Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 188, 4 August 1907 — Page 7
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, AUGUST 4, 1907, Ex-Cass County Residents Will Begin to Journey to Old Home Today. ONE TOUCH of ODORLESS ANTISEPTIC EVERSWEET And all odors from the body are dispelled 25 CENTS. Quigley Drug Store Paid Up Capital and Surplus make up the financial strength. Careful, Conservative Management make up the moral strength. Dickinson Trust Co. has the FINANCIAL and MORAL STRENGTH. LET US HANDLE YOUR BUSINESS. ; : 1 "'M f - $1.00 $3.00 $10 R. W. HALL WHY PAY MORE? 1 f i V s& A
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7T& "OLD JSZUzfe Wgf" Logansport, Ind., Aug. ,'. Preparations on a scale unusual for Logansport
.have been In progress for months here i-i anticipation of "old home week," v.-hen Cass county people will come from all over the country to attend the reunion, which began today and continue? until Aug. Kt. The week's festivities close with a monster picnic at Spencer park. The entire week will he a series of reunions neighborhood picnics and fall festival celebrations. Hundreds of people who vere born or have lived In Logansport or Cass county are "coming home," according to V. S. Wright, secretary and organizer of the Cass County Historical society, which has charge of the week's observance. Wright has scores of letters telling of people as far away as L03 Angeles. Cal.. El Fason, Tex., and Portland, Me., who are preparing to return to Logansport then some of them for the first time since they left Indiana. At the formal . observance of "old home week," in Spencer Park, Aug. lO, the Rev. John C. White will deliver the invocation. Rufus Magee, former minister-, tQ Norway and Sweden; Con gressnian Charles B. Landis of Delphi, Judge Kenesaw M. Landis of Chicago,
and Gabriel Godfroy, surviving chief of the Miami Indians, will deliver addresses. There will be an abundance of music by bands and glee corps. Some of it will be real music, and some will be the efforts of former bands, orchestras and quartets that haven't practiced together for many years since their members scattered to all quarters Df the nation. An effort is being made to get James Whitcomb Riley as Dne of the features of the celebration.
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City and County
ST AT I ST XS.
Real Estate Transfers. John W. Morgan to Laura Bertsch, part of lot 7G original plat of Centerville; $1,600. Walter Commons, executor, to Louisa Hill, part lot 41, original plat of Centerville; $3S3. - John W. Cooper to Jesse Goodlin, part of southeast quarter of section 2S, township 15, range 1 In Franklin township; $1,000. ... Addison B. Moody to Bertha E. Brown, part lots C3, 64 and "65, Grand Boulevard addition; $2,000.Albert R. Lamb to John W. Rethmeyer, lot 91 in Haynes addition to City of Richmond; $700. George W.,Riche to Tennie G. Riche part of northwest quarter of section 27, township 16, range 12, in Jackeon township; $1. Deaths and Funerals. ""FOSNOT The Infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Fosnot died at the home of his parents, 311 South West Second street, Saturday afternoon. The funeral will be from the home Monday afternoon t two o'clock. The interment will be In Earlham cemetery. Rev. E. G. Howard of the First English Lutheran chnrch will officiate. Friends may call any time.
D. C. GENN'S NEW POSITION. . D. C. Genn. former street -commissioner, has taken a position as yard superintendent with the Mather Bros, company.
WILL BUILD FREIGHT CARS.
A Company Is Formed at St. Thomas, Ontario.
St. Thomas, Ont., Aug; 3. A company has been organized here with ii capital of $400,000. to manufacture freight cars, the output to be five standard cars a day, and that city will pe asked to grant a $30,000 bonus and a fixed rate of taxation for 10 years.
NO CHANGE WAS MADE. No change in real estate assessments in Wayne county was made by the State tax board. The county officials are well pleased with the result of their presentation to the taxing body in which, they argued against an Increase.
BELONG ARRAIGNED BY CATHOLIC PAPER
Columbian Record Publishes Article in Reference to The Lecturer.
NOW AT NEW PARIS, OHIO.
DELONG IS GIVING A SERIES OF ADDRESSES ON "ROMANISM," IN WHICH HE AT CKS THE CHURCH.
IS CHARGED WITH PROVOKE. Joe Burrell, colored, was arrested by Officer Lambertson Sunday afternoon at Fourteenth and North F streets for provoke. The charges are preferred by another colored man. WILL ABANDON A PLANT.
Machinery at Niles, Ohio, Scrapped.
Will Be
. Niles, O., Aug. 3. The American Sheet and Tin Tlate company, has decided to abandon its four-mill Falcon tin plate plant at this place and Ihe greater part of the machinery will Lie scrapped.
Rev. F. F. DeLong is engaged In de livering a series of lectures at New Paris, O., on "Romanism," his subjects being: "Why I Refused to iBecome a Catholic Priest"; "Purgatory"; "The Nunnery"; "The Secret Confessional." In speaking of Mr. DeLong the Catholic Columbian Record, published at Indianapolis, says: The Rev. John Noll recently gave two" interesting lectures to the nonCatholics of Rome City and La Grange, Ind. The lectures were intended to counteract the influence of certain slanderous tirades, that a few weeks previously had been served up to the people of the above places, against the Catholic Church in general and her priests and Sisters in particular. In his Rome City lecture, Father Noll gave considerable attention to the history of some of the Church haters,, who had recently appeared in neighboring places. The recitation was rather unsavory; but being founded, on first hand evidence, it was quite enough to convince his hearers. The lecturer then exploded some of the stale slanders, that had been served up here and at Wolcottville by one DeLong, now in the service of the Baptist communities of these places. DeLong was in the audience; and when "Father Noll' graciously allowed the floor to any one who desired to make any remarks, he arose, not to defend any of his own slanderous utterances, but to bolster up the tottering characters of his confreres in villainy. In this scene of the performance DeLong demonstrated that, whether he is densely ignorant or profoundly malicious, he is certainly brazen-faced. As fast as he "made his statements in defense of Delaney and Williams they were proven false by Father Noll or by Father Quinlan, who was in the audience and gave some of his personal experiences with the falsifiers in refutation of DeLong. But the impudence of the latter finally became so great, that the audience sickened of it, walked out of the hall. At LaGrange. Father Noll confined himself to the explanation of the church doctrine on points of belief that have always been stumbling blocks to our separated brethren, such as purgatory, confession. Catholics and the bible, celibacy of the clergy and of sisterhoods. As his time was limited he did not extend any invitation to the audience to ask questions. However, DeLong, who had come down, had Impudence enough to make an attempt uninvited to have his say, just as the meeting was breaking up. Father Noll had. in the course of his lecture, but once referred to the infamous his
tory of Delaney, among other things stating, that he had letters to show that said Delaney had absconded with the funds of a certain Baptist community. This DeLong denied and challenged proof. Before Father Noll could produce his evidence, however, a gentleman in the audience produced a letter saying: "I have the evidence right here, a letter from his own minister, proving Delaney a pilferer." That satisfied the audience and they dispersed.
CALLED TO WASHINGTON CITY. W. J. Phillips, the "bug man" has been called to his home at Washington, D. C. by the serious if not fatal illness of his father. In hi3 absence Mr. Kelley of the department of entomology at Washington is conducting his experiments.
TWO CHEERFUL LIARS.
A Queer Cherry Trcs end a Back Action Cannon Call. Mr. Finlayson, town clerk of Stirling In the hitter pnrt of the seventeenth century, was noted for the marvelous in convcrstttlou. lie was on a visit to the Earl of Moutcich and Airth in his castle of Taha, on the loch of Mouteith, and was about taking leave when he was aske.l by the earl whether he had seen the sailing cherry tree. "No," said Finlayson. "What sort of a thing is It?" "It is," replied the earl, "a tree that ha3 grown out of a goose's mouth froiu a stone the bird hr.d swallowed and which she boars about with her in voyages round the loch. It is just a; present in full fruit of the most exqui site flavor. Now. Finlayson." he add ed, "can j-ou, with all your powers oi memory ami fancy, match the story of the cherry tree?" "Perhaps I can," said Finlayson clearing his throat, adding, "When Uli ver Cromwell was at Aith one of tlu cannon sent a ball to Stirling sn lodged It in the mouth of a trumpc which one of the tr;-.ss in the casth was in the act of sounding." "Was the trumpeter kii.'ed?" said tlu earl. "No, my lord." said Finlayson. "II blew the ball back and killed 'the' artil leryman who had ft red it!" Pearson'; Weekly.
MS
OF BATTLE
SHIPS ISJOESTIOH Action by Congress Will Be Asked by United States Navy Department. SKATES HAVE BEEN USED.
FOR SOME REASON, NOT BEEN FULLY THERE IS A AGAINST UTAH. -
THAT HAS EXPLAINED, PREJUDICE
ALEXANDRIAN LIBRARY.
The
Greatest Literary Treasure Tha
tho World Hcs Lost. Ferhaps tLe largest and .most valu able of literary treasures the work has lost was the Alexandrian library This collection, the most reiaarkaba of the ancient v.o;-kl. is said to havt contained in its tniKt flourishing perio; 4X),000 or, according to others, 700, 000 manuscripts. its royal founde. collected from all nations their choic est compositions. We are told that oni of hU successors went so far as to rc fuse to supply the Athenians "wit" wheat until they had given him th original manuscripts cf Tlschylu Sophocles and Euripides. When Jt llus Caesar laid siego to the city Vc greater portion of ihU library was d ttroyed by fire. It wes later replace by the collection presented to Quet Cleopatra by Mark Antony. But t was not destined to endure Ion: When the Emperor Theodosius th Great in C91 A. D. ordered the destru tion of all heathen teaipies within tt Roman empire, the Christians, led I the Archbishop Theophilus. did nc spare that of Jupiter, In which wer kept the literary treasures. From thi general destruction about 4,000 manu scripts escaped, only tV be burned I: G40 by Saracens under th Calipl. Omar. Arsqaaoju
Washington, Aug. 3. The nary department now plans to ask Congress to legislate at the next session on the question of names for battleships hereafter authorized and constructed. Existing law provides that battleships shall be named after states of the Union. It so happens that with one exception these names have been exhausted. That exception is Utah, and for some reason or other, not fully explained at the navy deartment, there is a prejudice against giving the name of Utah to a battleship. It is not a fact that there are as many battleships as there are states in the union. Long before legislation specifically required battlehips to be called after the various commonwealths the names of many of them were selected for ships of other classes. Some of the cruisers and monitors are so named. There has been some talk of a recommendation to congress authorizing the renaming of these minor vessels and reserving the
names of states for the battleships of
the future. But because of confusion which would Inevitably result from the renaming of naval vessels, the officials . of . the navy department are just now at a loss how to proceed. One of the new 20,XXVton battleships has already been called the Delaware. The name of the remaining one is yet to be selected. It could be Utah, or perhaps even Oklahoma may soon be available.
St. Peter-le-Poor, an ugly Georgian
church In London, nas finally suc
cumbed to the ecclesiastical commiS'
sioners and has been advertised for sale, the site being desirable because of
its close proximity to the bank and stock exchange.
During the match at St Andrew's,
Scotland, a rustic was struck in the eye
accidentally by a golf ball. Runnin
up to his assailant, he yelled: "This'll cost ye five pounds five pounds V "But I called out 'fore' as loudly as I could," explained the golfer. "Did ye, sir?'' replied the troubled one. much appeased. "Weel, I dina hear; I'll take
fower."
The London Statist says that the total value of exports of Australasia In the period from 1W to 1J10, Inclusive, apart from any further expansion after the end of 1907, will amount to about
$1,873,000,000, or. If no drought, probably more than $2,000,OOO.OOt in con
trast to only $STiG.fNV.O00 in the five
years from 1S-S5 to ISOO, a growth In
only twenty years of from 1D0 to ISO
per cent -
I DR.W.J.SmiTH
1I03 Main Street, Ground Floor
.. DENTIST..
Tills Institution Pays three per cent Interest on savings deposits; collects Bonds, Rents, Mortgages, Interest, Dividends, Coupons, or other class of income; it pays taxes and insurance, and will care for and manage estates; it will act as Administrator, Executor, Guardian, Agent, Assignee or Trustee. Your financial business solicited Richmond Trust Co. E. G. llibberd. Pres. r Adam II. Bartel, 1st V.Prea, John J. Harrington 2d V.Pres. W. K. Henley, Sec. & Treas.
Here is something that you need RICHMOND EXPORT
Read wll and then you will come to the conclusion that the eminent physicians who declare that coffee is a form of clow 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. Mi nek Brewing Co.
3 Phones 190-298
V
h 3 Phones
190-298
ALL THE GOOD THINGS AT OUR STORE
Dressed Young Ducks, Dressed Chickens. Monte Cristo Melons, Red, Ripe and Juicy Sweet Nutmeg Melons. Home Grown Sweet Corn, Vegetables of All Kinds ' Bananas, Oranges, Plums, Peaches, Berries. Fancy Apples to cook or eat. Home Grown Tomatoes. Swiss Cheese, Brick Cheese, Royal Luncheon Cheese, N. Y. Cream Cheese. Dr. Johnson's Educator Crackers, Educator Wafers, Educator Toasteretts. Lime Juice, Grape Juice, Ginger Ale. Baked Ham, Baked Tenderloin, Chipped dv. Cream to Whip. Give us your orders if you want the best.
YOU MAY SCOUR THE TOWN and you'll not find an establishment whose facilities or abilities approach ours In the cleaning, pressing, and dyeing of ladles' and men's outer garments. Our methods are the result of long and careful study and experiment, that enable us to guarantee fast colors and perfect work without a cent of excess cost
1024 Main St
Richmond Dry Cleaning Co.
Both Phones Home 1581, Old 412.
4 Doors East of Westcott Hotel.
Did you read last night's ad? Read it again then come in and see the demonstration. PILGRIM BROS. 5th and Main, Richmond, Ind.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
THE COST OF COAL depends on the satisfaction It gives not only on the price per ton on your bill. If you order this kind of fuel from us you get the honest amount of heat units the life-giving properties of the coal with the smallest percentage of ash and other unburnable materials. We are looking for your order. O. D. Bullerdlck
529 S. 5th St
Pbsse 1235
mm
FROM GROUND UP FOR A MOUSE Hardware, Glass. Paints, Roofing, Plumbing Material, Electric Wiring and Fixtures, Etc TJue Largest! SnnppHy Moiinse
