Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 258, 25 October 1907 — Page 2

THE RICH3IOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1907.

PAGE TWO.

Best selection of Boys' and Children's Suits in the city. Blouse or Russian

Blouse Suite

years $3.00 to $6.50 Norfolk Suits with plain or Knickerbocker trousers, 7 to 16 years $3.50 to $7.00 Overcoats, all styles, $2.00 to $6.50

LOEHR & KLUTE 725 MAIN STREET

PLUMBERS' TRUST IS TO GET THE IX Will Be Joyful News to Many Who Have Suffered From Operations. GOVERNMENT TAKES HAND. UNDER A PACT THE TRUST HAS BEEN HOLDING UP MANUFACTURING CONCERNS AS WELL AS SMALL DEALERS. Richmond people In common with the rest of humanity, will rejoice to hear that the government is going after the plumbers' trust A Washington dispatch says. The Plumbing trust is to get the federal ax. This will be Interesting news to every householder who has come Into contact with this conscienceless and tryannical octopus. The Department of Jubtlce has been quietly collecting a mass of evidence bearing upon the operations of the Plumbing Trust. The bulk of it has come from J. J. Sullivan, district attorney at Cleveland and consists largely of facta secured through a proceeding to oust the trust from the State of Ohio. The Information in possession of the department shows that there are three associations: The Eastern Supply Association, the Central Supply Association and the Pacific Coast Supply Association. Six members an 1 six alternates of each separate association from the national committee of the Confederated Supply Association, which is the trust complained of. On Aug. 22, 1906, the national committee of the Confederated Supply Association adopted the following resolution: "The manufacturers and jobber? belonging to these associations shall not hereafter sell plumbing supplies to others than Jobbers or manufacturers officially recognized as such by the national committee of the Confederated Supply Association and as legitimate master plumbers." Under this pact the trust has been holding up manufacturing concerns as well as small dealers and the public. Among the papers turned over to the Department of Justice is a letter written to a new plumbing firm that had trouble buying soil pipe because It was not "recognized;" in other words, because it was blacklisted. This letter follows: "Replying to your favor, we regret to say that we will be unable to quote you prices on soil pipe at this time. The Cleveland and Pittsburg jobbers made such a howl over the fact that we accepted your previous order that for our protection we will be unable to quote you until you have your name on the legitimate list of jobbers." PARTY GIVEN IN FAIRVIEW. Mr. and Mrs. C. Austin Goeins entertained Thursday evening at their residence in Fairview in honor of their son Sergt. John W. CfOiens and Band Sergt. Lemuel P. Harper, of Tuskegee. A luncheon was spread by the host and hostess. Those present were Messrs. and Mesdames H. H. Hayes, W. G. Alexander, J. A. Clay, W. Gordon, John Jones, Frank Arnold, Ben Rowe, John Reid, Samuel Schooler, F. Owens, John Dorsey; Misses Hullsee Rowe, Ada Taylor, Nora Rhea, Minnie Miller, Nannie Embry, Ocie Watkins, Edna Gaines, Bertha Gaines, Ruby Hayes, Margarette Robinson, May Miller, Evangaline Anderson, Letha Rowe, Faustina Carter and Nellie Hayes; Messrs. Tom Mitchell, Horace Crittendon, Ellsworth Gordon, Marcus Roberts, Garrison Rowe, and Herbert Arnold; Mrs. Lula Brown, Rev. Harris and Dr. W. G. Huffman. The Idleman , Spend an Idle hour with IDLEMAN, 22 North 9th St. Bowling and Cigars. 5c SHOES SMNED 5c

for 3 to 6 gpfi f, ftSf St 3n 'm a .'. : :.: -Z3 i.J Js IIS A PRETTY WEDDING AT HAGERSTOWN, THURSDAY John Harry and Miss Carrie Miller Principals. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE. Hagerstown, Ind., Oct. 23. In the presence of a small company of friends on Thursday evening at 7 o'clock, was solemnized the marriage of John Harry and Miss Carrie Miller at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Miller on South Perry street, the Rev. Wm. Warbinton officiating. The participants were unattended. The bride was charmingly attired in a dress of white silk with trimmings of lace. Immediately after the ceremony a twocourse dinner was served in the dining room, which was very artistic in its decorations of red carnations and ferns. The bride is a popular young woman and is a graduate of the Ha gerstown high school and the groom Is a prominent young man employed by the Big Four. They will be at home to their friends in the property of Mrs. Clara Crocker on South Perry street. Those who witnessed the ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. John Miller and son Simon, Mrs. Wm. Warbinton, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Elvord and Misses Cloella and Maud Lumpkins, Ruth Copeland, Ruby Rummel, Mrs. Maggie Replogle and Syrill Hiatt. A WOMAN'S BACK The Aches and Pains Will Disappear If the Advice of This Richmond Citizen Is Followed. A woman's back has many aches and pains. Most times 'tis the kidneys' fault. Backache is really kidney ache; That's why Doan's Kidney Pills cure it. Many Richmond women know this. Read what one has to say about it; Mrs. Frances Hamilton of 27 North Ninth St., Richmond, Ind., says: "I was induced to try Doan's Kidney Pills by my sister who had used them and had been cured of kidney trouble. I was having severe backaches and : pains in the loins and shoulders, and at times it was very severe. I got a box of Doan's Kidney Pills at A. G. Luken & Co's drug store and began using them. I took only two boxes in all and was entirely freed from my aches and pains, and have never had a return of my trouble since, although it was several years ago that I used them. My sister and I both think there Is nothing so good as Doan's Kidney Pills and very gladly recommend them to other kidney sufferers." For sale by all dealers Price 50 cenf.s. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United Stages. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. NOTICE. Members of the Automobile Club m good standing may get credentials for reduced rates to New York by calling at Auto Inn. The Value of Neat Appearance To a man cannot be overestimated. It is absolutely essential to him in a business way and imperative in the walks of society. Just as Important to the business man is neat appearing stationery. The letter, bill or circular is your agent when mailed to a customer or prospect and should impress the recipient with a feeling of confidence in the neatness of your work and quality of your product. We turn out neat work that impresses. It is alive and brings results. To be satisfied place your order with us. Quaker City Printing Co. Over 17-19 North 8th St.

A

BROWN

ROASTING

F New Castle Courier Hands Out Some Hot Ones in Football Controversy. WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE SCHOOL AUTHORITIES THERE DECLINE TO MAKE GOOD THE LOSS OF PARAPHERNALIA EY THE RICHMOND TEAM. New Castle, Ind., Oct. 23. The team and faculty managers of the high school foot ball team have addressed a letter to the Richmond team, politely, but positively refusing to acknowledge responsibility for the alleged loss of football paraphernalia last Saturday. The home team feels no responsibility in the matter because the visitors chose to move their equipment from the schoolhouse to a local hotel. When the visiting team, of their own accord and without the sanction of the home team, removed its equipment, they did so at their own risk. The matter will be dropped just where it is by New Castle and in the meantime the best course of action will be discussed. The matter will be taken before the state athletic association. The managers of the Richmond high school football team wrote the local team one of those dirty, little nasty letters, declaring that unless New Castle makes good the alleged theft of football paraphernalia which was stolen the game will be considered cancelled. On the face of the whole thing it looks like a trick to get out of meeting New Castle Nov. 10. The articles referred to were left in the high school building after the game. When the players took their departure, nothing was missed, and it seems strange that it was necessary to wait until Monday night for discovering that they were gone. The Richmond team was so badly defeated by New Castle last Saturday, that they are likely afraid to meet this aggregation again and have resorted to a trick to get out of the game. While in the city the visitors were royally entertained, their expenses paid and a dance given for them. They were treated like gentlemen. BORTONS TAKE TWO FROM THE ROTTERMANS Score of 801 Was Run Up in The Second Game. SCHEDULE FOR NEXT WEEK LEAGUE STANDING. Won Lost Pet. ..7 2 .778 Idemans Hunts 6 3 Entre Nous 5 4 Bortons 4 5 Rottermans 3 6 K. C.'s 2 7 Thursday Night's Games. .607 .556 .444 .222 BORTONS lsG. 2dG. 3rG. P. Mecurio 147 172 177 King 15S 147 174 Fox 147 164 125 Borton 117 154 158 Buntin 152 164 154 Totals 721 801 7SS ROTTERMANS lsG. 2dG. Mecurio Ill 124 Nusbaum 136 142 Rotterman 205 144 Denny 131 155 Foster 156 151 3rG. 16S 181 119 184 122 Totals 739 716 774 Schedule for Next Week. Monday, Oct. 2S Rottermans vs. K. of C. Wednesday, Oct. 30 Idlemans vs. Entre Nous. Thursday, Oct. 31 Hunts vs. Bor tons. ONLY NINETEEN MEN REPORTJT PRACTICE Franklin Not Hopeful in Game Against Earlham. SHORT OF 2 FULL TEAMS. Franklin, Ind., Oct. 25. Only nineteen men turned out to practice last night for the game against Earlham Saturday. It seems impossible to get enough men out for good scrimmage work. At no time this week have two full teams been out in the field, and as a result the line has had very little work. Most of today's practice was to develop speed in the back field. Franklin has a heavy set of backs for a secondary school, but their speed has been rather erratic all season. Byers seems to have center cinched, and Devore and Thompson look as though they will be the regular guards for the rest of the season. Beam and Graham are working well on the ends. In Jones and Capt. Boone the team has an unsusally heavy pair of tackles, but the entire machine needs more speed. With the present lack of a good bunch of scrubs to buck against there seems to be little hope of improving this condition very soon.

OR RICHMOND

SPORTING

RIVALRY

SCHOOLSCONDEMNED Parsons Objects to Intercollegiate Athletics. TALKS TO THE STUDENTS. Terre Haute, Ind., Oct. 25 President Parsons has been talking to the Indiana Normal students a good deal at morning chapel meetings this term beginning with a series of comments ' on school athletics. He explained the objections to intercollegiate athletics and quoted an unnamed Indiana college president as having said at a meeting of the State Board of Education that he would accept a gift such as made to Swarthmore on condition that there would be no more intercollegiate athletics, because he believed they were immoral. President Parsons concluded the series by drawing the line between athletics and sporting rivalry and as a means of physical and mental impn ment and let it be understood j that the Normal management stood for the latter only. DEDICATION OF LIBRARY It Will Take Place When the Building Is Finished. The date for the dedication of the ' new library at Earlham has not yet i been set, but it will be in November, j probably toward the middle part of the month. Prof. Lindley states that the dedication will not take p'e un-, til the library is entirely furnished. TALKS OFJHILIPPIS Prof. D. W. Dennis Spoke in The Earlham Chapel. Prof. D. W. Dennis gave a stereopticon lecture at Earlham chapel, on "What We Owe to the Philippine Islands." It was very interesting. The views shown compared the American and Filippino homes, the modes of travel and commercial intercourse and Prof. Dennis made a plea for the Filippinos urging the American people to realize their obligations to the people of that country. Moldine removes moles; no pain, danger or scar; guaranteed; $1.00 per bottle. Cut out. keep and tell your friends. Dr. Teeters, Steubenville, Ohio. It At the auction sale of seats in Pittsburg for the Pittsburg orchestra season all records were broken recently when the receipts reached $10,431. As a result of recent accidents to various navies the British warships will have their magazines cooled with refrigerating machinery. holds J-21

It

Pf A matter $PJ of choice 7hich will you have dry, chalky, tasteless vt fj oyster crackers dipped out of a barrel, or ft dainty, appetizing bubbles of II : crispness that melt on your II H tongue with a savory suspicion II V of salt and add zest to your soup or oysters? fj (3?$ n misture fj TS?v( proof package J05S NATIONAL yL M0 )'j BISCUIT jL

HOMEGROWN GREEN STOFF OFF MARKET Heavy Frosts of the Past Few Days Put on the Finishing Touches. FRUIT LINE IS DEPLETED. PLUMS HAVE ALMOST ENTIRELY VANISHED AND FEW KEIFER PEARS ARE TO BE FOUNDPOULTRY PLENTIFUL. The season for home grown green stuffs has ended, the heavy frosts of last week completely killing the crop. There was a plentiful supply of such until the frosts came. The markets are remarkably short on corn, lima beans, tomatoes and green beans. in their stead winter vegetables are being sold. There are plentiful supplies of turnips, beets, cabbage, and in fact, all the things which constitute the main makeup of an old fashioned "boiled" meal. All are demanding good prices too. Hot houso green stuffs are being sold in large quantities. Lettuce is retailing at 20 cents per pound, while green cucumbers are selling for 10 cents apiece. Radishes of delicious kind are in demand. Wayne county gardners have an unusual amount of celery this year, and this will be rushed to market in a few weeks. The celery crop this year is of excellent quality. Put little of the home grown product has been sold in Richmond up to date. Fruit Line Depleted. The fruit line, which has afforded so much room for guessing during the entire season, is in a rather delapidated condition at the present time. Plums have almost entirely vanished. But few Keifer pears are to be found, and these are not of the highest grade. Grapes are good. Four pound baskets are retailing at 25 cents, while the eight-pound baskets sell for 35 cents. The grape prices have advanced almost one half over last year's crop. The quality is excellent, and the fruit is being sold in large quantities, notwithstanding the increase in pr!e. Florida oranges are now reaching Richmond. The fruit is a little bit green, but the shipments here are doing much to alleviate the orange shortage which has existed for tha past several months. A large crop of this fruit is expected, and as the shipments to this city increase in size and quality, prices will naturally descend, it is asserted. Poultry is plentiful. Choice ducks were sold on the markets today while the demand for chickens was great. All poultry i3 fat at this time, and therefore the demand is greater than at any other season. With plenty of poultry, sweet potatoes, celery, cranberries, a rich and typical Thanksgiving dinner could be prepared now.

What is medicine for? To cure you, if sick, you say. But one medicine will not cure every kind of sickness because different medicines act on different parts of the body. One medicine goes to the liver, another to the spine, Wine of Cardui to the womanly organs. So that is why Wine of CardTHLit has proven so efficacious in most cases of womanly disease. Try ifJ Mrs. Wm. Turner, cf BartcnviUe. ID , vrites: "I suffered for years with female diseases, and doctored without relief. My back and head vould hurt me. and I suffered agony with bearing-down pains. At last I took Wine of Cardui and nov I am in good health." Sold everywhere. In $1.00 bottles.

1 irDlTrC ITC A I I I I lD IYK1 IE U3 A IXiICK

SERVICES ARRANGED FOR UNIVERSALE MEMBERS

Rev. Leon P. Jones Is Coming From Eaton. MAY BE MADE PERMANENT. Rev. Leon P. Jones will preach for the Universalists Sunday, Oct 27 at 2:30 p. m. in the lower room of the Pythian temple. Every one is welcome. Mr. and Mrs. Jones are both ordained ministers of the Universalist church and are settled at Greenville and Eaton, O. They have come to Richmond with the recommendation of Rev. Marion D. Crossley, superintendent of Universalist churches and expect to hold services for a few Sundays at 2:30 p. m. to give the members and friends of the Universalist church an opportunity to take steps toward organization. It is a favorable time and there will be a proposition made in regard to permanent services which will be of interest to all who would like to have a Universalist church in Richmond. CARY CLUB MEETING OF UNUSUAL INTEREST Mesdames Hurst and Thornburg Hostesses. THE FLAG" WAS THE TOPIC Milton, Ind., Oct. 23. Mrs. Horace L. Hurst and Mrs. Park Thornburg were the hostesses of the Gary club meeting which was held at the home of Mrs. Edgar P. Jones Thursday afternoon. The parlor and the living room were beautifully decorated in flags in keeping with the topic of the day, "The Flag." The opening exercise was "The Flags of the Nations," given by nine small boys. Mrs. Eva Ferris Thornburg gave a fine paper on the flag and Mrs. Louise V. Boyd of Cambridge City, gave a charming talk on the subject, beginning with the emblems followed by the Hebrews and other ancient peoples, and tracing the development I the flag. She gave a number of interesting incidents of devotion to the American flag. The responses to the roll call were on the flag. After the program, refreshments were served. C, C. & L. ticket agent wll! sell jc sleeping car tickets to Caicago for their 11:15 P. M. train. Call on him. apr8-tl The Hub Of The Body. The orzan around which all the other organ volve, and upon which they are largely d ndent for their welfare, ia the ttomacl hen the function of the stomach become ii .ired. the bowels and liver also become S nsred. To cure a disease of the stomach, liv - bowels get a 50 cent or SI bottle of Dr. Ca oil's Syrup Pepsin at your druggist's. It e promptest relief for constipation and dy osia ever cctn pounded.

wtDdooPT',rNe6-Pa m'ttl Book far Wowec If yom ne :jrj

TAKE NO STOCK III FRANKLIN STORIES

Earlham Is Uncertain About The Game With, Baptists Saturday. BELIEVES REPORTS "BEAR" IT IS BELIEVED HERE THAT FRANKLIN HAS THE BEST TEAM IT HAS EVER HAD PROBABLE QUAKER LINEUP. With the Franklin game only a day off there is a feeling of uncertalnty at Earlham as to its outcome. The "bear" stories from Franklin have received no consideration. They are generally conceded as having the best team the school has put out for years and the dope artists can hardly change the facts as rhown by comparitive scores. Earlham will be out weighed about 15 pounds to the man and will have to rely almost entirely on speed and a true fighting spirit It will be one of the most gruelling contests of the season. Much depends upon the line of the Iqcal college. If it can stand the attack of the heavier opponents there will be hopes for an Earlham victory. The team will leave Saturday knowing that every student of the college Is behind them and this universal strong spirit will have much to do with the quality of the fight they make. Coach Vail, when asked, replied that he had no predictions to make. This being his first year in the Indiana secondary college league he is handicapped much In estimating the strength of opposing teams. lie said however that the team was in a very good con dltlon and should put up a plucky and heady fight The members of the squad who will probably be taken are as follows: L. E. Hancock. Hatton. L. F. Walthal. L. G. Swaim. C. R. Stanley, Carrol. R. G. Barrett. R. F. Thlstlethwalte, Capt R. E. H. White, Brubaker. Wrltfhtr Q. Elliott, Wilson, Beebe. L. H. Guyer, P. Bniner. .y F. B. Wann. Calvert R. 11. Harrell. IV I HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM. The local lineup for the RichmondGreenville football game Saturday: Ferllng, Brown, Lamb, Kama, Harsh, Hobson, Magaw, Cox, Taliant Allison, Smith and Fisher. JESSUP APPOINTED GUARDIAN. In the case of James II. McCluro and others against Frederick Mc;Clure, a minor, to partition land which the plaintiffs and the defendant own in common, the court appointed Prosecutor Wilfred Jessup guardian of Frederick McClure. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY. Our new stiff Browns and Blacks are equal Our new Black and Brown young men's t telescopes are up to date in style and finish All other styles better I in price than you can do elsewhere. t See our line of j 50c Caps , AITS I 914 MAIN. SWEET CIDER (Just In) CREAM TO WHIP HOME MADE BREAD Phone 292. HADLEY BROS.

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