Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 346, 27 January 1908 — Page 8
THE RICIIMONT PALLADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRAM, MOSTOAT, .TATTAttY 27. 1903. TRADING STRENGTH WILL NOT AID THE STATE CANDIDATES SECRECYSURROUNDS REMOVAL OF MRS. EDDY TO NEW HOME HEARST'S INDEPENDENCE LEAGUE DESIRES TO BE THE SECOND PARTY IN MASSACHUSETTS. LAST WEEK OF EMBROIDERY WHITE GOODS SALE
PAGE EIGHT.
Last Week of 35c Embroideries
Leaders in Republican Ranks Think This Feature Usually Accompanying Convention Will Not Aid Any Man. Special Train With Pilot and Trailing Engines Carried the Leader of the Christian Scientists.
CANDIDATES MAY ATTEMPT A FEW DEALS. Followers of Some of the Other Candidates Hope to Do Some Swapping in Convention by Solid Delegations.
A careful analysis of tlio situntiuii xihtlng within the republican party in Indiana at this time lias convinced many of the shrewd leaders that trading strength will not cut much figure on behalf of any candidate in the cornin? Ktatc convention. The intense interest, in the race for governor is so overshadowing that fully nine tenths of the delegates will be selected in behalf of wiine of the candidates for the head of the ticket. The four candidates for governor may have their districts in such shape that they can trade some of the votes, but the independence manifested by the average voter, it is thought, will keep the so-called leaders from delivering them here and there in behal!' of their candidates. There will be fewer opportunities lhan ever beforj to make trades. Tim Tenth district will have two candidates -.Judge Gillette, of Hammand, who wants to be renominated for supreme our!: judge, and Senator Goodwine, .1 candidate for Lieutenant-Governor. With tjiese men dividing the district the number of votes that can be traded there will be small. The Ninth district has two candidates-Fred A. Sims, of Frankfort, for secretary of state, and K. K. Neal of Noblepville. for reporter of the supreme court. Sims has no opposition, so he will not be involved in any trades. Neal will have to divide his own county if he mal es the race in earnest, but it is said that, he cannot j handle the rest of the district for trading purposes, especially among the candidates for governor. There are three candidates for state nuperintendent of public instruction J. F. Tomlin of Shelbyville; Iawrenee McTiirnan of Alexandria, and Prof. Hauicau, of Mt. Vernon. Tomlin aud Congressman James E. Watson, candidate for governor, reside in the same district, so their interest, are mutual. McTurnan's district is so split by far Hons that he does not hope to control to the point of being ablo to trade ihem. while it is said that Hauman entered the race so lat that he has no cliauce of getting delegates who will go down the line for him and be traded right and left against their own favorites for other positions. .ludsse David Myers, of Greensburg. who is a candidate for renomination as appellate judge, has no opposition, and he lives in the same district with Watson and Tomlin. Thre will be no on to trade with in the Second and Fifth, unless Speaker Uranch runs for lieutenant governor. George Self, of Corydon. is a candi date for renomination for reporter of tho supteme court, and probably no candidate has more loyal followers at homo than he. but he is not making an effort to line up his district to make trads with anyone His county, as a matter of course, will be divided. Orange county will present Joynce Monjhan, of Orleans, for stale treasurer two years hence, which may result in a divided delegation there, but no other county in the Third district is getting ready to do a lot of trading. The Eleventh will have a candidate in Quincy Myers, of Logansport. who is running for supreme court judge, hut the district is so torn up over the race lor congress that no candidate can get delegates who will do his biddins. The Twelfth has no candidates bo will not be in position to trade. The followers of sonic of the candidates have been counting 011 getting a large vote in the convention by haiug their own districts so solid that ihey could trade right and left, but ihe indications are that good trades will Lc hard to make. Russian Jurymen. The most Incredible stories have been told of Ttussian jurymen. Thus the foreman of a jury declared he would not semi a poor fellow- to prison because it happened to be his (the juryman's) birthday. Another jury htl agreed upon a verdict of guilty when the church bells, began to ring. They revised their verdict because a holiday had begun. A burglar was allowed to go free because the man whom he had robbed hnd refused to lend him money. This in the opinion of the jury was a direct Incentive to crime. W-med. Minister's Wife ti her hulandi "Will you hejp me to 1 mt the drawing room cirpf; oVwn loday. dear'.- The rovm N beautifully eiean. Minister (vexsf !AHiK'y )- Ah. well. 1 suppose I will hto. Witv And don t forget, .'.ihu. dear, while- you aw doing It that you me a minister of the gospel. London Tit-Bits. Thn There Wat a Row. "Now, sir." she commanded, "look rao In the face aud deny. If you dare, that you married me for money!" lie raised his eyes until they were directed to her countenance and faltered: "Well. I think I earned the cash, tlcn't jpuv dear?"--London Mall.
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The lndeiendence league of Massachusetts In seeking to have the league declared the second party in the state. I-Mcture shows Thomas Ij. Uisgtn. who beaded the ticket, of Hay State Independence league, and who. it is claimed by the 1-eague, received the second highest number of votes?.
SPLIT OF OPERATORS MAY CAUSE STRIKE Interstate Wage Agreement Bone of Contention in Miners' Ranks. CONFERENCE THURSDAY. THREE STATES WILLING TO RENEW THE PRESENT INTERSTATE AGREEMENT STRIKE WOULD BE SUCCESSFUL. Uepo.'ts were current among the miners' rieiejaites yesterday of a split among the bituminous operators coming to Indianapolis Thursday for the conference looking to a renewal of an interstate wage agreement. Operators in Indiana. Ohio and part of Illinois, it is said, favor the renewal of the present interstate agreement, which expires March ,M, and will work to that end. Bituminous operators in Pennsylvania and West Virginia and those with headquarters in northern Illinois, "especially in Chicago, are said to be against a renewal of the agreement even to the point of striking if necessary, officers and delegates say. It was pointed out yesterday that bituminous operators mining mountain coal, because of the industrial depression and the unusually warm weather, have been unable to dirpose of the produets of their mines as readily as in previous years and have been compelled to store much of it. As a consequence a large amount of coal is on j hand. The Pennsylvania and West J Virginia operators, especially, it is j pointed out. are anxious to dispose of I this , accumulated product, and by THIS YOUNG WOMAN WAS BENEFICIARIES Carrie Bowman, whose jrlettire wnpii h -! name? xv;is ment'innp'i codicil to the will f Harry K. Thaw.
bringing about a suspension of operations would create greater demand for coal and thus enable themselves to dispose of their surplus. Even if the miners could be forced to strike, it is pointed out by the more conservative miners attending the present convention, these operators would obtain what they are striving for. For this reason a suggestion of a strike among the miners will be met by opposition in their ranks. The Indiana, Ohio and southern Illinois operators have not suffered so much from the industrial conditions, it is said:
A Wall street business man phewed a visitor a bundle of old letters that he was taking home from his office to burn in his furnace. "I wasn't always so particular about these useless business letters," he said, "until I learned that the women cleaners were sorting them out of the wastebaskets and selling them to certain firms which make n business of furnishing lists of names for various purposes, mostly to speculative concerns. Then I concluded that I owed it to my clients to protect them from the nuisance thpt follows gettlnz one's name on a mailing list" New York Sun. The Ay-yj. A very strange animal, related to the lemurs and peculiar to Madagascar, Is the nye-aye. It feeds on wood boring grubs that tunnel into the bark of trees. The beast cut away the outer bark with its chisel-like teeth, and as the worm retreats to the end of its hole pokes after it with a finger. This finger is a remarkable organ, evidently provided by nature for this purpose, being abnormally lone and armed with a hook shaped claw for dragging out j the grub. 1 The Inspector's Life. j Caller I'd think that your father's ; duties as building inspector would be 1 awfully dangerous going round unsafe , buildings. (Small Hon of the House . Oh, no; he doesn't go near 'em till after they fall down. Life. The other fellow's advice may be all richt. but ron'd hetter iisp o Hftlo hnr j sense with it. Springfield Republican. ONE OF THE OF HARRY THAW'S WILL. is ii-re shown, is one of the youns one of the bntficiaries in the
NEW HOME IS IN FASHIONABLE BROOKLINE.
It Was Rebuilt at the Cost of $100,000 and Will Probably Be the Last Earthly Home of Famous Leader. Boston. Jan. 27. Guarded with the utmost Mcrecy Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy, founder and head of the Christian Science church, was. removed by special train yesterday, with all her household attendants, from Pleasantview, in Concorn, N. II., where she has lived for 19 years, to a new house in the fashionable Chestnut Hill section of Urookline. The corning was unheralded and only a few of tiie leaders of the Christian Science church had been aware of the contemplated change. Kven the train crew which early took the private car of the vice president of tho Hoston and Maine railroad to Concord were commanded to maintain absolute secrecy as to the trip they were to make, and the best men in the service of the road were assigned to the duty. Preceded by a pilot engine to clear the way the special train of three cars left Concorn at 2 o'clock and proceeded over three railroads by a circuitous route to the Chestnut Hill station on the Boston and Albany road. In thf rear of the train, to guard against collision, trailed a third engine. Unusual Precautions. Arriving in Brookl'ne at 5 o'clock tho party was taken to the late Amory A. Lawrence estate, one of the most beautiful in Brookline, even before $100,000 had been spent in the past four mouths to remodel it, and here Mrs. Eddy was settled in her new home. The most unusual scene attended the arrival of the special train at Chestnut Hill Station. There were seven closed carriages to meet and convey the party to the Lawrence estate. The fifth carriage in the line, the smallest of all and the least conspicuous, was occupied by Mrs. Eddy, Calvin A. Frye, her secretary, and another man, apparently a groom. All were warmly wrapped in furs and the women all carried boquets of beautiful flowers. The Lawrence home was reached at 5:20 o'clock. One by one the men and women of t'.ie party alighted, and, gathering about the massive porch at the front entrance, stood in lino on either side from the carriage steps to the house. Carried From the Carriage.' When the carriage of Mrs. Eddy drove up Calvin A. Frye was the first to leave it, and following him came the other man. Leaning back into the carriage the big man gathered up the frail form of Mrs. Eddy. Wrapped in a long sealskin cape, with a black bonnet trimmed with violets on her head and with her hands protected by whiie. gloves, she was carried gently up the step3 in the big man's arms through the long line of people, who murmured softly as she passed. Then she was taken upstairs and placed in what will be her own private room, on the front, or Commonwealth avenue side. Immediately the whole great house hurst forth into light, and from every window came the rays where before but a few lights had burned dimly. Trunks and satchels were passed in and soon all but one of the party had passed into the house. Calvin A. Frye remained behind, and was closely pressed for information by newspaper men and others. Absolutely refusing to give any names of those in the party or to make any statement, he turned to six tall, powerful men who stood near him, and ordered that every person be at once put off the grounds. Then he turned and entered the house and his orders were obeyed without delay. House Closely Guarded. At S o'clock the light in Mrs. Eddy's room was extinguished, a little later the servants passed from the house to their quarters, and the first night in her new" home had begun for Mrs. Eddy. Six men remained on guard through the uight and tomorrow six others will take their places for the day guard. Within a week permits have been issued by the Brookline police for the men to carry arms, and it is believed the watch of six at night aud six by day will be continued for some time. ! Leaving Richmond 11: IS n m. via C, C. & L. lands you in Chicago at 7:00 a. m. Through sleepers and catches You will like it. arr6-tf Until about l-VO. writing was taught in th- schools of th United Stares from ropies that were written by the j Uaeher. who also made from goo.-- j mill's the pens which the pupils used, j A ;fti. knife with a keen blade was an i essential part of the teacher's equipment. CHICHESTER'S PILLS 5 MIL, f-r at
rill 1 K.4 - W.M cV
;nmiM.iKiKri)nMi. SOU ft DSW$T5 DtRWKfiE
Last Week of 50c Embroideries For 39c
"TlnlE PEPLE'S
Open Evenings. The Bee Hive Grocery Co. Automatic Phones 1198-1199 Bell 190 Look over the following and see if you can find what you want: In Canned Fruit t Peaches, Pears, Apricots, Plums, Pineapple, White Cherries, Blackberries. In Canned Vegetables . Corn, Peas. Green Beans, Wax Beans, Succotash, Lima Beans, Asparagus, Spinach, Hubbard Squash, Pumpkin, Whole Tomatoes, Strawberries, Beets. Dried Fruit Peaches, Prunes, Apricots, Raisins, Currants, Citron, Lemon and Orange Peel. Fancy Bulk Olives. Sweet, Sour and Dill Pickles. (arpenfers We carry a full line. Pilgrim Bros. Cor. Flftb and Main. Warehouse : 619 S. 9th St. SENSATIONAL DIVORCE. Absolute separation from all dirt is granted our coal daily fioUl by Judge Seive. When we send you coal, you get nothing but coal no dirt, dust, slate or any foreign substance. The result shows in the tiro. Our coal burns with a clear steady, hot flame and combustion is perfect. Need any? Write, telephone or call H. C. BULLERDICK L SON. 529 S. 5!h St Phone 1235. Use Nyals' Winter Cough Remedy, WHITE PINE TAR. Contains no Alcohol, Chloroform or Opiates. 25c. QIIOLEY DRUG STORE 4th and Main.
rLtt ui. r i I n u.
Last Week of White
Corner
Talk is Easy But to "deliver the goods" is quite another proposition. Since we opened up in Richmond LOW RATE LOAN COMPANY, which was indeed very much needed, our business has been phenomenal, and we know, from their continued patronage, that our patrons have appreciated our EXTREMELY LOW RATES and our EASY, UP-TO-DATE METHODS. There is still no limit. We loan any amount, anywhere, for any time and on any kind of security. If you are with any other loan concern, try us just once and see how much more favorable terms and satisfactory dealings we can give you. A letter or 'phone call will bring the money to your door. Strictly confidential.
Indiana Loan Co. Established 1901 Automatic Phone 1341. Third Floor. 41 Colonial Building. Richmond. Indiana.
ANNOUNCEMENT
The American Pure Coffee and Spice Co., of Dayton, will give a free demonstration of their famous "Monibak" Coffee at our store all this week. You are cordially invited to try a sample of this Coffee. A Few Grocery Specials
boxes I'needa Biscuits for IS lbs. Granulated, 19 lbs. A, 20 lbs. C t lbs. Fresh Ground Buckwheat Flour Hest Square Crackers, per 11) A No. 1 Good Ginger Snap, per lb Best Golden Wafers, per lb Home Made Sauer Kraut, per lb Stamps with each 10c purchase.
Model Department Store, S. 7th St. Interurban Station. Colonial Bldg. Ntw Phone 1 838. Bell Phone 47R Smith & Goodrich, Props.
11 It
The Recent Financial Flurry demonstrated the great value of a savings account. Many wage earners, with income temporarily cut off, passed through the period -without inconvenience as they were able to fall back, upon their bank accounts. Unfortunately, however, numerous ethers had not fortified themselves in this manner. They are now in debt. Now that the shops are open again, you should maintain a savings account. Do this. 9 r"' ""it flurry will net find vou unprepared Rictaimoedl Trastf Comnipaey
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
For 25c
l STIE" 9th and Main Sts. i 1 0c Susrar $1.00 and 3') Stamps 30c ..' 5c 5c 10c 5c
