Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 326, 7 January 1908 — Page 4
TlIE K1CIOIOND PALLADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGKAJI. TUESDAY, JAMWRY T. 100S.
PAGE FOUK.. THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SIN-TELEGRAM. Palladium Printing Co., Publishers. Office North 9th and A Street. RICHMOND, INDIANA. PROFESSOR DISCOVERS NEW METHOD OF TREATING CEREBRO-SPINAL MENINGITIS. Monday Was a Great Day. Wednesday Will Surpass All.
See Us Wednesday. Best Calico, All Colors, 6c. See Us Wednesday. $15.00 Jacket. $7.50. See Us Wednesday. $5.00 Skirts, $3.98. See Us Wednesday.
rif simnn Flexner. head of
See Us Wednesday. Ladies' Gauntlet Gloves. $1.62. See Us Wednesday. $1.50 Blankets $1.19. See Us Wednesday. 5c Crash. 3c. See Us Wednesday.
Rockefeller Institute for medical research, whose picture is here shown, has discovered an antitoxin serum with which he has treated many ccre-bro-spinal meningitis sufferers, successfully. At the left is a photograph. i enlarged many times, or tne cerem I spinal meningitis germ. The ! shows Dr. Flexner at v.ork in ! oratory. PRICE Per Copy, Dally 2a Per Couy, Sunday 3c Per Week, Daily and Sunday 10c IN ADVANCE One Year $5.00 We Want
I
Entered at Richmond. Ind. Postcffic As Second Class Mai! Mattur
LIQUOR IS CAUSE OF MANY WRECKS Railroad Officials to Wage War on the Stuff During The Present Year. CAMERA IS TO BE USED. Railroad officials are uaid to be determined to put a stop to the liquor habit among employes, particularly engineers, trainmen and those who liavo to do with tho operation of signals and switches. A unique campaign lias been instituted in which the kodak snapshot is to play a leading part. A secret service bureau is to be established to report men who aro in the habit of drinking Intoxicating liquors when on duty, and there seems to be a new campaign waged by the higher officials against such, bad habits. EJecauae of the occurrence of disastrous wrecks in the different states during tho year just 'parsed, tho blame for some of which lias been placed on trainmen, signal men and other operators, railroad ofificials are moving to stop the use of 'intoxicants among all classes of employes. The loss of life and financial damage, not to speak of tho unwelcome publicity, are not the sole reasons for the crusade. Stockholders of some of the companies have taken the matter up with the officials and urge a closer observance of the rules of the company regarding tho use of latoxicating liquors. ZEUBLIN CALLS SOCIETY SHAM Professor Makes Boston Women Gasp. Boston, Mass., Jan. 7. Prof. Charles Zueblin of tho Chicago university bitterly attacked modern society and modern philanthropy in a lecture on the "Twentieth Century City" before the Wpmen's Industrial union this afternoon. , "Modern society is nothing but hyiocrisy and sham", was the first sensation that the Chicago disciple of settlement work flung at the eager women listeners, and he followed that up quickly by an assault on so-called charities. "These modern philanthropies" was the way he put it, "are most dishonest Idiocy; if they are not, they show jpathetlc ignorance on the part of well meaning people who leave endowments to widows and cats in what they imagine Is a great effort to benefit humanity." T.-.e C vsreoat. Probably in uo othr department sartorial is there exhibited so much iu difference to hygienic considerations s la the oyercat. The greatest fallacy of all perhaps in regard to the choice of an orercoat is that the torms "weight" and "warmth" are synonymous. As a matter of fact, they are nearly always diametrically opposed. Moreover, the heavy overcoat is a tax en the resources of the organism and destroys the economy which a good Insulating cloth is intended to secure. London Lancet What a Woman Says. Singleton I want to ask you a question, old man. Wedderly Come on wltb it. Singleton Does a woman always mean what Bhe says? Wedderly During courtship she doesn't, but after marrlags you bet she does. Chicago News. Sounds Possibls, but Not Likeiy. "I've thought of a novel effect for toy new melodrama." "What is It?" "The villain lights a cigar during the snowstorm, thus setting the snowstorm afire." Washington Herald. Heavy Work. Mr. Younghub Did you bake this bread, darling? Mrs. Younghub Yes. dear. Mr. Younghub Well, please don't Co anything like that again. You re aot strong enough for such heavy work. The Nevis is a small British island near St. .Kitts, as round as your hat and consisting of one lofty mountain peak and a lovely shell road, some celebrated ruins and the finest of mineral springs real, hot, rotten smelling sulphur water being brought from the mountain top in a stone conduit A few baths in this water, at KW or 104 degrees will renew your youthful vigor. New- York Press.
(iiwawpM ...
FUTURE IS CLEAR AS THE PAST TO THIS THIRTEEN-YEAR-OLD GIRL
liattle Creek. Mich.. January 7. A strange gift is that possessed by Ethel Hopple, aged 1", living with her grandmother, Mrs. Duly Hopple, in this city. She is known as "the girl from whom you can't keep a secret." At Christinas time Ethel always knows just what, every present is to come from her friends. When her grandmother goes calling Kthel always telis without failure whether the person to be visited is at home or not. She forecasts every case of sickness in th'e I LITTLE EGYPT OIES IN COLD NEW YORK Black Marks on Neck Indicate Murder. New York, Jan. 7. "Little Egypt" the original "Little Egypt," who was the guest of Herbert r.arnum S?eley, the grandson of the showman, when Capt. Chapman made bis sensational raid at. Sherry's a little- over ten years ago was found dead today in her apartments. Black marks on her neck and breast and blood stains on her nightgown led Coroner Harburger to believe she had been murdered and he ordered her body removed to the morgue, where an autopsy will be performed tomorrow. CUR KILLS ROER WAR VETERAN Fought in Battle Thirty Years And Went Unscathed. Buffalo, N. Y., Jan. 7. After serviu thirty years in the British army, coming unscathed through many campaigns, Lieut. Col. John C. Cantley of Toronto was killed by a street ear here today. He was on his way from his home in Toronto to visit his daughters, who aie attending school in Buffalo. Postum is made of the purest cereals with absolutely no medication whatever and when boiled according to directions it is heavy with food value and a great nourisher and rebuilder, as well as a delicious drink. It is also a specific for all of the dozens of different diseases caused by coffee. Trial proves this, and "There's a Reason." Look in pkgs . for the famous little book, "The Road to Wellville."
te whenever company is coming. When talking to st range r,s The past and future of their lives comes to Ethel as instantaneous mental pictures whic h she interprets. Other interest -ings things are told of her truthful prediction of life events. Mis Hopple was born in the township of Charleston, Kalamazoo county, and lived on a farm until four years ago, when the family removed to liattle Creek. She has never heard of such a. thing as psychic phenomena. FUNERAL OF ROBERT F. WHITE T Will Be Held From Home. His Late The funeral service for Robert V. White, will be held at ten o'clock Wednesday morning at his late home, HO South Ninth street, both services and interment, to be private. Friends may call Tuesday evening after six o'clock to view the remains. it goes to the root of disease, strengthens and invigorates, li.s lite giving qualities are not contained in any other remedy, llollister'.s Rocky Mountain Tea has stood the severest lest time. For thirty years the surest remedy. :;rc, Tea or Tablets. A. G. Lnken Co. CUPID NABS A FAIR TOURIST Girl Writing Her Way Around World, Wedded. New York, Jan. 7 Word has been received from Manila of the marriage of Miss Anna Pinch, one of two nluckv American newspaper girls who started from New York two years ago te) write their way around the world. Although her object was not matrimony but to see the wonders of creation, she gave up her long globe trot just as soon as Cupid chirped. She is now the wife of Lieut. Dworak of the United States army and their home for the present is at the battalion post of Cotobata in the Philippines. Miss Pinch had for her companion when she started on her tour a Miss Conley, another newspaper woman. They had arranged with several Amer ican newspapers to send syndicated articles about countries they meant to visit. One match factory on the Pacific coast covers forty acres and operates over thirty miles of railroad, over which is carried to it daily SuO.OOO feet of sugar pine and yellow pine logs for tne match machines. Inferior lumber will not do. It must be straight grained and free from knots and carefully treated in addition. The by-product goes into larger things. This factory turns out as by-product a thouind doors and window sashes daily.
family, and can
FIFTY MILLION IS LOSS TO KENTUCKY
Night Riders Have Done That Much Damage to the State By Lawless Acts. GUILTY OF HIGHEST CRIME. Frankfort, Ky., Jan. 7. The January term of the Franklin circuit court began here today. Judge It. L. Stout impressed upon tin; members of (ho grand jury that it was their duty to inquire into any charges of intimidation or destruction of property made by "night riders". Among the things 'Judge Stout said: "The outrages committed at Princeton, liopkinsville and Russellville are of grea.1 importance to every state. It is not mencal disturbance, and it cannot be so regarded by any right thinking man. I do not pretend to say where lies the blame of those demonstrations of lawlessness, but 1 do undertake to say that those who pngraged in them are guilty of the highest, crimes and misdemeanors which have been written against on our statute books." a money standard is not by any manner of means the highest, staid ard wit'.i which to gauge the sets of men or the effects of those acts. Hut it is a standard which all men can understand and appreciate. Measured by that standard, I believe the loss to Kentucky occasioned by the recent lawlessness in the depreciation of local values at the scenes Of those crimes, and the further ill effect upon all Kentucky properties, is not. less than $50,000,000." TO PREVENT THE GRIP LAXATIVE HROMO QUININE removes the cause. To get the genuine, call for full name and look for signature of E. W. GROVE. L'.-.c. LIVE STOCK MEN 'Eight Organizations Repre sented in Convention. Eight organizations, comprising the Congress of Indiana Industrial and Breeders' associations, opened a four i!as' session in th state house, at Indianapolis esterday. The congress is under the supervision and the auspices of the Indiana State Board of agriculture', and matters of importance to the live stock interests of the (state will be discussed. The organizations in convention are the Indiana Hereford Breeders' association, the Indiana Jersey Cattle club, the Indiana Wool Growers' assoe iation. the Indiana Swine Breeders' asI sedation, the Chester White SwincBreeders' association, the Indiana Aberdeen-Angus Breeders' association, the Indiana Live Stock Breeders' association and the Farmers' Mutual Insurance company. Mary Dawson, aged eighty, still works as maid in the New England house, Boston, where she has served for sixty years. Her first employer was Paran Stevens. City ..f To! .'do. J.l.C.15 I'r,.r.k J. Cbvncy mak-s oatU that h- ' pei-i'vr' partner the firm K. .1. hft,,y 8; cv.. Uoinur business in tUo :t" of Tol.-d". Oi'Ulitv anil State ferf-said. and that said fhun wUl r.it v t! sum of ON K ft"NIKK.r DOLLARS lor fa!-,-, aii.f v. i v as. of atarrh use ui that Oinnvt cured !.y tie; lia!l Catarrh C sro. i" FRANK J. CHKNKV. ; Sworn to b.-for rn.j and subs.-rib..! i in my pre-Fenee. this Sth d.iy of 1 . : cember. A. J 1 S$6. Sea!) A, W. GLEASm.X, Notary Public. Hail s Catarrh Cure is taken intr!naliy. ana acts directly on the bU.orJ , and m-ico-is surfaces of the system. (Send for testimonials frof. i V. 3. CHENEY CO.. ToIpcIo, O. I S.-M by all rrupjri?ts. T5-. i Tak Hairs Family Fills for censti-
THE PEOPLE TRADE AT THE PEOPLE'S STORE" COR. NINTH AND MAIN
REGARD THE HARTJE CASE AS ENDED Wife's Attorneys Are Preparing to Ask for Final Rulings. DESIRES TWO CHILDREN. Pittsburg. Pa.. Jan. 7. Attorneys for Mrs. Mary' Scott Hartje regard today's decision of the state supreme court, refusing the petition of her husband, August J. Hartje, the millionaire paper manufacturer, to pass upon the finding of the superior court, which sustains the lower courts in refusing him a divorce, as practically ending the case. They will shortly ask common pleas court for a ruling on the custody of the two children and the amount to be allowed Mrs. Hartje for expenses of the trial. She has asked $:o, N m . Following this, her application for divorce, asking only separation from bed ami board, will be pressed. Hartje's attorneys are seeking newgrounds to reach the state supreme court and also to reach the United States supreme court. SECRETARY TAFT GIVEN A FROST i Ohio Republicans Rescind the Resolution. ! Sandusky, O., Jan. 7 Resolutions ! adopted by the Erie County Republi- , can committee last March, declaring for Secretary Taft as Ohio's candidate- j for the Republican nomination for ; President were rescineleel last night by a vote of fifteen to two, when twenty-: one out of thirty members, represented in person or proxy, held a stoimy meeting. The committee deposed Carl LS. Clark, local Taft leader, as chairman. The grounds for the committee's action were stated to be that the previous Taft. resolutions do not represent the sentiment of the people now thatSenator Foraker is in the presidential race. Two Horse Taies. An Albanian who had bwn in an eastern state while freshets were in full swing told the following about a horse- which had leen attached to a footbridge crossing a brook to keep the stru'ture from going adrift. The flood tiualiy swept horse and bridge down stroniu. Later the bridge was discovered lodged against the oank. with the horse sitting quietly on the former. A bystander who had listened intently to this tale remarked quietly: "I sen sutbin' simiiyar oncet." "Indeed? What was it?" asked the story teller. '"Ye see." was the reply, "arter the boss I see was took down stream nobuddy ever 'spected to see him alive Bg'in. But he was a pow'ful sort o brute, an' 'bout a hour afterward v.e see him a-comin' up stream a-pullin the Mame old bridge arter him T' Albany Journal. Mortar Tossers. There is no hod carrying in Japan. The native builders have a method of transporting mortar which makes it seem more like p'ay than work to the onlooker. The mortar is mixed in a pile in the street One man makes this up into balls of about six pounds weight, which he tosses to a man who stands on a ladder midway between the roof and the ground. This man deftly catches the ball and tosses it up to a man who stands on the roof. j San Francisco Chronicle. j
Wednesday To Be Biggest Day ol All Inventory
Sale. SEVEN MEN DROWN; T Pipe Layers in Kansas Meet Death in Dark River Waters. ONLY TWO MAKE ESCAPE. Leavens worth, Kan., Jan. 7. As a result of the overturning cd" a skif containing nine men near Kickapoo, Kan., even were drowned; t lie oilier two, William Sharp and Frank Logan were rescued by Ernest Schweitzer at the risk of his life. The men were- 'employed by the Kansas Natural (las company in constructing a pipe line under the river and had been working on the Mi.sxmri side of the river, the ae edde-nt happening when the men were1 rowing in the Kansas side, preparatory to returning to their homes. DISTURBED THE CONGREGATION The person who disturbed the congregation last Sunday by continually coughing is re quested to buy a bottle' of Foley's Honey and Tar. A. C. Lnk en & Co. A Danish scientist. Poulson. has pere.s telefectcd phony heard Berlin his apparatus for wire' set that he can talk and distinctly from Copenhagen some '2 miles. be to POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR REPRESENTATIVE. LEE J. REYNOLDS ' iindidate Representative from W;; vilely, subje ct to th Republican CounXfmi nation. j WALTER S. RATLIFF Candidate for State Representative, Republican Nomina tic suhje-ct to lite t COUNTY TREASURER. ALBERT R. ALBERTSON of Clav township, e-ur.dida'e ior Treasurer of Wayne- County. Mibjert to R)-puhli-ean Nemii nation. COUNTY RECORDER. j WILL ROBBINS of Abington Township, candidate for County Re-corier, subject to the? Republican Nomination. , BENJAMIN F. PARSONS, of Wavne 23-
BO
OVERTURNED
ffi&S DENTIS.T
Substantial and Artistic Dentistry Permanently located In rooms 18 and If. Colonial Building
township is a candidate for I'ounty Recorder, subject to the Republican Nomination.
COUNTY CORONER. DR. A. L. BR AM K AMP, Candidate for Coroner Wayne County, subject to the Republican Nomination. COUNTY RECORDER. JOHN C. KING is a candidate subject to the t ion. of C ntt-r Township, for County Recorder, Republican NominaCOUNTY COMMISSIONERS. ROBERT N. BEESON, of Harrison township, is a candidate for County Commissioner to represent the Western District, subject to the Rptiblican nominating election to b held iu February. BARNEY H. LINDERMAN Candidal 4 for ConimUsioner of the Mieldle ltstiicr. Clay Township. Wayne County, subject to t he Re-publican nomination. RICHARD A. DAVENPORT of Boston township, is a candidate for county commissioner of Wayno county. Eastern District, subject to the Republican nomination. TOWNSHIP ASSESSOR. TOM J. GOLDING Candidate for Township Assessor, Wayne Township, Wayne County. .Subject to the Republican Nomination. CHARLES E. POTTER Candidate for Township Assessor of Wayne Township, Wayne County, subject tej the Republican Nomination. CHARLES H. BULLA Candidate for Township Assessor of Wayne Township, Wayne County, subject to the Re-publican nomination. TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE. CHARLES L. WETTIC; Candidate for ejffice of Township Trustee, Vayn Township. Wayne County, subject to Republican nomination. THOMAS B. MARTIN Candidate for Township Trustee if Wayne Township. Wayne County, subject to th Republican Nomination. JAMES H. HOWARTH Candidate for Township Truste-e, Wayne Township subject to I he Republican Nomination. Petaluma Incubators Standard 01 the World. Pilgrim Bros. Cor. 5th and Main. "EVERY OVENFUL LIGHT AND SWEET' speaks truth when it refers to bread baked in this fchop. It doesn't just, happen so, ii's-not. due to mere chance bur is the result of finest our, mixed ! kneaded with skill bora of experience, an i baked as only experts know how to manage the process. Outcome wholesome, sweet, light, palatable bread. We deliver daily to any part of the city. 'Phone connection. Zwissler's BAKERY and RESTAURANT Phone 1656. 90S MafnSt.
3
