Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 76, 23 January 1909 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT.

THE RICHMOND PAIXADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I, SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 1909,

DOMESTIC SCIENCE WILL BE FEATURE This Subject Will Receive Respectful Consideration at The Corn School.

CAPABLE INSTRUCTORS HAVE BEEN SECURED AND IT IS EXPECTED MANY WOMEN Wlt.L TAKE THE COURSE ARRANGEMENTS BEING MADE. The domestic science course will prove one of the most Interesting features in connection with the corn school to be held at Centerville February 1-6. Competent instructors have been secured and the committee is arranging for everything that may iu any way add to the attractiveness of this course. Farmers' wives and daughters are not the only ones who will be interested in the course offered. It is expected that many of the Centerville women and a few from Richmond will take the course. Announcement was made by the committee this morning that it has obtained Miss Agnes Smiley of Piqua, O., Miss Cirginia Meredith of Cambridge City and Miss Elsie Marshall of this city as lecturers and demonstrators. The demonstrations naturally will be one of the interesting phases of the course. Ranges will be set up end the scientific preparation of victuals shown. The domestic science section will meet in the Chirstian church. The general committee of the corn school desires it announced that the regular course tickets for the corn school will entitle the holder to the lectures only. The scoring classes can not atend on a day ticket. The reason Is due to lack of space. Accommodation has been provided only for the pupils in the stock judging and corn scoring schools, so the day ticket holders can not be accommodated. VERDICT FOR $1 Portland Man Wins in Suit Against Father-in-law and Members of Amish Sect. WIFE INDUCED TO LEAVE Portland, Ind., Jan. 23. The Jury in the Pallle damage case returned a verdict In favor of the plaintiff and assessed damages for $1,000. Paille brought suit -against, his father-in-law and other members of the Amish sect of Adams county -for. alienation of his wife's affections. . It was claimed Paille insured his barn, against fire which is contrary to the teaching of the church. The barn was destroyed and Paille collected the insurance. His father-in-law induced Pallle's wife to leave him and had him ostracised in the community. He was expelled from the church, also. The case attracted more attention here than any that has been tried in recent years owing to the characteristics of the contestants. WILL CELEBRATE ANANNIVERSARY Walnut Level I. 0. 0. F. to . Jollify. Walnut Level lodge of Odd Fellows will celebrate the anniversary of its birthday to East Germantown this evening. A special program has been prepared and an excellent social time is predicted for all who attend. A delegation of local Odd Fellows will attend. Among those who will go are Judge Fox, Harry E. Penny, Thomas Jeseup and Lawrence Handley. John Markley, court bailiff, intends to go. If the jury in the Jones case does not return its verdict in time, however, John will be numbered among those absent. Elecroliers of French renaissance design will be used to illuminate the grounds of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition at Seattle. Hundreds of the beautiful standards have been built On the top of each will be a large sphere containing sixty 30-can-dlepower globes. The foods we eat furnish energy for the body just as burning coal makes steam for an engine. The experiments of Prof. Frankland, Ph. D., of London, show that cod liver oil yields two and one-half times more energy than starches or sweets. Scott's Emulsion is pure cod liver oil combined with hypophosphites of lime and soda. It forms fat gives strength, enriches the blood, invigorates the nerves, and repairs tissues. this ad Uninuit. together with name of la which it appears, your address and four cents to cover postage, and we wilt send you a ICoegpiste Handy Atlas of the World" . u -

GIVEN A NEEDED BATH YESTERDAY

Main Street Scrubbed Cleaners. by Main street was given a much needed bath yesterday by the street cleaning department. It was late in the night before the west end of the paving was reached. An immense amount of water was used to remove the mud that covered the bricks after the snow melted. A heavy rain would help the condition of other streets. Hie s Book crap In a Bad Way. A doctor came up to a patient in an insane asylum, slapped him on the Wick and said: "Well, old man, you're all right. You can ran along and write your folks that you'll be back home in two weeks as good as new." The patient went off gayly to write his letter. He had it finished and sealed, but when he was licking the stamp it slipped through his fingers to the floor, lighted on the back of a cockroach that was passing and stuck. The patient hadn't seen the cockroach. What he did see was bis escaped postage stamp zigzagging aimlessly across the floor to the baseboard, wavering up over the baseboard and following a crooked track up the wall and across the ceiling. In depressed silence he tore up the letter that he had just written and dropped the pieces on the floor. "Two weeks! Hell!" he said. "I won't be out of here in three years..' LACGHTERLAND. All aboard for Laughterlandf "Tis a pleasant place. Where the sun of happiness Shines in every face. Where the cares of this old world Quickly are forgot And there's never any cloud, , Any pain or blot. AH aboard for Laughterlan Region of delight! Can be reached by any who Set about it right. First you shake your troubles off. Then begin to smile. And you'll go to Laughterland In a little while. Children dwell in Laughterland 'Cause-they do not know What makes grownup people bear Burdens as they go. Light hearts seek for Laughterland, Optimists go there Oh. it is the gladdest place Known of anywhere! " J What About the Other Eye? A small boy was playing with the scissors, and bis kindly old grandmother chided him. "You mustn't play with the scissors, dear. I know a little boy like you who was playing with a pair of scissors just like that pair, and he put them in his eye and put his eye out, and he could never see anything after that." The child listened patiently and said when she got through the narrative: "What was the matter with his other eye?' Mark Twain's Cams of Billiards. One day Mark Twain was in a billiard saloon, when a particularly unprepossessing looking man approached him and asked him to play a game. The humorist consented, and they began in earnest. "I'll be perfectly fair with you," said the stranger. "I'll play you left hand ed." "I felt hurt," said Mark Twain when he told the story, "for he was cross eyed, freckled and had red hair, so I determined to teach him a lesson for his audacity. But he won first shot and ran clean out, taking my half dollar, and all I got was the opportunity to chalk my cue." The wonderful play of his opponent so astonished Mark that he exclaimed, "Great Scott, if you can play like that with your left hand I'd like to see you play with your right!" "I can't," replied the stranger as he sidled out of the room. "You see, I'm left handed." Her Own Doctor. A Washington woman recently hired a negress. Going to the kitchen one day she was amazed to find the negress sitting on the floor, with her hair standing out from the head like a black nimbus. The girl was pulling one curly lock and then another in such a way as to suggest that she had suddenly lost her reason. "What on earth are you doing, Mary?" gasped the lady of the house. "Xawthin, ma'am, only I has got a sore throat an was Jest tryin to find de lock dat would pull mab palate up an' relieve de tickle." Optimist and Pessimist. Sidney Rosenfeld once wrote a comedy entitled "The Optimist," which achieved success after its production, but was a long time reaching the stage. Manager after manager refused the manuscript, and one day Mr. Rosenfeld, whose patience was exhausted, blurted out to his sole auditor: "Of course you don't appreciate the play! You don't even know the meaning of its name!" "Yes, I do," protested the impresario. "Well," insisted Rosenfeld, "what's the difference between an optimist and a pessimist?" The manager barely hesitated. "An optimist is an eye doctor." he said; "a pessimist is a foot doctor." Bo Yourself Always. Whatever you are by nature, keep tc it. Never desert your own line of tal ent. Be what nature Intended 70a for and you will succeed. Be anything else and you will be ten thou sand times worse than nothing. Sydney Smith. , Quebec supplies 90 per cent, of the world's supply of asbestos.

', ' In 1908 the importation of ruber to J thla xouatix amounted to, f37,flO,O0O.

HOT SURPRISED WITH JE DELAY Y. M. C. A. Officials Do Not Expect Contractors to Ask Settlement at this Time.

LIEN LITIGATION CERTAIN ASSOCIATION TRUSTEES HAVE HELD OUT FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS TO PROTECT CREDITORS OF THE CONTRACTORS. Officers of the Y. M. C. A. ar not surprised that the contracting firm of Caldwell & Drake, of Columbus, Ind., have made no effort to collect the amount due them for the construction of the Richmond Y. M. C. A. building. In fact these officers do not believe the contractors will make any such effort until called into court by lien proceedings, brought by the Y. M. C. A. management. It is thought that it will probably be several weeks before the building is formally turned over to the trustees. The association is fully protected by its bond and no uneasiness is felt by the officers. Under the terms of the contract between the contractors and the association, the association is holding one tenth of the contract price until the final settlement is made. This amounts to about $5,000. The other payments have been met by the association. Liens Amount $5,000. However there are liens against the building which will amount to about $5,000. These liens should be paid by the contractors but as they have not done so, the association has taken another method of protecting itself. It has asked that all firms or persons, who may have bills against the contractors, to file liens and the association will guarantee that payment will be made them from the $5,000 yet due the contractors. Not until these bills have been paid and the contractors show recepts of same will the association accept the building. NEW FREIGHT HOUSE Reported That Pennsylvania Will Put Up Additional Structure This Year. BUSINESS WARRANTS IT. Again come reports that if business warrants, the Pennsylvania Railroad company will this year erect a duplicate to the present freight house to the west of this building. No official confirmation of the report was obtained however. More than a year ago before the recent panic the company had such a local business that it intended to erect another building. Land was purchased and cleared for this purpose. Plans and specifications for a freight house were also considered. However with the panic, business decreased so that it could be accommodated at the present structure. Now however, business with the company, is again assuming such proportions as to make it necessary for an additional freight house. HOPPED JT00 OFTEN. Sanders Wont Steal Train Rides for Twenty Days. John Sanders, colored, will not hop trains for some time. John has been very agile in this form of sport but the police got him this morning. Complaint was registered against him and Earl Foreman Thursday by a member of the Panhandle police force. In city court this afternoon, Sanders was fined $10 and costs. Foreman said he had only misbehaved In this manner once. He declared he was in a hurry to get home to dinner and jumped aboard a passing train. He promised not to do it again and was released conditionally. MRS. BREHM RECOVERS. Mrs. George Brehm is recovering from her injuries received by a fall through a skylight at her home yesterday afternoon. She fell a distance of twenty feet, smashing through the heavy glass, but was not cut or scratched and no bones were broken. She is bruised somewhat and the pain from this source is severe. There is no fear of internal injury. BUY FACTORY BUILDING. The Starr Piano Company has purchased the building formerly used by the Watt and Keelor coffin factory, South Second street. The company purchased the place it is understood to lease out. The consideration was not made public. WOMAN IS INSANE. Martha Pitts was declared insane by a sanity commission in the Wayne ciVjuit court today. Robert Boren, of Fountain City, was named guardian. TEMPLE STILL MISSING. The police have not succeeded in locating Neal Temple or Mrs. Fred Ellis. Temple is wanted for cutting Fred Ellis in a fight Thursday night He is believed to bare left tha city

ROWDY STUDENTS

I S TIO

Object to Organization of Day Student Council Because It Stands for Order. COMBINE ORGANIZATION. EARLHAM FACULTY FAVORS MERGING DORMITORY, DAY STU DENTS AND GIRLS' COUNCILSMEETING IS HELD. The first meeting of the Day Dodger Student council was held yesterT"3ay at Earlham college. Prof. Men denhall who is the governor of the boys dormitory told the representatives of the day dodgers the work of the councils at Vassar, Michigan and several other colleges. He stated that great care should be exercised in forming a constitution and he therefore suggested that the work on this comnfence immediately. Prof. Mendenhall stated that great good can be accomplished by the student councils but there are always a number of students who try to "buck." They are only hurting themselves and not any one else, he said. Next week a meeting of the council will be held at which first steps will be taken to wards forming the constitution. Some "Rowdies" Object. The student council is in the gener al favor of the Day Dodgers with the exception of about half a dozen students who believe more in rough house tactics than in having the "Den" remodeled and refurnished. This body of "Selects" as they are known held a meeting last week in wbJch they proposed a number of res olutions that were not only a discredit to themselves but a disgrace to the college. The remarks by Prof. Mendenhall to the council shows the faculty is In favor of forming the Day Dodger council, Dormitory council and the Girls council into one big body. This would be a great benefit in many ways and would be one of the great means of bringing the day and dormi tory students Into a closer relation. There has always been some feeling between the two classes of students. CITY STATISTICS Deaths and Funerals. SCULL Stephen M. Scull, formerly of this city died at his residence in Anderson Wednesday night from apoplexy at the age of 61 years. Mr. Scul was a tinner and well known here. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Alice Scull, and three sons, William of this city, Lewis of Dallas, Texas, and Charles of Louisville, Ky. The remains will be brought to this city tomorrow afternoon and will be taken to the home of his son William, o03 North Seventeenth street where the funeral will be hedl Monday morning at 9 o'clock. Rev. R. J. Wade will officiate. Burial will be in eEarlham cemetery. Friends may call Sunday afternoon and evening. BROKAMP Mrs. J.y A. Brokamp died last evening at ior home 110 South Sith street from heart trouble, at the age of " years. Henry Brokamp. her husband, three daughters and three sons survive her. She was a prominent memoer of St. Andrew's church. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. WELCH-James C. Welch aged 44 years died yesterday morning at his home four miles northwest of the city on the Williamsburg pike, of heart failure. His wife, Mrs. Ella Welch, two sisters and four brothers survive him. The funeral will be Monday morning from St. Mary's church. Burial will be in St. Mary's cemetery. LAWRENCE Mrs. Mary E. Lawrence, wife of C. C. Lawrence, died this mprning at her home 114 Sheridan street at the age of 45 years. She is survived by her husband, three sons and two daughters. The funeral will be .Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the residence. Rev. Theodore Candler will officiate. Burial will be in Earlham cemetery. BEHXEN Mrs. Anna Behnen died this morning at her residence 635 South Eighth street. She is survived by her husband. Benjamin, three children, her parents and three brothers, and four sisters. Funeral arrangements wil be announced later. NYE The body of Edwin Nye, son of Ezra Nye, of Lynn, who was accidentally killed in the Grand Hotel at Indianapolis by -falling off a scaffolding yesterday, will be brought here for burial Monday. The funeral will take place at the home of Mrs. Hannah Williams, 215 North 6th street Consul-General William H. Michael, of Calcutta, writes that twenty miles from Chittagong natural gas issues from a crevice in the ground in considerable quantity. It has been burning so long that the oldest inhabitant can give no idea of when or how it was set on Are. The general belief among "the natives is that the gas has been on fire for centuries. At any rate, the gas flow has been burning as far back as any records have been kept by white people. Meat is high, fruit scarce, so bay Mrs. Austin's famous pancake Cur. A good, hearty breakfast for a little money. A census of the railroad cars of the country shows 2,200,000, of which 90,-

fli mm'i

Absolutely in The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar FASTEST IN STATE, NOT IN THE WORLD Error Made in Description of "Gazette" In the account of the purchase of "Gazette" by W. L. Wood, of the Palladium was in error when it stated Gazette is the champion double gaited stallion of the world. Mr. Wood says he is the fastest double gaited stallion in the state. The owner says he does not care to have anything said to the advantage of Gazette that can not be substantiated. For the next three months Philadelphia will enjoy the distinction of having real brigadier-general in the ranks eph Stephen Adams, head of the BudaPesth fire brigade, at the command of the Hungarian government has arrived in the Quaker City to study its fire department. He proposes to learn from the inside, by experience, and to that end will he respond to alarms and drag leads of hose, like the everyday professional "blue shirt." In explaining his mission to this country to Mayor Reyburn he said he wanted to be commissioned as fireman, and, if necessary, wear the uniform of the Philadelphia department. Of the appropriation of $800,000 authorized by Congress for participation at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition, $350,000 will be used in the construction of buildings. The big exhibit places will be ready to receive the display from the department at Washington, Alaska, Hawaii and the Philippines not later than March 1. Knights and Ladies of Honor are requested to meet at the hall at 7:15 this evening to attend the funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth Parker. Mrs. Jessio Larmore, Sec. Clarence Brown, Protector. Polo Game Monday, Jan. 2?, reserved seats now on sale at Westcott Pharmacy. Price 25c j JJew QaStle VS. Richmond. 23-3t " Richmond Rag " By Mae Aufderhelde Sold only by PAUL E. WILSON Anything In Music. Adams Drag Store. Farnham's COAL. Does Wot Clinker. Clean and Beautiful. Phone 1303 ClUain First and

ISsng3?wiilr

Makes the finest, most delicious biscuit, cake and pastry; conveys-to food the most healthful of fruit properties

Most people know that it is etiquette! at the papal court for women, what-J ever their rank, to appear in black, but few know that an exception to this rule is made for tho Pope's sisters and niece, all of whom are privileged to wear white at the audiences and church ceremonies, but the old ladies do not avail themselves of the relaxation of an ordinarily rigid regulation though the niece makes a point of wearing white when attending papal functions, her mantilla as well as her dress being as white as snow. Another little known point of papal etiquette is that women who come to the public or private audiences must keep the right hand uncovered; indeed, it is even more correct for both hands to be ungloved. DRESSED CHICKENS. Plenty of Dressed Chickens for Saturday and Sunday at Schwegman's Meat Markets. 22-2t Caviar is now made in large quantities at Lake Winnipeg from sturgeon roe. It is shipped to Hamburg in kegs and comes back to this country in tins and jars as Russian caviar. City bowling alley, 22 N. 9th 22-tf

HACKMAN, KLEHFOTH & CO.

LITTLE LESSONS IN

"A Friend in Need", but be sure it is your need and not the friend's. There is no occasion for charity in selecting advertising mediums. Look into the situation ' coldly, critically, judiciously. - If DAILY NEWSPAPERS can tell your story to the class of people you wish to reach, in the territory you wish to cultivate, at a lower cost than other mediums, and in a manner directly : under your control, start or stop at a day's notice, wouldn't it be worth while to find out all you can about it? Ask any DAILY NEWSPAPER, any responsible Advertising Agent, or write The Six-Point League, Tribune Building, New York City.

2 Automatic Pbones 1195-1193

GROCERY

IressedL CMetaiis. 1 8c feaip Sale I8e Fancy Russets.

Cauliflower, Cucumbers, Spinach. Tomatoes, Mangoes. . Green Onion. Egg Plant, Mushrooms, Head Lettuce, Oyster Plant, Radishes, Celery, Turnips, Parsnips.

Arizona Oranges, Tangerines. Fancy Grape Fruit. Tinted Malaga '' Grapes, Bananas, Extra Fine Sorghum, Apple Butter, Maple Syrap and Sugar.

Cream to Whip. Roquefort Cheese, PhIL Cream Cheese, Keofachatel Cheese. -

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Baltimore -has begun, to believe thai being willing to pay handsomely fo it, she should have grand opera as a steady musical diet. The papers 1 the Monumental Ctty are pointing with pride to thefacthat for two per formances by Mr. Hamniersteln'a company the sale of seats, amounted to $18,000. "The two performance were entirely tertative,"says th American " 'the cocktail before th banquet,' as Harry Hammerstein, the. son phrased it. Anjd while it was not stated in so many words, it can bo authoritatively saidthatiMr. Hammer stein will return-to Baltimore with his company In some future time. EVERY THING IS LOVELY AND THERE IS NO C0UDT AS TO THE ALTITUDE OF TDE'GCOSE Railroad conditions are good and we have plenty of coal for all our larje trade. Mather Bros. Co. -FOR GRATE PU BLICITY" Lenon 3. 2 Aatosnatle Pnonea lltS-lltl

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