Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 29, 15 March 1908 — Page 2

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MIS KICII3IOM I'ALLAUIUJl AMJ ,SU. TIiL(;RA3I, SUNDAY, 3IARCII l., liMJS.

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MAGNATES ARE TO ASSEMBLE MONDAY

Promoters of the Indiana-Ohio Circuit Arc to Meet in Anderson. SIXTH CITY TO BE CHOSEN. EXPECTED THAT THERE WILL BE LITTLE TROUBLE IN SECURING SUITABLE TOWN AS SEVERAL APPLICATIONS ARE ON HAND. On Monday, representatives of the Ilichmond, Puma, Van Wert, Huntington, and Anderson teams of the I.-O. league, will hold a meeting at Anderson .and the first question that will come up for discussion, will be the selection of a sixth town to round out the circuit. No difficulty in securing suitable town, is anticipated. President Gamble states that he has several applications on hand. The magnates, who will attend this meeting re Clarence Jessup of Richmond, C. Sank of Piqua, Frak Ixmgwell of Van Wert. Manager Weils of Huntington. Dal Williams, Howard Witt. Will Js'orLon. Charles Smith, Phil O'N'eil and other Anderson men. President Gamble and Secretary Poundstone will idso attend. Effort Will Be Made to Break Up Proposed Phone Merger in Indianapolis. WANT LEASE ANNULLED. lndianaiolis. Ind., March 14. Acting under a decision of the United Ftates Supreme court in the Vandalia case, that one public .service corporation cannot lake over bodily another Dubllc service corporation, with Its rights and franchises, suit to annul the lease of the new telephone company to the Indianapolis Telephone company has been filed in the circuit court, by Elliott R. Hootou. prosecuting attorney, in his capacity as a representative of the state of Indiana. The proceedings are in the form of Information witli a prayer that the information result in annulling the lease of the new telephone company, the ousting of the Indianapolis Telephone company front all rights and franchises unlawfully held, tho restoration of the property and plant of the new telephone company to the stockholders of that company and the requirement that the new telephone company lu3 and operate the property for the interest of 'reditors and stock noltlers. PEOPLE KILLED Terrific Explosion in Mississippi Town Does Great Damage. SEVEN BUILDINGS WRECKED Natchez. Mis., March 11. A gas ox- j Jdosioti in a drug establishment here J tonight. Killed nine white people and Injured many who are not jet accounted for, and destroyed seven buildings. L GETS ANONYMOUS LETTER Threat to Destroy Buildings in Denver. Denver, Col.. March 11. Governor "Buchtel has received an anonymous letter, in which tho writer threatened to destroy the federal building and the city hall in this city unless something is done to reloive tho condition f the unemployed in Denver within the next forty-eight hours. Tho letter was signed ""A Republican Who Has Voted Under the loash of the Master." Although the governor did not appear to take the threat seriously, it is said that extra precautions will be taken to keeo suspicious characters out of the capital and other public b'rlldingy "Did yon ever notice the peculiar odor of new paper money':" "Xot exactly, but T'vc noticed tho cent. "Cleveland Plain Dealer. At The Club At Home, and on the Street, an "AMERICAN KID" will prove its quality. See Window Display. ED. A. FELTMAN, Manufacturer of and Dealer in High Grade Cigars. 609 Main Street.

sweeping

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GOVERNOR

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GOLFERS OUT ON COUNTRYCLUB LINKS Three Men Say the Going Was Fine.

Yesterday afternoon the first jroif match of the season at the local country club was played by Waiter Hutton Charles McGuire and Will Dill. They state that the going was fine and that the links are iu very good condition. NIMRQDS RETURN FROM JUINTING TRIP A Few Thousand Ducks Killed And Many Bass Caught. Manager Clarence Jessup of the local team, returned home yesterday from a week's hunting and fishing trip in Western Illinois. With him on this trip were Will Kelley and Louis Knopf. By actual count these nimrods exerminated 4,1'A'j ducks and yanked something over o bass, the smallest weighing 12 pounds, out of the various wet places in that section of the country. These figures are Known to be accurate they were furnished by the nimrods themselves. ONE FIFTH OF DELEGATES CHOSEN Results of the Week's Conventions. Washington, March II. Nearly onefifth of the delegates to tho Republican convention have now-been selected. The additions this week came from Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Virginia and Ohio. The conventions wore all held in territory, most of which was conceded to Taft long ago. The returns to date give Tal't 112 delegates. Of the delegates selected tints far thirty will be contested in the national convention. Kour Hughes district delegates were, chosen in Missouri this week. Two of these were? instructed and two were uninstructed. NEW yo r k c HI U FTC R es". Trinity and the Land It Occupies Valued fit fl2.500.000. Trinity church is valued at $12,500,000. This estimate includes the land occupied by the churchyard. It is in the most valuable part of New York, if not in the most valuable division of property in the world. St. Paul's church is valued at $5,500,000. Grace church, at what was once described as the head of Broadway, is valued at $950,000. The First Presbyterian church, on Fifth avenue, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets, is valued at $750,000. St. Mark's church, on Second avenue, an old landmark iu that neighborhood, is valued at $275,000. The Marble Collegiate church, Fifth avenue ami Twenty-ninth 6treet, is valued at $1,000,000. The Church of St. Paul the Apostle (the Paulist church), at Fifty-ninth street and Columbus avenue, is valued at $700,000. The West Presbyterian church, on West Forty-second street, is valued at $430,000, St. Thomas' at $1,700,000 and the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian church, 9 and It West Fifty-ninth street, at $1,000,000. The valuation of the Temple ErnanuKl Is $1,530,000, of St. Patrick's cathedral $0,000,000, of the B'nai Jeeshurun synagogue $;;00,0W, of the Temple Beth-El, at the corner of Fifth avenue and Seventy-sixth street. $1,300,000, of I tbo Broadway Tabernacle, Broadway i aud Fifty-sixth street, $700,000 and of 1 the Christian Scientist church. Central ' Park West and Sixty-eighth street, $300,000.-New York Sun. PRACTICAL PICTURES. Odd l'arlur Ornaments and a ery .Substantial Dinner. j There is a practical minded millionaire who has invented a substitute for valuable pictures which it is hoped will i not commend itself to others. Lie has had a large number of bank notes ! framed, and these are hung upon the' wall where the pictures should be. In the drawing room is one frame that contains a bank note for 100,000, and he says: "There is the money in case I find a picture which is sufficiently valuable to pay that price for it. Meanwhile the note tells its own tale aud saves ine from explaining to my visitors that 'this picture cost so much,, as most other rich men do. "The chief pleasure of these collectors ! appears to arise not from the beauty of j the work, but from the cost of it: then why not have checks or bank notes for a large sum hung on the walls, as I do? , Besides. I find that it is much more Interes tins to my visitors. fr most of I them lok i'.'Utr and carefully nt the bank notes who would but glance at j the v ork of art." j TL;s eveentr.- man cave a dinner o:i the -ian.e pr:n.;p'.e. In 'he. sor.p plate? there was r.o soup, hut soere:ens; fur! hh we;v t. erred five-pound U'"te. fr ' game -hecks rind for STvoet shares in a thriving nwpany, aud there wan not n puet who did not enjoy thU enter- ! tainmetit more than any he or she bad ever before been present at. Loudon The Twilight Of Life. Tho muscles of the stomach In old ace re not as strong or actire as in ycrath and in consequence old people are very nubject to constipation and Indigestion. Many eldom hare a bowel movement without artificial aid. Alany a!o. have unpleasant eructation of tras from the stomach after eatin. All thi can be avoidSi VJi!f u,e cf ,I)r t'Mweir Syrup Pepsin. hicn permanently rreulates the bowels so that passages come naturally, and so strengthen ll Ji torac1 ,h,t. food eetcd without dislarsc botUe 8e'StS ScU ' 50 cems or $1

RICHMOND BUTTS IN NATIONAL CIRCUIT

Giants, Colored Baseball Team Will Play in Large Circuit. TWELVE TEAMS PROPOSED. ALREADY ST. LOUIS, CINCINNATI, DAYTON, COLUMBUS AND OTHER LARGE CITIES HAVE CAST LOTS WITH CIRCUIT. Walter Dennis, a well known local colored sportsman, states that Richmond will be represented in the National Colored Baseball league. He will attend a meeting of the proposed organization which will be held at Louisville April 12. He states that this city will be represented by the Giants. The league is backed by money furnished by white and colored sportsmen. The circuit will include St. Louis, Terro Haute, Indianapolis, Louisville, Richmond, Dayton, Springfield, O., Columbus, O., Cincinnati and Evansville. Two other teams will be admitted. The local team will probably be backed by a stock company. It is not known where it is proposed to locate the park. CONTRACTS AWARDED. Contracts were awarded as follows yesterday afternoon by the board of county commissioners, for furnishing of supplies to the county poor farm for the quarter ending June 1: Groceries, to John M. Eggemeyer, Richmond; dry goods, to Hoosier Store, of Richmond; clothing, to George Pox of Richmond; drugs, to F. H. Dunham of Centerville. "GLIGGY BLUKS" CAUSE OF DEATH Little Girl Died for Lack of Attention. Bedford, Ind.. March 1-1. Eunice, the nine-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Bennett, who reside near Avoea, died last night, apparently a martyr to the "Gliggy Bluks' ' faiu cure religion. ; . Coroner Voyles has been at Avoca holding an inquest to determine the cause of the child's death, which, it is alleged, was due to pneumonia and the absence of proper medical attention. The death of the little Bennett girl has created a feeling of indigation in the vicinity of Avoca. as the father has been at the head of a new religious sect, or faith cure cult, and, it is said, depended solely upon an invisible power to heal his daughter. The Valley of Quillota. "Whoever," says Charles Darwin in his "Voyage of the Beagle," "called Valparaiso the valley of paradise must have been thinking of Quillota." Qulllota is a thriving town twenty-six miles from Valparaiso in a northeasterly direction. Any person, he declares, who sees only the country around Valparaiso, barren of vegetation, would never imagine that there were such picturesque spots in Chile. "As soon as we reached the brow of the sierra the valley of Quillota was immediately under our feet! The prospect was one of remarkable natural luxuriance. Tho valley is very broad aud quite flat and is thus easily irrigated in all parts. The little square gardens are crowded with orange and olive trees and every sort of vegetable." Acrordlnc to Contract. A man who was very miserly hoarded tip his stacks of bay year after year in the hope of making double the price he was offered for them. A well known hay and straw buyer in the district one day asked the price of a stack. An enormous price was asked, which the buyer accepted. "How about the terms of settlement?" asked the old miser. "Well, you see." said the buyer, "my terras are to settle when I fetch the ,ast Ioa,; away jnats a oargain. said tne miser, slapping the other's hand. The old chap watched every load go away except the last, and that the buyer never did fetch away. London Standard. Salute Foe a IJtrtr Frlare. The crown prince of Germany bad as a child a great dislike of heing washed. The emperor tried various means to cure him, and he at last hit on the right one. The young prince came running to him one day in a great rage, saying the sentry had not saluted biro as he passed. "To be sure." said the emperor. "I gave orders they were not to salute a dirty prince, but only a clean one." Th'"1 child's pride was hurt, and he took to the both. He Mnt Have Had Faith. The i'hnrh was packed, even the aisles lined with chairs. .iut before the benediction the thoughtful clergyman. rho loved order as he did the pospol. ihu admonished bis hearers: "In pasijij; out pieae remain eated until the ushers have removed the chairs from the aisles." Lippincott's Magazine. Man often feels himself independent of all the earth, but let the sunstiine and rain fail for a little while and he realizes how meanly dependent be is. Salisbury Democrat

PALLADIUM WANT AOSPAYi

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

t 3 5 j 31 STATIONS Except j Dally Dally Sunday Sunday Lv Chicago 8.25am 9.30pm J cTc3ani Ar Peru 12. 40pm 1.55am I 12.40pm Lv Peru 12.50pm 2.05am C.OOam j 4.-i0;m Lv Marion 1.44pm 2.5fam 7.05am ; 5.37pm Lv Muncie 2.41pm 3.57am S.lOam j t;.40pm Lv Richmond 4. 03pm 5. loam S.ioam 1 S.O.'pm Lv Cottage Grove 4.45pm 6.53am S.4opin Ar Cincinnati r 6.33pm 7.30am 10.2. pm

Westbound Cincinnati Chicago

STATIONS Lv Cincinnati Lv Cottage Grove Lv Richmond .... Lv Muncie Lv Marion Ar Pens Lv Peru Ar Chicago (12th St. Station)

Through Vestibtiled Trains between Chicago and Cincinnati over our crwn rails. Double daily service. Through Sleepers on trains Xos. 3 and 4 between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeper between Muncie, Marion, Peru and Chicago, handled in trains Xos. 5 and C, between Muncie and Peru, thence trains Nos. ?, and 4, between Peru and Chicago. For train connections and other information call

C. A. BLAIR, flome Telephone 2062.

FEELING AGAINST STOLE HAIR FOR BARNARD AIDS THE HIS SWEETHEART LOCAL CANDIDATE "Borrowed" Curls, Switches, (Continued From Tage One.) And "RatS."

delegates to support the Wayne county man when it is seen that neither Stivers of Union county, nor Moore of Fayette county, have a chance to land the nomination. As another reason for justifying their belief that these two counties will act on the principle outlined above, the Campbell supporters call attention to the fact that some years ago when Union, Fayette, aud Henry counties were linked together in the question of joint offices, Henry county always acted the "hog" and such offices were always given to a Henry county mam This fact, the Campbell supporters: say, has left a sore spot iu both Union and Fayette counties that will render little likelihood of the Henry county man now receiving much consideration from their hands. Way He Will Win. Willi Wayne county and eventually Union and Fayette counties behind Campbell, together with his share from Rush and Shelby counties, the minister-candidate will be within close reach of the coveted 57 delegates necessary to nominate. And it is felt that he will receive more than enough votes from the remainder of the counties, such as Decatur, Franklin and Hancock, to put him way in the It t id of Judge Barnard. One thing is certain, with all these possibilities and with the fight being waged on Barnard, the coming convention should be a very interesting one for the onlookers.

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2 Except Sunday 4 Dally 32 I Dally Sunday 8.40am 10.15am 10.55am 12.17pm 1.19pm 2.15pm 2.23pm 6.40pm 9.00pm 10.40pm 11.15pm i 12.4f.am ! 1.44am I 2.35am S. 40a m 10. 1 5am 10.55am 12.17pm 1.19pm 2.15prn 4.50pm 9.20pm r, 30pm S.OOpm 9.00pm 10.00pm 2.43am 7.00am P. & T. A. Richmond. Ind. New York, March 14. Reuben Schenck, arrested for larceny, told Magistrate Han-is that he helped himself from his employer's stock of Marcel waves to make his sweetheart look pretty. He said a hair restorer his fiancee used operated the other way, and to replace Iresses shed from the young woman's scalp ho borrowed "an assortment, of curls, switches and "rats." He was held for trial. MINER CONVENTION HASJOJOURNED Operators, Slow in Replying to Conference Idea. Indianapolis. March 14. The miners' convention adjourned Saturday until Monday. The scale committee reported it had not heard from all the operators regarding the joint conference March twenty-fourth. It is said Ohio operators will not be ready until after April 1. Indiana operators have notified the committee that they are willing to meet any time. It is believed that some operators want to postpone the negotiation until Presi- , dent Efc.Tt Lewis takes hold, so lie may have the credit.

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who creates the

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Mcoimey

Any Amount. Anywhere. Any Time. Almost Any Kind of Security. No Red Tape. No Delay. No Publicity. With lis, you de;! direct :h tho U mi-r. for we represent no foreign capital. Loaning our emit money, nominal expense and the great volume of business wo do emtb'es us to not only i;te you easier payments and more r.a isi'actoi y dt alius, but uho to uurauteo you FAR BETTER RATES (hun can b hail of any ooiic T!i in this section of emu try, none excepted. laus taken up from i-th.-r loan companies, w o j:ivtnir you. in addition, any reasonable amount you may want, c'.i'l on or thono us. Tho difference wo can save jou will I .surprising. Automatic Phones From S a.m. to 5 p.m. 1341. Alter 5 p.m. 36SI or 4156 Indiana Loan Co. Established 1901 Rooms 40-41 Colonial BIdg. 3d Floor. Richmond. Ind.

DEUKEM'S JKtfS !

New Spring Showing ol Go-Carts, Perambulator, and Baby Carriages The Finest in the City. Also see our line of Gas Ranges. Oil Stoves and Gasoline Stoves.

Special OSfen To toaoliors or Iliirh School gr-it nates, lluroil uow and receive iuEtruction at home. Free until you enter. For information, 'phone or addicts Richmond Business College. Phono LTi-pi. L. B. Campbell, Res. Mgr.

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shear EEMEASURED For your Spring Suit. It is the only way you can feel certain of securing a perfect fit. Fine Suits Si 5 and $18. EinnimniDini Tailoring Co.