Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 246, 13 July 1909 — Page 10
PAGE TEN.
HABERSTOWU FAIR BIG UNDERTAKING Exhibits in All Departments This Year Will Be Greatly Improved. NOW BEING ADVERTISED ONE OF THE FEATURES OF THE EVENT THIS YEAR IS POULTRY EXHIBIT GOOD TRAIN SERVICE ASSURED.
THREE 1IIJURE0
BY SCARED HORSE Miss Blanche Shook Had Collarbone Broken.
Fountain City, Ind., July 13. E. C. Shook and wife and daughter, Blanche while driving home Sunday evening met with an accident, between here and Lynn. Their horse became frightened at a cow. The buggy was whirled around, throwing all three of them to the ground.' Miss Blanche's collar bone was broken, but Mr. and Mrs. Shook received only slight bruises.
The agricultural exhibit of the Ha
erstown fair which wil be held on
July 27, 28, 29,30, will perhaps be the
largest this year than for many years
An especial effort is being exerted to
make the fair a bigger success than
ever before in every particular. Sev
eral fast horses have been secured and
the racing will be excellent. More at
tention will be given to the poultry and live stock exhibits this year, as more interest is being manifested by pedple generally in this department. Several Richmond people who raise prize winning poultry will place their exhibits at the Hagerstown fair it is said. "Bigger and Better." It Is practically a certainty that the fair will be "bigger and better" than ever this: year. The promoters are busily engaged in billing -Wayne and adjoining counties, and state that everywhere the fair Is being looked forward to with more than ordinary interest. The train service will be arranged to suit the convenience of all Richmond people who desire to attend. By special arrangement with the Pennsylvania officials fast train No. 19 to Chicago at
11. -20 a. m., which ordinarily does not
W. H. Romey, buyer for the Romey Furniture Co., has gone on his semiannual buying trip to the Grand Rapids and Chicago furniture markets. His purchases will follow quickly.
COMPANY WILLING
FOR 1JMC IE
Waterworks Corporation Held
Meeting With Special Committee.
ASK THIRTY DAYS' TIME
COMMERCIAL CLUB INFORMED
THAT THE COMPANY WILL
THEN SUBMIT TERMS OF FRAN
CHISE TO BOARD OF WORKS.
The officials of the Waterworks com
pany met yesterday afternoon with the
even hesitate at Hagerstown, will stop Commercial club to consider the plan for a few minutes during fair week for submitted by the Commercial club for
the accommodation OI lis passengers. better fire nrotection for the citv. A
duplicate main and duplicate pump is desired. The company agreed to comply with the request, but desire thirty days time in which to prepare their
Their pro
position will then be submitted to the
city for its approval and negotiations
will be made for a new franchise be
tween the Waterworks company and
the city.
The question of better fire protec
tion has been agitated for some time.
Should the present main break there would be absolutely no means to get water. An extra force pump is also needed as the water pressure in several
instances has been very weak. The
Clubs and Lodges in the City hember8fofhe board of works say
tection and state that they are perfectly willing to draw up a new fran
chise for the Waterworks company and submit it to council for its, approval.
WHAT WOMEN 8HOULD DO. What a dirty world this would be if fair women would refuse to wash, clean or scrub any more. Imagine
our professional men with their soiled plans for a new franchise.
linen, the kids with dresses of questionable cleanliness or color, and that Is what women should do, is to absolutely refuse to wash without rub-a-lac. It Is a time saver. Try it.
MOUEY FAILS TO
REACHTPEASURER
County Official Cannot as Yet
Cash the Semi-annual Warrants
STATE MAKES THE DELAY
CAUSED BY MAKING IT NECES
SARY TO HAVE MONEY ORDER SENT CASHED AT AN INDIANAPOLIS BANK., The county treasurer remains with
out money to cash the warrants issu
ed yesterday by the auditor for the
semi-annual distribution of all funds.
The warrant arrived from the state yesterday, but it was not bankable locally. It had to be indorsed by the county treasurer and returned to In
dianapolis to be cashed by the state
treasurer. The county has checked out more monev than it has at its
command, but the depositaries ai
making up the deficit. State Has a Plan. The feeling prevails among county officials that the state is working a plan whereby it will be enriched considerably by withholding the settlements. If the same condition prevails in all other counties the state will draw interest on the money. Wayne county's apportionment is about $200,000 so what an enormous sum is to be divided among the ninety-two counties of the state can be estimated. The interest would be no small item even for two or three days.
An Attractive Colonial Design. Well Adapted For a Suburban Home Can Be Built
For About $2,200. Copyright. 10OS. by P. T. MacUsan. Newark. N. J.
TDco VuZ7 OF WumERT
ARE MANY PICIIICS
Reveling in the Fresh Country Air.
ENTRE NOUS CAMP STARTS
Swallow's Grove, west of the city is . being besieged by the members of the Entre Nous club, who are enjoying thelr annual picnic. Camp was opened this evening and stakes will not be pulled until late Sunday night.
The club members have plenty of good
things to eat and drink. Only mem
bers of the club and out of town
guests were Invited. , Held Picnic July 25.
The annual picnic of Triumph lodge,
Knights of Pythias will be held Sun
day July 25 at John Placke's farm, two miles north of the city on the Union pike. These affairs are always
largely - attended by the lodge mem
bers and visitors. A Lodge Picnic.
Whitewater lodge I. O.. O. F. degree team win holdv its annual picnic at Henley's grove, north of the city Sun
day, July 18.
A Sultan's Suicide. Sultan Marad V. of Turkey was de
posed la 1876 after a reign of three
months. It was alleged that he was
Insane. He lived until 1904. la the
palace which had been assigned him as a residence he was found dead one
morning, and the first impression was
that be had been assassinated. He
was lying half across the sofa 'in his
apartment with his feet on the floor
In a great pool of blood. Nineteen
physicians of different nationalities
were at once called in, and all agreed
that the deceased sovereign had died by his own hand. The weapon em
ployed was a pair of scissors, with
which the unhappy man had opened
the arteries of his arms.
RICHMOND
AFTER IT
"New, Richard." said the teacher.
"can you tell me who Atlas was?"
"Yes, ma'am," answered Richard:
he was a notorious footpad." "A whatT queried the teacher.
"A footpad," firmly repeated Rich
ard. "He held np the earth, you
know." Chicago News.
This City Wants to Entertain
Next State Y. M. C. A. Convention.
COMMITTEE MEETS TODAY
COULDN'T FOOL HIM Doctor Was Firm and Was Right.
state officials of the Y. M. C. A. at
Indianapolis today. Sharon E. Jones,
who has been exerting every effort to
bring the convention to Richmond was
unable to attend the . meeting today,
An invitation has been extended by
Mr. Jones and it is understood that
most of the officials look upon Rich
mond as the most favorable place to
hold the convention.
In order to select a place for the
next state convention to be held,
: Many doctors forbid their patients there is an executive meeting of the
to drink coffee but the patients still
drink it on the sly and thus spoil all
the doctors efforts, and keep them
selves sick. ;
sometimes me doctor makes sure
that the patient is not drinking coffee
and there was a case of that kind in
St Paul, where a business man said:
"After a very severe illness last
winter which almost caused my death, the doctor said Postum was the only thing that I could drink and he just
made me quit coffee and drink Pos
tum. My illness was caused by indi
gestion from the use of tea and cof
fee.
"The state of my stomach was so
bad that it became terribly inflamed and finally resulted in a rupture. I
had not drunk Postum very long before my lost blood was restored and my stomach was well and strong and
I hare now been using Postum for al
most a year. When I got up from bed after my Illness I weighed 98 pounds
and now my weight is 120.
"There Is no doubt that Postum
was the cause of this wonderful lm-
provemenL I shall never go back to
Thinks They Should Vote on Question That Concern Them. Henry Clay Ide, ex-governor general of the Philippines, who takes the post of United States minister to Spain, has some advanced ideas on the subject of women, ne doesn't exactly come out for unqualified woman suffrage, but something very near it. "I have always thought." he said to a New York Tribune reporter, "that women should vote on the questions that concern them. They have as good a right as men to exercise the ballot In matters relating to the taxa
tion of their property, the expenditure of the money thus obtained, the management and maintenance of the
schools and the general protection of the community. They should have the vote on all things affecting the moral
naYId v MAAnlA Brtfissla ACtTAAStt a 11 V- I
are their province. The mother has the training of the child. That is her work, and who knows better than she does what Is for the child's best interest in the school?"
Mr. Ide said he believed that wom
en's growing interest in the ballot Would have, a purifying effect in poli
tics. "And the agitation for woman suffrage has already worked wonders toward the general emancipation of
women," he said. "In the days when I cast my first vote a woman in most of the states could not make a contract that was binding. She had al
most no property rights. She might be a rich womns, married to a man who brought her nothing, but her property was his to control. She had no rights In her children, who In the eyes
of the law were her husband's. Now all this Is changed, and, while It is true it was men who repealed those
unjust laws, woman suffrage agitation
made the sentiment that caused them to do the repealing.
"A woman who does the work a man does should be paid the money a man is paid. Of course there are kinds of work requiring more muscle than most women have, but in clerical and Intellectual pursuits there need be no distinction and should be none. In some occupations for instance, that of court stenographer women are paid as well as men now."
i a VERSPECTIYB VIEW FROM A PHOTOGRAPH.
FIRST FLOOR PLAN. SECOND FLOOR PLAN. ' j
HOBBY -TROOSEttS
kMBBBBaMBaiBMBaiBMBBBMl
are what the yoiEva man of today is lock? ing for. These trousers have the distinguishing marks of made to order goods. Every detail is perfect fabric, fit and finish. Everything that is nobby and for a man's comfort in Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery and Neckwear.
KRONE & KENNEDY 803 mm SlttEET
This Is a very attractive colonial design and a great success for a nlee j subui&in residence. The whole treatment of the detail of the exterior, as well the interior, is reflnod and classic. The plan is very well laid out; all of the main rooms on the first floor open well together. Note especially the nook with the fireplace as you enter the hall; also a nice alcove with seat on the main landing of the stairs. To lessen the cost of this house the chimney showing in the library could be dispensed with and still not detract 1 from the looks of the building. Main rooms and stair on first floor trimmed In hrd wood; balance of building trimmed In soft wood and finished natural. First story ten feet high, second nine and a half feet. Third story has three rooms finished, with ample storage space. Laundry In cellar, which Is floored; laundry has all Improvements. House Is heated throughout with steam, and 1 all wnHs and ceilings are plastered with three coats of plaster. Cost about j $24200. Size, 24 by feet, with ten foot porch.
P. T. MAC LAGAN. Architect I
A SAMPLE VOTlliS
MACHINE ARRIVES
Is on Exhibition at the Com
mercial Club.
A Sample voting machine has been
placed on exhibition in the rooms of the Commercial club. It Is of the pat
tern the county council has suggest
ed adopting for use in this county. The machine Is In charge of James Davis, who represents the factory. He will be pleased to show all visitor how the machine Is manipulated.
"I understand the Browns hare moved into a house of their own." Z: "Yes; they had a boose warmlaff tt other night.' "Is that so? Did they show yea all the modern Improvements T "Yes. everything except th matt gage." Detroit Frea Press.
PLAN CELEBRATION
Local Grove Druids Will Observe Tenth Birthday In December. BANQUET LAST EVENING
There was a special meeting of the local grove of the Ancient Order of Druids last night No candidates were initiated Into the mysteries of the order as was Intended, owing to the warm weather. A banquet was served and the evening was spent socially. There was a large attendance.
Plans for the celebration of the
tenth anniversary of the local grove on December 2 were discussed. Nothing definite has been decided upon as yet, but it is understood, several speakers of prominence will be secured and it is the intention to make the de
cade event one of the biggest and most
successful affairs in the history of the ocal organization. - -
HIT BUTLER COUIJIY Storm Strikes Funeral Procession and. Several Were Injured.
ONE SOLDIER IS KILLED
Suffragette Banner. Very pertinent the lords of creation will doubtless think the adoption of a parrot as a motif for the design of the suffragette banner that decorated St. James' hall, London, where recently was held the first quintennial meeting of the International Suffrage alliance. Mrs. Ida Husted Harper was one of the distinguished representatives from America. For the English Writers league Mme. Sarah Grand made a magnificent address, and when her time' was up the audience pressed her to continue. She asked how It was
ELIZABETH CROOK
WAITS! DIVORCE
Charges Desertion and Cruel
Treatment.
Elizabeth J. Crook has filed suit in
the "Wayne circuit court for divorce from George W.: Crook. She alleges
in her complaint the two were married
in 1878 and that for more than two
tea or coffee, but shall always stick to yeras the defendant has remained
the food drink that brought me back ;
to health and strength.'
Look for the little book, "The Road to WellvUle In pkgs. "There's a
Reason."
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
re genuine, true, and full of human i
apart from her. She charges that dur
ing this time he has wholly failed to provide for her. She alleges that pre
vious to the time of separation the defendant was guilty of cruel and Inhuman treatment She maintains he
struck her with his fist, called her vile
and Indecent names and otherwise
w- n J! ; b
secretary's baknbr.
that women had had strength to bear obloquy, insult and slander from enemies, some of whom would gladly have seen them stoned to death what
was it that urged them on? Women were demanding to be enfranchised simply because they could not help it.
and the movement was not national. It was racial and it was evolutionary,
Everything had been tried to stem the
decay of nations except this of giving
a woman a - moral - Influence In all
lands. Man could not work or live or think alone. Woman was the heart of his heart and hie other wing, with
out which he could not fly upward. .
A JEWELRY
HELD PITTSBURG
Charged With Taking $3,000
In Valuables.
Pittsburg, July 13. Joseph Feldman
28 years old, who gives his address as 964 North Tenth street, Philadelphia,
is under arrest here with $3,000 worth
of -jewely in his possession. Feldman
Is believed to be one of the participants in the Toronto burglary a week ago.
A MEETING CALLED
A special meeting of Wayne coun
ty council has been called for Tuesday, July 20. It will be necessary to
elect a successor to J. C FUlghum. He was elected from New Garden township. The council fills all vacan
cies.
Hamilton, O., July 13. A tornado swept over a part of Butler county late
yesterday, injuring a score. At a point seven miles from this city a funeral procession encountered the storm and several were injured. Hit Soldiers' Camp. Toledo, O., July 13.-Llghtning struck at the outskirts of Camp William H. Taft yesterday afternoon where some of the troops which participated in
last week's tournament wer still quar
tered, and killed Jerry Spaulding, a teamster from Ft. Sheridan, 111.
No collar which shrinks or cracks can be as good as an
15c. each 2 for 23c
Arrow Cuffs, like Arrow Collars, are;the best at the price as casta ft pair
A CAMP MEETING HIT BY CYCLONE
One Woman Is Killed Preacher Injured.
an6
Steubenville, O., July 13. A cyclone which swept eastern Ohio last night, did $10,000 damage to houses, oil derricks, and struck . the camp meeting grounds of the Free Methodists, kill
ing Miss Mary Miller, 16 years old, of Brighton, Pa., and severely injuring
Rev. W. Ladue, also of New Brighton.
Many others received minor injuries and the camp was completely wrecked.
FIIID PHARES GIRL
Catherine Phares of , Camden,1 who was reported to the local police yes
terday as missing has been found. Word was received here yesterday afternoon that the girl is located. No
details of the affair were divulged.
2 Automatic EitZtZ MltS Pboues - - - - ' Whmmmm GROCERY
Plenty of Good Tbinfls to Ed at Our Store. Luncheon Goods of An Kfci& Hot Weather Drinlic: Dearfield Table "Waters, Grape Juice, Ginger Ale, Lemon 8auer. How to Entertain 12 Persons
1 Pt Welch Grape Juice. 2 pta. Water. 3 Lemona ; 1 Orange ' 1 Cup Sugar 1 Lump Ice Serve in Sherbet Glass. . Get at the Bee Ri ve.
Wevcr-SOp
You will find the Pingree-made Oxfords different from others. They never slip at the heeL That's worth a whole lot. Try a pair and see if we are not correct. Cost no more but are bettes
Freeman F. Dc!s!2 y
OEiTiiariATcns
fcrfe cl a Cettfc7
tvfccn yea ca cm cz2
prises:
Ice Capacity 50 lbs. " GO " . : 75 v
v ico
C3.CD C7.C0 caco 010.C0:
(Gei?nje Wo (BunEiei?!
Interest.
abased her. f.
