Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 351, 1 February 1908 — Page 3

THE "RICHMOND rALLADII'M AND SI N TKI.KOR AM, SATURDAY. FKURI ARY 1. 190S.

PIERSON MAY ASK FOR INSPECT!

THIS'NOBLE COUNT HAS RECEIVED THE FIRST OF THE MILLIONS OF NEW WIFE.

BILL AGAINST TRUST SIX WERE KILLED

Fountain City Butcher Desires

To Sell His Product in Richmond.

WILL REMODEL PLANT.

THE NORTH COUNTY BUTCHER CAN DO THIS AT SMALL EXPENSE AND APPEAL FOR INSPECTION MAY BE HEEDED.

Charles C. Picrson. tin- 1- mimam i City butcher, who v;u e.Miudi d I'niiii j

celling meat, in this cii lit aii.se of t h

jneat inspection ordinar.cc. will proba- !

My petition the I. nit ed Stan gov r:iTiifnt to provide an inspector1 for lu Mit.ehorini; establishment. Nearly a!! f Pierson's business was confined to this city and he feels its loss keenly. City Attorney T. .1 Study stated that 3)r. Wagoner, federal inspector at tiic Richmond Abattoir company, had informed him 1 hut. it. would he' a comparatively easy matter for l'ierson to si -ure federal inspection. All that the Fountain City butcher would have to l. would he in remodel his butchering olant to meet, the government recjtiirements. After this hail heen dote the government would detail a meat iugpeetor. whose salary would he paid by Uncle Fain. .Mr. Study statnl thai he tiouH';t J'ierson could it model his plant ;o jneet government requirements ai a rost. not to exceed 7" or Sl;io. It j.; known that l'ierson is considering the nrivtaability of duint? this. If his meat was inspected under go eminent supervision, l'ierson would have, a per fort right to sell his product in Richinond. Mr. Study says that, he is confident the courts will sustain the validity of. the local meal inspection ordinance.

WOODMEN HAVE IMPORTANT MEETING

ft I !

' ... I i .. i

V lMSJi

Home Tel. 2062

Is Corporation Having as Its! Tornado Carried Death and Purpose the Restraint of j Destruction With It in the Tobacco Trade. j state of Mississippi.

Home Tel. 2862

NIGHT RIDERS ARE AT WORK TOWNS SUFFER DAMAGE.

Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Railroad Co. Eastbound Chicago- Cincinnati

Frankfort, K. Fi hruary 1 The i Franklin county tnanu jury relumed an indictment aa.in.--. tie' American Toba co Company aUofiiny; Uiat ii. is a corporation haviiiK as its purpose, the restraint of the tolace... trade in this county. Attorneys hero who have read UK' indictment say that the Krand jury left no loopholes t hrou-jili I which tlie company can escape prose

cution.

On a New Tack. , 1 opkinsv ille. Ky.. February I "XifiiU riders" ourroumied ilie arocery of John Collins af (Gulden Pond. Triuu -ount-. last niulit. -nvrred the proprietor with pistols and held him pii-oner while the smashed one barrel of wbi.--

nine cases of beer and v tiuaiitify

( wine and liquors in bottles. Twenty masked men wen' in the band. They charted Collins with ' running a blind tisier." Storehouses Razed. j Nashville. Tenn.. February 1 Iust ii i 14.1 1 r , near Fredonia. two large tobacco barns on the farm of W. K. Wall , were destroyed by fire. Wall is not a ; member of the Dark Tobacco Growers' Association. LaM summer his general j

merchandise store was burned and hi plant beds were scraped.

Delegates to County Camp to Be Elected.

The Modern Woodmen will have an important meeting .Monday evening. A special committee reported on die revision of the by laws at the last, nicotian and this report, will come up for final action Monday. There will also In' an election of delegates to the county camp. In .lune. next, the head camp will meet at I'oorin, 111., in .May. Tne state camp for Indiana meets at Torre Haute. The count v camp for AYayne will bo held at Uichiuond in April. As Uiehmond camp hopes for representai ioii at both state and head camp meetings the election of delepates Monday night is of more than usual interest.

COUNT LASZIO SE2CHENYI.

First Tangible Evidence of the 'Dot" Which Young Heiress Brought to Her Titled Husband.

New York. Feb. 1 Five million dollars was deposited today in the Hungarian Discount and Exchange Hank, in lludapest, in the name of the Count and Countess S.eohenyi. The money runic from New York, according to cable dispatches received

here last night, etnfl was in the shape of a credit draft, upon one of this city's largest institutions, known to he a depository of part of the Vanderbilt wealth. It was the first tangible evidence of the "dot." which the young; heiress brought to her titled husband. As the deposit in the ltudapost bank was made in Hie joint names of the Count and Countess, it lends evidence to one of the stories told before the wedding- to the effect that the Count would not lie allowed to spend more than a certain sum each year without his wife's permission.

HAVE YOU PILES? Jir. Leonhai dfs Hem Uoid is an internal remedy that entirely removes 1hr cause of Piles, and cures to stay cured in any case, no matter how h ronic If you have Piles, and Dr. l.eonliardt's Hem Uoid will not cure you. you get your money back. $1A0 at Ia-o. 11. Fihe's. Richmond, Jnd., or Dr. Ijoonhard1 Co., Station 1!, ltuffalo. N. Y.

PAPER TRUST FLAYED STATE CLOSES CASE

Representative Adair of Indiana Speaks Interestingly in House.

Mrs. Lafollette Could Not Be Found When Called to Enter Stand.

Vv'essi-n, Mis.. F '.. 1 Six persons i are dean. lhr'e persot.s wt re probably fatally injured ;.nd many others were sliahtly hurt by a tornaio. which destroyed a number of homes. A lift -'i who arrived here about dark broughi news of ;iie .-ti'Vin and au appeal for aid. Three physh ian.- sMrtrd in carrias s i'or the .-trie' ei- ; j-n it.-t. The tornado ;nu- about ! o'clock y . .-u riiay aftei iioo.i. For a distance ot twenty miles in a northeasterly diree- ' lion the wind tore a pathway nearly j a mile wide, partly or wholly destroy-' ing nearly e--y buiblir.u in this area. Scores of dead farm animals litter-.vl ! the tornado's track. The resilience of Mr. and M i s. Ma 1io. was blown almost completely out and Mrs. Maddox's spina! column was broken. A negro was found injured in the debris of Robert Littleton's farm liOUijC. Surrounding' towns, not in the dim: path of the storm, suffered damage during the few minutes of the cyclone's duration. At (i'-orKetown. buildiugs were blown down and at Hazelhurst two saw mills were destroyed, many fences and several small buildings; were blow n' over. Center Point reported much damage, but no loss of i life. J Darkness hoilled down so ipiiekly '

iifter the storm that only an incomplete estimate of the destitution both in life and property was obtained.

II 3 5 31 STATIONS j Except i Dally Dally Sunday Sunday ; I I !.v Chicago I s.;h"am , 9.30pm ! S.;'.5ar.i Ar Peru PJ.40pm j t.:.5an i 12.40pm Lv Per i j l-'.aOpm ' 2.05aiu ! 6.00am 4.40pm J.v Marion j 1.41pm , L'.J'Jara 7.0'.ra S.STpm l.v Miiiuie : 2. 41pm 3.."7a.m S.lOam fi.40pm l.v Jticbtiiond '. 4.0r.pm j 5.15atn 9.35am S.05pm l.v Cottage Grove 4.45pm C.5r.aiu ! S.43pm Ar Cincinnati e.pm i T.Soam ! 1 10.23ptu Westbound Cincinnati Chicago 2 4 6 3t STATIONS Except Dally Dally Sunday Sunday l.v Cincinnati j S.40am ; .0opm V40ua, l.v Cottage drove I 10.15am 1 10.40pm ' 10.15ar Lv Richmond ! 10.55am I 11.15pia r..:'0pm 10.55am Lv Muncie 1 12.1 7pm ! 12.45am ' Ouptn 12.17pm Lv Marion l.lpni 1.44am P.OOpm l.P.'pni Ar Peru 2.15ni j 2.:;.".ani ; 10.'Opni 2. 15pm l.v Peru ; 2.25pm j 2.15am j 4.50pm Ar Chicago (12th St. Station) ' ?.40pm i T.Ouam !' -'Qpm

Through Yestibuled Trains between Chicago anl Cincinnati oer oi own rails. Double daily service. Through Sleepers on trains Nos. and 4 between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeper between Muncie, Marion, Peru and Chicago, handled in trains Nos. 5 ami between Muncie and Peru, thence trains Nos. ) and 1. between Peru and Chicajv Tor train connections and other information cail C. A. F.LAI R, P. & T. V. Home Telephone 2002. Tlichinoud. Taa.

Raiders Fire a Barn. Mayl'ield. Ky., February 1 A barn containing two crops of tobacco on the

farm of .lack Crawford, northwest of j

Mingo, was burned last night. I no i

loss is $1,000. "Night riders ai blamed.

Of the eighty-nine senators sworn in and serving, twenty-two. or nearly onefourth have officiated as governors of their states. Ten of the twenty-two are republicans and twelve democrats. The senatorial delegations from Arkansas. Louisiana. Tennessee and Vermont have been the chief executives of their respective states. Twelve are from the southern states and comprise nearly one-half of the wrath's representation in the senate. Four are from the east, four from the middle, west and two from the western states. Washington Herald.

DEFENDED IN STATEMENTS.

THE HORSE WON.

Beat the Firtt Locomotive on the B. and O. Road. The first locomotive on the Baltimore nil Ohio had sails attached. So dii the ears. Ths sails were hoisted when the wind was in the right direction so as to help the locomotive. The rivalry between the railroads usins locomotives and those using horses was very bitter. In August. ISoO, an actual trial of speed was held

between a horse and one of the pioneer locomotives, which did not result in favor of the locomotive. The race was on the Baltimore and Ohio, the locomotive being one built by Peter Cooper, W het also acted as engineer. The horse, a gallant gray, was in the hflbit of pulling a car on a track, parallel to thru used by the locomotive. At first the gray had the better of the race, but when he was a quarter of a mile ahead Mr. Cooper succeeded in getting tip enough steam to pass the horse amid terrific applause. i At that moment a band slipped from M pulley, and. though Mr. Cooper lacerated his hands trying to replace it, the engine stopped and the horse parsed it and came in the winner." Van Norden Jdagazivm

Washington. Feb. 1 . Discussion cf the tariff on wood pulp and print paper was precipitated for the liit time in the house yesterday by a speech of Representative j. a. M. Adair of Indiana, in which he flayed the Paper Trust. He was granted thirty minutes but his speech proved so interesting

and so fertile of suggestions Uiat his time was extended without, limit and he consumed about an hour. Several congressmen attempted to interrupt him. but he declined to yield until the end of his speech. Representative Charles Q. Tirrell of Massachusetts, a leading member of the judiciary committee, then inquired

of him if he knew that the International Paper company tthe trust) controls only about 4 per cent of the output of print paper and that it has many M rong competitors. To this Adair replied that the "strong competitors" of the Paper Trust are like the - strong competitors" of Standard Oil-that is. they are no competitors at all. but are straw companies dominated by the trust. John ShHry Williams and Representative Gilbert M. Hitchcock, a publish r of Nebraska, jumped into the area and defended Adair. Williams said the tariff on print paper is "a tax on knowledge and intelligence.'' The eagerness with which tin- house listened to the discussion indicates the keen interest that is taken in the subject.

BLOW STRUCK AT DEFENSE.

Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury.

a mercurv will surely destroy th s.-nse of snn-11 and completely hTiing the whole system wlen entering it through tin' mucous f'lirf.-U'-s. Sueli artielis should lever lie USed Ce.pl .hi presei-ii'tions from leputabb- physicians, as the flamugp they will do is ten fold to the good you can iiossildy derive from them. Hall's i-itnrrh "ure. liuiniifaetur.'d by V. J. t'lioi"' A.- I'o., Toledo. O.. contains no mercury, and is taken internally, actimr directly upon the blood anil mucous surfaces of the systi m. In buying

Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you pi t the genuine It is taken internally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by F. .1. I'liency ii- Co. Testimonials freo. Sold hv Orutrgists. Price 7."ie por bottle. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation.

NOTICE PUBLIC SALE. Attend Public Sale or Household Goods, Monday, Feb. 3rd, at 1 o'olock p. m. No. 305 North Seventh street. T. R. WOOmil'RST, Auctioneer. MILTON CRAIGHKAD, Clerk." 30-3t

GENNETT THEATRE

Ira Swisher g Managar

PEOPLE BECOMING MORE NERVOUS

Rumors of Plot and Counterplot Against Government.

Lisbon, February 1 The city is outwardly calm, but there is a steady increase of nervousness among the people owing to the constant rumors of plot and counter plot and the persistent activity of the ioliee in arresting suspected rebels. On the night of January 2. there was a bloody fight in a small restaurant on the outskirts of Lisbon. Suspecting the presence of a crowd of conspirators, the police surrounded and raided the restaurant. They were met by a volley of bullets and one of them was killed and four were wounded. The conspirators managed to keep the police at bay until they made their escape. An official note issued today denies that the government intends to proclaim a state of siege in Portugal, and declares that a majority of public opinion supports Premier Franco.

"LOOK WHO'S COMIMG HOME. ALL WEEK. Commencing Monday. Feb. 3. with Dally Matinees, commencing Tuesday.

"THE REAL

ii u it in niiua.. lunieuiaus umi

HARRY

NORTH BROS., Comedians

NORTH AND VIRGINIA GOODWIN

And 20 others. ADVANCED VAUDEVILLE betiveen acts, and a hall hour concert by the LADIES ORCHESTRA one-hall hour before the regular performance. opening play TIiC Viper on the Hearth" Prices: 10c. 20c and 30c. Matinee 10c to all parts ol the house. Ladles will be admitted tree Monday night under usual conditions. Seats at Westcott Pharmacy.

THE NEW PHILLIPS VAUDEVILLE THEATRE

O. G. MURRAY, Lessee. WEEK OF FEBRUARY 3. Daily at 3:00 and from 7:30 to 10:15 Continuously.

A. OVERTURE Miss Eva Hazeltine B. SID BAXTER Aerial Bicyclist

and Juggler, assist ed by Beat rice Southwiolc. C FRANK L. PERRY Rube Comedian. D. REILLY AND MORGAN Whole sale and Retail Dealers in Mirth and Melody. E. ILLUSTRATED SONG "Wont You He My Honey." F. THE ABBOTT-ANDREW CO In "The Little Leading Lady''

A Dramatic Playlet by George 1 Kt iinedr. CastRose, a child actress Francis Abbott Fanny Breeze, the real article Mrs. I-wis. Ro.so's mother Fannie Abbott Bob Ashtnore, an actor-man-"ager Jack Andrew I'hice N. Y. City. Tino Present. G. THE CAM ERAGRAPH latest Motion Pictures.

Special Matinee each Saturday; children. Ii cents; souvenirs at Wednesday's matinee. General admission, 10c. Reserved seats at night, Tc extra. Amateurs Friday night. Those wishing to appear, anply at box office.

Palladium Want Ads Go Into All Homes.

Greenfield. Ind.. Feb. 1 After two hours unsuccessful search for Mrs. Nan Lafollette Fisher, 1 lie state closed its case yesterday against T.,...,-i At Vimi.- ti ..Tt .. ........1

murder of .Tomes Lafollette, on Nov. I 17, 1907. More witnesses wore intro- j duced to prove the intimacy that, ex-J

isleil between t)unc;ui and Ins victim's wife previous to the tragedy. Duncan testified in his own defense today. Mrs. Lafollette Fisher was in the courtroom the first few days ot the trial, hut when her name was called by the state at 10 o'clock she could not, be found. Court was adjourned until 1 o'clock and an attachment was

! Issued for the missing witness. Kx-

Policeman Hiram Michaels, Constable Charles Houston and Ed Thornburg testified that they had heard Duncan make threats against the life of Lafollette. Sheriff Carlton testified that Duncan had admitted the killing of Lafollette. but said he shot Lafollette in self-defense. Ex-Judge Felt made the opening statement for the defense. He said the defense would show that Duncan killed Lafollette in self-defense; that Lafollette voluntarily cntered-the conflict and linn Duncan did not shoot until he had hem pursued t;uite a dis-

Weigh Yourself nd then after a few weeks weigh yourself attain. If vou are losing weight fake SCOTTS EMULSION. Breathe fresh air day and night. Eat simple food. Try this for a few weeks. Then weigh yourself again. The expe rience of thousands of men, women and children is that Scott's Emulsion increases the weight. It contains a power that produces new flesh. This simple treatment often cures consump. tion. All DrugiU; 50c. and $1.00.

They Don't Like Funerals. "If yon want -- know just how souMtive some Washington folks are. listen to the reasons some of our tenarts give for canceling their ieases." said a renting agent. "Here are the complaints from five families who want to move because they live on 'funeral streets.' A lot of people, it seems, are sensitive about that. There are certain streets in town those near churches where many funerals are held and those leading to the various oeme-teries--whicn are usually traveled by funeral parties. Houses in those streets are becoming a poor investment. There is more moving from those houses than from any others we have anything to do with, and generally the tuevers give as the rson for their dissatisfaction the fact that the sight of so many heHrses ets on their nerves," Washington Star.

Mr. London writes: "If I owned your Tea. 1 would guarantee a euro or rfund their money. I say it's nature's cure and the only one for the blood." Hollister's itochy Mountain Tea curod him where other remedies failed. 'Xutt said. A. G. Luken v Co.

The brain usually stops growing at about fifty, and from sixty to seventy it is more likely to decrease. It has been related by Canon MacColl that Mr. Gladstone's head was constantly outgrowing his hats. As late as the Midlothian campaign, when he was early seventy, he was obliged to have his head remeasured for this reason. Canon MacColl's conclusion that this continual growth of brain contributed to Mi. Gladstone's perennial youthfuluess appears not unwarranted. London Spectator.

Th." English potato crop its l'.7 is climated at ''.77.!'1 tons, who h is a serious decline a? c.imp.wed o Ii lb

1 Have you noticed the Improved ei v ioe to Chicago via the C. C. & I..

Thi-ous'h sleeper leaves Fiioiiui' nd at!

ll .t"i P. M. daily, ai rives in Chicago I ml XiMt A, L To- iL aj?rtt-tfj

Sltauri "(Who

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 for full particulars.