Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 250, 16 October 1907 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

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TWO FATAL ACCIDENTS OCCUR AT CINCINNATI Steel Cars Jump the Track With Serious Results. HARRY ABSUCH KILLED. Cincinnati, Oct. 16. One man was killed and twenty passengers injured when an Elbron avenue car jumped the track and plunged over an embankment to day. The dead man is Harry Bausch. Most of the injured are women. A Warsaw avenue car also Jumped the track, fatally injuring motorman Charles McCoy. NED HIATT GOES EAST. Ned Iliatt, consulting engineer for The Nevada Finance and Development Company, located at Meina, Nevada, left Tuesday night for New York and Boston on business for the company. ... . ...w..oy. Shelley lhd with ardor amont' Ideas, Aspirations Jind passions ji which there wn.s something at oneirresponsible mid abstract. He follow ed every impulse, without choice or re stralnt, with the abandonment of a leaf in the wind. "Oh, lift me as ?! wave, a leaf, n cioiul!" wae his prnyev to the west wind and to every influence. Circumstances meant so litth to him that hn was unconscious of the crnelty of change to sentiment, nm' thus of the extent of his cruelty t women. He aimed at moral per fee tlon. but was really of a perfect aes thetic selfishness. He was full of plt.f and generosity and desired the libera tlon and uplifting of humanity, but humanity was le;s real to him thar his own witch of Atlas. He only touch ed hiuv-n action and pp.ssion closely in a rlu.'-le one of his works, and ho said of "The Cenci:" "I don't think much of it. My object was to see how I eonkl succeed ii describing passions I have never felt." Arthur Symons in Atlantic. Portrait and Slipper. A touching anecdote, associated with A picture in the National gallery at Edinburgh, is told by an English lad in her book. "Potpourri From a Surrey Garden." She writes: Several pic. tures stand out with peculiar interest especially the life sized Gainsborough of the young Mrs. Grahame. She sal for the picture as a bride, but before it came home she was dead and her husband had gone to the wars. When he came back he never had the cour age to open the case which contained his young wife's portrait. On his death, many long years after It was painted, it was opened by his heirs, and inside the case was the little white slipper she had left with the painter to help him to finish his picture. The portrait was given to the Edinburgh gallery, and the slipper was kept by the family. Trouble on the Mantelpiece. "If you'll always give mo full wing." observed the pendulum, 'ycui will never have any trouble with youi hands." "I don't know," replied the clock "If it wasn't for your going back an forth In my works. I never woul have any strikes." Chica so Tribune. The Idleman Spend an Idle hour with IDLEMAN, 22 North 9th St. Bowling and Cigars. 5c SHOES SHINED 5c

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V GREAT EXCITEMENT OVER AN ASSAULT Blood Hounds Used in Pursuit Of Negro. TROUBLE AT DANVILLE, VA. Danville, Va., Oct. 1J. A negro this morning criminally assaulted a prominent woman and her daughter, throwing the former to the ground and choking her. Three suspects were arrested and bloodhounds have started for the scene. Great excitement previals and trouble may follow. ODD WAYS OF POETS. Tennyson, Artistically Fastidious, VVs a Personal Sloven. There is a sort of Idea in the publi mind that the poet is what scientist call a "fixed genius," that every poe is the exact counterpart of every othe poet. There is probably no class o men in the world if class it can b called whose members differ mor widely in personality. Pope, for Instance, was a miser Dryden, Sed'ey, Rochester and Shelle seemed to have no use for money an "splashed it about in the most insan fashion. Shakespeare was a keen ma of business. His contemporaries. Ma) lowe and Massinger, did not leavi enough to have their bodies decentl. buried. Coming down to modern times, Ter nyson was artistically the most del! cate and fastidious of men. A mis placed comma, an epithet which wa not the perfection of expression, gav. him nights of insomnia. Yet he ws perhaps the most utter!: careless man of his generation regan ing his personal appearance. Had h not been carefully watched by his d voted wife, he would have been qtV content to wear a suit of clothes unt it dropped oir him bit -by bit in obed ence to the law of gravitation. A great admirer of Tennyson one described bis first meeting with th great poet. It occurred at a roadside pub!' house in the Isle of Wight. The la laureate was seated by the kltcho fire, with a short black clay pipe b tween his lips, burning grease spo' out of a pair of check trousers wis the point of a redhot poker. It was probably Tennyson's "facuif of silence" which helped him to seenthe friendship of the greatest talker ?n both senses of the phrase of h generation, Thomas Car'lyle. Carlyle had occasional fits of silem and he and Tenryson would sit on o posite sides of the hearth for six hou at a srretcn witnout exenangmg v many words. At the crpiration of such a perio of silent intercommunication Carly' would knock the ashes out of his lapipe and rem irk with every symptor of the keenest intellectual satisfactlo"Aye. Alfred, mon, we've had a glori ous nicht!" Tennyson's great and friendly rival. Drowning, was as different from him in his personal peculiarities as he was In point of genius. ITe always looked as If he had Just been turned out of a bandbox. Tennyson was one of the most silent of men. Browning one of the most ebullient and loquacious. Tennyson was pessimistic and somewhat morose. Browning was always bursting with optimism and expansiveness. Chicago Inter Ocean. Bored to Death. The Wife I had a call from Marcelle today. Her Husband I suppose she bored you to death, as usual, with her stupid talk? Wife Yes. dear, she talked about you the whole time. Rire. For one man who can stand prosperity there are a hundred that will stand G. E. DYERS 1 the best brand- S RICHMOND, IND. M

CASES ARE SET 111 THE CIRCUIT COURT

Judge Fox Has Outlined Business Up to the Eleventh Of November. NO NEW CHARGE FILED. PROSECUTOR JESSUP WANTS FAIR TREATMENT FOR BERNARD GREEN, THE SERIOUSLY ACCUSED NEGRO. In the circuit court Judge Fox set the following cases for trial: Thursday, October 17 Hollinger against Hollinger. Saturday, Oct. 20 Hodgin against Hodgin; Dwyer against Dwyer. Wednesday, Nov. 0 Garner against Larsh; Clapp against Moorman. Thursday, Nov. 7 City of Richmond against Hill and Cook; Vogelsong against the City of Richmond. Friday, Nov. S Jones & Jones against city of Richmond; Van Baalen against City of Richmond; Werner against City of Richmond. Saturday. Nov. 0 Muhl against estate of Ballard; Clevenger against Bowmaster; Miller against Miller. Monday Nov. 11 Converse against the estate of Hovelmeier; Nicholson against estate of Hovelmeier; Boyd against estate of Layman. No New Charge. Prosecutor Jessup has not as yet filed any new charge against Bernard Green in the circuit court. Green is at present charged with assault and battery on three-years-old Hazel Harris but it is thought that this charge will be withdrawn and the negro will be charged with criminal assault. Prosecutor Jessup is in Indianapolis. Thursday he probably will take final action ,in the Green case. Hundreds of indignant citizens have urged the prosecutor to charge Green with criminal assault as advised by Attorney John F. Robbins. Wants Fair Treatment. It is known that one reason the pros ecutor hesitates in filing this charge, as he would have a perfect right to do under the law, is because he thinks it would be difficult to secure a jury which would not be prejudiced against the negro. "As far as I am concerned, if Green had committed such a crime against a child of mine I would shoot him down, but I am determined that Green shall receive fair treatment now that he is in the custody of the law," Prosecutor Jessup stated. PURSUERS ARE FOOLED No Clue Found to Helen Maloney, Heiress. New York. Oct. 10. W. J. Fanning, counsel for Martin Maloney, made the statement today that Helen Maloney and Samuel Clarkson. the Englishman with whom she eloped, had succeeded in throwing pursuers off the track. HOPE FOR JIB RULER Emperor Joseph Francis May Recover. Vienna, Oct. 16. The prime minis ter this morning received from the grand steward at Sarah ona castle the following telegram: "Now we may hope." This is the first official Inti mation that the illness of Emperor Francis Joseph is dangerous. The aged monarch passed a good night and was refreshed this morning. LOCAL HOTELS CROWDED There Are Many Visitors to the City Just Now. The hotels of Richmond are crowded to their capacity and the genial landlords, notwithstanding their broad smiles, are beginning to wonder where they are going to put their many patrons. A large number of delegates to the Five Years' meeting are stopping at the hotels while the fall influx of traveling men is great. Almost every available room in the larger hotels was monopolized Tuesday night. Will making often affords a man an unrivaled opportunity of paying off old scores and speaking his mind with out any fear of unpleasant conse quences to himself. The great Duke of Marlborough evi dently could not resist the temptatioi of a farewell slap at his duchess whe:; he left her "10.C00 wherewith to spoi Blenheim in her own way and f l.'.OO to keep clean and go to law with." There is also a distinct note of spite fulness in this extract from the tes tament of a Mr. Kerr who. after do daring that he would probably have left his widow 10,000 if she had allowed him to read his evening paper in peace, adds: "But you must remember, my dear, that whenever I com menced reading you started playing and sinjinj. You must therefore take the consequences. I leave you 1,000." -Grand " Throw away pflls and strong cathartics which ire violent in action, and always have on hand Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, the guaranteed ure for constipation sad all diseases arising from stonuua tronbie.

FIVE YEARS BOD! BEGINS ITS WORK

AT EAST ST. (Continued From Page One.") the rmnTr,ittP, and Ohio voarlv meetmg regarding the latter-, refusal to enter the Five Years' body, should be eliminated, out of respect for the Ohio j meeting. Further discussion ensued. Timothy Nicholson of Richmond, who ! was secretary of the committee, mainuuneu ma .viien lirst me yrupusiuuu ; was aired a mistaken impression gain ed foothold among the people generally in regard to the situation and for this reason an accurate account of the existing conditions between the Ohio and i Five Years' body was given in the re-

MAIN

port, that all such false impressions correspondence among the various meeting at its 1902 session, which might be removed. The matter of 'yearly meetings. It maintained that 1 said that children should be left to elimination of the objectionable but few present day letters were read choose for themselves, was the better clause, was after much discussion and before the yearly meetings and said policy. The proposition may be dison the motion of Elwood Cox of North ; that the Five Years meeting should cussed at some length before the clos-

Carolina. referred to the business com-! mittee, who will discuss the feature J and then submit a report. The right of the business committee to strike j from the communication the clause pertaining to the refusal of the Ohio : yearly meeting to come into the fold, ; was challenged, however, during the latter part of the morning session. Officers Are Named. After some deliberation following the meeting Tuesday night, the chair men of the various delegations nominated the following officers for the Five years' meeting, which nominations were concurred in by the main body at the morning ressions: James Wood, New York, clerk. Louis Lindon Hobbs, North Carolina, first assistant. Mabel H. Douglas, Oregon, second assistant. .unco iv uiic, ijan...uv'n-i i,n.uwun...

The chairmen of the delegations al- j The New York communication advo. so made the following selections from cated a beUer system of keeping the various delegations to serve on yearly meeting and church records; althe business committee during the a lan t determlne the accuracy of

present deliberations: North Carolina Geo. W. White, Guilford college. New England Rufus M. Jones. Wilmington Samuel Hawworth, Friendsville, Tenn. Kansas Edmund Stanley, Wichita, Kas. Indiana Allen Jay, Richmond, Ind. Iowa Ellison R. Purdy, Oskaloosa, Iowa. New York Robert E. Pritchard, Brooklyn, N. Y. Canada Joseph A. Mills, Toronto. Oregon N. Edwin McGrew, Caldwell, Idaho. California Addison W. Maylor, Berkley, Cal. Baltimore Allen C. Thomas, Newport, Pa. Timothy Nicholson, Amos K. Hollowell and Levi Mills were selected to serve on the auditing committee for the coming five years. The report was submitted by A. Rosenberger and J. E. Pugh chairmen and secretary respectively of the committee of chairmen. New Clerk Speaks. The new clerk of ths meeting made a short address in which he stated that all the coming sessions of the Five years body should be carried forward with deliberation and care. while harmony should be the key note to all discussions. Edmund Stanley, the Five years' meeting, thanked the meeting for the honor that had been conferred upon him by appointing him the first clerk of such a great religious ruling body. Peter W. Daidabaugh of Western yearly meeting made the motion that the good will of the meeting be shown toward the visiting delegates from the Ohio and Philadelphia yearly meetings, by extending to them an invitation to occupy places on the platform. This was ruled down, however, but the visiting delegates were extended the well wishes of the meeting and given all privileges except participation in business affairs. As

As. -J&f The oyster season 1 " J begins with September fck i U 'ff and ends vith April. Fjf JJ Vjjr The soup season ff begins rith January and ends f with December. Therefore I are in season every day in every 1 month of every year. A Oysterettes oyster crackers with W a taste that improves the flavor tj' of oysters, soup and chowder. if 'Ml Always fresh in moisture Gg$jl j 0rm,man dust proof packages QJ M iSNs NATIONAL Jk Jjg BISCUIT

time passes there is a stronger be-' oeated a better class of Sunday lief among the delegates that soon all School literature which would be origprejudice existing In the Philadelphia inal with the Friends church. Other and Ohio yearly meetings will be ov-, yearly meetings also favored a change

ercome and the bodies will identify themselves with the Five Years body, To aid the work of the various re - porters "covering" the yearly meeting, Benjamin TrueWood asked that : a press committee be appointed and : this was done. The meeting is very ! desirous that nothing be printed of the deliberations unless entirely ac - rnrntP cuiate. whpn the comrminlcatlons from the various , meetings were read in ... cnrn(1 nf f. t niieKT,OT1 now rnT,frnnrt. the ebnr"h were taken un by them iu a condensed way and recommen(jations made to the Five Years meeting. Better Correspondence. Baltimore yearly meeting through its letter, was the first to take a stand for a better class of episto'.ary rule in some manner on the question. Iowa yearly meeting presented the proposition to establish a new yearly meeting to be known as the Nebraska yearly meeting to be composed of the Hiawatha, Platte Valley, Union, Springbrook and Mt. Vernon quarterly meetings, wnicn nave a comoinea membership of 1,310. The whole matter has been thoroughly investigated hv tVip. Tnwa ve.irlv metinsr which feelg that owl to thQ broad field and already large membership a greater work could be accomplished if the

yearly meeting was established. The actions of the Five Years meeting quarterly meetings which are to be j whlch directly affected them. This a part of the Nebraska yearly meet-duty fall upon the cierk. Mr. ing have long worked together for j Wood according to the manner in the promotion of the Friends affairs. which it was adopted. The proposition was referred to the j MUeg jt treasurer of the meetcommittee on church extension and , in rpa(i his renort whlch was very

evangelization which was to havo , satiafactory although it showed a tenmade a report at this afternoon's ses- dency on tne part of the varlous year

'sinns j the details of the uniform rulinsrs of the meeting. Sunday School Literature. North Carolina yearly meeting adj .g; EITHER KIND Warranted ! fi 13 U

mT

f-ffV!!lS:r!fcgv.A S

23

; in the present day system of teaching j the bible school lessons, and thought ; the Five years' meeting should take some decided stand on the proposition

as a whole and make proper recommendations. As was predicted some time ago, the proposition to do away with the pres . ent system of associate membership ' with a return to the old birthright . membershlp poicy typ,ca, wkh the first Friends' belief, came before the meeting, through the Western Yearly meeting. The Western, however, was careful to make no recommendations, simply speaking of the action that had Deen taiien Dy inai uouy. 1 ntt meei j ing as a whole favored the birthright policy, which would make all children born to Quaker parentage members of the church, but the permanent board of the meeting thought that the new policy adopted by the Five years' I ing of the present sessions However, as the business board is expected to take some action on the matter. It is a live question, it is thought, among many attending the meeting, and therefore should recelvo attention as a whole, that all possibility of conflicting opinions which might arise in the next Five years, bo set aside. Will be Notified. Rufus M. Jones, editor of the American Friend, who Is attending the j sessionS( thought the various yearly i shonid be aDnrised of the ly meetings to not give the proper financial support to the Five Years meeting board. There has been some trouble In drawing the line on expenditures for various purposes from the Five Years meeting treasury. To do away with this, the proposition was referred to the business committee who will ppeACTION QUICK BAKERS LESS FUEL OF GAS Satisfactory

ARDwARE

cifically outline what procedure will have to be used to secure the money belonging to the meeting. Church Extension.1 The report of the - committee on church extension and evangelization showed that the work had been greatly hampered by the lack of sufficient funds, and support from those who were in position to grant their personal services. An attempt wag made during the past five years to qomrile a statistical record of the Friends church but this was unsuccessful owing to apparent disinterest in the cause by many of the yearly meetings. But very few gave statistics desired by the secretary of the church extension committee. The church extension report e'.ielted much comment and It was generally conceded that greater interest In the work should bo evinced if the Friends church is to take a place alongside the other religious denominations of the country. It is absolutely essential, it was thought, that more strenuous effort be made to carry forward the work of the church through the church extension board and that all support possible be granted the committee in its work. A recompilation of all church extension records for the past five years will be made by Emma Hedges, secretary of tho board, and a committee composed of a delegate from each yearly meeting. This will be inserted in the Fivo Years meeting records The board of education through Charles E. Tebbetts of California yearly meeting made a short report showing that rapid advancement was being made in relislous education

throughout all the Friends schools. Special lectures by Rutus M. Jones In the various educational institutions during the past five vcars have done much good, it was asserted. STATE IN CHARGE OF AFFAIRS; AID TO THE SUFFERING (Continued From Page One.) a large warehouse and 500 homes. In many of these the fronts were blown away, while in others the roofs wero hurled into space, the sides blown out. or they were left a confused mass of collapsed wreckage. . , The school buildings were destroyed at Fontanet and Coal Bluff, two miles away. All were filled with, school children, and everyone of these was more or less injured by the collaps ot the buildings. School Pupils Injured. A four room school building was torn to pieces and not one of the 200 children escaped unhurt. None was fatally hurt. A two-room school building at Coal Bluff was turned over and collapsed. The teacher and ninety pupils were more or leBS injured. The force of the explosions destroy ea all telephone communication with outside towns, and it was with great . ..iculty that aid was summoned. Terre Haute and Brazil sent physician and nurses with supplies in carriages and automobiles across country, white special trains were made up and run on tne Big Four railroad for the care of the injured. Gov. Hanly at the Scene. Governor Hanly at Indianapolis or dered the Terre Haute company of the Indiana National guard to patrol the ruined district and protect life and property. The governor himself arrived and brought with him seven hundred cots and one hundred tents for the use of the homeless. Chicago passengers using C, C ft L. trains land at 12th st. (Illinois Central) Station; most conveniently located. Remember this. 6-tI Is Tb e fttesnaek Dispensable f An operation for the removal of the stomach. In a Chicago hospital recently, promoted dis-j rtission among the tnrgeons whether the stom ich could be removed and the patient be none he worse for it. Before the discussion bad well ied out. the patient had died. It demonstrated a could not live without his stomach. To keep e stomach in good condition, and cure consrt ticn. indigestion, etc.. nse the treat herb laxave compound. Dr. Caldwell's Hyrop Pepsin, druggists sell it at 50 cents and fl a bottle.

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