Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 109, 3 June 1908 — Page 6

THE RICHMOND PALLADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1903. HE DIED AT PRAYER DEVIL'S HOLE ONE OF TALKS ON ADVERTISING NO. 18.

PAGE SIX.

Theodore Shonts Tells of the Tragic End of Duke De Chaulness.

AN HEIR IS EXPECTED.

New York, June ,1. Theodore P. Shonts, who hurried aboard early in April, following the sudden death of his son-in-law, the duke de Chaulnes, has arrived on the Crown Prinzessin, Cecelie, and for the first time revealed the tragic manner in which the young French nobleman was stricken with heart disease. "The duke and my daughter were Ineellng at their bedside in prayer," said Mr. Shonts, "when the stroke came upon him that carried him off before medical aid could be summoned. "The memory of the duke has been grossly maligned, and outrageous reports were printed about the matter and cause of his death. The facts arc these: On the afternoon of the day on which he oied the duke and my daughter were out riding. They dined together, and then retired to their apartments very early. After their arrival in Par!?, my daughter told me It was their custom to retire at 1 o'clock. "They were kneeling close together and the duke held one arm about his wife's shoulders. Suddenly he lurched forward and then tumbled unconscious at my daughter's feet. He was dead before anything could be done for fcltn. "The death of the duke was due to heart disease. The coating of his heart was tooMhin and the organ contained too little blood. The reports that he was addicted to the use of drugs and that his indulgence in opiates caused his death were infamous libels." "The relatives of the duke have been more than kind to my daughter. They have vied with one another in trying to do for her. The duchess IT Uzes has been more than a sister to her, so thnt she will be among sympathetic friends while she remains in France." Mr. Shonts did not say so, but the report is that the family wants her to stay in Paris, in the expectation of an heir.

S

N AGRA

MANY WONDERS

A WONDER THAT HAS PUZZLED MANY.

There are many people that are greatly puzzled over the wonderful effects of Root Juice. When this new medicine was first introduced it was generally thought that a new fake was born to die in a short time. But as time passes and so many testimonials are pouring in from all over the country from people who had given up hope of ever seeing another well day, and neighbor is telling neighbor of some great good received from the usi) of Root Juice, many people are wondering why this great remedy was not discovered years ago. What a great boon to human-kind is a remedy like Root Juice, a combination of nature's drugs that soothes and heals and tones the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. How sweet is health and how wonderful are the many cures that Root Juice has made of rheumatism, catarrh, indigestion, female weakness and other troubles of the di

gestive and secretory organs. Those

who wish to learn of this great remedy should go to A. G. Luken '& Co's drug store.

This One Time Mighty Cavern, Famed in the Legends of the Red Men As Abiding Place of Evil Spirits, Will Be Viewed by Palladium's Niagara Falls Party. tL The Palladium's party to Niagara, will see all of the hundreds of beautiful places surrounding the falls, plenty of time being taken to each one. It will not be a one day affair, a two days affair, which are always coupled with the hustle, bust!,", hasty glances at this and that and always numerous disputes with the cab and expressmen over the slow transportation of baggage, but will be a trip which all delight to take. It will be one which all young women who are so lucky as to be made a member of the party will have plenty of time to properly view Niagara and its surrounding beauties and one on which they will have time to stop and dwell on the indescribable magnificance. One of the pretty spots surrounding the falls is Devil's Hole. The Devil's Hole is a weird st, and was at one time a mighty cavern, framed in the legends of the red men as the abiding-place of the Evil Spirits, which gave it the name. History tells us that the French explorer, La Salle, was the first white man to see this cavern, in 1078. Not quite a century later, on September 14, 1763, this same cavern was the scene of a blood-curdling massacre soon after the bloody French and Indian war. At the top of the bank an English provision train, guarded by a company of regulars, was ambuscaded by a horde of Seneca Indians. They swooped down on the unsuspecting Englishmen, and, out of about 90 men. all but three were either butchered or thrown over the awful brink horses, wagons and all driven pell mell over the cliff. One drummer boy, named Matthews, escaped death by falling into a tree and being caught in the branches by the strap of his drum. One of the others to escape was the officer in charge of the train, named Steadmau, who broke through the ambuscade, mounted on a fleet horse. The cavern contains many interesting features, the great Council Rock, the Mysterious Cave, and the bed of Bloody Run Creek, so named from its running red with the blood of the awful massacre in 1763.

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The regular ballots will appear In each issue, entitling the lady voted for to one vote. Remember you can enter the contest any time you wish to, so "get busy and keep busy." The conditions of the contest are as follows: CONDITIONS. One year's subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 2,500 votes One six months' subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 1,000 votes One fifteen weeks' subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 500 votes One month's subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 100 votes

EDUCATED BEARDS.

Whiakers In Paris Reach the Pinnacle of Cultivation. It Is In Paris that the whisker retches Its highest state of civilization and deTlopment The luxuriant ver dure on the faces of some of the Pari elans who strut along the boulevard evry day cau be compared to nothing but the riot of vegetation In the trop lcs. Every Parisian has whiskers mnch whiskers if he can, but some whiskers at any rate. He supplements nature's efforts with the best aids of the barber and trains and nurses his hirsute appurtenances with anxious care. The Parisians spend hours on their beards and educate them into formal gardens, set pieces, shrubbery, terrace and vista effects. They lay out hairscapes with them, arrange them in undulating meadows and twine them on pergolas. There is the long, spade concoction much sought by men with black beards, which consists of about a foot of hair cut square across the bottom and adds much glory to the wearer, for the whiskers always shine and R-llsten in the sun. There are side winders and pointed ones, the heart shaped and the curved, the waved and the plain. A man who can train his whiskers to glow in a new way is as much of a celebrity as a man who writes a good poem or paints a good pictum Samuel Q. lily the in Everybody Magazine.

Ida Beeson, Greensfork R. R. 22 77,891 Jennie Wine, 1117 N. G street 73,792 Goldie Dadisman, 402 S. 12th street 64,509 Lucie Benton, Fountain City 62,667 Goldie Myers, Centerville R. 11 54,016 Maude Pettibone, 409 N. 16th street 35,437 Elsie Wyatt, 1114 N. G street 25,327 Rosa Kuehn, 17 South 8th street 20,487 Hattie Lashley, Centerville 16,106 Marie Hodskin, Cambridge City 15,610 Lena Cornthwaite, Cambridge City 10,701 Ethel Wysong, Lynn, Ind 8,619 Ruby Hodgin, 25 South 7th street ' 6,101 Estella Coates, 201 N. 8th street 5,773 Adda Study, Williamsburg, Ind 4,119

HUGHES WELCOMED

Students and Citizens of Greencastle Pay New Bishop Tribute.

BIG PARADE IS A FEATURE.

Greencastle, Ind., June 3. At a joint meeting of the committees representing the faculty, students and cit-

Uaoa la Downer ball yesterday &fter-J

This Ballot Not Good After 5 p. m. June 16 Palladium and Sun-Telegram Niagara Falls and Canada Voting Contest.

ONE VOTE COUPON

NAME

ADDRESS

Carrier Boys are not permitted to receive Ballots from patrons; put the name of the lady of your choice on this Coupon and bring or send to this office before the expiration of the above date or it will not be considered a legal vote.

LYNCH T WINNER Again Wins the Presidency of International Typographical Union.

CANVASS IS COMPLETED.

Indianapolis. Ind., June 3. The canvass of the official returns in the election of the International Typographical union were completed last night, and shows the re-election of the present officers by substantial majorities. The election was held in all the local unions of the country on May ::. The results were counted by the locals and a statement of the returns forwarded to the international headquarters in the Newton Claypool building here for canvassing by a canvassing board made up of the international president, the secretary alu one member of the local union, being in, this instance,

James M. Lynch, J. V. Bramwood and

Edward Barry, respectively.

The officials returns show the elec

tion of James M. Lynch for president;

J. V. Hays, vice president; J. V.

Bramwood, secretary; George P. Nich

ols, agent Union Printers' Home; four

delegates to American Federation of Labor convention. Frank Morrison,

Max S. Hays, Hugh Stevenson and T.

W. McCullough; and three trustees for the. Union Printers' Home, Anna C.

Wilson, L. C. Shepard and Thomas Mc-

Caffery.

Women's Fashions for 1908. The brightest women are changing the old fashioned wash day instead of boiling and rubbing their clothes to pieces all day long, they use Easy Task soap in a motor washing machine, thus doing a big wash in half a day. They call this now method the Easy Task way.

ANCIENT EMBALMING.

Not

Only People but Animal. AVer.

MunimlSrd In Egypt. Myrrh, which was fabulously supposed to be the tears of Myrrha, who was turned into a shrub, was a plant of handsome appearance, with spreading, fernlike foliage and large umbels of white flowers. It was found principally in Arabia and Abyssinia. In early times the perfume distilled from it was greatly in requisition for embalming. Herodotus gives a detailed account of the ancient mode of embalming,

which is perhaps more instructive than pleasing. After the body had undergone much preparation, which, to spare your feelings, will not be described, it was filled with powdered myrrh, cassia and other perfumes. It was then steeped in natron, a strong solution of sodn, for seventy days. After this it was wrapped in bands of fine perfumed linen, smeared with aromatic gums. Not only people were thus embalmed, but the crocodiles of Lake Moeris, which, after their mummification, were decorated with ornaments and jewels and laid in one of the subterranean passages of the great labyrinth with much pomp and display. The sacred cat, ichneumon and other cherished animals devoutly worshiped by the Egyptians were embalmed with scrupulous and fanatical care. On days special to the memory of the dead the mummies were newly sprinkled with perfume, incense was offered before them and their heads anointed with fresh oil in the same spirit as we lay new blooms upon the graves of our dead.

The Mistake of the Big Steak By Herbert Kaufman Watch out for WASTE in circulation. Find out WHERE your story is going to be READ. Don't pay for planting the seed of publicity in a spot where you are not going to HARVEST the results. The manufacturer of soap who has his goods on sale from 0skaloosa to Timbuctoo doesn't care HOW WIDELY a newspaper circulation is scattered. Whoever reads about his product is near to SOME store or other where it is sold but you have just ONE store and it is in RICHMOND. Buying advertising circulation is very much like ordering a steak if the waiter brings you a porter-house twice as big as your DIGESTION will take care of, you've paid twice as much as the steak was worth to YOU, even if it IS worth the price to the restaurant man. It is not the amount of circulation that your ADVERTISEMENT gets, but the amount of circulation THAT GETS PEOPLE TO BUY. If two newspapers offer you their columns and one shows a distribution almost entirely within the city of Richmond, and in towns that rely upon Richmond for buying facilities, your business can digest all of its influence. If the other has AS MUCH CIRCULATION, but only ONE THIRD of it is in RICHMOND TERRITORY, the bulk of copies cannot establish its value to YOU IT'S ANOTHER CASE OF THE BIG STEAK you pay for more than you can digest. That part of its influence which is concentrated where men and women can't get your GOODS after you get their ATTENTION is SHEER WASTE. By dividing the number of copies he prints into his inch rate, a publisher may fallaciously demonstrate to you that his" space is sold as low as that of his stronger competitors, but if half his circulation is too FAR AWAY TO BRING BUYERS, his real RATE is double what it seems. He is like the butcher who weighs in all the bone and sinew and fat and charges you as much for the WASTE as he does for the MEAT. (Copyright, 100S.)

WHISTLER AS A TEACHER.

A Genius Who Showed Dlfflcnlty In luiparllnK Ills lv novrled ne. Whistler was certainly a genius, but he showed some difficulty In imparting his knowledge. His criticisms were often foggy and uncertain, and he hardly ever found words in which to express himself. It was almost an Impossibility to develop without becoming a slave and copying him in every way. With a majority of the students this was a dangerous method. If one came with a spark of originality it was extinguished immediately by the dominating personality of the master. He could see art only from his own standpoint, and he insisted on all of us using the same palette and the same brushes as himself and on our seeing all objects with his eves. The result to an

ordinary outsider was ridiculously monotonous. I well remember a Frenchman who wanted to join the class coming to view some of the studies and then remarking, with an amused smile, "Vous avea beaucoup des petus Wheestlairs!" This was perfectly true of the majority, but there were a few matured men who hardly carried out Whistler's formulas as regards the palette and method, but who, owing to their more independent attitude, profited much by the criticisms. Century.

KEYNOTE FOR DEMOCRATS

OF THE STATE

(Continued From Page Four.)

Ballots Deposited Today Will Appear In Tomorrow's Count.

noon, arrangements were made for the reception to Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes when he arrived from Baltimore this afternoon on the Vandalia at 1:20 o'clock. The college are in gala attire and the city presents a most beautiful appearance. Prof. Kleinsmid, with the assistance of four class presidents, had charge of the procession.

The carriages, carrying Bishop Jed at th ma& "ng

Hughes and members of the faculty and board of trustees, were followed by a formation of seniors, juniors, sophomores, freshmen and citizens. The Brazil band, city officials and the fire department had a place in the parade. The procession marched to Meharry hall, where speeches were made. Hugh Dougherty of Indianapolis, president of the board of trustees, presid-

TotlaB In Paris. "In Paris only one-fifth of the roten go to the polls and cast their ballots." said an American who has lived in Paris as a business man for several years past. "This Is not because they cannot vote, but because they do nol care to. Everybody In the city is in terested in politics, but when the tlm to vote comes few care to go to th polls. The man who wins Is mosl often the man who promises everything. For Instance. In my distriel last time a man was elected whe promised to put a new shed on the market. I know of another deputy who was kept In office fifteen years because he promised to add an extra sardine to the dally rations of the soldiers. There are so many soldiers thai that made a big difference. They did not get the sardine, but he continued to promise and kept office." Washington Post

NOTICE. We have moved our main office from South 7th street to our main yard on South G between 6th and 7th streets. HACKMAN. KLEHFOTH . CO.

purposes this amount of money was applied? More than $2,k.hh) was expended in the state of Indiana from H)r to liHKi than there was from is:: to 1V.M, and, strange as it may seem, the school revenue for tuition instead of increasing during those years, was decreased more than KxMxxv. I am not making any statements charging dishonesty upon any public officer in the state of Indiana. I know of no dishonesty and I am too much of a lawyer to suspect dishonesty where none is proven. But I am also acquainted with that trait in human nature which enables it to expend recklessly, if it has the power, the money of another. It has doubtless, all been honestly and legally expended, but if the facts had been put before the people, I rather imagine that by this time, groaning under the burdens of taxation, the people would have insisted that the legislature and the office holders be not. so liberal in the expenditure of other people's money. There is but one way to correct this manifest abuse, and that is to have a new deal all around. Put new men in and let them understand that the people of this state not only require economy in public expenditures, but that they will require a knowledge of the wav in which their money has

been expended. No one, from the acts of r.7, can tell how much Indiana is in debt. I am, myself, no niggard. I believe that the workman is worthy of his hire, but I also believe in the equitable adjustment of salaries, and instead of a horde of petty officeholders parading the state of Indiana and drawing salaries out of the treasury'. I should prefer some of this money to be expended in increasing the salary of Dr. J. N. Hurty, men whose life, whose talents and whose learning are being devoted to the upbuild

ing of the mental and moral and physical welfare of the people of this state. Centralized Power. I have heretofore said that in a larre number of measures I am in accord with the president of the United States. I meant to speak of all those measures which have to do with the making of fair dealing between man and man, and the amelioration of the conditions of the laboring classes. I do not, however, agree with the president of the United States either in his attempt to centralize power at Washington or in himself. And while it is not a political question. I may be permitted to voice my views upon a subject about which, doubtless, you -and I will not agree. It has nothing to do especially with politics, but I feel that I ought to say what I think upon that subject. I allude to the theory of the presi

dent of the United States that the only way in which to keep peace with your neighbor is to conceive your neighbor that you are either big enough to lick him, or have more bowie knives, revolvers and guns in your possession than he has. What applies to the individual will inevitably apply to society at large. If. in order to be at peace with my neighbor It is necessary for me to wear a revolver, and when he gets two. for me to get three, then in the twentieth century of Christian civilization it is indeed necessary that every time the nations abroad shall build a war vessel, it will be necessary for us to build two. I cannot agree with the economic views of Vice-President Fairbanks, but he has my hearty commendation in his statement made at Chicago, that instead of more preparation for war, this world needs greater preparation for peace; that

jschools and colleges, and churches.

and hospitals and libraries, will do more to bring about the era of universal peace than all the military armament which man can devise. I myself believe in the old couplet: "You cannot tame the tiger. You dare not harm the dove. But every gate you shut to hate Will open wide to love." We, ourselves, stood in the fore

front of nations with a small standing j

army and a comparatively insignifi-j cant navy, so long as we maintained the ancient ideals of the American republic, jieaee with all nations, entangling alliances with none. While we held strictly to the Monroe doctrine and had not ourselves gone into the larceny business , the moral force of our position was worth a million armed men, but when we receded from that doctrine and began our system of imperialism, then, of necessity, we began to truly Tramp around the world with a chip on our shoulders, asking somebody to knock it off. I have sometimes found it difficult in my own life to retrace a false set, but, by the grace of Ood, it has been posible to do that thing. What a man may do a nation can do. Let us retrace our false steps. Let us say to the world that we are not anxious to engage In controversy that whil prowess is to be admired, national

prosperity, is to be desired, yet, after all, the American people only desire to be a peace and liberty loving people opening Its doors to those who choose to come in and finding no fault with those who want to . stay out. In this ps in all other matters, my humble voice must always be lifted for a return to the ideals and principles of the fathers. The contention which I have heretofore made with reference to the dangers arising from one branch of the government Interfering with the duties of the other has received a startling proof in the rumors of the past week to the effect that certain corjoratlons have made bold to inquire of the executive whether they might do Illegal things without the danger of prosecution. A bare mention of this fact is sufficient to show how really dangerous this trend to public affairs is. If these things may be done, or if the suspicion that they are done, gets into the public mind, how long will it be until in the lower walks of life every man who desires to break the

law will first retain as his counsel the prosecuting attorney? I may not stop to elaborate, the public press furnishes full details. In our own state affairs, another startling thing is taking place. With increased expenditures and increased tax levies, the corporations have at last succeeded with the State Board of Equalization in getting their tax-

ables reduced. May I inquire what reduction has been made to the farmer, the merchant, the lawyer, or the widow, on account of hard times? Surely the hour is ripe for the SO per cent to voice their sentiments. I have already spun out the thread of my verbosity finer than the line of my argument, and yet have not touched upon some questions which seem to deserve attention. It is time, however, to close. In all that has been said to you, nothing has been said about the prospects of material prosperity. The purpose of this address has been to attempt to recall your minds to the ancient ideals of the republic; to get you to be willing to divorce business and politics; to have you soberly consider whether you ever want to change your form of government in any other way than the way provided by law; to plead with 70a to cease

trying to obtain things which you may want regardless of the law; to warn you that the mere following of a man is dangerous. Thrice Caesar thrust away the crown, nad yet. when the blood gushed out of Brutus' wound it was the blood of an Emperor of Rome. The first consul prated loudly of his love of liberty and yet he died exiled Emperor of France. The constitution and the law axe the two things as citizens that yoi may safely venerate. Following them, your liberties are secure. Why ask the people to obey ihe laws when every day officials violat. the constitution? If it was thought a glorious privilege to die that the constitution might be preserved, may every drop of blood such martyrs shed rise on in judgement against us if to serve our own ends we impiously break open this Ark of the C enaii.

HEARS OF BROTHER S " DEATH ANDJNIEARLY OIES Newburg, Ind., Man in Critical Condition.

Evansville, Ind.. June 3. Hearing of the death of his brother Peter In tb.'s city, John Iennert, aged 78, of Newburg. Ind., suffered two strokes of paralysis and is said to be dying.

Cured at Home

I Will be at Arlington Hotel, Richmond, Friday, June 5, and until noon, 6th.

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j ble afflictions ever offered to the pub

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