Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 92, 17 May 1908 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT.

niE KICli?.IO??D FAL LAIJIUJI A,D SU;S-Ti:L.ECxKA JI, lr-WAr, .UAi'n, ittos.

Green Apples A green apple must be cooked before you can safely eat it. Do you know why? It is because of the starch. Starch, unless thoroughly cooked, isn't digestible. It upsets the stomach and bowels. As the apple ripen;- the starch changes to dextrine digests itself. Then it is safe. Much of the starch that you eat, like the ttarch in green apples, isn't sufficiently cooked. And wheat is largely starch. That is why bread, unless toasted, isn't good for dyspeptics. The inside of the loaf never gets half enough heat. The granules of the starch are not separated, so the digestive juices can get to them. That is the reason for Mapl-Flake. Our wheat is steam-cooked for six: hours. Think of that! Yet even that is insufficient. Then we flake it crush each separate berry to the thinness of paper. Then we toast it, for 30 minutes, in ovens heated to 400 degrees. The flake is so thin that every atom of starch gets the full force of that heat. That is why Mapl-Flake is the best food in the world. It is all food. Every atom is available nourishment.

ARE QUEER ELOPERS GIRL COUNTERFEITER

Man With Wooden Leg Captures Heart of Fifteen Year Old Girl.

PAPA IS AN ANGRY MAN.

Mapl-Flake is also the most delicious food, because we cook the wheat in pure Maple Syrup. No other flavor, especially with children, can compare with that. There are other flaked foods both corn and wheat prepared in one-fourth the time ipent on ours. They sell for 10 cents per package. But food should be measured, not by volume, but by nourishment. And that depends on the process. Mapl-Flake at 15 cents is the cheapest food by far. "It's All Food"

Tteraufkfr ImbOM MltaM laafe to twm I tuaou HtumrrL unsnu , HVOICHK rSoo'cOMPAMY I J1 S.1U. OMt.Mak.UJjk.

DERVISHES CARRY

P

Italian Government Finds This Condition.

Home. May 16. The recent fighting In Italian Somallland revealed the extent of the clandestine sale of firearms to the natives. Reports of the various encounters between the Italian forces and the rebels near Merka, and the Mullah's followers, lay particular stress upon the number of rifles captured from the raiders. In one case, 600 of the Dervishes were armed with firearms, of which 40, nearly all of French manufacture, were taken from the men who were killed.

USE THE FAMOUS

Bee Hive

And Yon Will be Happy

Get it at the

New nrp niirp New Phones UIwE nann GROCERY Vi C0MPANY

CHARGED IRE ENEMY ' BUT TO HIS SORROW

Dreams of Recruit Suddenly Vanish.

Xew York. May 10. The dream of becoming a general in the army, in which Edmund Hynes had been indulging, has ended sadly in a nightmare. Preparatory to undergoing a physical examination today for the purpose of enlistment, Hynes was sleeping with Corporal Robert Phillips and Private Samuel Payne in the army recuiting office in Kast "4th street. At 2 o'clock a. in. he sprung out of bed, stood at atention for a minute, still sleeping, called out excitedly, "to the front, boys, to the front with me." and charged through a closed window, falling into a basement fifteen feet below. He sustained a badly laseeratod body, head contusions and internal injuries. His recovery is doubtful.

FACE 01 THE COINS BUT IS DESTITUTE

Has Been Robbed of the Honor Due Her, She Alleges.

Omaha, Neb., May 16. Picture to yourself a schoolmaster, 4o years old, with red hair, freckles and a wooden

Then picture a pretty, bright, vivacious little Eva, the 15-year-old pride of her happy home. You wouldn't pick them out. as elopers, would you? If you were the father or mother of the little girl, the thought that she might run away wirh the 45-year-old, red-headed, woodenlegged schoolmaster, would never have entered your head, would it? Perhaps, then, you would have been as much surprised as was Charles Sample, clerk of the Brookings (S. D. ) School Board, when the unexpected happened. Perhaps, too. you would have been as angry as he was. In any event, the girl and the man did elope and the father is angry, very angry, so angry that he declares he will prosecute John M. Day, the schoolmaster, and seek to annul the marriage. He has been tracking the couple all over the north central part, of the I'nited States and he has cornered them in a hotel here, but despite the lapse of time his wrath is unabated. The wooden leg and the red hair were material aids to Eva's father in following his daughter's choice for a matrimonial partner. Sample learned

the couple had gone to Pipestone, Minn., and when he landed in Pipestone every one in town knew they had been there. Finally Sample arrived in Omaha, hot on their trail, and even in a village of such generous proportions as this he learned that a man with red hair, a wooden leg and a child companion was a sufficiently novel combination to occasion more than passing notice. The father had no trouble in tracing them to a hotel. The angry parent, through the medium of the police, had an interview with the happy bridegroom. What the father said would not look nice in cold type, but what the bridegroom replied was said smilingly. It was to this effect : "We are married. Mr. Sample; legally married. What are you going to do about it?" There was an explosion, something about prosecution and annulment of the marriage and the father hastened away.

Comely Young Woman Manufactured Quarters to Her Sorrow.

IE

PLACED UNDER ARREST.

Xew York. May 10. Mabel Hamilton, comelv. and 24. is charged with

manufacturing bogus quarters and half dollars in her home, at 147 Lawrence street. Brooklyn. She is locked up in the Raymond street jail. In the same jail are three young men. one her sweet heart. The men were locked up by secret service men on suspicion of having aided the woman in passing the worthless money. According to Capt. William Flyr.n of the secret service, Miss Hamilton is the first American woman to be arrested for counterfeiting in many years. The men under arrest are John Hart, said to have been in prison for counterfeiting: Thomas F. MePartland. Raymond scruton and Joseph Gilford. The girl was held in bail for further examination, while the men were held in $'.. bail each. "There's no use questioning me. because I won't say a word." was all the young woman would say to the secret service men when she had left I'nited States Commissioner Benedict's courtroom. After she had been taken to the jail a dinner from a first class restaurant wits brought to her by some friends. The detectives believe the girl is "green" at counterfeiting, and think that she is only a dupe of a gang of expert counterfeiters who have been operating in various cities. After the four prisoners had been led out of the court room the girl's face was wreathed in smiles. She looked toward one of the men and said : "Say, Kid, everything will be all right simply don't say a word." The secret service men declare that they found a complete set of counterfeiting tools in the Lawrence street house. For several weeks Chief Flinn has bsen getting complaints from many de

partment stores m Brooklyn and from owners of small stores in the Williamsburg section, of bogus silver coins. The Brooklyn Rapid Traction company complained that their conductors had turned in thousands of dollars' worth of bogus silver.

$12,782.09 Savings Department Gnteresi Goney 0n MAY 1st, our semi-annual interest period, we paid to our 4.500 ACTIVE SAVINGS DEPOSITORS the above large sum in interest at 3 per cent, on their deposits. Savings Depositors Are you any longer in doubt as to where you should deposit your savings to have them safe and at the same time earn you some interest? You Weed Have None Deposit them with DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY and thus share in our next distribution of earnings. Our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT is LARGER, STRONGER and BETTER THAN EVER. WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT. Dickinson Trust Company Resources Over One Million and a Half

i

II

T

IS A PROBLEM

To Be Dealt With in International Congress.

ILLINOIS CENTRAL BUYSJMUCH COAL 2,500,000 Tons Is Contracted For.

Chicago, May 16. The Illinois Cen

tral has contracted for 2,."00,mm tons of coal for company use during the next fiscal ye:;r. Awards wee made to lowest bidders as follows: To mines in Kentucky, 1 , .boo tons; ti Alabama min s. Tun.uuti tons: and to Illinois mines and those owned by the company, SUit.imii tons.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY

About forty different kinds of whalei and dolphins are known, and thougj

they in the open sea and loo

like fish, they are- not fish at all, bii

are true mammals, breathing air ail

fcediuc their young on milk like cov

and horses.

Virc.inta : (Idle. .V"dl Kieur makes dliciou bakt stuff Rfioi'A

Bingharnpton. X. Y., May lt. - Destitute and so years old, Mrs. Caroline Williams, whose face, if ner story is true, appears on all of Uncle Sam's silver dollars, has been taken to the Broome county almshouse. She says she not only received a cent for her portrait in silver, but that she even has been robbed of the honor due her.

t,lnn t:iv 1 K KdllCatOl'S will

look w ith hope tow ard the I mentation- j al Moral Educational congress, to be j held in Ijondon, September 2;?-2C, 190X. j The congress wMl deal w ith the prob- j lems of moral training in school and j home. Papers will be read on the j topics of school organization, educa-j tion, the moral values in the curriculum, discipline, juvenile literature,; civics, the education of the morally j

backward and many other subjects of importance in educational theory. The public meetings, sectional meetings, and special conferences will be supplemented by a carefully chosen exhibit of hooks, pictures and various illustrative material bearing on the work of moral education.

THE

TOLSTOI TALKING A

Ttie Twilight Of Life. The muscles of the stomach in okl nee are not F.s strontr or active as in youth and in consequence old people are very subject to constipation and indigestion. Manv seldom have a bowel movement without artificial aid. Many, also. hav3 unpleasant eructations of pas from the stomach after eating. A!i this can be avoided by the use of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin which permanently regulates the bowels so that passage come naturally, and so strengthens t!ie stomach that food is digested without discomfort. L'ruKsiitb sell it at 50 cents or fl a lirse bottie.

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What a ISamilk

"We will loan you money the same day you apply for it We will accept as security furniture, pianos, horses, wapons, etc. We C charge the lowest possible rate of interest. Our svstem Is modern and our terms the easiest. Before you borrow money elsewhere cry give us a call.

ww Hi Mot H3

Richmond Loan Co.

721 Main St.

Room 17 Over Nusbaum's -

g Home Phone 1545. Richmond, Ind.

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Famous Writer Finds Writing Irksome.

St. Petersburg:. May l'"".. Tolstoi is talking the book he is now at work on into a phonograph, as he finds writing irksome. The book, is to ho a reader for the great masses, and will be. he declares, his most useful, though not his greatest work.

ENGINEER RUBBERED ATPRETTY GIRL Then Wreck Follows, Killing A Man.

Poughkeepie. N. Y., May 16. In the award of $6.o00 damages yesterday in court to Mrs. Mary B. Keeler, a jury practically declared the negligence of the engineer and fireman of a New York Central freight engine in watching a pretty girl instead of attending to their duties, was responsible for Keeler's death at Milleton in October in a rear-end collision. Miss

Corinne France, named as the indirect cause of Keeler's death, was in court, and after watching her the jurors evi-1 dently believed that if she was in sight the plaintiff's charge was true. ! Miss France, who is just twenty and 1

is reputed to be the prettiest girl In Duchess county, denied "flirting" with the trainmen. Several witnesses testified, however, that at the time of the accident both enginemen were on the same side of the locomotive and lookins at th girt

Si

1 KP

iliUMJ

GOING

Your opportunity. A sale extraordinary. Seldom, if ever, will like circumstances work so directly to your advantage. Here, surely, is a chance you can't afford to miss. Our new building is nearing completion. The contractors are pushing the work with might and main and promise to turn the building over to us within the next few weeks. We are making everp preparation to leave the old home and take up new quarters in what we believe will be one of the finest stores in the state. We want to make a new start in the new storeso the old stock must go. This is your opportunity to get real bargains.

Over 200 Iron Beds yet to sell. We start the price on all Iron Beds at $1.69, $3.40, $4.20, $6.85, $8.10 and upward.

HELP US MOVE

Devanports A selection to please jou at our Rercoral Sale prices. Special styles from $16.85, $23.75, $25.60, $29.00 and upward.

Open Evenings

TOMY FUMTHM CO

Open Evenings