Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 342, 23 January 1908 — Page 6
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 190S.
PAGE SIX.
FARMERS
METHODS
DISCUSSED AT THE ANNUAL INSTITUTE
To Be Successful the Modern Day Farmer Must Farm His Lands in Scientific Manner' Not Slighting Anything. j
HELD IN CAMBRIDGE CITY YESTERDAY AND TODAY. The Affair Is Attracting Much Interest as Many Very Excellent Papers and Addresses Are Being Heard.
The
White Indian
A white Indian is a sick Indict. When the Indians first saw a white man they were sure he was sick. White skin sick man was. their argument. "Pale-face" is the name they gave us. Pale faces can be cured. When blood is property fed the face tows with health. Scott's Emulsion is a rich blood food. It gives new power to the hpne marrow from which th red blood springs, t t t AlfDrucriiU; SO. mud 91-00.
FREE LOVE ADVOCATED W W PLAINTIFF
Defendent in Sensational Suit ' Has Novel Defense.
m
MRS. BRADLEY IS NOW PENNILESS AND ASKS AID
vice president; A. R. Feemster, secretary; W. II. Doney, treasurer.
Had
Cambridge City, Ind., JaH. 23. The ftrmual farmers' institute opimed Wednesday morning at the Masonic opera liouse. The audience was lacs More than four hundred farmers from this iod tho surrounding counties were in attendance aud a deep interest is being manifested in the session. Oliver Stewart of Dublin,' acted as chairman of the mnrainig session in the absence af the tovnty chairman, Abner I. Bond, of GVeensfork. R. L. Thompson of Lagrange county was the first ipeaker, his Spplc being "Success and Failure In Clover Raising," in which he was emphatic on the point of crop
rotation and the jireat care that should f. h.
d exercised in sowing the seed at the proper time, when the ground is in a suitable condition to bury and protect :he seed. A. O. Lockridge of Groencastle. disjussed the subject, "Is Tile Drainage More Expensive than Profitable V Good tile drainage is especially neceslary in a clay soil as this class of ground is made more fertile by the drainage process as the texture, of the oil is improved. Proper drainage al;o adds to the bearing facilities of the ground and likewise increases its value. The value of the Purdue short course n agriculture was clearly explained ly Arthur Toms, who brought out it nany advantages, one of which is that
11 gives Hits laimci a. Luauic i Ugate and study farming from a scientific standpoint. It gives him new ind advanced ideas and enables him to farm his land successfully and profitibly. The afternoon session opened with Hill a larger crowd than that of the aiorning period. A musical program arraigned by Prof. Reese was a very .nteieiting feature of the afternoon. A. "O. lockridge talked on "Profitable Beef Production," declaring that
:attle that are fed on grain are more
profitable than those raised and prepared for the market on other foods. The profit in beef production on the
ligh priced land of this section of the jountry must come from careful aud
:lose management and he suggests that .he farmer who desires to produce
eef profitably, should use great care .n making a selection of his herd and dc certain to secure high grade cattle. Steers of a uulform type and well dereloped are those to be desired. R. L. Thompson gave his views on Success and Failure iu Hog Raising," In which address he said that some of the essentials in tho raising of hogs tre In making a selection of the dam ind sire, both of which should be Urong aud well developed. The theory of cross breeding was advanced by
Mr. Thompson in making a statement
that he had better results in this, man
ner, but it did not seem to meet the
ipproval of many of the hog raisers
present, on the grounds that the cross hreeding is not any more to be devired in hog raising than it is in other
lines of stock, and that the straight bred hogs develop into more perfect animals iu every respect. Great rare should be exercised in selecting ;he food for the young pigs, especially it. the time of weaning, so that they will not take on fat too quickly before they have attained their growth. Mrs. M. E. Mason read a very intertsting paper on the subject of "Poultry on the Farm," in which she said that cleanliness was the secret of suc
cess in the raising of poultry and that
the person who engages in it must study it thoroughly and also enjoy it to
make it a successful enterprise.
A paper discussing the horse, was read bv George Baker, showing that
horse raising is a very profitable busi oess for the farmer to engage in. The sessions of today were very in ieresting.
BACK TOJTHE ARMY. Avery Long Will Re-enlist With Uncle Sam. Cambridge City, Ind., Jan. 23 Avery Long who recently paid a brief visit to relatives in this, his native town, returned from the Philippine islands last December where he was soldiering for Uncle Sam. He will retairu to the army in February and serve 2 Ms years more when ho will be expedited with 30 years service and retire on a life pension. He received double time when first on the islands and for wounds received in battle, aud tlis lessens the actual time served. He will return here for a short visit, bofore returning to the army.
CHEAPER LAB9R. I." & E. Traction Line Hiring Less Valuable Men.
Cambridge City, Ind, Jan. 23 Owen Forrester, who has been a mo torman in the employ of the Richmond street railway and later the interurban company for the past 17 years, was let. out last week because he ran into a low, open switch near Richmond. No damage resulted. Mr. Forrester is one of the high salary men amd it is said to be the policy of the company to replace these with low salary people as easily and as speedily as possible.
ROBERT MANLOVE DEAD.
Numerous Relatives in mis
County.
Milton, Ind., Jan. 23. worn nasi
been received or tne oeaiu oi jh'i i
MAnlove at Chicago, Wednesday morning. He was a brother of Jofieph L. and John T. Manlove of Milton. Ho
was the son of Absalom and Mary
Rea Manlove and was reared m Layette Co., but for a number of years
practiced law in Chicago. KUHN AT DUBLIN.
' Chicago, Jan. 23. Adrian C. Honore brother of Mrs. Potter Palmer and a member of Chicago's most exclusive ! clubs, has announced a novel defense to the breach of promise suit for $20,;000 brought against him by Miss Virginia Rowden. Through depositions ; filed in his behalf in the superior ; court, Mr. Honore answers the allegations that he toyed with th affections of Miss Rovden and then refused to keep his promise- to marry hr, hy the proposition that a woman who is an ardent follower of a "free-love"
cult and who has a penchant for affinities, would not permit herself to be tied dom by the bonds of a conventional married life. The suit, which was begun against Mr. Honore more than a year ago. has
been placed upon Judge Abbott's trial calendar, and will be called as soon as; ths few cases ahead of it are disposed of. Miss Rowden has promised to tell ; a highly salacious story of her wooing;
by Mr. Honore, iu which midnight suppers, champagne, a furnished flat and automobile rides play an important part. That the evidence of the defense will be of an equally interesting nature is shown by several depositions filed in behalf of Mr. Honore in the superior court.
Uneeda Biscuit A food to work on A food to smile on A food to sing on Energy and good -nature in every package. The most nutritious wheat food.
In moisture and dust proof packages.
With Her Four Children Lives in Little Hut.
I 5
Salt Iake, Utah. January 2S Mrs. Annie Bradley, who shit aud killed former United Staes Senator Brow u, of Utah, at tho Raleigh IloUl. iu Washington. 1. C, December lftOn, and who was freed by a jury in the Capital City less tli.cn two months ago is penniless in this city wiih her four children. Sh has appealed to her friends for aid. Sh- was a former res. ii'.ent of this rily and hero slm met Hrowii. She returned, believing that sin would bo received with open arms "I am more in prison now than I was tn Washington." said Mrs. Hradley last night. She has been shunned by all of her former women friends. In a little hut on the outskirts of the city, Mrs. Bradley is living with her four children, two by her former husband and two that she claims ai the tons of Brown.
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
MEN AND MACHINES.
HAGEBSTOWN, IND. Hagerstown, Ind, Jan. 2I. Mrs. Wilmina Loutz returned Tuesday from a several weeks' visit with her brother and family at Ijidianapolis. Mrs. Will Fox of New Castle, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Backenstoe, Tuesday. Mrs. Harry Endsley and Mrs. Chas. Wedekind, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Geisler at Frankton, Tuesday, Mrs. Clifford Fouts has also been their guest for tuie past few days. The Christian Aid society will meet with Mrs. Henry Keagy next Tuesday afternoon. The Social circle will be entertained by Mrs. H. J. Day at her home on North Elm street Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Teetor entertained Tuesday, Mrs. Goo. Bullock of Chicago, Mrs. Al Rost of Richmond and Mrs. Clayton Hunt and Mrs. Win. Pence.
Miss Emma Locke, who was severely burned while bathing last week, is
getting on as nicely as can be expect
ed. Miss Locke fell against a hot
stove in an unconscious condition.
Brother of Preacher Politician Preach There.
to
Dublin. Ind., Jan. 23. Rev. E. E. Kuhn. of Ctarkshm, a brother of the
n.v T II- Kuhn. of Richmond.
been engaged to preach at. the Chris
tian church at Dublin, the rouriii sun-
day of each month. He is holding a series of meetings there and will con
tinue until Sunday night.
Advice to Mothers: Don t let your children waste away. Keep them strong and healthy during the winter with Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea.
It is the greatest tonic for children.
Pure and harmless, does the greatest
good. 35c. Tea or Tablets. A. G. Lu
ken & Co.
COLLEGE CORNER, IND.
SLANT-EYED MEN
HUSTLINGjOR HOME
Many Japanese Are Leaving
America.
San Francisco, January 23 The
Bulletin says that the number of Japanese returning home from this coun
try is unusually large. On the Man
churia, which sailed for the Orient last
week, there were 90 Japanese; 100 departed today on the Asia, and already 150 have been booked to go on the Mongolia next week.
A Higher Health Level. 'I have reached a higher health lev-
TANKS REMOVED FROM SCENE 0FFATAL FIRE Coroner Causes the Arrest of Man in Case.
Boyertown, Pa., Jan. 23. W. R. Javers, of Quakertown, Pa., was arrested last night in connection with the opera house fatal fire on a warrant sworn out by Coroner Strasser, and is accused of having been instrumental in the removal from the ruins
CRAZED MOTHER CARRIES CHILD'S CORPSE Ran Through Streets of St. Louis Last Night.
St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 23. A woman
last night ran several blocks through
St. Louis streets carrying in her arms tne corps of her six-year-old sou. whom she had killed by accident. After giving the sou. Arthur, a tablespoonful of carbolic acid, which
of the theatre of the two tanks used sno mistook for medicine, Mrs. Henry in operating the calcium light at the (Milleke. of 4.j!V Newport avenue, car-
entertainment. The coroner wants to
The Limit of Human Speed Ha About Been Reached. One thins alone can intervene ami put the curb ou the desire for speed man's powers of endurance. Already there ere slgus that it has almost reached its limit. The increase of nervous diseases, the spread of insan ify. these and other warnings should serve as danger signals that the speed of modern life is xeessive. The adJusting of a man's frame to rapidly changing conditions, great tbouja it be. vet has its limits. Machinery may le j-erfo tod to an iucredible degree, but man unless we are to conceive of biiu as becoming absolutely machine-like will alwaya have his limitations of flesh and blood. He will always be a fantastic creature subject to strange emotions, uncertain gusts of passion, sudden tricks of nerves or of physical exhaustion. Among the daily catastrophic from the lust of speed it U rare to find that it is the machinery which la at fault. It Is the failure of the eye to transmit with sufficient rapidity the danger mossajre to the brain or an error in Judgment or a sudden nerve failure, one of these which brings about dis
aster. Man may ierfect the niaclnue. but he remain himself ever Imperfect. London Saturday Review.
learn whether the tanks were taniper-
el since I began using Dr. King's New j ed with and evidence of criminal neg-
Life Pills," writes Jacob Springer, of West Franklin, Maine. "They keep my stomach, liver and bowels working just right." If these pills disappoint you on trial, money will be refunded at A. G. Luken & Co. drug store. Zoc.
RECITAL AT MILTON.
Mffst Popular?
Proved to
be a Event.
College Corner, Ind., Jan. 23. Laura
Lundy is suffering with rheumatism.
Martin Haley and wife, Harry Lun-
dv and wife visited with John Haley
has .,n u.iffx Tip.-vr Rrvan's chanel.
Josie Martin has been ill for a few days but. is better. Charlie Mull, while skating, fell and broke his ankle. Nellie Jones of Greenfield and Laura Pike were guests of Ella Liuderman. Martin Mull and family of Hagerstown, was the guest of his mother, Suanah Mull.
Milton, Ind., Jan. 23. The vocalion recital given by Chas. F. Hanson of Indianapolis, at M. K. church was one of tho finest, musical treats Milton has enjoyed in a long timf.
The women of the royal house of Saxony have made an arrangement with a publishing house of Dresden for the sale of a series of postcards on which pictures painted by royal artists will be reproduced. The proceeds of the sale will bo given to an instituton where consumptives are cared
for. "The German emperor," says a Dresden paper "will probably also become a contributor, and the little cards will give the world an idea of the artistic talent of the sovereign who
has said so much on the subject. The world will judge, as it always does by what it sees."
ligence removed. It is alleged that an order, which was represented to have been written by the coroner, was presented to those who had charge of the ruins requesting them to permit the bearer to remove the tanks, so that they might be transferred to a place of safety.
Since 11XR) the quantity of tan bark used has fallen off 15 per cent., al
though its value has increased. During i know
ried him to a doctor's office, a block away. There the boy dieI. The mother, crazed with grief, picked up the body and ran with it until neighbors intercepted her and guided her to the door of her home.
Rank Foolichness. "When attacked by a cough or told, or when your throat is sore, it is rank foolishness to take any other medicine than Dr. King's New Discovery," says C. O. Eldridgc, of Empire, Ga." I have used New Discovery seven years and I
it is the best remedy on earth
this period the consumption of extract increased from ('.7,o to (;00,Oa barrels a year, of which nearly 90.000 barrels were imported. Relatively small quantities of hemlock bark were imported from Canada, and of mangrove bark from the West Indies and Africa. In weight, four times as much quebracho was imported in bark as in extract form, but the valuo of the two forms was about the same.
for coughs and colds, croup, and all throat and lung troubles. My children are subject to croup, but New Discovery quickly cures every attack."
Known the world over as the Kiiuj of throat and lung remedies. Sold under guarantee at A. G. Lul.en & Co.. drug store. 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
Nurse Dread Lightning. Of all people who are glad when the) season of thunderstorms is past, none are more thankful than professional nurses. "It isn't that tve are no afraid of lightning ourselves," said a nurse in Roosevelt hospital, "but It has a harmful effect on our patient'. Most siek people have an unreasonable fear of lightning. In eases of extreme weakness or nervousness a dozen flashes of blinding lightning reduce the patient to such a state of prostration that it takes extraordinary efforts on the part of the nurse to bring him around. If one tick fersou requires all that extra attention in a thunderstorm, just Imagine the predictmeut of the nurse vh has a whole ward full of them ou be hands." New York Tres.
C, C. & L. ticket agent will sell you sleeping car tickets to Chicago for their 11:15 P. M. train. Call on him. aprOtf
OF VITAL IMPORTANCE No other organs of the body are so essential to good health as the kidneys. Foley's Kidney Remedy makes
the kidneys healthy so that they will
strain out the impurities from the blood which is constantly passing
through them. Commence taking Foley's Kidney Remedy at the first sign of danger. A. G. Luken & Co.
STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING.
A. W. Bradbury Is President of Loan
Association.
Cambridge City. Jan. 23. The an
nual stockholders meeting of the
Wayne International Building and
Loan association was held last Tues
day. The terms of directors J. W
Marson and J. L. McDaniel having ex pired, these gentlemen were re-elect
ed for a period of three years. C. H Graver was elected to fill the unex
pired term of C. W. G. Jones. At the
conclusion of the stockholders' meet
iug. the hoard of directors met and
elected officers as follows: A. W
Hradbury. president ; J. W. Marson
MORPIIIHE HABIT CBBED-T) I Quick, w.thotrt m. n! per TTYTTii BtiiteBt without sftef-effwti II
Wi care ll trog habit to "ia
can." lrtMe tbuiattlr cenft-
tftetnl. XV Pa u a mmul'lii
h tier Tea are cere. WRITE tit
M. STtwm-KWO t eiTMiiej 380 f rHi At. SWtrrtllr, M-
A Cure for Misery. "I have found a cure for the misery
malaria poison produces," says R. M. ' James, of Louellen, S. C. "It's called Electric Bitters, and comes in GO cent 1 bottles. It breaks up a cas of chills j or a bilious attack In almost no tune; i
and it puts yellow jaundice clean out ,
of commission." This great tonic medicine and blood purifier gives quick relief In all stomach, liver and kidney complaints and the misery of lame
back. Sold under guarantee at A. G. Luken & Co., drug store.
SMYRNA, IND. Smyrna, Ind., Jan. 23. Mr. George
H. Baker, living near Smyrna, were pleasantly surprised Sunday morning
by a company of thirty-four neighbors and friends, who, with their charm
ingly prepared luncheon, called at the
Baker home and spent the day.
John "What kind of tea do you like
best?" Priscilla Go-tees, some, out
Rocky Mountain Tea host." John
Whv Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea
best? Priscilla It speaks tor useii.
John." (Makes lovely complexions.)
A. G. Luken & Co.
On the Job. Amusing epitaphs are commonenough. but it is not often that a tocabstone Inscription is meant to carry a bnsl ness advertisement. A West Virginia man tells of a singular one which may be seen In a certain cemetery. It was the idea of a widow of a man named Terkius, a partner in a commercial house known as Perkins & Parker. Soon after the decease of her spouse Mrs. Perkins married Mr. Parker, her late husband's business associate. The inscription reads: "Sncred to the memory of James Perkins, for thirty years senior partner of the firm of Perkins &. Parker, jow Parker & Co." Harper's Weekly.
ROBINSON'S CROSSING, IND.
Robinson's Crossing, Ind., Jan. 2:1.
Misses Edith Henry and Mary' Kuhn
visited with Mrs. John Retherford.
Charles Harvey, wife and son Paul,
of College Corner. O., were the guests
of John Retherford and family. James Henry and wife. Albert Henry, wife and son, George Ostheimer and family and William McFarrin and wife were the guests of S. K. Henry and wife. Claire Jobe, who is attending school at Indianapolis, visited his parents. J. W. Jobe and wife, Sunday. Watt Thomas and wife and Mr. and
Mrs. Ptetetsou visited Frank Trus
ter and family.
I he larest yield or none trow, one
whale was taken in 1SS." by the Mary
and Helen. It amounted to 3.100
pounds. hich was worth about si."
at the prices. ''(!'. "retailed
Her Helpful Hint. The honeymoon had waned, and the ;upboard was bare. "Don't worry, Mabel," said tne romantic husband as he opened the pi ano. "Remember music is the food of love." But the practical little wife Bhook her head. "If you really think music is the food of love," she responded, "perhaps you'll step round and get the butcher to give you a beefsteak for a mere song." London Answers.
New York Life. The life of New York seems a tragic matchlehe. a religious can-can, the maddest blend in all Christendom of common sense and lunacy, diguity and folly, poetry and a furious pogrom against everything that makes for Wautv. Cr. Pall Mall Gazette.
Telling Tales. Unsophisticated Visitor (trying to use the telephone) Kitty, what do you say when you take, this thing off the hook?
l.ittie Girl --Papa always says. "Darn.
central, jon'v $ven the
a! j Jl'U. Of J WtMg l
SI Sir t tifalQ
The Palladium has received a ship, ment of 1,000 pocket savings bankswhich it will give away absolutely free to its readers. Recent events have shown the usefulness of a savings account as insurance against "rainy day" needs. With each bank the Palladium will give 50c as a starter. Call at the office fpr full particulars.
II,
time. .
number: Cbicixo Iriboce.
