Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 58, 5 January 1909 — Page 4
PAGZS FOUR.
TOE RICHMOND PALIADIUM AND SUN TELEGR AM, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1909.
Its Illctn:cr.a PalteJIca -r-ani Snn-Telccram Published and owned by the PAIXAOXU1C PRINTING CO. Issued 7 day a wch wk, evenings and Sunday morning". Office Corner North 8th and A streeta. Home Phone 1121. RICHMOND, INDIANA.
Rdolk O. l4m Mniftic Edlte. Ckarlee M. Hrs BaatacM Maaacer. O. Otvea Kwaa STcws Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond 96.00 per year fin advance) or lOe per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. ' One year. In advance f 5.00 Six months, in advance 2.60 One month. In advance .......... .46 RURAL ROUTES. One year. In advance ......12.00 Six meats, In advance .......... 1.2; One manta, In advance AdaVess ehanedsa often aa desired; bota new and old addresses must be given. ubejerlbers will please remit with order: mtoioh should b griven for a apoctflaU trm; namowtll not be entered until payment Is received. Kntaaed at Richmond. Indiana, postoffice. second class mall matter. CUBA. hose were' pleasant and promising ceremonies that took place in Havana New-Year's day. Everybody manifested the liveliest interest in the occasion and what it signified. The Cubans saw in it matter of great importance to themselves, the official repre sentatives , of other countries offered congfttul&ions to both Cuba and Aaaerica, Vhlle the Americans felt satis-, fsdttonHn what their country had been. able-'to do for a struggling neighbor. ' Good, feeling the best of feeling marksM the. day. Contrary- to many predictions made afcvUt time both here and abroad, and to, no little private opinion probably thatadtitnot indulge in prediction, we are aavthe eve of quitting Cuba. in the Interest of a second trial by the. people of the island in self-government. When the Palma government succumbed sad American troops again appeared 'on the aeene, we were told that they would remain permanently. Here was another case of Great Britain and Egypt. Uncle Sam would never let go. All promises. that he would were for temporary purposes. The Cubans would be soothed by them until such a time as it would be both convenient and necessary to break the truth to them, i ; But we are packing up, and sailing. Having done, and according to the Cubans themselves ' done well what we came to do and promised to do, we are through. Cuba's day approaches, and she appears to be ready for it The officials to take charge in her name have been properly chosen, the people are satisfied with the result, and in a few weeks the wheels will begin to revolve. A Cuban will occupy the presidency, and a Cuban congress to co-operate with him will be la session. The new order will have the best wishes of the controlling influences in this country. Judge Taft has shown his friendship for Cuba, and there is every reason to believe that he will use his great power as president in all that pertains to the island for the Island's good. The relations between Cuba and America must remain Intimate, and for1 the benefit of both countries should be cordial. Gov. Magoon is coming home crowned ' 1th conspicuous success. When he took charge of Cuban affairs they were in a tangle. Distrust of everybody was the dominant feeling in the Island. Failure had set the people against each other, and all factions seemed set against the United States. It was a situation that called for firmness tempered with patience and dK, plomacy. Fortunately Gov. Magoon possessed the necessary qualities, and he soon had matters in hand. ' He has acquitted himself of his task so as to receive the praise of all sides. There is an impression that he is to be rewarded with a high office under the new administration. It should be a high one. Judge Taft will need men of that stamp to assist him. NEW BUILDINGS OPEN. School was reopened at the new buildings for No. 9 and Greenbriar schools yesterday. The Greenbriar building has been rebuilt following a fire. The No. 0 building is entirely new and one of the finest in the state. It was built at a cost of almost ?S.500. The old building' was sold to George McLear for $550. It will be used as a residence. ' MASONIC CALENDAR. Tuesday Evening, Jan. 5. Rich mood Lodge, No. 196, F. & A. M. Stated meeting. ,, , Wednesday Evening, Jan. 6 Webb Lodge No. 24, F. & A. M. Entered Apprentice Degree. Thursday Evening, Jan. 7. Wayne Council, No. 10. R. & S. M. Stated Assembly. Friday Evening. Jan. SKlng Sol omon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. Stated Convocation. " PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching. Bund. Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. B0c. TlMTBl! QcMl Modal Flour leads them alt
MOUNT ETNA,
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The above picture shows the diameter. ALFRED ELOOUEUT, STUBrSftRCASTIC Underhill Wanted Right to Obstruct Street Corner Because Y. M. C. A. Did. COUNCIL WAS FAVORABLE THEN CITY ATTORNEY AROSE AND QUESTIONED, "DO I UNDERSTAND YOU TO COMPARE UNDERHILL. TO A Y. M. C. A.?" Never before in many years has council been so dull as it was last evening. Its session lasted but one half hour, being protracted at least half this time in argument over the granting of a petition to Alfred G. Underhill for temporarily obstructing Sixteenth and North E streets that be might get building material on his lot. It was a spicy argument which several councilmen, City Attorney Study and Mr. Underhill indulged in, resulting in council referring the matter to the board of works with the recommendation 'that the petition be granted. Mere routine characterized the remainder of the business before the city fathers. The franchise committee having in charge the matter of overhead wires on Main street and the milk ordinance did not report last evening. An extension of time w'as given the committee on the wire question because of the inability of John F. Robbins, attorney for the Traction company to meet with the committee. Report on the milk ordinance was delayed because council could not arrange a meeting during the holidays. City Attorney Study was very sar castic in. regard to granting a permit to Mr. Underhill, declaring that the North 16th and E street corner had been a persistent source of annoyance and that if the obstruction was not cleared away in a few days he would prosecute Underhill. Underhill Is Eloquent. Mr. Underhill addressed council and stated that the right to obsruct Piles Quickly Cured at Home Instant Relief, Permanent Cure Trial Package Mailed Free to All in Plain Wrapper. Piles is a fearful disease, but easy to cure if you go at it right. An operation with the knife is dang-, erous, cruel, humiliating and unnecessary. There is just one other sure way to be cured painless, safe and In the privacy of your own home it is Pyramid Pile Cure. We mail a trial package free to all who write. It will give you instant relief, show you the harmless, painless nature of this great remedy and start you well on the way toward a perfect cure. Then you can get a full-sized box from any druggist for 50 cents, and often one box cures. Insist on having what you call for. If the druggist tries to sell you something just as good, it is because he makes more money on the substitute. The cure begins at once and continues rapidly until it is complete and permanent. You can go right ahead with your work and be easy and comfortable all the time. It is well worth trying. Just send your name and address to Pyramid Drug Co., 92 Pyramid Building, Marshall, Mich., and receive free by return mail the trial package In a plain wrapper. x Thousands have been cured in this easy, painless and inexpensis way, in the privacy of the borne. No knife and its torture. No doctor and his bills. All druggists, 50 cents. Write today for a free package.
THE GREATEST VOLCANO, SPOUTfNG LAVA.
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crater of Mount Etna, now in eruption, Eighth and A streets had been given the Young Men's Christian association for several months and that if the city extended this privilege to others he felt that he should be granted a similar opportunity to improve his property. His argument was interspersed with oratory and a waving of arms. No doubt it would have lasted longer but for the fact that councilmen interrupted and refused to allow him to continue. Councilman Bartel was of the opinion that as the Y. M. C. A. had been given the privilege that other citizens, including Underhill should be treated in the same manner, a remark which called forth an expostulation from City Attorney Study. "I hope you do not compare Alfred Underhill to a Y. M. C. A." he said. Council Routine. The poorly lighted condition of Eighth and Main street was brought up by Councilman Englebert. The matter was referred to the board of works. It is probable that an agreement will be made with a merchant on this corner whereby he will keep his arc light burning at a cost to the city. The poor condition of a fountain at First and Richmond avenue was called to the attention of the board of works by Councilman McMahan. The extremely bad condition of West Second street which prevents coal and ice dealers and other heavy haulers using it extensively in muddy weather was brought up by Councilman Burdsall. He stated to the board that the street could be fixed in two days time so It was fairly passable by the application of gravel or crushed stone. The petition of Frank Hlllman, owning property in southwest Richmond has been denied by the board of works. He wanted his property excluded as a part of the city. The matter was referred to by Councilman Brown. It is probable that further action will follow in this matter. ASKS ANNULMENT CASE DISMISSED Third Chapter in Keen Matrimonial Tangle Filled in the Circuit Court. AIRED IN THE CITY COURT WHEN KEEN WAS ARRESTED FOR SLAPPING COLORED GIRL THE PROSECUTOR CLAIMED HE WAS A NEGRO. Surprise was manifested in the Wayne circuit court today, when a motion was introduced to dismiss the case of Ethel F. Keen vs. Asa L. Keen to annul the marriage of the two. The Keen's troubles began when a group of boys in the court house yard yelled "nigger" at the young bride, who is a white woman. It was currently reported the husband had negro blood in his veins. It was but a short time after that episode that the husband slapped a little colored girl near Main and Sixth street. He claimed the girl had made insulting and insinuating remarks about his wife. It was in the trial of this case in city court that the prosecuting attorney openly avowed the Keen woman had married a negro. The Keens appeared highly indignant and threatened to sue the prosecutor, but no action of that nature was attempted. The third chapter of the story was written when suit was brought to annul the marriage.- It was alleged in the complaint the defendant is a negro. As to the future action in the case, there is nothing but conjecture. WILL INSPECT BRIDGE. The county commissioners will inspect the Test bridge across the Whitewater river south of the dty. The flooring Is said to he ia d of quick .repairs.
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i' 3 y A mm which is over four miles In Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copy.ight, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye WALKING AS AN EXCHCISE. This heart to heart talk will" be about the benefit of walking as an exercise and the why. You know physician recommend this as the best all around exercise known to. them. Why? Lefs put the -matter in . plain speech and print out the mala words in capital letters: In the first place, when you walk you RAISE THE TEMPERATURE OF YOUR BOT. It is like putting a lot of coal in the stove and opening the draft Ther' semetlUng doing. Waste is being carried off and your muscles and nerves get needed nutriment when the temoetretuve Is raised. Besides, you BREATHE MORE DEEPLY when yeu walk. And that puts more oxygen in your bleed, and oxygen is LIFE. And there's the skin. Millions of pores little sewers are opened np. Perspiration carries eff waste, waste which if it stayed in your blood woald poison yon. And your DIGESTION walking aids that process and puts an edge on youH appetite. And good digestion waits on appetite. But that is not all. There's yonr diaphram. That useful thing Is a sort of movable stage platform between the chest and the abdomen. It is raised or lowered by the contraction or swelling of the lungs. When the lungs are filled the diaphram goes down and pre as en upoa the liver, stomach and spleen. Now This movement of the diaphram up and down, especially down, is like a massage on the liver, , stomach and spleen. The massage helps to keep those organs In good order, especially the .liver. He who walks regularly and systematically will have no liver troubles. Nothing Is here said about the MENTAL BENEFITS the exhilaration that comes from being in the open, the joy that conies In knowing that yonr whole organism Is in good working order and the reaction of the mind on the body. Do yon see? Especially that about the diaphram? It pays to walk, purely as a beneficial exercise, to say aothlng of the enjoyment. It pays big. He who constructed yonr body did not Intend yon to rMe, Se gave yoO two less. Irving and Henley. In Z. Comyns Cart's there is a story of Irviac and of W, E. Henley, who had been treating his readers to some adverse criticism on the great actor's Macbeth. At their first meeting afterward Irving fixed the critic with his "clittertae eye." MI notice," be said, "that you do not ap prove of my conception of Macbeth. Tell me now, for I should be inter ested to hear It. bow you would play Macbeth if yon were called upon to present the character on the stage. What is your conception?" It la re corded that Henley was speechless. 8orry He Spoke. "He's not what you call strictly handsome," said the major, beaming through his glasees on an utterly hideous baby as It lay howling In Its mother's arms, "but if s the kind of face that grows on you. "If s not the kind of face that ever grew on you," was the unexpected re ply of the indignant mother; "you'd be much better looking If It had!" Liver pool Mercury. Knollenberg's Dress Goods Dept. for Bargains. 4 Days' bale starting Wedn e s d a y morning we will put on sale some very attractive goods with prices to make it interesting. Read every item careruiiy. Polo, New Castle vs. Richmond, Wed. Eve., Jan. 6th.
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HINTS FOR BUSY WOMEN. How Newspapers en Kitchen Tables Prove Traveling Universities. The faithful reader of the Atlantic Monthly Magatine will remember well the young woman who confessed in an issue of two or three years ago that the source of her remarkable fund of information and her broad knowledge of affairs was all due to her grandmother's uncompromising ideals of economy and cleanliness. Was the kitchen table freshly scrubbed and the board above the sink washed and scoured? Then cover-them with newspapers. Newspapers were everywhere, and as this young woman, who was then a girl In her early teens, pared the apples or shelled the peas or washed the dishes thrice daily her eyes traveled up and down the columns of those papers that shrouded everything about her. Editorials and news items, all were alike to her. She read them all and, reading, remembered. ' The methods of today are neither so deliberate nor so particular as to permit this sort ef newspaper education, but a contributor to a current magazine suggests another method by which she obtains a liberal education while "on the wing," as It were. She Is a busy woman and can spare only a few minutes each day for the papers. A hasty glance at the headlines or a look at the leading articles in the magazines may be all that she has time for, but there are often long articles on art or literature or matters of national Importance which she longs to read through. So she has formed the habit of marking these articles, and after the other members of the family have read the paper one of the children cuts the marked pieces out and slips them Into the mother's pocketboek. These can be read througb on the car when waiting for an appointment or at other odd seasons and thoroughly enjoyed. And so In the end this busy woman finds herself not so far behind the times, after alL Design For Street Costume. The drawing shows a very smart costume for street wear, the coat having the newest features of the season. The model is In ' black ' broadcloth, with satin revers and satin passementerie buttons, but the model Is also especially well adapted to soft, flat fur, such-as pony skin sr caracal. The
Am EMIhiimsiisislIile Sunceess UP-TO-DATE MERCHANDISE AT CLEARANCE SALE PRICES. You will never know the greatest purchasing value of a Dollar until you attend this sals. Scores of satisfied customers attended the opening sale Saturday. Come in and be convinced of these big reductions.
Table test Hire JVU Cor.
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When depositing money with a Bank to find out what that institution oilers as security in return for your money
has a Capital, Surplus and Stockholders Liability ot over $900,000.00
shirt of tie gow Ik In waTktng lengta, In a gored circular, and the sleeve art small and fitted without t ullaess ' lots the' ana bole. Kitchen Help. A dosen grains ef rice In a saltcellai will absorb dampness and keep the salt In powder. It also1 breaks the lumps that there may be In the salt. An alarm deck kept la the kitchen may be set to ring at the time the vegetables should be put over the fire 01 the hot bread or the cake or pudding Is due to be done and as a guide t time in many ether matters. Racks for kettle aad pan covers may be made on the back of the doors oj kitchen closets and will save mncb trouble. Get brass screw books and arrange them on the lower edges oi the crosswise panels of the door. Screw larger hooks at each end of the panels and stretch the door springs attached to them acres the panels. The distance of the spring front the bottots of the panel varies according to the size of the covers. The hooks for the springs for the large covers sbeald be pat about the middle of the panel and for the smallest rovers quite near the bottom. The covers or flat trays slipped be tweeh the spring and the doors will rest en the hooks along tiie lower edge. For Milk Bottles. A little rubber lid for milk bottles Is new on sale at the grocery stores. These sre circular pieces of flexible white rubber with a little round batton In the center, and they lit In any milk bottle, taking the place of the nerve trying paper top or the oldet tin form. - These rubbers cost 5 cents aad last practically forever. Once tried one will never be without them. Milk bottles sbotdd be caref nlry wiped a boot the top with a wet clotfl before removing the pssteboard top. TCrrirl Per IsSssstSca. 1UAJm Relieves soar stomach, palpitation of the heart Digests whatyou eat.
... DROttlDE EH LARGO 3 It Is easy. Booklet of Instraetloa Free. Browale Enlarging! Camera. CXSt. flXSS aad. w. n. noss DRUG CC'IP ANY.
The choices! ccccatecat ct well selected LErrcry TcZIzq at a ftcetlsn cl Cieir vclze. Bay one at sale price. $15.00 Library Tables -...-...$11.83 $20.00 Library Tables ....-$160 $22.00 L&rary Tables . .$17X0
cut, $11.00 Save Ninth and T-2nin
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VAIL ' MAY HETIRE Generally Reported Among Students Athletic Director Is to Quit. RUMOR. NOT CONFIRMED. Rumor has it that Coach Vail of tne Earlham athletic teams will aeve bis connection with the college when his present contract expires, the close of the spring term. Faculty members have made no announcement to this effect nor, so far aa known, has Mr. Vail made any statement. Nevertheless,, it is common gossip, among the students. Some Greek philosophers who Heed 600 year before Christ formed a theory of the transformations of matter which is held todsy by naturalists. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY, MISS MADEL IXUCN Tea ,to ELCCUTE I X tfteartetl Zf s-istast. ISO. DR. HIATTS GERMICIDE , Cures Cough, Cold. Sort Throat, 25 cent. WATT'S RHEUMATIC CURE relieve the pain in one day. Csll at 217 N. 13th Stand find out. J. A. HI ATT. argarw3Bgisw3HtMacfc3QiKi . Money Wow!
.Fornllnrc, Stoves,
