Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 220, 15 June 1910 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1910.

PAG2ET

DEPUTY USED GUII III MAKING ARREST

And Hunter Then Had the Game Warden Arrested for Pointing a Weapon. CONSTABLE PLAYS A PART HE ARRESTS DEPUTY GAME OF.

FICIAL AND THEN GOES ON HI3 BOND, WHICH PROCEDURE 18 CALLED ILLEGAL.

Owing to the alleged officiousness of William E. Lampher ot Indianapolis a state deputy game warden, complaint probably will be made to the state warden and his dismissal asked and he will be prosecuted for drawing a deadly and dangerous weapon on Charles T. Jennings, a one armed man living in Center township whom he arrested on June 11, for alleged hunting of BQuirrels out of season. Lampher was arrested last Monday by Constable M. B. Crump of L. C. Abbott's Justice of the peace court. Crump, despite the fact that he is an officer, gave bond for $25 for his prisoner. The attorney for Jennings says that Crump, as an officer, has no legal right to go on a prisoner's bond. Jenning's attorney is demanding that Lampher be re-arrested and locked up unless proper procedure in filling out the bond ia complied with. Constable Crump this morning was very reluctant In admitting that he gave the bond. Defending His Chickens. Jennings and James Morgan were arrested last Saturday by Lampher and another deputy named Lail. Jenning's says that he was hunting an animal which had been ravaging his chicken coup. In making the arrest,

Jennings alleges that Lampher, who

Is a very large man, came up to him, pulled out a long pistol and said "Consider yourself under arrest." The two men were taken before Squire Abbott and released on $50 bonds, each. When informed of the circumstances under which the arrest was made, Jennings's attorney refused to allow his client to be prosecuted unless Lampher was arrested and tried first. For every conviction which the- state obtains for hunting out of season the deputy game commissioner is paid a commission of $20. It is said that the cases against Morgan and Jennings Till be appealed to the circuit court and tried before a jury. A BIT OF CHALK.

Mrs. Ford Escapes Prosecution

i i tit m, -it , HrMn ' ' A If

nun SUFFERS FflOM BIG FLOODS

Cloudburst Flooded Berlin and the Loss Today Is Estimated at $1,000,000

Mrs. Jeannette Stewart Ford and Charles L. Warriner, the convicted former local treasurer of the Big Four Railroad, Cincinnati. Three indictments were returned against Mrs. Ford several months ago, one charging her with blackmailing Warriner. another charging her with receiving stolen money, and a third charging her with sending threatening letters. Recently Judge Caldwell of the Common Pleas Court, sitting in Cincinnati, nolle prossed the indictments, an assistant prosecutor having recommended that the indictments against Mrs. Ford be dropped owing to Mrs. Ford's health being very poor. Mrs. Ford was tried on the blackmail charge, but the jury disagreed. She was to have been retired.

What It Shews When Placed Under a Powerful Microtoope.

Few people know what a wonderful object a bit of chalk is when examined under a microscope. Take your knife

blade and scrape off a little of the

loose powder, catch it on a clean glass

slide and place this ou the stage of a

good table microscope. Use a quarter

inch objective lens and Illuminate the

field with a cone of light from the

enuenve side of the reflector. The pow der will be seen to consist of a con' fused mass of beautiful tiny shells,

many of them of the most curious

form.

A better way, however, is to rub.

down a portion ot chalk with an old toothbrush In a tumbler half filled with water. It you desire to preparo several slides rub on about a teaspoon

ful of the powder. Shake the tumbler

, briskly, allow the sediment to settle for a moment and then carefully pour off the milky looking water. Repeat this until the water remains clear, and yon will then have left In the bottom only perfect shells or large parts of shells. Take up a small pinch of this deposit and spread It carefully over the center of a glass slide. Dry over a lamp and If you wish to preserve the slide for future use mount it in Canada balsam, pressing out the babbles of air beneath the cover glass.

FIELD EXAMINERS ABOUT CONCLUDED WITH THEIR WORK (Continued from Page One.)

About Hyomei

A Bottle Costs Only 50 Cents A Complete Outfit Including Inhaler, $1.00. When Leo H. Fihe states most emphatically that he will guarantee Hyomei to cure catarrh or give you your money back, what is your answer? , Are you satisfied with your condition or do you want to rid yourself forever of vile catarrh, with its humiliating symptoms, such as hawking, spitting, blowing and bad breath? Hyomei is a simple, antiseptic medicine, that you breathe through a small pocket Inhaler over the parts affected by catarrh. It Is made of Australian eucalyptus mixed with other germ killing and membrane soothing antiseptics. Get a complete outfit today. It only costs $1.00 and contains everything necessary to cure any ordinary case of catarrh. Extra bottles, if needed 50c Hyomei ia the best remedy in the world for sore throat, coughs and colds croup and bronchitis. It gives woncerful relief In two minutes. For sale by druggists everywhere and by Leo H. Flbe. Send for free sample bottle and booklet. Booth Hyomei Co., Buffalo, NL Y.

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II relieve ssntnanh misery, sour stora.

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for It or paid no attention to the matter whatever. Such carelessness, it is pointed out by the examiners is inexcusable in a township advisory board, because it affords a trustee an opportunity to be crooked if he is so disposed. ..Under the law the board is

required to examine the accounts of the trustee and thdn certify to the true condition of affairs as the board finds it. This practice on "the part of some township advisory boards of certifying the amounts on hand without

even trying to find out whether there is anything on hand or not is roundly denounced by the examiners whenever they have run across such a case. Petty Graft Is Scarce. Another gratifying development in the examination of the office of trustees is a fact that petty graft has almost entirely disappeared. A trustee that undertakes to do any grafting now is taking great chances and . mighty little of it is done. In this respect the offices are different from what they were a few years ago, when it seemed that graft was one of the fixtures in any public office. Under the present law, however, where there is such an elaborate system of checking the accounts there is little opportunity for anything of this kind. In former years the supply man and the public contractor found easy picking among many of the township trustees. Examiners who worked in Mar

shall county ran across an amusing J

entry in the accounts of one trustee. It read Unus "Contribution from a supply man, $4." The examiners asked the trustee about it and he explained that he bought a small bill of supplies from Charles Turner, a supply dealer at Plymouth, amounting to a little over $19. When he paid the bill Turner handed him $4. The trustee refused to take the money and Turner refused to take it back. Then the trustee placed the four dollars in the township fund and made the entry in his books. This shows the way the practice flourished at one time, but the trustee in question did not propose to bite at the cherry. He was highly commended by the examiners for this action. In many townships the examiners find traces of such graft- They find where trustees have paid excessive prices for supplies, and this leads to the belief that the excess price was largely graft. Of course, there is found once in a while a trustee who has been in reality a crook. Here and there is a case where a trustee has issued vouchers twice for the same claim. Or he would

Issue a voucher to pay a claim and later he would include the amount of

this claim in another claim and issu

a raised voucher for the whole amount, thus paying twice for the one

bill.

As Others See Her. Her Sweetheart The dearest little woman in all the world. Mother If she would only regard my wishes more. Father She's cost enough to bring up. stillBrother Shed be all right if shed take a little advice from me. Optimist Thank heaven for putting such a glorious creature on earth! Old Friend She's a fine girl, but she is changeable. Disappointed Lover She talks too much. Rival Her figure's all right, thanks to her dressmaker. Cynic Pooh! She's like all the rest. Maid I know why she appears so beautiful.

Classified. The suggestion has been made that goats meat prices should be taken away from the provisions list and quoted in the butter market. New York Tribune. ...

LIGHTNING PLAYS HAVOC MANY BUILDINGS WERE STRUCK BY BOLTS AND TWENTY PEOPLE WERE BADLY INJUREDFLOODS ARE GENERAL. r

(American News Sci

Berlin, June 15. Investigation of

the havoc wrought in Berlin by the cloudburst which last night flooded the city today showed that the damage is more than $1,000,000. Several buildings were wrecked by flood and fires started by lightning. The twenty persons struck by bolts were near

ly all today declared out of danger. All night long fire engines pumped water from the subway and the cellars of many 'buildings, but this morning only a beginning had been made. The sewers were choked by the flood, and in some streets the. water is higher than three feet today. It reached that depth on the principal thoroughfares in the cloudburst and in the low-lying regions lakes formed which may take days to drain away through the crippled sewer system. The police have had to take charge of the tables and chair3 swept from open-air restaurants. They are arrayed in police stations for identification. Government is Frantic. The result of the floods in the country is growing with each fresh report. The government is making frantic efforts to send out relief. The destruction of many miles of railways makes the relief work extremely difficult and the fact that the.

floods have swept away telephone and

telegraph wires in a wide area makes it difficult to secure details. Advices recieved today indicate that the dead are more than 500 at least, an it is possible that the roll will exceed 400. At many points bodies have been recovered which have been swept miles by the flooded streams. While the government today declared that the floods in he vicinity of Oberammergau were subsiding, it is known that the situation there is still desperate.

At Local Theaters

At the Murray. Miss Margaret Ryan, who is so popular with the patrons of the Murray this week, when asked as to how she came to go on the stage says that it was really more through fright than for any other reason. "I was going to school one day in Chicago, where my parents were living, and stopped at the old American theater while a rehearsal was in progress of the stock company then playing there. I sat down to watch the actors and the actresses. Suddenly the stage manager let out what to me seemed an awful roar and pointing directly to me asked me what I meant by fitting out in front when my proper place was on the stage. I arose and looked for a way to escape but the door had been locked. With another roar from the manager as to whether I was going to keep him waiting all day I went up on the stage to explain but he shoved a book in my hand and told me to hurry as I had kept him waiting long enough. I mumbled the first few lines in a low tone but as I went along some of the confidence that I now have in my work came to my assist

ance and I acquitted myself to his satisfaction. He told me to be on time the next day that's how I went on the stage and have kept to it ever since." Miss Shields and Company in an interesting comedy sketch, Faustus in feats of magic, Black Brothers with banjo music and dancing and the moion picture, a comedy film, make up the remainder of the big bill this week.

WAS NOT PROSECUTED. William Fitxgibbons, who was charged with . the theft of a roll ot matting from Adam H. Bartel, was not prosecuted this morning in the police court, the state withdrawing its charge on Fitzgibbons promise to refrain from drinking. He was arrested for public intoxication at the time the matting was found in his possession.

Conversational French. "Can yon speak French T "A little. That is. I can shrug or shoulders." London Answers.

PftnoMlo.

Prom 3.000 to aOOOtpioeappl plants can be raised on an acre of land, each plant producing- lOaeapple.

SSfiST -Davis MS ANTI - HEADACHE You can obtain prompt relief from Backache and Kidney "Disorders with a 50c Box ot DAVIS KID-NE-TABS. Druggists or Fred C -Keating, Chic, go, IIL

Good Reason. "I wonder," began the man with the investigating mania, "what makes bebies cry." "Probably." butted in the practical fellow, "contemplation of some of the things they're in danger of being like when they grow up."

"DOCTORS OF THE MASSES" is what one writer has termed proprietary medicines. Good honest, proprietary medicines like Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound succeed, and the homes of the masses are blessed by them, while those which are worthless or harmful soon drop out. Thirty years of success in curing female ills is the record of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.

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SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE

New Murray Theatre APPROVED VAUDEVILLE

Convention Fund Benefit Week. THE PARISIAN SENSATION "THE EAGLE AND THE GIRL" Other Exclusive Features. Matinee, any day, 10c. Night performances, 7:45 and 9. Prices 10, 15, and 20c. Loge seats 25c

WE ARE SELLING Dodge 6 Non-Taxable Preferred Stock Specially Guaranteed This preferred stock issue offers a rare occasion for careful, conservative investors to put their money to work where it guarantees net return of 5 per cent. Purchasers of this stock assume na personal liability take no risk of any kind, yet receive $ti a year net on each $HX certificate, paid promptly by the Dodge Company's check aJnuary and July 1st. Interest begins the day yosu purchase. The safety of this investment is beyond Question. Net assets of $3 for each $1 of preferred stock are pledged by contract on. a basis that gives the investor better protection than a bond. Ask for full information without cost or obligation or any kind on your.part. W. 1VI. RICHARDS 336 American Central Life Bldg. IndlainapoUa lad.

Jtme Bugs Ire Mere June too. Are you prepared? No doubt there are some things you have overlooked. This is.to remind you that at Quigley's Drug Stores you can quickly secure Insect Powder, . Ant Powder, and Roach Paste, Camphor (gum), Tar Camphor (balls and flakes), Carbolic Acid (crude), Formaldehyde, Sulphur-Candles, Cleaning Fluids, Straw Hat Cleaner, Gasoline, Benzine, Naphtha, Diamond Dyes, Chamois, Sponges, Screen Paint, House Paint, Putty, Glue, Metal Polish, Furniture Polish, Floor Oil, Machine Oil. Check off what you have forgottemand order NOW Qnfligley's IngStoires

Edward Hyatt, superintendent of

public Instruction in California in a recent report tells of the value of the automobile as a . means of knitting a

rural community into a strong school

organization. The town of Imperial is the pioneer in the use of the motor

car. It has a great, big passenger and freight automobile truck which cost $3,500. Every day it makes trips into

the country, gathering up the older children for the agricultural hieh

school and the younger ones for a

grammar school in the. town. The machine has seats in front and a

freight compartment in rear.

Thirty years of

cigar wisdom in the

lasts.

Why

shouldn't it be bestr

Only value

The quality hasn't

saergred.so thedemandi

has never lagged. Buy

one and see a nickel

grow important.

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LOUIS G. DCSCHLCR CO.. Distributors Indiana !, latf.

AN INVESTMENT IN Dodge Pireffeifiredl MEANS To net-Six per cent free of all taxes. To be free from speculative fluctuations. To be free from the risks of untried or distant projects To be fully informed as to the condition of the Company through audited annual statements. To have a guaranteed reserve of never less than two dollars for each dollar invested. To participate in the profits of a prosperous corporation with over thirty years favorable history. To have an investment in a substantial home-state institutionone that you know and may see at anytime. To increase your income from one-third to one-half over any other form of safe non-taxable investments. To have an approved investment recommended by a large number of Indiana Trust Companies who have investigated the details. . Information will be given and subscriptions received by the following Trust Companies of Indiana, who will also arrange regarding delivery:

Central Trat Gmpaay, Indianapolis Americas Trest Co., Lebanon Grant Trasttflc Savings Co., Mario Peoples Trot Cv, Mnacie Citizens L, T. & Sar. Co., Sovtfe Bead

Tri-Stale Lou & T. Co., Fort Xftjte Wainritkt Tnst Co., NoUesrOe Pen Trass Co., Pent M utmal T. & Deposit Co., New Alfcaay Mishawaka Trat & S. Co., Hsfawaka

If information is not available locally, interested investor are requested to address M. W. MIX, President Mishawaka Indiana

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