Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 236, 2 July 1910 — Page 4
PAOC FOUR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1910.
.lb VLftztzi Pallsilca Ki Sca-Tclcer-a PnMlsned and wn4 r tha PALLADIUM TMHTWO CO. Issued T days trk weak, evenings and ffanday mornlnar. Offles Ornar North th and A strati. , Hon Phone 1121. RICHMOND. lyPIAWA. ateawls O. LNtfi K4Hw LsftM JwSMS B.alsMwS MSMef Cut SMakatdl A lata Etna W. a. rMi4ilw nM" !. UBSCRIPTIO.S TERMS 1m Richmond $S0 par aar (In advanca) or lOo par waafc. MAIL SUBSCRIPTION Oris yasr. In advanca .J J Is month. In advtnea ' On month. In advanca " RURAL. ROUTES. On yaar. In advanca If he month. In advanca On mouth. In advanca Addra chanvd aa oftan aa danlrad; bath nw and till aldrassoa mut r-a fives. Hubacrlbvra wtl class remit with rdar, which ahould be given for a apaclflad trm: natra will not ba enter 4 until paymtn' is received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poat office aa aacond claaa mall tnaltar.
Tka Association of Amarkaa J an (Now Yarfc City) has j and aerUlied to Uxa ctrauUtioa 1 at Ula yabliaattea. Only U Ugvrm of I simutlan mtalaad la Its nport an j tv cm AjMocunoa. J an m mm RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Haa a population of f S.000 and la grewlni. it la tha county est of Warn a County, and tha trading- cantar of a rich agricultural community. It la located dua east from Indtanepolla mllaa and 4 mllaa from tha atata Una. Richmond la a city of nomas and of Industry. Primarily, a manufacturlnc city. It la alao tha jobbing cantar of Eastern Indiana and enjoya tha rctaU trada of tha populoua community for mllaa around. Richmond la proud of Ha , plandld atraata, wall fcapt yards. Its cement aldawalas and beautiful shada traaa. It haa 1 national banks, t truat comranlas and 4 building", aaaoelalona with comblnad reeoureee of over f fl.noo.OOO. Number of factories ill; capital Invaated 7.000.000, with an annual output of f27.000.000, and a pay roll of fl.700.000. Tha total pay roll for tha city amounta to approximately 14.800.000 annually. ' Thara ara flva railroad comJan las radiating- In elht dlfarant directions from tha city. Inrnmlna freight handled dally, 1.780.000 lb.: outgoing freight handled dally, 740.000 lha. Tard faatmtea. par day 1,700 care. Number of paeaanger trains dally, St. Number of freight tralna dally 77. Tha annual post offlca receipts amount to 146,000. Total aaaad valuation of tha city, $15,000,000. Richmond has two Interurban railways. Three nawapapara with a combined circulation of 3S.000. Richmond la tha grant- . aat hardware lobbing cantar In tha atata. and only aacond In Reneral Jobbing Intereeta. It aa a piano factory producing a high grade piano every IB minutes. It Is the leader In tha manufacture of traction ensince. an-1 producea mora threahlne; machines, Iswu'rw. ara. rollar skates, grain drills and burial caakata than any other city In tha world. Tha clty'a area la 1.440- acres; ' haa a court house coating 1600,00; 10 public schools and has tha flneat and moat complete high school In the middle west under construction; I parochial echoota: Karlbem collere and tha Indiana Rualnass Collage; flva splendid flra companies In ftr.a hose houses: dlen Millar park, tha largaat and most beautiful park In Indiana, tha borne of Richmond's annual Chautauqua; seven hotels: municipal electrlo light plant, under successful operation, and a private electric light plant. Insuring competition: the oldeat public library in tha state, except one, and tha second largest. 40,000 volumes: pur a, refreshing water. unairpaased: 45 miles of Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers; IB miles of cement curb and gutter combined; 40 mllea nf cement walks, and many miles of brick walks. Thirty ' rhurchee. Including tha rteld Memorial, built at a cost of ! 110.000; Raid Memorial lTosFittal. one of tha most modern n tha atata: T. M. C A. building, erected at a cost of II 00. not, rne of tha flneat In the sta'e. Tha amusement center of Kna. eni Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the else of Richmond holda as fine an annual art exhibit. Tha Richmond Fall Festival held each October la iinlnue. no other city holda a similar affair. It la given In tha Intereat of tha city and financed by tha business men. t Huccesa awaiting anyone with . enterprise in the Pan la Proof City. Items Gathered In ' From Far and Near Cangrssa and tha President. From the New York Times. Credit for the passage of some of ine most important measures enaciea at the session of congress just closed la dua to the personal force -and insistence of President Taft, If we once accept the theory of the "ailmlnUtralof hilt. If must fihsent to and , appro tlto practice of driving through congress measures which congress haa not originated, hut which ev ...&-. stanaaAl W 4) V 4ft amttita. tration, then we must be prepared to ' admit that the merit of the president's . achievement Is very great. Considering the factional and refractory body with which he had to deal, which he had to constrain to his will. It Is surprising that he got so much done. Much that ne sBxea oi congress was ' ' In tha first place opposed by some of the most Influential "regular" re publicans, particularly In the senate. What ha proposed was In many rewtm HtlrlArv ! Ihn In sue. gents. It remained for the democrats, tha natural enemy, to, divide their forces Deiween mo rrfuuiuaa liicuuua ".according to tha direction of their sympathies. To -attempt to get any- ' thing out of a legislative body of that BilUll WHB HOI I Ul:il uuun isklllg. Ht. Taft haa really succeeded in getting a good deal out of it. . . . ..... y . a Home Joys. lambus Ohio 8tate JournaL Tttra la no place la tha world so yaaW. tkaao benign and translu-
Mr. Common People
AU over the country, whether in North or South, East or West you nay hear the same story the same cry and the same plea and the same threat. Queer Is it not that what appears in a Philadelphia paper expresses the sentiment of the Rest of Us in Richmond. Ind. But the editorial writer of the Philadelphia North American has turned the trick and he has made his words bite home with all the force of a master when he said "They could not answer the query of the woman's eyes why their children must quit school and go to work; why herself sacrifices in the early years meant nothing" Of course its the same story that we all know but that's why we're all thinking it Mr. Common People deserves his day. He is not such a futile, ignorant, inconsiderable individual as not to deserve something that is all his own. In city flat and suburban home. In village cottage and lonely farmhouse there have been so many meetings In a way, political meetings of mute protest that it Is high time for an occasion of inspirational outburst of emotion. Through so many of the passing years there were so many tlmes'wben a good man looked into a good woman's eyes and felt his strength and later usefulness ' sapped and shriveled under self-confession of the worst indictment a man can suffer that he was a failure. So many thousands of men have felt tht while the country they loved wag growing richer and greater, while they had 'been honest and industrious and patriotic, they could not answer the query of the woman's eyes why their children must quit school so soon and go to work; why her self-sacrifices in the early years had meant nothing; why to keep stomachs filled and backs clad it was necessary to part with all the savings of the years. Mr. Common People could not answer to himself those questions. However hard he worked, the more helpless he became. Some hideous unseen power was crushing him. He clung fast to the ideals of the fathers of the nation. He tried so hard to believe In his country and In democracy and all Americanism. But he was ground between the upper and nether millstones of privilege and politics until doubt of all our institutions sifted into his soul. The toller began to feel himself a serf. And when such sullen doubt and discontent enter the spirit to a virile people It spells revolution that does not halt at bloodshed. But in good time came a hope-giver. And the history of the past eight years teHs why the plain American, Mr. Common People, feels today exactly as every schoolboy has done when the hulking bully has stolen from him his marbles and ' top and kite and lunch basket and around the corner comes the big brother who is going to take just one quick look, smash a jab and an upper cut to that bully's pop eyes and then accept explanations about legality and the like only after insisting upon apologies from the bully to begin with. It is not today a question of what Theodore Roosevelt is or is not; what he will do or will not do; what he has done . or has not done. It is a matter of tremendous significance to this country that the tens of millions of the common people of America Iqok to his home-coming with such pathetic Jubilation. It is Mr. Common People's own day. He is not carrying , a torch because he has been herded with other human cattle to vote a party ticket that has been hailed victorious at the polls where he has not really been represented. He is not waving a flag because an admiral or a general, with good boys under him, has whipped lesser men in honor of "the" flag, that has come unhappily to mean less a guarantee of liberty and equality than It was meant to do for Mr. i Common People. Roosevelt's arrival means much more than Dewey's or even than Grant's. The enemies then were alien. Those to be beaten now are within the nation's fortalice. . And Roosevelt, the square fighting man, is the one and only one who came forward and told the disheartened garrison that, while the fight would be long and hard, it might be won.
Mumps, Measles, Scarlet Fever For at least a month this town has had, in common with the rest of the towns of Indiana, quasi-epideralcs of measles and mumps with occasional lapses into scarlet fever and diphtheria. An epidemic of any sort always means a wrong condition. There is no ground for immediate criticism. The health authorities and the physicians do all they can. The people on whose homes quarantine cards appear are the sort that care enough about their children to send for a doctor. The cause, then, must be in the people who do not think that mumps and measles are enough of an inconvenience, not to say danger, to take care of their children. And the mild cases of measles circulate freely In the community particularly at school. Soon the real remedy will be in force medical examination of school children at regular Intervals. This may commence with the idea of stamping out mumps, measles, and the deadly scarlet fever but the greater ultimate effect will be in the detection of adenoids, tubereulosis, bad eyes and all the things which, uncared for. means defective men and women. So the epidemics of contagious disease will be turned into a greater good if they eventually secure what Is only beginning In the larger and better managed cities the medical supervision of school children by the state.
cent mornings as at home, sitting in a north room, with the windows wide open, and the fresh air, sweetened by the sunshine, lifting the curtains and strolling In like a spirit from the better world. It Is a scene that has more lovely dreams about It than ocean beach, mountain crest or trip on the river, for it has no anxieties, no forebodings, no sense of fading glory. One doesn't need anything else to make the experience happy no friend, or feast, or book, or glimpse of eea or sky only the tender grace of the morning and its soft, cool hand on his brow. It is the most beautiful gift of the year, a chalice filled with wine and honey which makes one forget his troubles and remember only his joys. And what is it called that does all this? The spirit of contentment, the serenest ruler of these warm and fragrant days. Let us bow to its gentle sway. A Great Neeo. From the Los Angeles Express. Luther Burbank has propagated a new poppy. We wish he'd turn his attentions to a seedless watermelon that would be on the market January first. Tha Cry of the Children. From the Baltimore Sun. Hot weather in the city brings discomfort to persons of all ages, but it Is the babies who suffer most. It is pitiful, the thousands of infants who gasp for breath in the roasting city. The lives of Infants depend on the care and food they receive during this trying period. Unless they can get pure milk and ice. their chances for survival are small. The most crowded quarters of cities, where fresh air
is rarest and good food scarcest, are the sections where children abound. Those who have the largest families are least able to support them. The mothers struggle along as best they can, but many of them can hardly afford the pure milk and ice necessary.
TWINKLES BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. Touring in the Rockies. "What's that?" inquired Mr. Chuggins, excitedly. "Stage robbers," replied the chauffeur. "That shot is a signal to step." "What a relief! I thought we'd had another blow-out." A Harsh Critic. "What do you think of my acting?" asked the confident but untalented youth. "That wasn't acting." replied the stage manager. "That was misbehavior." A Disquieting Report. "Is it true." asked Plodding Pete, "dat yous is offerin work to anybody dat comes alons?" "Yep," replied Farmer Corntossel, SHAKE INTO YOUR GIIOEG Altai' Foot-EaMk tha antivaDtic nowder. It i painful, manmx, nervous fret, and instantly Ukea thm (tins oat of corns mad haniona. It's th iimim comfort dicoTry of the age. Alien's Foot-Eas makes ti((ht or new shoes feel eaar. It is a certain cor for sweating callous, swollen, tired, acfainx feet. Always use It to Break in New shoes. . Try it ee das. M everywhere- By aaaU for ts eta. in tssnne. Dnt mctmpt any swMftiu. For FHEStnal peck---i -"ti til ' "
Jes take off your coat an "
"Not me. I'm Jes a scout sent ahead by de other fellers to verify a terrible rumor." Evidence of Long Service. "Of course you will seek to gain wisdom and efficiency in the discharge of your duties," said the member of congress. "Yes," replied the government em ploye. "But Isn't it best to be cautious about becoming wise and efficient? It may cause somebody to spot you for the superannuated class." Modified Enthusiasm. I see the dewdrop gems so gay As if. upon a holiday. Old Croesus gave his wealth away. And June time beauties, rich and rare. Now glorify the humblest spot While perfumes fill the tremulous air But all the tame, it's mighty hot! 'Tis sweet to see the languorous rose Her blushing loveliness disclose. And as the sun his journey goes. We watch, at eve, the quickening flame That gilds each cloud with strange device. Oh. splendid sight! But just the same I'd rather see a chunk of ice! GREAT WILL MAKER Was Aged French Woman and Her Estate Is Very Hard One to Settle. SHE LEFT GREAT FORTUNE (American News Service) Paris, July 2. The winding-up of the estate of the widow of a former French Consul-General at Jerusalem, an old lady who died two years ago leaving property valued at $t500,000 will be no easy matter. The deceased is said to have been incessantly occupied in making wills and adding codicils. The- last codicil discovered, which is dated August 16, 1907, "confirms the two last testaments, revoking all others." But the lady drew up in all fifteen wills. Nine of the number are plainly revoked by the above codicil, but six others all bear the same date, May 9, 1004. Two of these appear to be the "last testaments" referred to in the codicil, as no later wills have so far been found. But which two of the six are the latest? The lady evidently wrote them a.t different hours of the same day, but there is no indication in any of them of the precise moment. The point is an important one, as by three of the six wills, but not by the others, a female relative of the deceased inherits large sums, which the universal legatee may or may not have to pay. The courts are now engaged in an attempt to determine by "Internal evidence" which of the wills most probably expressed the latest wishes of the deceased, French jurisprudence allowing In such matters more latitude than that of England. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye A HUMAN DOCUMENT James Stell. aged thirty, is a convict in the Fort Madison (la.) prison. He was convicted of burglary. Stell Is an unusually bright young man. Is a poet of no mean order and bns been' made editor of the prison newspaper. In a recent issue the young man tells in a coucise way his history. The interesting human document reads: "First. I was born March 19, 18S0. at Cedar Falls, la. -Second. A divorce three weeks after my birth left me motherless, homeless and practically fatherless. "Third. An auut cured for me until my father's second marriage, which occurred on my seventh birthday. "Fourth. Too much stepmother result, parentless at ten years. -Fifth. By "passing bills' and errand work I clothed myself, paid my board and attended school regularly. "Sixth. Environ inent. evil influences, bad associations, caused me to leave school in the eighth grade against the advice of Frofessor Laylander, a grand ma a. "Seventh. As a consequence I drift ed. drifted, drifted to my present disgrace: "Eighth. 1 was committed to prison for breaking and entering la April. IOCS, for un indeterminate term of one to ten years. "Ninth. Booze "Tenth. I am guilty, but believe my sentence was too severe. "Eleventh. I have tried to prove my worthiness by my record. 1 seek a pardon, and 1 will not misuse my liberty." Note the causes: Orphaned by dlTorce of parents, evil surroundings and associates, the drinking habit. It Is difficult to see bow he conld have been other than he was. While be pleaded guilty, who is really guilty of bis unmaking? : His parents are guilty. Society la guilty. So long as parents may throw off responsibility for heir offspring as a peddler throws off bis pack, so long as divorces are granted for trivial causes, so long as boys are permitted to grow op without guardianship, so long as society licenses men to make boys drunken, so long will wa coattnoa to make young convicts. .
WERNICKE
This week O.'H. I Wernicke spoke before the Indiana Retail Furniture Dealer's Association. The name of Wernicke is known from one end of the land to the other and in those that border even on the Seven Seas. So he ought to know. And he said: "The furniture trade is lagging behind in the race for business. "Statistics show that the furniture trade of the country last year was $140,000,000. "THAT MEANS ONLY $1.50 PER CAPITA. "THEY SPENT THREE TIMES AS MUCH FOR AUTOMOBILES. ' FURNITURE IS TO A LARGE EXTENT A LUXURY. -TO CREATE A DEMAND YOU MUST ADVERTISE."
AND HE ALSO SAID: "To some extent, furniture is like pictures. To sell it you must arouse interest in it. THIS CAN NOT BE DONE WITHOUT PUBLICITY. Also the furniture man should study his trade as carefully as men in other lines of work study theirs. The dealer should become familiar with the historic and artistic sides of bis work. "While it is not true of every man in the business, it is nevertheless a certainty that a majority of clerks and retailers do not know the difference between the styles of furniture of the various historic periods. The only thing he can tell about the furniture is what is marked on the tag. The dealer should develop the artistic side of his work, too, and should know something about color schemes, settings and other things that pertain to the selling of furniture." IF A MAN WILL PUT THAT SORT OF SELLING TALK IN A PALLADIUM AD THE AVERAGE EXPENDITURE WILL BE FAR HIGHER THAN $1.50 PER CAPITA RIGHT IN HIS BUSINESS.
German Kaiser Is Eying South America With Fond Glances Though He Denies It
BY STEPHEN BURNETT. (Special Calile from the International , News Service.) Berlin, July 2. While the Kaiser never tires of assuring that Germany has no political ambitions whatever in South America German flirtations with the Latin republics increase from day to day. Only r few weeks ago a delegation of Brazilian ofifcers were invited by the Kaiser to accept the hospitality of the German Army for a year; today we learn that Mexico has bestowed one of her highest decorations on the Emperor out of gratitude for his unceasing interest in Mexican affairs, and the Argentine Republic is according General von der Goltz, the honors of a hero. He is the Kaiser's personal emissary at the Independence Centenial. Germany's avowed object in cultivating the friendship of South Aemrica is the expansion of her trade in its markets. But the Pan-Germans have dreams far less prosaic than trade. One of their most highly respected prophets. Professor von Schmoller, of the University of Berlin, writes of the day when "a German nation of 200,000,000 souls will raise up. in the Brazils." . That hero of German boys, Karl May, came once more into the limelight the other day when his apepal against the acquittal of editor Lebius will be heard. Last April, May charged Lebius with writing a letter to Weimar actress In wfclch the famous writer of robber romances was referred to as "a born criminal." Karl May, though an immense favorite with German boy readers if only on account of the desperate deeds performed by his Deerslayer, Is very unkindly regraded by the German press as a corruptor of youth and a disturbing element in boy life generally. One responsible paper, the Frankfurter, has carried on a specially bitter campaign against him, asserting among other things that he Is a mere "fakir" who, though he professes to describe scenes and events in Africa and other wild parts of the world, has never been out of his fatherland, Bavaria, and suffers from a nervous horror of travel. Karl May is now a wealthy man, for the circulation of his penny dreadfuls is larger than that of all other German writers of romance put together. Germany is by no means at the end of her financial difficulties. In fact those that are ahead promise to be even greater than those which caused such turmoil during Prince Bulow's final months of office. It is the question of further armaments that causes the trouble. Politicians, who are well informed, say that the official statement "regarding the quinquennial regulation of the size of the army on a peace footing Is not only intended to contradict the statement that undue saving is likely to be exercised, but also to prepare the public for a considerably increased vote. Additional demands will very likely be made for expensive defense works on the west coast of Schleswig-Hol-steln. "Vorwaerts" says that elaborate maneuvres were made recently to test the possibility of an enemy landing on the island of Sylt, the largest of the North Frisian Islands. The manoeuvres were intended to show whether the supposed British threat to send British troops to land in Schleswig could be carried out. The entire Island was secretly garrisoned at the end of Mar with infantry, artillery, pioneers, and cavalry conveyed from Snandau, near Berlin. Then, one moonlight night, the fleet endeavored to make a landing. The defense was completely surprised and overwhelmed. The military heads immediately decided that the island must be powerfully fortified, and th?.t the old and sandy, harbor of Koenigshafen should be reopened. In consequence of the FILES C'JHED AT T.C-Z DY CEn flcsonPTicn cetcod. ' T m mlbr (mm TnlMvlinv itchinv. Tbilisi or protuding Piles, send me your address ana i wut leu yoa now ca caiv jwneu w j home by the new absorption treatment; and j will also send some of this home treatment ' free for trial, with references from yoar own locality if requested. Immediate re-1 lief and permanent care assured. Send no money, but tell others of this offer. Write i today to afrs. ll. Summers, Box P, Notts Danu. lad. . - .
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fact that the island is simply a series of narrow dunes the works will be very expensive. "Vorwaerts" further states that the whole business of the defeat was a put-up job intended, to justify new naval and military expenditures. At the same time it is asserted that the extra receipts from the corn duties, which, as originally voted, were to be used to create a widow's and orphans' pension fund, do not exist, and that the fund must be placed on the ordinary insurance basis. The last fragment of the fiction on that the corn duties would be a benefit to some one besides the Junkers is thus swept away. The Imperial unearned increment tax will, it is finally declared, not suffice to meet the requirements of the veterans fund, which no longer receives the support of the exhausted French millions. This object will presumably call for the imposition of additional taxation. Poor old "Porsena" is no more and the German Empress is inconsolable. He took part in several of the great events of the reign, and on such occasions was always in the forefront of the spectacle. Serious In character and of immense physical strength,' ho was for years a devoted servant of the Crown. They, curiously enough, after a long official career, he went on the stage and became a familiar sight to Berlin opera-goers even though his voice was never heard. Now he is dead, full of years and honor, at the ripe age of thirty; and while bis much-loved Imperial mistress must get another steed, the royal opera must look about for another equine member of the company. A singular burial incident is report ed from Grosswardein. A few days ago the. five-year-old daughter of Joseph Jauernig, a local official, died of diphtheria. Jauernig bad turned his back on the Roman Catholic religion. He forbade his children to receive re ligious instruction, and set his face against a priest taking part in the burial of his child. He himself .performed the duties of undertaker, and at night
Hot Weather Makes You Sweat And If you wait till Winter before ordering Pocahontas Coal And be obliged to pay the increased price Cold Weather Will Make Yon Sweat The DEST GRADES at MATHER BROTHERS CO.
Have a Sane FourtHa How pleasant it is on the 5th to know that there are no powder burned faces or bruised fingers no burned clothing in your household. The pleasure of such knowledge will be yours if you send your children to Quigley's Drug Stores Let them celebrate the Fourth by enjoying our delicious soda, sundaes, ice cream, glaces, ginger ale, fancy drinks, choice chocolates, superb t bon-bons. They will appreciate the Fourth more and thank you heartily for such a pleasant day.
(HUKSLEY'S is the drug store at which to celebrate the Fourth.
A SHOCKING STORY
(American News Service) Paris, July 2. A shocking story of Muley Hafid's atrocious cruelty is related by the Matin's correspondent at Fez. Furious .at having tailed to discover the spot at which Hadj Ben Aissa'a treasure was concealed, he had the Pasha's wives subjected to the bastinado and, .not content with this, he had the favorite wife tortured. First, the palms of her hands were cut open, and salt was introduced into the wounds, then they were nailed to a wall, and. as she continued to declare that she did not know the place of concealment, her chest was crushed. The suffering woman was kept four days and nights in this position, being fed by force, and then she was released and carefully tended with a view to strengthening her to endure further torture. Modest Mr. Moggs was returning to the club house when Wilson met him. "Well, how did you sr-n; on today?" queried Wilson, "I ner saw better golf," said Moggs. "My opponent got away every drive, he hit every brassey clean, he approached up to the hole perfectly and he never mi&sed a put." "How much were you beaten by?" "Beaten! I wasn't beaten. I won!" time carried the coffin to the cemetery. He ordered the sexton to dig a grave outside the cemetery. The sexton refused, and made one Inside the cemetery wall. In this Jauernig, with', the help of his ten-year-old daughter lowered the coffin and read a short burial service. Since the child had died from an infectious disease, and as Jauernig had carried the body through the whole town, the authorities are to take proceedings against him. A new method of suicide is reported from Munich. During the last few days a man named Karl Kurz, a clerk at Mainbourg police court was arrested on a charge of having embezzled $200. The authorities decided that the case should be inquired into at Landshut, and the accuses was brought to the prison of this town. At his request he was employed in mak-' ing cigar-boxes. On the following day it was found that he was suffering from, meningitis, -and he was sent to the hospital where he died a few hours later. On making a postmortem examination the doctors found that Kurz had taken his life by pressing 20 small naila into . his head. He had taken them from -the prison workshop. The nails had, set up the meningitis from which he died. EcrnBAsia. , You can't fall with Gold Medal Flour. Nos. 01 -00 Round Trip TO CINCINNATI Via the C, C. A L. R. R. , SUNDAY, JULY 3RD- -Baseball "Reds" vs. Pittsburg, - and numerous other attractions. Train leaves Richmond, 5: OS a. m. Train leaves South Richmond, 5:13 a. m. Returning leaves Cincinnati, 10 p.' aa. For particulars call, C. A. Blair, Pass. & Tkt. Agt, Richmond. Home Tel. 2062.
