenderly. "No. sweetheart, I won't. You have not money enough to make one enjoyable." she answered practically. Life. The charity that hastens to proclaim Its good deeds ceases to be charity and Is only pride and ostentation. Ilutton. CONSTIPATION, I For constipation there is nothing quite so nice as Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They always produce a pleasant movement of the bowels without any disagreeable effeet. Price 25 cents. Samples free, A. G. Luken & Co.

NOTED WOMAN DECLARES AGAINST SUFFRAGE.

Miss PLpebe Couzics, who once lead the fight fir Women Suffrage and who was the first woman to be a United States marshal, recently made the amazing declaration that equal suffrage and prohibition are failures. In the picture at the left is shown Miss Couzins from a photograph taken .in ,1S71 .when she was t wenty-cne years of age and in the -ael.at jJxelxit2MissCauzlnaisB:liown as;he now appears. . .

RO QU EFORT" CH EESE. How the Green Mold and the Flavor Aro Produced. A cheese expert has the following to say about Roquefort cheese: "To make Roquefort cheese we must have the proper raw material sheep's milk. Of course we have sheep in America, but show me a Yankee farmer who would go to the trouble of milking sheep! It is even too much for him to milk cows, and it Is the standard lamentation of all our farmer? that the boys, even if they stay on the farm, do not want to do any milking. Before they do such kind of work they would rather go to a business school or a college where they study agriculture, chemistry, etc. "How is Roquefort cheese cured 1 The maid In the cheese is produced by moldy breadcrumbs which are ground to a green dust and mixed in the cheese curd. The country around Roquefort is very rocky. The limestone rocks are full of crevices and caves, which draw in the warm air la summer, give it out in winter, and vice versa. "These caves have been provided by nature and improved by cellars that have been built in such a way that these natural currents of warm and cold air pass through them, where Roquefort cheese is cured. This Is the way that Roquefort cheese is ripened and gets Its peculiar flavor and character. It is all very well for the scientists to study the chemical process which the cheese is undergoing, but tc produce this process In an artificial way is another question. Nature is the best chemist. "The manufacture of Roquefort cheese has been tried in America, bci the manufacturers did not make much of a success. Nobody manufactures Roquefort in America at present. We know of one manufacturer who tried tc make Roquefort cheese of goats milk. He boasted especially that he would use only the milk of 'imported goat3. Just think of the idea! Imported goats grazing on American pastures were expected to give better flavored milk than domestic goats. It Is the clhrate, the special soil, atmospheric Influences, etc., which produce the fine fragrant grass. The milk of the cows or goat or sheep Is naturally the product of the grass they are eating, the watei they are drinking, and neither this not the climate nor the country can be im ported to America only the product which the climate or country produces That is why neither the Americar Camembert nor Roquefort ever has tht

flavor or fragrance of the imported nr tide in spite of all the imported goalf or Imported cattle or even of Imported microbes." Chicago Record-nerald. " ' Adam and Methuselah". -' A faithful student of Genesis for many years insists that Adam's age was not 930 years, but 930 moons, and. counting thirteen moons to the year, he died at a little over seventy-oi;? years. By the same calculation Methu selah (9G9) was only seventy-four "Otherwise," says the sage, "thev would have required eighteen or twer ty sets of teeth during their lifetime. New York r"" THE DOCTOR AWAY FROM HOME WHEN MOST NEEDED. People are often very much disappointed to find that their family physician is away from home when they most need his services. Diseases like cramp colic and cholera morbus require prompt treatment, and have in many instances proven fatal before medicine could be procured or a physician summoned. The right way is to keep at hand a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. No physician can prescribe a better medicine for these diseases. By having it in the house you escape much pain and suffering and all risk. Buy it now; it may save life. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co.

4ih of July Picnic Specials !

Paper Picnic Plates Boiled Ham Paper Jap Napkins Bulk Queen Olives Swiss Cheese Dill Pickles Bottled Ginger Ale Bottled Root Beer Dried Beef in Glass Sardines (all kinds) Olives Almonds (stuffed)

Underwood Deviled Ham (for sandwiches) JOHN M. EGGEMEYER 4th AND MAIN STREETS.

Wc Want You to Know

That your account will be welcome at

DICKINSON TRUST CODon't worry about the size of It. We extend the same welcome to all. $1.00 starts an account. Three per cent, compound Interest.

New J)(BW(Bf'yy We have just received an entirely new line of necklaces, Combs, r brooches, hat pins, scarf pins, waist pins, belt buckles, belt pins and fobs. You are invited to call and examine them as the designs are so new and varied they are hard to describe . It Is al ways a Pleasure to show goods. Chas. Hm Honor, Tho Jcwclor, . 81 0 r.l Din Street. OPTICAL WORK A SPECIALTY

s All Day Wednesday and Until Ten OVloclt at EJigHt. For we are closed Thursday and will deliver your goods, bought Wednesday until midnight if-necessary. Remember a Big Day and Double Stamps Wednesday. Come in Tuesday evening and leave your order. Canning time Is here and we have everything you-need. Best Star Tin Cans at 35c a dozen, 3 doz. for . $fc00 Standard Quart Jars, per dozen ----- 40c Mason Quart Jars, per dozen 45c 17 lbs. Granulated, 18 lbs. A or 19 lbs. Extra C. Sugar for $1 1 gal. Milk Pans, each 5c Best Square Crackers and Ginger Snaps, per pound 5c Hood's Fancy Blend Coffee and 23 Stamps for 25c S. & H. Stamps. .

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

n. THE BEE HIVE Jli PICNIC Ea -ed Ham Baked Tenderlof Swiss Cheese. . Cream Cheese Royal Lunch Cheese Salmon (Fancy Red Imported Sardines Mustard Sardines Table Mustard Sour Pickles Sweet Pickles Mixed Pickles C. & B. Chow Chor Can Lobster Can Shrimp Plain and Stuffed Olives Dill Pickles Lunch Tongis Deviled Ham Potted Ham Chicken Loaf Potted Chicken Tainall'is India Relish

Give us your order early and get the best. Store closed all day the 4th ot July.

Phones: 139-238

Wafers (all kinds) Wood Picnic Plates Baked Tenderloin Saratoga Chips Bulk Stuffed Olives Brick Cheese Midget Pickles Bottled SarsaparllU Brook Trout . Figs and Dates Salmon (steaks). Piccalili Pretzel Is

'1 TOE BEE DIVE SUPPLIES Cooked Corned BeeC "Kippered Herring. Broiled Mackerel Cin. Tomato Sauce - ' Baked Beans (plain and tomato sauce.) Grape Juice Lime Juice Imp. Ginger Alt Duffy's Cider Shelled Walnuts Shelled Almonds Nuts of all kind Yv'afers Nic Nacs Cracker3 Peanut Butter, 10, 13, 23c Salted Peanuts, 20c per lb. , Picnic Plates. - U-All-No After Dinner Mints. Bananas, Oranges. Strawberries, Raspberries Dew Berries. Nutmeg Melon and Water Melons.

THue Bee Mive