Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 207, 27 August 1907 — Page 4

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the RxcnraroxT palladium axd stt?t-teIiEgram, Tuesday, august 27, 1907.

RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM.

Palladium Printing Co., Publisher. Office North 9th and A Street. RICHMOND, INDIANA. PRICE Per Copy, Daily.... , 2c Per Couy, Sunday 3e Per Veek, Daily and Sunday 10c IN ADVANCE One Year $5.00 Entered at Richmond, Ind., Postoffice As Second Class Mall Matter. RAILROAD NEWS. NEW EQUIPMENT COMING. THE C, C. & L. WILL IMPROVE ITS SERVICE GENERALLY. The Road Is Admirably Adapted for Local Traffic But Also Does a Good Through Business. It. Is understood locally that the C, C. & It. will soon add new equipment for many of its trains, on the northern and southern divisions of the road, to still further attract patron age. The road now has eighty-eight stations between Cincinnati and Chi cago and is admirably adapted for lo cal traffic. The road, is also doing a good through business between CIn clnnati and Chicago. . SIGNS TO DISAPPEAR. The poster and sign . bedecked freight cars will be things of the past after September 1, according to the statements of a local railroad man. After that date the placing of signs on freight cars will be absolutely prohibited. Shippers will consequently be lacking for this means of advertising, nut the cars will look much better without the gaudy signs. The exact reason for the ruling of the railroads in regard to placing signs on freight cars is not known. The ruling is general. RAISING A PROTEST. Shippers all over the country are standing against the proposed enlargement of freight cars, such as i3 promoted by the railroad companies that there will be no danger of freight congestion during the next few year? to come. The general enlargement of cars could not be made the coming winter or the next. Chicago shippers are said to be determined to enter a big protest against the increasing in size of freight equipment and power, arguing that this increase means .n delay to goods in transit. It is also argued that the big freight cars and enormous engines will not hurt the big shippers, but will make it almost impossible for the small dealer to continue in business. So great has becrie the craze for larger equipment tiat a large per cent of the smaller 'cars have been "scrapped," and now the small shipper is confronted with a big car and a big minimum weight. A good deal of this anxiety on the part of the small shipper Is borrowed. The big engines, such as just completed by the Erie and Pennsylvania, are intended solely as pushers to heTp heavy trains over steep grades. DONT BELIEVE IT. A railroad official said, "It seems difficult to persuade people that there Is a law in Ohio and Indiana against Issuing railway passes. There are still many people who think they are entitled to free transportation upon the railroad." One prominent railroad man states that he pays out of his own pocket from $500 to $600 a month to bny tickets over his own road, disliking to turn away applicants for passes. ROADS GETTING READY. Fortunately for the striking telegraphers several of the strong Ifnes are already anticipating the changes to go into effect March 1, 190S, and are employing good men who apply for positions, as on most railways the change will entail an increased force of operators. These men, however, will have to take the places under the seniority rule of the Order of Railway Telegraphers, which prevails on several of the Important lines of the country. HAD PARALYTIC STROKE. Mrs. Thomas Barrett Is In a Critical Condition. New Paris. O., Aug. 27. Mrs. Thomas Barrett living west of town suffered a stroke of paralysis Saturday night. She is in a very serious condition. MUSICIANS FAILED TO APPEAR. Abington, Ind., Aug. 27. The dance Saturday night was well attended but the musicians failed to arrive, greatly to the disappointment of the guests. A SHOWER FOR MISS HALE. Milton, Ind., Aug. 27. Mesdames Dayton Warren and .Alice Gresh have issued invitations for a shower Wednesday afternoon at the home of the former In honor of the bride-elect, Miss Blanche Hale. . SUFFERING FROM BROKEN ARM. Abington, Ind., Aug. 27. Albert Cunningham who has been suffering from a broken arm the past week is Improving.

Veterans of Many

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CALVERT I VZrfJ, , J300VC J VI LLP Martinsville, Ind., Aug. 27. Plans are now complete for the annual meet ing of the veteran soldiers and sailors of the White River Valley Association and everything indicates that this will be one of the most successful meetings in recent years. There are almost 300 members of the association, and most of them are expected to attend. The White River Valley Association was organized by Henry B. Taylor of Mooresville and W. II. Dryden of this citv. and it is unique among the vet erans' organization.- of 'the state. Its purpose is to afford a reunion for vetomn in the state who otherwise wnuld have no reunions. The mem bers of the White River Valley Assofiatnn. most of them at least, are those who fought with regiments from other states, and who do not have the opportunity to meet with their old regiments. LANOIS WILUE HEARD Judge of Standard Oil Fame in Preble County. Eaton, O., Aug. 27. Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, who recently came to the front of the public stage by Impos ing a heavy fine on the Standard Oil trust, will come to Preble county on the 10th day of September and speak to the soldiers of the 35th O. V. I., at their forty-third reunion. The day is soon coming, according to Sir Caspar Purdon Clarke, when the richest shoppers of Paris will ask for the brocades of Patterson, N. J. STRUCK BY SCOOP SHOVEL. Edmund Dare Severely Injured in New Lisbon Elevator. New Lisbon, Ind., Aug. 27 Edmund Dare was severely Injured Monday while working at the elevator by a large scoop-shovel falling on his back. ALL TEACHERS WERE PRESENT. Eaton, O., Aug. 27 Out of a total enrollment of teachers for Preble county of 181, that number were present at the opening session of the an nual institute, which, commenced here Monday. GOOD WEATHER IS NEEDED. Abington, Rid., Au. 27 A few more days of good weather would allow the completion of threshing as it Is nearly finished. DEPAUW STUDENT PREACHED. Economy, Ind., Aug. 27 Morris Ballenger, another DePauw student from here, studying for the ministry, filled the Rev. Singer's place in the M. E. church, Sunday morning. CEMETERY ASSOCIATION MEETS. Centerville, Ind., Aug. 27 The Woman's cemetery association will meet at the rooms of the Civic club on Friday afternoon. JOHN SNIDER IS IMPROVING. Abington, Ind., Aug. 27 John Sni der, who has been very ill, is slowly improving. SCHOOLS OPEN SEPTEMBER 8. Milton, Ind., Aug. 27 The Milton schools will begin September 8. WHAT IT IS Composition of the Famous Food. A wide spread Interest has been created among good livers, as to the composition of Grape-Nuts, the food that has become popular and famous the world over. It has long been known to physicians, chemists and food experts, that the starchy portion of entire wheat and barley flours is transformed into a true and very choice sugar, by the act of Intestinal digestion in the human body. This sugar is identical with, and is known as grape-sugar, and it is in condition for immediate transformation into blood and the necessary structure from which the delicate nerve centres are built up. A food expert followed a line of experiments until he produced the food called Grape-Nuts, of which grapesugar forms the principal part, and it is produced by following Nature's processes, in a mechanical way. That is, heat, moisture and time are the methods employed and directed by scientific facts gained in research. Grape-Nuts food is probably entitled to the claim of being the most perfectly adapted food for human needs in existence. Certain it is that the user's delight in the flavour and the perfect action of intestinal digestion during the use of Grape-Nuts is satisfying, and the added strength of body confirms the fact, "There's a Reason." Read "The Road to Wellviile," in pkgs.

Regiments Will Meet at Martinsville.

Nervous Women Suller No More Silently and Alone You Bear With Pa tience, Burdens That Would Crush Strong Men. In this country today there are thousands of women whose days are filled with constant suffering. There is the dull headache, the dragging backache, the hot flushes, that awful tired feeling, too sick and faint to work, too well to go to bed. Men have little knowledge of the suffering their women go tnrougn aay aiier aay. Many times such illness is attributed to biliousness or the after effect of a cold when it is really a derangement of the nervous system, caused by weakness or disease of the genital organs. It seems a shame that women should suffer so when there is a safe, harmless remedy that will restore to them the splendid health that makes perfect womanhood. , Zoa-Phora dispels nervous disorders of women because it regulates the menses, and relieves them of pain. It is wonderfully effective in the cure of prolapsus because it strengthens the muscles supporting the parts, and renews the nerve force. It removes and prevents Inflammation, congestion and unnatural discharge from the genital organs these diseases that sap the very life, destroy the tissues and finally shatter the nervous system. It is marvelous in its tonic effects and women who have been tired, listless, with headaches and backaches marring their every pleasure have in a single week been changed from suffer ing, morose, irritable beings to bright, happy, cheerful women who find pleasure in their household duties because they have a new and natural strength to perform them without fatigue, simply by use of the wonderful Zoa-Phora, oa-Phora has helped hundreds and thousands of women to health, strength, and the joy of living. The only way in which you may receive the same beneft Is to do as they did. Go to your druggist and procure a dollar bottle of Zoa-Phora. Being used at once according to plain directions found in the package. If any further information or private advice is desired, the Zoa-Phora company, Kalamazoo, Mich., will gladly answer all questions if you write them. Just ask the druggist for Zoa-Phora no other ex planation need be given and you will receive the medicine already prepared, compounded in just the right proportions, and put up in sealed, sterilized one dollar bottles. Will you act now while the opportunity Is before you? Chicago passengers using C. C. & L. trains land at 12th ' st. (Illinois Central) Station; most conveniently located. Remember this. 6-tf NATURE FAKE CONTROVERSY. Sabre-Tooth. Tiger, which has been drawn into the nature fake controversy. President Roosevelt said this anmal now extinct was the last that could possibly have reached the heart of a bull-moosel with a single bite as the Rev. Dr. Long Insists was done by the wolf that .figures In one of his nature stories which the President has announced as a nature fake..

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FLEET HIAWATHA.

A Cynical Critic's Cold Analysis of Longfellow's Description. Determine how fast, aska Professor Greenhill, Hiawatha can run from the following data: Strong of arm wai Hiawatha. He could shoot ten arrows upward, And the tenth had left the bowstring Ere the first to earth had fallen. Swift of foot waa Hiawatha. He could ehoot an arrow from him And run forward with such swiftness That tb arrow fell behind him. Neglecting the resistance of the air and granting that Ilia.watha could shoot one arrow a second, the solution Is as follows: The time of flight of the arrows shot upward must have been nine seconds. Therefore the velocity with which they were shot, being equal to the time multiplied into half the value of the constant of gravity, was 144 feet a second. Now, in shooting an arrow from him, Hiawatha, to obtain the farthest flight, would let fly at an angle of forty-five degrees, and by a simple trigonometrical calculation we therefore arrive at the fact that the horizontal velocity of the arrow would be rather less than 144 feet a second and would in fact be 102 feet a second, or seventy miles an hour. Hiawatha would therefore have to run faster than thl3. Could he do it on a sprint? Again having recourse to calculation, we find that an arrow shot at 144 feet a second would fly 216 yards, or nearly a furlong. Hiawatha wxuld run that distance in about seven seconds, so that he would be able to give the present holder of the record some 145 yards start. London Post. The Worm Eater. Even "worm holes" are no guarantee of extreme old age in furniture, as waa demonstrated some time ago in the lawcourts, when a woman came to excuse her husband's absence from the court on account of illness. "What i3 your husband?'' asked the Judge. "A worm eater, my lord," was the reply. 'A what?" asked the judge again. "I don't wonder he's too ill to attend." The woman then explained that her husband was so called not because he was addicted to this peculiar form of !iet, but because his trade was to drill tSese holes in new furniture to give it the appearance of antiquity. London Tatler. "Conspicuous by Absence." Tacitus, the great Roman historian, was the originator of tlr phrase, "Conspicuous by his absence," when, describing the funeral of Junia In his "Annales," he said the Images of her famous kinsmen, Brutus and Casslus, shone by their absence. Lord John Russell popularized the phrase In England in 1S59 by saying of Lord Derby's reform bill, "One provision Is conspicuous by its presence, another by its absence." Backhanded. Bess I don't like that Mr. Cutting. Jess That's unkind of you. I heard him say something awfully sweet about you yesterday. Bess Oh, did he ? What was It? Jess He said he Imagined you must have been perfectly charming as a girl. Cleveland Leader. Artful. "Why don't you try to make people give you their entire confidence?" "I'd rather have 'em suspect me Just a little." answered Senator Sorg'ruao. "Then if anything goes wrong thej ara not so surprised and resentful.' Washington Star. Compensation. Corkins I don't know how I do It, but I can always tell what time of day it Is without looking at a watch or clock. McStab To be sure. Nature always confers instinct upon creatures that lack the higher faculties. Chicago Tribune. The surest way to test a man's memory Is to lend him money. Detroit Free Prc-s. PRES. KELLY IN PENNSYLVANIA. President Kelly of Earlham College is at Johnstown, Pa., this week, delivering lectures before the teachers' j Institute. - '

Lyon's PERFECT Tooth Poivdor Cleanses, preserves and beautifies the teeth, and Purifies the breath A superior dentifrice for people of refinement Established in 1866 by HE GAINED KIS F0INT. To Do lt the Actor Spoiled the Play and Lost His Position. An American actress who had toured in England was teilin. her experiences and related an incident that amused her. Sbe Raid: "In a play produced ia the provinces there is a sce.ie in which the hero strikes the villain, who sHu!;s away without seeking to defend himself. One iilfrht in a larja manufacturing town the yoiuj.r; follow vrha plnjed the deep dyed aco'.mCrel roniarcd to the leading man l)?.'ore th :urtnin rose: say, old chr.; I've r-t ray fauee out in front tonight r.-Ith hr father and mother. No.., of co'trs! they don't know anything abo:t our li!"!nosj!, nnd I'm afraid It world rathor lmrt mr with them I" I receive 1 n Mow and gr,t away in th? usual cowardly farh'n:i So, dear old chap, can't you omit tinblow tonight?' "But. my boy. the management will fine me 2 sfiill'nrr-:' " 'Well. I'll pay the P.:c 44 'Ch, yes! Thot'3 nil very well for you. but what do I got out of ItNothir.g but a bad name with the powers that be.' "'Oh. well, I'll ive you 2 shillins;exrra, or. better j-ct. you hit me a usual, and I'll hit back! They'll fine me, not you. and I'll give you the 2 shillings besides. You see how I'm situated. I shouldn't like the girl to mix me up with the character I play. Outsiders .re so funny that way.' "So the compact was made, and that night when the hero cried, 'Sir Daniel Deep water' or something of that sort 'base offspring of a noble race, take that! Sir Daniel not only 'took that. but gave it back with such force that 'the pit In cheers rose at him, including his relatives to be by marriage, and he walked off the stage in triumph. "I am sorry to add he lost his situa tion, but he gained his point." An Odd Animal Community. Natural enemies of the nnimal world are sometimes found living together in extraordinary communities. J. G. Millais in a volume on animal3 quotes this experience of an observer: "On one occasion when ferreting I bolted a fox, a cat, a stoat and several rabbits and rats out of the same earth. The fox bolted first, after giving the ferret a nip across the back, from the effects of which it died nn hour later. Next came the stoat and then the cat. both of which I shot. Then followed the rabbits and rats promiscuously. It was a large burrow on the bank of a deep, dry watercourse and often held a fox when 1 ferreted it afterward." Talking Through a Human Body. To talk through a human body or a row of human bodies, for the matter of that, is one of the weirdest of the electrician's feats. If a telephone wire be severed and the two ends be held by a person, one in each hand, but far apart, it is quite possible for two individuals to carry on a conversation through the body of the medium a? readily and as distinctly as if the line had been St. Thomas Episcopal church in New York is about equally divided whether to expend $l,fM"M,00 on a new church or split the amount and give one-half of it to mission work, using the other half for a church.

PEOPLE WHO RECOMMEND CHAMBERLAIN'S COLIC, CHOLERA AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY

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MLS3 KATE LEVY. I am a sufferer from a weak stomach and when I become very weary, overheated or eat anything which does not readily digest, I have severe pains in the bowels and they become very loose. . I have used various remedies which I found gave relief, but they often npset my stomach so that I would vomit easily. Since I have used Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy I have found more benefit than I ever experienced before. One dose is enough to stop the pain or regulate the bowels, and I find that I am not troubled as often as I used to be. I therefore gladly indorse this remedy. Miss Kate Levy, Ysr S. Robertson St, New Orleans, Louisiana.

BELIEVES IT WOULD BE A BAD MISTAKE Local Railroad Operator Talks About the Telegraphers' Strike. ACTION FOR SYMPATHY.

IT IS CLAIMED THE MEN WORKING FOR THE PENNSYLVANIA HAVE VERY LITTLE REASON TO COMPLAIN. It is hardly probab'e. even though the telegraphers' strike should spread over the entire country among the commercial telegraphers, that the Brotherhood of Railroad Telegraphers will participate in it. Local railroad telegraphers are not by any means in sympathy with the agitation which i3 brewing In railroad telegraph circles, in favor of a universal strike in sympathy with the commercial companies operators. In speaking of the matter, a local operator said that he Is In no wiss In sympathy with the strike agitation, which, it is asserted, is gaining much headway in railway circles. He said that if the railroad operators struck it would be largely through tha efforts of men who are traveling over the country in the interest of the commercial operators, and whose particular business it is to stir up trouble in railroad circles. Local operators are said to be content with the hours and pay. Particularly is this true of the Pennsylvania which pays its operators more than any other road in this section of the country. The C, C. & L. operators here will hardly strike as their positions are not guaranteed. The operators along the C, C. & L. made an attempt to organize a union some time ago which was to have been swallowed by the B. R. T. but this attempt was unsuccessful in the main, owing to the large nvmber of telegraphers refusing to join, when the attempt was made to secure recognition. It is claimed that if the B. R. T. Issues a general strike order the C, C. & L. men will not participate. NOTICE TO RECEIVE BIDS FOR TRANSPORTING SCHOOL CHILDREN. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Trustee of Webster Township, Wayne Co., Ind., will receive bids to drive a hack transporting the children to and from school along the route from the Southwest corner of Patrick Flatley's farm south one-half mile thence there about, thence north to the Webster school house. All bids to be in the hands of the Trustee by 12 o'clock noon, Aug. 31, 1907. The right to reject any or all bids Is reserved. CIIAS. HARRIS, Trustee Webster Township. Most of the stone marbles used by boys are made in Germany. The refuse only of the marble and agate quarries is employed and is treated in such a way that there is practically no waste. Men and boys are employed to break the refuse stone Into email cubes, and with their hammers they acquire a remarkable dexterity. The little cubes are then thrown into a mill consisting of a grooved bedstone and a revolving runner. Water is fed to the mill and the runner Is rapidly revolved, while the friction does the rest. In half an hour the mill is stopped and a bushel or so of perfectly rounded marbles are taken out. The whole process costs a trifle. Philadelphia Record. EDWARD THOirrSOX. CHOLERA MORBUS CURED. Two years ago I was cured of a severe attack of cholera morbus by the use of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. My wife has ahio used it a number of times with the best results, and it cured our baby of cholera Infantum. I believe it saved the child's life. The attack waa a severe one, but this remedy overcame the difficulty. For the past year w hare never been without it in the house. Edward Thompson, 629 North Upper St Lexington, Ky. Pipe man Central Engine House, Lex ington Fire Department.

$7 00 Traverse City, To Petoskey and Mackinaw City $0 00 Mackinac vO. To Isand o. r. & i. as Saturday, Sep. 7 Tickets will be sold from all stations, Richmond to Fort Wayne inclusive, good to return until Sept. IS. For Excursion Fares, train schedules and other Information, see bills, arpl to G. R. & I. agents, or address, C. L. LOCKWOO, General Passenger Agent, Grand Rapids, Mich.

MISS HOWE AND MISS MAROT'S School for Girls 513 West First Street, Dayton, O. Reopens September 23, 1907. Resident and day pupils. Preparation for Eastern Colleges. Academic and Advanced Courses, Design. Pottery, Bookbinding, Metal Work, Voice Training. Piano. TOILEVS OF ANTS. Combs, Brushes, Spcngee and Soap Used In Making Them. "Ants have Cue and coarse combs, fponsre, hairbrushes and soap. They are remarkably clean." The speaker was a nature student. He bent over the artllicial ants nest, or formicary, that stood on bis table under glass. "Watch this lady making her toilet," he said. "She won't mind." The little black ant seemed to be carefully tying and untying knots in herself. The small black body twisted and turned. The tough little black limbs darted through the air. "That is her tine tooth comb she is using now," explained the student. "It Is atiixed to the tibia of the foreleg. It has a short handle, a slhT back and sixty-five fine teeth. Nothing can escape it. "Now she is spouglng her back. Yes, the tou?T:e is her sponge, the flat surface of the toutrue. The tongue's edges ore her brush. They are equipped with hemirhcrlral ber-jf hort, Miff. Muut bristle. f'r bt-r bribing: her left forele.!; with It. Doc3.'t It work admirably? "Now the Is cabbing the hairy underpin t her body with her coarse tomL. lt U fctf-urDel to tbe tarsus and has forty-five c;: a tec-lb, an excellent lr.stnimnt t'.r inojch work. "fc'Le i s !?!. hcr less a good oa bath no rv. :.t Cr-iwa thorn, you see, through her rusniiM, or upper Jaws. The n-ni.r'ih'.e! ju serrated, and they secrete a that Is qulfe like soapnndn. a ii'?rb toilet lotion which ciear.Jifs tho s'tln and makes the hair hrlH'niit and supple. "IJrufhr!, combs, toilet lotions, nonp and sponges nature has given them all to tr.e little black ant." New Orleans TImes-lJe-jum raL RHEUMATISM CURED IN A DAY. Myotic Cure for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically cures la 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the system Is remarkable and mysterious. It rerxiOXH at once the cause and tho disease immediately disappears. The first coats greatly benefits. 75 cents. Sold by A. Q. Luken A. Co.. Druegista. KoG-d&w A veritable soldier of fortune waa Gen. Francisco Sandoval, the report of whose death In Guatemala is confirmed. He fought In most of the countries in Central and South America and about fifteen years ago unsuccessfully endeavored to foment on the Texas border a revolution against President Diaz of Mexico. He died In porerty. VITJ. LUXLLA Wi R.V2TK. BAD ATTACK OF BOWEL COMPLAINT CURED. Last fall I had a bad attack of bowel complaint. My bowels kept running for over a week till I became bo weak I could not walk and could hardly stand. The stools were dark and mixed with blood. I took the doctor's medicine until the smell of it sickened me. My sister, who was visiting here, said she had used Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for bowel trouble, so I tried it, and found it all and more than I had expected. I would not have been without it for ten times its cost Mrs. Luella Warner, Secretary Ladies Auxiliary Brotherhood of Loco. "uiotive Trainmen, Selma, Ala-

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