Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 259, 26 July 1909 — Page 8

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IEZ3 TO GET HI OHIO FACTORY

HAL HOW CLOSED Officers of an Indianapolis In dustrial Company Are Ex pected to Sign Contract Submitted Today. NEW INDUSTRY WILL BE A TOOL CONCERN It Is Understood That Work ; On Factory Building in the i -Beallview Addition Will Start In Two Weeks. With the signing of a contract by ' officers of the Industrial Realty Company at Indianapolis today, a deal between the South Side Improvement association and officers of an automatic 1 tool works for bringing the factory to this city which is now located in an Ohio city will be practically closed. The realty company is acting as agent for the location of the factory, in this city and, according tq the terms of the pending contract, work will be com- ' menced on thevfactory building within two weeks and the concern must occu py the building W December 1. The i name of tie concern is withheld from publication until all pending agreements have been signed tfi black and white and in the hands of the South Side Improvement association, which will prooabiy be tomorrow, j Terms of Contract. According to the terms of the con tract between the association and the realty company, it is learned from a reliable kource, the realty: company, whleh ialeanttalized at 150.000 and will have Its i headquarters in tjhis city lmi mediately upon the close; of the con tract, it Us expressly stafed that the i automatic tool works muit be located Jn this city. ; The company is also ex.pected touo all in its power to locate : other factories for the South Side Im provement mssociation. ' man. named WiH Bockhoff Is president of he realty company and also tateiwteaMathe new factory, which la to be brought to this city. He formerly resided In this city and since his removal has made an enviable rep utation in the manufacturing world. The responsibility of bringing the factory here is dependent upon the fealty company. It has to furnish the bonus and the association will after wards repay the realty; company by the sale of lots In the Beallview addl- ? tion. The sale of lots will be left en- ' tirely with . the association and will '.probably be carried on through a local agent and not a foreign agency. . Employs 100 Men. Tne new lactory concern win em ploy In the neighborhood of 100 men. AH labor is skilled. The factory is capitalized at the present time at $250,000. , The location of the factory site is between South N and O streets and Oakland and South Seventh streets, , and the C. C. A I railroad. . The site .is two squares long by one square i wide. Arrangements have been com pleted whereby the C. C. & I rail road company will put in ample i switching facilities for the new conicern. A hitch was at first experienced over the inability to secure prom ise or swucmng facilities, but at a meeting of officers of the factory with C, C. & I officials Saturday after noon the matter was settled An officer of the factory who was .in this city recently stated to friends that the ground had been laid out and the factory building would be erected at once. The building will prob ably . be of either concrete or brick construction. THROUGH SLEEPING CAR MARQUETTE TO leaving unicago, aauy, s:ou p. m. via the Chicago ft North Western R'y. The Direct Route to the Lake Superior iron and copper country. Through without change. For further particulars apply to your nearest ticket agent or address W. B. Knlskern, Passenger Traffic Manager, Chicago, III 19-26-2 HOWARD TO ATTEUD Rev. B. O. Howard, pastor of the First English Lutheran church will leave In a few days for Rockrille, IIL, where he will attend a general assem- . bly of Lutherans. He is on the program to deliver an address twice each day for the ensuing two weeks. After finishing this engagement he will visit his parents home In Michigan and spend the remainder of his vacation. EXPECT ARRESTS. utner arrests on suspicion are ex pected to follow the effort of the po lice to get a clue as to the identity ot the burglars, who f visited so many bustsJ places recently. Frank Townsend, 'Who has been held on suspicion claims to be able to establish an alibi. NOTICE TO RED MEN. Members of Osceola and Hokendauqua tribes of Red Men are requested to meet at Wigwam the evenings ot . Thursday, July 29 and Friday, July 30, respectively. Business of importance. By order of Union board ot trustees. ELMER FORD. President CHARLES E.POTTE3,Secy.

Woman Hired as

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President William G. McAdoo, of

other sensation bv hlrine voune women as ticket sellers. Other women

have been employed, by the local traction companies In this capacity, but Mr. McAdoo insists on paying them the same wages as paid men ticket

sellers. The picture shows one of MISPLACED CONFIDENCE. The Victim Said Nothing, but Did Heap of Thinking. At a railway station the other day "a gentleman from the country" yield ed to the pressing solicitation of a per sistent newsboy and bought a penny weekly paper. But here was a difficulty a shilling. no change and the engine ot the train giving unmistakable evidence of a speedy departure. The bargain was about to be can celed when the boy volunteered to get the shilling changed Into pence. "But." said the gent, "perhaps you will not return with the 1 pence." The boy's face wore an injured look. "If you are afraid to trust me, sir," said be, and there was the least trace of emotion in his voice, "you can have the other eleven copies as security." Something suspiciously like moisture came into the old man s eyes as be glanced Into the bright, open countenance of the boy, and he felt heartily ashamed of himself as he mechanically held out his hand for the remaining eleven copies. He watched the little fellow as he trotted down the platform till he sailed round a corner and was lost to sight. Fifteen seconds later the engine gave a final shriek, and the train slowly gilded out of the station. The man glanced round at his fellow passengers and handed a copy of the paper to each. one from his pile. He said nothing, but he seemed to be thinking. London Tit-Bits. NATURE AS A CHEMIST. Feats Which the Highest Exactitude of Science Cannot Rival. The bursting leaves of springtime illustrate nature as a chemist who performs feats which the highest exactitude of science cannot. hope to ri val. In a leaf the living matter is his chemist, and the cell Is his laboratory. By daylight the leaf chemist Is ab sorbing, the carbonic, acid - gas - and la decomposing this gas Into its component -elements carbon and oxygen. The carbon tt Is retaining as part of the plant's food to enter Into combination . with - water, and ' the oxygen it sets free Into the atmosphere. ; By night this process ceases, for light is an essential feature in the operation. Out of the carbon and the water the leaf chemist will elaborate the sugars and starches which the plant , world affords. - As sugar the products ' will pass from the leaf to be stored up, as In the case of the potato, for example. so as to afford a storehouse of food whereon the , plant may draw for Its sustenance and for the development of Its leaves and flowers when occasion comes. AH the-vegetable essences and adds, the; scents and gums, the juices which yield India rubber, the flavoring of fruits and even the color of the flowers arc similarly the products of constructive chemistry which V beats man's best efforts to imitate. Man fol lows nature, but at a distance. Chi cago Tribune. Baked Tamale. Boll until tender one small chicken or that amount of any tender meat The meat from soup bones is fine used this way, and veal is as good as chick en, in fact you can use to advantage any tender leftover meat Strain off the broth, remove the bones and break into small pieces. Put Into a frying pan two tablespoonf uls of lard or drip pings and when hot add two tablespoonfuls of flour and let brown a little. ? Then add the meat salted to taste, with on cupful of broth and two tabtespoomfuls of chill powder. Stir and cook ten samutes. Set off to cool and add a small cupful of raisin (whole) and about the same of olives. Now make a stiff batter of three cup ful of cernmeal and one of flour, salt- & tm. T.hjch IS rubbed ttaeMXl8K

Ticket Sellers

the McAdoo tunnel, has caused an the young women at work. ora-up.."jl or iat-a or drippings, moistened with one beaten egg and one cupful of broth. Line a deep pan with the butter and bake one hour. Delineator. Calling Names. The late Peieg W. Chandler, who was hard of hearing, was one of the most effective of war time speakers. Qvery occasion Illustrated his eloquence and demonstrated the quickness of his repartee. At one meeting be' was frequently interrupted by a blackguard at the rear of the ball, who kept shouting. "Why don't yon go yourself?" , For a time Mr. Chandler's deafness prevented blm from catching the exact nature of the Interruption, of which he had been for some time conscious. At last Mr. Chandler caught the words of the disturber. Then, In the mildest accents, which emphasized the force of the words, be said, "Young man, if my ears were as good as yours and as long as yours I shouldn't be here tonight!" Argonaut. Evolution of. the Modern Play. With the decay of dialogue In importance less attention has been paid to delivering It so exquisitely as to' give value to It for its own sake. And so by degrees we came to the modern play, in which everything is sac rificed to rraisemblance. soliloquies are tabooed, and people talk as they do In real life naturally and entirely to the point Era. Temperate. Grimsby So you want to marry my daughter, sir! What are your princi ples? . Are you temperate? Fledgely Temperate!. Why, I am se strict that It gives me pain even to find my boots tight London Pick-Me-Up. It. Depends. A Wigwag (trying to think of insomnia) When you haven't been able to sleep for, about a week what do you call it? Toungpop What Is it a boy or girl ? Philadelphia Record. MEN WITH TAILS. ler Rceardi of Old Ttm .Writer Tfeila SfcJet. ' y ..... ' Mention of an obscure belief in other countries that Englishmen used to wear tails has prompted a correspondent to submit some information regarding the subject of tails in general. Dc. John Wolff, an old time writer, said: ."There is even in England a gentleman of dark complexion' and of great talents who walks exactly as if he had a tail, and people of high rank told me that he and his family were known to have talis, ; and -therefore In his carriage there is a hole in the seat -where he sits In order that he may be able to sit comfortably ." Baring-Gould's : "Curious Myths of the Mlddle Ages" contains the following: VDr. Wolff in his travels and ad ventures says, There are men and women In Abyssinia with ' tails - like dogs and horses. . Wolff also heard from a great many Abyssinians, and Armenians (and Wolff Is convinced of the truth of It) that there are near Narea, In Abyssinia, people men and women with large tails, with which they are able to knock down a horse, and there ase also such people near China.", A note hi Baring-Gould's book adds: "In the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Dubnn may still be seen a human skeleton with a tall seven inches long. There are many known instances of this elongation of the caudal vertebra, as in the Poonangs In Borneo." MADE LONG FLIGHT. Savannah, I1L, July 26. Balloon university City which left St Louis last night to attempt to capture the i Lahm cup landed here at nine-thirty i o'clock this morning. It covered only ! 2i2 milea.

iStlTTGIl KILLEB

IS THE CHAftGE OF HIS OTHER She States in Interview Today That the Lieutenant Was The Victim of Deliberate Murder Plot. WAS LURED TO DEATH IS HER ALLEGATION i Resident of Maryland Writes To Authorities Saying That His Brother Was Also Done To Death. (American News Service) . Annapolis, Md., July 26. Lieut J. N. Sutton," the inquiry Into whose strange death was resumed here today was not only killed by his brother officers, but his presence at the scene of the fatal quarrel was the result or a deliberate and cowardly plot to slay him, according to a statement of the dead marine officer's mother, Mrs. James Ni. Sutton today. Mrs. Sutton, who has worked almost unremittingly since the first court of Inquiry pronounced her son a suicide, to remove the stigma from the family name, declared that the young naval officer was lured by show of friendliness to invite the young men to accompany him in the automobile. His companions, she said, bad formed a plot to beat him to death and then shoot him In the head to give color to the suicide theory, which his slayers before the commission of the crime decided to advance. Challenge to Duel. The mother said that among the ef fects found on her son was a note from Lieut Sumner, apologizing for a challenge to a duel. She related how she had found Sumner, who declared that there was nothing significant in the note. "I do not believe the postponed' duel had any direct bearing on the tragedy, but the evidence will be presented to the court to show that instead of be ing quarrelsome and domineering, as he has been represented to be, Jimmy was of a generous disposition, . kind enough to accept the written apology of one who felt that my son's actions warranted the fighting of a duel. "How "my son could ever have a companied a number of his acknowl edged enemies to the camp in an auto mobile as the witnesses have sworn, unless they inveigled him into it by a show of friendliness!, I can pot believe. It is my belief that th' coward ly attack was planned before the par ty left Carvel hall, and that the officers accepted the hospitality of my boy so as to, accomplish their purpose. Asks a Reopening. That the -navy department will be asked to reopen the original inquiry Into the death of one and possibly more marine officers' developed today when Mrs. Sutton received a letter from a resident of Maryland who declared that his brother had been mur dered. A verdict similar to the one rendered in the Sutton case was returned. Upon the advice of her attorney, Mrs. Sutton declined to make public the name of the writer of the letter. It was learned, however, that the mysterious death referred to occurred in a post on the Pacific coast, within the last year and that the relatives of the dead officer were unable to have the findings of the first board reviewed by the head of the navy who was then in office. The writer commended Mrs. Sutton and her daughter, Mrs. Rose Sutton Parker for the effort they had been making to have justice done to the memory of the dead lieutenant It described the facts of the tragedy and : concluded with the statement that the writer of the facts of the case he referred to could no longer be withheld If the two women succeeded In having the stigma of sui cide removed from the name of Lieut Sutton. SUfT WAS FILED. Suit has been entered in the Wayne circuit court by the Union Loan & Trust Company, of this city vs. William E. Farlow on note and to fore close mortgage. '.-" m I II

All

SUFFERED A STROKE

Judge Herron, Taft's Father-in-law, Suffers With . , Paralysis. HIS CONDITION IS SERIOUS (American News Service) Cincinnati, July 26. John W. Her ron, father-in-law of President Taft has suffered a stroke of paralysis and is seriously ill at the home ot his son in-law Charles Anderson Jr.. at East Walnut Hill. Because of his age it is feared that the stroke suffered will be fatal. He is past 82 years of age. It was said today at the Anderson home that Mr. Herron's condition was slightly improved. His daughter. Mrs, Taft, has been notified by Dr. . Eman uel Schwab, the attending physician, but at his advice has not yet started for her father's bedside. It is believ ed she will come to Cincinnati early this week, leaving the summer home or the Tarts at Beverly, Mass- on Monday. Dr. Schwab said today he did not know whether Mr. Herron's afcoke would prove fatal as paralysis requires many hours before a definite knowledge of a stroke can be gained. COMPLETE PLANS F8JI CEHTEIIIIIAL HELD AUGUST 19 (Continued From Page One.) Calling list of churches. Evening. Invocation Dr. Guild, Supt Rich mond district Address BishoD J. F. Berry, Buf falo, formerly, editor Epworth Herald. Hallelujah chorus, sixty voices. LOCAL ATTOBHEY SEES A CYCLONE AT CROOKED LAKE (Continued From Page One.) notified In time to run from the house and seek shelter In a little ravine. "The air was filled' with falling de bris, including wheat straw, a wheat field having been crossed by the wind before it struck the lake. The cloud passed on and after striking a hill side went out of sight a thousand feet above. For days parts of the Wickwire cottage were being pulled from the lake. The senator's clothes had contained his money, watch and other valuables. Bed sheeting, pillows and other furnishings kept falling into the lake for several minutes after the cy clone passed." A GREAT CHANGE. Everyone knew of the lady who lived UDon the heights. She used to wash the livelong day and sometimes half the night But now it is a well known fact that she is through by nine. The change is due to rub-a-lac which she considers fine. ' Two Cxeeatla. "They say that all the world loves a lover," said the rejected suitor as he ate his dinner from the mantelpiece, "but there are generally two exceptions to the rule, the girl you want to be your wife and the man you want to be your father-in-law." Princeton Tiger. Submit to what Is unavoidable, ban ish the Impossible from the mind and look around t or some new object of In terest in liXe. Goethe. The Widow's Mite. The widow's mite Is a coin of copper issued by Alexander Jannaeus (105 to 173 B. C) bearing a wreath of olives, with the inscription. "Jonathan the High Priest and the Confederation of the Jews." "On the reverse are two cornucopias and the bead of a poppy The mite was the smallest current coin In the time of Jesus, and its value was abotrt one-eighth of a cent . r--SAYS WAS NOT HE. The "prominent cafe man" recently reported as having left Richmond, "stinging" the merchants, was some other than myself. I am still keeping busy at 14 South Eighth street CHAS. PROFFIT.

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All Onffordc T.luo4 Go. fJo4lco Our tTJindorjo uncnimigCiiainn) G. (LcGcinniaini 710 ".lain 34. '

Are You ForJtSoney? Do you need a little assistance temporarily? The proposition Is easy. Call at our office . and state your wants to us confidentially. We can help you out without any embarrassment or publicity. Our system is simple and easy easy to get and easy to pay. Money Loaned On wagons, pianos, household goods, horses, or any personal property cf value without removing them from your possession. Loans made anywhere within 40 miles of Richmond. $1.20 is the weekly payment on a $50 loan for 50 weeks. Other amounts In proportion. If you need money, call or write at once. Private BcUsUc RICIM0ND L0ATJ 0., Room 8, Colonial Bldg Automatic Phone 1545. RICHMOND, IND.

GIRL'S FROCK. This is one rf the new designs With the two plccts la the front of the skirt with curved belt The bretelles on the waist come in line with the pleats, giving a pretty panel effect to the front of the dress. The toek opens all the way dewn, the buttons on the skirt being so arranged as tm emae en the inside. This pattern Is cut in four sites, 4, f, S and 10 years, fuze 6 requires 4 yards of plain material 27 inches wide or 5 yards of border material. Price of pattern 4 SO is 10 cents. No. 460. Name Addiess SUe ......... .......... PHI out blank and send to Patterv Department of this newspaper. . ROUND TRIP TO CINCINNATI Via C C. & L IL IL y SO WE) AY AUgUGl IS. Numerous attractions Baseball "Reds" vs. Brooklyn.; Train leaves Richmond 5:20 a. m. Returning leave Cincinnati 10 p. m. For particulars call C. A. BLAIR, P. tT.JL, Home Tel. 2062. Richmond.

Monday and Tuesday

Drama fadl of

Roosevelt's Dsacrs Nothing in comparison with the riiSa taken by the men who capture alive the wild animals for the circus andithe soo. Roosevelt is an expert rifle shot. Notion or rhino will reach him. But the animal catchers court death daily. The most dangerous trade tn the world'is thrillingly described by Captain Fritz Duquesne, the Boenivoty hunter and after you havevemd his article you'll knowwhy&a white rhinocero sis wVrtvi fSfeOOO. Xn amazing story of the bright red face of danger.' In HPTGW'S MAGA2NE AUGUST-ON SALE ,NOW. Visit your newsdeaftt tay and examine a ccjpy of tfciaQew magazine. Then' you'USceway 25,060 new people -buy " ittevery month. You'll find it full-of special articles dealing with-sweh inicrcsung ana napnumv iects as: - WmshtHrton, D.C ivWrvi adtse Tudre Harris Did tells why, in a masterf ub contsi bution to the Negro" Questn. I Not only what tJhey wast.) bast I what they intend to have. Uead Rheta Cbilde Dorrarticlsucd see what the wosaa nwrt really means. "The PtivmU Bnk PutxT by Edwin Palaver and 'VTLJa B. MacHarg. Another of tise series of achievements of Lfttfisr Trant, Psychologist Detective. "Th Wo0d MoT by Gonver neur Morris, a story o tho Lost Dauphin, charawtsly told in Ur. Morris's delightful style. Kin Pierpnt th First, md tk Ttust tkmt will Cmtml All othir Trusts Water power wZl soon control fanning, mannfacturiag, jlransportation. The power of the Water Power Trust will be beyond comprehension. Join L. l&thews tells how and why in an article that will give you new things to think about. Splendid vmaxtion fictUn by Elmer Blaney Harris, Res Beach, . O. Henry, Myra Kelly and Gertrude Allen, G. W. Ogden, etc' 15 cents riAJwWTntrs UAr.A7rsr.twY aEzrucll? and we will tell you what it has done for the people in this vicinity so that you can look into the matter and bo sure you are doing the right thing by purchasing one. CbcSo M. EQC2I? Tfcc Jctvclc? 99

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