Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 278, 16 November 1907 — Page 2
PAGE TWO.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1907. SHE IS THE LOVLIEST BARRISTER IN PARIS. LOCAL AND GENERAL SPORTS
QUAKER TEAM LEFT IK GOOD CONDITION
Has the Battle of the Season! On With DePauw This Afternoon. WEIGHT ABOUT THE SAME. EARLHAM WILL RELY LARGELY ON STRAIGHT FOOTBALLMUCH INTEREST IS SHOWN IN OUTCOME OF BIG CONTESTS. The Quaker football team in charge of Coach Vail and accompanied by about sixty or neventy rooters, includ-j log fair co-eds, left this morning at j six o'clock on a special traction car for Ireencastle, where Karlham will meet De Pauw this afternoon in battle royj-.l j 10 decide the secondary championship: of Indiana and Illinois. Ail the members of the Quaker team are in fine Khape and ready to play the aiiie of i their lives. j Coach vail states that his team wiil ; average about one hundred and sixty pounds. This will be about the average weight of the team De I'auw will ; put in the field, and so far as aveidupols is concerned, both contestants for championship honors will be equally matched. With his scrubs using De Pauw formations. Coach Vail has all week been perfecting his varsity defense so that it will be able to resist the. fierce Methodist attack. The Quaker linemen have shown great improvement in their pla- and are expected to put up a light which will open the eyes of the Methodists. Rely on Straight Football. Coach Vail since the first of the season, has used the vomewhat. antiquated Pennsylvania tandem formations lor his attack, but this formation has proven an excellent round ainer for the Quakers and the Karlham supporters ure placing the greatest confidence in the ability of the sturdy Karlham baciv Held to penetrate the Do Pauw defense. Captain Thistlethwaite and his men will rely principally on straight football in carrying the ball this afternoon. If the Quaker attack works smoothly and the costly fumbling is eliminated there is no reason vhy Earlham should not defeat the strong De Pauw team, notwithstanding the opinion of critics throughout the staie who unanimously favor the Methodists in the game this afternoon. We venture the prediction that the game the Quakers will put up this afternoon wiii ! open wide the eyes of numerous carp-.' ing dopesters. If De I'auw does win it will be seen, that the accurate toe of Tooker, the great Methodist drop and place kicker, will count materially in the victory. Interested in Big Games. Ixical fans are taking the keenest interest in the results of tue MichiganPennsylvania, the Yale-Princeton and the Minnesota-Carlisle Indian games, which will be pulled off this afternoon. Pennsylvania looks better than Yost's eleven. Yale is the favorite' over Princeton, but the. Tigers are liable to ; surprise their ancient enemy. It is rumored that the great Princeton team ! has gone stale. General iuterest is centered in the Minnesota-Carlisle Indian game, as it will furnish a comparison of eastern and western teams; Minnesota has one of the strongest elevens in the west, and this year Carlisle has defeated Pennsylvania and Harvard. The only team the Indians have bowed tho knee to is Princeton. Chicago is the only eleven which has defeated Minnesota. Pneumonia Follows a Cold but never follows the use of Foley's Honey and Tar. It stops the cough, heals and strengthens the lungj and prevents pneumonia. A. G. Luken & Co. DEPAUW IS IN GOOD CONDITIO FOR PLAY Earlham Will Have No Easy Time With Methodists. COACH BROWN SATISFIED. Greencastle, Ind., Nov. 16. Coach Brown gave his men the last workout of the year Friday afternoon on MoKeen Field and was satisfied with the showing tnat his colts made. The practice Friday afternoon was light, the men being run through the various signals only and no heavy work being given. There has been some little fear in the camp of the Methodists lately that the men were tale and that the condition of the squad for today's game was not of the best. All such doubts were van i. -bed Friday, however, when tho members of the team were put through a lightning practice. They showed as much speed Friday afternoon as at any previous time during the year, and their powers of endurance were vastly superior to what the coach had Imagined they rerc. Only One "BROMO QUININE," that is Laxative Bromo Quinine
Football Games Today
Manual vs. Louisville, M. T. II. 3., at Indianapolis Shortridge V3. Steele, at Dayton. Butler vs. Hauover. at Hanover. Wisconsin ve. Purdue at Lafayette. Earlbam vs. De Pauw. at Grcencastle. Penn vs. Michigan, at Ann Arbor. Carlisle vs. Minnesota at Minneapolis. Yale vs. Princeton, at New Haven. Harvard, vs. Dartmouth, at Cambridge. Iowa vs. Ames. Missouri vs. Washington Kansas vs. St. Louis. Oberlin vs. Wooster. Lake Forest vs. Knox. Ohio State vs. Case. Michigan Aggies vs. Olivet. Nebraska vs. Denver. Anderson vs. Sheridan. Crawfordsville vs. Brownsburg. An every night all year round medicine, pleasant to take, positive results. It's Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea, the greatest family remedy, 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. A. G. Lukcn & Co. Before the Matinee call at Stranahan's, 9th and .Main, and get nice Fresh Chocolates. 14-3t HONESTY AS A POLICY. Refactions of a Jailer Whose Wife Took a Prisoner's Cake. Rather an original story comes from the criminal prison at Warsaw. A bookkeeper named Schneider was awaiting his trial, being charged with fraud. As his health was bad. bis family sent him many little delicacies unknown in the prison fare, delicacies which, no doubt, the head warder shared with him. One day. among other things, a huge ; iced cake appeared. The warder's j children were fond of cake, and so was : his wife. They therefore determined to keep half of it for themselves. Their surprise was great when upon applying a knife to the dainty It stuck just below the icing and refused to go any farther. "It must be baked to a cinder," said Mrs. Warder. But her good roan, suspecting that something worse than careless baking was responsible for the cake's hardness, cut roind the 6ides and was rewarded by finding a revolver and Beven cartridges buried la the paste. When brought up before thf authorities Schneider confessed that he had intended to shoot his guardians and escape from prison before bis trial. "After all," said the warder pensively when he told his story, "honeity is not always the best policy. If; my wife had not cut Into that cake I should have been a dead man by now, for I Bleep hard." Pall Mall Gazette. CRUELTY IN PERSIA. Queer Things About the People of That Queer Country. According to the authors of "Queer Things About Persia." cruelty is common there. The executioner cut3 throats in a public square, and the spectacle excites little interest. Criminals are sometimes crucified and sometimes walled up alive. Women for certain offenses are cast headlong from a tower. The Persian is a gentleman of surpassing courtesy and politeness, but say these writers: "The same man who drops rose petals under your feet in order to make them avoid the hardness of the road will not hesitate to make you suffer the most cruel tortures. He delights in the murmur of the rivulet in the moonshine, but the sound of blood flowing from au open wound has also for him its fas cination. The singing of the nightingale fills him with rapture in the night, but be quivers with pleasure at the cry of pain from a victim." Also they aflirm that lying is an institution and no one condemns it. "The Persian does uot consider a lie a sin. He thinks that we have a bad opinion of lying because we do not know how to lie, and if he shows an unbounded confidence in everything the Europeans say it is chiefly because he thinks we are totally devoid of the gift." Sustaining His Reputation. A story is told of the Prince de Conti, whose reputation for cruelty stood high. He was going to mass with some ladies when his bailiff asked for Instructions concerning a poacher who had Just been caught on the grounds. "Give him 100 stripes and lmpuson him in a dungeon for two years," was the answer. One lady, horror stricken, went to the bailifi afterward, but he only laughed in her face. "The prince only said that to keep up his reputation. His royal highness came to me directly after mass aud begged me to see that the poor wretch was only sent away from the neighborhood for two mouths aud that his family was well looked after during his absence." PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. NOTICE TO HUNTERS. Positively no hunting allowed on my farms. PETER BEELER. . nt The fact that, colds are more common in the winter than in the summer is not due simply to the lower temperature. It is mainly because people spend less time in the open air. Dreading the chill air they remain indoors. The health is proportionately lowered and they take cold easily. London Cassell's. - Jf CltfJs on every box. 33
DOCTORS TOO MUCH FOR INSURANCE MEN
Beat Them in a Bowling Match Friday. Friday night at the city bowling al- ' leys the insurance men played against the doctors, with four men on each team. The latter aggregation took , two of the three games. Scores: j Insurance Men lsG. 2dG. CrG. ' Cring 118 130 112 Thornton 132 92 139 Shideler 90 lo. 117 Taylor 14$ 122 115 l Totals 4S8 499 483 Doctors IsG. 2dG. 3rd. ; Markley 135 149 122 Harold 133 132 122 Smythe 12S 123 8fi Waters. . 153 124 147 Totals 519 528 477 , FOOTBALL SCORES. Wabash Athletic Association Franklin College 0. 1. ! THIN DEFENDS WILLIAM T. NOBLE Objects to Some Statements Made Concerning Former Richmond Man. FEES NOT CONCEALED. LAW OF 1907, UNDER WHICH ATTORNEY GENERAL IS NOW ACTING, HE CLAIMS, WOULD MEAN CONFISCATION. W. W. Thornton, a lawyer and exreporter of the Supreme court of the state, has been retained by William T. Noble, an ex-clerk of the supreme court, and formerly of Richmond, who is defending a suit brought by Attorney General Bingham to recover certain fees or costs said to be in the hands of Noble, as well as Alexander Hess, Andrew M. Sweeney and Noble, all former clerks of the supreme and appellate courts. Mr. Thornton, discussing the suits, said: "These gentlemen, when they retired from the office did so just as all their predecessors had done. If the state can go back to the time of Mr. Sherrin or Mr. No ble, it can go back to 1S53, for all of the clerks since that date have followed the same practice. When Mr. Sherrin. Mr. Noble, Mr. Sweeney and Mr. Hess retired from office there was no statute authorizing them to turn over these sheriff's costs and transcript fees, nor any of the amounts sued for, to their successors, whatever the attorney general may say to the contrary, and they were so advised by counsel. If they had turned these sums over to their successors and these successors had enibez,.ed these amounts or refused to pay them out on proper application the ywould have to pay them again. I hold that the statement that there was a law requiring them to turn over these fees is erroneous." "Speaking for Mr. Noble, he has never, except In one instance, refused to pay over the fees entitled to them. Certain persons claiming to act under general powers of attorney, have in time demanded some of these fees: but in the case of Mr. Noble, he was advised by the attorney general ond by one of the judges of the supreme court that their powers of attorney were void. "By the statute of 1907 the state of i Indiana now seeks to take these fees from the ex-clerks and pay them into the state treasury. I hold It is an act of confiscation. "In the complaint against Mr. Noble the attorney general charges that he concealed the fact that he had collected these fees. This is denied. No one ever entitled to examine the records whil he wa3 in office was denied access to them: and that is true of all his successors." The Sam Old Mother. "Now. Jamie." said the schoolteacher. "If there were only one pie for dessert and there were five of yon children and papa and mamma to divide it among, how large a piece would you get?" "One-sixth." replied Jamie promptly. "But there would be seven people there. Jamie. Don't you know howmany times seven goes into one?" "Yes'm. and I know my mother. She'd say she wasn't hungry for pie that day. I'd get one-s!xtb." Youth's Companion. A Disappointment. Rich Uncle (to his physician) So you think there is hope for me? "Not only that, but I can assure yon that you are out of danger." "Yery well. 1 wish you would in form my nephew, but break the news gently to him." Philadelphia Inquirer. Unaided. Dr. Slicer Shocking! This paper 6ays that 8.000 people died lackinff medical services last year. Mrs. Slicer Well, well! You wouldn't think that posible, would yon? Cleveland Leader. One of the latest curiosities in labor circles is the formation ot the Pallbearers Union in Alexandria. Va.
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Here is a portrait ot a woman who is UUt ully the loveliest barrister in Paris, but is one of the loveliest women of that city. She Is Mile. Helena Miropolsky, who although only '22 years old, has great knowledge of the law.
PLANS FOR NEW PLANT ARE NOW COMPLETE Work on Scott Stove Building To Start Monday. OPENING ABOUT APRIL 1ST. B. P. Wissler, a director of the Scott Stove company of Cambridge City, says the plans for the new plant have been entirely completed and the active construction work will begin Monday. The new building will be 60x214 feet. It will be divided into three sections foundry, mounting room and warehouse. Mr. Wissler says the directors hope to have everything in preparation for the opening which will occur about April 1. If the building can be completed beforo that date the factory will begin operations, however. ROE BARTON INJURED IN TRACTION WRECK Local Traveling Man Was Severely Injured. UNCONSCIOUS FOR HOURS. Rue Barton, a traveling salesman for the Richmond Candy company was in an interurban wreck between Greenville and Brookvllle, O., Wednesday of this week and received several severe injuries. For some hours he was unconscious after the wreck and it was at first thought that his injuries might prove fatal lie is now much improved however and will be able to resume his duties soon. Penalties of Being a Bachelor. The ancient Romans were severe With their bachelors, who were made to pay heavy tines, and, worse than that, Camillus, after the siege of Veil, Is recorded to have compelled them to marry the widows of the soldiers who bad fallen in war. In the time of Augustus married men were preferred for public office. The Romans who had three children were exempted from personal taxes, and the bachelors bad to pay them. Plato condemned single men to a fine, and at Sparta they were driven at certain times to the temple of Hercules by the women, who castigated them in true military style. In the French settlements of Canada women were sent over after the men. and the single men. that they might be forced to marry, were subjected to a heavy tax and to restrictions on their business and their movements generally. The Noonday Of Ufte. Married people should learn what to do for ens another's little ills, end for the CIS of tho children that may come. They are sore sooner or later to have occasion to treat constipation or Indigestion. When the opportunity come' remember that the quickest way to obtain relic and finally a perm anent cor, is with Dr. Cai e'.l'i Syrup Pepsin, the great herb laaativ XMT.pound. A bottle shocld always be in tb acuiw. It " - - irngE. rc AN UNFAIR ADVANTAGE. (Indianapolis Star.) Of course it is natural for Earlbam to pray for the success of its football team, but isn't it taking an unfair advantage of the irreligious college that have- no influence abova? -
PLACING CEMENT OH STONE CONSTRUCTION
Work Advancing on the Y. M. C. A. Building. WEATHER IS FAVORABLE. Contractors in charge of the Y. M. C. A. foundation work have already made rapid strides on the construction. Minuto excavations have been completed, and a large force of men are employed in filling these with cement, to bo used as a base for the stone construction. If present weather conditions continue the foundation will bo completed in short order. CASTORIA, Bears the T 'nl You Have AlAavs Bcagftt THEFT OF SHOTGUN CHARGED TO Cambridge City Man in the County Jail. GRAND JURY TO CONSIDER. George Byram, one of Cambridge City is confined in the county jail on a charge of petit larceny. Byram's case will be investigated by the grand jury. Byram was arrested Friday by Marshal Drischel on a charge of having stolen a shotgun from William Eiler, an old soldier. Eiler drew his pension Friday and with this money he made several purchases, among them a new shotgun, which he at once took home. It is claimed Byram, knowing that there was a strong market for firearms, owing to the hunting season entered the Eiler home, appropriated the shotgun ai.1 made an effort to sell it. He was unsuccessful in making the sale and when the weapon was left for safe keeping with a friend he reported the fact to Drischel. Byram was placed under arrest and bound over to the grand jury by Justice PritchardIt Would Not Pay. It was undoubtedly true that the stout man took up more room in the crowded car than is often occupied by one person. The exceedingly tbla man next whom be sat heavily down gave a sound of disapproval. "They ought to charge by weight In these cars." he said to his neighbor on the other side, in so clear a tone that the stout man bad to bear him. "Maybe 'twould be a good Idea, my friend." he said, taming a calm, dispassionate gaze, on the thin man. "but if they did you'd have to walk, The car would never atop for you." Have you noticed the tm proved serv Ice to Chicago via the C, C. & L Through sleeper leaves Richmond at 11:16 P. M. dally, arrlvaa Is Chlcajrr at 7:00 A. U. Try It apr-tf K this concerns too, read carehtHjr. Ui Caldwell's Syrcp Pepsia is positively smarac eed to cvra iadissttoa. eonstfpadoa. sick bead ache, effeaahre breath, as alar ia aad aildJeeaae artsfnff from tlamaa n trovMe.
AM
H I
Discriminating Men insist on knowing what thev biv. In selecting a stimulant they always demand Genuine Whiskey. The Government Green Stamp" is only found on natural whiskies. This stamp seals every bottle of Sunny Brook THE PURE. FOOD Whiskey It tells the exact Age-Proof ard Quantity of whikev within the bottle. Its purity, mellownes ami flavor comes ONLY from perfect distilling and perfect ageing. All First-Class Dealers Sell It. SUNNY BROOK DISTILLERY CO.. Jefferson County. Ky. WAYNE SUPPLY CO.
Distributors, Richmond, Ind.
THE CURSE OF INDIA CASTE, WHICH FIXES THE STATUS OF EVERY HINDOO. He Man Can Rlae From the Clasa. However I'nclean, la Which B tVa Horn Neither Wealth 5for Success Affect the taste of Any One. In the fixed scale of descent in India tome classes are merely Inferior, while lome are "unclean" or "untouchable," but from whatsoever class a man be born in be has no escape but death. Children born In an "unclean" caste remain "unclean;" children born in an Inferior caste remain as their fathers were. Nothing that they can do can In the slightest degree change their situation. They were born "unclean;" their ancestors were "unclean;" their descendants will be "unclean" till the end of the chapter. To give a few Illustrations from many, a weaver Is less "unclean" than a carpenter, a carpenter is above a house cleaner, a bouse cleaner is above a street cleaner, and a street cleaner is above a pariah or no caste man. Every trade or occupation has its exact place, arbitrarily fixed, in the scale of degradation. Above all the men that labor with their hands in whatsoever way are the tradesmen and shopkeepers, also with subdivisions into classes: above the tradesmen is the useless and now almost Idle warrior class; above the warriors is the Brahman or priestly class, and with these grand divisions the structure of the system is complete. Wealth or material situation or success has nothing to do with the caste of any man. You may hire for your cook or valet a Brahman of the purest strain serene, who for weeks before you engaged bim may have been on the verge of starvation. The meager beggar to whom you toss alms In the road may be of a very high caste. The well fed groom, resplendent In gorgeous livery, flashing by on a carriage that covers the beggar with dust, is very likely of a caste a mile below the beggar. Time no more than effort can break down these walls of division. One of the wealthiest and most distinguished families in Calcutta, the famous Tagore family, lost caste about two centuries ago. Members of this family have received honor from the government, have conferred great benefits upon city and country and have been noted for their numerous charities and benefactions. One exerted himself all his life to fnrther native education. Another helped to endow Calcutta university. All are enormously rich, and all bear enviable reputations for goodness, honesty and philanthropy. But th wall of caste has never fallen for them. They are still hated and avoided by their countrymen exactly as they were at the beginning of their exclusion. In the streets of Calcutta is many a ragged artisan that would not sit on the same bench with a Tagore or touch the end of his robe. Pain, suffering, penury, eveu death itself 1, nothing to the Hindoo cxm - pareu wim tue loss ui tasie. .uaujr a Hindoo that in the old days would yield nothing to the most fiendish tortures quickly surrendered his secrets when threatened with something that would contaminate him a piece of cowskin, perhaps, or a glass of water that had been touched by a pariah. In. I suppose, thousands of cases persons that have hopelessly lost their caste have abandoned their homes and wandered miserably along the roads until death overtook them. Thousands of others have thrown themselves into the Ganges or deliberately starved. Three Brahman girls who had been degraded by a Mussulman went before . a Judge to demand vengeance and j when the Jndge declined to Interfere kijled themselves In the courtroom. 1
Public Sale 80 Acre Farm The undersigned commissioner, appointed by the Wayne Circuit Court, will at the hour of 10 o'c'ock A. M. on Monday, November 25th, 1907, offer for sale at public auction, on the premises to be sold, situated about Vz miles southeast of Richmond, and Vz mile east of the Wernle Home, 80 acres of land, being the farm formerly owned and occupied by David MeClure. TERMS: 1-3 cash, 1-3 In 9 monhs and 1-3 In 13 months from day of sale, the purchaser giving his p-omissory notes for deferred payments, waiving valuation and appraisement laws, bearing 6 per cent Interest from date, and secured by mortgage on real estate sold. All purchase price may be paid in cash if purchaser so desires. Robbins, Starr & Robbins, Attorneys. Edgar F. Hiatt, Commissioner.
At'a 'fjvn caiieff huj uj a wraovr lost caste by falling in love with a man beneath ber. As loss of caste by one member of the family degrade the others also, her eldest son immediately swallowed poison and died, and his remaining brethren fled the country. A husband shares a wife's degradation. A wife goes down the steps with a husband. For iuor than 100 years a Brahman family of Hantlpur has been outcaste because one member foil in love with the daughter of a shoemaker. Charles Edward Russell la Cosmopolitan Magazine.
PrOBBMClatlOB. Ilere is a curious couplet which Illustrates In one sentence the various values of the combination "ough and showa bow strikingly inconsistent aro the spelling and pronunciation of some English words. The lines may be supposed to be the words of an Invalid who had a strong will and was determined to live in spite of his ailment: Though tho tough cough and hiccough ploughed me through. Tet o'er lire's lough my course X wiU pursue. SWEET CIDER (Just In) BACHMEYER KRAUT CREAM TO WHIP. HADLEY BROS. Phones 2292, New; 292, Old. SANITOL ' $2.70 worth of Sanltol Toilet Luxuries for $1.00. Call at the store and get our proposition. Leo H. Fihe's PHARMACY. A SENSIBLE THING Increase your ability, thus advance your salary, by attending night schood at Richmond Business College Enter Monday No. 2040. night Phone Kibllnger Elotor Bnggy, $250 And Upwards Air cooled 9-10 H. P. The Automo bile for winter. No water to freeze, XT-. rmntura4 HrM Simula aaf and 1 ;cllable Bum fQp CQUntry roadi W. H. KIBLINGER CO., No. 320. Auburn Box Ind The Best Brands Of Cigars To be found arc to be obtained here and they are tept Just right You won't find them dry and brittle, with the wrappers peeling off. When you want a good smoke come in and inspect our choice line of cigars. M. J. Quigley, 4th and Main
