Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 365, 7 November 1908 — Page 8

' PAGE EIGHT.

THE K1CHMOND PALLADIUM AAi oo iumu oATL'ACuAY, . li.Mi5I.Ii V,

BELIEVES OBIEIIT WILL BE CHANGED

Miss Ruth Paxon Believes Regeneration Cannot Be Hindered. AN INTERESTING APPEAL IN 8PEECH BEFORE Y. W. C A. CONVENTION, TRAVELING SECRETARY 8AY8 NOW IS TIME TO CHRISTIANIZE FAR EA8T. Program for tonight and Sunday: 7:30 Song service. Scripture and prayer. Address Professor Elbert Russell, Earlham college. Sunday. 9:10 Bible Hour, "More than Prophet." Miss Cutler. 4:00 Vesper service for delegates Miss Paxson. ( 7:80 Organ recital Miss Constance Fosler. Scripture and Prayer Dr. Lyons. Address "Circling the Globe" Mrs. Verling Helm, Greencastle, Ind. 8:30 Farewell Service Miss Melcher. "The Opportunity of the Hour in the East," was the subject of a very interesting address given last evening before the state convention of the Young Woman's Christian association at the Reld Memorial church by Miss Ruth Paxon, traveling secretary of the volunteer movement. Miss Paxon in her address gave her own experiences and pointed that now was the time for the Christian missionaries of this country to flock to China, Japan, Korea and India and teach the people the religion of Jesus Christ. She told of many experiences that she encountered in the Orient and of how the people of the countries are casting aside their old faiths, beliefs and superstitions because of the knowledge of Western civilization being communicated to them. In a very pointed manner Miss Paxson stated that this was an opportunity that was not to be lost by the civilized countries. The address by Miss Paxson was undoubtedly one of the best that has been given before any of the association meetings. In part the speaker said: "In the nineteenth century this great universe was a neighborhood but in the twentieth century it has become a great brotherhood by the feeling that was caused among the European nations when the little country of Bulgaria announced its independence. "Again this spirit of brotherhood was shown in the San Francisco disaster, when the city was wrecked by an earthquake. China sent supplies to thai place fts well as many of the other foJeign countries, besides the cities In our own lend. "Do people realize that we have only been able to. aa.y this in the last four or five years. It -Jies in the hands of Christ and the church to bring the nations still closer togtvher, and this movement is full of optimistic significance. "There are three things hat have come about that makes it possible for the people of this country to go to the Orient to teach the works of Jesus Christ First, the marvelous chanres that have taken place In the Orieiit. With the learning of the Western countries the people become restless and want a political change in the government. This can be pointed out-by the way Japan ' has dealt with the question. The people in the country have political liberty and a constitutional government Even China the conservative nation, has taken steps by which the people will in the time to come hare a constitutional government Few people realize the remarkable changes that have been wrought Railroads and telegraph and many other western inventions have been adopted. Korea has 9,000 miles of railroad and China 4,000. In Pekin they have ten dally newspapers and one of the dailies is edited by women. All these changes have come about during the last five or ten years. The educational changes are also very marked. Fifty years ago there were no schools and now in Japan they have the complete school system from the kindergarten up to the college. s"The Japanese peril is the lack of religion. "In Korea and China the gates have been opened by the educational systems. Let's go out and teach them that It was Jesus- who died for them, and when they learn this, they can not keep It to themselves, but will tell their neighbors and as a result this teaching will spread rapidly. "Second, there Is the spirit of nationalism and materialism In which. -after being taught the western learnlng7tbey become imbued with the . spirit1 oXvindependeuce Just like the "The third reason Is the many! achievements that have been accomplished. V ' ' "The missionaries are proclaiming that now is the time to ivade the country with the word of God, Now is the time, and we should take advantage of it. I sincerely believe that during my own time that the little country - of Korea will become a Christian nation, and If the right steps are taken there other countries will accept this rellon now, as they are prepared for it" Indiana Y. W. C. A. Work. The "History of the Association Work In Indiana," which was discussed by Mrs. Belle Mansfield, of DePauw University, was the feature of this morning's program. Mrs. Man field

SPIRIT LETTER CREATES EUROPEAN SENSA TION

4

A remarkable series of spirit-photographs taken .under the supervision of Archdeacon Colley, Rector of Stocktom, Rugby, England, has created a sensation in spiritualistic circles, abroad. v Picture shows a fac-simile of a spirit letter to the Archdeacon.

state which was In 18S3, and in a very Interesting way pointed out the growth of the work in Indiana up to the present day, showing that now it is a flourishing condition. To prove this she pointed to the new building at Indianapolis that will soon be completed, and the building at South Bend. She also paid especial attention to the convention that was held at Earlham College in 1889, at which greetings were received from several other state asoclatlons that were in session. She stated that this is the first time in the history of the work that the work in Indiana had become of real importance. , Previous to the address given by Mrs. Mansfield, Miss Louise Porter, of Earlham College, read a very interesting paper on "The College Girl on Furlough," which was very much enjoyed by the large number of delegates present. Charcoal Removes Stomach Poisons Pure Charcoal Will Absorb One Hundred Times Its Volume In Poisonous Gases. Charcoal was made famous by the old monks of Spain, who cured all manner of stomach, liver, blood and bowel troubles by thi3 simple remedy. One little nervous Frenchman held forth its virtues before a famous convention of European physicians and surgeons. Secheyron was his name. He was odd, quaint and very determined. His brothers in. medicine laughed at his claims. Thereupon he swallowed two grains of strychnine, enough to kill three men, and ate some charcoal. The doctors thought him mad, but he did not even have to go to bed. The charcoal killed the effects of the strychnine and Secheyron was famous. Ever since that day phy sicians have used it. Run impurel water through charcoal and you have a pure delicious drink. Fad breath, gastritis, bowel gases. torpid liver, impure blood, etc., give way before the action of charcoal. It lis really a wonderful adjunct to nature and is a most inexhaustible storehouse of health to the man or woman who suffers from gases or impurities of any kind. Stuart's Charcoal Lozenges are made of pure willow charcoal, sweetened to a palatable state with honey. Two or three of them cure an ordinary case of bad breath. They should be used after every meal, especially if one's breath is prone to be impure. These little lozenges have nothing to do with medicine. - They are ' just sweet, fresh' willow, burned to a nicety ( for charcoal ' making and . fragrant j honey, the product or the Dee. Thus every ingredient comes to man from the lap of nature. The only secret lies in the Stuart process of compressing these simple substances into a hard tablet or lozenge, so that age, evaporation or decay may not assail their curative qualities. ' . You may take as many of them as you wish and the more you take the quicker will you remove the effects of bad breath and impurities arising from a decayed or decaying meal. They assist digestion, purify the blood and help the intestines and bowels throw off all waste matter. Go to your druggist at once and buy a package of Stuart's Charcoal ! Lozenges, price 25 cents. You will soon be told by your friends. that your, breath is not so bad as it was. Send us your name and address and we will send you a trial package by mail free.. Address F. A. Stuart Co., 200 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich. LITTLE SMOKE NO CLINKER

Burns to a white ash and holds fire over night Positively the hest coal ever offered in Richmond for the money, and sold on a positive guarantee, and will irrall cases do as represented . - - - UPDATED) COA YARDg CO.

CITY OFFICE, 922 MAIN STREET

THE CITY IN BRIEF

Guns for rent Waking & Co. 7-7t Possum supper Grace church Tues-i day evening. ,7&9 This week, donation of can goods, fruits, vegetables, staples and Money thankfully received at Margaret Smith Home. 31-7t Possum supper Grace church Tues day evening. 7&9 The Masterpiece. "We have read your manuscript" said the publisher, "and are convinced that you have written a masterpiece. It will make your fame secure." "Ah," replied the gratified author, "I am glad to bear you say so. I hope your judgment may be verified. And will you bring it out immediately?" "No. That would be a fatal mistake. Nobody would ever take the trouble to discover its merits. Your labor would be wasted. Go out and do something to draw public attention to yourself. Leave your wife and run away with an affinity, get arrested as an anarchist crank or try to cross the Atlantic ocean in a barrel anything to make everybody talk about you. We will have the book ready, so that it may be put on the market at the psychological moment Good day, sir. I hope we may begin to hear Jfrom you soon." Chicago Record-Herald. BKCKT: Gold Medal Flour for me. Lib bib. PRAYERS OFFERED FOR WELL WOMAN. . DUCHESS D'AOSTA. ? Extraordinary series of, rumors has reached England of the .serious ill health of the Duchess. So much credence was attached to them and so serious was the Duchess's ', condition said to be, that prayers were offered up ' for her r recovery .r in ' several French churches, fit is now learned that all these reports were ' without foundation. ' . '

j I1tsJ!,v ( aJ

OHIO MAN VOTES FOR 16 PRESIDENTS.

Eldorado, O., Nov. 7. T. R. Potterf, one of the oldest citizens of Preble county, Tuesday, voted his sixteenth time for president of the United States. Mr. Potterf is yet quite active for a man of his years. CHANGE OF VENUE TAKEN IN CASE Judge Fox Hears Attorneys Are Dissatisfied. A change of vanue has been taken from Judge Fox of the Wayne circuit court, in the case involving exceptions to the admin Lstartor's report in the settlement of the estate of Nye. Judge Fox stated from the bench today, he understood there was some dissatisfaction on the part of attorneys and for this reason be will ask' Judge Macey of the Randolph circuit court to hear the case. LEGAL WORD SPECIALISTS. Have to Knew Exact Shade of Mean ing In Words end Phrases. "Some people seem to think that an Important legal document can be drawn up by a lawyer in the time it takes his client to smoke a cigar," remarked a gray haired law clerk the other day. "It takes time and the most scrupulous care to get things just rigfi. If lawyers were not careful the Lord only knows where the clients would land. "Why, I know a man In one of the great law offices who is a specialist In the exact shade of meaning of each word or phrase nsed In a legal document Nothing goes out of that office without being submitted first to him to pass upon. Sometimes he will give a week to the study of but one short but very important paper, theorizing as to the possibilities of its meaning being construed this way and that When he gets through with a document however, and has submitted every word of it to the acid test there is practically no chance of its not being exactly right as to its verbiage at least In some cases, too, It Is deemed desirable by clients to becloud the meaning of a contract so that there is a loophole for its being construed in another way In the event of certain contingencies occurring. That is where the services of an expert word juggler are Indispensable. "The biggest case that I ever heard of In this line was when one of the great corporations wished to issue some mortgage bonds against its property. A long contract had to be drawn, and the wording on the back of the bond bad to be decided upon. Th matter was so important that after the attorneys themselves had decided on the forms to be used, it was turned over to two of these experts in verbiage. 1 "They looked up the dictionary meaning of practically every word used In the two documents and made Innumerable changes and suggestions. Before the papers were finished thirty different drafts of each of the two documents bad been made, and there was not a word used in the final form of the papers that bad not been considered carefully, not only as to its individual meaning, but also as to its individual relation to the other words of the phrase or sentence containing It It is safe to say that these two documents are never likely to be assailed successfully in a court of law and that they mean exactly what the corporation and 4 its counsel wished them to mean." New York Press. . ABOVE THE LAW. Courts Hivt No Jurisdiction Over Foreign Ambassador. The chief of an embassy Is an august being and one who boasts some remarkable privileges. It may be mentioned to begin with that In the land In which he Is officiating an ambassador ranks Immediately after the princes of the blood royal. The ground on which an embassy stands Is in theory as well as in practice the territory of the nation to which Its principal occupant belongs. Even if a criminal were harbored In an embassy the police could not enter the premises without permission. An ambassador is above the law of the country to which he Is accredited. The courts have no jurisdiction over him, and, strangely enough, his subordinates and even his domestic servants are also inviolate. The humblest employee in the embassy If he committed a punishable offense could not be arrested without the consent of his master, nor can an embassy official be Imprisoned for debt Ambassadors are to be envied most of all perhaps for their freedom from the burden of taxation. They disburse not one penny In taxes, either directly or Indirectly, and, as for the custom house. It is nonexistent so far as they are concerned. No duty whatever la charged in respect of wines, cigars, cigarettes, etc., that are consigned to them. Again, their excellencies need not bother about taxes unless they please. That they do so is purely an act of grace on their part They are not legally exempt from ' these tantalizing demands on the purse, but If they declined to meet them there would be no means of enforcing payment Cassell's Journal. -

MARYLAND AND OLD MISSOURI FOB TAFT

Both States Make Flop, But Bryan Gets Six Maryland Electors. THE HOUSE IS REPUBLICAN. PARTY IN POWER MAKES GAIN OF TWENTY-ONE CONGRESSMEN THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY, LATE RETURNS SHOW. Missouri For Taft 18 Maryland For Taft 2 Maryland For Bryan 6 Taft's electoral vote 326 Baltimore, Md., Nov. 7. Maryland on the official count completed last night gives Taft a plurality of 613, yet elects six Bryan electors out of the eight. The total vote cast in the state was: Taft, 116,523; Bryan. 115,910. These figures represent the votes of the electors receiving the most votes. They lead thelf respective tickets. Missouri for Taft, St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 6. Supplementary returns " failed to disturb materially Taft's lead of 4,233 votes in Missouri. The state legislature seems fixed at a democratic majority of six on joint baljot, although this is subject to change. What doubt now exists relates mostly to the minor state offices and the constitutional amendments proposed for adoption. Definite figures are lacking on these matters and it is impossible to predict the results. Ohio Returns Still Incomplete. Cincinnati, O., Nov. 7. Complete returns from 73 of the 88 counties in Ohio give Taft 401,688. Bryan 35)0,412. Harris, republican, for governor, receives 410,878. while Harmon, democrat, has 431.181. Partial figures have been received ft-rtTYft tlia nthur fVMinHoe Hut tifOTfluno 1 of their incompleteness they are not included in these totals. Republicans Gain Two Seats. Washington, D. C, Nov. 7. The returns from congressional districts throughout the country resulted in a republican gain of twenty-one, as. compared with figures. Albert Douglas, republican, was contrary to previous advices, elected in the Eleventh Ohio district, and Moses P. Kinkaid, republican, who was reported as defeated in the Sixth Nebraska district, also was returned as elected. The contest in the Fifth Nebraska district is extremely close and it will require the official count to determine the result. According to the reports already received, the next house will consist of 173 democrats and 218 republicans. i THE "DOCTOR." An Important Functionary on Marchant Vessels Is the Cook. There is one functionary on merchant vessels of all kinds who has very much more to do with the "peace and dignity" of the floating commonwealth than shore folks usually Imagine. I refer to the cook, who Is sometimes called the "doctor." Why he is given this cognomen Is not altogether plain, for his handiwork seldom has any therapeutic value and in the past, at least, has had much to do with sending poor sailormen to a doctor, if not to Davy Jones' locker. In fact, there was a time In nautical history when the presiding genius of the galley was In such bad repute that to call a man a "son of a sea cook" was a most opprobrious epithet and one that would be emphatically resented. In those days (and to some extent today) the cook was covertly despised by the occupants both of the forecastle and the cabin, though the men "forrard" outwardly professed affection for him and apparently were never so happy as when they could wash his clothes or do him various other favors, with the hope of getting sundry "leavIn's" from the cabin table or being granted such privileges as "hanging out" in the galley when rough weather at night made the watch on deck grateful for such shelter. In other ways it was found highly salutary to keep in good graces of his culinary majesty, who frequently -was a nrnre powerful person In some respects than the "old man" himself. It Is almost needless to add that the more skilled as a cook the cook was the more profound was his influence both fore and aft. But he wasn't often much in the way of skill, all the same. Shipping Illustrated Veneer. The woods principally used for making veneer are red . gum, maple and yellow poplar, which together yield more than half of the total product. Red gum is largely nsed for baskets and maple for furniture. More valuable than these, however, are white oak and walnut veneer. Beech, which can be cut very thin, is used very largely! for wooden' plates. A number of tber kinds of woods are nsed.

C0DKD.

fflttffiGTlfu

Bad Breath, K'Hawking and Spitting, Quickly Cnred-Fill Out Free Coupon.Bclow for Large Trial Package Mailed Free.

The above illustration plainly Catarrh Remedy Catarrh is not only dangerous, but it causes bad breath, ulceration, death and decay of bones, loss of thinking and reasoning power, kills ambition and energy, often causes loss of appetite, indigestion, dyspepsia, raw throat and consumption. It needs attention at once. Cure it with Gauss' Catarrh Cure. It is a quick, radical, permanent cure, because it rids the system of the poisonous germs that cause catarrh. In order to prove to all who are suffering from this dangerous and loathsome disease that Gauss' Catarrh Cure will actually cure any case of catarrh quickly, no matter how long standing or how bad, I will send a trial package by mail free of all cost. Send us your name and address today and the treatment will be sent you by

BUT LITTLE HOPE THAT ENTOMBED MINERS LIVE

Benton, 111., Nov. 7. The rescuing party that for twenty-four hours has been trying to reach the four miners who were entombed in the Rend mine, at Rend City, three, miles west of here, have not yet succeeded, and it may be late today before the imprisoned miners are found.

Cases of Kentucky Refugees to be Taken Up in Order

Frankfort, Ky., Nov. 7. Governor, Willson was asked if he would request a requisition for W. S. Taylor and Charles Finley in case Commonwealth's Attorney Franklin demanded it, now that Governor Marshall, Democrat, is elected in Indiana. He re Fin Language. At a role the educated native of west Africa, like his Indian brother, loves high flown language. A clerk some time ago sent a report complaining that the carbines of the police at bis station often misfired. This is how be put it, "It Is ridiculous to report that the firearms of the police, when pointed at the firmament, refuse to give explosive sound." London Saturday Review.

2 Automatic Et EE MlfOm a AnloossrtJe Phones ' Pnosiis UtS-llM GROCERY 0 11M-UM DRESSED CHICEtENS Roasting, Gtewing, Frying.

Cauliflower, Spinach,' Egg Plant, Cucumbers Head Lettuce, Green; Beans, Green Onions, Celery, Radishes, Leaf Lettuce, Jersey Sweet Potatoes, ' Turnips, Hubbard Squash, Home Grown Potatoes. Tokay Grapes, Concord Grapes, Niagara Grapes Malaga Grapes, Grape Fruit, Florida Oranges, and Chestnuts. Old Fashion Buckwheat Flour, Gold Bond Maple Syrup, Genuine Mapie Sugar Appfe Butter, Extra Fine.

Just opened a barrel Bloater Mackerel. t

YARDS, SECOND and CHESTNUT

shows what a few days' use of Gauss will do for any sufferer. return mail. Try it! It will positively5 cure so that you will be welcomed Instead of shunned by your friends. C. K. GAUSS. Marshall. Mich. Fill 'out coupon below. FREE This coupon Is good for one trial package of Gauss' Combined Catarrh Cure, mailed free in plain package. Simply fill in your name and address on dotted lines below and mall to C. E. GAUSS, 3425 Main Street, Marshall, Mich. That they were suffocated within thre minutes after the explosion is the belief of miners. There is a faint hope, however, that the men are alive In some remote corner of the mine. The fire has been extinguished. . A new shaft will be started at once at the Leither mine, which was plug ged up to smother & fire. ' " plied: "We will take up the Taylor and Finley matter In regular order of business, and consider those cases just, like we would any other cases. Further than this I do not care to make statement." Pereelain. China (porcelain) is so called beeeruse it was first brought from the Celestial Kingdom. It is made principally of kaolin, and kaolin takes its name from a high hill in China, where it was first discovered. It is s fine clay, white when pure, and it is easily worked. It has since been found in rations places, the Uaited States as well as other countries. of fancy white, fat, juicy, LITTLE SOOT ALL HEAT CTI p"ir

...............

mo

siarcea wua me orsi convention, in me