Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 223, 14 September 1907 — Page 3

TIIE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND STJX-TELEGRA3I, SATURDAY, SEPTE3IBER 11, 1007.

PAGE THREE.

HEROISM OF MOTHER

SUPERIORAVES LIVES Children Get Safely Out of Burning Building. DONVENT WAS DAMAGED. New York. Sept. 14. The Catholic Eonvent of St. Agnus, on the Hudson Jtiver, was partially destroyed by fire larly this morning, while two hundred nd fifty children were asleep in the building. The heroism of the mother Superior and her assistants, avoided ""terribly casualty. Every child Inarched out of the building In two and pne-half minutes after the alarm. The lire was confined to the two floors. SAMUEL MITCHELL WAS OVERCOME AT THE FAIR. Aged Citizen of New Paris Was in a Serious Condition for Some Time. New Paris, O., Sept. 14. On Wednesday, Samuel Mitchell, an aged citizen was prostrated at the Preble , County fair and was brought home on the car by friends. He was In a very serious condition for Forae time and It was thought that he had suffered a Btroke of paralysis but later developments showed that it was due to weakness and nervous trouble. lie is better. MISS SARA COE MARRIED. Miss Sara E. Coe, daughter of Mr. And Mrs. J. M. Coe, was married to Mr. Fred L. King, also of Richmond, on July 5 at the home of Miss Coe's cousin, Miss Grace Wyman, in Carthage, Mo. Miss Coe left Richmond In June, ostensibly to spend the summer with her cousin, and the fact that the marriage took place was not known to family'or friends until with In the past week. ATTENTION F. 0. E. Yon are requested to meet at the Eagles hall this evening at 7:30 o'clock to attend the funeral service of C. O. Druley. By order of the president, John S. Ilandley and Frank Hartzler, Secy. JRADFORD PASSES THROUGH. President W. A. Bradford, of the Chicago, Cincinnati and Louisville, passed through Richmond Friday from Chicago to Cincinnati and will spend today at the Cincinnati offices of the company.

Wattcii For Site SHay all Home Dollar

Y0J ER'T 3fHE

MOVE AGAINST BLIND TIGER Pure Food Commissioner to Aid in Its

Prosecution. The State Laboratory of Hygiene, which is in the charge of H. E. Barn ard, pure food and drug commission er, Is takir; a hand in the work of enforcing the blind tiger act. passed at the last session of the general as sembly. LARGE ORDER FOR PIPE r Five Hundred Miles for the Texas Oil Field. Youngstown, O., Sept. 14. The Youngstown Sheet and Tube company Is now completing the largest order for wrought iron pipe ever let in the world. It is for five hundred miles of pipe for use in the oil fields of Texas. The cost will be three millions. SUITS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. Frank C. Geers has filed suit on mechanic's lien against Bonnilee G. Kelley and John H. Kelley; demand $1,000. Luther C. Young has filed suit against Elizabeth J. Kamp on note and to foreclose chattle mortgage, demand $150, SERVICES AT HAGERSTOWN. . Hagerstown, Ind., Sept. 14 Rev. E. G. Walk will fill his regular appointment at the Christian church Sunday, both morning and evening. Endeavor services will be held at 6:30 p. m. Topic, "God's Omniscience." Leader, Ralph Worl. GRAND TREASURER IS DEAD. Philadelphia. Sept. 14. Thomas R. Patton, grand treasurer of the grand lodge of Pennsylvania Masons is dead, aged eighty-three. GREEN APPOINTED GUARDIAN. John II. Green has been appointed guardian of Harry Creep, minor heir of the late Harmon Pitts, who resid ed near Fountain City. DEATH DUE TO TYPHOID. Lynn, Ind., Sept. 14. Mrs. Clyde Miller of near this place died at hej home Thursday at 2 a. m. of typhoid fever. She leaves a husband and four children. MISSIONARY SOCIETY MET. Fountain City, Ind. Sept. 14. The Home Missionary society met Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Frank Keever. The electric chair for executions is used only in the United States.

L LETTER WILL

BE ISSUED TO PUBLIC TO GIVE ENTERTAINMENT. The Board of Associated Charities Meets. A meeting of the board of associated charities was held Friday .afternoon, and the winter's work was discussed. This Is the first meeting that has been held since July and several bills were voted for payment. Arrangements were made for the issuance of the annual letter to the citizens of Richmond, soliciting money donations for the year's work. A report was made by the city missionary which detailed the extent of the work done. A large number of calls were made In the Interest of the sick and needy and homes were found for several children. The report of the department of instruction, showed that the cooking school and the sewing school were well attended. At the meeting in October plans will be made for the presenting of some form of entertainment, the proceeds to be devoted to the interests of the charities of the city. ANNUAL PICNIC IS HELD.' Radical United Brethren of Sugar Grove and Economy. Dublin, Ind., Sent. 14. The annual picnic of the Sugar Grove and Economy United Brethren (Radical) church wa3 held today. Ex-Bishop Floyd of Dublin, who is in charge of this circuit, desires to announce that he will preach his farewell sermons in his circuit as follows: Greensfork September 15, (morning); College Corner church September 15, (night); Sugar Grove, September 22, (morning); and Economy September 22, (afternoon.) Romarxaolo Visicn. An old woman who had been In th Infirmary with sore eyes told a neigh bor that the doctor took out her eyes and scraped them with lances. "Non sense, women," replied the other. "Ye shouldn't believe ntt ye bear. The doctors would only be stuffing ye." "Ob. but ye know it's no use saying that, for I awakened up out of the chloroform and saw both of my eyes lying ou the table!" His Clever Son. The Dad My son, I want to tell you that the secret of my success, as it must be of any man's, is hard work. I The Son Sh! Dad, I don't care to bear other people's secrets, and I am too much of a gentleman to take advantage of Information gained that vvay. Say no more. Cleveland Leader. An Insinuation Feared. Clergyman Madam, you must bo msoled with the thought that your husband is at rest. Widow Do you r.'ean that be didn't have any before s3 died? New York Press. All must respect thoe who respecr TH

QUALITY, VARIETY AND PRICE

PRINCE IS ASSASS1NATED Princess Was Wounded at the Same Time.

Tiflis, Russia, Sept. 14. Prince Chavadse of the council of the empire was assassinated in the Bushton district. The princess was wounded at the same time. THE ATTENDANCE WAS GOOD. Fountain City, Ind., Sept. 14. The W. C. T. U. convention held here last Tuesday had a good attendance in spite of the rainy weather. Dinner was served in Wiilard Hall. TWO ARE FATALLY BURNED. Beaver Falls, Pa., Sept. 14. Mrs. Juliette Soota and eighteen months old baby fatally burned in a gasoline explosion. PRINCE AUGUST DEAD. Carlsbad, Sept. 14. Prince August, of Coburg, died here today. i THE !!.... or UEA7H. Life Lines In Trisete's Street For Uct Whon the Bsra Bicvvs. That which was once Illyria is nor Dalmatia, or," rather, that part o Ulyria which reaches the Adriatic I Dalmatia, the half forgot tea country as the Austriacs called it when it fe! into their hands cot so mnny years ag It is one of the few tits of Eurnp that remain in a measure uuhackm ed. and it is still out of the ben to paths of the tourist, who himself is a most as much of a curiosity to th people as they are to him. There ar seasons, according to an article I Appleton's Magazine, when the bor blows, that wind of death, as th natives call it. which comes out of th blue with more than a suddenness v a tornado and shakes the earth and a' that is on the earth, rtinging. blindiiu choking. In the square of Trieste liflines are prominent features which th citizens must grasp when the bor clutches them, and they grope thoi way through the whiriing'dust and th promiscuous missiles flying in th. darkened air. But the bora goes it: quickly as it comes, and when it i gone the people simply excavate them selves out of the drift and think in more about the winged demon, which has left no trail whatever in the re stored serenity of the scoured sky. When you want a quick cure without any loss of time, and one that 13 followed by no bad results, use Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy It never fails and is pleasant to take. It is equally valuable for children. It is famous for its cures over a large part oi the civilized wor'il BUY

&H.

RUNNING UPSTAIRS.

?t Causes an Excessive and Injurious Strain on the System. Every one knows that the "ascent of a staircase is more fatiguing than ordiuiry walking. In walking progression is effected by a succession of lifts, inclinations and swings. In starting the Unly is lifted, for example, by the levers of the right foot and Is inelired forward. The left foot being then raised from the ground, the leg swings forward and is carried by its momentum beyond the right foot. The levers of the left foot now lift the body again, and the right leg swings forward, and so the body oscillates along on a pair of pendulums. Short pendulums vibrate more quickly than long ones, and therefore short legged people step quicker than long legged people, though with no more sense of exertion. In going upstairs the mechanism of progression is of course the same, but the lifting action, which is the real force consuming part of the process, is now greatly increased. Instead of being just sufficient to admit of the free swing of the pendulum foot it must be so great as to project the body up at each step a distance equal to the height of the stair. Running upstairs is thus an excessive strain upon the constitution, but where does this strain fall? The levers of motion are moved immediately by the muscles, but the muscles cannot act of themselves. Their contractions and relaxations take place only under stimulus. They are all connected by lines of force, called nerves, with the nervous centers, and these are the sources of muscular stimulation. Not that the nerve force of the brain is converted into the mechanical movement of progression, but nerve force Is constantly drawn upon to maintain the action of the muscles, and this draft Is always greatest where there Is a sense of exertion. When Ifodily vigor is high, the evil result of running upstairs may not be decidedly felt, but where there is debility of any of the processes this strain cannot fail to tell in some form or other with injurious effect. St. Louis Republic. SOME NEW YORK FIRSTS. The first schoolmaster was Adam Roelandson, appointed In 1C33. The f.rst graveyard was laid out In 1G33 on the west of what is now Broadway, above Morris street The first farm, called "the company's farm," was laid out in 1633. It extended from what is now Hudson to Wall street The first clergyman was Dominie Bogardus, for whom a church was built, in 1G33. This was the first real church building in New York. The first artist was Dirk Hermans, a Dutch officer, who made a sketch of New Amsterdam in 1035, which was afterward engraved in Holland. The first mode of public punishment was the whipping iost, set up in 1G35. Upon this offenders were hoisted by the waist and suspended for such length of time as their offense called for. New York Herald. When the World Was a Cube. .There was a time, centuries since, of course, when the learned men of the worM ---"- tnr-rt that the wor! '

DT KI H&SY P&YGXl

UNEQUALLED.

was u vVv'.y :it. but that it was a cube. The primitive geographers of Egypt. Assyria and China all taught that the world was a "square plnne," evidence of which may be fonnd on thousands of ancient monuments in the countries mentioned, as well as In their ancient manuscripts, upon their Inscribed tablets of clay and other early literary remains. One of the most curious discoveries ever made In Central America concerning Toltec beliefs, symbols, etc.. is that they also had a similar Idea concerning the form of what we now speak of as the "globe." A writer on the discoveries made among the monumental ruins of that country says, "They (meaning the Peruvian?, Toitecs and Quiches) believe the world to le a cube, suspended from the heavens by cords of gold fastened to each of Its corners."

The Aesthete. Occasionally the Fairlight drawing room supplied a specimen of the aesthete as Du Maurior was then drawing him in Punch. His dres wan a complete suit jf black velvet and salmon colored stockings. He Joined the shooting party, but be generally fell down when the gun went off That, however, did not prevent his charming the Ijdies. "You do not lool well, Mr. Maudle," said one of thesn "Thanks; I am not ill. only tired. The fact Is I picked a primrose in the wood yesterdaj-. It semcd sick, and I have been sitting up all night with It." From M. Escott's "Country-Houses." Birds' Nst Candy. An American resident of Shanghai sent home recently an advertisement of birds nest candy printed' tn Eeglish by the manufacturers. The odd screed ran like this: The Candy of -the Birds Nest Our Candy is prepared of Birds nest which was famous in all the countries. We made it used with Engines to take the dirty away and then put It lute Sugar; there is a great of sweetness, fragrance and whiteness. Every oC and young one ouijLt'to eat, for It can strong. Exchange. Cheers and Cain. "Your speech elicited great op plause," said the friend. "Yes," answered Senator Sorghum. "It's remarkable to see how easy it I? to elicit three cheers from a, man who wouldn't give S3 to the campaign fund."-'7-' " " A Nice Little Hint. First Lieutenant How do you like the horse you bought from me last week? Second Lieutenant Very much. He might hold his head a little higher, though. First Lieutenant Oh, that will come all right when be Is paid for. London Tit-Hits. Soothing. "Are you hurt, John?" Yes, dear, I am afraid three or four of my ribs are broken." "Well, don't feel bad; It doesn't show." Houston Post. Observe the face of the wife to know the husband's character. Spanish ProverS The Sultan of Turkey has a wonderful collection of animals, which he keeps on an island at Ylldiz. They In clude 6tags, roedeer, gazelles, rare goats and sheep, and birds of every kind. A special kiosk is given up to dogs, and there is a special cat house.

' PL o 1 w V Yt BET BLAST aj

PenninisylvaEna

LINESExcursion to Eaton. SOc round trip from Richmond, Special train leaves 1 p. m., Sept. 12th and 13th. Jamestown Exposition Daily excursions to Norfolk Tour of Eaat with Stop-overs Pittsburgh New York Harrisburg Boston Baltimore Philadelphia Washington Richmond and other points Go One Route Return Another. Through sleeper to Norfolk, via Columbus and Norfolk & Western Il'y. leaves every day at 4:55 p. m. Indiana Day at tho Exposition is Oct. llth. Northwest West; Southwest SPECIAL. REDUCED PARES For Particulars Call on C. W. ELMER. Ticket Agent The town of Orson, Sweden, is without taxes. The necessary revenues are derived from forest reservation. A Hawking and Spitting, Dropping Into ' the Throat, Foul Breath, THROUGH TIIE BLOOD by Botanlo Blood Balm, (B.B.B.) Is your breath foul? Is your voles, husky? Is your nose stopped? Do, you have frequent pains In the fore head? Dou you sneeze a great dealt Do you have pains across the eyes? Are you losing your sen so of smell ot taste? Is there a dropping in the throat? Do you hare a ringing In the ears? Is there a constant bad taste In the mouth? Do you have a hack lng cough? If so, you hare catarrh, t Catarrh la not only dangerous In this way, but It causes ulcerations, death and decay of bones, kills ambition, often causes loss ot appetite and reaches to general debility. Idiocy and Insanity. It needs attention at once. Cure It by taking Dotanic Blood Balm (13. B. B.) It is a quick, radical, permanent cure because It rids the system of the poison germ 8 that cause catarrh. Blood, Balm, (B. B. B.)' purifies the blood; does away with every symptom. Kit lng strenngth to the entire mucus membrane and B. B. B. sends a rich, tingling flow of warm, rich, pure blood direct to the paralyzed nerves giving warmth and strength Just where It Is needed, and In this way making a perfect, lasting cure of catarrh in all its forms. Botanio Blood Balm, B. B. B.) Il pleasant and safe to take. Composed of Pure Botanlo Ingredients. Sample sent free by writing Blood Balm CoAtlanta, Ga. Sold by druggists $1 per large bottla or sent by express. ' Sold In Richmond, Ind., by Alford Drug Co, Ninth and Main Sts. PA

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