Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 139, 3 July 1908 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1908.
PAGETHJIEE.
ASSASSINATION OF . KING ISEXPLAINED pmartfng Under Insinuations, 0e Alpoim Tells of Plot To Slay Carlos.
BIG PRICE WAS PAID. "IRST PLANNED TO OBLITERATE ENTIRE REPUBLICAN FAMILY, BUT THIS ACTION WAS FINALLY DISAPPROVED. Lisbon, July 3. Dr. Jose Maria De iMpolm, Chief of Progressive Dissi dents, smarting updcr the insinuations that he was implicated in the assassi nations In Lisbon last February, of King Carlos and Crown Prince Luiz treated a sensation in the House of fcxrds, yesterday by revealing what he (declared to be the true history of the regicide plot. He asserted that the assassinations bad been decided upon at a meeting of the leaders of the Progressive and Re generator party, a few days before Ihey were carried out. A number of republicans also were present at the meeting. Dr. Alpoim charged further that the republicans proposed to obliterate the 'entire royal family, with the exception of Maria Pia, the mother of King CarJos, but that the monarchists insisted that such a general slaughter would useless. Finally Manuel Silva tBuissa and Alfredo Costa were given (20,000 and $10,Ox) respectively to 3ill King Carlos and Premier Franco. 'Arrangements were made by other tmen to cover the flight of the assassins, but when Buissa and Costa fired, fthelr friends lost their heads and fired also. These shots resulted in the death of Crown Prince Luiz. Look For Soap Quality. It's no bargain to buy a big chunk .f yellow soap for a few cents, if the tulle and weight are made with rosin find grease; that simply smears things but does not clean them. There is a good pure sort called Easy Task soap which only costs five cents a cake and .Is the greatest cleanser known. Consult your grocer. CLEVELAND WILL Document Has Been Filed ' Which Gives Wife Greater Part of Property. CHILDREN ARE CARED FOR. New York, July 3. The will of the Jate Grover Cleveland has been filed fwith the surrogate of Mercer county, frJew Jersey, and within ten days Mrs. Cleveland will come down from her another's home in Tamworth. N. II., when the will will be probated. The ex-president left a large estate, enough to keep his widow and children in comfortable circumstances. Practically all of the estate is left to Mrs. Cleveland, although the children and lothers have been provided for liberally. , Mr. Cleveland drew his own will, and, being a lawyer and a methodical man, carefully revised it until the Instrument conformed with his wishes. He then put it away In a safe place. The day after the funeral Mrs. Cleveland and Frank S. Hastings, executor of the ex-president's estate, took out ithe will and went over it together, ilt was then placed in the hands of tMrs. Cleveland's attorney, Bayard Stockton of Trenton, who filed it with tthe surrogate. . Among the things disclosed by the ' will Is that the ex-president was owner of the summer home In Tamworth Hvhlch has always been regarded as the property of Mrs. Cleveland's mother. DOCTOR, YOU LIED;" THENWMP FELL Pretty Illinois Girl Bad Physician. Ablngton, 111., July 3. "Dr. Bellwood pou lied about me. and you've got to (take it back," exclaimed Miss Frances Smith, daughter of a nickelodeon (proprietor, as she broke a buggy whip ton the doctor's head and beat him fwith its butt end till he escaped in a iclothing store. The affair is the outcome, it is alleged, of a visit the girl made to BeilAvood's office for medical treatment, Tuesday afternoon, when she alleges, Tie behaved improperly. $100 Reward, $100 .,The Jrrad,ers of this Paper will be pleased to learn that there la at least frne dreaded disease that science has leen able to cure In nl its stages and that Is Catarrh. Hall s Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now- known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being R constitutional disease, reouires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally. Idctinfr directly upon the .blood and murous surfaces of the system, therebv Destroying the foundation of th t8' M?.d iv!n th Patient strength hy building: up the constitution and assisting nature In doln its work Th proprietors have so much faith in it curative powers that thev offer Hundred bollars for any case tha? it Jails to cure. Send for list of testiknonials. ddress: F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. ! Sold by Drug-KistP. 7Sc. Take Hair Family pills for const!-
Emory's Mill Remnant
Begins Tuesday July 7, 8 a. m. Bigger and Better Than Ever Before Railroad Store Store closed Monday HALSTEAD IS DEAD One of Country's Best Known Journalists Dies at Home In Cincinnati. WAS A FAMOUS WRITER. Cincinnati. O.. July 3. Murat Halstead, one of the leaders in American journalism for more than half a century, and widely known as a vigorous editorial and magazine writer, died yesterday afternoon, in his seventyninth year. At his bedside were his wife, his son Robert and one daugnter, Mrs. Arthur Stem. Mr. Halstead had been failing in strength for several months and yesterday suffered from cerebral hemorrhage. Mr. and Mrs. Halstead celebrated their golden wedding anniversary a little more than a year ago, at which time Halstead's health was frail. Mr. Halstead was one of the great editors of the last half of the nineteenth century, and one of the strongest tributes to his inclslveness as a writer was in 1SS0, when his nomination by President Harrison to be American minister to Germany was rejected by the United States senate because of articles he had published charging corruption to some members of that body. He was a native of Butler county, Ohio, and after a short service on a literary weekly, he, in lSTtf, became connected with the Cincinnati Commercial, in vhich he secured a small interest a year later, becoming chief owner in 18V). Nearly twenty years later his paper was consolidated with the Gazette and he was editor in chief of the combined newspaper until ten years afterward when another consolidation was effected, new owners securing control. For a time he was editor of the Brooklyn Standard-Union, and during the last ten years he had figured largely as a magazine and newspaper writer, besides issuing a number of historical books. In the civil war Halstead reported many battles, being rated as a war correspondent of the first class, and later in the Franco-Prussian war and also in the Spanish-American war he added to his reputation. For fifty years he attended and reported all republican national conventions. $1,000 PILE CURE. A Thousand Dollar Guarantee goes with every bottle of Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid. George Cook, St. Thomas, Ont., writes: "I had Blind and Bleeding Piles, and suffered everything. Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid cured me perfectly." Hem-Roid removes the cause of Piles. $1.00. Leo H. Fihe, Richmond, Ind., or Dr. Leonhardt Co., Station B, Buffalo, N. Y SEVEN ABE CAPTURED Mexican Revolutionists Placed In Custody by U. S. Troops. THERE MAY BE MORE NOW. San Antonio, Texas, July 3. Seven alleged Mexican revolutionists have been captured by United States troops at Del Rio and the surrounding country, according to V. E. Weatherbee. "Four of the revolutionists were captured night before last by detachments of troops," said Mr. Weatherbee, "and three were taken later. They have all been placed in the County Jail at Del Rio. By this time it is not improbable that several more have been captured by the troops, of which there are about 200 now at Del Rio and along the river. "That some of the revolutionists hardly realize the imrairtance of the movement is shown by two of the seven persons who were captured by United States regulars. They were armed only with razors. One had a revolver, while I don't know if the others were armed or not." Short Tes; I believe some fortune tellers are on the level. Not long ago one agreed to tell me something about my future for a dollar. Long Well? Short I gave her the money, and she told me the time would come when I would wish I bad my dollar back.
FORAKER HEARS POLITICAL DEATH Senator From Ohio Is Slated For Defeat This Year It Is Said.
BURTON TO SUCCEED HIM. BURTON HAS BEEN A STAUNCH SUPPORTER OF TAFT AND STOOD BY ROOSEVELTIAN POLICIES IN CONGRESS. Washington, Juy 3. Senator Joseph Benson Foraker is to be opposed for re-election by the Taft organization in Ohio. Congressman Theodore E. Burton is to be put forward to make the fight against him. This is the report here. It is a de velopment of the Taft-Burton conference here last Tuesday. Burton has given up his proposed trip to Europe and will go to Hot Springs, Va for a month's rest. He will then return to Ohio and enter upon the work of capturing the Buckeye legislature and throwing Foraker into political oblivion. Several reasons are ascribed for this fresh outbreak against Foraker. Vorys' hostility, aroused during the heated first stages of the fight to swing Ohio to Taft, has never been removed. The indifference manifested by Foraker in the work of the convention after the delegates had been el ected is resented. On top of all this came Senator Foraker's announcement that he had made no truce with the Taft men in Ohio for re-election to the senate, be cause it was necessary first to prevent the election of a democratic legisla ture. This was interpreted to mean that the senator felt the Taft ticket might throw the state into the demo cratic column. Senator Foraker is no tyro in poli tics. He knew the effect of the position he was taking and must have invited the fight that is comina. Bur ton is ambitious. He is a warm friend of Taft and supported the Roosevelt policies in congress. TAYLOR THE Friends Want Him to Act as President of National Lincoln League. STATE MEETING THURSDAY Indianapolis, Ind., Julv 3. At the meeting of the district and countv managers of the Indiana Lincoln League of Republican Clubs, held at the Claypool Hotel, it was unanimous ly decided to present the name of Wil liam L. Taylor, of IndianaDolis. for national president of the organization when the national meeting is held at Cincinnati on Sept. 22. Edward E. Neal, president of the Indiana organization, presided at the meeting yesterday. There was a good attendance of county and district managers. During the meeting Senator Hemenway was a welcome visitor. Senator Hemenway helped organize the league. He came to the city yesterday to see "what was doing in Republican politics." As soon as the Lincoln leaguers heard he was here they wanted him. "Where's 'Jim' Hemenway," yelled one of the officers, "fetch him right away." Among others who addressed the league officers were James E. Watson, Charles W. Miller, J. Riley Broyles and Ed. V. Fitzpatrick. It was planned yesterday to begin looking after the "first voters" at once. This work will be taken up by the district managers. Specials for July 4th, 300 pounds Chocolate and Cream Bonbons, 15c pound. The Greek Candy Store. PLACEJIF MEETING National Educational Assoc'n Holds Next Session There. Cleveland, O., July 3. Denver was commended by the board of directors of the National Education association as the place for the next annual convention of the association. Formal action will not be taken until the next session of the board in December. Denver won over Atlantic City. Chicago and Seattle. With no general session of the association on the progran the delegates spent the day in departmental meetings, excursions and sight-seeing. II Constipation Poisons The Blood D Blackburn's 0 Prevent. Purify and Please Jl
MAN
DENVER
CHOSEN
AMERICAN MUST MA SPY Guatemalan Government Condemns Man.
San Francisco, July 3. Passengers who arrived from Southern ports on the steamer City of Sydney yesterday, tell of the arrest by officials of the Guatemalan Government of H. Barrington. said to be an American citizen, as a spy. The arrest was made at San Jose De Guatemala, when Barrington went ashore in that city from the City of Sydney. Barrington went to Central America from New York several months ago. The passengers expect to hear that he has been nut to death, as they claim mat the evidence against him was p!iin. he having papers in his possession when taken which proved beyond doubt that he was a spy from Salvador. The papers, they say, proved him also to be in a conspiracy against President Cabrera. A LAFAYETTE WOMAN HUNG. Marvelous Results of a Woman's Plea. An old lady called on the Root Juice Scientist over at Lafayette, Ind., and said: "I actually hung to the neck of my husband and pleaded with him to try Root Juice. So much was being said about the remarkable cures the remedy has made that I felt it might do him some good. He had suffered for years with his stomach and kidneys and severe headaches. Every change of the weather his back pained him very much, and of late years the lightest food would ferment in his stomach and bowels and the fermentation of gas would cause him to bloat so that he couldn't button his vest. He tried so many medicines that he lost heart, but I finally persuaded him to take Root Juice. He has used but a little over two bottles and I never saw such a change in a man in my life. He told me this morning that he would not take the best farm in the state for what the wonderful medicine has done for him." A number of local people have reported remarkable cures resulting from a short use of the great healthpromoting discovery. It gives a good appetite, creates good digestion and seems to heal and tone every organ of the body. Root Juice is $1 a bottle, or three bottles for $2.50, at A. G. Luken's drug store. HUNTING VIOLINS. rarlsio Was Found Dead Sarroaoted by Valuable Instruments. Violin makers now and again come upon pieces of wood of phenomenalresonance and beauty, and when they do we may be sure they give special care to the making and finishing of the Instrument formed of the wood. Stradivarius, at any rate, did. In 1T16 he had a piece of luck In this particular, and his luck went into an instrument with which he fell so much In love that he absolutely refused to sell it or allow it to be played upon by any hands but bis own. He kept it locked up, and when he died at the advanced age of ninety.-three he bequeathed it to his sons. By and by an enthusiastic collector named Salabue got on the scent of this instrument, and about the year 1760 he acquired itat what figure is not known from ohe of the great man's sons. Salabue cherished it until his death, about 1827, and then a strange character appears on the scene as purchaser. This was an eccentric old fellow named Luigi Tarisio, who, abandoning his trade as carpenter, had started collecting old violins and was now searching in every nook and corner of Italy for the treasures of Cremona. He could neither read nor write, this enthusiastic collector, but be could tell a valuable fiddle the moment he saw it, and he estimated the worth of the Salabue "Strad" so well that after he had acquired it he kept it to himself with all the loving care that its maker had already shown for it. Tarisio lived entirely alone in a wretched garret in Milan, and one day in the year 1S54 his neighbors found him lying dead among a confused heap of Cremonas. The old man had amassed a collection of some 230 instruments, the result of a thirty years' "liunt," and, although he had started life a penniless carpenter, he died worth about 12,000. Cor nh ill. Arrtle Mosquitoes. The presence of mosquitoes In myriads within the bare, uninhabited arctic circle Is surely in some degree a mystery. The mosquito is a bloodsucker, but in these unvisited plains he is for the most part, and of strict necessity, a vegetarian. A few birds excepted (and the birds are furnished with Impervious feathers), there is no local life whatever. The Lapp in summer drives his reindeer to the sea, and no native crosses the fjeld if he can help it. Yet in this region, "seemingly the most unsuitable for its effective working," the mosquito flourishes, "a primeval and enduring curse, inexplicably developed to its utmost." London Chronicle. Land of Surprises. New Zealand is not exactly contiguous to or a part of Australia, as many seem to imagine, there being a slight difference of some 1.700 miles between them. Things go by contraries in the "land of the kangaroo." The farther north you travel the hotter it is 123 degrees In the shade in Queensland. Lignum vitae, which sinks in other waters, floats in Australian waters. The Christmas dinner is eaten In Melbourne and Sydney when it is over 100 degrees in the ehade. Vhst Ton Do. Where you are is of no moment, but only what you are doing there. It is not the place that ennobles you, but you the place, and this is only by doing that which is noole. Home Notes. The Most Popalar Tree. Ryer Ever study forestry, De VoeT De Voe Yes, I'm working on my family Itm bow. Brooklyn Life.
Kosenbloom, Brain &
824 MAIN STREET Wi. 5 x&r--. v. SUICIDED FOR THREE Mississippi Youth in an Odd Way Ends Life for His Sweethearts. THE GIRLS DENY IT ALL Hazelhurst. Miss ., July 3. Unable to decide which of three women he really wanted to marry, Eli Hood, 17 years old, a boarder at the farmhouse of Eli Graves, eight miles from Hazelhurst, decided that the best way out of his difficulty was to commit suicide in such a way that each of the women would know that he had killed himself for her. For Miss Carrie Nelson, 18 years old, he swallowed 60 grains of morphine; for Mrs. Eva Spellman, 35. he drank four ounces of laudanum and for Miss Henrietta McDonald, 16. he put the muzzle of a shotgun in his mouth and pulled the trigger with his toe. Beside his dead body was found on a table a paper wrapper that contained the morphine. On it was scrawled "For Carrie." The empty laudanum bottle stood on a slip of paper on which was written "For Eva," and an empty envelope, on which a picture of a shotgun had been drawn, was inscribed "For Henrietta," On one occasion Hood complained of his inability to get married, and when Graves jokingly referred to his three sweethearts he shook his head sadly and said that was where his trouble was. "I can't make up my mind." he said. No one of the young women would admit that Hood had paid her special attention and none of them dreamed, each said, that Hood ever wanted to marry her, or any one else. "Don't worry,- said the financier reassuringly. -No matter how money matters go 111 stick to you." Later the lamb had occasion to remember this promise. It was kept, with the exception that the financier forgot that insignificant word "to." Cleveland Leader, , .
m (Of JULY
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There It no medicine to safe and at the itme time to pleasant to take as Dr. Caldwell 'a Syrup Pepsin, the positive rare fr all diseases arising from stomach tremble. The price is very rea onable 50c and tl. A Rapid Rhymer. In Illustration of the working powers of George R. Sima, ttoe dramatist and poet. It Is said that one night a new piece was produced at a leading theater in London. Sims sat It out and then returned to his office, where he wrote a column and a half of criticism in rhyme. It was near the time for the paper to go to press when he began, and the boy took the piece verse by verse from him to the composing room, the boy walking continuously from one to the other for an hour. Weak Heart Action There are certain nerves that control the action of the heart. When they become -weak, the heart action is impaired. Short breath, pain around heart, choking sensation, palpitation, fluttering, feeble or rapid pulse, and other distressing symptoms follow. Dr. Miles Heart Cure is a medicine especially adapted to the needs of these nerves and the muscular structure of the heart itself. It is a strengthening tonic that brings speedy relief. Try it. "To years I suffered with what I thought was.atomach trouble, when the doctors,. ,teld me I had hart trouble. I hail tried many remedies, when the Dr. Miles- almanac came into my hands, and I concluded to try Dr. Miles Heart Cure. I have taken three bottles, and now I am not suflertn at all. I am cured and this medtoine did It. I write this la the hope that rt win attract the attention of others. wfuxauffer as I did." ... ,M58' 5- BARRON. 804 Uala St.. Covington. Ky. Your druggist sells Dr. Miles' Heart Cure, and we authorize him to return fl? rst bottle (only) It fails to benefit you. Miles Medical on Efefearttlgd
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The Doctor's Motor Boggy 13.6 H. P. $525 Air-cooled, 2-cylinder. 30 miles on one gallon gasoline, 30 miles per hour. Saves time, saves money, always ready, never tires, never gets restless. Good 363 days In the year. Built for comfort, protection and strvice. Won first place in Chicago Motor Club's Hill-climbing Contest (see Chicago Tribune. May 18, 1908). We build 8 other models. Ask for catalogue 320. W. H. Kiblinger Co.. Auburn, Ind. H II i I I ? I I I I I I 1 I 11 1 I M H I Round Trip to r'lmr'iivTnTArrw iviaCCSLRR. Sunday, July 5 i X Leaves Richmond 5:15 am ? X Leaves So. Richmond 5:20 a. m. X Leaves Boston 5:33 am Leaves Cottage Grove 5:53 am " Leaves Bath 6:03 am ' l X Returning lv. Cincinnati 9:00pm f "13 hours In Cincy." x f- C. A. BLAIR. P. & T. A. " J Home Tel 2062. Richmond. '" f I i 1 I 1 I I I I 1 I U I M I I I I I 1 I iT aZ rhis concer? 70U. read earefaDrs Ifu Caldwell's bymp Peptia it cositiseir ftusraoeed to cure mdtgestioa. constipation, sirk beadicbe. offensive breath, malaria ajsa ail iVitsirt irlsiac froa stomach trouble.
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PALLADIUM WANT AOS. PATS
