Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 183, 16 August 1908 — Page 6
THE KICH3IOND FAIXADIUM AND SUN-TB1VEG-RAM, SUNDAY, AUGUST 16, 190S.
A Bride Objects to Supporting Husband at Cost of Honor. SHE SLAYS HER HUSBAND. New York, Aug. 15. Mrs. Rose Grazlano, aged 21, a pretty bride of six months shot and instantly killed her husband, Dominick, at their home at i No. 20 Adams street. Brooklyn today, after he bad demanded that she sup- ; port them both at the cost of her honor. Then, the girl, dazed at what she had done, rushed from the house, the i revolver in her hand and walked a half mile through the streets of Brooklyn to the Butler street court. From the story as the young woman told it to Detective Kerns, who hapuened to be in the court room and who took the revolver away from her, her husband last night threatened to ; beat her if she did not do his bidding. 'This morning he repeated his demand. When the girl returned the husband was dressed but was lying on the bed in a rear room. Once more he told ;ter what she must do. He declared that he would not work, that she could easily get money for both of them. ' The girl became infuriated and then she declares he struck her. She drew the revolver from her waist and shot him, and he fell back oik the bed dead. POSSE CHASING TRAIN ROBBERS Men Who Held Up N. P. Train May Be Caught. , Spokane, Wash., Aug. 15. A battle Is soon expected between the posse i and the Bix men who held up a Northern Pacific -westbound overland train, NVl, at Trent, ten miles east of here jla3t night. The posse is in hot purisnit TJie engineer and firemen were (forced to abandon their engine, and 'the robbers uncoupled the mail car t and ran the engine and came to within ; three miles 'of this city where it was ; abandoned. It is not known how much , booty the-robbers secured. It is supposedthe bandits are trying to reach ithe wooded country in the vicinity of Palouse. WRIGHT TO COMPETE F0R 50.G00 Aerial Navigator to Take Up Foreign Offer. , Paris, Aug. 13. Wilbur Wright announces his intention of competing I very, shortly for the prise of $50,000 ; offered by the Daily Mail to the aeroi naut who succeeds in flying in a ma- ' chine heavier than air from London ito Manchester in one day and wlthiout stopping more than three times ! to replenish his fuel tanks. BLOWS HIS NOSE; AN EYEJALLS 00T Man Sleeping in Yard Cuts Member on Beer Bottle. i Beaver Falls, Pa., Aug. 15. John Hofio of Koppel last night, owing to the extreme heat, slept on the ground In his back yard. He rolled over in , his steep and his face struck a broken i bottle. One eye was so cut that when jhe blew his nose the eye fell out on ihls cheek. A physician replaced it. OF SHEEP ED TO DEATH iFire Destroys East Buffalo Sheds. r Buffalo, N. Y. Aug. 15. Fire which ' broke out in the hay sheds at the East , Buffalo stock yards destroyed the .sheep pens and burned 1,100 head of sheep. The shay sheds containing ! 1,000 tons of hay were consumed. The iloss is estimated at $175,000. CITY STATISTICS. Deaths and Funerals. I LAUGEL The funeral of John Lau- ; gel will take place Monday morning at 9 o'clock from the St Andrew's church and the interment will be In the cemetery of the same. VINTER S The remains of Mary Vinters who died at the Eastern Indiana Insane Hospital at the age of 34 years, will be sent to Brook ville, the home of her parents, for burial Monday morning. The cause of her death was pulmonary tuberculosis. ROBBINS. The funeral of Mrs. Mary Robbins took place yesterday afternoon from the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. A. Maddox, 109 South Seventh street The Rev. Hobson of the United Brethren church officiated. The burial was in Eariham "cemetery. The pallbearers were John Faust, (WiUiam. Dye, William Draper, A. T, i Murray, William Genn and John Long-'man.
HOW
MURDERESS
HUNDREDS
Chief Wilkie Has His Troubles With Counterfeiters of Southwest
v Washington, D. C, Aug. 15. Cleverly raised currency is being circulated ir. Texas, Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi. This general warning was sent put today by Chief Wilkie ct the secret service. "National bank notes of the denomination of $5,"said Chief Wilkie, "have been raised to $20 and are being circulated freely. The work is the best seen in a quarter of a century. "The top layer of the figure 20 has been skillfully sliced from each corner of a note by the delicate use of a hollow ground razor and the severed portion has then . been pasted over the ALASKAN WHEAT 1 NOT GOOD QUALITY Wayne County Farmers Are Warned. Wayne county farmers should not be mislead it is now claimed by the glowing advertisements that have appeared in some sections of the county describing the excellrit qualities of the Egyptian, seven headed, or Alaskan wheat. The majority of the farmers in this section of the state purchase their seed wheat from the grain stores, or else from the near by farmers that have good wheat for sale. The new kind of wheat is a very big yielder but is not good for milling and other purposes. As a result of the tests made recently by the states its composition has been found to be high in starch and low in gluten, and is extremely poor in quality. Th federal department of agriculture has commenced to make war on the sellers of the product ana according to its reports, it is a gross imposition on the unsuspecting farmers of the country to recommend the growth of the grain. YOUR OWN FACE. 0 You Think You Would Recognize It on Another Person? "How 8( range it is." said the philosopher, "that the person for whom you care most on earth, the one you see oftenest and who receives your most constant attention is the one wh(ose countenance is least familiar to you." "Who is that?" asked the visitor. "Yourself," said the philosopher. "It Is a fact that if people could be duplicated and could meet themselves in the Btreet very few would recognize themselves. We look at ourselves many times during the 303 days of the year. We say our eyes are blue or whatever color they may be, our hair brown, our chin peaked, our forehead high. We know every lineament of onr face from constant study and attention, yet when we turn away from the mirror we cannot conjure up a picture of ourselves. We know just how our friends and even acquaintances look. In fancy we can see them sitting so or standing so and their varying expression under different circumstances is clear to us, even though we have not seen them for years. But when it comes to ourselves we cannot even fill in the outline of the picture. We may laugh, we may cry, we may frown, but we do not know how we look while 'we are doing it. Photographs do not help us. We have never seen ourselves in the flesh. Mirrors and pictures are poor aids when we sit down and try to see ourselves with the mind's eye. That is why people are so deeply interested in anybody who Is said to resemble them. Just say to a man, I know somebody who looks for all the world like you,' and he will never restamtil he sees that person. Then if the likeness is really true he will own that up to that time he had no conception of how he really looked." The visitor smiled wanly. "I wish you wouldn't talk like that," she said. "It makes me feel so uncanny. I am almost afraid of myself." WHEN FIRE BREAKS OUT. Keep Cool and Remember and Follow These Instructions. In case of fire, if the burning articles are at once splashed and sprayed with a solution of salt and nitrate of ammonia an incombustible coating is formed. This is a preparation which can be made at home at a trifling cost and should be kept on hand. Dissolve twenty pounds of common salt and ten pounds of nitrate of ammonia in seven gallons of water. Pour this into quart bottles of thin glass and fire grenades are at hand ready for use. These bottles must be tightly corked and sealed to prevent evaporation, and in case of fire they must be thrown near the flames, so as to break and liberate the gas contained. At least two dozen of these bottles should be ready for an emergency. In this connection It is well to remember that water on burning oil scatters the flames, but that flour will extinguish it. Salt thrown upon a fire if the chimney la burning will help to deaden the blare. If a fire once gets under headway and prompt exit becomes a necessity, a silk handkerchief dipped In water and wrapped about the mouth and nostrils will prevent suffocation from smoke; failing this, a piece of wet flannel will answer. Should smoke fill the room, recall your physics remember that smoke goes. first to the top of the room and last to the floor. Wrap a blanket or woolen garment about you, with the wet cloth over your face, drop on your hands end knees and crawl to the window. Bear in mind that there is no more danger in getting down from a three story window than from the first floor if you keep a firm hold of the rope or ladder. Do not slide, but go hand over hand. New York Tribune. Kodftl For Indigestion. Relieves sour stomach, palpitation of the heart. Digests what you eat
figure 5 on the bill of the lesser denominationan operation that had to be repeated eight times for each raising of a bill. The counterfeiters sucseeded in leaving the original figure 20 sufficiently unimpaired to allow the sliced bill to pass unchallenged. "Three bad bills were brought to the attention of Agent McAdams, in charge of the Birmingham district, and he has caused the arrest in New Orleans, of Frank Johnson, charged with passing them. In Vicksburg, of J. W. Young, similarly charged, and in Oakdale, La., of a man named Windsor, charged with making them.
BLACK BOMB OUTRAGE Terrorize the People in New York Tenement. New York, Aug 15. Hurling every occupant of the house out of their beds and wrecking the lower floor, a dynamite bomb was exploded early today in the hall way of a tenement at No. 136 Hamilton avenue by Black Hand agents. More than a thousand scantily clad Italians living in the house and adjoining tenements rushed to the street and for more than an hour great excitement prevailed. The bomb, the police declare, was intended for Leopold Paccelli, a wealthy grocer living on the first floor of the house who had refused to give $500 to the blacmailers. RATTLESNAKES' TEETH. if You Should Happen to Get Any, Handle Them With Care. The zoo keeper carefully unfolded a small paper packet, which looked as il It might contaiu a headache powder. "Want a rattlesnake's tooth?" he inquired. "Tooth?" "Well, call it a fang if you want to, but ain't there something in the good book about 'sharper than a serpent's tooth?' Look at this one and you'll think that the old fellow that wrote that must have known what he was talking about." He opened the paper and showed what seemed like a miniature born. It was shaped like a cow horn, which has only one curve. It was yellowish white, like a discolored tooth. It was about three-quarters of an inch long and a sixteenth of an inch in diameter at the base, where it seemed as if it had been broken off. The point was as sharp as a needlte Aa eighth of an inch back of the point, on the outer curve of the tooth, was an opening, the end of a sort of tube, which ran the whole length of the tooth. This little channel through the tooth seemed to be full of a dried substance, which the zoo keeper evidently regarded with proper suspicion, for he warned the recipient of the tooth to handle the same with care. He did not thini that one would get a true case of snake bite from one of these discarded teeth, but if the skin should be scratched of pierced v it a bad sore would probably result. According to him, the keepers at the zoo often pick up these loose teeth in the snake cages. They are apparently shed in the course of 'natural changes, something as the serpent sheds his skin. They are not merely the snake'i baby teeth, for he sheds them more than once. Washington Post. The Gaetio Language. The old Gaelic language was6poKen by all the branches of the great Celtic race, for, while a dialect of the Celtic language, it was so like the other Celtic dialects that no Celt would find difficulty in speaking it Specifically, it was the speech of the Manxmen, Welsh, Scotch highlanders. Cornishmen, Bretons and many of the Irish. It is still spoken in some parts of Ireland. Wales, the highlands and the Isle of Man. New York American. A Mere Pittance. Mrs. Nurich I told Widow Downes to send her boy to you and you'd give him a position. Mr. Nurich Well, I didn't give him no position. He camo with a note from her, an' she said in the note, "I must find employment for my boy, even if he works for a mere pittance." The nerve of her caliln' me 'a mere pittance!" Philadelphia Press. A Dry Joke. "Will you take something to drink?" "With pleasure." The photo was taken, and the sitter said: "But what about that Utile invitation r "Oh, sir, that is Just a trade ruse of mine to gire a natural and-interested expression to the face." Tit-Bits. In th Wrong Shop. Mrs. Newljwed I want to buy a steak. Lumberman Hickory, oak oi ash? Mrs. Xewlywed Porterhouse Lumberman You'll find that in tb butcher shop. This is a lumber yard. Judge. Frugality is a fair fortune and habio itf industry a good estate. Franklin. ECHO OF GUN NESS CASE. Laporte, Ind., August 15. Coroner Mack today received the report of the expert who made the examination of the fluids used by undertaker Cutler In preparing the bodies of Mrs. Gunness and her children for burial. The expert whose name Coroner Mack refuses to disclose, says the embalming fluid contained no poison, thus clearly establishing the theory that the poison found in the bodies of the victims was administered before death.
ISTER'S AFFECTION ALIENATED EASILY
Probably He Looks at Money Of Rich Widow. Spring City, Penn., Aug. 15. A pathetic domestic story was sprung upon the public but the filing at Westchester of a $30,000 suit for the alleged alienation of a minister's effections. The plaintiff is Martha, the wife of Rev. Maurice Samson, pastor of the First Reformed Church of this place, and she sues wealthy Mrs. Mary E. Keeley, the sixty-two-year-old widow of O. B. Keeley, the well-known stove manufacturer. Mrs. Samson alleges that the widow has alienated the affections of her husband, not for Mrs. Keeley's own particular benefit, since there is a great disparity between her age and that of the young pastor, but for two wealthy nieces, and because, as the resentful wife avers, her husband dotes on riches, and has often berated her for not bringing to him any dowry when they were wedded without knowing one another very well in July, 1897. The couple have one child, Edna, aged 10. WOMEN WERE SCARCE. A Fominino Fc Caused a Furor In California's Early Days. There were few women in the California mining camps in the old days, and the advent of an emigrant wagon with a woman in it caused a furore, as is proved by the following incident from the reminiscences of former Senator William M. Stewart: "Women were so scarce in California at that time that this was sufficient to arouse the whole camp. The 'boys,' as wa were called, were scattered along the coyote diggings for a distance of about four miles, and when anything unusual happened the words, Oh, Joe!' would be passed along the whole line. When I saw the feminine raiment I raised the usual alarm, 'Oh, Joe!' and this called the attention of the miners on Buckeye hills, where I was, to the clothesline which had attracted my notice. They gathered around on the hill, nearly surrounding the covered wagon and its contents. The rush of the boys in the immediate vicinity to see the wonderful sight attracted those farther away, and in less than ten mltf-1 utes two or three thousand yonng men; were anxionsly watching the wagon, j clothesline and fascinating lingerie. In alarm the man that belonged to the woman inside stuck his head out of a tmnll tpiif beside th wacnn I ns-
sured him that no harm was intended, I wireB n pole this morning he accibut that we were very anxious to see ' dentally took hold of the arc wire w!th the lady who was the owner of the its i-300 voltage. His hand was firmly clothes. This aroused her curiosity j fastened, while the blue flames comsufficiently to induce her to pull the , menced to dart off his coat sleeves, curtain of the tent aside so that bet) Unconsciously he fell backward, face could be discovered, but not fully ; when his heel caught in an Iron step seen. J on the pole and his knee in the other "I then proposed that we make a do- and, he bung head downward with his nation to the first lady that had hon- clothes aflame.
ored our camp with a visit I took from my camp a buckskin bag, used for the purpose of carrying gold, and invited the boys to contribute. They came forward with great eagerness i and poured out of their sacks gold dust amounting to between $2,000 and $3,000. I then proposed to appoint a committee to wait on the lady and present it. The motion was unanimously carried, and one of the gentlegested myself as chairman. I took the j sack of gold and went within about! thirtv feet of the tent and made as good a speech as I could to induce the lnrlv tn remt tint nsanrtnir hir that all the men about her were gentlemen. ,!- th.r v.h .n nr. in fnr an
many months and that the presence ! murder of his father, George Vail, of one reminded them of their mothers Sr- 61 years of age, who disappeared and sweethearts at home. I told her i suddenly on June lo, 1007, has conthat the bag of gold was hers on con- j fessed to having committed the crime, dition that she would come out and j According to the confession of claim it. Her husband urged her to the young man he threw be brave, but when she finally ven-, the body into a hollow near his home tured out about halfway the cheers and burned it, some of the bones
were so vociferous that she was scared and ran back. "She repeated this performance several times, and I kept moving slowly back far enough to get her away from the little tent so the boys could have a good view-of her. I suppose half an hour was occupied with her running back and forth while the boys looked on in admiration, when I finally gave her the bag, Vith ail the good wishes of the camp. She grabbed it and ran into the tent like a rabbit The next morning the wagon, oxen, man and owner of the inspiring apparel were gone, and we never heard of them in after life." Where the Funds Went. As an Instance of the happy go lucky character of the early darky the following extract from the Albany (N. Y.) city records may prove interesting: "In 1826 the trustees of the African Baptist church applied to the common council for 'permission to circulate a public subscription paper to aid of the funds of the church. It was moved to lay the petition on the table, pending Investigation, for the reason that the principal part of the funds secured by a previous subscription for the African chnrch had been used by the trustees in treating themselves to hot suppers.' " Presidential Succession. During the first session of the Forty-ninth congress (1SS5-7) the presidential succession was fixed as follows: In case of the death or removal of both president and vice president ths secretary of state shall act as president until the disability of the president , be removed or a president is elected. If there be no secretary of state, the secretary of the treasury shall act as president And the succession passes in like manner to the secretary of war, the attorney general, the secretary of the navy and the secretary of the interior, in the order here given. Scsas: For Pater" ppet!e trv baking powder mede ec govs aisaai rtovx. m.bi.
Special Aiiiiii0)MiiiCinni(2initt
some 7th VICTORIOUS AUTOIST HAS ARRIVED HOME Schuster, Winner of New YorkParis Race, Arrives. New York, Aug. 15. Frederick Schuster, driver of the Thomas flyer that made the trip from New York to Paris, beating all competitors, returned today to New York on board the French line steamship Lorraine. He was accompanied by George Miller. i the mechanic, and George Adams, the publicity agent of the trip. The ! Thomas car was also brought back, j There was a big crowd of enthusiastic j automobilists at the pier to welcome ! the intrepid driver and preparations I for a public reception have been made. AWFUL EXPERIENCE OF PHONE LINEMAN QrajS a 1 200 Volt Wire and ' LOOrCS Death in FaCC Allentown, Pa., Aug. 15.-Wbile Lewis Turtell, lineman was inspecting the Fortunately help was soon at hand and he was lowered to the ground. CONFESSES TO KILLING FATHER TOOK BOCJy and BUHied It D c . DOneS rOUllU Lam. Batavia, O., Aug. lo.-George Vail Jr., 20 years old, charged with the being found later. The finding of the bones led to the arrest and confession. GIVE CHILDREN CHANCE TO PLAY This Will Be Ultimate Object of Play Ground Congress. New York, Aug. 15. More than 1,000 leading educators, sociologists, high school training experts and physicians and a large number of mayors of cities and municipal representatives of health departments will gather here from September 8 to 12 for the second play-ground congress. The subjects of all the meetings and the objects of the excursions and entertainments will be to gain for the children of the United States more chance to play. FLIRTY GIRLS PLACED IN JAIL Gay Misses at Atlantic City Had Object in Actions.Atlantic City, N. J.. Aug. 13. The girls arrested Saturday night for flirting on the boardwalk were sent by Recorder James Hayes to jail, as they were unable to pay their fin. The police charge, that the girls were seeking to rob young sports. Why do policemen ride en street cars for nothing? Because you can't get a nickel out of a copper. Philadelphia Ledger.
We have la stock a fall line ol Men's Fall and Winter Tans In SFOES and OXFORDS . In all newest ' hadts and patterns. Also a complete line ol Ladies' rVvTon,a Tan v Shoes and Auto Boots We can show you almost anything yon v want In blacks. See our windows lor
ol them. and Main. VICIOUS ATTACK MADE ON ITALIAN BY A COUNTRYMAN (Continued From Page One.) of his type. He is about 5 feet 6 inches tall, swarthy, of medium build and wore when he fled from the camp a black soft hat. All Police In Search. All the policemen on duty were notied to assist in the search for Polo. rUnless he succeeded in leaving the city on a train before the police were notified, it is believed most likely he would seek concealment among his friends in other camps. The proximity of the railroad yards to the wild lands above the city is in Polo's favor. By seeking concealment among the underbrush and weeds that cover acres of ground in the bottom lands north of the Thistlethwaite falls ,the
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Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Railroad Co. Eastbound Chicago-Cincinnati
i s t ai STATIONS Except Sunday DaI,y DaIly . f T I Lv Chicago 8 5am t.SOpm fe.26am Ar Pern 12.40pm 1.55am 22.40pm ' Lt Pern 12.50pm 2.05am 6.00am 4a0pm ! Lr Marion 1.41pm 2.59am 7.05am aVaSpm : Lt Muncie . 2.41pm 2.57am 8.10am S.46pm X-r Richmond 4.05pm 6.15am t,25am. ff.OSpm ! L.v Cottage Grove 4.45pm 6.52am 8.4Spm i LAr Cincinnati 6.35pm 7.30am l.TJpm j
WestboundCincinnati Chicago
1 4 STATIONS Except Dally Lr Cincinnati 8.40am 2.00pm Lt Cottage Grove 19.15am 10.40pm Lt Richmond 10.55am 11.15pm Lt Muncie 12.17pm 32.45am Lt Marion 1.19pm 1.44am Ar Pern .......................... 2.15pm ' 235am Lt Pern 2.25pm 2.45am Ar Chicago (12th St Station).... 6.40pm 7.00am
Through Vestibuled Trains between Chicago and Cincinnati over oar own rails. Double daily service. Through Sleepers on trains No. 3. and 4 Between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeper, between Muncie, Marlon, Peru and Chicago, handled In trains Nos. 5 and, 6, between V uncle ant Pern, thence trains Nos. 2 and 4. between Pern and Chicago. For train connections and other information caU
a A. BLAIR.
Some Telephone 2052.
The Shoe Corner. man has a chance to elude pursuers until driven into the open by the pangs of hunger. If he boarded a north bound train he mould be sure of escape for the present as the police had no way to thwart his efforts. Orders were given to search all trains, as well as camps and bunk houses. It Polo boarded a train north of the city near his camp there would be no way to intercept him. In the opinion of Dr. Krneger th wounds were Inflicted wfth a stiletto or similar instrument. The examination by the physician revealed the fol lowing wounds: Stab in left shoulder, stab in small of back, slash on left side through flesh to bone, slash' across left groin penetrating bowel and indicating the weapon was twist ed after penetration. There Is believed to be little chance for the -man to re cover from the wound In the groin. "No." said never fcacw a story well. the tlreeotae man. I 'woman who coaldjtell Most. wemen, as. a sgcn-' eral rule, appreciate that facf and dont try""Yes," interrupted the bored one, "and most of the men appreciate It too." Catholic Standard and Time. ft ifiaVBsslsM 30 South 10th St, Richmond, Ind. Home Tel. 2K2 Dally 8.44am 10.13 am lftS&am 12.X7pm tlfa 2.15pm 4.50pm 9.:0em 6.20pm 8.00pm .00pm7 10.00pm P. & T. A. Richmond. :
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