Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 216, 11 June 1910 — Page 4
?AGC FOUK.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1910;
Its nicLor-d Paltedlra tsi Sca-Teleenia i . ' Published and owned by tho PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. tMUd 7 day each week, evenings and : Bunday mornlnir. Office Corner North Stb and A streets. , , Homo Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.
Kadalpfe O. Leeds...... Edlte Laftaa Jaaea... Baalaeaa Maaaaier Cart Bernhardt. ..Associate Kdltor W. R. Pua4stM........News Editor. 8UBSCIUPTION TERMS. la Richmond 14.00 per ear (la advance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUUSCTUPTIONS. One year, In advance '522 Bis months, In advance 2. One month, In advance .......... RURAL ROUTES. One year. In advance ........... .IJ 60 Six months. In advance l-jjO One month. In advance Address changed as often as desired: both new and old addresses must be Itlven. Mubscrlbers will please remit with order, which should be riven for a pacified term; naire will not be enter ed until payment is received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office as second class mall matter. ' Tbs Association of American AsWtisora (Now York City) has 4 I sxawld aad oertilisd to ths circulation 1 a tui publication. only uie ngures ox 4 dreniation eontalaad la its report art i L guarantied, by the Association, RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Has a population of r.3,000 and Is growing. It Is the county seat of Wayne County, and tho , trading center of a rich agricultural community. It is located due east from Indianapolis 69 miles and 4 miles from the , . state line. Richmond Is a city of homes and of industry. .Primarily a manufacturing city. It Is also the Jobbing center of Eastern Indiana and enjoys the retail trade of the populous comraur.Ity for mllos around. Richmond Is proud of Its splendid streets, well kept yards. Its cement sldewalKS and beautiful shade trees. It has 3 national banks. 2 trust companies and 4 building associations with combined resources of over 8,000,000. Number of factories 125; capital Invested $7,000,000, with an annual output of $27,000,000, and a pay roll of $3,700,000. The total pay roll for the city amounts to approximately $6,300,000 annually. , There are five railroad companies radiating In eight different directions from the city. Incoming freight handled dally. . 1. 750.000 lbs.; outgoing freight handled dally, 750,000 lbs: Yard facilities, per day 1,700 . cars. Number of passanger trains dally, 89. Number of freight trains dally 77. The annual post office receipts amount to $80,000. Total assessed valuation of the city, $15,000,000. Richmond has two lnterurban railways. Three newspapers : with a combined circulation of 12,000. Richmond Is the greatest hardware Jobbing center In the state, and only second In general Jobbing Interests. It has a piano factory producing a high grade piano every 16 minutes. It Is the leader In tho manufacture of traction en prtnes. and "-produces more threshing machines, lawn mow- . ers. roller skates, grain drills : and burial caskets than any other city In the world. The city's area Is 2,640 acres; has a court house costing $500,000; 10 public schools and has the finest and most complete high school In the middle west under construction; 3 parochial schools: Earl bam college and the Indiana Business College; five splendid fire companies in fine hose houses; Glen Miller park, the largest and most '. beautiful park in Indiana, the ' home of Richmond's annual chautwuqua;. seven hotels; municipal electric light plant, under successful operation, and a private electric light plant. Injuring competition: the oldest public library in the state, except one. and the second largest. 40,000 volumes; pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed; 65 miles of ' Improved streets; 40 miles of ewers; 25 miles of cement curb .. and gutter combined; 40 miles of cement walks, and many miles of brick walks. Thirty . churches, including the Reld Memorial, built at a cost of ' $350,000: Retd Memorial Hosfiltal, one of the most modern n the state: Y. M. C A. building, erected at a cost of $100,000, one of the finest in the state. The amusement center of Eastern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the size of Richmond holds as fine an annual art exhibit. The Richmond Fall Festival held each October la unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It Is given In the interest of the city and financed by the business men. Success awaiting anyone with enterprise In the Panic Proof "City. Items Gathered in ' From Far and Near A Better Nation. From the Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph.' One need not be a churchman in order to realize that the census figures showing a greater proportionate increase in church membership than in population Is a wholesome sign. Even the rabid freethinker cannot contest the simple fact that the man who allies himself with a religious body and endeavors to conform to its rules finds himself constrained to observe the requirements of good citizenship. Te be a good Christian one must be t good citizen. This is an axiomatic truth, and hot to be debated. Therefore, be the point of view what it may, the rapid growth of the churches is to be regarded with satisfaction. Herein we have irrefragable evidence of an advancing tendency toward good order and right living, and this means that the republic as a whole grows better with the advancing years. Faith in the Courts. From the New York World. v If there Is any criticism of "government by injunction' just now it does " not proceed from the leaders of organized labor. The writ served upon the railroads the other day Is precisely the 'same as those against which working- ' men complain. It was designed to forestall and forbid a violation of law and to prevent an injury that might not be easy to remedy. The railroads
Corporation News
About the only thing which seems absolutely certain about this Natural Gas Co. business is that Mr. Ashely has secured an option on a majority of the stock for some one or a collection of some ones. You - may take your choice as to whether this is a move on the part of the Standard Oil company to market Its gas from West Virginia or whether it is a move on the local chess board to get rid of a few pawns so that the more elaborately carved pieces may proceed with the game. , One thins Is rather a matter for congratulation at the present time; towlt, that no gas franchise of broad and sweeping character Was granted at the first part of this year. If there is to be a readjustment of the gas business in this comunlty it will be particularly more satisfactory to deal with a situation when there are more cards on the table. From all outward appearances there is, to put it in plain modern American, or Miltonic English, something doing. The most obvloius thing to do In the franchise business is to wait till there is something definite to deal with.
Co-operation
Friction is commonly set down as the beginning of fire which may be pleasant or unpleasant, just like Mr. Bernard Shaw's plays. It is usually interesting. Also futile. For those inclined to-' moralize we submit the following from a metropolitan paper: v As brought out today in Essex market court, the facts in their chronological order appear to be as follows: Mrs. Anna Zuloff, matron craved a pickle. Joseph Detter, a pushcart merchant had pickles in a tub. Mrs. Zuloff left her apartment, in Suffolk street, and went forth to traffic with Joseph Detter. In the course of the necessary negotiations, Mrs. Zuloff told Mr. Detter, like a lady, that he was a robber and a loafer, and a low life for wanting 2 cents for a regular size 1 cent pickle. Mr. Detter reproached Mrs. Zuloff for squeezing the pickle in question with such emphasis as to destroy its symmetry. Mrs. Zuloff smote Mr. Detter in the eye with his own pickle, producing temporary blindness on his part. Mr. Detter groping wildly, seized Mrs. Zuloff by her back hair. Mrs. Zuloff's gold locket, value $30, was loosened from its clasp and fell into the pickle conservatory. Mrs. Zuloff screamed for help. Nine thousand East Side, ladies (estimated number) arrived almost simultaneously. Two stout ladies held the struggling Mr. Detter, while two other upended the reservoir, with its contents, upon his head, badly disarranging his toilet and filling his whiskers full of green pickles. Mrs. Zuloff lost her locket. Mr. Detter lost his pickles and his disposition. Mrs. Zuloff got a summons. Magistrate Cornell refused to give a decision and called it a draw. .... Think of the romance if the harmony of the spheres had not been shattered by the pickle. Andrew Carnegie has been trying to persuade us all that it is folly to fight, we refer this case to him as showing the economic loss of warfare.
which have attempted to Increase rates must appear in. court and accept the judgment there pronounced. The road to justice is long and rough. When legislators enter new fields they sometimes err through ignorance or rancor. Facts are not always understood, men profoundly intereseted are not always candid and differences arise which lead to confusion and mischief. Even laws carefully drawn appear to have conflicting provisions, and the impatient or the arrogant attempt on occasion to force conclusions for themselves. In such emergencies the courts, sitting apart from their rivalries and contentions, mave the power to stay proceedings and to determine rights. In most cases every harm is done by delay. In almost every instance where there is obedience all parties are benefitetd by the orderly adjudication. Occasionally. From the Chicago Resord-Herald. Every little while some rich American coming home from Europe gets through the custom house at New York without a squbble qr a scandal. Becoming Very Narrow. From the Baltimore Sum The English Channel is getting to be quite an Insignificant little brook to the men with wings. Exposition Rivalry. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. One might think from reading the papers that the Panama canal extends from New Orleans to San Francisco. Makes the Heart Grow Fonder. From the Boston Transcript. No sooner has Mr. Bryan started for Europe than his senatorial boom revives. He neer seems so popular In his own country as when he is out of it. TWINKLES BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. Explanation. "I was very much, diaappointed In that spring chicken you fold me," said young Mrs. Torkins. "It didn"t seem at all like the genuine article." "Madam," replied the affable procer, "you must remember that this year's spring was one of the most deceptive on record. "Popularity," said Uncle Eben, is alus uncertain. Dar ain no way of tellln exactly what a crowd means by the word 'hurrah. " Calendar Studies. June is the month of loses, So they say. But they also talked of blossoms Due in May. And of rainbow showers in April Lightly tossed. But each real demonstration Was a frost So when you sing of roses And of June. Be prepared for speedy changes In the tune. Yet be patient, though uncertain Be the sky. We may look for settled weather In -July. Insufficient. A yearly cask of wine they owe, In payment for a laureate's layTis not enough to drown his woe At what the envious critics say. A Dreamer. "You say your boy Josh is a dream-
er," said the literary lads. "Does he write poetry or romance?" "Oh," replied Farmer Corntossel, he .don't write anything. But he jes natchelly refuses to get up til nine o'clock."
Mentality Ignored. "Of course you admit that mind is superior to matter," said the argumentative friend. "Not always," replied Mr. Sirius Barker; "what a fashionable hat sometimes covers is not considered nearly as important as the hat itself.". Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. ' Copy.lght, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye THE SILVER. LINING. The inner side of every cloud is bright and sbinlng. 1 therefore turn my clouds about And always wear them inside out To show the lining. , E. T. Fowler. However the world may seem to you. however miserable you may be. smile. When the slow tears force themselves under your lids because of self pity laugh aloud. You say you can't do that you must be honest with yourself and you must act as you feel. . Of course you cannot put your best foot forward, your best side out. except by practice. And in the practice of forced optimism the world is finding some wonderful cures of mind and body. We are strange creatures. None of us quite understands himself. But we all admit the wonderful influence of mind attitude over the body. Do you know there is such a thing as a "laughing cure?" Every day the patient sits for twenty minutes before a mirror and laughs. The mere act suggests humor, and before long' the person is laughing iu all reality. Persons who have tried this for certain ailments melancholia, etc. say it really cures. Most of us take ourselves too seriously. , You can literally coax yourself into a melancholy. You can magnify your ills and form the brooding habit. If by this habit of mind you can make yourself miserable, why cannot you by mental coaxing and habit minimize your Ills and put yourself in a cheerful frame of mind? ;; Wear your clouds Inside out. Live on the sunny side of your existence. You cannot Improve a bad condition by living in the shadow. Aud if you go about with a long face and a story of bad luck your best friends by and by will turn a corner In order to keep from meeting you. Hold op your chin and smile. : Do your best and look for the best and ail the day long act as If you were a son or a daughter of God's royal family, which you are. And remember the slangy but philosophic stanza: The difference between the optimist And pessimist la droll The optimist sees the doughnut, Tbe pessimist tbe hole. MASONIC CALENDAR. Tuesday, June 14-Richmond lodge. No. 190 F. & A. M. Work in Entered Apprentice degree. Friday, June IT King Solomon, No. 4. R. A. M. Called meeting. Saturday, June IS Loyal Chapter, No. 49, O. E. S. Stated meeting.
FATAL EXPERIMENTS
It Was' a Case of Too Much Chemistry for Employe of Poor House. WAS BLOWN INTO ATOMS. ( American News Service.) Paris, June 11. The interest taken by Frederic Martin, an employe at the Bicetre poorhouse, in chemistry has proved fatal to the unfortunate man, and has also led to disastrous results to a too-confiding friend. Martin, who was 30 years of age, devoted most of his leisure to the manufacture of explosives, not, it must be explained with any sinistetr design: and only five days ago he had let off an infernal machine of his own construction on a bit of waste ground, and with infinite satisfaction to himself. Encouraged by this experiment, he bought an old shell, and yesterday afternoon he filled ,it with a mixture of picric acid and nitroglycerine in the presence of two of his comrades, who considering the proceeding extremely imprudent warned him of the risk that he was running and then- left the room. The shell had been filled, and it had still to be fixed, so Martin went off and persuaded another of his comrades, Charles Honet. a year or two his junior, to come and hold it while he set to work to close It. Suddenly a terrific report spread consternation among the numerous tenants of the poorhouse. The shell had exploded. Martin's chest was broken in, and his handswere carried away, while Honet lost an eye. sustained the fracture of an arm, and was bruised all over. Martin expired in terrible agony in a few moments, and Honet is in a very critical condition. The officials of the poorhouse say that Martin was an excellent employe. He had been several years with them and had given perfect satisfaction. He was of a reserved and retiring character, being probably engrossed by his chemical studies. As his political opinions were of a very advanced type, a report naturally got about that he was experimenting with a view to an anarchist outrage, and, indeed, that he was actually attempting mischief when the shell exploded; but there is not the slightest grounds for such a supposition. The police authorities have conductetd a searching investigation, and they are quite convinced that Martin only took an Innocent interest in explosives. A MUSICAL PRODIGY. Richard Strauss Composed Dance Music at the Age of Six. Richard Strauss was a musical prodigy. Hls first effort at writing music was made at a Christmas celebration, says the Designer. Some children were dancing around tbe tree and singing a three part song. "1 can compose music like that." said tbe six-year-old Richard to his mother. Thereupon he sat down and did so. - But his mother was obliged to write in the words, because, although be could write music legibly, his pot books were too large. Strauss himself not only vouched for tbe truth of this story, but said tbat while be was still six years old be composed a polka and a schottische. Richard was only fifteen when a symphony composed by blm was brought out by Herman Levi, court conductor at Munich and conductor of tbe first performance of "Parsifal" at Bayreuth. When Richard came out to bow his acknowledgment of tbe applause which followed the symphony a man In tbe audience turned to bis neighbors and asked. "What has tbat boy got to do with it?" , "Nothing." was the reply, -except that he's the composer." Ancient Ideas of Afrien. In mediaeval times Africa was an unknown continent as well as Asia. Until a few years after the discovery of Columbus no one had sailed around It, and it was quite genera. ly thought. as It had previously been thought in regard to Asia, that the African continent extended on and on indefinitely. It was supposed that far to tbe south was the zone of beat, iu which no human being could live. This was by no means an unreasonable Inference to the ancients. They knew tbat the far ther they sailed to the north the colder it grew and that iu the extreme north was a region of perpetual snow. They also knew tbat the farther they sailed to the south the warmer it grew, and what was more natural for tbem to suppose, that if. tbey weut far enough in that direction they would come upon lands that were parched aud baked and upon seas that boiled, where nothing could live but salamanders? The Smile. We talk of a smile of defiance. There is really no such thing. Such a so called smile is nothing more nor less than a snarl, a survival of the way our savage ancestors bad of show ing their teeth in order to strike fear Into the hearts of their enemies. Tbe real smile of pleasure begins with slightly opening the mouth, and Is, ot course, traceable to the joy of those same savage forefathers of ours at tbe prospect of food. A Moan Comparison. "Confound these railway time t blesT snapped Mr. Stubb as tbe loug folder refused to remain closed Ion; enough for him to place it in his pocket--They remind me of a woman." "The idea r replied his wife in' surprise. "What Is the comparison? "Why. they are bard to understand, and you can't get them to shut i" A New Be. - WAYS Of CAANIN6 MONEY CflJ WsaM job HW to tatt m smisf t TV U"rl Bock Ants ow to sort rai3 mif A' " tsnaf bmtiacss a yor Iniiii I ftt Tu is m n sent iiujiwmuus : yoa get tbe aanfaccmrs ami Home Factory j,5
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Latest News
Dandruff, Falling Hair and Itching Ccalp Cured, or Money Back What other people say of you. sometimes has more effect, than what you say about yourself. Bead these, "I used one bottle of Parisian Sage, and it did all you claim it would do. My hair is fluffy and clean from dandruff since I used the Sage, and I am going to keep it constantly on my dressing table for toilet use." Mrs. M. Griffin, 326 W. 9th St. Davenport. Iowa. "I write in short that my head was almost running me crazy, and I saw your ad in the Times-Union. I bought a bottle of Parisian Sage at once and tried it, and in a week I could see that my head was almost well, and my hair was growing wonderful, and I continued using Parisian Sage, and now my hair is beautiful and everybody admires it. My scalp is always clean." I Your customer, Mrs. S. Dingle, Jack sonville, Fla., Oct. 15, 1909. "Parisian Sage is certainly a wonderful hair restorer. My husband and I both have used it, and find it to be just as advertised." Mrs. D. Schorling, 220 Wasaon-St., Toledo, O., Oct. 23. 1909. Parisian Sage is sold by druggists everywhere, and by Leo H. Fihe for 50 cents a large bottle, and Is guaranteed to cure dandruff, stop falling hair and itching scalp, or money back. It makes hair grow soft, lustrous and luxuriant, and is not sticky or greasy. The girl with the Auburn hair , is on every bottle. Mall orders filled by Giroux Mfg. Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ENRICO CARUSO SAD Bemoans the Fact he is a Great Singer and Has Illustrious Name. REPUTATION IS BURDEN. American News' Service) Paris, June 11. Enrico Caruso, the famous tenor, has troubles of his own He bemoans the fact that he possesses such wonderful talents, and complains that his great name is only a burden. "When I was unknown," he says, "I sang like a bird, careless, without though of nerves. But now my reputa tion is made my audiences are more exacting. Here I am today bending be neath the weight of renown which can not increase, but which the least vocal mishap may compromise. My audiences, well disposed toward me as they are, have to pay high prices to he me and they imagine that I am a unique singer, and I appear before them stared at and envied. "Imagine my state of mind when the curtain rises for the human voice has its weaknesses. Like everyone I have my cares and troubles, and ell mate and temperature affect me, but the public never thinks of that, de manding an artist as perfect as they imagine me to be. That is why I am often the unhappiest of men. I compare myself to a great parliamentary speaker before an important interpel lation. When the moment arrives he may be sad, weary, ailing, and he longs for repose, but his friends await him, his enemies rally round. His interest bids him speak. A tenor is much worse off, for he, alas, is compelled to sing." REPORT OH ESTATES Inventories to two estates were filed in the probate court today. In the estate of William S. Tutorow, who was accidentally electrocuted on March 23 1. 1 1 1.1 t TIT i T I V. J 1 . is shown that he possessed $1,575 in personal property and receipt of an an report to this has also been filed which shows that he had $243.71 due him in wages from the city of Richmond and Cambridge City and on a small industrial life insurance policy. The inventory of the estate of Eleanora S. Likins shows that the appraised value of the personal estate was $2,250 and that of the real estate $700.73. ', Snakes. The holes commonly seen in the fields are not "snake holes." though commonly called such. They are made by field mice, shrews and moles, often by the larger bisects, and it is very seldom that snakes even take refuge in them. Few snakes actually dig holes. They burrow in soft ground, the subterranean species, but these live, as a rule, in soft, yielding soil. St Nicholas. A COTBE DACE LADY'S AFFEAL To aU knowing sufferers of rheumatism. whet'a er muscular or ot the Joints, sciatica, lambagos. backache, pains la the kidneys or senralgi ' pains, to write to her tor a homo treatment which has repeatedly cored all of these tortures. She feels it her duty to send: it to oil sufferers FREE. You cure yourself at home as thousands wiU testify no chamre of climate being neees sary. Tcis simple discovery banishes uric acid , from the blood, loosens the stiffened Joints. pm ' " tno oiooa ana Brightens the eyes, gmng elasticity and tone to tbe whele system. If the above Interests you, for proof address afrs. M. Summers, Box & Kotre Dame. lad. Cincinnati $1.25 ROUND TRIP SUNDAY Leave Richmond 7:00 A. M. PENN5ffioAN,A Madison $1.50 ROUND TRIP SUNDAY Leave Richmond 6:25 a. rh.
Baseball Jars Magnates' Nerves
Dignified Officers of Standard Oil in New York Have a Complaint Gossip From the Gay Metropolis.
Copyright National News Service.) New York, June 11. For some time the highly sensitized nerves of tbe dig nified officers of the Standard Oil, the Produce Exchange and other large corporations facing on Bowling Green have been jarred by office boys playing baseball in the streets in front of their offices at lunch hour. Sidestepping baseballs in transit through the air proved too exhllerating a diversion to the barons of high finance and this week they complained to Mayor Gaynor for redress of their grievance. Their contention that the plaza, which is hallowed by memories of Peter Stuyvesant and the Dutch forbears of Col. Theodore Roosevelt, who in the pas toral days of New York's early settlement bowled on the velvet 6ward of Bowling Green, was not suitable for baseball, impressed tbe mayor and he ordered the custom house side of Battery park thrown open to the boys during lunch hour. The site selected is opposite the big office building of the coal barons and .around the corner from 20 Broadway, the home of John D. Rockefeller's giant monopoly. Fraunce's Tavern, where Washington bade farewell to his officers is down the street. Every day the youngsters play by some of the grizzled old albatrosses of the financial world who sympathized with them in their troubles. As proof of a widow's insanity a lawyer in the surrogate's court this week introduced evidence to show that she had directed that her pet dog be interred in the same grave with her deceased husband. Mrs. Fanny Mogg, the widow, died recently leaving $.,000 to Christ Hos pital. Her nephew, George Innell, of England, claims tbat she was mentally irresponsible and asks that the bequest be set aside, submitting in support of bis contention, the strange provision of the woman for the burial of her dog. In view of the recent decision of the surrogate to probate the will of a wealthy butcher's widow who evinced a sentimental regard for the source of her husband's fortune by erecting a costly granite steer over his grave and the more recent refusal of he eame court to accept the will of a woman, who to symbolize her solicitude for her lamented hubby, implanted on his grassy mound a replica of the stauesque form of a well-known Broadway chorus girl to whom he was partial, it is regarded as highly probable that the decision will be adverse to the decedent.. ' ' That the customs regulations are no longer a respecter of persons is being emphasized anew every day under ttie administration of Collector of the Port Loeb. Last week it was former Governor Rollins of New Hampshire who ran afoul of the law; this week. Colonel Henry C. Stuart of Virginia, son of the famous Confederate cavalry leader; Mrs. Henry C. Frick, wife of the Pittsburg multi-millionaire, and Count Tedesco, of Italy, got tangled in the meshes of the customs net, now spread out with more care than ever to catch those who either by design or through lack of information contrive to evade the payment of. duty on Importations. The Stuarts had their baggage held up pending an investigation of their declaration as to the value of their dutiable foreign purchases and had to pay $1,823 to secure the release of their property. Mrs. Frick neglected to make any declaration at all and large tot you vnwi,fim aeiineraieiy i
l 1 deeper in debt. With aa too bave uie aatunction J W U of feeling that the payment is Jan right, large PHONE 1341 ROOM 42 4 c enoagh to clean up the loan in a abort time and --d r If small enoagh to avoid becoming a drag. That's RICHMOND li j OUB idea of inakingsatlafsctoTy loans. , ... niynsiunu. . 11 " ii,niifiri mfirt i"r aS- j
... TORNADO ... E. B. KNOLLENBERQ I NSURANCE Room 6, Knollenberfl Annex
JORDAN. MTsWWS & DImRD FUNERAL DIRECTORS Ef.!DAIOnS. TELEPHONE 2175. PARLORS 1014 MAIN tT. Automobile Service for Calls Out of City. Private Chapel and Ambulance.
Don't Forget Thst the price cf &(L Win aelvaaee wltk tae seawoss. Ustber Crcers Co. Paoaes 117S-1179 4 BBTsasm aaaaaaaam
when pressed to explain said she had overlooked it. She paid duty on $2,000 -worth of European - bought goods In her possession and was allowed to depart after a delay that must have been keenly embarrassing and humiliating
to a woman of her proud temperament. Count Tedesco did not fare so well. He and a companion were arrested on a charge of smuggling jewelry into the country. An examination of his trunks showed them to be equipped with false bottoms. In one day more than $15,000 was collected from would-be evasive passengers on the steamship piers. The stringency of the customs regulations under Loeb has added more than $3,000,0410 to Uncle Sam's : revenue since the 4th ot March last In accordance with the dying wish of her late husband, Mrs. Oscar Nelhart assisted by her two daughters and a son, on Sunday last flung .his ashes to the four winds from the highest point on the statue of liberty. In the harbor. Nelhart, who had been an advocate of cremation for many years, called his wife to his bedside just before he died and directed her to dispose of his ashes in this unique way. In obedience to the strange request the widow, carrying the little bronze urn, containing all that remained of him, went to Bedloe's siland early Sunday. In the presence of a few United States regulars stationed there and the member of her family she climbed to a point 250 feet from the ground from wbkh she threw the ashes. Choosing a Doctor by fheteararh. Carlsbad Is , full of original . Id ess. Where eht can you And the photographs of all the doctors la tbe place arranged together in shop windows, so that a newcomer can examine tbe facet and pick out tbe one wbos looks he prefers? To have a medical man with Just the sympathetic expression ooe likes best mast surely be a great help to recovery. Carlsbad Letter to New York Herald's Tarts Edition. CHlcHKigripn.uj I ! a ether. fMr eCn " . A k fart .JT MAbwSI X MSLAS rfi Bt.titt.AI wltewa ite Flower Sbop 71Q jUaln St ntcuuof
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