Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 114, 8 June 1908 — Page 3

THE RICITMOXD PALLADIU3I AND SUXTELEGR AM, MOM) AY, JUNE vS. lOOS.

PAGE THREE.

GERMANS EXTEND ROYAL RECEPTION

King Edward and Queen Alexandra Are Given Warm Welcome. RUSSIAN TOWN IS AGOG. KING EDWARD WILL MEET CZAR OFF THE LITTLE TOWN OF REVAL HUNDREDS OF SECRET SERVICE MEN ARE ON DUTY. Kiel, June . Kins Kdward, on the royal yacht. Victoria and Albert, and ccompanied by Queen Alexandra, I'rinrcss Victoria and a large suite. tnet a great reception here. The Gcrman warships were dressed and the trews ' manned ship. Royal salutes were fired and the German sailors cheered tho British monarch, while a guard of honor was brought up rn the rjuay and the hands played the British anthem. A fleet of German torpedo boats and destroyers escorted the royal yacht Dtit of the harbor on its way to Ileval. It was really an impromptu review tf the German fleet, in honor of the King. Home forty powerful warships, which had just concluded ten days' maneuvers In the North Sea. were drawn up in double line, parade formation, as the Victoria and Albert passed through. SECRET SERVICE MEN ARRIVE. Five Hundred Reach Town of Reval With Infantry Regiment. Reval. Russia. June S. This quaint Did town already has begun to fill with visitors for the meeting of King Kdward and Knipcror Nicholas. The hotels are crowded and all available private lodgings are encased. Where today's expected influx, of courtiers, correspondents and sightseers will be quartered is difficult to foresee. The ministers of court have established headquarters here and Sunday a regiment of infantry and fni secret service officers arrived for guard and police duty. Four destroyers took their Stations in the harbor to keen the roadstead clear for royal yachts. The narrow, twisted streets and the thirteenth century houses of the city have begun to bloom with decorations, although the mona'clis do not intend to pet foot on shore to receive the traditional offering of bread and salt. The imperial yachts will anchor so far out in the offing that from them only the battlements of the old Danish fortress on the hill top and the graceful early pot hie church spires will be distinguishable by the unaided eye. There is a possibility, however, that Kins Kdward and Kmperor Nicholas will come by rail on account of rough weather in the Gulf of Finland and Join the yachts here. GOES TO NEW YORK. Centerville, Ind., June S. Dr. J. M. Fonts left Sunday aCternoon for Nv York City to take a course of stiffly in Columbia University. Dr. Fonts will be gone for about four weeks. Imrlng his absence Mrs. Fonts and children will visit her parents and other relatives. TAL OF THE SEA. The Upsid Down Cruise of the Captain of the Erndte. An almost incredible instance of the perils attending those who go to sea was the basis of a story told in a maritime court of Dautzic some years age by the captain of the sailing ship Krudte. Nothing that Jules Verue, Clark Russell and II. G. Wells ever fancied in thett wonderful tales surpassed the story told by Captain EngellandL He had sailed from Metnel with a cargo of planks for OlUetiburg. The captain remained at the wheel during a gale which overtook the vessel next night and at 4 In the morning went to his cabin to change his wet clothes. He had Just got into dry underclothing when his vessel capsised, and he found himself standing on the roof of the cabin, the door of which the sea had hermetically closed. By loosening the boards of what was now the roof he got into the hold, which contained only loose sails. Fortunately some shelves of a high cupboard remained intact, and from them he collected some cans of condensed milk, some prunes, rice, sugar and saueage. lie also found a hammer. For twelve days the master of the phlp lived in his prison, eating as sparingly as possible and driukiug sea water, which appeared to have no ill effect on him. He employed his free time in hammering on the steel bottom of the ship to attract the attention of passing vessels. He knew when it was day, for a dim light penetrated the water. On the twelfth day the Norwegian Fteamer Aurora sighted the wreck and sent a boat to take it in tow. Engellandt had fallen asleep; but, hearing footsteps ovei his head, he began knocking witl? bis hammer and shouting for help. The Aurora's men returned to their ship for tools, with which they bored a hole through the bottom of the Erndte where they had heard the shouting. When they drew out their drill, a man's finger followed, and they soon learned that Engellandt had food for four days more and wished to be towed to laud, for it was impossible to release him in the open sea. The Aurora towed the wreck safely to Neufahrwasser, where with consid erable difficulty it was attached to a huge crane, a plate was unloosened, and the imprisoned master was freed. He was perfectly conscious and even able to walk alone. The three men who had constituted his crew were of course drowned when the vessel capSized. New York Tribune.

CARDINAL LOGUE

This remarkable photograph was taken ov a H. N". S. staff photographer, an-! shows Cardinal hoffiie. primate of Ireland, and John D. Rockefeller, seated. The picture was taken while those two eminent men wore, guests of James Butter, v.' ho is shown in the picture standing, the well known lacing horseman auJ merchant, at Ins Tarr.vtown homo.

3 '.-'jWk j FMl iJ&sn- A frit

V THIRST NOT TO LIKING OF STATE Georgia May Repeal Prohibition Law. Atlanta, Ga.. June S. "The very first day the legislature convenes this summer I am going to introduce a hill : to repeal the prihibition law," said 'representative W. W. Wilson of Gwinnett county, a leading member of the Georgia legislature. "I will do this." ; he continued, "because I interpret, the idefeat of Governor Hoke Smith to i mean that the people want the law repealed. ! "1 was in favor of prohibition and voted for the passage of the bill, although I wanted the question put before the people for decision. My amendment wao defected, but I supported the bill " IDEAS OF HEAVEN. The Romans believed in the Elysian fields of the Greeks. The Haitians locate heaven In one of the beautiful valleys of their island. The Assyrians believe heaven is in the bowels of the earth or far away in the east. Some natives of the south Pacific think heaven a place where they will be white. The Greek belief, according to Socrates, was that the pious went to heaven, like prisoners set free, to dwell In unclouded peace. According to the ancient astronomers, heaven was seven or eight solid spheres, with a planet for the center of each. Some even ran the number up to seventy. The Egyptians thought heaven to be on many islands at the foot of the Milky w-ay. Those worthy spent the time harvesting beans and in feasting, singing and playing. Kttqntte. '"Etiquette" is a French word which originally meant a label indicating the price or quality, the English "ticket," and in old French was usually specialized to mean a soldier's billet. Th phrase "that's the ticket" shows the change to the present meaning of manners according to code. Rurke solemnly explained that "etiquette had its original application to those ceremonies and formal observances practiced at courts. The term came afterward to signify certain formal methods used iu the transactions between sovereign states." A Widow's DonMf Grief. A clergyman who recently called upon a young -widow to condole with her upon the loss of her husband placed considerable emphasis upon the proposition that the separation was merely temporal and painted in vivid colors the happiness of friends reunited after death. When he stopped for breath the sorrowing one heaved a deep sigh and quietly remarked. '"Well. I suppose his first wife has got him again then." Saturdav Review. Troved It. BJ ones Why the grouch? Fsmith My wife willed me a fool. Ejones Cheer up. It may not be true. Fsmith But it is. She proved it. Went and dug up a bunch of my old love letters and read 'em to me! Cleveland Lead er. Lrttrrn. Answer a letter the day it is received and you will experience a sense of duty well done. Delay it. and after too long a time has elapsed shame will put a stop to its acknowledgment altoget her. While Europe has 107 people to the square mile. Asia has but fifty-eight Africa eleva and Australia one and a half.

AND JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER

"9 y' q Plji

GET RED HAT 1 1 Mgr. Diomede Falconio Will Be Made Cardinal, It Is Rumored. TALK OF A SUCCESSOR. Rome, June s. It is rumored at the Vatican that Mgr. Diomede Falconio. the apostolic delegate ro the United States, is said to be created a Cardinal in the near future. Mgr. Falconio will probably be summoned to Rome to receive the coveted honor as soon as he has brought to a close certain negotiations which he Is now conducting at Washington and in other parts of tne United States. There Is already some talk about his successor, who is generally pointed out in the person of Mgr. Bellegrino Stagni, archbishop of Aqnila, who belongs to the Order of the Servile Fath ers and speaks English fluently. Before becoming archbishop, and while the general of his order he went to America to visit that branch of the Serviles which flourishes especially in Chicago, where they have, headquarters at the Church of the Assumption. Downward Course Fast Being Realized by Richmond People. A little backache at first. Daily increasing until the back is lame and weak. Urinary disorders quickly follow; Diabetes and finally Bright's disease. This is the downward course of kidney ills. Don't take this course. Follow the advice of a Richmond citizen. John Moris, of 43S Main street, Richmond, Ind., says: "I was a great sufferer from lumbago for several years, and those pangs and pains have given me many restless and nervous nights. I doctored with several different physicians and used remedies without success. Finally, being advised to try Doan's Kidney Pills, I went to A. G. Luken & Co.'s drug store for a box. I was better in three days e.fter beginning the treatment, and took in all three boxes. The lumbago has never bothered me since and I have often told people of this experience." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents fur the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. THIRTY-THREE MEN RESCUED FROM E Daring Work All That Saved Them. Silverton. Colo., June S. Thirtythree men entombed in the Gold King Mine at Gladstone have been rescued ! after a night of daring work by a score ! jof men. Two of the men were' i brought by a third rescue party and j the others were hoisted to the tunnel ; level soon afterward. Three of the : men had been missing since the fire and the others were members of the two rescue parties. Wixifrep: Oeld Flour U best for pastry.

MAY

VISITED HORSEMAN.

A

.i ii,

PLUCKY E SAVES PASSENGERS In Scalding Steam He Shuts Off Engine. Springfield, III.. June S. Through the blinding steam and hot water that filled the cab when a patch on t ho boiler head of an Illinois Central engine gave away, near Marine, 111., Engineer Lawrence O'Brien of this c'ty. crept on the running board and shut off the engine. No one on the train was injured, although the coaches were filled with passengers and the engine hail been running wildly for almost a mile. The train was a south bound mail and express out of this city and was running :w miles an hour. Not until the next station was reached did the passengers learn of the danger from which the engineer had saved them. i i fN THE WHEELHOUSE. It In There That All the Foreei of s Great Vemel Are llreetel. On entering the wheelhouse of an ocean liner a landsman is' likely' to be awed by the group of instruments and masses of complicated machinery on every hand. Your eye will first be caught by the wheel or wheels, for often there are two or more of them, one directly in line with the other. The first of these is au insignificant looking affair perhaps a foot or so iu diameter, which seems out of all proportion to the work it must accomplish. Directly in front of it stands the ship's compass, while back of it are massed many complicated wheels and levers which transform the slightest motion of the wheel into tho-great force which guiiies the ship. All the great steamers are steered nowadays by the aid of steam or electricity. In the old days half a dozen men at times would struggle with the wheel in high seas, and s.tilors have been killed by the rapid revolving of the projecting spoke handles. The modern steering gear makes it possible to guide these great ships with the slightest pressure. The rudder, weighing many tons, is perhaps 500 feet astern, yet with a touch of the polished wheel the great 700 foot ship will swing from side to side with almost the delicacy of a compass needle. The wheel that the steersman operates merely governs the steering engine, which, In turn, moves the great rudder. The most astonishing thing about the bridge is to find the wheelhouse w-ith all its curtains tightly drawn, as often happens, and the man at the helm steering the boat without seeing ahead at all. At night or even by day if the light of the binnacle is confusing the wheelhouse is often completely shut in. The man at the wheel, it Is explained, does uot need to look ahead. The lookout high up in the "crow's nest" and the officer on watch on the bridge Will keep him informed if any object Is sighted. The duty of the man at the wheel is t keep the ship on her course. Throughout his watch of four hours he must keep his eyes on the compass and nowhere else. On one side of the wheelhouse are posted the sailing directions, which give the wheelsman explicit orders. The course to be followed for the day is placed in a neat little rack called the compass control. It suggests the rack In church at the side of the pulpit which announces the number of the hymns and psalms for the day's service. Te compass control will announce, for instance, X, 7, S, W, or some such formula. The wheelsman glances at this as be takes his watch at the wheel and holds the great ship exactly on this course until he is relievedFrancis Arnold Collins In St. Nicholas-; PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY

MANY INJURED IN ! STREETCAR WRECK Car Filled With St. Louis Pleasure Seekers Jumps Track Sunday Night.

CHILDREN WERE HURT. WERE PINIONED IN WRECKAGE AND MANY WERE DRAGGED FROM BENEATH DEBRIS BLEEDING AND BADLY INJURED. St. Louis. Mo.. June s. One man was killed outright, several others t'i-tallv injured and practically all of the passeng'-rs on bo;-d we-e hurt mor.' or less it vhT. e:o-t bound Creve Ceour car unnpe.i the track at a curve t-,-t sou h of t le Olive Street Road, three blocks west of Lie city limits, late Sunday night, ami pitched L feet oer au embankment. Six of the passengers were so ,-er-iously injured that tbev will die. ac- : cording to the physicians who were c-t'led to the scene Tile conductor i was dragged out f,-om lTeneath the motor box. with his chest crushed in J and both K gs cut off. j Thi- niotorman was pitched from ; the platform several feet away from the car. He was knocl ed unconscious but not seriously injured. Half of the passengers on the catwere women and children, returning from Sunday school picnics at the lake. Many women were pulled front under the wreckage of the car, unconscious and bleeding from various wounds. The throat of one child was cut from ear to ear bv being shoved against an iron bar over the window. Story of a Witness. Morris Stein, of No. 370 Page avenue, who was walking near the tracks when the accident occurred, was the first one to come to the aid of the injured. "I saw the car coming around the curve at about 20 miies an hour," he said. "All of a sudden it rose from the tracks at an angle of 4S degrees, turned over sidewards and toppled over the embankment. It was all so quick that no one had a chance to leave the car. It rolled over onto the other track before it went down the slope." Ten thousand people from Delmar Garden, only three blocks away, rushed to the scene of the accident and carried people out from under the wreckage. Telephone-messages were sent to the nearby hospitals and 200 physicians were on the scene within 20 minutes after tho accident. The large crowd surrounding the wreckage impeded the work of the rescuers, and a squad of police were rushed from the Twelfth District station to preserve order. Motorman Arrested. The motorman, Francis McEndre, was arrested soon after the accident and made a statement in which he says he was on his first trip on the Creve Coeur line. Ho admits he had been warned about the dangerous curve where the car was wrecked, and says he forgot the warning. He has been a motorman nine months. McEndre escaped serious injury by a miracle. He was thrownclear of the wreck and as he scrambled to his feet was confronted hy three men, who told him that he had best get away from the scene as he might be lynched by the angry passengers. Despite this warning McEndre had sufficient presence of mind to run back up the track to flag the car following him. thus preventing an even greater catastrophe. Ho then ran across fields to the De Baliviere sheds arriving there breathless. After informing his superiors of the accident he voluntarily gave himself up. Get Your Money's Worth. A pretty good test of a soap's quality is the number of uses to which it can lie put. A soap that will cleanse the daintiest textures, is often of no account for heavy work. Doubtless the soap that does the best under all circumstances is the pure quality callec Easy Task soap. Flannels, overalls, butchers' aprons or lace-handkerchiefs are all washed perfectly by iL Only oc a cake. too. There Are T w o I Uir, the Gfnolnt and tbe Prurniten. It has sometimes been said that fishermen cannot be manufactured. This is true to the extent that nothing can supply the lack of certain inherent, constitutional and inboru qualities or traits whieh are absolutely necessary to a fisherman's makeup. Jf course there are many who call theaiselves fishermen and who insist upon their membership iu the fraternity who have not in their veins a drop of legitimate fisherman blood. Their self asserted relationship is nevertheless smieumes seized upon by malicious or ignorant critics as permitting the assumption that the weaknesses and sins of these pretenders are the weakness and sins of genuine fishermen. But in truth these pretenders are only interlopers who have learned a little tish language, who love to fish only "when they 1;te," who whine at bad luck, who betray incredulity when they hear a rousing fish story and who do or leave undone many other things fatal to good and regular standing. They are like certain whites called squawmen who hang about Indian reservations and gain certain advantages in the tribes by marrying full blooded Indian women. Surely no just person would for a moment suppose that genuine Indians could be treated fairly by measuring them according to a squaw man standard. Neither can genuine fisherman be fairly treated by judging them according to the standards presented by squaw fishermen. From "Fishing and Shooting Sketches," by Grovex Cleveland.

Hi SPECIAL STAMP M ia; sale this week Mi

25 STAMPS v;:h one lb. of Cuff. ,- at ;'."c.

50

20 STAMPS with one lb of Conee at Sec T5 STAMPS with one lb of Coffee at 2."c 10 STAMPS '.:h one box of Rice at lei a box. 10 STAMPS with one box of A A: P. Cocoa at 20c a o.

..STAMPS.. With one 18-oz ran ol A. & P. Baking Ponder at SOrts. a ran. Perleetlv Pure. Best Made.

20 STAMPS wi'h one 2 o.'. hot- to STAMPS with one bottle of lie of A. Jt I: Ext i acts a 'J.V a , , ,,, auce at !-V a bott.o. he' tie.

pg'tThc Great Pacific Mm 727 Main Old Phone 53 W. AVENGED HER WRONG Nurse Shoots Physician and Gives as Her Reason, Unwritten Law. SUFFERS THE PENALTY. New York. June V While Dr. Martin Auspitz, a well known physician, was searching in the vestibule of No. 1?,1 One Hundred anil Thirty-fifth street last nigh! for the name of a supposed patient who had sent a call by telephone, he was shot down and instantly killed by Sarah Koten. a trained nurse, 22 years old. The trap had been carefully planned by the young woman, who had sent in the false call for the physician by telephone about 11 o'clock iu the morning, and had waited on the stoop of her home, diagonally across the street, from that hour until half past 7 o'clock last night for the doctor's appearance. The nurse was formerly employed hy the physician. The tragedy occurred just as a trolley car filled with passengers was passing the door. The light from the car illuminated the doorway, and practically every person on the car saw the tragedy, enacted as under the flash of a spot -light upon the stage, in the vestibule of the building. "Who did the shooting?" asked some one in the crowd. "1 shot the man. but he murdered himself," said the girl. "He has suffered the penalty of his crime." The woman's only excuse for her act is the unwritten law. She declares that Dr. Auspitz attacked her while she was in his employ, some five months ago. and ruined her life. She repeatedly declared that he had murdeiCkl himself by that act. CUTTLEFISH FARMS. Where the Queer Creatures Are Cultivated to Be Milked. Does any one know that cuttlefish are cultivated on farms to be milked? These cuttlefish farms are located on the coasts of Great Britain, and the cuttlefish are kept in tanks or pond" to be milked of their ink. The pond or tank Is connected with the sea by a pipe, and'a thousand or more cuttles are kept In a 6lngle one. They form a most curious sight as they move about, trailing their long arms and staring out of their bulging eyes. They are guarded by screens which prevent them from being scared, for If they are suddenly frightened they will squirt their milk into the water, and it would therefore be lost. This fluid or milk is very valuable, and a cuttle will yield about $2 worth a year. It is secreted in a bag which can be opened and closed at will, the cuttle ejecting the fluid to darken the water so that it may escape unseen when attacked. The best cuitlefish ere procured In China, where for some reason or other they produce the best quality of milk. When the farmer considers It opportune to milk the cuttles he proceeds bv opening the sluices of the pond and gently agitating the water. The cuttles then swim around the pond, and as soon as one paes through the sluice is closed. The cuttle passes down a small channel into a basin or metal receptacle, and as soon as It I" securely there the water is drained of!. It is then frightened and at once squirts the fluid from the bag. When it is exhausted it is lifted out, the milk is collected and the basin prepared for another. i. this concerns 70a, read carefnlij Dt. "aidwell'i feyrup Pepsin is positively fctiaranto cure indirection, constipation. ti k bead che. offensive breath, mataxta aaa -i Ci tease J uUiaz from itomacH trouble. a HI BaJ a""""!" ll

a i r .c 1 i incHinc

WEEK OF

Dean's Auditorium Stock Co. A Notable Event in Theatrical Circles IV1ISS MARIE MACEA A Charming Actress in the Leading Roles Matinees Wednesday and Saturday. Ladies free Monday night, as usual. Prices 10, 20 and 20c. Seat3 at Westcott pharmacy.

50 STAMPS with one lb. of Tea at 70c a lb.

45 STAMPS with one lb. of Tea at 6V a lb. 40 STAMPS with one !ivof Tea at ." Oo a lb. 10 STAMPS with one box Macaroni or Spaghetti at U'v a box. 10 STAMPS with one box Preakfasl Flakvs at l'V a K. Atlantic fjigf Tea Co.S Street jSj New Phone 1215 L REUNION OF THE GRAY Confederate Veterans Meet in Birmingham Tuesday. DECORATIONS ELABORATE. Birmingham. Ala . June v Birmingham is a mass of bunting and flags in honor of the Confederate veterans, whose annual leur.ion will !;- gin Tuesday and continue through Thursday. The general committee ha prepared for ".o.c.oo visitors. The extra trains becan to come in todav. The first of the prominent officials to arrive was den. Tyler, head of Forrest's cavalry corps. (Jen. Cabell. (Jen. Fvans. Commander Wright of the navy and others will be here tomorrow morning. The decorations are the most elaborate ever seen in Birmingham. Capitol Bark will be made a general rendezvous. Immense grand stands have been erected, from which officers will review the floral parade Wednesday and the veterans' parade Thursday. Amusements Repertoire at the Gennett. "Kife for Life" is the play with which the Auditorium Stock company will open its engagement at the Cenriett tonight, to continue throughout the week. There will be two matinees given -one on Wednesday and one on Saturday. The Auditorium company comes to Richmond with splendid indorsement as to the quality of it work and announces a list of standard plays, several of which have not been seen in Richmond, at icast not in recent months. Mis Macca, the leading lady, is said to not only be a splendid actrers. hut charming and attractive as well. She has the support of quite a company of veteran btuck players. THE WILD 13ALSAM APPLE. Ita Seed Haider Are. bnaceative of l.are I'uraen. In the brooks of autumn In certain places r.any little Iac!ike bags u:ay be seen drifting along with the current or stranded by the sharrel They are the Inner coats or bodies of th wild balsam apples f!b!nocystis lobatai which have dropped from the vines overhanging the stneain and now float lightly nm-ny with ttieir targe seeds. The green prickly bag of the balsam appie itsMflf began to foiaj in.Ute summer, and by autumn It has withered and faded to a pale straw color. We may sec the trailing vines with their shrunken pod decorating the rookside bushes far intu the winter. The outer coat of the pod gradually rots away, and the inner bag or seed carrier is now released and exposed as a delicate, wehby network of tonsil filers. A thia skin or membrane fill up the space between these meshes, but that also falls away through the action of water and the winter storma until oaJy the ball-like tissue of the "purse" is left. These lTTtle purses, being extremely light and buoyant, float far and wide over the submerged swamp lands in late autumn, carrying the s'-eds with teem and so planting the vine In new situations. If, however, we take these seeds home with us atid plant them there. Mother Earth w,il suitably reward u.-i In the followiC year with vines of our own. They will spring ujj and spread rapidly until all the stone walls and garden fencea are decorated with the tracery of their stems and Etar shaped letves. tit Nicholas. f" Mk mtm Q Ira Swishar Manager JUNE 8

- -

I '