Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 115, 9 June 1908 — Page 2
1JAGE TWO.
THE KICH3IOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JUNE 9. 1008.
"LIST SAO RITES" NOW IN ORDER
Richmond Amusement Company Gives Up Ghost and I. 0. League Is No More. AN INDEPENDENT TEAM. PLAN INAUGURATED THIS MORNING, BACKED BY BUSINESS MEN TO PLAY SUNDAY BALL PLAYERS LEAVE. By Tort. The Richmond lias-' ball club disbanded In..t evening. This action was after ;i meeting of tin- directors of tk1! ichtnoiiil Amusement company, held last, evening. With t lit- disbandmenf of the local learn the I. O. le;t!ine is a t hint? of the jia.-t. The other throe clubs, Mur.cio, Iltmtinuion and Van Vort, O., were willing to rontimio in the ram''. The Mniu-i:' team h;n just been rcor.ira nied and appeared to bo a p.'iyins j rr i.-i i ryi i but tlic ) Inntinc1on iind Y:ui Yrt clubs were not self a pport lii.i".. tlowcvir tbo sporisnien bucking these clubs 't( ready to produce I ho neros.-" a : v I'im'ls t' maintain Their tfaiiiF, just fur t'e- satisfaction of seeing good base li'ill The directors of the Richmond Am-u-fnnid c(,-nipaiiv stale thar they deidod to disband th" team because it w;is not receiving the support of The Hirhmnnil fans. It is understood that flic club is nearly $ 1 ,oo in arrears. Over half of this indebtedness is money due the players on back salaries. The last pay day the members r f the Richmond club had was May l.. The players were to have receiv--1 their salaries in full on June 1 hut t elub treasury on that date was 1 ''.en. What niHiev the plavers have re.''ved the past three weeks Ifs come li'o.stjv. i'mni the generous purse1 of the playing nianamr. ('larence Jesfuip. Ye.Oerdav a few ymins business nicii of this city made an effort to secure iho control of the tepni and of Athletic park. However, when it was learned the indebtedness it would lie reeessary for them to assume, it was decided to let the proposition alone. The cause of the failure- of tin1 fans to support the local e!rb is a disputed fl'.iestion. Since the onenitm of the reason the week days crowds, even en Saturdays, have averaged only about 100. On Sundays there1 have inner been more than one thousand in attendance. I .art Saturday there were about sixty five ecople at the same. Last Sunday there were f.0 n;tid admissions. With this attendance ami the payroll aver;i':iii(; about SOOO per Tnenth. it can be seen "hat base ball in Richmond lias, been a poor proposition this season. !i is unit.1 probable that the majority of the local phivers will catch on vi;h tst league clubs elsewhere, as every member of the Richmond team i.-, an cxcvil.T.t ball player. Loyal fans r:aet lesin, the team as they agree it was the best one that ever wore Richmond uniforms.. EASE BALL ON SUNDAY. Irc'ependent Team to bo Backed by Business Men. This morning Clarence Jessup, manager of the defunct local 1. O. league team, interested ten business men in a plan to ersani.e a local independent team which will play Sunday games in this city. Kach of these men have guaranteed to pay the back salaries of the Richmond league players, and in return the stockholders of the Richmond Amusement company have turned over to them the lease on Athletic park. Manager .lessup will at once organize a fast independent team but it is improbable that any of the members of the Richmond league team will be included in this outfit. It is stared that at the meeting held by the directors of the Richmond Amusement company last evening it was decided not to pay the players the salaries due them. Manager .lessnp then threatened to bring legal proceedings. U was finally decided to turn over the lease on Athletic park j to a new company providing that com-! pany would assume tbo indebtedness of the Richmond Amusement company to the players on its payroll. The Richmond players will migrate to different points as soon as they secure the money due them. Rrown will leave this afternoon to join the Marion Ohio State league team. Parker will join the Fairmount, AY. Y;i. league team. Shinn will go to the Danville team of the Pastern Illinois league, Cameron. Hurst. Pierce. Ratlin an and probably Arestnith will probably join the- Charlotte team of the North Carolina league, which team is managed by Reynolds, the former pitcher on the Entro Nous team. Mason belongs to the Kewanee team of the Eastern Illinois club and he will probably catch on with that outfit. Fleming has not yet decided where he will po. One trial will convince you that, the atuuiiuvi i.if.,11 is uie nest mat o i cents will buy. So Different. "Women all have the same fault. They cau't pass a shop that has bonnets In the -window -without looking in." "So different from men! They can't pass a shop that has bottles in the window -without going in." Illustrated Bits. Be-ware of worrying about little tilings. It is the malady of happy people. It Is more heroic to live on one's grief thaa todia of J.U
WHO WILL WIN?
NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won Los Pet. China so 2 1 ', .634 Cincinnati 2 17 ,T Pittsburg 23 is .50 1 New York 22 20 ."21 Philadelphia. 1ft 1ft .500 IJo.sT.on 1ft 'S .4"2 Sr. Louis lf 2s .401 Ilruokhn 15 27 .357 AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet. Chicago 2:5 20 .53 St. Louis 24 21 .5;;:; Cleveland 24 21 .533 New York 22 20 .:,2t "Philadelphia 2:: 21 .52:; Detroit 22 22 .5ni Host on 21 2f. .117 Washington is 2; .10fi AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won Lost Pet. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.
Indianapolis 20 Is .02.", I Louisville 31 20 .fiOs J Toledo 27 1ft .3S7 I Columbus 2") m -510 (Milwaukee 23 .4S'i .Minneapolis 21 22 .177 j Kansas City 22 20 .l.'S st. Paul li ::t; .234
CENTRAL LEAGUE. Won. Lj st. Pet. . c. c 7 .011 .OH.", ..".Oil .300 .417 .37 .204
Oranrt Rapids 1 South Rend -2 11 Dayton 1 " Kvansvilie L'O vji Zano.sville Ifl Pi. Wayne 1 21 Terre Haute It 23 Wheeling 10 1' t
RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. Cincinnati 2: Brooklyn, 2. New York, 1: St. Louis. 0. Pittsburtr. a: Philadelphia. 0. Chicago, a; f'os;on. l1. American League. St. Louis, 10; Philadelphia. 0. Chicago. 2; Washington, 1. New York, ": Cleveland. 1. American Association. Toledo, a; Kansas City, 0. Columbus. 10; Milwaukee, a. Centrnl League. South Rend. 1; Ft. Wayne, 0. Wheeling. I': Terre Haute, s. Dayton, 2; Craml Rapids. 1. Zanesville, I; Kvansvilie, 2. We don't try to deceive by fancy ads or mysterious name. Simply Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. made millions stronp, healthy and happy, where other remedies failed. You'l! not regret trying it. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. A. (1. Lukon & Co. Mrs. S. .Joyce. Claremont, N. II., writes: "About a year hro I bought twt) bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy. It cured me of a severe case of kidney trouble of several years' standing. It certainly is a grand, good medicine, and I heartily recommend it." A. C. Lukon & Co. COINS IS ANGRY Says That American Federation Did Not Attack Integrity of Courts. HE GOES TO CHICAGO. Washington, June ft. Indignantly denying that the Federation of Labor has attacked the integrity of the courts, state or national, President Ciompors, of that organization, declares that the Federation will wage a fight in Chicago on The memorial of New Yorkers asking for the insertion of a plank in the platform of the Republican party, affirming confidence in the integrity, and justice of the courts and insisting on the preservation of their independence and full constitutional prerogatives. The executive council of the Federation will hold its regular meeting in Chicago during the time the convention is being held. President. Gompers will leave here Thursday. He declares that most, of the signers of the resolution of protest were attorneys, or other representatives of great corporations. He says that in Chicago "we will assert our rights, with the hope that the great gathering of Republicans will not be insensible to them." "I believe in the courts." lie added, "organized labor does. We have not attacked their integrity, but that the right, of injunction has been abused, no one can deny." Arnold mid Uis t treat.. Matthew Arnold used to travel in company with Mrs. Arnold, his two daughters and the aont. whom he elegantly called his "impresario." They usually had railway passes given to them, and on several occasions, when presenting these to the conductor, he remarked in a condescending tone, "Oh. the Arnold troop. I suppose!" "Just as if we were a traveling circus." said Mr. Arnold, with a hearty laugh. The Rest Return. After ah. it isn't the way we live or the work we uo that matters, but the ideal we put into it. Is there any work too sordid, too prosaic, to yield a return of beauty'---Ellen Glasgow. ofhlnst to Steal. Minister's Wife-Wake up! There are burglars in the honse, John. MinisterWell, what of it? Let them find out their mistake themselves. Christian Register. Pon't spak too plainly. If a man were to set out by calling everything by its richt name, he would be knocked down before he tot to the corner of the street. Exchange. i, this concerns yea. -eaa e-arerui'v. lit 'aiCwoli's byrnp Pepsin J posfti.ely tcarart :.M to core ind?cftion. constipation, sk k beaUlie. offensive breath, malaria aaa aii tiseaso .U'ieioff from stoaacb troubio.
BREWERS
DISCUSS
BUS! N ESS FUIl)REiwhen the Yeiiw Mstai was I First Found In Australia.
Hundreds of Members of National Association in Milwaukee Today. -ICONDOLENCES ARE SENT. PROHIBITION PARTY IN STATE! CONVENTION SENDS MESSAGE1 STATING BREWER'S BUSINESS IS DOOMED. ! Milwaukee, Wis.. Juno 9. This morning at 1 o'clock the most important, meet ing e er held by the United States Rrewers' association opened in the public service building. How vividly its importance is recognized by the brewers themselves is shown by the attendance. Hundreds of members and associate members art- in Milwaukee. During the convention interesting suit ement s will be niiuie by Jurisr'.lohn A. Caldwell, of The Cincinnati Juvenile court, and O. J. Rentier, a probation officer of that city, lioth of whom will tell of the system in their city, in which the brewers arc greatly interested. If a family is found to be suf ferinii as a result, of drunkenness on The part of the husband and father, the brewers take the matter up at. once, and noijfy the saloons that no more money is to be taken from the man who has neglected his family. The saloons either must cease selling To such men or they must themselves get out of the saloon business, and the influence of the brewers compels obedience to the orders or a retirement from business. Condition in Kentucky. Frank Fehr, a leading brewer of Louisville, who is attending the convention talked freely on conditions in his stale. "The Prohibition movement in Kentucky has aroused a strong counter movement, against, fanaticism." said Mr. Fehr. "The business men and the leaders of both political parties have wakened to the fact that, if left to take its course without opposition, the prohibition movement will, bring ruin to the commercial and indiistrial intere.-.ts in the state, and involve all property and financial Interests in the t rash." President Julius Liebmann of New York, in the course of an interview today said: "The most, important question before the convention of the United States Brewers' association- Ts not prohibition but the. local option laws. These laws will niake it- necessary for the brewers, in self-protection, to get into politics." Clean Up the Saloons. National Secretary Hugh F. Fox, of the association, says Hiat the greatest undertaking which the brewers will have to confront in fighting t lie prohibition wave will be to clean up the disreputable saloons. There is, no use arguing the question of the brewers' responsibility for the things which exist, he added. For the first, time in the, history of the association it will conduct a public, mass meeting this afternoon. Addresses will also be made, by L. J. Giddings. of Guthrie. Okla., and Henry Fink, of Milwaukee. MESSAGE TO BREWERS. Condolences Was Fir6t Act of Minnej sota Prohibition Convention. i I Minneapolis, Minn.. June !. One of the first acts of the Minnesota Prohii bition convention, which assembled I here was to send this message to the National Convention of Brewers in j session at Milwaukee: i "The prohibition state con vent ion of j Minnesota, now in session, sends con- ! dolenees to your association. Your ' business is doomed, as your outposts j are now carrifcd, and the prohibition. J army is about to move gairtst your i main body. The church and rex-let y ! has now declared, ami The state will soon say 'The saloon must go." Signed "E. E. LOR EC K, Chairman." Uoderstudies For Monarchs. In a land of distrust iike Russia it is only natural that the precautions taken should be of the most drastic order; hence the use of a royal understudy who has always been a conspicuous iiffure at that court. Indeed, it was the understudy of the late Czar Alexander III. a man named Koruaroff who was murdered in Moscow some years ago, when the murderer thought he had covered himself with g'ory by assassinatiug the czar. Nicholas, like bis father before him, has an understudy, and the many state functions he attended at the opening of his reign, when the relations with his people were less strained than they are t day, were attended for the most part by prosy. No monarch, however, ma le such frequent use of his understudy as the late Emperor William of Germany. Every day as the clock struct; 1- the emperor came out and bowel on the .palace balcony. It was not until some time after the emperor's demise that the secret was male known that the man who appeared daily on the balcony was the royal understudy. And the person who gave the secret away was the great Bismarck. London Black and White. The Kentucky coffee tree was so named because the Kentucky pioneers used its seed as a substitute for coffee. Its leaf is formed like that of the honey locust, but much larger, and its fruit is a pod containing seeds whieli are surrounded by a layer of sweet pulp. Bacon Is he addicted to the drug habit? Hetaoi My. yes! Why. he even gets his postage stamps at the drug stores: Xonkexs Statesman
A GREAT GOLD SCARE
AFRAID OF THE CONVICTS. The English Government Tried to and Did For a Time Suppress the News Because It Feared a General Uprising In the Colony of Criminals. Gold in Australia was discoveredone might almost be pardoned for saying first discovered many times. Rut the news of the earliest discoveries v as jealously kept from spreading. The secret of this reticence lay in the presence of the army of convicts which then composed the balance of the population. Had a gold panic broken out it was feared that a general uprising of the prisoners would take place. Nevertheless the first gold found la Australia was by convicts. In 1S14. near Bathurst, New South Wales. The discoverers gathered together a quantity quite sutiieient to lead them to believe that they had found a gold mine, but when they reported what they considered their good fortune to the keeper lie, instead of undertaking to recommend them fur pardon or easing their hanl labors in any way, threatened to give them nil a sound flogging If they ventured again to say a word nbout t he matter or to spend any more time picking up gold. The next find was made ou the Fish river In 1S2;, not far from the spot where the convicts had come across it nine years before. This news, being reported to the authorities, was also ordered suppressed. Within the course of the next two years finds were so frequent that the London government began to take great interest in the affair. But the fact that another region of the yellow metal might be at the disposal of such as might seel; was kept rigidly secret until in 1S2 a dramatic incident precluded all possibility of further secrecy. A convict was discovered with a nugget of gold In bis possession. When asked how he had come by the metal, he said that he had picked it up in the bush. He was cautioned and told that the. authorities had no doubt that he had stolen the gold, but the prisoner stoutly held to his original tale. At length he was taken out and severely flogged in public as a thief. There is now no doubt that the man told the truth. After this, although the public was every now and then keyed up to great, expectations by some reported find, no further veins were discovered until 1S39. when a Russian nobleman found a rich deposit in the Blue mountains. The British government again became fearful of the consequence of such news upon a colony of convicts and ordered the matter suppressed. Yet sufficient people had heard of it to keep the story alive and give credence to such rumors as arose from time to time. So matters drifted on. ' Time and time again bushmeu, shepherds, convicts and surveyors picked up small nuggets ami brought them to the centers of population, but at that day people were nothing like so keen on gold mining as they subsequently became, and the subject of gold in Australia was not pursued as one would expect it to be. The discovery of gold in California changed all that. Those rich fields, panning out their golden store and filling the coffers of lucky individuals and governments at a rate never dreamed of, awakened a thirst for prospecting all the world over. In every part of the earth men went out with pick and pan, hoping to come across the precious metal. When the news of California's fortune reached Australia, many took ship to America's shores, and among these was Hammond Ilargreaves, an Englishman, native of Gosport, who bad emigrated to New- South Wales In as;;2. In Australia he engaged in farming without much profit and was among the first to rush for California. Ou reaching the auriferous region the first thing that struck him was the similarity of the geological formation in California and Bathurst, Australia, and there and then he made up his mind to Inquire into the subject should he ever return to Australia. He worked for something like a couple of years in California and then set sail for New South Wales. Returning, he of course carried in his mind the thought that perhaps there might be gold in Bathurst, and when he landed he set to work to make a thorough search. Before this, however, he had made the acquaintance of William and James Toms and J. II. o. Lister, who were anxious to prospect for gold. Ilargreaves tra tight them how to use pick and pan. the dish and the cradle in fact, gave them a practical if rough education into the mysteries of gold and gold bearing rocks and gravel. These men struck our. and in April, the three pupils returned to their old master, and. lo, in their pockets they carried gold to the amount of four ounces'. Ilargreaves. knowing the ropes, took this gold and full directL.rts to the proper quarter. The news went forth, the rush began, rich finds were made, and Ilargreaves was hailed as the discoverer of gold in Australia. In reality he had won the title, for it was his knowledge that first educated the Tomses and Lister, and It was his knowledge again that sent them in the right direction. Puty is what goes most against the grain, because in doing that we do only what we are strictly obliged to and are seldom much praised for it. La Bruyere. CASE CONTINUED. Attorneys for the plaintiff in the case of William Watts vs. the Terre Haute. Indiana; oils & Eastern Traction Comj I.lil.e ;0 1I1S . . i lioili Hiilii'Oown tuts rti'iiT.ins prepared to try the case. John F. Rohhir.s is the counsel for the defendant and owir.e to his condition as the result of his accident nt Winchester. Friday, the case was continued. The Kniglifstown parties had not been notified. T A BTTH A ' Uold iledil Flour leads them ail. tI.iiTXE.
CHURCH TOWERS.
They Are a Distinctive Feature of the Mexican View. There is no country better worth visiting than Mexico. It is very striking ia crossing the border from the United States to note how completely everything changes. Here there hardly seems anything man has constructed which harmonizes with its surroundings; tLore everything seems to be entirely a part of the country. It is more foreign than Europe is now and constantly reminds one of the east. Riding ia some of the little traveled districts. I could hardly believe that I was not in India. The dust iu the road, the thoin scrub on both sides, with that pungent smell of the blossoms, all reminded me of the country about Ahmedabad. The plateau ia winter, the dry season, is very much like the desert long stretches of country, with purple mountains ia the distance, without a tree iu sight except where there is a town or where irrigation has kept a little green and a few trees have been planted. Often the horir.on is so di-tant that the mountains melt into the sky, and perhaps one catches a glimpse of the snowon one of the volcanoes. The color is that of its own Mexican opal greens, blues and reds. Everywhere the distinctive features are the church towers and tiled domes rising above the towns. The exteriors of these churches are always picturesque and inteiestins. but the interiors are usually disappoint inc:, for they have suffered much during many revolutions and perhaps even more from senseless renovations. There are A few still untouched, where one can see them as nearly all were once, entirely covered with richly carved wood heavily jrililed. Oold was used thickly everywhere till the carving looked like solid metal. I have seen much gold in churches, but noue to equal that in Mexico. Lock wood de Forest iu Century. NO ALTERNATIVE. The Jury Had to Teach the Pompous Judge a Lesson. A certain trial judge in a certain state became so unpopular that the only way he could get a verdict for the state was to make his charge in favor of the prisoner. When matters had reached this stage a famous feud fighter was arrested ou a charge of murder and brought to trial. The case, which was the judge's first murder trial, attracted much attention, and the judge, whose unpopularity arose from his vanity and pomposity, greatly enjoyed his role as umpire of the law. The case was a clear one against the defendant, and his guilt was so conclusively proved that the judge even presumed to charge accordingly. The Jury retired, and when they filed back into court It was noticed that they avoided the prisoner's eye and looked unusually solemn. "Gentlemen," said the Judge, waving the clerk into silence, "have you reached a verdict?" "We have," said the foreman. The Judge opened a paper bag and drew- out a black cap. With an im- j portant look around the courtroom he placed this on his head and pulled it ! down until it met his ears. ! "Prisoner," he said, "arise and look at the jury. Jury, arise and look at the prisoner. Gentlemen, what is your verdict?" The jurymen, who had been whispering to each other, nodded cheerfully at the prisoner. "Not guilty," said the foreman. "Of course," he said later, when every one had shaken the innocent man's hand, "he was guilty all right, and that was going to be our verdict, but when the little Judge put that black cap on his head and pulled it down over his ears like that there was only one thing for us to do, and we did it." New York Sun. Graveyard Neighbors. The agent for a cemetery company j was expatiating on the good points of a certain lot. Presently the prospective purchaser interrupted with the enumeration of several prominent families owning property there. "Is this lot near theirs?" she asked. The agent admitted that it was quite a distance off. "Then." said the woman, "I don't want it. I'd rather pay more and get in a good neighborhood." The agent collapsed. "Has it come to the point," he said, "where people consider their next door neighbors even in a graveyard?" NewYork Sun. Business Sense. i In new- lines of goods is where the ! profits lie. The old standbys that ev- j ery dealer keeps have the prices all cut i to pieces on them. Get the new things ' ahead of the other fellows and make money on them. Frequent change of the arrangement of your show cases . gives the effect of new goods received. ; The same oid arrangement month in : and month out, no matter how many new g'"ods, looks like the same old stock. Printers' Ink. Persuasive. "Tour wife is somewhat strong minded, isn't she. Little john':" "Strong minded'.' A furniture polish peddler came here yesterday and in five minutes she sold him some polish she had made herself." London Telegraph. An Easy Way. One of the easiest and most effective ways of escaping the hardships of prison abuses is found in the simple old process of keeping out of prison. Chicago Record-IIerald. Honor the tree that gives yon shelter. Danish. The Twilight Of tire. The muscles of the storrjach in old aee are not -s street or active as in youth and in cone- i -;uence old people are very subiect to constipa- i -a and indigestion. Many seldom have a ' c wei movement without artificial aid. Many I No. havo unpleasant eructations of ?as from e stomach after eating. A!l this can be avoid- i -J by the use of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep in 1 ...ch permanently reg-ulates the bowels so that s ;:asaes come naturally, and so strengthens : tr e stomach that food is digested without disyomiort, Drusrists seU it at 50 cents or 1 a lirze botne. Fl"ra3AsiA : You .an't fail w-th Gold Medal Flour. Nob a.
PALLADIUM WAjMT ADS. PAY
traw
Our StrawsThey're always the same in quality and the same in price
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Curled Brim
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The Brahman. Iieligiou plnys a very important part in Indian village life, but it is in the holidays and the rites connected with them that religion asserts itself most conspicuously. It is then that the Rrahman comes to the front. The I'.rabmans are the priests, the "bhusurs" (lords of the earthi. They take the lead in all rural life absolutely and completely. In towns their ascendency may be disputed, but in the Mofussil they still reign supreme. In fact, in some of the more primitive and out of the way villages the Hrahmans are actually objects of worship. Nothing can go on without them, neither births, marriages, deaths nor feasts, and as a natural consequence there are many feasts. Empire Review. The Parson (us he foozles) It-r-r-r-r! The Caddie Might as well po ahead and say it, boss. I'm a mind reader. Louisville Herald. Home Tel. 2062
Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Railroad Co Eastbound Chicago Cincinnati
1 3 8 31 STATIONS Except Dally Dally Suirtlay Sur.day , Lv Chicago I S 35cm 9 30pm j 5arr Ar Peru 12.40; m 1 r.Um 12 40pm Lv Peru 12 G0pm 2.(Cam e.G-iara ! 4 0pra Lv Marlon 1.44pm 2..":am 7.0'am ' 5.37pm Lv Muncle 2.41pm S.STam 8.10am j 6.40pra Lv Richmond 4.05pm 5.15am .S5am S Oopta Lv Cottage Grova 4.45pm &.53im 8 45pm Ar Cincinnati 6.35pm 7.30am lu.25pra WestboundCincinnati Chicago 2 4 6 I 32 STATIONS Except , Dally Dally Sunday .Sunday j Lt Cincinnati 8 40mm 9.00pm j 40an Lv Cottage Grove 10.15am 10.40pm j 10.15am Lv Richmond 10.55am 11.15pm ."0pm ! 10 5ara Lv Muncle '. 12.17pm 12.45am h 00pm ' 12 17pm Lv Marion 1.13pm 1.44am 9.00pm ! 1.19pm Ar Peru 2.15pm 2.3'am 10.00pm i 2.15pm Lv Peru 2.25pm 2.45am ! 4 50pm Ar Chicago (12th St. Station) 6.4Crpm 7.00am &.20pm
Through Vestibuld Trains between Chicago and Cincinnati ovr our own rails. Double dairy service. Thrtwgh Sleepers on trains Nog. 3 and 4 "between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeper between Muncle, Marion, Peru and Chicago, handled in trains N03. 5 and 6, between il uncle and Peru, thence trains Nos. 3 and 4, between Peru and Chicago. For train connections and other information call
C. A. BLAIR, Home Telephone 2062.
Mat
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and up College Sfyles High crown, narrow. Hat brim, a smart style tor young men. Three-color bands, red, white, blue,
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'-.t.-M :- " thp v" riV An Emergency Measure. The principal of oae of the largest and best known girls' beardlug schools in the country was a spieDdid woman, but one whose discipline was not always appreciated by thote directly under Its sway as often baprieos. Being called out of the city unexpectedly one time Just before time fcr the weekly evening prayer service, her absence left those neit in authority unprepared to take her place. Hut the assistant principal thought of a brilliant way out of the difficulty, and, rising, she frravely announced. "Since Miss has un expectedly been called away I think, under the circumstances, it will be most advisable to hold a praise service of eong." Lipplneott's Magazine. There Is no medicine se ;fe arM at the ime time bo pleasant to take as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, the positive core fir all diseases arittcg from stomach trouble. The price ia very rea .nable 50c and SI. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY Home Tel. 2052 P. & T. A, Richmond, lad.
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