Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 142, 29 March 1910 — Page 3

THIS RICHMOND FAIXADIUIX AND BUN-TEUEGHA2I, TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 101O.

PAQC7Z

Hrmnnrv men

ODD

i

I led Car Thrcush Eaten as a Sarcastic Fling at the Speed Ordinance. ACTIVE CAMPAIGN IS 03

SO VIGOROUS HAVE OFFICIALS BEEN THAT EVEN THE RECKLESS MOTORIST HESITATES HITTING IT UP.

1 ; , , (Palladium Special) , 1 ' Eaton, Ohio. March 20. Attaching a rope to the front end of a Dayton and Western freight car, and carrying a red flag, the crew of the ponderous

vehicle on Saturday morning apparent

ly hauled it through the city of Eaton

The action was not occasioned oy a

lack of power, but was . doubtless planned and executed to ridicule the city's officials in their efforts to en

force an observance of the .... speed or

dinances. For many months . Marshal, Charles

Bunting has had trouble with persons

employed On the railroads and traction

lines, and recently a crew on the Day-

wn miu tv eaieru were uniereu iuui court, for an alleged violation.- The case has not yet been heard. The or-

dlance compels a reduction of speed to

eight miles or less per hour ; through the corporation, and since its rigid enforcement was begun, all trains passing through the city have'gone so slow

that a passenger could get on or alight

with safety and ease at almost any point, even though he were burdened

with an abundance of baggage. Traffic Now Slow. : l Automobillsts have also been pinch

ed and fined to exceeding the speed

limit, and traffic here Is decidedly slow,

It was observed on Sunday morning that a party of tourists from a neigh- - boring state were going through - so r fast that the scenery looked like a

blur, and all along Main street a howl of "Where's Marshal Bunting r went up from the throng of church-goers. At the same time a "limited" car enr route west was passing, but the autoIsts speeded a distance of six' blocks while the car crawled one square.' 1 , -The trouble all came about over the killing of two citizens within the last six months. Little Mildred Johnstone, ehrouta to school, was cut In twain by a Pennsylvania train, and Daniel McKiaal, octogenarian, suffered death on tfc tracks of the electric line.

I'.-iS.W""""""' . , w .. . alterably divided, some believing in tt'a sternest regulation, while others ar complaining that" Marshal Bunting devotes so much time looking after the eatorcement of the speed laws that his attention is detracted from an abundance of more grevious infractions of the law, to the detriment of the city.

Stcnccb Repaired

Relieves Distress In Five Minutes . Guaranteed to Cur Indigestion, or Money Back. . Let Mrs. Griffith tell you about Ml-

o-na, the greatest prescription xur

stomach troubles ever written: For years I have doctored for acute gastritis, but only received slight benefit and had to be careful what I ate. But, thanks to Mi-o-na stomach tablets I can now eat anything. Last Christmas, after partaking of a hearty turkey dinner, I was seized with an attack of acute indigestion, and the doctor worked over me, for hours before I got relief. He paid me eight visits before I could say I was well enough to sit up. But since then I have taken Mi-o4ia tablets, and I have not been troubled since. Before using Mi-o-na I had attacks about every month." Mrs. Ida Griffith, 1213 C. St., Washington, D. C, July 5, 1909. Mi-o-na stomach tablets are sold by druggists -everywhere and at LiH. Fine's for 50 cents a large box. They are guaranteed to cure indigestion, sour stomach, belching gas, dizziness, biliousness, heaviness, or any stomach ailment. Try Booth's Pills for constipation a joyful surprise 25c. - '

uu

Onies

catarrh or money back

Just

breathe it is. Complete outfit, including inhaler $1. Extra bottles 60c. Druggists.

CALL CHILD "QUIT"

Mrs. Dan Gard So Named Her Offspring Because Her Husband Left Her.

A DIVORCE SUIT IS FILED

. BRAZILIAN BALM put in wound Stops bleedingstops pain cures the blood poison over night prevents lockjaw. Deals like magic Keep on head. May save a life or limb.

v tnrtlGATION IN WINTEIL . Reoelta Very Satisfactory Where Tried r In Western States. 4;Wbeo Water is applied either to bare oil ur to crops outskle the regular irrigatlou seasuu It Is termed winter irrigtlonTue practice thus far has been ceehned largely to the warmer parts "of the arid region. It has become well established In Arizona and California aad is being quite rapidly extended to parts of Oregon. Kansas and the Toc,k.r mountain states. ; v Experience has shown that a deep retentive soil Is capable of storing a large quantity of water. On account. ; ct the fluctuation of western streams of all kinds, from the small creek to the rlarge river,: the greatest flow of water often comes at a season when there is least demand for it. In a few localities adequate storage facilities have been provided to retain the surplus.

bat as a rule it Is allowed to go to

(Palladium Special)

Eaton, Ohio, March 29. At the birth

of their last child, which the mother was pleased to call "Quit," Daniel

Gard evidently made up his mind to quit his marital relation with his wife, Llllie ML Card, and is now suing for divorce, the action being heard today by Judge Elam Fisher in the Preble

County Common Pleas court. The

couple were married September 9, 1801,

at Flora, Ind., and have seven child

ren, ranging in ages from seventeen to

two years. The husband alleges that

May 8, 1907, his wife abruptly aban

doned him,. going . to Lebanon, Ind.,

"where .for five' months" she lived Tn

adultery .with his brother, William Gard. She returned home,: but subse

quently again went to her brother-in

law In the Hbosier state, remaining

for seven weeks. When she again returned to the fam

ily circle she proceeded to dispose of

all their personal property, consisting

of a cow, hog, forty chickens and the like, converting the cash to her own

use. Wherefore, he prays for absolute

divorce and the custody of their child

ren. except the latest acquisition to the

family. -

- One year ago Mrs. Gard sought di

vorce and alimony on the grounds of extreme cruelty, but after hearing part of the evidence, Judge Fisher dismiss

ed the action.' The family have been residents of Eaton for a little more

than two years.

waste. The passage of so much wastetf'" bnt what wlu todnce labor to

water led to the introduction of winter

irrigation, and In nearly every case the results have been satisfactory.

and ordinary' Irrigations are the larger Tetanies need, the crude manner of cooreylng and applying the water and

the dormant or partially dormant condition of the plants at the time of irrigation. In Fresno county, Cal water to turned Into the canals In January and

reoruary. xne urge canais or xne Modesto : and Turlock districts run mm than half a head during the latter half of February. This Is the rainy period In both these localities, and the soli Is usually too wet for plant growth, but water la applied to tlfa flU1 tn All nn th anhanll an

. as to provide a surplus for the rain

less summer when water la scarce. Cesides furnishing a supply of much 'seeded moisture, winter Irrigation, when conditions are favorable, pre

vents wmter killing ana improves xam

ebanlcal condition of the solL

Deafness Cannot De Cured. by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. Titer la only one way to car deafness, and, that la by constitutional remedies, v Deafness la caused by an f attained condition of the mucous lln-I-of the Eustachian Tube. When t tub la In named you hav a rumt as; sound or Imperfect hearing, and mm It la entirely closed Deafness Is tlve result, and unless the Inflammation be taken out and this tub restored to Its normal condition, hearing

nine

NO FEAR OF BEEF TRUSTS. Oclden Wards of Wisdom' Anent the "Back to the - Farm" Slogan. : Here is the view of a Vermonter. who signs himself A Farmer From Town." in a recent letter to a Mew York paper: We in the hills have watched with great Interest the widely varying comments on the high prices and means for restoring less costly living.

Back to the farm Is the only reme-

Wirl be destroyed

of ten are eaves by Catarrh. Jen is nothing but an Inflamed con.

vtpn oi tn mucous surfaces. V will gtre Oa Hundred DoUars far any rase of Deafness caused by "rrh) that cannot b cured by Hall's rTh Cur, twd for circulars free. ,'"' CKKHkSY dt XX, Toledo, O. . - rl by Drureist. Tic

back to producing food? The farming

population, a fairly large proportion, has simply asserted its right to choose where to work for a living. If labor prefers to build automobiles or to manicure ladles' hands or even; aa we sea It, to make cheap wrappers In a New England factory ; town rather than work on a farm, what is to be done? The only way to make those one time farmers go back to work on the land Is to make it pay. and that would mean higher prices than are now paid the farmer. At present 7 cents per pound, dressed, la the beat the farmers of this region receive for beef , 3 cents per quart for milk richer in fat than most that Is sold In cities, and vegetables for nearly nothing back from the railroads. But already "the ultimate consumer" pays mora than be wishes. The remedy Is back to the farm with "the ultimate consumer" himself! if be : will forego fashionable dot bee, champagne and canvasback duck, be content with the best beef, mutton and chickens, milk, cream, cheese and batter that any market affords, the city rebel could, with no more than a few thousand Invested In tend and 500 a year, live like a lord tn lovely surroundings and spend aome time In town aa welL If. like us, he chops and baals soaae of bis own wood, glows bis own land and cares for bis own garden, tajOO to invest and tSSO a year wold give freedom and good Uvtacp hard for watt to do folks to Sad in town.

On the farm wa have no tsar of

trusts nor of Cass

tSleness follows a "tirTTi w ha vs. a yours fast reafy. some fritters- to aeO. a cCar faa f vagetablcB and an

Drove Cattle Over Long Trail

ASert Uichols Fought Indians and Overcame Other Trou- : bles He Encountered fr cm Texas to California.

AusUn, Texas, March 2a Albert

Nichols, who had the distinction of being the first man to drive a herd of cattle from Texas to California, 'died at his home here a few days ago. Few other men ever attempted the hazard

ous trip. , He was seventy-one years

old.

Mr. Nichols belonged to the old type

of Western ranchmen. He drove many

herds of cattle up the Chisholm trail

and encountered bad men and hostile

bands of Indians times almost without number. It waa bis trip from Texas to California, in 1860. however, that he regarded as the most eventful experience of his long life of adventure.

Ranches Demoralized. In the ' days Immediately following

the close of the civil war the ranch business in this State was in a demoralized condition. Mr. Nichols learned

that a good market existed in California for, cattle, and he resolved to try

the experiment of driving a big herd

to that remote region In the hope of

deriving a big profit on the venture. He collected about five thousand head and started them West In the spring of 1865. The outfit consisted of only twenty-two ; trained cowboys, every man being an expert shot and a tried hand at shooting Indians. They took the southern trail from the vicinity of San Autonio. They had not been long on the way when the Apache and other Indians began to give them trouble. The wily redskins regarded the big herd of cattle with covetous eyes. If they. could stampede and cut out a big bunch of the animals and land them across the river in Mexico they could obtain a handsome profit on their exploit.It took constant ; watchfulness and care on the part of Mr. Nichols and his cowboys to prevent the loss of the entire herd by Indians. In the region between San Antonio and where El Paso now stands several night attacks were made upon the camp by Indians. In these fights the Indians were driven off with losses and the herd was held together. Made Trip Slowly. The 2,500 mile trip was made slowly, the journey to California not being finished until six months had elapsed. The desert and uninhabited region

through New . Mexico and - Arizona caused intense suffering on the part of both men and cattle. In selecting the route the question of water and grass had to receive primary consideration. How the cattle managed to survive the long arid trail waa always a mystery to Mr. Nichols and the men In his outfit When the . water and grass oases were reached the herd would be allow

ed to rest for a few days and then hur

ried on to the next feeding spot. In

this way the destination finally waa reached with a loss of only a few head. The venture proved profitable,- but one trip over that long trail was sufficient

to satisfy Mr. Nichols love for adven ture.

In the early days It was not uncom

mon for herds of cattle to be driven

from Texas to Montana and Wyoming,

but those trails were easy and comfort

able as compared with the one between Texas and California. -

Mr. Nichols was in the ranch busi

ness in this part of Texas for nearly fifty years. He was well known to all the old time men of the Western and Southwestern ranges. :

Use the celebrated GOLD COIN FLOUR. Ask your grocer.

Rew r.!zrray Tfcectre

OVEB VAU53VBJLR

Week of March 23th.

Special Feature STRICKLAND'S DOG MULE SHOW Other Exclusive Features. Matinee, any seat, 10c. Evening performances, 7:45 and 9:00. Prices, 10, IS and 20c Loge seats, 25c

Phillips

M Den The sadden change from years of activity of both body ' and mind to the quiet of later years causes the human system to undergo many changes, chief of which is in the digestive organs. It hMAfmesi fin rrtisi asmS Seake. a ak

- hiW sasasa UMUfT laj KTJV aQSJ I rSTI1"! moY Promptly and reerulariyJ

J ".""T'"' It eiaery men surraot only from the basic touble. constipation, but from Indigestion, headache, belching, sour stomach, drowsiness after eatin5 ad 8,mllr annoyances. It is first of necessary to keep the bowels open and then to tone the digestive muscles so aa get them to again do their work naturally, a violent cathartic or purgative la not only unnecessary but harmftiv nd 05thing mild wlU do the work jusc aa weu. After you hare sot through experimenting with salU and pills and wltersof varioua kinds, and have become convinced that they do only temporary good at best, "ifj? tnr Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, a mUd. gentle. pleaaant-Uatlng laxative tonlo that Is especially adapted to the requirements of old people, women and children, and yet Is effective enough for anybody. Tour druggist, who has handled It successfully for a quarter of a century, win sell you a bottle for fifty cents or on dollar, but if you want to make a test of It before spending any money send your nam and address to Dr. CaldCS'A ai5? he yfll gladly send you a sample bottle free of charge. This jwmedy Is rapidly displacing all other forms of medication for the cure of stomach. Over and bowel trouble, and families like Mr. O. F. Wished of Syca? J?0. ID., and Mrs. Carrie Culler's of S2S N. Notre Dame street. South Bend. Ind.. am now never without it In the house. They have tested It and know Its grand value to every member of the family. a Dr. Caldwell personally will be pleased tn VIVA VA .nv mujIImI J l T. .

desire for yourself or family pertaining- to the stomach, liver or bowels absolutely

i'rr sdEpiain your case in a letter and h win reply to you tn detail.

. .. v m... nui7 ,cnu your name and address on a postal card or

uuwrwm. - r or eitner request tn doctor's address is Dr. W. B. Caldwell, R.504 Caldwell bunding. IfontlceUo, ,u7

CnilXnEO 17C3 ARE SIWU

jHoiners wee wwu vn-i . welfare ef thwr children, shoaid never he without a

oox oi noun umj . n . . v . - - - . . .1 1 ..k.-(Ph.. SiM tM?AlH.

v rZ nMBilMtiim. Teetkino' Dls-

ordera, Bendecheand Stonaca Trooble. THtSg

rUWl)E.K8IIBIHrll. uuiu;.iinifn jsc. Don t mcetpt say tubttitnlt. A trial package will be sent FKKB to any meUier who wiU address Alien 8. Olmsted, Le Boy, M. Y.

One Jolly Night, Wed, March 30th. The Silk snd Satin Show LID LIFTERS Burlesquers ADDED ATTRACTION Mile. DeVere V Co, in "Caught in the Act ' Prices, 25c, 35c and 50c.. Seats on sale at the Westcott Pharmacy.

acaikgi Ariete. Now is the time to do your Spring and Summer House Cleaning and here is the place to buy all necessary articles with which (to do the cleaning. Here we make a few suggestions.Curtain Stretchers Scrub Brushes Step Ladders Carpet Sweepers Feather and Wool Dusters Cotton Mops

Carpet Beaters.

Tubs, Pails, Etc.

G04-C08 felAIN ST.

J

lavesfjfjate ocr mcCMJds $10 and upwards

psmd

If you have been dealing with some other company and are thinking of doing so again, be sure and call here first and aee whether we cannot do better by you. Our Instances than others and INDIANA LOAN CO.

PHONE 1341 ROOM 4X

WE MAKE QUICK LOANS and are careful to keep it confidential.

RICHMOND.

" " '' ' " " I' " "

LaOa Tlhieatii?' Monday end Tuosday Tho Rancor and tho Girl A Decutiful Gtory of IVostcrn Lifo

1C1E

Special Ecster CZll Lsa. & Tecs. "Joseph Sold Into ; DonCcs.?

The famous Bible story made beautiful by hand colored film snd shown on the marvelous "Mirror Screen." There will be two other pictures also. Our business has doubled since installing the "Mirror-Screen." See it!

IPunlMncs

. Pei?simdfl IPi?(n)3D2i?fly.

Dizccn Cba, EnzzzZz?.

nn

I'lliAn tm Itnu itpiiinnmj nmflji liAa

fllCII 1UU UUI WIMtllCriJ UOI tawll IIUM

you run the risk of its being defective. If it goes wrong, you have no recourse end must stand the loss.

Assured Qndlfy. With the hose we are seeing this ycer the conditions are changed. Yen ere insured against loss. There is a gucrcnted tag which accompanies every length pf hose which guarantees the, purchaser against loss in case the rubber, cr any part of the hose proves defective cr unsatisfactory. When you buy this hose you know that you are getting just what you pay fcr. :

UQ72 fitSZz? Uc33 in This hose is made by the D.a.'nend Rubber Company. , They couldn't affcrd to give this kind of a guarantee if they didn't know that enoush pure rubber went into the construction of their gecds to insure long, satisfactory wearfca Qucties.

Ccs!s LTo TeZcre. . This hose tzllz fcr 9. 10, 12. 14 end 16 cents per foot, the price depend upon size and quality. Garden hose m:ht be made t4eh would be so!d fcr less money, but wcn you consider that ycu are buyhj something which you want and expect te last, it is plain that quality must be the feremost consideration. If you want your lawn cr garden to de properly, you must sprinkle duriaa this dry weather. You misht as wc3 est a3 the benefits by buying the needed hose

Tl

aaa a si.. - - a

IT.MI III

TTTt Ti

h or

Cr(2

neein ary of rich m!t

. ' ; Hall's fctontly PUIS far r. ; i, ,t which w