Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 37, 23 March 1908 — Page 8
TAG E EIGHT.
THE RICHMOND PA IX A D ITJ3I AND SUX-TELEGRAM. 3IONDAY, MARCH 23, 100S. REPETITION OF THE ATLANTA RACE RIOT DECENT BURIAL FOR ANTON
For with greatest care we have picked and chosen and purchased and know that there are not to be found more worthy and beautiful representatives of the newest and best in Spring Suits. NOVELTY AND EXCLUSIVENESS ARE THE FEATURES OF THE SHOWING, AS WELL AS PRICES SURPRISINGLY MODERATE RANGING from $10.00 to $45.00.
SELL TO BUILD E Almost Certain That Old Plan Will Be Revived by Telephone Company. PLANS DISCLOSE SCHEME. -ALL CONDUITS WILL BE LAID ON NORTH SIDE OF MAIN STREET NEARER PROPOSED BUILDING ENGINEERS ARE MEASURING. Now that the Central Union Telephone company is, through the enactment of the Main street pole ordinance, permitted to place its system underground without any restricting obligations, it is almost certain that the company will erect a new telephone exchange building on North Tenth street. Two years sigo the company purchased a lot on North Tenth street near Main, for the purpose of erecting sch a building, but this plan was abandoned when the city attempted to force the company to accept an underground franchise which contained a maximum rate clause. The plan for the establishment of SHOE For Men Built on reasonable lines. Every curve and swell of the foot finds corresponding form in "Bostonian"shoe. That means actual and unquali fied foot-comfort, because tired feet, sore joints and those
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XCHANGt
agonizing little things called corns, are caused by shoes which attempt to shape the foot to themselves rather than shape themselves to the foot.
"Bostonian" shoes fit like a touch all over but they do it easy;
come to " Bostonian" "style " and wear," there's nothing to be desired. Cunningham & Lahrman
AGAIN
Inspect Our Line of Fashionable Suits Before Buying. Excel Them ? Impossible ! Equal Them ? Try !
We are proud of our selections eager for you to see them confident of your approval.
COME TOMORROW.
Id)
HOME OF BUTTERICK PATTERNS
B9tS a Maiu street conduit system which the company has turned over to the board of public works and the city engineer calls for the placing of the conduits in a trench on the north side of Main street. The reason for desiring lo place the conduits on this side of the street, is for the purpose of having the conduits closer to the proposed exchange building on North Tenth street ' Today two engineers of the Central Union company were in the city making measurements to ascertain the amount of cable required in the reconstruction. Several miles of cable, it is thought, will be needed for this improvement. PRINTER'S ERROR CAUSES TROUBLE Local Optometrists Complain Of New Law. Local optometrists are complaining because the law which requires them to take out new licenses, although they hold licenses as occulists issued last year. They claim the charges of the state are excessive and not based upon legitimate rights. A mistakfc was made in the priming of the licenses last, year and all followers of the profession must, take out new licenses and pay the new price, so they have to bear the expense of the printer's error. sock they and when you
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RECEPTION PLANNED Epworth League of First M. E. To Entertain Tuesday. A cception will be given at First M. H. church Tuesday everung in the parlors of the church in honor of the new converts and accessions during the recent revival services. The affair will be under the auspices vof the Epworth league. The members of the official board and their wives will assist as reception committee. There have been seventy accessions during the meetings. The following program lias been arranged: "Church Welcome" Rev. 1j. H. Bunyan, on behalf of the official board. Vocal Solo Prof. J. L. Harris. "Sunday School Welcome" Mrs. S. C. Bevington and Prof. I). R. Ellabarger. Piano Solo Miss Colvin. 'Greetings from Kpworth League" Raymond H. Wehrley. Violin Solo Prof. Frederick Ilicks. A feature of the reception will be the passing of the new members along the receiving line and art Epworth league badge will be placed on each as favors. Refreshments will be served and all members and friends of the church are cordially invited to attend. "Are you nvwire," said the antiquary, "that there nre certain church pews to which the contribution basket is never passed ?" "No." "It is a fact. These pews are in certain old churches in Philadelphia, in Boston and in a number of New England villages. They have been rented on a uoneontribmton basket basis frua couple of centuries, la the pRst. It is said, men slept in church. They even played draughts there, and the advent of the contribution basket-would have been an amazing interruption to them So for a very much higher rental they obtained pews that the collectors ignored. These pews In churches that like to keep up the quaint customs of the past are still maintained." Cincinnati Enquirer. Sarcastic. It was evening, and the conductor rang the bell violently as the omnibus crossed over at the bank. The drive drew up with a sudden jerk. No one stirred, and after waiting for a second or two the conductor ran up the stairs two steps at a time. "Didn't yots say you wanted the Mansion T.t:s?V" he demanded of a large and reposeful lady in front. "Yes." she said without matin? any attempt to r;e. "Wrll." responded the conductor, "if you it HI want it you'd letter me down, 'cause 1 can't shift it any closer for tuppence, and" (with cuttine emphasis) "the 'osses is tired of waiting." London Scraps. Foek Agent Good morning! Are you the lady of the hcus? Bridget rm wan o' thim. New lork
Miss Dayse Walker Says Conditions Surrounding Negroes Must Be Changed.
ERNEST YOUNG WORKER. ' ATTEMPTING TO ESTABLISH HOMES FOR COLORED GIRLS ALL OVER THE COUNTRYNOTHING DONE FOR THEM. "If tho white people of thir, state do not promptly recognize and remedy the conditions existing among a large! class of the colored people, there will j be a repetition of the Atlanta race riot j in Indiana." This was the statement made by i Mis Dayse 1). Walker, a blight, eatn-j et young colored woman of Indianap-j olis, in an address given Sunday at the First English Lutheran church. Miss j Walker is at the head of the Young j Colored Women's Protective orgauization in fact she alone is responsible j for its organization. The establishment j of such liaunes in the principal cities! in the country. Miss Walker states, will j he a big stride in the work of remedying the condition of the negro race throughout the country. Thursday evening Miss Walker will deliver an other address at the First Presbyterian i church. In her address at the First. English Lutheran church yesterday. Miss Walker said that, some time ago she was stranded over night in a small Ohio town. She knew no colored people in the place and could not obtain, in consequence, a room where she could spend the night. I'ntil morning Miss Walker sat in the waiting room at. the station, despite the fact that the staion agent had ordered her away. This experience, she. stated, caused her to organize at. Indianapolis, the first Y. C. W. P. A. "In the cities of this country nothing has been done to provide homes for unfortunate colored girls. Everything is done to look after the welfare of white girls in the same condition of their colored sisters." stated Miss Walker. "At the present time the only doors opened to unfortunate colored girls are the doors of vice. The white people in Indiana, appear to be willing to assist in bettering the conditions of the colored race in Africa and in the Southern states. My ultimate purpose is to establish in all the important cities and towns in this state, homes of refuge for young colored women." Miss Walker is a school teacher at Indianapolis and before engaging in her present undertaking did slum work there. IS ESTABLISHED Young Girl Divorced Saturday And Application for Marriage License Today. CLERK WAS SURPRISED. HARDLY REALIZED THAT NINETEEN-YEAR-OLD GIRL COULD ACT SO HASTILY SECOND VENTURE FROM NEW CASTLE. Divorce decree received Saturday. Court house closed Sunday. Marriage license received Monday. That is the unique and at the same time remarkable record made by Sylvia Riley, a nineteen year old Mt. Auburn young woman. It was only Saturday that. Sylvia recited to Judge Fox in the Wayne Circuit court the trials and tribulations of her short marriage career with William Riley. William was an habitual drunkard, or at Vast that is what Sylvia said about him. Sylvia appeared at the clerk's office this morning and Floy Little, her intended No. 2 was ihere, also. Floy was asked the name of the girl he expects to take unto him and when when the deputy clerk looked surprised. Floy said "Oh you know here." But all recognition was lost to the deputy, until Floy pronounced the name, Sylvia Riley. Then the deputy remembered that the last time she had written that name, was in the "after taking" column. The second venture of Mrs. Riley is a product of the flower city, recognized as the capital of Henry county. He gives his occupation as a "brewery worker." ALBERT OLER ILL. Albert Oler, ex-county commissioner, has been confined to his room some time with tonsilitis. His granddaughter. Helen R. Stewan. has also been quite sick for some time. They are both now improving and in a fair wav to recovery soon. Have yon t-ont of anv kind ariatog- from a dmordered stomach? Go ro your druggist and re' a 50c or SI bottle of Dr. Caldweii's Srrup Pepsin, which is positively jraarantMd to -are you ami keep yea well. Learning. Rofcer I w-on $oO from Bines Iart ntetat playing poker. Joker Why, does Blugs knw how to r!ay poker? So&er Not yet Uppineott Mtgu-
MARRIAGE
RECORD
Moulders' Union Saves Wan derer's Body From the Potters Field.
STORY OF THE MAN'S LIFE. HE REFUSED TO DISCUSS IT FURTHER THAN TO SAY HE HAD A GOOD FATHER AND MOTHER, AND DRINK LED HIM AWAY. The moulders of this iitj 1 1 a - determined that Anton Datir, the honiele.-s vagrant w ho died Saturday a ii -t i f u of alcoholism, will not lc lahi to rest in the M)tter'.s field. At a meeting held esterday by the members of the local moulder's union, it was decided that their brother craftsman should be buried as a human being and one not a pauper nor charity charge. The union voted to purchase a casket .a lot at one of the Catholic cemeteries and to mark his j;rave with a headstone. It is probable that the funeral will be held tomorrow. Members of the union will attend. Paur died with the secret of where he was born and who his family was. locked in his breast. Two days before his death he was asked where his home was. He stated that, it was in Columbus, (). Inquiries made there yesterday revealed the fact that Iaur was not known. The moulder's union wired to Terre Haute. Springfield. O.. St. Louis. Philadelphia and Indianapolis in an effort to secure some information concerning the man, but all of these inquiries were, fruitless. The general offices of the union at Cincinnati have now been appealed to to make, a thorough investigation. When first arrested the man was in a terrible condition as the result of a protracted spree. He told Sergeant. Mc.Manus that he drank whiskey because he had not. enough will power to resist his cravings for it. "I had a mother, a father -and another one who loved mo and they were good people, just as good as your loved ones, but my appetite for drink led me away from them." said Daur to th police officer last Thursday. Then his voice broke and he sobbed bitterly. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. He who thinks no evil can do no wrong. Waiting works wonders if you work while you wait. A man may do the best he can and still get the worst of it. Wings of riches ore as unsatisfactory as the stings of poverty. A man's most bitter enemy is the exfriend who can no longer work him. Even the man who expects the unexpected is apt to be surprised when it happens. A man is seldom as old as he feels or a woman as young as sue says she Is. The faster a man lives the quicker he will occupy ground floor space in a cemetery. It's an easy matter to obtain peace. All you have to do is let the other fellow have his way. Pome things are rather difficult to understand, especially when they are explained by some one who doesn't understand them. Chicago News. Tbe Chanarelraa Moon. T'nder existing conditions and the conditions have existed on the surface of the moon for perhaps millions of years it Is a physical impossibility that the face of the moon should change one iota. There are neither outside nor inside Influences that can be brought to bear to make a change in the configuration of "our silvery sister world." Her internal fires have long since died out. and there is an utter absence of both air and water. Existing under such conditions, it is utterly impossible that the fare of the moon should undergo change or disintegration even in the course of a hundred million years. Prolinuria tion. There is a story that Tennyson, hearing at a dinner party somebody pronouncing knowledge with a long o. Jumped up from the table, rushed at his fellow guest and shook hands with him. "Among the faithless faithful, he:" he exclaimed, and he proceeded to denounce in vehement terms the inquitous mispronunciation of the English language. It is remembered that a greater English poet Byron, to wit did not sgree with him. as a couplet iu "Don Juan" shows: No. no; I'd send him out betimes to college. For there it was I picked up my own knowledge. LiRhtsliiK Flashes. A four inch black disk, marked with a white cross and rotating fifty to sixty times a second, has been used by a German at night for studying lightning flashes. Some flashes caused the cross to appear once, others brought it out several times, and repeated observations confirmed the view that the discharge is very variable. The duration of some seemed to be about the onethousandth part of a second. Others were shorter, and some were evidently not wore than a thirty-five thousandth part of a second. V Svcrl Drraui Kodrd. Ethel Bobby Jones died very suddenly. I Lear. I suppose bis widow in inconsolable? Edith - Yes. poor dear. She wa looking forward so happily to divorce proceedings and alimony. New York Press. Torned Down. Ted I tieer yet met the woman I thought I c?uld marry. Ned You're lucky. The three I met I thaught i could. New York Herald. -
In Large or Small Sums-- S5.00 lo S100 Take a pencil and paper and retire up all your little bills then come to us and we will LOAN vou enouch to pay them ail off We will make the payment so small that jou will inner miss it ou' of your salary. There is no excuse for you being in debt when we have m much money and are so willing to loan ii to ou on our household, furniuire, piano, horse, wagons or other chattels. If you need money, til! out this blank am! mail it to vis. Our agent will call on you. Pate Your full name U ife's full name ' n y Street and No!" Amount wanted Kind of security you have - Occupation RICHMOND LOAN CO. Established 1S93. Home Phone 1545 Room 8. Colonial Building. Richmond, Ind.
NEW MARRIAGE DECREES WERE READ YESTERDAY (Continued From Page One.) tain permission . from the bishop or from the priest appointed by hint to grant such permissions. There arr regulations made likewise for The proper registration of marriages. In the exceptional case of marriaee before any two witnesses, a like obligation rests upon the contracting parties and the fwo witnesses. The registration of the marriage must be made and signed by the pas tor or by the priest. To forestall any rloubts or difficul ties as to the validitv of tin- marriage ceremony we hereby declare that all assistant priests, administrators and substitutes, who shall b appointed by us in the future . shall be vested with the. full and absolute power and an thority to assist at the valid celebra tion of marriage within the limits of the parishes, missions or stations to which they shall be assigned. Parties wishing to arrange for marriage musj prove their domicile or their month's residence, as well as their freedom to marry. We forbid Catholics to assist as groomsmen aud bridesmaids at nonCatholic weddings. All regulations herein laid down, which are not contained in the decree "No temere," are made by each of us for his own diocese. Given at Cincinnati this l"th day of February in the year of our lord, ICtOX. HKNftY, Archbishop of Cincinnati. FRANCIS SILAS, Bishop of Indianapolis. HENRY JOSEPH, Bishop of Grand Rapids. CAMIUA'S PAUL, Bishop of Covington. .10H.V SAM CEL. Bishop of Detroit. IGNATIUS FREDERICK, Bishop of Cleveland. THOMAS SEBASTIAN. Bishop of Nashville. HERMAN JOSEPH, Bishop of Fort Wayne. JAMES JOSEPH. Bishop of Columbus. MASONIC CALENDAR. Monday, March 23. Richmond Comj man-dory, No. S, K. T., work, Order of j Temple. - ! Tuesday, March 24. Richmond i ! Lodge, No. l&fi, F. fc A. M work in! Master's Degree. i Thursday, March 26. Rehearsal Su J per Ex. Degree, Wayne Council No 10, R. & S. M. C. W. MORGAN THE GROCER (Successor to Harry J. Doan ' 12th and Main Streets. Automatic Phone l.",(9; Bell 229. Phone I's Your Order. i i ! INSURANGE.REAL ESTATE LOANS, RENTS ! "ST- . W. H. Bradbury & Son Rooms 1 and 3, Wsstcott Blk t r APPLES! APPLES! APPLES! 90c PER BUSHEL. Sound, Medium Size Stock. HADLEY BROS. Phone 2292. SPECIAL Notice our east window Three 25c Articles 6-5-4 Stove Lusta Liquid Veneer and Shinbright Metal Polish are going at 19 Cents Pilgrim Bros. Cor. Mb. and Main.
Extra Fine Maple Syrup i. i H hi . ... j t and Sugar Try one of our Country Hams Entire Wheat
Flour All the wheat that's good to eat. Large, Crisp, Queen Bulk Olives 30c Qt. BEE HIVE GROCERY m"rrvr Richmond Trust Company. Capital and Surplus $275,000.00 Pays interest on deposits, executes trusts, takes charge of real estate, and arts in all fiduciary capacities. Solicits the business of all. OFFICERS: E. G. Hibberd. President. Adam H. Barfel. 1st Vice Pres. John .1. Harrington, 2nd Vice Pres. W. K. Henley, Secretary and Treas. The attraction of an open fireplace makes it a magnet as well as an ornament in the home. When you use good, clean coal in your grate, your range or your stove, you always have a bright, glowing fire that is always grateful n the Spring time. We send coal to your ordr. clean and high grade, that always gives satisfaction. H. C. BULLERDICK & SON. 529 S. 5th St Phone 1233. Moore & Ogborn Firo Insurance Agents. Will go on your Bond. Will Insure you against Burglary, Theft and Larceny. Room 10, I. O. O. V. Bb!g, Phones, Home Bell 53 R. SEE OUR SPRING LINE ...of... GO-CARTS at HASSENBUSCH
