Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 109, 3 June 1908 — Page 2

THE KICIi3IOL "A1jL.A1)IU3I AND SUN-TEIiEGXAJI, WEDNESDAY, JUNE li, 10O8.

Pennsylvania Columbus Excursion Next Sunday $1.75 Round Trip From Richmond BROWN'S WILDNESS LOSES FOR LOCALS HAVE ONE BIG WISH HAMMOND SEEKER AFTER NOMINATION HOTEL MEN RELIEVED STATE TO CLASH WITH RAILROADS NEGRO MUST LEAVE Local Fans Would Like to See Muncie in the Hands of a Good Manager. Held by the Supreme Court That Beating Board Bill Is Misdemeanor. Willie Burden Told to Get Out Of County or Go to the Penitentiary. Van Wert Scored Three Runs In the First, Making It Possible to Win. Indiana Railroad Commission Will Make the Fur Fly From Now On. Would Be Named by Republicans for the Vice Presidency. BAIRD HAD BAD DREAMS. SUPREME COURT RULING. BURDEN IS A PERVERT. i Leave at 6 a. m.

LEAGUE MEETING TODAY.

MAGNATES ARE ASSEMBLED AT VAN WERT TO DISCUSS FUTURE OF THE ORGANIZATION JESJ5UP IN ATTENDANCE. Van Wert, O., June .3. Through Crown's wildness in the first inning, Illchaiond lost to Van Wert yesterday by a score of 4 to In the first inning Brown hit ' two batsmen, overthrew first and then allowed a hit. In this inning Van Wert scored three men. Outside his inning and the third, when Van Wert counted one more run, Brownie was in grand form, allowing only four hits and whiffing nine batsmen. Howard was a puzzle to the Quakers up to the ninth, when they brought their heavy artillery to play on him, pounding in three runs. The tatting of Cameron was the feature of the game. The Quaker first basdman secured a double and a triple. A crowd of nearly five hundred people witnessed the contest. About l."V) were school boys, who some public ppjrlted citizen sent to the ball game to pay them for taking part in the Memorial Day ceremonies. The league magnates are in session here today. Manager Jessup states that there Is a probability of Marion and Anderson entering the league. I-TOtuoters In both cities will notify th league magnates this afternoon whftt they intend to do. Marion fans ar& crazy for league baseball, but they xvumt assurance from the city officials that Sunday games will be permitted. The Muncie team is being held together and some Muncie business men will back the club. Baird has writtjn to President Gamble stating that be would like to have the Muncie franchise again, providing that the circuit Is composed of six cities. He will probably be given the frozen face bn the magnates are very sore at him. Tim summary of yesterday's game follow $.

Vcn Wert. AB. R. H. O. A. E. Conl !in, :.b.. . . :i 1 1 2 2 0 Sfawtrt. ss 4 1 1 1 t O Cray, rf 4 2 1 o O O Lnirham. If 4 o o 1 o Campbell, cf., .4 O O O O Carmony, lb., . 3 1 12 1 1 Hardin, c a o 1 1 1 o Giegory. 2b., . : O 1 :J 0 Huwtrd. p A O 2 0 Totals .. .,1 4 5 27 1 1 KlirlTniond. AB. K. H. O. A. E. 1'srttr. 2b 4 1 2 2 1 1 CJiiiifiron. lb., . 5 2 0 o o Jib.iitnan, ss., .. ." o ) ( ;5 O Km ui, cf 4 1 1 ) 1 Pierce, if 4 o o 1 o Barubaugh, Ub., : O 1 1 1 0 fitlnu, if a l l 1 o o Clarke, c 4 o o !t o ) Brown, p M 1 2 O 2 1 Totals . . 3 i 24 7 3

Van Wert 3 0 1 00000 O 4 lliruiond o O o O 0 0 33 Two base hit Shinn, Cameron. Tl-ee base hit Cameron. Left on bass Richmond 11, Van Wert 8. Stolen bases Carmony, Howard, Gregory, Bambaugh. Sacrifice hits Hardin, Parker. Hit by pitcher Coaklin. Carmony, Brown. Bases on balls Brown 2, Howard 2. Struckout Brown 0, Howard 0. Double play Conklin to Carmony to Hardin. Time - If. Umpire Moore. Attendance --4SO. WHO WILL WIN? NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet. Chicago 23 15 .605 Pittsburg 20 16 556 Philadelphia IS 15 .545 Cincinnati 20 17 541 Nejy York 19 IS 514 Boston 19 lf 500 fit. Louis 16 26 3S1 Brooklyn 14 23 37S AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet. Cl0V!and 22 IS 550 New York 20 17 541 Philadelphia 21 19 525 St. Louis 21 19 525 Iotroit 20 19 513 Chicago 18 19 4S6 Washington IS 21 462 Boston 17 25 405 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won Lost Pet. Indianapolis 2S 16 636 IiOutaville 27 19 5S7 Toledo 23 17 575 Columbus 22 22 500 Milwaukee 20 21 4SS Minneapolis 20 21 4SS Kjin&as City 19 23 452 St. Paul 11 si 262 RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. Boston, 4; New York 3. Brooklyn, 3; Philadelphia, 0. Pittsburg, 12; Chicago, 6. American League. Boston, 7; New York, 0. (First gani). Boston, 6; New York, 5 (second garo). Washington, 5: Philadelphia, 2. Cleveland, 6: Detroit.o (first game). Cleveland, 6; Detroit, 1 (second game). St. Louis-Chicago, rain. Toledo, 3; Indianapolis, 1 Minneapolis. 2: St. Paul. 1 Kansas Sity, 9; Milwaukee, 1. Louisville, 4; Columbus, 0.

Local fans have only one hearty wish to wish in regards to the reorganization of the I.-O. league. That w ish is let some one get hold of the Muncie franchise who does not suffer with frigid pedal extremities. At the present time Muncie is base ball crazy, and was the only team, when the explosion occurred that was making money. However. Baird had direful dreams about Old Hard Times chasing him over the precipice of Financial Ruin and stabbing him to death in mid-air. Monday morning, in the middle of one of these dreams he jumped out of bed, rushed down stairs and sent in a riot call for his players. After paying each of them off and handing them their releases, Baird collected the uniforms and the rainbow stockings, then galloped to the tall and uncut buffalo grass. When Jack Smith and his Huntington tribe arrived in Muncie for a series of three games beginning yesterday, he was surprised to learn that Baird and his hired men were among the missing. He promptly communicated with the Huntington officials and they ordered him to bring the team home. The Huntington out fit has been stabled, awaiting the action of the magnates In reorganizing the circuit. It is reported that eight clubs may be included in the league within the next week.

FORGAVE MRS. SIDDONS. She Did Not, Arrording to Her Father, Marry an Actor. Mrs. Siddons, the actress, was born In 1755 at the Shoulder of Mutton inn, Brecon, south Wales, of parents connected with the theater, her father, Itoger Kemble, being a strolling manager. The child Sarah was reared in a theatrical atmosphere, and at ten she was playing Ariel. As she grew up she became very beautiful and had many admirers, among whom was Henry Siddons, a young actor in her father's company, who had little ditticulty in winning the girl's heart. Mr. and Mrs. Kemble had made up their minds that Sarah should not marry in the profession, in consequence of which they strenuously opposed the marriage, and young Siddons in a fit of retaliatory humor composed a song detailing their opposition and his trials, which brought about his speedy dismissal from the company. Sarah left the company, too, and hired out as lady's maid in Warwickshire for two years. During this time the lovers carried on a lively correspondence and finally, gaining the reluctant consent of the Kembles, were married at Trinity church, Coventry, In 1773, when Sarah was eighteen. It la said that Mr. Kemble told her if she ever married an actor it would make him discard her forever. After her marriage he said, "I may forgive you without breaking my word, for you have certainly not married 'an actor,' whatever the gentleman himself may think is his vocation." This is on authority of Lady Eleanor Butler, who knew the persons. JAPANESE SAINTS. The One Moat Beloved by the People Is Bimaara. Among the many Buddhist-Shinto saints, whose quaint effigies set up in every conceivable nook and corner of Japan make it a "country of graven Images," one of the most impressive and interesting is the pathetic person called Blnzuru. lie was once upon a time a member of that strange company of Buddhist disciples known as the "Sixteen Rnkkan." But one day he fell from grace by remarking upon the attractions of a woman, and he was expelled from the society of chaste brethren. The great Buddha gave him. In return for all that his worldlinesa had cost him, power to heal human ills and to grant the prayers of childless women who longed for motherhood. But he was put outside the temples. He must henceforth sit without, in the midst of the passing throng, and submit himself to personal contact with all that was unclean and healthless. The simple hearted people love him. X think, above all saints. His wooden images In the temple porches are the strangest objects in all Japan. They give him soft cushions to sit upon, and he is always clothed in quaint little cotton stuff collars and mufflers in all sorts of soiled looking colors, and on his head his devotees usually keep a curious little cotton cap. Eleanor Franklin in Leslie's Weekly. The Young Member. Grantley Berkeley tells in his "Life and Recollections" how a member for Ludlow in the last parliament of William IV. "tried to make a maiden speech, and. rising in his place, with a very bald head, known, too, as he was to everybody ns one of the oldest stagers In all the ways of the world, he began, with great affectation of inexperience and with an exceedingly mild voice. 'Mr. Speaker. I am but a young member.' On hearing this assertion from so well known and crafty a man, possessing so venerable a pate, the entire house roared with laughter. Twice he stopped, and three times he commenced with these words, but it was useless. The house would not listen, and he never to my knowledge essayed to speak again, or if he did the sight of his bald head set his audience in a roar." Tfhe nab Of The Body. The organ around which all the other orran involve, and upon which they are largely deS?udeliLf,or t?eir welfar. is the stomach. ben the functions of the stomach become impaired, the bowels and liver also become 5e--ansed. To cure a disease of the stomach, liver ,r S?WS1" et i50 cnt or of Dr. Ca!drril s Syrup Pepsin at your druyisfs. It fs :e promptest reiie! for constipation and dyf epsia ever compounded.

HE ISSUES A STATEMENT.

SAYS HE ASKS THE NOMINATION AS A PLAIN BUSINESS MAN AND NOT AS AN ACTIVE POLITICIAN. Washington, June 2. John Hays Hammond, recognized as one of the foremost living mining engineers, who has perhaps been more closely identified with the development of the great mineral resources of North America! than any other man, has made formal announcement of his candidacy for the republican nomination for vicepresident. When asked to state definitely whether or not he was a candidate for the vice-presidential nomination, Mr. Hamond said: "You may say I am a candidate. In the ljast few weeks I have carefully considered the suggestion made by a number of influential friends and well-wishers throughout the country that I seek the republican nomination for vice-president. After calm deliberation 1 decided to make public announcement of my determination to enter the field. I am an active candidate. Any qualifications I may possess are the Qualifications of "a plain, blunt business man. It is as a business man 1 desired to be considered in connection with the nomination. I am not a politician. I have no time for practical politics. I have been too busy all my life. 1 have always been a consistent republican and a believer in the basic principles of the republican party." MODERN CIVILIZATION. Ita Complexity, Hurry and Worry Shortening; Our I.lvea. Not long ago while traveling I chanced to stop at a village on the river Rhine, where I found an astonishing number of old people. There were a dozen over a hundred years of age and many from eighty years old up to the century mark, yet straight and vigorous. One woman nearly a hundred years old was earning her living by picking hops. Her grandchildren were middle aged. It was quite wonderful. But there was no mystery about it. It was merely the effect of a simple life spent largely in the fields, with plain diet, consisting of a few vegetables and fruits, little meat, and native beer and wine for beverages. Nothing can be more obvious than that the very complexity of our modern civilization is shortening our lives. But of all the evils that afflict us the worst and most destructive are hurry and worry. Hurry drives the body machine beyond its capacity, while worry racks it Inwardly. Of the two worry is probably the worse. This might indeed be called the age of worry. Because of the intense nervous strain to which we are subjected we do Tastly more worrying than did our forbears. The average man of today Is continually surrounded and pursued by phantom troubles, which, though few of them ever materialize Into realities, haunt him continually, ruining his peace of mind and Injuring his health. Reader Magazine. Getting Married. I don't know myself what getting married feels like, but it cannot be much more exciting than watching other people getting married. Indeed, I always get something like palpitation of the heart just before the priest utters the final fateful words, "I declare you man and wife." Half a second before you were still free, naif a second after you were bound for the term of your natural life. Half a second before you had only to dash the book from the priest's hands and put your hands over his mouth, and, though thus giddily swinging on to the brink of the precipice, yu are saved. Half a second afterAll the king-s horses and all the king's men Cannot make you a bachelor again. It i3 the knife edge moment betwixt time and eternity. From Le Gallienne's 'His Quest of the Goldeu Girl." The aine "Fife." The origin of the name Fife is not known. One historian tries to show that it comes from the Celtic word veach, a Fict, and means that the district was inhabited by Tiets, but that is obviously absurd, as Fife was not specially the home of any of the Tictish nations. The tradition that rinds greatest favor is related by a monk, who states that the first known possessor of the district which has since grown into the kingdom of Fife was one Fifus Duffus. a famous chieftain whose date is lost in the mists of antiquity. He Cheapened Pen. Sir Josiah Masou was, according to his biography, walking in Bull street, Birmingham, in the year 1S2S when he saw some steel pens, price Ss. Gd. each. Josiah was a hard up maker of split rings. No sooner had he seen the pens than he went home, made some better than those in the shop, sent them up to London and got a large order by return. At thirt3- years of age Mason's capital was 30 shillings. At 6ixty he had given awav 400.000. Hard Lack. "Why does Baron Hoffman look so dejected lately?" "Haven't you heard? He married a rich widow not long ago, and now n banker has absconded with all her money. Meggendorfer Blatter. In Egypt the cat was sacred to tht moon, and when a cat died its master shaved off bJs eyebrows in sign of mourning

Indianapolis, Ind., June 3. The hotel and boarding house keepers scored a victory in the Supreme Court when the law making it a misdemeanor to "beat a board bill" and to obtain food and lodging with intent to defraud was upheld. The decision was rendered in the case of George W. Clark, who was fined $5 and costs on the charge of fraudulently obtaining food and lodging at the Unia House, Huntington. The defense of Clark was that a person may not be imprisoned for debt in Indiana, and the law under which he was convicted provided for imprisonment as well as a fine. It was also assorted that the law was repealed by the new penal code of 1I05. Judge Oscar Montgomery, who wrote the opinion, declared that the criminality consists not in the manner of obtaining the food and entertainment, but in the fraudulent purpose with which the act is done. Fraudulent intent, he asserted, is a mere state of mind.

PRELIMINARY STEPS GIVEN APPROVAL County Commissioners Act on South L Street. At the meeting of the board of county commissioners this morning, it was decided to accept proposals for the construction of South L street July 6. This date will bo the first on which the commissioners will be in session during the July term. The report of the viewers was read to the commissioners and they expressed their approval of all the preliminary steps that have been taken. TRIAL OP GEORGE GAHOSTPONED He Will Be Given a Hearing June 16th. Upon the request of the attorney for the defendant, the case of the State vs. George Gay, charged with violating the liquor laws, has been continued from June 12 to June 16. More interest centers in this case than any liquor case which has come to the attention of the Wayne circuit, court, because of the prominence of Mr. Gay as proprietor of the Westcott Hotel. ABINGTQN HAS NEW SCHOOL PRINCIPAL Lyman Lybouldt of Centerville Goes There. Lyman Lybouldt, of Centerville, former assistant principal of the public school at Webster has accepted the position of principal in the school at Abington. Mr. Lybouldt is regarded as a very successful instructor MALE INSTRUCTORS AT A Trustee Potter Continues to Look for Them. Ross Lamott, who resigned as a teacher in the public schools of Washington township has accepted a position as a teacher at Middleboro. Mr. Potter continues to look for male instructors as he can find places for them in the Wayne township schools. LAW LIBRARY DATA. It Is Furnished to the State Commission by John Markley. In answer to the request of Chalmers Hadley. state organizer and secretary of the Indiana Public Library Commission, John Markley, librarian of the Wayne County Law Library Association, has furnished the state commission with data relative to the law library. The library commission is required to furnish information concerning Indiana libraries to the governor and legislature and wrote to Markley to secure the latest about the law librarv. Cut and Run. "Cut and run" originated in a peculiar custom of the Egyptian embalmers. A low caste was employed to make the first incision in the corpse, a process viewed with much dislike by the people, who held him accursed who should mutilate the dead. As soon as the fellow had made his "cut" he had lo run through a storm of curses, tones and sticks. He "cut" for a Hvfcg and had to "run" to save his life. There Is no medicine so safe and at fbe same time so pleasant to take as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, the positive core for all diseases arising from stomach trouble. The price ia very rea nnibia 50a and ti.

TWO RAILROADS ARE HIT.

JUDGE HARVEY OF MARION SUPERIOR COURT ISSUES TEMPORARY ORDER TO THEM FROM DISOBEYING ORDERS. Indianapolis, Ind.. June 3. The state railroad commission has finally closed with the railroads, and the fur is going to fly. Judge Harvey, in the .Marion superior court, late yesterday, issued a temporary order restraining the Big Four and Southern Indiana railroads from disobeying the order of the commission and from further refusing to receive aud transport coal shipments. The hearing is set for June at which time the order is returnable. These two railroads have been wrangling over a division of the joint rate on coal shipments, and each has refused to deliver coal to the other. As a result, the cities and towns along each line have been held up and are in danger of a complete failure of the fuel supply. The commission grew weary of the squabble, and also of the avalanche of complaints that came from the towns affected, and determined to move. It is the first real clash between the powers of the state and common carriers, and the outcome will be watched with interest. Wouldn't it be just a little odd, perhaps embarrassing, if the state should take possession of the two properties in behalf of the public until such time as the fussing corporations should decide to respect the law? COLD AND THE SEA. Why the Metal la Shipped In Bare Rather Than la Coin. "When the banks ship gold across the Atlantic," said a banker, "they prefer to ship it in bars rather than in coin. It loses less that way." "It loses less?" "Yes, sir. If $1,000,000 in gold coins is shipped across the sea it is only $D99,800 on its arrival. It loses from twelve to fifteen ounces, about $200, through abrasion, through knocking about with the motion of the waves. The sea makes gold lose weight, you see, the same as it does human beings Gold bars lose less. In fine weather they will only lose about $100 to each million. In the ugliest weather they don't lose over $150, whereas In like conditions gold coins have been known to lose $300. As gold shipments of $10,000,000 often occur, to make these shipments in gold bars Instead of gold coin Is a saving of $1,000 or more. It is odd to think when you cross in one of those gold laden ships that every wave that hits the boat clips off 10 to 15 cents from its golden cargo." Philadelphia Bulletin. Cruel, bat Necessary. The Eskimos dread the winter and take early precautions to provide against famine. As the season approaches the great herds of reindeer migrate southward, and the walrus or the seal are all that remain for food. When an In wind is blowing the walrus Is easily found on the outer edge of the Ice packs. When It is blowing off the shore, however, the Ice packs sail out to 6ea with the walruses on them. The natives then class their numbers In a list from the strongest to the weakest. The food that is in 6tore is divided up, the weakest having the smallest quantity, the strongest the largest. Thus the mightiest hunters have strength to provide for the others. It is a cruel system, but nevertheless a necessary one. If all were weak, all would die; if some are strong, they will save many of the weak. The Largreat ripe. What is described as the largest pipe in the world is valued at 8,000 and is counted as one of the most remarkable pieces of carving in existence. The pipe is made of one solid piece of meerschaum and represents the landing of Columbus. There are twentyfour fignretf In the scene, each one four Inches high. The carver who executed this masterpiece is dead, and, as the demand for this sort of work has nearly died out, it Is practically Impossible to find a man to duplicate it London Telegraph. Month I leers. Little ulcers that appear In the mouth from time to time are exceedingly annoying and painful. An old fashioned household remedy Is alum, the powder or crystals being applied to the yellow center. But this is a bitter, nasty dose. A physician has prescribed the use of a saturated solution of potassium chlorate, applied every two hours. "Saturated solution" means as much potassium chlorate as can be dissolved in a certain amount of water. Lepers nnd the Law. The Norman-English laws enacted that a leper had neither power to sue in any court nor to Inherit property. During his lifetime he was permitted to enjoy the usufruct of any property in his possession at the time he was "found guilty," so to speak, of leprosy, but all rights of disposition over It he lost. A ntobloarraph y of a Family Man. I was born in New York and went to Boston to be born again. For the first twenty-one years of my life I was known as the son of my mother, for the next thirty as the husband of my wife and for the last tea years as the father of my daughter. I claim, therefore, to be a family man. Independent "T!s not the size or grandeur of the structure, but the contentment that abides within, that Insures m happy horn. Henry Satpbin.

Willie Burden, of direct Ethiopian extraction, and as black as the middle of a coal mine, was arraigned before Judge Fox in the Wayne circuit court this morning, but not required to offer a plea. He was charged with burglary. The negro was told there

are two roans he may take. (Hie leads out of Wayne county and the other to the penitentiary. He was given his 1 freedom and the alternative. He told ' the court he would take that which ', will tarry him beyond the confines of: the county. Burden is the pervert, who was arrested some time ago in the basement j or the Mary Brothers store on Main j street. He had not stolen anything and for this reason there was some i doubt of the state to make a case of I burglary. Burden confessed that the reason he entered the store was to gain access to the grates in the sidewalk, from which place he could look beneath the skirts of women as they passed or stood in front of the showwindows. The negro admitted he had no other reason. This was his second arrest as the result of breaking into the basements of store rooms. On the first offense he was found at the Bosenbloom, Buntin A; Company store. He was sent to jail subsequently for having a number of indecent pictures in his possession. Burden stated he Is twentyseven years old. FORCE OF WATER. The Great Power That la Kxerted by a Six Inch Stream. The effect of the hydraulic motor, which is now used for the purpose of removing masses of earth, well nigh passes belief. A stream of water issuing from a pipe six Inches In diameter, with a fall behind it of 375 feet, will carry away a 6olid rock weighing a ton or more to a distance of fifty or a hundred feet. The velocity of the stream is terrific, and the column of water projected is so solid that If a crowbar or other heavy object be thrust against it the impinging object will be hurled a considerable distance. By this stream of water a man would be instantly killed if he came in contact with it even at a distance of a couple of hundred feet. At ''00 feet from the nozzle a six Inch stream, with a 375 foot fall, projected momentarily against the trunk of a tree will In a second denude it of the heaviest bark as cleanly as if it had been cut with an ax. Whenever such a stream is turned against a bank it cuts and burrows It in every direction, hollowing out great caves and causing tons of earth to melt and fall and be washed away in the sluices. The Eye of a Child. Who can explain or fathom the wondrous instinct of the child? Lying in the arms of ita nurse, in its carriage or elsewhere, its large, round, wondering eyes roam over u sea of faces till suddenly its features break into a sweet smile, a baby laugh dances iu Its eyes, perhaps the tiny hands are extended, and the little body gives a bound as though it would throw itself through space. What has happened? It has recognized a friend, nothing more and no less. It makes no mistake. Wiser, perchance, in that moment of inexperienced helplessness than It will be years afterward, when the world and its Inmates have been studied in the light of Instruction and experience, its love offering Is seldom if ever mistakenly presented. By what power Is this child love directed? By what subtle influence does it see and know what in after years it may strive In vain to I discern? Carlyle and the Ax. Carlyle as a schoolmaster was a terror to evildoers. Even the biggest and boldest boys wilted wher be growled out "dunce" or "blockhead." He did not thrash often, as his scowl was enough to hush a whole school, but when he did thrash he meant business. One day a joiner passing along the road heard the most piteous howls and cries for mercy and help coming from the schoolhouse. Hushing in and handing his ax to Carlyle, he exclaimed: "Jist doo't ootricht. mon, and no mince ma iters." Ingratitnde. "Were you ever really glad to hang a man?" "Only once," answered the sheriff. "I had prepared him a hearty breakfast of steak, eggs, potatoes, waffles and coffee." "Yes?" "And the infernal ingrate demanded stewed oats instead." Louisville Courier-Journal. Bad Soeiety. What you learn from bad habits In bad society you will never forget, and it will be a lasting pang to you. I tell you In all sincerity, not as in the excitement of speech, but as I would confess and have confessed before God, I would give my right hand if I could forget that which I have learned in bad society. John B. Cough. Didn't eed to Tell. "Bobbie, I Lope you didn't tell your mother that you saw me kissing sister last night" "Xope. I didn't have to. Sis waked us all up at midnight when yon went home and told It herself." Minneapolis Journal. If yon wish to remove aTarice, yon most remove Its mother, luxury. Cicero. ihli concerns 7 do. -ea2 carefuPyt xr. :akiwir Syrup Pepin lpoirte!y Knarao--J to ears hiditreirioo, constipation. k k beadles, offensive breath, malaria ana all iaaaaea JL-i-itiiig- from stomacs trouble.

BRIDGE CLOSED 10 PUBLIC TRAVEL

Old Covered Structure Has Been Used Last Time. As the result of tlu-ir inspection if tne old covered hridse across the east fork of the Whitewater at Msi-dn-'uoro. the county coiniuist-tunors have ordered the hrbige closed to traffic. The Mructure was found in eu'h a state of dilapidation that the entrance ways were boarded tip. Tho.-e who travel the road in vehicles will be required to ford the stream. The repairs will be made immediately. The commissioners believed it more advisable to repair the bridge than to eiect a new structure. BRIDGE COMPLETED. Span Near Cambridge City Has Beert Accepted. The erection of the new brid; in Harrison township north of Oanilrid4e City has been completed. The bridge was installed by the Pan American Bridge Company. It has been accepted by the commissioners. Gold M-flal Flour mkfs lightest IrfSt. Srt. See our window lor correct styles and prices E.X 807 Main St. Don't Play a Long Shot ! The Favorite in the Smokers' Handicap is the American Kid Cigar Ask Your Dealer Ed. A. Feltman, Mfr. Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction Co. Eastern Division (Time Table Effective Oct. 27. 1907.) Trains leave Richmond for Indianapolis and intermediate stationa at 6:00 a. m.. 7:25. 8:00, 9:2.r. 10:00, 11:00, 12:00, 1:00, 2:25, 3:00. 4:00, 5:2.".. C:00, 7:30, 8:40. 9:00, 10:00. 11:10. Limited trains. I-ist car to Indianapolis, 8:40 p. in. Iast car to New Castle, 10:00 p. rn. Trains connect at Indianapolis for Lafayette; Frankfort, Crafordsvile, Terre Haute, Clinton. Sullivan, PaHa (Ills.) Tickets sold through. The Kiblinger Motor Buggy $375.00 and upward. A practical, successful, economical, automobile at a email cost. Double cylinder, air cooled. 10-12 IL P. Solid rubber tires. Win run through deep mud or sand, and will climb atet-p hills. Write for our Agency Terms. W. H. KIBLINGER CO, Box N. 320. Auburn, Irtd. INSURANCE, REAL ESTATE: LOANS, RENTS W. H. Bradbury & Son

HUM

Rooms 1 and 3, WosSeott Blk it