Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 264, 1 November 1907 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. Palladium Printing Co., Publishers. Office North 9th and A Streets. RICHMOND, INDIANA. PRICE Per Copy, Dally 2s Per Couy, Sunday 3c Per Week, Daily and Sunday 10c IN ADVANCE One Year $5.00 Entered at Richmond, Ind. Postcfflce As Second Class Mail Matter. The Magazines. ST. NICHOLAS IN 1908. Carolyn Wells has written ;i .serifs rf quaint and humorous verses, which fcho ca!L -The Ilappychap.s," which will run through several numbers of Ft. Nicholas. They will have plenty of pictures, made by Harrison Cady, the artist, who has been illustrating Mrs. Burnett's "Queen Silver-bell" stories. BEAUTY AT ZENITH AT FORTY. There is a beauty quite apart, from youth the beauty of the mature "woman. Some there are that maintain that, beauty does not reach its fenith under the ae of thirty-five or forty, in a measure this is borne out Jy the events of the antique past "W'hioh may likewise be paralleled vith instances of our own day. Helen of Try appeared on the scene at the fic;c of forty. Cleopatra was past thirty whrn she met Antony. Aspasia, married to Verifies when she was thirty-six, was a figure birlliant in her world for thirty years after. When 3iane de Poictiers was past, thirty-six fcho won the heart of Henry II, and he but half her ae. Anne of Austria Was thirty-eight when described as the Most beautiful woman of Europe. Mile Mar was heralded as the greatest of leanties at forty-five, and Mme. Rccajnier was at her best between the ages of thirty-five and fifty. Mine de .Maintenon was forty-three when united to J.ouis, and Catherine of Russia thirtythreo when she took seat on the throne which she occupied for thirtyfive years. All these women were world-famed for their beauty and gave the lie direct to that toothless old saw which buzzes the power of sweet sixteen. Tho dew of youth and a complexion of roses it must be admitted, sometimes combine in a face that is tinmoving, irresponsive, utterly lacking In that expression which goes to the making of a perfectly molded visage. From "The Dominance of American. Beauty," by Pen-Ron Maxwell, in The Bohemian for November. POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. Death is not a universal accompaniment of life. In the lower organisms death does not occur as a natural and necessary result of lif. Death with them is purely the result of an accident, some 'external cause. Natural death is a thing which has been acquired in the process of evolution. Why should it have been acquired? You will, I think, readily answer this question if you hold that the views which I have been bringing before you liave been well defended, by saying that it is due to differentiation, that When the cells acquire the additional faculty of passing beyond the simple tage to the more complicated organisation, they lose something of their vitality, something of their power of growth, something of their possibilities of perpetuation; and, as the organization in the process of evolution becomes higher and higher, this necessity for change becomes more and more imperative. But it involves the end. Differentiation leads up, as its inevitable conclusion, to death. Death Is the price we are obliged to pay for our organization, for the differentiation which exists in us. Professor Charles S. Miuot in Tho Popular Science Monthly. TACOMA, THE CITY OF DESTINY. (Chauucey Thomas In "Success Magazine.") Tacoma, truly "The City of Destiny." has one of the finest harbors in the world, ample tide, lands, practically unlimited level land, both near a water level and on the plateau up a rise of from one to three hundred feet, and the shortest railroad haul from ruget Sound on a water level to the Canon of the Columbia. Here at Tacoma, the only point on Puget Sound where such conditions exist, we find the necessary and sufficient elements of the great city or heart of the great city of the future. Other points exceed Tacoma in some one thing, but Tacoma is the only point that has enough of everything and is lacking vn. notnlng. To these things may be added huge beds of the finest coking coal in the Northwest, and from Mount Tacoma or Kanier a near, unlimited and eternal water power, equaling Niagara to turn into electricity. In fact, the mountains adjacent to the Sound assure the entire region practically unlimited water and electrical power, but some points are more remote from a supply than are others. In this and in coal, however, none even equal Tacoma. THE LADIES WORLD. The Ladles World for November is an excellent number, full of good stories and most Interesting personal and household department matter. The leading feature is a new serial. The Captain and the Maid, by Roy Norton, the well known writer of short stories. It is a tale of the Northwest, and opens In very ? promising style. Kleanor Kobson gives a very humorous account of the doings of one of her mascots, a doll named Sniggs, given her by Richard Mansfield. There are also stories amusing and sentimental by Harriet Kowland, Wej mer Jay Mills and. Ilel-

ONE OF THE BEAUTIES OF

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Mrs. A. V. Pederneiras, wife of the military attache of the Brazilian embassy, at Washington, and one of the beauties of the capital city, who on returning from tho Peace Conference brought over a whole wardrobe of gorgeous Parisian gowns. Mrs. Pederneiras has been called the most lovely cosmopolitan type of Patrician beauty in the national capital.

en A. Saxon, and a really delicious contribution for the children by Grace MacGowan Cooke. POLITICAL METHODS IN NEW JAPAN. I.afcadio Hearn through his wife and a few pupils had access to the intimacies and courtesies, the customs and legends and superstitions of the past, which made his happiness: but the necessities of his livelihood brought him into contact with a colder world of polite, critical, practical persons, whose habits of mind jarred at every point on his more wayward and emotional spirit. Writing on behalf of a Western friend, whom he considered to have been harshly treated by Oriental employers, he said bitterly: "Japanese officialdom is not lovable and it is Oriental when unpleasant. It does not say 'Here! if you don't like things! get out! here's your salary.' On the contrary, it suddenly becomes coaxing, caressing, infinitely sweet, and invites you out for multitudinous insult. Then you are suddenly surrounded by smiling combinations unimaglned and unimaginable and softly struck in a hundred ways. A knockdown blow is nothing to it. I pity a man of letters in the government service in Tokyo:" From "Things Knglish and Japanese," in The Craftsman for November. There is only one cotton mill in Egypt, which in this respect is behind all other cotton raising countries, where the tendency is for the cotton mills to go to the cotton fields. The anomaly is due to taxes and to the insufficiency of efficient help. There is a new use for New York ' public parks. They are recommended ' as sanitariums for recovering from ! drunkenness. Fridav a hie nolieeman ! guided a drunken man through a irate of Bryant park with the advice, "Go in there and sit down until you are sober." HER "BEST FRIEND" A Woman Thus Speaks of Postum. We usually consider our best friends those who treat us best. Some persons think coffee a real friend, but watch it carefully awhile and observe that it is one of the meanest of all enemies for it stabs one whi'e professing friendship. Coffee contains a poisonous drug caffeine which injured the delicate j nervous system and frequently sets up disease in one or more organs of the body, if its use is persisted in. "I had heart palpitation and nervousness for four years and the doctor told me the trouble was caused by coffee. He advised me to leave it off, but I thought I could not, writes a Wis. lady. " On the advice of a friend I tried Postum Food Coffee and it so satisfied me I did not care for coffee after a fewdays trial of Postum. "As weeks went by, and I continued to use Postum. my weight increased from :S to US pounds, and the heart trouble left me. I have used it a year now and am stronger than I ever was. I can hustle up stairs without any heart palpitation, and I am cured of nervousness. ! "My children are very fond of PosItum and it agrees with them. My sis;ter liked it when she drank it at my house, but not when she made it at j her own home. Now that she has i learned to make it right, boil it ac- ' cording to directions, she has become I very fond of it. You may use my name if you wish as I am not ashamed of praising my best friend Postum." Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek. Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," In pkgs. "There"s a Reason."

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SU3T

THE NATIONAL CAPITAL. UNUSUAL ACCIDENTS OCCUR ATJEW PARIS Two Reported That Would Be Hard to Duplicate. TOP GRINDS INTO HAND. New Paris, O., Nov. 1. Dr. C. A. Hawley reports two very peculiar accidents, either one of which would be very hard to duplicate. A few days ago while James Jackson was driving in his double surrey from the house to the barn, his little son Guy, jumped onto the step, which is also a double fender covering both wheels. While they were driving along the wire In the rubber tire of one of the wheels broke, and strange to re late that while the vehicle was not moving very rapidly, yet there was enough force to drive one end of the heavy, rusty wire through the leather fender and into the boy's left leg, which it penetrated to a distance of some ten or eleven inches in a perpendicular line, being buried in the flesh about half inch. The wire was forced through the flesh until about half a foot of it was exposed. As might be supposed, it made a painful wound, finally forming an abcess, which has been opened, but at present the lad is doing nicely. A second peculiar case is that of a niece of Roy Eubanks, who bought a candy top a few days ago and while ln une ol Iler nanus 10 wmu it up iae tack which held a spiral spring wire pulled out and wound itself into the Palm of ber hand so far as to make it necessaiy to cut it out. Blackheads, blotches and pimples are caused by the improper action of the bowels. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea regulates the bowels, makes your complexion clear and beautiful, gives you that healthy look. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. When Longfellow DTnecf. " "Yesterday I dined with Dominican friars at the convent of San Clemente. Archbishop Manning and several people of note were there. We had a jovial dinner and good wine, and every dish was Italian, not to say ItalianJsfidnio. After dinner we went into a small coffee room, where the Inquisitor tried to light a fire, with email success. Home one cried out, 'Ah, padre, the days have gone by when fires can be lighted by inquisitors!' and there was a roar of laughter, in which the padre aforesaid joined heartily." "Yesterday Lowell gave a supper to Thackeray. We sat down at 10 o'clock and did not leave the table until 1. It was a very gay affair, with stories and jokes. " 'Will you take some port?' 6aid Lowell to Thackeray. " 'I dare drink anything that becomes a man.' replied T. " 'It will be a long while before that becomes a man.' "'Oh, no,' cried Felton; 'it is fast turning into one.' " Extracts From Longfellow's Letters. Is Tie Ntomaeh Dispensable? An operation for the removal of the stomach. In a Chicago hospital recently, promoted discussion among the surgeons whether the stomach could be removed and the patient be none he worse for it. Before the discussion had well lied out. the patient had died. It demonstrated ie could not live without his stomach. To keep he stomach in good condition, and cure constiation. indigestion, etc., use the great herb laxa ive compound. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Druggists sell it at 50 cents and $1 a bottle. Chicago passengers using C. C. St L. trains land at 12th at. (Illinois Central) Station; most conveniently located. Remember this. -U

- TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, IVOVTOIBEK 1, 1IKJ7.

HEW- SAFETY PAPER TO BE USED Local Railroads as Well As Others Will Have New Style for Tickets. DEMAND FOR OPERATORS. IT WILL BE GREATLY INCREASED AFTER THE FIRST OF MARCHOTHER NEWS OF THE RAILROAD SYSTEMS. Local railroads as well as all others j over the country will soon be using the; new style safety paper for tickets, which was devised last year. For several months this question of changing from the old to new paper has been prominent in railway discii3Bious. At one time it threatened a disruption of the peaceful relations of the various roads. For several years an Ohio concern has been making the iHtPt. mnpr nn a lone: term contract, and since the contract is to run out be- j fore long, it was just the time for an i inventor of a new chemical paper to ; step in and make a bid for the business, j i

SOON

Many of the railway officials ar- operators aim iess naumij ol ucci- , , , , dents, as each man will have an opporgued that the change from the old tojtunUy tQ Becure hjg rest ftnd therefore the new paper would be too costly. It aoie to a better degree of efficiency was admitted that although the ; carry on his work. Many wrecks in -scalpers" were defacing the present ' Iast years have been attributed to

paper, it would be impossible to invent a paper which could not be defaced. Then it was also asserted that the change from the old to the new would , Little Ills of Children Mothers and all others who have children about the house cannot do their families a better service than to learn of 6imple and reliable remedies that correct children's ailments. Many grown people are suffering today for the ignorance or negligence of those who had charge of their bringing up. Children are prone to constipation, nu ir u isn t corrected early, the bow els get in the habit of not working nor mally and soon chronic constipation results mat may last off and on all through life. Then children eat almost continually and as a consequence indigestion sets in soon followed by worms. or stomach pains, or diarrhea, or any one of a j dOBen other troubles. To eay that it will right ! itself is putties- altogether too much faith in , chance. It is tcyin with the child's present , and future health. A better way is to give the child a close of SOmethilflT intendsd o iim ht mnr mnht. and cothint better for the purpose is known than -aiaweii s syrep Fepsin. It never gripes ?w ently "d as it has a pleasant taste nc d wiU not refuse to take it. Buy a 50 cent or $1 bottle of your drugcist and save the child vf5 6ickness. You should remember that a c . .Tth08e stomach is in good working order is not likely to catch colds and fever diseases Mrs. Curry, of Trowbridge, la., attributes the remarkable health of her child to Dr. Caldweil'a fcyrup Pepsin, which she gives regularly in these disorders. Mrs. Eversote. of Hlnsboro. in., is frank to say that the present good condition of her five-year-old boy is entirely due to this wonoerful remedy. Try it in your own family and see if yoa cannot share these opinions. Every bottle (is guaranteed to do exactly as we claim. snd the porlty of icrredients is also vouched for. FPFF TTCT ThM wishing to try Dr.Csld. , IbWI wetl's Syruo Pepsin before Ouying cm have a trw sampi pottle rent to their home by addrss sing the cemoany. TWs offer is to prov. thatthe remedy will so as we claim, and is only open to those who have never taken It Send for It if you have any tymoioiotof tomach, Ihrar or bowel digeaa Gentlest jet most effective taxative for chnoren, worms and oKJ rXIS1 " Lattve So 6ood and Sure !!. ?&0WEU-' Up PEPSIN." TWt product b Wait csaraptsa No. 17. Washington, a C. , .-.-!EMHB SYRUP CO. tOgQUhweM Btstg. MoartiMltsw tH.

NOVEMBER F6HST EV1ARKS THE BEGE&ra!5!G OF FUR SEASON

OUR DISPLAY IS NOW READY FOR INSPECTION. Our oft repeated phrase IN FURS WE HAVE NO COMPETITION is more applicable this year than ever before. For thirteen years Boston Store Furs have stood the test. Thousands of ladies in Richmond and adjacent territory will corroborate these strong cliirrs. Our Fur Coats have a style, fit and finish not attained by any other make. Plain Near Seal Coats $30.00, $40.00, $45.00, $50.00, $55.00 Trimmed Near Seal Coats $30.00, $40.00, $60.00, $65.00, $70.00 Blended Coney Coats $30.00 Blended Mink Coats $65.00 Blended Squirrel Coats $90.00 Our assortments of small furs we will not attempt to describe at this time. Remember Boston Store for Furs. H. C. HASEMEIER CO.

IiivcJve too much labor on the part of the railroads. The general plea was that it would be useless to adopt the lew paper. The advocates of the new PR per were confident that it would show erasures, while the work of changing would not be as great as was first thought. At a recent meeting of the general managers of the railroads, which Manager G. L. Peck, of the Pennsylvania railroad attended, it was decided to adopt the new paper Erasures show the various col- j t ors ors. Chemicals also change the color ' of the paper. The contract for the nev; paper has been let to a New York firm. bigger officials think that the change from the old to the new will not involve a great amount of work, local ticket agents think otherwise, and dread the time when the new paper is sent. DEMAND FOR OPERATORS. While there is a demand for telepph operators at the present time. there will be a greater demand in the near future. Beginning next March the state law passed by the last legis-j lature, will compel railroad companies to employ three telegraph operators at each important station, where trains pass at different hours, day or night. The men will be compelled to work on eight hour shifts. As the penalty, there is a fine of one hundred dollars per day for failure to , coir.ply with the law and the local cum- ! I an'es are making every effort to secure men. As fast as they can be found thev are nlaeed to work that they may be hel(I Exlra men are ah ready working along local lines. The , new law will mean better hours for the j a j i i-i : i : i e overworKeu operators. The new law will discommode the C. c & h in th,g clty more tuan jt wjll the Pennsylvania, for the reason that fewer trains are run along "the Straight Line" through Richmond than on the bigger road. The telegraph schools which hav been established in Richmond, are ex pected to aid in solving the question of efficient operators. Many of those in the schools now will be able by March to hold positions on the railroads. Sev- ! eral railroad men holding other positions are attending night schools to fit themselves for better positions. COAL IS DELAYED. Local merchants are handicapped by car shortages in the eastern part of the country. For several weeks shipments of coal to Richmond have been! delayed. In some instances, order placed four months ago are still unde livered, the coal dealers haying that! the miueoperators cannot guarantee ' nrompt shipments due to the lack of ransportation facilities. So far as lo-! al shippers are concerned, but little rouble has occurred uptodate. as regards to securing cars in which to ship heir products. Local officials do not ; "ear a car shortage so much as they do freight congestion. When the new Pennsylvania freight depot is built here the condition will be directly changed however, as all freight can be handled ... f,loott, w Itn oispatCU. . . . n . e MINOR NOTES, Totr Mprhanic n V TTnvP5 nnri Master .MecnaniC U. r . riajea ana Road Foreman Of Engines A. L. OpUf - v . o,-,, t; rune, ui luc uiauu xvupius iv iiiumua, leave for the northern peninsula of Michigan the first of this month. The Pennsylvania company contemplates laying two tracks in addition to the present double track at several important passing points on the line of the Ft. Wayne division. Traffic is often delayed on account of the congestp1 condition on the present double tracks. a

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OCIoites $1.00 HATS This should interest you A hard winter and high living expenses for the next six months is going to make you go some. Better wear good clothes bought cheap than the samo clothes bought high. At Hall's will get you as good a Suit or Overcoat as you will get any place else for one third more. Don't doubt this but come and see our big slock. MALL 914 MAIN. RICHMOND, IND. CHICHESTER'S PILLS 71IK lHAMO.NI I1RAM). A ( h.vke-trr's limond Tirdy 'Ills in llrd tnl C ij :n,iicv Take m other. B'iy of Tour "-lt- Atkferlili-Ciritii-TER'S IIAJoI 1RANI PIJ.LS. fc years known as Bct, S&fet, A. way Rci1hl SOLD BY ORlGGiSTS EVERYWHERE MM and n BLACK

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TEAS

Make the Ideal Beverage Rich and Satisfying ONE TEASPOONFUL MAKES TWO CUPS. Loose or in Sealed Packets. All Grocers (Published by authority of the India and Ceylon Commissioner.)

Dark Days Are Here... Now Is tbe time for FLASH LIGHT PHOTOGRAPHY. Wc have all tbe requisites. Booklet on Flashlight. Portraiture free. W. H. Ross Drug Co. 804 MAIN ST. RICHMOND.

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F. B. THOMPSON G. E. BYERS g The People's Wine Co. I SPECIALTY Edgewood Pure Rye and Bourbon Whiskies; also Bonded Whisky and case wines and brandies of the best brand. O 430 MAIN ST., RICHMOND, IND. 8

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Wedding Beils are ringing. "We Have tHe Rings." 18 and 22 karat. No such assortment Is oliered except in large cities. Jenkins fL Co Jewelers

New Corn and Clover Kay at OMER G. WHELAN Feed and

39 S. 6th St. Phone 1679 SWEET CIDER (Just In). NEW KRAUT (fine) CREAM TO WHIP (Heavy) HOME MADE BREAD. Phone 2292. HADLEY BROS. Have you noticed the improyea serfIce to Chicago via the C. C. & L? Through aleeper leayes Richmond at 11:15 P. M. dally, arrives in Chicago at 7:00 A. M. Try it aprG-tf FOUNTAIN PENS. The largest and best stock In the city. 25c to $3.00. Pens repaired while you wait Keep this in view. JENKINS & CO., Jewelers. CEYLON GREEN