Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 231, 28 June 1909 — Page 8
In Memory of Father of His Country
IS TO PRACTICE SOONER1 LATER - 1 Serosa Will Turn Out Tomcrrc.v Afternoon end Loosen Up Joints. jtr 0 EXPECT CHARLEY HORSES WW. w
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UANAGZR WILFRED JES8UP OF THK "HIGH-BROWS" DENIES HIS TEAM IS SUFFERING WITH CHILLED PEDALS. . The newspaper baseball team will hold Its "spring" practice tomorrow afternoon on the . play grounds. The press nine does not expect to be taken by tie lawyers when they? meet in mortal combat at Athletic park July 7. There was a rumor on the street today that the lawyers have lost their nerve and do not Intend to play. Manager Wilfred Jessup says it is all S bluff. Hot weather nerer hurt a
lawyer and he does not believe it would In a ball game. There are some v who say that a ball game on a hot day would be but a suggestion to lawyers of what they may expect some time in the future. - Battery Is Feared. The newsgatherers are somewhat fearful of the battery the lawyers may present. They are touting .Charley Ladd to beat the band, Ladd Is an Id professional pitcher who has taken up the practice of law as a pastime and his associates at the bar are tryins to run a bluff about his remarkable skill. The newsies are laughing because they believe if Ladd Is such a star twirler the lawyers won't have any catcher who can hold him. - The game Is for charity and it is expected that the wonderful chance of seeing the attorneys of the city In action on, ball field will be so great that business will ' be suspended. Judge Converse has begun to study the system of correct score keeping, so he can mark down 10 runs for each goose egg that ought to be recorded against members of his profession. ASSESSMENTS MADE Board of Review Takes Action on the Institutions Of the County. A FEW INCREASES MADE Either Increases In capitalisation, or Increased surplus funds and undivided profits, account for the higher assessments of many of the banking institutions in Wayne county this year as compared with 1908. The County Board of Review has fixed the assessments as follows: Richmond. 1909. First National . . . .$114,570 Second National . . . 423,050 Union National . . . 178.610 Dickinson Trust Co. 218,800 Union Loan 4b Trust Co .............. 120,000 Cambridge City. First National 43,390 Wayne National . . 37,590 Contervllle. - Cttlsens 16.720 Dublin. First National 18,540 Fountain City. Fountain Bank .. . . 8,330 Greensfork. First National ..... 19,960 Hagaratown. First National ...... 30,880 Milton. . Farmers' Bank .... 17.500 Williamsburg. First National ..... 18.680 1908. $108,945 423,220 174,470 .91,700 120,000 43,400 36,870 14.920 17,920 7.440 19,600 33,050 17.710 18.110 F0LLQV7S WAYIIE Doctors There Don't Want f Jones Published. Wabash county medical society has followed the example of Wayne county medical society in voting not to nee printer's ink for advertising purposes and to request the press to refrain from the use of a physician's name In pursuit of his profession when connected with news stories. Speaking editorially on this subject, the Ma rion Chronicle says: We presume that special reference Is had to those not infrequent - eases wSJeh come to the attention of news papers where a patient is cut open for one thing and is found to hare another, or where an error in diagnosis results in the death of the patient, etc. The president of the nitonois state :.: medical association at the recent state conTentlon of the. organisation very properly said that conservative and nmnr iilnFtlilnff Iit nhMtntin. Is Tint ethical Is erroneous. There is no more impropriety " about the Insertion in a newspaper oi a proxessionai earn giving the location and specialty of a E&ysiclan than there Is to painting a alga on a door or hanging one on a buZ"nx. Any assumption to the conrwcry u nonsense.
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Photograph of the tablet in memory of Washington, unveiled by the D. A. R. on June 23 on board the new steamship George Washington of the North German IJoyd. '
ROYALISTS MADE A T Surrounded the Carriage of The President of the French Republic. ALL YOUNG ENTHUSIASTS PEOPLE IN CROWD TURNED UPON THE RIOTERS AND A LIVELY COMBAT RESULTED, SEVERAL BEING INJURED. Paris, June 28. While the carriage containing President Fallieres was returning to the Elysee Palace from the Grand Prix race at Longchamps last night, it was suddenly surrounded by several hundred youthful : royalists wljo attempted a ; demonstration against the head of the republic. The royalists clutched at the heads of the horses, broke through the gendarmes and outriders and were press ing in upon him when the crowds lining the route turned upon the at tackers and belabored them with um brellas until they retreated Into the hands of the police. Ten were placed under arrest. The police are scouring Paris today for others. The riot created the greatest sensation because the president's carriage was in the midst of a procession of ve hicles carrying thousands of celebrities returning from the races. The race goers, Including many Americans, cheered the crowd loudly when it attacked the royalists. The president remained calm throughout. . AN EMPEROR'S FURY. PmI ef nasis Order to His Real mnt of Herae Gvarda. On one occasion during a parade of Us horse guards the Emperor Paul of Russia was extremely dissatisfied with the manner in which the troops performed their evolutions. At length, after a more than ordinarily stupid blunder on the part of the troops, the czar could stand it no longer, and he determined to preside over the drill In person. The troops were well aware that the czar's temper was on the verge of bubbling over, and the knowledge so unnerved them that things went from bad to worse until at last a blunder supervened -a blunder in which officers and men shared alike which proved the climax. Galloping up to the disorganized lines and reining up his charger at their head, livid with fury which he no longer attempted to suppress, Paul gave Tent to the following original and effective speech: "Officers and troopers of the Imperial horse guards, right about face! Quick march to Siberia r The entire regiment, with unbroken composure and dignity, wheeled to the right and. started off then and there upon their terrible march Into exile. By the time they had arrived at a point lying some few days' march from the capital, the czar's temper having cooled down, swift couriers were dispatched after the exiled guards with' news of the imperial clemency, and the troops were allowed to return. - ' Dan-er Money. tn former times when traveling was not so safe as In the twentieth century the judges often needed an escort when passing from one town to another- on circuit. It was the duty of Newcastle to provide such protection for the Journey between that town' and Carlisle. As time went on the actual provision of a guard was replaced by the payment of money for the purpose, and it pwas'thls contribution that became known as ; "dagger money." To this day the old custom is kept up." and at the Newcastle assizes the judge r receives from the mayor a coin that la probably itself a curiosity and also serves as an interesting souvenir of this strange survival. London Mall. Spldera Slht. Experiments have been made to decide how far spiders can see and It has been determined that they have a range of vision of at least a foot. It Is not always possible to tell, however, whether the lower animals perceive by sight or bearing or by the action air to motion has upon their bodies. Experiments tend to show that mice are sensitive to motions of the air which to nnman ears exeat ao sound whab
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- i - , msac THE EAST HAS A REAL RACE RIOT Turks and Syrians Come to a Bloody Xlash. Springfield, Mass., June 28. One man dead, another fatally injured and several dangerously wounded is the result of a race riot in which Turks and Syrians participated here yesterday. The trouble arose over the elopement of a fifteen year old Syrian girl with a seventeen year old Turkish youth last Thursday. . AN OCEAN ENIGMA. Mystery ( the Fate of the Crew mt tbe Shi Mart Celeste. Undoubtedly the most extraordinary of all tbe mysteries of the sea is the fate of the crew of the ship Marie Celeste, a more fantastic creation apparently than novelist ever wove. She left New York in 1887 for Europe, her personnel being thirteen, including the captain's wife and child. Two weeks later a British bark sighted her in the Atlantic. There was no sign of life on board. A boat was sent to her, and a most exhaustive search proved her to be as silent as the tomb, as deserted as a pesthouse. r Everything was in its place, even the boats at the davits. Tbe hull was undamaged, the carg3 untouched. Rigging and spars were intact; the sails were al set. The crew's weekly wash hung above the forecastle; an awning covered the poop. Binnacle and wheel and rudder were complete. The sailors' kits and dinners were seen in the forecastle. In the cabin was a sewing machine, with a child's garment miler the needle, and on the table a half "eaten meal. The chronometer ticked undisturbed In the chartroom; the cfcsu box was unrifled. The logbook, posted to within fortyeight hours of the visit, - showed the passege to hare been favorable; the ship's appearance proved there had been no storm. Evidences of a struggle or piracy or murder there were none. Yet thirteen people had disappeared, as if spirited away by some supernatural agency, and from that day to this the mystery has never been unraveled, though the United States government spared no effort to solve it-P. T. McGrath in McCIure's Magazine. HE TOMBSTONE CENSOR. Sees That ? rmermly Inaertp. tion Mara the Cemetery. A tombstone censor is employed by most large cemeteries. It is the duty of this man to fiee tliat nothing unseemly in the way of a' tombstone is put up. A young engineer in a Xorristown mill was killed by the explosion of a boiler, and the family of this young man. believing that the mill owners had known- all along that the boiler was defective, actually had carved on the tombstone the sentence, "Murdered by his masters." The tombstone censor, of course, refused to sanction such an epitaph, y On the death of a certain noted prize fighter the surviving ; brother . of the man wanted to put in a glass case beside .the grave a championship belt, four medals, a pair of gloves and other trophies of the ring. But the censor's negative was firm. A widow who believed that the physician was responsible for her husband's death wished to put on tbe tomb, "He employed a cheap doctor." but tbe tombstone censor showed her that such an. inscription would lay her open to heavy damages for libel. Atheists : sometimes direct . In their wills that shocking blasphemies be carved .on their monuments. - The censor, however, sees to It that these blasphemies do. not disfigure the cemetery. Philadelphia Bulletin. ' . A BIRTHDAY PARTY. Cambridge City, June 28. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Scott gave an elegant dinner at their home on East Main street, Friday evening, the occasion being the sixteenth birthday ? anniversary of their daughter Gladys. The company was composed of eighteen young people. Dancing formed the evening's diversion. HAS PNEUMONIA. Raymond Mather, well known young man, has been removed to the Held Memorial hospital. He Is suffering from pneumonia. His friends will be Interested In his recovery.
CHICKEII JID BALL National Bird and National Game at the Ministerial Picnic.
TO HOLD EVENT FRIDAY Muscular Christianity will be in vogue next Friday afternoon when minister meets minister on the athletic field and green sward of Glen Miller park. The committee in charge of the arrangements of the amusements of the Ministerial association annual picnic reported at the meeting today, listing baseball, checkers, horse shoe and numerous other diversions which will be appropriate to wind up the season's work. The topic committee also made a very interesting report. The minister's favorite fried chicken, was Included in the menu, which this committee had in charge. The menu was not slighted in the least, every minister and his wife expecting to do something for the cause. Nearly all the time was taken up in the , discussion of chicken and checkers at the meeting today. However Rev. A. Parker gave a short critic on the subject. "What Our Universities are Teaching." He classed it as over daring, somewhat egotistic, impious and quoted President Hadley of Yale university, who said it was immoral. He also thought its effect on the student was injurious. In con'eluding his criticism, he said that the 'question for us to settle is how is edi cation to remain Christian and yet be modern. A BUoMT OF WATER. In Right Place When Needed It Will Prevent a Conflagration. i A single bucket of water even a cupful thrown ou a blaze at its start often does more good than a reservoir .,11 .t......... , t ..J 4. i . , . , " . one out of a thousand American homes is a single bucket of water dedicated to fire protection. The only excuses for this negligence are ignorance, carelessness, total disregard of property and life. Poverty may explain the absence of structural protection, but no one who has a home Is too poor afford a bucket of water. : Even 23 cents spent for fire pails will measurably Increase for years the safety of a bouse and that of its Inmates. And the only attention this very effective fire apparatus will need is an occasional refilling from the pump or tap. The virtue of the bucket of water kept exclusively for fire purposes is that it Is always there when you look for it and always full of water. There is. to be sure, lots of water around" the house (except wben tbe pipe or pump bas frozen), but by the time one can find a bucket, take it to the tap or pump, wait for it to fill and then take It back to the fire not one, bucket but ten are needed. If. however, you can dash into tbe ball." seize a" ready filled bucket, and souse the blazing curtain, all within twenty seconds.' one bucket generally, will be more than enough, at good os a whole fire department and far less destructive than its superfluity of water. v' f ; The family that cares anything at all for Its belongings should keep at least one bucket of water on a little bracket in the hall on each flcof and another bucket In the garret. Down cellar there should be a barrel of water and a bucket not far from the furnace. The water In the garret or cellar may be kept from freezing In cold weather by adding common salt. Exchange. J V In the Interest ef Good Eyes. ' A noted oculfet advises against using the eyes' immediately after waking: therefore the fasblt of many young 'girls of reading or studying in bed Is Injurious. " It is harmful to one. tbe eyes when sleepy, as it Is a great strain anon the muscles. If one must read or write wben drowsy, rise occasionally and bathe tbe eyes with hot or cold water. Remember that a quick change froth a dark room to a brilliant light Is a strain upon the eyes. New York Press. ' Stobb I beer that Falcon is going to stop writing poetry. Penn Tea. The position la which tbe paper brought oat his sonnet discouraged him. Etnbb Did they ran it on the children's page? Penn Worse than that. It ap
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You will want something. When that time cornea, get your choice of what you want in the quickest and easiest way by putting a WANT AD. in the PALLADIUM. It will only cost you a few pennies and may mean dollars to you. No matter where you live, our classified WANT ADS. will find for you Just what you want. You may be one of our country readers, or you may live out of town a short distance, or you may chance to pick up this paper in another city. No matter our WANT ADS. are valuable to yoa ANYWHERE, if you but And out by READINQ them just what they will do Look over the different bargains each day; perhaps yea will find something you would like to have. You have the opportunity in the classified column of picking what you want from propositions that may be money makers. It means MONEY TO YOU to read these ads dally. And when you are in need of anything put an ad in this paper and you will not have to look further to satisfy your want.
Six Dying Whalers Picked Up By The Crew Steamer Celtic
New York, June 28. Antone Penna. third mate of the old brig Sullivan o.' New London, and his five companion: who were lost from ihe ship for si: nights and seven days on the West African whaling grounds, returned to day on the Celtic as if they had come back from the grave. Until June 0 when a cablegram was received from Teneriffe, Penna's wife and children in New Bedford believed he had. been lost They were almost dead from hunger, thirst and exhaustion when nicked up by the steamer Max Brock v J.. on ju&rea t "We had six cakes of pilot bread and a gallon of water, a little tobacco and plenty of matches," says Penna. "The bread was all eaten on that first night. For five days I kept beating. I set watches, but I myself for six nights and seven days got no sleep. After two days I issued only one tablespoonful of water a day to each man. I dared not close my eyes, lest in their delirium the boys, dying of thirst, should drink salt water. We saw only sharks, and every time we tried to maneuver near and harpoon one my men were too weak to man the oars and the shark could swim faster than the boat could salt we kept drifting ! at first, and then I put up all sail. On the fifth day I made for the land hundreds of miles away."I though that Justino, the boy would never make it. After the fourth . day he lay in a stupor in the bottom of I tbe boat. The boat steerer was all right, twit tbe others grew weaker. On tbe seventh day at noon I picked up smoke, and at 1 p. m. I made out a steamship which was coming for us PUIIISK A VICEROY Chinese Government Acts Because of Attack Made On American. ONE FOREIGNER KILLED ! Pekin, June 28. As a result of the j attack made upon Surveyor H ax rah j and Interpreter Sowerby. attached to the America lieutenant Clark's Me- i teorological expedition by Chinese, in J which Hazrah was killed In the prov- j ince of Kansu. the Ticeroy of the province has been dismissed. The expedltion was attacked on June 2L Other members of tbe expedition rescued Sowerby. after Haxrah was killed. On the following day the viceroy compiled an official report, this having been demanded by the British minister. The Ticeroy complained that in rescuing Sowerby the expeditionists took the law into their own
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Just right. I steered to intercept her and she saw our blue flag. She was the Max Brock, a Woennann liner, from Sierra Leone for Swakopmund, German South Africa. The boys could not pick up the oars and I let the boat drift alongside and downed my salll "Captain Fastert asked who we were and I said: 'We are starving men. We had nothing for six nights and seven days. We can't stand this another day ' . " 'All right,' said Captain Fastert, and a ladder came thumping down, the side. The boat steerer and I got up all
THE PROVIDENT LIFE AND TRUST COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. Insurance in Force, $201,185,439. Assets, fS7,324(m23 The NEW POLICIES of the Provident are unsurpassed for concise ness and simplicity of form and for adaptability and liberality In all essentials. The Premium rates of the Provident are exceedingly low and are still further reduced by large annual dividends. Phone 2082. E. B. KNOLLENBERO. Agent. 11 ft. CthCt.
Lcdies' Bay Every Ttcrdsy, Uzvfi39 P
Five minutes' walk north of Glen line. Lady attendant. Suits and
PAY
IT." right, but the others tad to navw hand. The steamship's crew saved taw whaleboat." The Max Brock carries) no Here la the menu which was first ed to dying men: A little brandy, a cigar all around. s little tea and m little bread. Penna, who bad his boat's crew under perfect" discipline, saw to it that they did not cat too much. Oa the next day he allowed them a caarw meal. "On May 21 Dr. Shenk and the i ernor sent us away on the East African company's Admiral .Captain I Doherr. the that took Mr. Roosevelt to Xfbmbaaa,' said Penna, The men worked their passes to Las Palmas, where the Amerlcaa ens sular agent put them aboard a ship for Liverpool. Lake; Just- fellow electric light Towels. - Lockers. Refr it Is that you were having czs!txry plumbing Installed la your test 12 ft isn't already there. Toot heeSa pends upon it, and wo stand ready to do it when we get your order. If yoa haven't the convenience of a good bath tub, with hot 'and eold watsf, let os make yoa an eetftnate cf the s, as well as anything: else in oar line. We are expert . plumbers charges are fair. CT3. Jci: We have ftttcd 7,500 pairs of eyes Optician Graduated in C ties, June, 1t34 la New York City. - Fifteen years ' haws wrought sjiaay chaojss la the style and sty ef as. Today we assise ialty of the KfyTtok in Terie form ani satisfaction. cltjl a n;: xxnr - c:o cj
PXUuTJ2 IVATJT AD3.PAY.
