Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 182, 15 August 1908 — Page 3

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 190S. PAGE THREE.

"KIA ORA ARDHA" FAREWELTMESSAGE In Maori Language New Zealand Bids the American Fleet Goodbye.

AN IMPOSING SPECTACLE. CONNECTICUT LEADING WAY, GREAT AMERICAN VESSELS LEAVE AUCKLAND WITH CITIZENS GIVING SENDOFF.

Helen, Mrs. Mort Edwards and daughter Esther, of Indianapolis attended the Clark reunion at Ballenger's park. Mr. and Mrs. Will Conroe gave an Ice cream party, Mrs. Carrie Jackson has gone to visit relatives at Anderson for a week. Rev. Dr. Singer Is still ill. He has been afflicted with rheumatism several weeks. M. C. Lamb has bought a lot in Economy and will erect a cottage on it this fall. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Ballenger are rejoicing over the arrival of a baby girl. Mrs. Minnie Weyl Is spending this week in Richmond. The Etude Club will meet with Miss Nellie Jones next Thursday afternoon. Miss Cora Maloney of Muncie will be the geust of Miss Blanch Fenlmoro next week.

Auckland, New Zealand, Aug. 15. The American Atlantic fleet departed for Sidney at 8:15 o'clock yesterday morning.

The weather was fine and large crowds were ashore and afloat to bid farewell to the Americans. Excursion craft loaded to the rails dotted the harbor. As anchors were hoisted and the flagship pointed her nose toward the mouth of the harbor, pandemonium reigned. Shore batteries belched forth parting salutes, which were answered by the American ships, and the whistles and sirens on the excursion flotilla resounded across the harbor and were re-echoed by the distant hills. The American ships were kept busy dipping their flags in answer to the salutations of the New Zealanders. The fleet steamed with precision of alignment out of the harbor and many of the excursion craft followed it far out to sea. The sight when the ships left their anchorage was a magnificent one, the flagship Connecticut turning and steaming between the lines of battle chips which turned In ofder and followed her to sea. Sir Joseph Ward, the premier, and a large number of officials were aboard a government steamer, and as each battleship passed, Sir Joseph led the rousing cheers for the Americans.

The battleship Kentucky, which was the last In line, responded lustily with cheers for New Zealand and the bands on both vessels played the

British and American national anth fms and "Auld Lang Syne." . Exchange Farewell Messages. Cordial farewell messages were ex

Changed between Rear Admiral Sperry, commander of the fleet and the New Zealand authorities. Sir Joseph

Ward, the premier,- voicing the senti

ments of the people of the dominion,

Bald:

"Your all too short visit to New

Zealand unquestionably has drawn the

peoples of the United States and this

dominion closer together."

The message concluded with the

following words in the Maori lan guage:

"ivia ora arona," which means

"Good luck and love."

Admiral Sperry, In reply said the reception accorded the battleship

fleet at Auckland had been hearty

and cordial beyond his expectations

and that It would unite in closer bonds the two white races whose interests

in the Pacific were Identical. The much heralded visit of the Am

erlcan vessels is now a thing of the , past and It is safe to say that the people of Auckland have enjoyed these

seven days with the American fleet

quite as much as have the visitors.

The battleships will go to Sydney,

N. S. W., where they are due August

20 and will remain for a week. The

distance from here to Sydney is a lit

tle under 1,300 miles.

You Can Have a Cool Kitchen. A soap that can be used without boiling is a great blessing to womankind. Its. use means the absence of those steamy, sudsy smells that makes wash day intolerable. Think of avoiding the roasting fires, and the big fuel

bills that go with them. All this comfort may be had by the users of Easy Task soap. Isn't It worth a trial? 5c

cake everywhere.

CAMBRIDGE CITY. IND.

FAMOUS HYMN WRITER DEAD Ira D. Sankey, Known the World Over, Passes Away In Brooklyn Home.

HIS SONGS ARE FAMOUS.

SUNG EVERYWHERE AND IN MOST EVERY LANGUAGE WAS LONG ASSISTANT TO DWIGHT L. MOODY.

MONSTER SNAKE CREATES TERROR -r - Farmers of Southern Indiana Fear "Big Jim."

Cambridge City, Ind., Aug. 15. Mrs.

Lillian Alexander has resigned her position as trimmer with the Paul Casket company.

Mrs. Charles Merrick and son

George, are visiting the formers brother, Frank Houts, at Mishawaka.

Mrs. Omar Huddleston returned to

her home in Muncie on Thursday eve

ning.

Mrs. Nellie Wood of Richmond, la

the guest of Mrs. Charles Marson.

Mrs. Humphrey, an aged lady, is se

riously ill at the home of Mrs. Stonebraker in East Cambridge.

Mrs. Wid Forkner of Lewisville, was

in the city yesterday.

Mrs. Mary Luddington who has been

spending several weeks with relatives

in this city has returned to her homo in Muncie.

Charles Knapp of Hagerstown made publishing the

New York, Aug. 15. Ira D. Sankey, known as an evangelist throughout the Christian world, died Thursday night at his home in Brooklyn, but the news of his passing did not become generally known until Friday. Mr. Sankey was 68 years old. For

the last five years he had been blind and had suffered from a complication of diseases brought on by overwork, but almost to the very last he worked at hymn writing. His tours throughout this country and Europe with Dwight L. Moody, the evangelist, brought him into wide prominence. Sankey it might be said wrote the gospel hymns of the world. In China, Egypt, India, Japan, in almost every language nown to man Sankey's hymns are sung. He received a large income from his publications and leaves considerable of an estate. Among Mr. Sankey's most familiar compositions are "The Ninety and Nine," and "When the Mists Have Rolled Away." His songs are said to have had a circulation of more than 50,000,000 copies. He was a rapid composer and wrote book after book of gospel hymns. During the last five or six years of his life he was interested in preparing and

story of the gospel

Sullivan, Ind., August 15. "Big Jim", the monster rattlesnake that for the last twenty-seven years has been the talk and terror of that part of Illinois lying Just across the Wabash river from Knox county, is thought to have crawled Into Indiana, and to be in the southwestern part of this county. He has not been seen in the haunts in the "snake rock" district in Illinois, for several weeks, and.

meanwhile, farmers in the southwest part of this and the northwest part of

Knox county are reporting, almost ev

ery day, tales of a monster rattler that is having its own sweet way in that

part of the country. Farmers of the neighborhood say

they have seen the snake several times, and an old-fashioned snake

hunt is being organij:ed for the first of

next week.

CURED HAY FEVER AND SUMMER

COLD

A. S. Nusbaum, Batesville, Indiana,

writes: "Last year I suffered for three

months with a summer cold so distressing that it interfered with my business. I had many of the symptoms of hay fever, and a doctor's prescription did not reach my case, and I took several medicines which seemed only to aggravate it. Fortunately I Insisted upon having Foley's Honey and Tar. It quickly cured me. My wife has since used Foley's Honey and Tar with the same success. A. G. Luken & Co.

1 1 nil 01 NIC! 2

i i ar a I n u a .1

n i inir

o

JUib

a business trip to this city on Thurs

day.

Turner Oliver who has been in poor'

health for some time has sold his plumbing outfit to James Revelee.

Invitations have been received by

members of the Huddleson family to attend a family reunion to be held at

Kenawa Falls, W. Va., September 9.

John Huddleson and others in this vi

cinity expect to be in attendance.

Miss Ida Westlake will take her va

cation next week. She will join a

party to Niagara Falls, and spend two weeks in sight seeing.

Rev. F. O. Beck, formerly a teacher

in the schools of this place, but now

pastor of a church in New Albany, is visiting friends in this vicinity. Rev. Beck is accompanied by his wife.

Mrs. Rhoda Coffin of Chicago, is the

guest of Mrs. Virginia Meredith at Norborough farm.

Mrs. Kate Welliver and son Charles,

of Oxford, O., are here the guests of the former's sister, Mrs. Amanda

Kimball. Mr. Welliver is a student at Hanover college, and Is at home for the summer vacation. A three days Spiritual camp meeting will be held at Jackson park the first week in September.

. this concert"? you, read eareruEn . vt. '.laweU'a byntp Pepsin 1. cosltUeiy fcuaran.j to cure indigestion, constipation, gle k headic. offensive breatb. malaria ana all tfiseasct Vint from stctrarh ronbie.f

hymns. At the same time he saved his wonderful voice for posterity by sing

ing into phonographs. The records were sent all over the world. Mr. Sankey lived in Brooklyn for twenty-seven years, and it was the-e that most of his songs were written He was a singer from boyhood, and his voice attracted attention in the hamlet of Edinburgh, Pa., where he was born August 2S, 1840. At the beginning of his active life Mr. Sankey was a Methodist, but for the last sev. en years he had been a Presbyterian. He is survived by a widow, Fannie V. Sankey, his two sons, I. Allen Sankey

and Edward Sankey, and two grand

children.

WHY JAMES LEE GOT WELL. Everybody in Zanesville, O., knows

Mrs. Mary Lee, of rural route 8. She

writes: "My husband, James Lee,

firmly believes he owes his life to the use of Dr. King's New Discovery. His lungs were so severely affected that consumption seemed Inevitable, when

a friend recommended New Discovery

We tried it, and its use has restored

him to perfect health." Dr. King's New Discovery is the King of throat and lung remedies. For coughs and colds it has no equal. The first dose gives relief. Try it! Sold under

guarantee at A. G. Luken & Co's drug

store. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle

free.

Kuiuhta uf Old. The knights of the days of chivalry were so well protected by the,ir armor that they were practically invincible to all ordinary weapons. Even when dismounted they could not be Injured, save by the nilsericorde, a thin dagger, which penetrated the chains of the armors. In more than one battle knights fallen from their horses could not be killed until their armor had been broken up with axes and hammers.

PRINTERS DO NOT ENDURE DEMOCRATS

Resolution Withdrawn Spirited Debate.

After

He Had Been Treated. Old Lady (compassionately) Poor fellow! I suppose your blindness is In. curable. Have you ever been treated) Blind Man (sighing) Yes, mum, but not often. 'Tain't many as likes to be seen goin' into a public house with a blind beggar. London Tit-Bits.

Lot. Love does not ask for perfections; it asks only for its own. You cannot pro pitiate it with gifts or satisfy It with all virtues if you cannot pay It back value for value in its own coin, and if this tribute be paid it will forgive every weakness. Woman's Life.

Boston, Mass., Aug. 15. A resolution that the International Typographical Union indorse the national Democratic platform and candidates, presented at the fifty-fourth annual convention of the union in this city, developed a keen and spirited debate. The resolution was finally withdrawn by request of the president who suggested that its withdrawal would be preferable to having it defeated, since a defeat would put the union on record as having "thrown down Bryan." The resolution was Introduced by Delegate Henry West of Birmingham, Ala. As Boon as it was placed before the convention a vigorous and determined argument started. One delegate declared that the union rules prevented the discussion of politics, but President Lynch ruled that the resolution could be discussed. An appeal was taken, but the chair was sustained. A declaration of political principles which contained no references to parties or candidates was adopted. A resolution that the International Typographical Union sever its connection

with the American Federation of Labor and the Canadian Trades and Labor Congress was warmly discussed and defeated. The convention may close today.

FOR SORE FEET. "I have found Bucklen'a Arnica Salve to be the proper thing to use for sore feet, as well as for healing burns, sores, cuts and all manner of abrasions," writes Mr. W. Stone, of East Poland, Maine. It is the proper thing too for piles. Try It! Sold under guarantee at A. G. Luken & Co's drug store. 25c.

HIGH LIVING CAUSE OF BANK CLERK'S FALL

A Rich Personality. We should make a rich personality our great aim instead of a fat pocketbook. If the aim is directed toward the pocketbook the bead will suffer, the heart will starve, and the life will deteriorate. Success Magazine.

Hla Carvlnar. "He carved out his own fortune." "Nonsense! He married it." "Well, he bad to cut out a lot of other fellows, didn't he?" Cleveland Leader.

LANE'S PILLS Are easy to take, and when your liver is overworked, or lazy, or isn't doing its duty properly, one at bedtime will fix you up. They HELP THE LIVER do its work and cure constipation, headache, biliousness, Jaundice, coated tongue, and all liver trouble. 25 Doses Cost Only 25 Cents. Hade by CHAS. E. LANE & CO.. 8t Louis. Me. for Sale in Richmond by J. A. CON KEY.

Pennsylvania Young Man Em

bezzles $7,500.

Wilkesbarre, Pa., Aug. 15. Norman Fogel, until recently a clerk in the First National bank of this city, was arrested today charged with embezzling $7,500. He was given a preliminary hearing and in default of $8,)00 bail was committed for a further hearing next Monday. Extravagant living is said to have led to the young man's down fall.

YOUNG WOMAN SHOOTS IN PLAY s " She Demands "Money or Life" And Fires.

Columbus. Ind., Aug. 15. "Tour money or your life," called out Misa Ethel Tucker, the pretty 20-year-old daughter of E. J. Tucker, a. well known merchant of Alert, to Herschel O. Herring, son of Albert Herring, and then she fired a 32-callber revolver, the bullet penetrating the right knee of the young man.

The party of young persons, who. were in front of the Tucker store, ran to the young man and carried him to the rear of the building, summoning physicians. The crowd was practicing target shooting and Miss Tucker was given, the revolver. She is an excellent shot but though that she had emptied the weapon, when she laughingly turned to Herring -and demanded his money or his life. He replied. "It's my life." and sho fired. Dr. T. J. Norton of Alert and Dr. A. P. Roope of this city failed to find the lead. Miss Tucker almost fainted after she saw what she had done and since the accident she has been under the care of a physician. Herring will re

cover. . ' . .

( The Word "Divan." The word "divan" means "councl of state" in Arabic and Turkish. BotL Milton and Pope use the. word In the sense of council In general. From meaning council the word came to mean council chamber and from that the arrangement of cushions round the chamber. A divan In this sense is strictly a row of cushions ranged along the walls of a room, either on the floor or on a raised step or on a bench; hence we speak of a sofa or couch as a divan and of a thickly cushioned chair as a divan chair. The same Idea is found In "cigar divan."

EXCELLENT HEALTH ADVICE. Mrs. M. M. Davison, of No. 379 Gifford Ave., San Jose. Cal., says: "The worth of Electric Bitters as a general family remedy, for headache, biliousness and torpor of the liver and bowels Is so pronounced that I am prompted to say a word In Its favor, for the benefit of those seeking relief from such afflictions. There is more health for the digestive organs In a bottle of Electric Bitters than In any other remedy I know of." Sold under guarantee at A. G. Luken & Co's drug store, 60c.

- GREENSFORK, IND.

Greensfork, Ind., Aug. 15. Mrs

Charles Bennett of Richmond is spending a few days with Mrs. Maraby

Bennett.

AiDeri a. uuncitie, wue and son

Francis left for Urbana, 111., Thrusday

to visit relatives for a short time

Hon. E. R. Roynolds of Hagerstown

was in town Wednesday calling on friends. John Clawson, Luther Murdock, Ed Gunckle, Dr. Kerr, Walter Gunckle fend Abner Bond attended the New Castle fair Thursday. Mrs. Richard Faucett Is seriously III. Mr. and Mrs. Borton of Iowa are fcuests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Roller. Miss Blanche Kerr has returned from a short visit with relatives In New Castle. John Roller is Improving his . property south of the railroad by a coat of paint. Mrs. Alice Pierce of Cincinnati is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Richard Faucett The Union picnic of the M. E. and Christian Sunday schools was held at Jackson's park Thursday. There were about 125 In attendance and a bountiful dinner was served to all.

William Abshire and wife are spending the week with relatives at Vermil

lion Grove, 111..

Mr. and Mrs. Oil Smith of Red Key re guests of William Nicholson and

family.

Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Gaylor spent

inursaay with relatives at New Castle.

Mr. and Mrs. Florence Blsh and son Ralph have returned from a week's

Tisit with relatives in Illinois. Miss Lucile Jones has rM.n

guest of relatives in New Castle this

week.

Miss. Minnie Chamberlain of Per..

terville Is visiting Mrs. Frank Boyd

ana Mrs. ixra stackhouse.

John Giffeth of Alliance. Ohio, is

pending a few days with Mr. and

Airs. Tom Gunckle.

the

, ECONOMY, IND. Economy, Iud.. Aujt. in. Miss urn.

linda Bowman returned to'jMuncie after a week's Tisit here and at Hagers

town.

Mrs. Harriet Clark and daughter

THESE PMTEOT 1

mmm

ST1

1EM

TFIMF.

To Palladium and See-Telegram Subscribers The Latest and Most Useful Household Invention The cutting edge on these shears is indestructible and will never wear dull. They will cut anything and everything, from wet tissue paper to a heavy horse blanket. Note the Patent Tension Spring. It does away with resharpening entirely. Eight inches In length.

Eight-Inch Patent Tension Spring Shears The Shears being distributed by the Palladium and Sun-Telegram are manufactured of the very highest grade steel, perfectly tempered and heavily nickel plated on a highly polished surface. The patent tension spring takes up all the wear on Jthe rivet so that the cutting edges will never wear dull. A simple turn of the little thumb screw will adjust the blades to cut anything from the thinnest and most delicate fabric to the heaviest material. Every woman who has had the exasperating and trying experience of attempting to cut with a dull pair of shears, will appreciate the value of this new invention.

THE ADJUSTABLE TIHSI0N Vl'.'l SPRING DOUBLES THE USEFULNESS I 111;)

81DE VIEW SHOWINO TENSION SFBlNa

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Name Rural Route No. Town