Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 68, 23 April 1908 — Page 7
XII K KIUH3IO'L lAliLAI3IL3I AD SUX-TELKU11A31, T1IVKSUAY, APRIL, 23. 10O-S.
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L UP AGAINST IT At Least This Is the Tenor of Remarks of T. H., I. & E. Official. CONDITIONS TO BE MET. WINTER SAYS THAT VAST IMPROVEMENTS HAVE TO BE MADE ON HIS LINE DURING THE COMING YEAR AT BIG FIGURE. Interurban business is not what it (Uied to be, according to Ferdinand Winter, who so told the state board of tax commissioners. Mr. Winter asked for a reduction of the assessment against the lines of the Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern company, I which operates eight divisions radiating from Indianapolis. lie was told that the present valuation of the company's lines as placed by the board represents only about oO cents on the dollar. j The board was informed the reduction in fares by the steam roads has caused a reduction in the number of passengers carried by the interurbans and the revenue has decreased consequently. It was asserted also that the original electric lines were not constructed to withstand the wear placed upon them and much , of the work will now have to be done over. It was asserted that OO.oOO new ties will have to be put in by the company on its lines and the cost of each tie was estimated at $1. 1 Last year the property of the Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern was assessed at JSS.Slo a mile. Mr. Winter believes there should be a reduction of at least $1,MK a mile this year. This company has a deficit this year of '$32.41!. The deficit appears, however, only after bond interest in the sum of $7fMUMji has been paid. Mr. Sims, of the board, called attention to the fact, that leaving the bond interest out of the list of expenses there would be net earnings of more than .$7."0,HX instead of a deficit. Mr. Sims said also that taking the capital stock and bond Issue cf the company into consideration the value of each mile is .f.'JO.Oro. '"Considering these figures." said Mr. Sims, '"our assessment amounts to only about iio cents on the dollar." I A novel feeling of leaping, bounding impulses goes through your body. You feel young, act young, and are young after taking a course of Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents. Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. GREAT HOME COMING 'Eaton Residents Now Making Active Preparations For Event. MERCHANTS ARE LIBERAL. Eaton, O., April 23. There is no ifloubt about the success of the proposed centennial and home- coming to be held here July 2, 3, and 4. The residents of the entire county have assured the promoters of their cooperation. The citizens of Eaton have come forward with their customary liberality and subscribed $3,000 as a guarantee fund. This will be made much larger as a number who are expected to aid, have not been asked. It has been suggested by a committee that the dedication of cannon be fcne of the chief events of the celebration. A county reunion of old soldiers will be held. There will be an Industrial parade and fireworks as Well as numerous band concerts. The town intends to surpass all previous efforts in the way of public events. PLENTY OF TROUELE Is caused by stagnation of the liver and bowels, to get rid of it and headache and biliousness and the poison that brings jaundice, take Dr. King's fc'ew Life Tills, the reliable purifiers that io the work without grinding or fcriping. 25c, at A. G. Luken & Co s drug store. Marie Wasn't it sliockins about Chollie Wortbinjrton? He fell out of pbis new airship when it got stalled n ihalf mile up in the air! Lilian-How did Chollie come to fall? Marie lie thought he was in his automobile and Jumped out to push It back home: Bohemian Magazine. Stokers Way Down In the. boiler-room cf the steam ship shovel in the coal night and day that gives her power to make a record. The best coa! gives the best power. That b why Scott's Emulsion produces flesh when other things fail, it contains more power. It fa truly a body fuel. Many a man. woman and child have broken their records for weight by ths pounds of flesh gained from SCOTTS EMULSION. It is a powerful ficsh producer. AODrcssutes 50c and $1.00.
NTERUiAH
"Eat What You Please"
When and Where You Please. This simple but powerful pre-, scrlption will enable those with "finicky" Btomachs to tat what they please, when and where they please, without any distressing after effects. Says a noted Battle Creek specialist: "I always prescribe the fl'.low-ing-with the greatest success, for indigestion, acute or chronic dyspepsia, sour stomach, constipation, depression. langour, )lues, wind and gas on stomach and bowels, heart palpitation and biliousness. The results are prompt and lasting from these harmless but powerfully blended extracts and essences. Jf not in stock. any drusrlpt ran obtain these Ingredients from wholesale firms who supply our profession witn rare eoncvurations. Take a six-ounce or half-pint bottle and get two ounces syrup of Ginger, one ounce Comp. essence of Cardlo: (in separate one-ounce bottle) and two ounces of essence of Pepsin. Mix and shake well; then take one or two teaspoonfuls after each meal. One spoonful before eating will give a good appetite. One or two at retiring will relieve constipation. Oive it to children who have stomachache, bad breath or bowel trouble. It may be takn freely, being entirely harmless and much better than any patent medicine containing opiates and enslaving drugs." t TWO KINDS OF GIRLS IN CAMBRIDGE Tribune Commends Those Who Work and Condemn Others. There are two kinds of girls in Cambridge City, also in every town the girl that works and the girl that gads. Commend us to the first named. Work lends real dignity to the pretty girl, gives her a charm for which there Is no compensation in idleness. She might gad about, loll on sofas and read novels, but she prefers to be of some account in the world. The girl that wcrks is the salt of the earth and of such is the kingdom of Heaven. The girl that gads soon loses the sweetness and charm of youth and gravitates to boisterousness and bad manners. Cambridge City Tribune. HER NEWSPAPER DAD." Ha Isn't Always Cross; Sometimes He Is Positively Jubilant. Nevvspnper daddies are funny, I think. Mine's one. He's funniest at breakfast, only it isn't breakfast, 'cause It's lunch, and that's another funny thing about it "Where's 'stnoruin's paper?" he asks mamma the first thing when he comes downstairs. And then when she looks sort of childishly at him 'cause he's a little gruff he hurries up and says, "Good morning, everybody," just as though he felt kind-a 'shamed of himself. And then he won't talk when he gets his old paper. He just sticks his nose into it and looks at one page after another just as fast as he can, and then be begins all over again and does it slower and keeps still for quite awhile. Theu mamma and I wait for an explosion. "Ijits!" he says. "They couldn't spell 'cat' right" Theu he goes chasing from one page to another as fast as ever ho can, talking to himself, and when he's got real mad he shouts at mamma: "They buried it! See. They buried it back there way back there, of course, and it's the best story in the paper!" Then mamma says, quiet, like a calm after a storm, "Come, dear, your coffee '11 get cold." But he's more like a bear than a dear, and he doesn't come, but he keeps on growling at the old paper. I guess he Anally gets tired of himself, too, and then he jumps up. throws the paper on the chair and tries to dodge mamma's funny smile. Mamma's awfully patient, I think, and she never gets mad, but Just smiles and smiles at daddy when he gets cross at things. Sometimes she asks him why he wants to keep on being a newspaper man if it's so awful. One time be answered and said it was because if he kept on working sixteen hours a day maybe the office would some time give him as much as the stereotyper gets for working eight hours a day. Mamma said that was sarcasm. I guess he thinks sarcasm must be a good thing for the office, 'cause he most always talks that way about It But newspaper daddies aren't always cross. Sometimes mine hurries downstairs a whole lot earlier, and then when he grabs the paper he smiles all ver and shouts at mamma: "See that story ? That's a clean scoop, end a bully cue! That's worth living for! And, say, won't the fellows on the old Bugle feel sore, though! "I tell you," he says then, "one day like that is worth a bicycle of Cathay," whatever that is. And then mamma looks at me and smiles, 'cause we both think he's funny sometimes. Dos Moines (la.) Register. A Great Lawyer's Method. , Writing of "Civilian Leaders of the : Confederacy" in the Louisville Courier- ; Journal. John Goode says of Judah p. i Benjamin: "The first time I met him we discussed the practice of law. and In the course of the conversation he asked me ' what we considered a g.xd fee in my part of the country, to which I replied that we considered $rt a very respectable fee. lie smUed and said: "When 1 practiced law in New Orleans If a I man employed me 1 charged him a re- ' tainer. If he came about the office , much I charged him a reminder, when I had done some work In the case I charged him a refresher, and when it l was all over I charged him a finisher." ! To clean marble take two parts soda, one of pumice and one of salt i all in powder, and mix to a paste ; with water. Rub this on the marble. ! not forgetting to add . some "elbow ! grease." and wash off with salt water. Finish with clean cold w-- nd a sjft clotli
TEACHERS 10 SCHOOL
Wayne County Pedagogues Hope to Secure Higher Salaries. CONDITIONS TO BE MET. Wayne county school teachers, holding twelve or twenty-four months' licenses, will go to school this spring and summer. The training schools of the state are expected 'to be crowded by teachers, who are anxious to raise their standard in accord with the demands of the new rules of the s'tate board of education. The training schools will be attended by ,3,600 teachers and by about .'!, persons, who never have taught but expect to follow this profession. At the same time the teachers are improving their knowledge in order to obtain higher salaries, they will be equipping themselves so as to raise the standard of the schools. LTnder the terms of the new educational licenses, the teachers are required to be graduates of training or normal schools in order to be plated under certain classification. This applies particularly to holders of twelve months' and twenty-four months' licenses. The salaries paid are regulated by the grades made in examinations and the training school work has bern formulated to prepare the teacher for these examinations. MARION SEEMS TO BE AFTER CIRCUSES Hopes to Make Treasury Rich By Tax. Marion, Ind., April 23. The city council of Marion has placed a license of ?200 on circuses. The lot formerly used by circuses has been well within the city limits. When the circus men heard of the action of council they leased the ball park which is outside of the City limits. The council met the move by annexing the ball park. Both the Wallace and Barnum and Bailey shows are billed for Marlon. Cancellation of contracts now is being talked of, as the shows do not want to pay the high license. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as thry cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by eonstitution:il remedies. Deafness Is caused ly an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining: of the Eustachian Tub". When this tube is inflamed you h:ive a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when it Is entirely closed. In-afness ih the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Hollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot he cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. V. J. CHK.VKY & CO.. Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. ' i .x. Business "NT tVia 1Tn.. it about. from the
Wall Street and to the Grand Dukes running things in this country with a high them as the Grand Dukes of Russia have there. The title of the article iz
There isii9i money enougli in the world today to do the world's worSl
Mr. Munsey takes emphatic issue with Wall Street and the followers of Wall Street who hold the President responsible for the panic. It is not his purpose in the discussion to acquit Mr. Roosevelt of blame, but. rather to get at the facts, as the facts are necessary to intelligent progress in the recovery of our business activities. "If these facts," Mr. Munsey says, "acquit the President, he is, as a matter cf common honesty, entitled to the acquittal." What we want to know, and should know, is the truth. And
In the May Number of Munsey's Magazine On all News Stands 10 Cents
WHy Maple? Why do we use Maple Syrup? Not a mixture of cane syrup and maple, but the pure Vermont maple. ' We boil it into the wheat before flaking. The main reason is the children. They like the flavor of the maple better than anything else that is good for them. We are making a food which we know to be the best for them. Isn't it wise, for all concerned, to induce them to like it? ?tIapl-Flake is the perfect food. It is so because of our process, consuming S6 hours. Because we spend six hours in steamcooking. Because of our method of curing. Because we toast the thin flakes, for 30 minutes, in a heat of 400 degrees. There are numerous wheat foods numerous flaked foods. But we spend four times the time that some others spend in the preparing. The result is, the starch is digestible. Raw starch gives scarcely more nourishment than chalk. Half-cooked starch yields half its possible nourishment. But from Mapl-Flake you get the benefit of every atom of food that is in it.
What if M.ipl-Flake does cost 15 cents, while other flakes cost 10 cents ? The cream costs the same on both. And the cream cost is more than the food cost. Mapl-Flake is all food because it all digests. Isn't it more economical than a food that's half food a food that but half digests? Besides, the starch that doesn't digest is bound to ferment and breed germs. That is why we spend those 96 hours in preparing Mapl-Flake. "It's All Food"
BOYLE IfJ TROUBLE Former New Paris Man Hooks Up With Federal Authorities. CRITICISM IS THE CAUSE. James J. Doyle, a former resident of New Paris, who became involved in difficulties some time aso. writing a pamphlet, which he called ' "Frenzied Justice." is in trouble with the federal authorities. Boyle's pamphlet was occasioned by adverse decisions in civil cases in which he was involved in the Common Pleas court at Eaton. A dispatch from Cincinnati ;;iys he was fined srio and costs. Royle was charged with mis-using the mail- to send postal cards to various legislators on the and Political TvT. V. n T. . 1 n it ;
Ii me iycvy nuniuci vji lVAunacy s iviagazinc, mr. iviunsey has an article on the panic and the causes that brought
He says some things and says them straight shoulder. He hands it cut good and hard to
the basic purpose with Mr. Munsey has been to lay bare the truth. Mr. Munsey in this article clears away a vast amount cf the distorted and awfully befogged ideas about this financial crash. The article is clear, convincing, forceful. It is not a dry, ponderous handling of the subject, but is swift and dramatic in expression, with all the sweep and picturesqueness of a novel. You cannot afford to miss reading it. No one who has any interest in the vital things of the day can afford to miss reading it
Piffle KUC10U3 HEALTHFUL SXTtSPYIM V5?x irvot e Snc Food "company
in Columbus regarding the action of Judge Alread in sentencing William Walsh, of Greenville, to HO years in the penii entiary." Walsh was accused of stealing a few pounds of meat and anonymous cards asked the question, 'For how long would Judge Alread have sentenced Walsh, if he h?d stolen a whole cow ':' ".Judge Alread considered this a reflection on his judicial character, and the postoffice inspectors were called cm to investigate, the result being the finding of an indictment against lioyle. "It was explained, with regard to the 99 year sentence given Walsh, that Judge Alread inflicted it because the stealinp was accomplished by first breaking into a house where the meat was : mrcd. You'll not find beauty in a rouge-pot or complexion whitewash. Truo beauty comes to them who take Hollistei's Hoeky Mountain Tea. Gives that loVely color that's made beauties famous, o.'i cents. Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. Situation n r n ir who have been hand running run tilings over
fitTHtii
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SHOE For Men
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fiRST EXCLUSION Of Till! SEASON -toCincinnati, Ohio, VIA ThcC.O. & L.R.R. ?L0G ROUND TRIP Sunday, April 26 Trains leave Richmond 5:15 a. in. Returning, leave Cincinnati, O., 9:00 p. in. BASE BALL Reds s St. Louis. See the new face. The Reds Hill be winners this jeir. For Particulars call C. A. BLAIR Home Telephone 2C02 '..veil's J-yr.:p Pencil Is i !.!( .; - 1 to cur j iuci.x-sticin. cnrira:!-a, su n-.-he, offensive br?.ith. r...i::ta a&a all e;:e;i; . . isinjr treiu stoat uc 'iCiuie. -.1 .vi Ls J t ,
Burn Artificial Gas in an Artificial Gas Range. Do it now and wateh your gas bill. See f!i Richmond Ligai, Heat & Power Co.
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i Seed Pol.:; -, Essex 1 a)3 Lawn Seed Garden Seed Seed Corn Prices RigM & P. o
No matter whether you wan just a cirig!e beard er a complete house or barn bill, we can su;p"y ycur wants 3rd perhaps, tave you seme dollars if that's any object to you. Get our prices on anything you want. CAiW LUMBER CGRSPANY
Phone No. 1010.
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and "stand up" so -well, and look so ood, for so long a time, that they actually pro?? to be cheaper than shoes which cost less. There is true economy in " Boston ians;" and besides it's u orth a v.hole lot to know that ov.r foot is properly fitted and your shoe in keeping with the rest of your dress. CCVMONWUUH SHOE AN0 lUTKfl Ct CunninQham X Lahrman The Kibliiigcr Motor Buggy S37S.00 and upwards. A iiractic.il, successful, economical, auiumohiU' ;it a small cost. Doublcylin.U r. air cooled. 10 12 II. P. Solid ruliiit r tires. Will run through deep niuil or Kiiml. and will "climb steep hills. Write for our Apency Terms. W. H. KIBLINGER CO, Bex N. 320. Auburn, Ind. SEE OUR SPRING LINE of GO-CARTS at HASSENBUSCH'3 ALLADlUr WANT ADS PAY. IT, .t r1 o t. i re V H V I ti - T" . -,t-- -.-rr. v " Si A Talk on Cake best wav ; jivoid the hat, h;::i'-e of failur1 through Jni!iO!i, lack if woibts and ;us, i '.. iiui'l" nt;i! to cake baki i.m! r ns to bake for you c:ike ytr.i hav: in mind. Our i.-i'! ! n n'-!i .itiil' ;ro in such it.f li'f t!,;;L ih" rout to yon per r. ..:;- : than it you baked r .' M.j ie 7' r, tlcplrVc liAKL'R V and 10 i Main St. Pkone 1635. Viz ere in a position lo furnish good seeds lor earden and farm at as low figures as any reliable iiesse. Call or write cs for calMeyer t s r1 i c a!opje. Phones ! K. 2i93; B. 398. 1
EE HEFTi
13-27 S. 11th St.
