Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 322, 3 January 1908 — Page 2
THE R1CII3IOXD PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRA31, FRIDAY, JANUARY lH)i. mm bapidly FUSING WITH WHITES DECASTELLANEAND PRINCE JO BATTLE Ex-Husband of Anna Gould Viciously Attacks Helie De Sagen, Her Suitor. HUSBAND ISSUES FIRM DENIAL THAT WIFE ELOPED WITH A VANDERBILT WHIP. the Year Economically By Attending 'rofessor Giddings Says That Real Blacks Are Disappearing Rapidly. SOUTHERNERS AGAINST IT. BOTH BLEED PROFUSELY. "HEY CANNOT CONSOLE THEMSELVES TO THE FACT OWING TO PAST AND SACRED TRADITIONS TO WHICH THEY HOLD. COUNT WAS IN HIGH SPIRITS AFTER THE EATTLE AND TOLD THE STORY TO PARIS NEWSPAPERS. 4
AGE TWO.
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New York. Jan. Z Prof. Franklin I. Giddings, of Columbia University, n his last of nix lectures on "The American People of the Future," ri-e-Ivered at Cooper Union, expressed the pinion that, the American nogro was npidly being fused with the whites, tnd that unless the negro race is Increased by emigration from Africa or ilsewhero, in the next hundred years r so the neRro, as we know him, will ? no moro. "The real negro question in the Jouth." said Professor Giddings, "is hat the white people do not believe hat it. would be advantageous for civiization and American institutions to lermit the general amalgamation of he while and negro blood, and tlioy iherish this view with intense bitteriess and j)rejudice on account of past raditions, and exclude the negro from ocial equality with white men. It b not merely political tradition; it is nerely economic conditions. It. is a ace instinct, and is especially held by Le women of the South, that if the iero were admitted to join in cveryhlng socially and . equally with the rhite man, nothing could prevent the analgamation of the blood of the two ces. That amalgamation they do tot believe to be for the highest inerest or the South and' the civilizalon of the white American nation. "However, notwithstanding this atenipt of the white people of the South o exclude the negro from social equally with white men and to prevent t he ntermarriage of blacks and whites, the icgro is fast disappearing. "As years go by the population of he full-blooded negro of the American lopulation is rapidly and surely disippearing, and in his place we have he mulatto, the quadroon and octo-oon.
EXPENSIVE BOOKS. Price That Ppevailed Before the Invention of Printing. In the present day it seems very strange to read about the prices of books before tho invention of printing. King Alfred gave a very large estate for a book on cosmography. Iu the year 1174 Walter, prior of St. Swlthin's at Winchester, purchased or Ihe monks of Dorchester, in Oxfordhire, " Node's Homilies" ami "St. Austin's Psalter" for twelve measures c? barley and a pall on which was embroidered in silver the history of St. Blrinus converting a Saxon king. About the year 1400 a copy of John of Meun's "Horn an de la Rose" was pold before the palace gate at Paris for 40 crowns, or about $l"o. The Countess of Anjou paid for a copy of the "Homilies of Ilalmon," bishop of llalberstedr, 200 sheep, five quarters of wheat and the same quantity of rye and millet. In 1471. when Louis XI. of Franre borrowed the works of Rhasis, the Arabian physician, from the faculty of medieiue at Paris he not only deposttpd by way of pledge a considerable quantity of plate, but he was obliged to procure a nobleman to join with him as surety iu a deed binding himself under a great forfeiture to restore the books. No Time to Lose. "Sir." said the young man. enterlnc the office. i sent you a communication yesterday !" "Well?" asked the grim faced man. "Well, Mr. Prater, I thought perhaps jrou might give me a reply to my request, and" "Wait a minute." said Mr. Prater. "Are you the man that sent this account for 10 for hats for my daughter?" "No, sir; I" - "Then you are the one that left this bill for 53 for her dresses?" "No, sir. My commu" "Then it must be this for 7 for hoes" "No. sir. My note was one asking If I might hare your daughter's hand." "Yon want to marry her!" gasped Mr. Prater. Then, turning over the pile of bills, he urged: "Take her, young man! I don't know your name, but take her quickly! She's talking about doing some more shopping." jondon Scraps A Paris Restaurant. The Parisian rueu aro not likely to grumble at being asked to dine in dress clothes la any particular London restaurant, for they have in Paris on flining place where this unwritten law has always been enforced. No man tver goes to dine at the Armenonville tn the Bols de l?oulorne without putting on his dresa clothes. Why fashIon has decreed that a Frenchman may dine at any of the boulevard restaurants in tenue de ville, but must wear swallowtail coat when he drives to the big park of Paris to dine, no ono knows. It la custom, and there to a Parisian Is the end of 1L Pcllman. The Effect on the Nerves of Gambling. How can a man do his daily work juietly, which represents perhaps only the earning of a few 6hillincs. when Is anxious other neurotic self Is won. lering how a horse he has never seen, ridden by a jockey he has only heard f. In a rate he has only read about. Is faring as to money ostensibly his. R-hich he cannot afford to lose because ie has not perhaps got it If be should are to pay? Is such an existence Ikely to add to the race value of our ttock of fleeting patriotism? Fry's
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Mrs. Alfred K. Dioterich. whose husband denies that she eloped with Harry Brenchley, the Vandcrbilt whip. Mrs. Dieteiich, who is worth $7 000,000 in her own right, left New York several weeks ago. She is now in Paris. Brenchley disappeared at the same time, but his whereabouts aro unknown.
LOVER OF MRS. EF Believed to Be Debonair Youth At Lancaster, Ohio. Lancaster. Ohio. Jan. ."..It is believed that Henry Gustave Woehler. who it is alleged eloped with Mrs. Clifford W. Hartridge from Canton, N. , some time ago, is iu this city. JNearly three weeks ago a young man arrived in this city and gave the name i of Henry Green. He obtained employ ment with Theimmcs Bros., butchers, immediately after his arrival in the city and has been living a secluded life since. ! Waltz Is Not Modern. Many people lator under the Impression that tiie waltz is of modern . origin, owing to the fact that it was comparatively unknown in America or In England until the early part of the I nineteenth century. But it was brought I originally from Provence to the court of Henry II. of France, at Fontaine- . bleau, by the Comte de Saulte. Mary, I queen of Scots, imported it into Scoti land, for history records her as having incurred the bitter wrath and fierce denunciation of John Knox and of oth er divines of the "laud of cakes" for dancing it on one memorable occasion at the palace of Holyrood. Toward the end of the seventeenth century it was danced throughout southern Germany and Austria, the celebrated waltz tune and popular song. "O. Du Lieber Augustin." dating from 107". But, as already stated, it was not until the first two decades of the nineteenth century that It made its first appearance in England and the I'nited States, when it was alternately denounced and lauded by the poets of the epoch. A Dog Story. A Columbus man who likes to hunt quail, who is handy with the gun and has a fine bird dog whose work as a retriever is remarkable loaned him to a friend who was only an amateur at the business. About the middle of the forenoon of the first day the dog returned to his master's home. The latter, not knowing what had happened, took his gun in the afternoon to try the dog. He worked all right, and a number of birds were secured. The next day he met the frietyl who had j borrowed the dog. "'What is the mat- ; ter with that dog?'' he asked. "We ! got up a covey of quail and shot at j them, but missed. We afterward got j up a number of the scattered birds ' and took a dozen shots or more, but I got nothing, and the dog put his tail I between his legs and struck across the fields in the direction of his home." It is evident that the dog. disgusted at the poor shooting, decided that the men with the guns were not in his class and decided to cut it out. Columbus (O.) Dispatch. II 1 Clean healthy intestines BUACKBURNOT II D Follow their use.
Castor-6il Pills UsflMCSSBaHHl
TOBACCO WAR MAY TERMINATE
Contest Between Burley Grow ers and Trust Weaker. Winchester, Ky.. Jan. ;'. K. K. Smith, vice president oi the American Tobacco company, is here meet members of the district boards of the Burley Tobacco society and inspect 40.000 pounds of white burley samples, representing: the pooled crops of OO,000,000 pounds, with a view to the purchase of the entire crop. If the purchase is made it will mark the settlement of the long controversy between the American Tobacco company and the white burley growers. Hundreds of growers are here to attend the meeting. Practically two-thirds of the counties composing the white burley belt have voted not to raise tobacco in l'.KS. First Come, First Served. A minister who sets his face against bazaars once related an incident emphasizing his feelings on the matter. "Once upon a time," he said, "a man was going along a dark street wfcen a j footpad suddenly appeared and. pointing his pistol, began to relieve his vicI tim of his money. "The thfef, however, apparently sufI fered some pangs of remorse. 'It's pretty rough to be gone through like , this, ain't it. sir';' he inquired, i " "Oh, that's all right, my man,' the ! 'held up' one answered cheerfully. I i was on my way to a bazaar. You're i first, and there's an end of it!'" Londou Telegraph. Modern Plays and Players. We no longer demand that a man or woman play a part. We insist that the part tit the man or woman. This condition no doubt is largely the fault -f managers, who instead of requiring impersonation pick performers for their likeness to the characters to he assumed. "Have you a father';"' one can imagine them inquiring of a candidate. "Yes." "Theu you won't do. This man's father died twenty years before the beginning of the play." Argonaut. Reformed. "Did she marry her husband to reform him':" "I guess so. She reformed him, all right." "Why, he drinks like a fish." "I kuow it. but he didn't use to before she married him." Houston Post Impossible Combination. "The time, the place and the girl! IIow seldom we find them together'." "Bah! The combination that we seldom find together is the man, the shower and the umbrella." Louisville Courier-Journal. By Right of Birth. Hunter Are you an American citizen. Tat? Pat-Faith, an' I am that! I was born in Donegal, but 'twas on the Fourth iv July. Harper's Weekly. When a man wears long chin whisk ers it may be because his wife In sista upon buying his nec'-iVes. Phil- i delphla Record. A chain, two and a half miles lone
ana weigmng twenty-nvc tons was recently made in England for use in a colliery. Indoneat3lSVVtonsof fish a yr.
Paris. Jan. C -Count Boni de Castellaue, from whom his wife, who was Miss Anna Gould of New York. was recently divorced, and Prince Hlie de Sagan, who on several occasions was reported to be engaged to Mine. Gould, had a persona! encounter today at the church of St. Pierre do Chaillot, whilo a service to the memory of Lady Stanley Krrington. a rclanv of both men, who died lately in Kngland. was in progress. Beginning' inside tho church, where Count Boni says i lie prince insulted both him and tho sacred edifice, the encounter was resumed at the doorway, where Count P-ord. followed by his brother. Count Jean de Castellane, overtook the prince. Count Boni spat in his cousin's face. Then came the clash of canes, followed by a rough and tumble fight on the pavement, which ended in the gutter, whore the men were finally separated by a big butcher. Count Boni at the moment of intervention was holding down the well-nigh insensible prince, while .lean according to eye witnesses, was administering to him a sinvre kicking. Both Bleeding Profusely. When the police arrived the butcher was holding ihe two principals in the fight, who were covered with mud. The princq was bleeding profusely from a wound in the right, temple, where he had been hit by Count Boni's heavy stick. With the butcher's hand on his collar Boni was haranguing a crowd which had gathered and asked why he had spat in the prince's face. The police invited the two men to go to the police station, and this, after some disputing, they agreed to df. All three of them, bespattered
with mud, accompanied the police, and followed by several thousand persons they marched off to the station, where they made "explanations." A "process verba!" having been written out, according to the French law, the three men signed it and then 1 were released. The case now will go ; b..foi-o the nrnuonitnf n li, win what, if any, steps shMl be taken. Tonight Prince Helie is laid mi in
today tobed with 1)ls nead SWathed in band
ages, while Count Boni spent a part
YOUNG GIRL WHO ELOPED WITH MINISTER MAY RETURN AND CLAIM A FORTUNE.
Alt!'-- J
1 Floret ta Whaley, the heiress, who eloped with Rev. Jere Knode Cooke, pastor of the fashionable St. George's Episcopal church, at Hempstead, L. I., has come into $5,377, her share of her! At the Waist
the evening in islting the new spaper offices lelliag the siory of the encounter. When seen tonight ho was in high humor. Throwing back the lapels of his fur coat in order to better display one of his famous white i'k waistcoats, he began the recital with the history, of his cousin, whom h painted in the blackest, colors, declaring that Prince Helie had been ostracized by his own family, not one of whom would permit him to enter the house. Count Boni then proceeded to explain the episode and declared that it hail nothing to do with Mrne. Anna Gould, but was the result of an old grudge between him and the prince. He added that the prince had no been invited to tho ceremony at the church and he was therefore surprised to find the prince sitting three feet in front of him. Count Boni said he took no notice of the prince during the service, which proceeded without incident until the elevation of the host, when, the prince rose. "As he passed," said Count Boni. "ne jammed his hat en his head and looked insulting at me, this within twenty feet, of the altar. I immediately got up and followed him and when 1 reached the vestibule outside I said: " 'I have not given you your Christmas present,' and spat full in his face. He raised his cane to strike mo, but I got. in the first blow, opening his temple. Wo then closed.' Have you noticed tne improved service to Chicago via the C, C. & L? Through sleeper leaves Richmond at 11:15 P. M. daily, arrives in Chicago at 7:00 A. M. Try it. apr6-tf Is TI. f StouiJw u iH).nHable T An operat'on for tne removal of the stomach cission among the scrgeons whether the stora .-. h could be removed and the patient be nor. 10 worse for it. Before the discussion had wei; ;d out. the patient had died. It demonstrate i could not live without his ntoinach. To keep s stomach in irood condition, and cure consti tlon. indigestion, etc., use the great herb laxa e compound. Dr. Caldwell' Syrup Pepsin insists sell it at 50 cents &cd 51 a bot'Je. father's estate. Her friends are wondering whether she will return to claim the money. Miss Whaley is also the sole heiress of her grandmother, who is very wealthy.
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Pains at the waist, back, front, or side, are nearly sure proof of female trouble. Some other sfgns are headache, pressing down pains, irregular functions, restlessness, cold limbs, nervousness, etc. These pains may be allayed, the system braced and the womanly functions regulated by the use of Wisne of Cardni Mrs.r Annie Hamilton, of Stetsonville, Wis., writes: "Cardui saved me from the grave after three (3 ) doctors had failed to help me. It is a good medicine and I recommend it to all suffering women." For sale at all druggists, in $1 bottles.
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Phones 292-2292 SHATTUCK WILL NOT BE A CANDIDATE Withdrawn From Race for Lieutenant Governor. Brazil. Ind., Jan. ". After having made a canvass of part of the state in the interest of his candidacy. Mayor Roy I,. Shattuck. of this city, has withiro,n tho race for tho republi can nomination lor lieutenant governor. He has been informed by Attorney General Bingham that the const itutkm prohibited a person holding a judicial office from being elected to another office, other than a judicial office, during tim term for which he was elected. Republicans of this district are now urging B. V. Corwin, of Greencastle, to become a candidate for lieutenant governor. Not Ac It Read. A certain M. P.. as proud and fond fs a man should be of his beautiful young wife, was Jut about rising to t peak iu a debate when a telegram was put into his hands. He read it, left the house, jumped Into a cab, drove to Charing 'ross and took the train to Dover. Next day he returned home, rushed into his wife's bedroom and, finding her there, upbraided the astonished lady in no measured terms. She protested her ignorance of having done tnything to offend him. "Then what did you mean by your telegram?" he asked. "Mean? What I said, of course! What are you talking about?" "Read it for yourself," said he. She read: "I flee with Mr. X. to Dover straight. Pray for me." For the moment words wonld not come. Then, after a merry fit of laughter, the suspected wife quietly remarked: "Oh, those dreadful telegraph people! No wonder you are out of your mind, dear. I telegraphed simply: 'I tea with Mrs. X. in Dover street. Stay for me.' " Fearson's. When Does Reason Dawn? As there must be a point back along the line of our descent where consciousness began consciousness in the animal and self consciousness In man so there must be a point where reason began. If we had all the missing links In the chain no doubt we might approximately at least determine the point or the form in which it first dawned The higher anthropoid apes, which are. no doubt, a lateral branch of the stem of the great biological tree that bore man, show occasional gleams of it. but reason, as we ascribe it to the lower orders, is more a kind of symptomatic reason, a vague foreshadowing of reason rather than the substance itself. For a long time the child is without reason or any mental concepts, and all its activities are reactions to stimuli, like those of an animal. It is merely a bundle of instincts, but by and by it begins to 6how something higher, and we hail the dawn of reason and Its development from the animal plane into the human. John Burroughs in Outing Magazine. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY
Wrl' 2y for ?r copy or Th-H mwtrrtod Book for Women, rfyoa Mod M41cal A4yke - 'acrlt yl?n1tita and rapiy w'.a be Mot la auoa Male envelope. A4drea I LfcdiM Advisory Dent, The Chaneinoa Medicine CoJatlaneea, Tea. Jit
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SATURDAY -fl fk ITtSnnr JL9JZ U VI M.r
Hadley Bros.
COUNTRY NEWS AGED WOMAN DEAD. Resident of Jackson Township All Her Life. Was Cambridge City. Ind., .Tan. 3 Mrs. Lucine Jamieson. aged 77 years, died at her home in Kast German town at one o'clock Wednesday afternoon. Shn was the widow of the long and well known citizen, Henry T. Jamieson, and spent almost her entire life as a resident of Jackson township. Two sons and a daughter survive. OFFICERS ELECTED. Cambridge Pythians to Install at Next Meeting. Cambridge City, Iud., Jan. 3 Th following officers were elected by th Cambridge lodge No. 9, K. of P. to serve during the ensuing year. They will be Installed at the next regular meeting: M. T. Crook, C. C: Harry Rhodes, V. C; Joseph Groves. Prc late; Dan Chapman, M. A.; George Babcock. K. of IL & S.; R. II. Ressler, M. F.; WT. E. Austin, M. E.; Henry Sims, I. G.; Will Woodward, O. G.; Elihu Mills, trustee; Earl Barefoot anl Ora Wheeler, representatives. GEORGE BODEN ILL. Is in Critical Condition at Horn In Cambridge. Cambridge City, Ind., Jan. 3 Geora Boden, who was stricken with hernia a few days ago Is in a critical condi. tion at his home on North Front street. It is thought that an operation will be necessary. NEAT SUM DERIVED. Bryan Woman's Cemetery Association Supper Successful. Centerville, Ind., Jan. 3 The Fupper given at tho town hall on New Year's eve by tho Bryan Woman's Cemetery Association was a very sue cessful affair, financially and other wise. Nearly three hundred persons were served with supper. The gross receipts were 192.00. The expensed were $12.00, leaving the neat sum rt $0.00 cleared. Truthful. Mark Twain once mist-ed the train which should have taken him to hW work. He did not wire any excuse. Ills telegram to his employer took tbi form: "My train left at 7:20. I arrived at the station at 7:35 and could not catch It." Lack Right Qualities. Mrs. Hlx Mrs. June strikes me a being entirely too mtwuline for a woman. Mrs. Dix Yes. indeed. Why. every time she has an ache or pairi I she makes as mu h fuss about it as a man would. Smith s Weekly. Retrenching. "I tell you. they are retrenching." "But they still hare their auto." "Which they run well within the speed limit. Bah!" Louisville Courier-Journal.
