Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 319, 31 December 1907 — Page 8
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THE RICHMOND PALLADll; ji .UD SiL-, AuiiAJi, TUESDAV, DKCEJiBEK 11M7.
"PfRHMIDSOFJOY"
CRIES HEW CASTLE M. C. Henley Delighted New Castle Editors and Oth1 ' ers by Compliment. "TICKLED" OVER NEW RINK. New Castle, Ind., Dec. 31. In two or three weeks New Castle will be given her first polo experience. Of course the teams wii r.ot have reached that stage of perfection as to be classed as professionals, but the games will be exciting enough to satisfy the local enthusiasts. An order was placed Saturday afternoon with M. C. IJenley and Son of Richmond for ten polo outfits complete, and delivery was promised within two weeks. At that time the practice games will bo commenced and continued until New Castle can boast of a crack amateur team. In commenting upon the arrangement of the coliseum Saturday night, Mr. Henley said, "It is a building far better than tho one In Itichmond and has one of tne finest floors that I have ever seen. Polo will undoubtedly make good In this city and I am glad to see that skating is so popular here." HELEN DIXON TO LEAVE BLGOMINGTON She Was the Sunday School ; Girl Who Swiped Organ Funds. WEARY AND HEARTSICK. Bloomington. 111., Dec. 31. With the; passing of 1907 tomorrow midnight,; Helen Dixon, the Sunday school girl embezzler, will forsake that name, and under a new name, will leave Uloomln'gton and Illinois and seek in tome place where she and her story are un-. known, to make a new start in life. Miss Dixon was arrested last February on her confession that she had embezzled $2,200 left in her charge as j treasurer of the Gleaners society of j her church. The money vras to have been used to buy an org;ui for the church. At first she said she had giv-. n it to her brother, but later said it had "just slipped through her fingers." j The girl Is weary and heartsick from her failure to find any one who will believe her story of repentance and give her a chance to work. When she came from jail she had decided to face the future bravely and try to live down the past but both she and her friends have come to the conclusion that the only plan open for her is to take a new name and go far away from Bloomington. Dancing Proves Fatal. Many men and women catch colds at, dances which terminate in pneumonia and consumption. After exposure, if Foley's Honqy and Tar is takn it will break up a cold and no ser- j ious results need be feared. Refuse any but the genuine In a yellow package. A. G. Luken & Co.
You Arc Welcome to
F U ffRJ I T 0JRE- BEDD I W G - P I CTU RES 925-927-323 MAIN ST,
PLEADS WITH AMERICANS TO STRUGGLE FOR INDIA'S
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Mrs. Thikhayi Ruston Cama of Bombay, the wife of a rich East InOlan who has come to this country from Bombay to ask the American people for assistance in the struggle for a freedom of India, against Kng-land, which says is impending. Inset is a picture of the flag chosen for India if the country becomes a Republic.
WIFE AVENGER NOT JOE FOUND Belief Prevails That Man Has Escaped. St. Louis, Mo., Dec. 31 St. Louis police are still searching for William Crane of Seymour, hid., who enticed his employe, Henry Wieneke, to a rooming house near Union Station, chloroformed and mutilated him to avenge himself for Wieneke's alleged attentions to his wife, but the belief prevails that Crane has made his escape from the city. The Sunrise Of Life. Tr.fants and children ere constantly Deeding: ft axative. It is ImporUnt to know what to rive cbetn. Tbelr stomach and bowels are not strong enough for salts, purgative waters or cathartic piiis. powders or ti-owiU. Give them a mild, -feasant, irentle. laxative tonic like Dr. Cald .veil's Syrup Pepsin, which sells at tfca small scin of SO cents or SI at drug stores. It is the one great remedy for you to have ia toe house to give calMrea when they need it.
With the Approach of the New Year '08 NEW RESOLUTIONS ARE IN ORDER What better resolution could you make, than to resolve to put aside a portion of your income with Dickinson Trust Company Be ONE to join our prosperous army of 7 900 Savings Depositors, WHEN YOU DEPOSIT YOUR MONEY HEREYOU KNOW IT IS SAFE Dickinson Trust Company extends to all the Seasons f Greetings.
TAKE HAND IN FREEDOM FROM ENGLAND.
DEPOSITORY LAW WILL NEED CHANGE Deputy Attorney General Likens It to a Piano Entirely Out of Tune. STEP IN RIGHT DIRECTION. That the new depository law which state, county and city officials are endeavoring to cor true in order that all deposits can be legally made by the time the law becomes effective, will need a great deal of remedying before it is put on the statute books to stay is the statement made yesterday by Deputy Attorney General Henry M. Dow ling. "The way the matter stands now," said Mr. Dow ling, "it is just like a pianist trying to play on a defective instrument. There can be no harmony until the law is amended so that provision will be made for contingencies. I am satisfied that the law is a step in the right direction, but there will have to be amendments before it will answer all the requirements." 1 Among the richer classes :54" in lnnt i nve to sixty years, in the middle classes 17,"; of the laboring class !.".;. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY
An Inexpensive HomeMade Cough Syrup.
Thia recipe wi'l make a full pint of unusually effective cough syrup enough to last the whole family a long time at a total cost of about 54 cents. Its delightful taste makes It popular with children, ar.d it is equally good for young or old. Simple as it is, nothing else will stop a, deep-seated cough so quickly. It is also excellent for colds, whooping cough, sore lungs, chest pains, bronchial troubles and other throat affecfectlons. Use Granulated Sugar Syrup 132 oz. Pinex 21-2 oz. You can make this in about five minutes. Take about threequarters of a pound of granulated sugar, add water, heat and stir until you have a thick syrup. Put 2V2 oz. of Pinex in a pint bottle, then fill it up with the Granulated Sugar Syrup. Keep well corked and It will never spoil. Take a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours. The results from this simple recipe are no less remarkable in their way than the wonderful cures of lung and throat diseases in the pine forests. l?oth are due to the abundance of guaiacol and other elements in the nine. Pinex is the most concentrated form of Norway White Pine Extract. All druggists have it or can get it without trouble if requested. Care should be taken to use the real Pinex, as it possesses a purity and strength not to be found in any of the numerous pine oil or pine tar preparations. STRANGLE!) KILLEO SEVERAL WOMEN Developments in New York Trial Sensational in the Extreme. KEHRER WOMAN KILLED. New York, Dec. 31. Eugene Di Potti, on the witness stand in the court of general sessions, today, swore that Guisseppi Capuzzo, also known as Charles Davis, confessed to him that ho strangled Sophie Kehrer, of Buffalo, and that he had killed other women in the same way. Ms. Keher was found murdered iu a furnished rooming house here last July. Capuzzo was arrested a few days later and is now on trial for the crime. Di Potti and Capuzzo roomed together, and after the crime the latter, according to Di Potti, returned to their room and told him of the murder. "It was easy," he told me. "I gripperl her throat for a while and then let go. Then I gripped it again and again until she was dead." He said he knew how to do it. because ne had s gled women before. Following Di rotti on the witness stand came the defendant himself. He denied all knowledge of the murder of Sophie Kehrer .although he said he had lived with her three weeks and was with her the night of her death. DIFFICULTY TO FIND PLACE JOB CONTEST Will Not Be in Tomlinson Hall This Year. The Indiana Intercollegiate Oratorical association, comprised of the leading colleges of the state, is having difficulty in finding a place to hold the annual oratorical contest. The usual place of holding the struggle in Tomlinson hall in Indianapolis, but a conflict in dates with tho hall management will prevent the contest being held there. The day scheduled for the battle of words is Feb. s, and the hall will be in use by the poultry show on this date. How Different Herel With the Persiau one cr.nnot discuss his women folk. To ask n Persian about his wife is a grare breach of etiquette. The most you cad do is to ask about the "mother of his son." If he has only daughters he does not mention them. They are a misfortune to be suffered in silence. London Globe. Th Lover. "It feems to me. Mabel.'' said the girl's mother, "that you've 1-ecome very fond of Mr. Prettyman In a very short time." "Why, mother," exclaimed the blnshin? girl, "how can you say that?" "I overheard you telling: him last ' nicht that he was 'too hateful for any : thing.' "Philadelphia Press. Explained. I ''Every one spe.iks of your benevo1 IsTice. madam, aud that you provide so ' u;any nsedy ones with food." j "Yes, yes; when one has three daughj ters leanring to cook at the same time." ! Flicgende Blatter. Charity. I "Par's enough charity In dis wori j ter kiver a multitude er sinners," said Brother Williams, "but ter do 'urn any good hereafter de kiverin' should be fireproof." Atlanta Constitution. When one door shuts a . hundred open. Spanish Proverb.
A WEST POINT STORY
ODD INCIDENT THAT MADE GENERAL BUELL BREAK A RECORD. A FUcrtat Breach of Discipline That Wmu Grotesque Enough to Make the General Who frr Laaaihed Roar In Spite of Hia Grlmint. General Buell, whose timely arrival at Shiloh, some military critics hold, aved General Grant from defeat, was known in the old army as "the man who can't laugh." General Buell Mas not grave merely: he was grim. Vet two yearling cadets at West I'olnt made General Buell break a record. It was hot on the plateau above the waters of the Hudson, ho.ter than the cheek of a fieldpiece that has been iu action, so hot that the leaves ou the elaj tree shriveled and the feet of the pacing sentries burned froiu contact with the ouly paved path on the government reservation. The plebes had reported aud were quartered in two divisions of barracks, the upper class men having been turned out to share quarters with their comrades in the other divisions. The June examinations were on. The board of visitors, of which General Buell was a member, had paid its perfunctory visits ti mess hall, to academic building and to barracks. It was 10 o'clock iu the morning. Two cadets had been thrown by fate and by tho arrival of the plebes into the same room of the fifth division of barracks. The thermometer In the shade of the guardhouse registered il degrees. In the room iu which the two cadets were quartered doubtless it Btood 10 degrees higher. There had been one morning inspection of quartera by an army officer, nnd the two yearlings, gasping for breath in a room into which the sun beat with no regard for cadet feelings, had every reason to believe that there would be no further Inspections that morning. They had stood the ordeal of the examInging board at 9 o'clock, and, with no studies in hand, they thought they vrere safe until the first call for dinner. By the law of the academy every cadet in quarters was to be In full dress uniform until 11 o'clock. He was not allowed to smoke. His bedding was to be neatly piled at the head of his bunk. In other words, the cadet room and the cadet's person were to be properly ordered and properly arrayed for Inspection. "It's hot," said the cadet who was to become an artillery officer. "It's hotter than that," said his comrade. "Let's strip," said the one. "Done," said the other. And forthwith they stripped. Then the mattresses were pulled from the bunks and thrown under the window, through which occasionally came a whiff of breeze, grateful though heat laden. "I'd like to smoke," said the future artilleryman as he threw himself on one of the mattresses. "I'm going to smoke," said his comrade. And lnstanter pipes were lighted, and tho room began filling with fragrant blue fog. There was a clink of a sword heard In the hallway. Its sound brought consternation. An Inspection was on. Before the two yearlings had time to think there was a rap, and the door was thrown open, and In came, not the ordinary second lieutenant inspecting officer, but Lieutenant Colonel Henry M. Lazelle, commandant of cadets, and Major General Don Carlos Buell, United States army. Discipline strikes in. The two culprit cadets spraug to attention instantly, heels together, arms hanging naturally and the little fingers where the seams of the trousers would have been If they'd had any trousers on. The future artilleryman was clothed in one sock, and in this attire he was one sock the better of his comrade. They stood there rigid. The position of a soldier was never better maintained. Commandant Lazelle turned purple with rage at this graceless breach of discipline actually paraded before a major general of the United States army and a member of the board of visitors. The cadet who one day was to command a battery had dropped his pipe. The hot bowl touched his great, toe. and the burning was too much for even a soldier's stolidity, and he emitted a very boylike "Ouh:" General Don Carlos Buell took in the spectacle and all the glorious humor of the situation. His grirnness was not proof against such a sight as this. He leaned back against a table and roared, and not even the wrath In the commandant's face could check his roaring. "Come, general." said the commandant; "let us go. I shall report these young men for three flagrant violations of the rules of the academy." General Buell looked at the guilty ones and roared again. The commandant led the way out of the room, but the culprits heard the laugh of Buell all the way through the hall, across the area of barracks, until finally it came as a sort of chuckling echo from the office of the gunrdhous". The culprits wero confronted with the probability of about throe montbs' confinement to quarters and about fifty tours of extra jrr.ard duty as a result of their disregard for discipline. They were in the depths fnr twentyfour hours, and then the list of the day delinquent? wss read, and. lo. their names did not appear! General Don Carlos Buell bad bad the Iausb of his lifetime, and because of the joy of it be had asked the commandant to spare the offenders. Chicago Post. Without going you can get nowhere. From the Chinese. A Dangerous Deadlock, that sometimes terminates fatally, is the stoppage of liver and bowel functions. To quickly end this condition ! without disagreeable sensations. Dr. Kind's New Life Pills should always Ibe your remedy. Guaranteed absolu tely satisfactory in every case or money back, at A. G. Luken & Co., drug store. 25c. C, C. 1 L ticket axen: -srtli saO yo sleeping car tickets to Cfeleago far their 11:15 P. M. train. Call oa aiau i . prf-tt
Your Banks Won't S WIE WILL! During these times of financial panic LOAN YOU ANY AMOUNT OF MONEY ON VERY EASY TERMS and without red tape or delay. You will find there is NO COMPARISON between our rates and those ol the ordinary loan company. Indiana Loan Co. Automatic Phone 1341 Third Floor, 40-41 Colonial BIdg. Richmond, Ind.
Richmond Trust Company We Iiopo that 190$ will be the happiest and most prosperous year you have ever passed through. A regularly-addcd-to savings account would prove of great help in bringing about such a result. We invite you to number yourself among our depositors during this new year. A resolution to save is one which jou will find a pleasure to keep. GOVERNOR WILL CALL A SPECIAL SESSION i his Action to Be Taken at Roosevelt's Request. Reno, Nov. Dec. .11 A special session of the Nevada legislature will be called today by Governor John Sparks. This action will be taken at the request of President Roosevelt, who has notified the governor such action must be taken or the troops now stationed at Goldfield will be removed. Have yon trouble f any kind arising from a disordered atotaacb? Vro to your druggist ind t-et i 50c or 11 bottl of Dr. Caldwell'i yrup Pepsin, which is positively fuaranteed U mt yon and keep yea well. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY
Florida Sweet Oranges 20c PER DOZ.
New Tomatoes New Mangoes New Cauliflower New Head Lettuce New Mushrooms New Cucumbers
TURKEYS and CHICKENS Fancy Grape Fruit. Bananas, Tangerines, Malaga Grapes, Johnathan Apples. Fancy new Queen Olives ONLY 30c QT.
The Bee Hive
Automatic Phones 1198-1199 Bell 190
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1 1 ORDER ONE DOZEN OF THOSE SWEET ORANGES 19c With Your New Years Order. : Phones: ; 292 & 2292. HADLEY BROS. Who Supplies Your Range Coal? If c do you won't need to read further, because you're entirely satisfied with its ouality. If you're not happy in your supply we respectfully (cheerfully withal) offer our services to bring pleasure to your homo in solid black lumps of appropriate size. O. D. BULLERDICK 529 S. 5th SI Phone 1235. Leaving Richmond 11: It p. tm. via C, C. L. lands you la Chios &o at 7:00 a. m. Through "lee-peri and coachea. You will Ilka It. aprG-tt Petaluma Incubators Standard Of the World. Pilgrim Bros. Cor. 5th and Main. Onions Radishes Carrots Egg Plant Parsley Celery Grocery Co. The Store That Extends A Welcome Strength And Health com from proper exercise and proper food and drink. Tn right beverage to get and keep in fine condition is Richmond Export Feer. Chemists attest its purity,. physicians its valu. as a medicine and tonic, athletes Its eood qualities as a general body builder. Do you know you ran get a case right at your door? Fact. 'Phone If yoi like postal will do. Minck Brewing Co.
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