Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 243, 8 October 1907 — Page 3

'THE RICn3IOND .PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1907

1AGE THREE.

WILL OPEN BATTLE

c. W. Stivers, Candidate tor Congress, Will Speak to Republicans of Richmond.

AT THE PYTHIAN TEMPLE.

HE IS ESPECIALLY ANXIOUS TO

MEET THE BUSINESS AND LA

BORING MEN TO EXPLAIN HIS VIEWS ON VITAL TOPICS.

C. W. Stivers, candidate for the republican nomination for congress in the Sixth district, will speak in behalf of his candidacy in Richmond, Monday, evening, October 14th, at the K. of P. temple. Stivers says he will speak in support of the principles and policies of the republican party, discussing the Issues sure to be involved in the contest of 1908 He will urge efficient party organization and loyalty to principle; uphold the policies of President Roosevelt uplifting standards of righteousness in the administration of the government. Specifically he will distafis the question of labor and capital, touching on socialism, immigration and law enforcement. Mr. Stivers desires to meet the business and laboring people of Richmond, especially those who vote the republican ticket. He expresses his unwavering loyalty to the principles of the republican party and to its chosen nominees.

If taken patiently and persistently will relieve the most obstinate cases of indigestion, constipation, bad blood, bad liver no matter how long standing. That's what Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will do. 35 cents, Tea or Tatflets. A. G. Luken & Co.

COUNCIL CLASHES

WITH

ADM

N1STHA

TION ON HOSPITAL

(Continued From Page One.)

spread a little oil on the troubled wat

ers by saying the hospital appropriation could be made at a later date but the argument waxed still warmer between Mayor Schillinger and Councilman Douker. Deuker again arose and

said: "It looks very much like the council vand the administration are bucking one another. It Is embarrassing for any councilman to step upon the floor of the council chamber and present a bill for an ordinance authorllzng an appropriation for the hospital, when the administration is bucking the institution in this manner. The hospital is just beginning to walk and needs our help now. Later on this will not be the case, in my judgment." Deuker here demanded of Schillinger what he knew of the cost of maintaining patients at the hospital. Schillinger said he did not know and repeat

ed his assertion as regards to the discrepency between prices of treatment to out of town and city patients. Roasts the Mayor. Here Deuker handed the mayor a lemon by saying, "The mayor by the virtue of his position should know. A. man who is no more public spirited than to look into an affair like that lives too close to the laws governing his office." Councilman Von Pein made the assertion that the hospital had to meet the rates of other such institutions at the present time and the city should do its share towards helping out the discrepancy, such as the last state legislature gave them a right to do, until the Institution is placed on a paying basis. Following this, the finance committee met and presented the ordinance which had previously been prepared by it, adding the clause to the budget of appropriations, granting Reid hospital the necessary appropriation, to be paid In four quarterly installments. The ordinance was read the second time, rules suspended and read the third time and placed on its passage, it passed without a dessenting voice, i According to the budget for 190S the tax levy was to have been $1.10 tor the year. The appropriation to Ihe hospital will raise the levy five and one-half cents. The city's expenses will, according to the budget, range about $199,000. The receipts bther than taxes says the estimate, Vill lower this to $146,595.82, which mount will have to be covered by the

Dfivlyon's

PERFECT Tf h Pewdteir Cleanses, preserves and beautifies the teeth, and n Purifies the breath A superior dentifrice for people of refinement Established in 1866 by

tax levy. The budget as prepared by

the finance committee, city controller

and others follows: Department of Finance.

Salary cf mayor $ 1..VK) Salaries of council men l.O.V) Salary of treasurer 1,7M

Salary of clerk 1,K0 Salary of controller 1,200 Salaries of sinking fund com... 'JW Office expenses for treasurer .. H Office expenses for controller 2x Office expenses for clerk lx)

Int. on city's indebtedness 8..TOO

Commission and exchange 23

Surety bonds for sinking fund

Commissioners 20

Ground rent due school fund . . 2."iO Water rights rental 25

Department of Law.

Salary of city attorney $ 1,200

Department of Public Works.

Salary of members of board... $ 3,000 Salary of clerk of the board 000

Office expenses of board 2f0

Miscellaneous expenses 250 Legal advertising 350 Water rents for city hydrants . 15,o75

Lighting city and parks 24,000 Public Buildings and Grounds.

Coal

Miscellaneous expenses Salary of custodian Parks. Salary of superintendent

Pay roll 3,400 Miscellaneous expenses 2,350 Street Commissioner's Account. Salary of superintendent 1,000 Pay roll 18,000 Crushed stone 4,000 Sundry materials 1,000 Miscellaneous expenses 800 City's part of streets and alleys 5,000 Civil Engineer's Account.

Salary of civil engineer 1,000

Salary of chief clerk Salary of rodman Salary of inspector Office expenses Miscellaneous expenses Markets. Salary of market master Miscellaneous expenses

Fire Department. Salary of superintendent 1,200 Pay roll 15,800 Miscellaneous expenses 2,000 Feed 1,500 Municipal Electric Lighting and Power Plant. Salary of superintendent 1,500 Pa,y Roll .. ... 14,000 Coal 17,000 Oil 500 Repairs 1,000 Office expenses 750 Mis. operating expenses 2,500 Wire, meters and sun. equip... 10,500 Crematory. Salary of superintendent 720

Coal 600

Hauling garbage 4,000

Department of Police.

Salary of police commissioners,

officers and patrolmen 17,000 oarding prisoners 150 Feed for patrol horse 75 Miscellaneous expenses 250

Department of Health and Charities

SHOW IMPORTANCE

UF CITY BY A FINE ARRAY OF FACTS (Continued From Page One.)

550 550 720 000

eases, Associated Charities. Reld Memorial hospital is the finest equipped in the state, unsurpassed for both

general diseases and surgical opera

tions.

The resources of our national banks

have increased 213 per cent in the last ten years, notwithstanding that that two trust companies have since been organized with present resources of $1,575,000 and six banks in small towns continguous to Richmond with resources of $650,000. The resources of our financial institutions have increased 305 per cent, in the last 10 years. A piano factory producing a com

plete high grade piano every fifteen minutes. The largest and best equipped retail hardware store in the United States. We manufacture more thrashing machines than any other city in the world. We manufacture more traction engines than any other city in the world. We manufacture more lawn mowers than any other city in the world. We manufacture more roller skates than any other city in the world. We manufacture more safety elevator gates than any other city in the world. We manufacture more grain drill3 than any other city in the world. We manufacture more burial caskets than any other city in the world. We manufacture more ventilating apparatus for greenhouses and buildings than any other city in the world.

TICKETS NAMED BY

NEW PARIS REPUBS. Township Ticket Was Chosen At a Primary Held Saturday Afternoon.

6

TICKET FOR CORPORATION.

W. P. MILLS WAS CHOSEN FOR MAYOR, C. E. SAMUELS FOR CLERK, W. F. WRENN, TREASURER, AND LON BAKER, MARSHAL.

Leaving Richmond 11:15 p. m. via C, C. & L. lands you in Chicago at 7:00 a. m. Through sleepers and coaches. Tou will like it. apr6-tf

PAY CAR.

450 450 25 050

280

"Keep well" is better than "get well."

Emulsion fortifies the body against disease and strengthens it during convalescence. It is composed of cod liver .oil and hypophosphites in

easily digested form.

It builds up faster

man wotk, worry and trouble can tear down.

o o

8

500 120 720

720 120 50 500

Salary of secretary Salary of other members board Se'ary of sanitary inspector . . Salary of meat and live stock inspector Salary of dairy inspector City physicians Miscellaneous expenses Department of City Court

Salary of judge 1,200 Salary of bailiff 120 Miscellaneous expenses 50

The amount of tax to be levied on

property within the city of Richmond

for the year of 190S, will be $153,000.

An ordinance was passed to this effect by the city council at Its meeting Monday night; $1.05 will be asssssed on each $100 property valuation for the

use of the general fund. For the sinking fund, the money to be used for

the payment of the bonded Indebted

ness of the city, five cents on the $100 will be collected, making a total of

$1.10 on each $100 assessed val

uation. The poll tax will be fifty

cents.

The ordinance was passed on the

third reading and became effective im

mediately.

SO

OF NICARAGUA'S

PRESIDENT IS IN BAD

Defendant in $100,000 Suit For Breach of Promise. v HIS FATHER IS TO BLAME.

Alt rOVTlsm.

New York, Oct S. Anabel Zelaya, son of the president of Nicaragua, and

a medical student at Columbia university, must give $10,000 bond or suffer arrest in a $100,000 breach of promise

sun urougni ay .iizaoein tieroa, a beautiful Greek girl. He was led into

breaking off the engagement through amazing international displomacy and intrigue in which the United States

played a part. The boy's father is re

sponsibly

Its Coin Rack, Crammed With Yellow Boys, a Tempting Sight. The good old days are gone. In these heathen times railroad men are paid by check. Of the pay oar and its luxurious travels C. F. Carter writes in the American Magazine as follows: "A metal coin rack crammed to the muzzle with three denominations of yellow boys, flanked with silver, and

ou the desk behind it a very large wooden tray, on which were long columns of yellow coins d'ye ever see anything so pretty in all your life'i No wonder your eyes stuck out until you could have used them for hat pegs. "And all the time an exquisitely musical 'tinkle, tinkle, clink-clink' welled up from coin rack and counter in response to the calls of the assistant paymaster. Talk about Beethoven's symphonies! '"If it were not for that strong wire screen you could have touched that fascinating tray. For the infinitesimal fraction of a second a wicked thought flitted, through your brain. Then you almost fainted as your roving eye stared down the barrel of a monstrous revolver. It was only in a rack, but it was within easy reach of the paymaster's hand and most eloquent for all that. Half a dozen of its fellows lay in the handiest places, while as many Winchesters lying on tables and settees came in strong on the chorus. "Hurriedly your vagrant wits busied themselves with all the Sunday school lessons you had ever learned. As your subconsciousness perceived that the head of the road's secret service department stood on the platform with his eyes intent on every man in the car at once, while Conductor Llnkenpin stood on the ground outside very much alert, with his coat tail bulging suggestively, your bosom swelled with pride over the watchful care the company had exercised to bring its honest toilers their hard earned money."

New Paris, O., Oct. 8. The republican township primary was held at the township house Saturday and the following ticket was nominated. Assessor John Coblentz. Clerk C. E. Samuels. Treasurer W. F. Wrenn. Trustees Ed. Reid and Alfred Murray. Constables Samuel Kessler and S. V. Bish. Justices Geo. Hildebrand and W. P. Mills. School Trustees Alva Marshall, C. C. Hawley, L,.. D. Bragg. Saturday evening they met and nominated the following corporation ticket: Mayor W. P. Mills. Clerk C. E. Samuels. Treasurer W. F. Wrenn. Marshal Lon Baker. Councilmen Wm. Mills, C. W. Bloom, Wm. Colvin, Call Bennett, Chas. Richie and Chas. King. School Trustees W. L. Hahn, Dr. B. F. Beane, James Davis and A. R. Ra-ney.

HOW IT SPREADS. The first package of Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid (the infallible Pile cure) that was put out went to a small town in Nebraska. It cured a case of Piles that was considered hopeless. The news spread, and the demand prompted Dr. J. S. Leonhardt, of Lincoln, Neb., the discoverer, to prepare it for general use. Now it is being sent to all parts of the world. It will cure any case of Piles. $1.00, with absolute guarantee. Leo H. Fihe, Richmond, or The Dr. Leonhardt Co., Niagara Falls, N. Y.

PRIMITIVE ANCHORS.

Power of the Waves. The power of waves, says M. Brounin in La Nature, is the sum of two efforts, one dynamic and due to the orbital movement of the water particles, the other static and dependent on the height of the center of gravity of the mass raised above its normal position. Theory and observation seem to show that the total power of waves is divided equally between these static and dynamic effects. If a body of wate: meets the wall of a structure there is a shock, and this is mo3t violent at the water surface, diminishing with the depth. At the moment of meeting jets of water rise sometimes to very great heights. His System. Shippen Clark (to his employer, leaving the office) Oh, Mr. System, haven't you forgotten your umbrella? It's raintng. Mr. System Can't help it. I have made a resolution to have one here and one at home to provide for all emergencies. Now, if I take this one they'll both be at home. London Tit Bits.

Force of Habit. Mr. Easy Cheer up, Mr. Peck. H we must go down let's go cheerfully like men. Mr. Peck But, hang it all. Mr. Easy, if I don't get home my wife will never let me go fishing again, never! Harper's Weekly.

A decent boldness ever meets with

friends. Homer.

Sore Throat or Mouth When tha mouth or throat is irritated or diseased you have tha common ailment of Sora Mouth or Sore Throat. If not quickly cured, you are in danger of contracting more serious or even fatal maladies such as Croup, Quinsy, Tonsilitis or Diphtheria, Nothing in the world will cure Sore Throat or Sore Mouth so quickly, so surely as TONSIUNE because TONSILINQ is the one remedy especially made for

that purpose. It has never tailed. You'll need T0N5ILINB one of these days, or some night when the drag store U closed better have a bottle ready at home when yon need it most. 23 and 50 ennf?.

A Xb XooaiUa Ok QMi

I

Stones and Wooden Tubes Filled With Lead First Used. There appear to be two ideas which have led up to the invention of the modern anchor first, that of attaching the vessel by means of a rope or chain to a weight sufficiently heavy to keep the vessel from moving when the weight has sunk to the bottom of the sea, and, second, that of using a hook Instead of or in addition to the weight, so as to catch in the bottom. The English word anchor is practically the same as the Latin ancora and the Greek angkura, meaning "that which has an angle," from the root ank, bent. The earliest anchors made on the hook principle probably only had one fluke instead of two. In the "Sussex Archaeil, Coll." there is an illustration of what has been surmised to be au anchor made out of the natural forked branch of a tree. It was found with an ancfent British canoe at Burpham, Sussex. There is in the British museum an interesting leaden anchor with two flukes bearing a Greek inscription. Its date is about 50 B. C, and it was found off the coast of Cyrene. The invention of the anchor with two flukes is attributed by Pausanius

to Midas, by Pliny to Eupalamas and

by Strabo to Anacharsis. Diodorus Siculus states that the first anchors were wooden tubes filled with lead, while another classical writer says that before the Introduction of metal

anchors lumps of stone with a hole through the middle for the attach

ment of the cable were used. The form of the anchors used by the Greeks and Romans is well known

from representations on Trajan's column and in the catacombs at Rome as a early Christian symbol. This form does not seem to have changed

materially for quite a thousand years, as is shown by the Bayeux tapestry.

The Girls Were Still One Ahead.

A young and bashful professor was

frequently embarrassed by jokes his girl pupils would play on him. These

jokes were so frequent that he decided to punish the next perpetrators, and the result of this decision was that two girls were detained an hour after school and made to work some difficult prob

lems rs punishment

It was the custom to answer the roll

call with quotations, so the following

morning, when Miss A.'s name was

called, she rose and. looking straight in

the professor's eye, repeated, "With all thy faults I love thee still," while

Miss B.'s quotation was, "The hours I

spend with thee, dear heart, are as a

string of pearls to me.' Ladles' Home

Journal. Respect at Last.

"Briefleleh is, I think, one of the

greatest lawyers In this stale." "Why, I heard you say once that you didn't consider him any good."

"Oh. that was years ago. He used

to give me pointers on legal matters without charging me anything because we happened to have offices adjoining

each other. Recently he has beer

charging me a stiff price every timf

I have gone to him for advice." Chi cago Record-Herald.

Long Winded.

"It takes you a pretty long while to

shave yourself, doesn't it?' "Not so very long. I can shave my self quicker than my old barber could.1 "I don't believe it"

"It's a fact. You see, he stammers

terribly." Philadelphia Press.

Studying hew to berp and benefit oth

ers will bnild up your twn fortune.

Baltimore American.

TdDp

For Chilly Evening and Cool Morning These Top Coats are made by the Hart, Schaffner & Marx "true clothing system." The style, quality and good fit are prominent in all our make of top coats. To be well kept and well fitted In a Top Coat, call on us. Our selection of patterns cannot be equaled anywhere in the city. Come in Greys, Blacks and Fancy Coverts. Prices: $10 to $20

Medium weight Overcoats, a little heavier than tht Top Coat, and cut longer. H., S. & M. trade mark ou every one. Prices are: $10 to $25

Sweaters and Sweater Jackets, grey, black and white, all this season's goods, all new, no old goods among them. Prices are: $1.00, $1.50. $2.50 $3.00. $3.50 antf $5.00

Open Every Wednesday Evening

"The House ol Lasting Merit' R0SENBL00M, BUITOJ & CO. 824 MAIN STREET

CHANGE IN NAME IS

BEFORE CONVENTION

Likely to Stir Up Lively De

bate for Episcopalians.

A TE!;HIELL: BIG TROUT.

Cast.

AMERICAN CATHOLIC BODY.

Richmond, Va., Oct. 8 The gener

al convention of the Episcopal church of America will now get down to business as the Bishop of London has de

parted. A lively debate is imminent over the proposition to change the name from the Protestant Episcopal to the American Catholic church.

SMALL SUM IS LEFT

TO RELIGIOUS SOCIETY Mrs. Mary Uphaus' Will Filed For Probate.

RELATIVES GET THE BULK.

The last will and testament of Mrs.

Mary Uphaus has been filed for probate and record in the office of the county clerk. The estate is bequeath

ed in greater part to family members,

though cash bequests are made to St. Andrew's Catholic church and to the

St. Elizabeth society of the same par

ish. Fifty dollars is bequeathed to the latter; $100 to the former. A farm of 113 acres is bequeathed to Bernard

Uphaus, a son, and certain real estate

in Richmond goes to Stella Marie Graham, a grand daughter to be held in

trust by Harmon Uphaus until the girl

shall become twenty-tive years of age.

He Was Cunning and a Hard

Too, Was This Fish. We were camping in northern "Wisconsin, and one evening after our sup per of black bass and bacon we lay under the pine trees smoking and tell ing fish stories in which it was alway i lie "bigger bass" that got away. Tu' guide listened with the gravity of a man who knew all about fi?h stories, and finally he knocked the ashes from his pipe and told us a story. "Once long ago," he said, "there was a terrible big trout up In Smith's pool. Every fellow who fished in the pool had hooked him one time or another, but he always got away, bit off the snood or something. "I tried to catch him myself a dozen timer. One day I was sitting by the

pool when, rplash, a young robin fluttered cut of the nest on a limb above the pool into the water below. In a miaul; there was a rush, a gleam of yeliow, ar.d the old trout had thrown hin.'.:.-c;f clear out of the water and had swallowed the young robin whole. "What did I do? Well. I climbed that tree in short order, got another one of there yo-cus robins, baited my hook with it nnYl threw it in just as lightly as I could. In a minute there was another rush, another glenm of yellow, and again the old trout jumped clear out of the water as he swallowed the robin, and in a minute more I had him hooked. "It was lucky I wasn't fishing with any of this newfangled rigging these boys use and that I wasn't bothered with a reel to look "after, or I would have lost him sure. As it was it took me a devil of a time to get him out. "Good to eat? Great Seott! We didn't try to eat him. He was so full of hooks we sold him for old iron, you know." That ended our fish stories for that night. J. J. A. in Chicago Tribuue.

NTEBESTING ADDRESS IN EARLHAM .CHAPEL G. F. Richings of the Curry Institute Spoke.

TALKS OF NEGRO PROBLEM.

What was probably the most Interesting of the chapel exercises held this term was the address and stereopticon lecture given by G. F. Richings of the Curry Xormal institute of Urbana, O., an institution for colored people. In his introductory remarks Mr. Richings said that he was glad to address an audience of college students, because they were going out Into the world and would be thrown with negroes. While their ancestors did not have to cope with many, the present generation has 10,000,000 to deal with, who must be educated and whose part it is to educate them and make them better citizens. In his address Mr. Richings took an optimistic view of the negro question. Ho spoke of the one hundred and eightyfive negro schools in the south, supported by northern churches. Ilia pictures were of a most Interesting nature showing the building at Tuskeegee Institute, prominent colored mea and women and prominent white men, interested in the education of the negro. Pictures were also shown of th work being done at Urbana, Ou

BACON WILL SUCCEED TOWER, ITIS REPORTED Rumors to This Effect Circulated at Berlin.

After forty-five years of office, T. F. Allison has announced his resignation of the post of town clerk of Louth, Linc61nshire. England. Mr. Allison, who is seventy-eight years of age, is one of the most prominent men of Louth, and was for fifty-one years secretary to the local gas company.

Worry ar.J Hurry. It is not work that makes one so "dead tired." It is worry and harry. A clever woman once said to a nervous, excited sister, "My dear, don't use a pile driver to pin on a bow of ribbon." It's good advice. It means simply don't use a double or a triple amount of nerve force in the performance of some duty that can Le done as well or

TOWER ASKING RELEASE.

New York, Oct. 8 A Berlin dispatch says it is reported that Assistant Secretary of State Bacon will be appointed successor to Ambassador Tower who has asked to be released as ambassador to Germany.

HOME MISSIONARY SOCIETY It Will Meet With Miss Laura Hill Thursday. Centerville, Ind., Oct. 8. The "Woman's Home Missionary society will meet with Miss Laura Hill next Thursday afternoon.

Comb Out? Betlet be en the safe tide. Ask four doctor about Ayer's Hair Vigor. Then do a he toys. He Imofin what h beat.

Is your comb telling a story, the story of falling btir? Not a pleasant story, is it? It ends badly. The story we tell is pleasant the story of Ayer's Hair Vigor. Promptly stops falling hair, destroys dandruff, keeps the scalp healthy. Does not color the hair. JfJl?;

BLACK

TEAS

GREEN

Incomparable for Quality, Flavor and Strength ONE TEASPOONFUt MAKES TWO CUPS. Loose or in Sealed Packets. All Grocers. (Published by authority of the I ndia and Ceylon Commissioner.)