Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 288, 24 August 1909 — Page 3
PAGE TUIXC3. SUPREME COURT CALLED UPOTl TO MAKE A DECISION Life Boat Crew Saving Sailors of Wrecked Schooner boat which the saffenr is diarrhea, or "ranmias; off of the) bemela. Ti m a tak lamsiea staffer, a miatura at laBdaanss or remedy. These ax the vary thiags yoa ahoold mot tak. Ssirair diarrhea is caused bv ca tenia cold in tha rtnmsrh or bosjs.li or bscan of sosm aunt food or water that too took. These war gernv-Udea. and tho germs got ioto tho and irritated them. Tho thing to do to tako a rouabla aauseptac use VMiVniiia v PEPSIN, which will promptly remoeo tho germs and tone and strengthen tho stomach aad bowels and thns giro thorn a new start. Young and old can use it with equal effect. Thousands of American families keep it constantly ia tho boose for just such digestive troubles as summer complaint, indigestion, biliousness, constipation, sick headache, and especially for tho digestive ailments of babies and children. No baby will refuse DR. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN as it is very pleasant to take, and, unlike salts and purgative waters, tablets and pills, it acts naturally and does not gripe, A bottle can be bought at any drug store for 60 cents or SI. 00, and one bottle is sufficient to keep an entire family in good health for a long time. TWwWtawwwMaMLMISk WELL'S STKrP rarelfc mm imU be il m tmmt m t ! iUWl see iihN WMhiijiljili Ji imI , mmm H1 - All PLC MTTUfMW ear HjiiiiIih ea mtlmmtr l Mr ms O mmm illtmitiai . ItetesatosU , Highest Tribunal Will Be Asked If Breweries Can Sell Booze To Their Patrons in "Dry MM MnwMM SNHiMn immi wmy mmm mm mmmmH wMI mm mm mm m " riTS ! www m k wilt fmM Spots." vMsnt ' wee egeisj mm tmr "OC'SlHKR S HtTWH TO) GREENCASTLE CASE aevem 94 ess, es m wtm HAS BEEN APPEALED BVOMftmH h4
THE RICHMOND PAIXADIUH AN2 BUH-TI3LEGIIAM, TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1909.
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Ruling of the Supreme Court Will Decide the Fate of the
Social Clubs in the Dry Counties. Indianapolis, Aug-. 24. The supreme court Is to be called on to decide whether breweries can legally sell beer In dry territory by mail or other wise. The case in which this decision Is to be made is that of John Skelton of Greencastle, against the state. Ekeltonwas the agent for the Terre Haute Brewing company at Greencastle. Skelton sold beer to the consum ers direct as well as to the saloons when Greencastle had saloons, and it Is this feature of the case that will have an all-important bearing on the question of whether breweries operat ed in wet counties can sell beer to consumers in dry territory. History of Case. While Skelton was acting as the gent for the Terre Haute Brewing company at Greencastle he was arrest ed on the grounds that he had no right to sell beer to consumers. The theory of the prosecution was that a brewery may sell only to retail dealers and not to consumers. In constru ing, the meaning of the word wholeBaler, the supreme court has held In the past that it means any person. firm or. corporation which sells to another person, who buys for the pur pose of selling to another person. The contention of the state in the Skelton case was that the Terre Haute Brew ing company could not be classed as a wholesaler, under these decisions and this t definition of the word, and that therefore, under its brewery lic ense it had no right to sell to the con Burner. It could only sell to the dealWhy Japan Won't Fight Us Japan wants the Philliptnes. - She wants to keep us out of China. She wants certain rights on the Pacific Coast. Will she fight for them ? No! Why? There are five reasons. Everyone of them sufficiently interesting in itself to make every man and woman in the country want to read this splendid articfe. - Dr. Thomas Green has just returned from Japan. He went tor tho purpose of finding out the exact attitude of the government and the people towards the U. S. The facts he found out make intensely interesting reading in HAMPTON'S MAGAZINE .C7TOS2R -ON SALE WOW ' Among the twenty other great features that will make you say that this is the "Best Uagazine in America " are " Pricing omr LawUss Cities." General Bingham "speaks out " at last abont the rottenness of the New York Judiciary. You must not cms bis startling revelations. MTkt Vow SiJenc"A typical story by Alice Hegan Rice in her happiest vein. " Tfu Crocks O 'GaaU."An Irish folk lore story by Hennmie Templeton. "Tkt Coming Spectacle in the Skits." By Garrett P. Servfcs. A thrilling and entertaining story about Halley's Comet that will soon be visible and may give us a "bump." ,Tk4WayoftkeTransgrtsun Charles Edward Russell writes an article of absorbing interest about modern prison reform. Capital fiction by Morgan Robertson, Rex Beach, Myra Kelly, F.Warner Robinson, etc, etc Bmw II 15 cento
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ers, in accordance with its license as a manufacturer. Skelton Convicted. In this case Skelton was convicted at Greencastle of violating the law, and he appealed to the supreme court. If the judgment of the lower court is sustained by the supreme court It will mean a lot of trouble for the breweries. During the last few weeks scores of social clubs have been organized in various dry coijities in the state, and in every case the purpose of the club is to enable its members to get beer to drink. No secret is made of this fact. The saloon in the county is prohibited by the county option law, but a number of thirsty men can get together and organize a club and incorporate it, and then each member can order from a brewery a supply of beer which will be shipped to him for his own individual use. All of the members do the same thing, and all of the beer is placed in the rooms of the club, where each owner can get it when he wishes it. Usually some ex-saloon keeper who has been put out of business by the operation of the local option law or some exbartender is the custodian of the club and handles the beer for the members. Each member pays a certain amount of dues each month to help maintain the club. This, of course, goes to help pay the rent and the wages of the "keeper of the ice box." Heloed Form Clubs. The breweries have been encourag ing this sort of thing and have been helping in the formation of dozens of these clubs. The breweries have been shipping in the beer to the individual consumers as ordered, but if the supreme court upholds the lower court in the Skelton case it will put a stop to this business and kill the social clubs. They .would be shut off from their supply. In a county which has gone dry by either the local option law or the remonstrance law the breweries cannot ship beer to dealers, because there are no dealers, under the law. The selling of Hnuor in a dry county is a crime. The only way the breweries can now sell in dry counties is to ship beer to the consumers direct. But if the Skelton case is decided against them the breweries will not be able to ship beer even to the ! consumers in dry counties, and the whole business will be killed. Club Cannot Buy. The social club, as a corporation, cannot buy liauor and then either sell or give it to its members. To do so would be a violation of the'liquor laws, for, under the law it is a crime to either sell or give away liquor in a dry county. It can only be purchased by mail and shipped in from wet territory to the consumer himself. The importance of the decision which will follow in the Skelton case cannot be over estimated in its effect f on the ' liquor business in the state. The social club has been the thorn in the side of . the Anti-Saloon league, and.it has feared all along that it would not be able to find a law that would reach the social club and put it out of business. The leagues lawyers have hunted through and through the law books for a law on the subject but have not been able to find one that fit the case. It was declared that there was no way to stop them, and the league has set its mind on getting the next legislature to pass a law forbidding strictly the shipment of liquor from a wet territory Into dry territory. In the meantime, however, the coun ties that have gone dry by- remon strance or election will continue to have their social clubs and the mem State of Ohio, City of Toledo. , Lucas County. 83. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he I senior Dartner of the firm of F J. Cheney & Co., dotng- business In the City of Toledo, county and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence, this Sth day of December. A- D. 188. (Seal.) JL W. GLEASON, Notary Public Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and acts directly on the blooa and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by all Druarlsts. 75c Take Hall's Family Pills for constl-
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PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN AT LONG BEACH, LONG ISLAND,
bers will continue to get their beer, unless the supreme court happens to decide the Skelton case against the brewers. Bingham's Contention. A brief in the Skelton case is about to be filed in-the supreme court by James Bingham, attorney general, and this brief will be an elaborate presentation of the state's contention that the breweries have no right, under their manufacturers' license to sell beer to the consumer and that they have only the right to sell to dealers. Inasmuch as there are no legal iiquor dealer in dry territory, in such a case, the beer business in such territory would be stopped, so far as the breweries would be concerned. It is suyposed that in case the supreme court decides against them and they are shut out of making shipments to consumers in dry territory, the breweries will establish selling agencies in connection with their establishments and conduct their selling in that way. To do so however, the brewery would have to have a retailers license issued to some man in the brewery's own town, and that man would then have a right to handle-the product of the brewery.- He would have the right, under his retailer's license, to sell in any quantity whatsoever, to the consumer, and would even have the right to ship into dryjterritory to consumers. This, it is presumed, would be the next move of the brewers In case of a pinch. No Decision Soon. There is no telling when the supreme court will pass on the Skelton case, however. It will probably be many months before a decision is given, for it takes a long time, as a general proposition, to get a case through the supreme court. There are a good many persons who believe that there will be no decision of any of the cases involving the local option or other phases of the liquor question until af ter the next state election, but this is not believed to be the case. It is more than likely that the supreme court will be ready to hand down a decision in October in the Noblesville case, in which the constitutionality of the lo cal option law is attacked. At least that is the general belief here. ADVISE MRS. THAW Pittsburg Friends Tell Her to Quit Breaking Into the Newspapers. WILL GAIN THEIR ILL-WILL Pittsburg, Aug. 24. The persistency with which Mrs. William Thaw has been breaking into print against the advice of friends and relatives has caused an estrangement between her and her Pittsburg advisers, and warning has been given the mother of Harry K. Thaw that unless she quits making attacks through the press on those who do not think as she does regarding her son Jiat her Pittsburg friends will desert her entirely. It is and has been the opinion of the Pittsburg friends of Mrs. Thaw that her talking and writing has hurt the case of he son. Even Roger CMara the detective and friend of the Thaws, who is also guardian for Harry, criticised Mrs. Thaw for getting her opinions on Harry's case before the public Dr. J. C. Bingaman, the Thaw family physician too, has made the public statement of "regret" that Mrs. Thaw should have issued this pamphlet. The more recent penchant of Mrs. William Thaw for talking through the newspapers has caused much uneasiness in Pittsburg. O'Mara is said by friends to have sent word that he -is through unless Mrs. Thaw "keeps quiet in future." This brings out some unwritten history in the Thaw family with reference to the trial of Harry Thaw for the Wiling of Stanford White In New York. It appears that the mission of O'Mara to New York; at that time was as much to keep Mrs. Thaw in line as anything else, and those who attended the trial and kept close to the Thaws say that O'Mara on several
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MILTON
RUNAWAY
CAUSES TROUBLE Ponies Scare at Auto, Break Up Rig and Kick Driver In the Head. FRIGHT HURTS INVALID WOMAN WHO WITNESSED ACCIDENT SUFFERED NERVOUS COLLAPSE AND PHYSICIAN HAD TO BE SUMMONED. Milton. Ind., Aug. 24. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Lowery, Will Phillpott, Misses Hazel Filby and Ruby Kellam were in a runaway accident Sunday evening Just as they were crossing the river bridge on the cast side of town they met Mrs. C. T. Wright and sons of Cambridge City in their auto The auto was moving slowly and the ponies seemed not to care for It Seeing this the driver threw on the clutch and the sudden noise frightened the animals who left the bridge at a breakneck speed. After crossing the bridge ths animate wheeled quickly to head for home. The abmpt turn broke one wheel and the carriage tongue. As they turned Lowery sprang from the carriage and caught one of the ponies. At the same time Phillpott was thrown forward and would have fallen under the wheels had he not been calugat by those in the carriage. The ponies were thrown into the fence that skirts the road, and as W. Morris was near the scene of the accident he gave assistance and the animals were taken from the carriage. One of the ponies reared on his hind legs when Mr. Lowery caught him and struck his cantor on the side of the head, cutting a severe gash. Outside of this no other injuries were sustained by the occupants of the carriage. Mrs. Lawrence Wissler who was sitting on the veranda at her home saw the accident. She is the sister of Mm. thought they would all be killed. She is an invalid and is not yet recovered from a recent operation for appendicitis. The fright she experienced was so great that she suffered a nervous collapse and the attending physician had to be called. occasions was forced to restrain Mrs. Thaw by force from breaking into the court roow and making a scene. SEARED WITH A HOT IRON, or scalded by overturned kettle cut with a knife bruised by slamed door injured by gun or in any other way the thing needed at once is Bucklen's Arnica Salve to subdue Inflammation and kill the pain. It's earth's supreme healer, infallible for Boils, Ulcers, Fever Sores, Eczema and Piles. 25c at A. G. Luken & Company's. Hitch Your Wagon to a Star. Httch your wagon to a star. Let us not fag In paltry works. Let us not lie and steal. No god will help. We shall find all their teams going the other way. Work rather for those Interests whien the divinities honor and promote justice, love, freedom, knowledge, utility. Ralph Waldo Emerson. A Toot Question In Theology. Six-year-old Walter bad a new little wagon, and it was very dear to bis heart. Sunday was a long day. and after getting borne from Sunday school be brought bis treasure around on the front lawn to enjoy it. But his father, who couUl not have the Sabbath broken tn the face and eyes of paaoersby, remonstrated with him, telling him to take ft around to the back yard. "Why cant I play with It hero, PPT "Why. becanso It fa 8nnday, my on!" "Bat. PPO, tent It Sunday In tho back yardr aakod Walter in
Baseball Results NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Won. Lost. Pet. Pittsburg 70 30 .725 Chicago 74 35 .679 New York 66 40 .623 Cincinnati 54 54 .500 Philadelphia 49 60 .450 St. Louis 45 64 .413 Brooklyn 40 69 .361 Boston 28 83 .252
AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet Philadelphia 71 Detroit .70 Boston 70 Cleveland. .' 57 Chicago 55 New York 52 St. Louis . . 45 Washington 32 42 43 46 58 57 60 65 81 .628 .619 .603 .496! .491 .464 .409 .283 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.
Won Lost Pet. Milwaukee 70 56 .556 Minneapolis .71 57 .555 Louisville 66 2 .516 Columbus .62 66 .484 Kansas City 60 65 .480 St. Paul 60 65 .480 Indianapolis 60 69 .465 Toledo 59 68 .465
RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. New York 12; Cincinnati 9. Chicago 11; Boston 6. Pittsburg 2; Philadelphia 0. Brooklyn 71; St. Louis 09. American League. Detroit 11; Washington 6. Philadelphia 12; Cleveland 6. Chicago 5; New York 1. Boston 3; St. Louis 2. American Association. Milwaukee 7; Kansas City 3. Indianapolis 9; Louisville 2. St. Paul 1; Minneapolis 0. Toledo 6; Columbus 5 (10 innings.) New York, Aug. 24. Cincinnati played its last game here this season yesterday and was beaten 12 to 9 by New York after a struggle in which each contestant used three pitchers. The residents made seven runs in the fourth inning, Seymour, McCormick and O'Hara each getting two hits in this round. Score: R.H.E. Cin'natI 20103001 2 9 12 5 N .York 00070131 012 13 2 Gasper, Campbell, Dubuc and Roth; Crandall, Marquard, Ames and Mey ers. Runs Bescher, Paskert.3, Hoblitzel 3, Lobert. Roth. Doyle 2, Devore. McCormick, O'Hara 2. Devlin 2, Bridwell 2, Merkle, Meyers. Two-base hits Paskert, Roth, Seymour, Bridwell. Three-base hits Hoblitzel 2. Home run Hoblitzel. Sacrifice hit Egan. Sacrifice flies McCormick. Devlin. Stolen bases Paskert, Egan, Lobert, Doyle 2, Seymour, O'Hara 2, Bridwell, Merkle, Devore. Left on bases Cincinnati 8; New York 6. Bases on errors Cincinnati 1; New York 1. Double plays Downey to Hoblitzel: Paskert to Lobert. Struck out By Gasper 1; by Campbell 1; by Dubus 1; by Marquard 3; by Ames 6; by Crandall 1. Bases on balls Off Campbell 2; off Crandall 1; off Marquard 2; off Dubuc 4; off Ames 1. Hit by pitcher By Dubuc, O'Hara. Wild pitch Ames. Passed ball Roth. Hits Off Crandall 1 In 1 Inning; off Marquard, 4 in 3 innings; off Ames 7 in 5 innings; off Gasper 8 In 3 1-3 Inn ings; off Campbell 3 in 2-3 Innings; off Dubuc 2 in 4 innings. Time 2:20. Umpires Rlgler and Kane. WASHINGTON'S PLAGUE SPOTS lie in the low. marshy bottoms of the Potomac the low. breeding ground of malaria germs. These germs cause chills, fever and ague, biliousness, jr.undice, lassitude, weakness and gen eral debility and bring suffering or death to thousands yearly. But Elec tric Bitten never fall to destroy them and cure malaria troubles. - "They are the best all-around tonic and cure for malaria I ever used," writes R. M. James, of Louellen. S. C They cure Stomach, Liver. Kidney and Blood Troubles and - win prevent Typhoid. Try them, 50c Guaranteed by A. G. Luken A Company. hf other say can't say anything tea
Petroleum has been found in Kolantan and other parts of the Malay peninsula. In the north of Slam small quantities of the oil have come to the surface in Muang Fang and other places, but so far no attempthas been made to appertain its commercial value. It is collected by skimming the water which collects in shallow pits dug for the purpose.
After corn has been pulled for hours or days it undergoes alight fermentation and flflavor. If not digestibility,
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1341. Third Floor Colonial Bldg, Boom 40, RICHMOND, IND.
is injured. Pulled and put Into large barrels or bulk, it becomes hot and may be ruined. Experts look at aa ear of corn and tell all about It, but people in general ought to open the shuck, try It with the thumbs, and It the milk squirts Into the eyes It can't be very bad. New York'PTeoa.
The logest telephone span In the world crosses Lake Wallenstadt. la Switzerland, the steel towers support ing the wire being nearly eight thousand feet apart. . All nv ms to Dairy Co. PHONff 11tX CENT.
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Teat St Bl each week. and one month's Treatment DISEASES OF THIS THROAT. LUNGS. LIVER end BLADDER. KHETMATI8C fslUnsr fits). Cancer. Prtv.t snt Nara.na end Ltqcsrs the borrower, on household JACLC
