Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 310, 15 September 1910 — Page 2
PAOXS, TWO. "
THE BICBUtnD PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1910.
TAFT Oil IIIBIV . MISSIOU III OHIO President Gives Up Trip to Panama Canal Planned for the Fall. - POLITICAL MAP CRITICAL
WILL SPEND POUR DAYS IN OHIO, THE QUEST Op'hIS BROTHER, C. P. TAFT, IN CINCINNATI MAY NOT MAKE PANAMA TRIP. Bowl 8ept 18. President Taft will .make a harmony visit to Ohio before returning to Washington, lie baa also been compelled to give up hla trip to Panama because of the critical situation In politics. Ho Intends to spepd four days In Cincinnati, at the home of his brother, C. P. Taft, and will aee the Republican leader and do aomethlng with a view to Improving the altuation of the party in hla home state. The preconvention fight left strong factional feeling among the Republican!, and thla. added to the spirit of Insurgency and the strength of Dover nor Harmon, presents a altuation that Is ' giving the president's advisers a great deal of concern. It la likely that President Taft will make an effort, at least, to smooth out the factional dlfferencea In the-party. ' " To Cancel Panama Trip. The preatdent will leave Beverly next Sunday night. He will atop off at New Haven on Monday to attend a meeting of the Yale University corpo ration, and will arrive In Cincinnati on September 20. From the Ohio city bo will go direct to Washington to at tend a three days cabinet . meeting After the cabinet meeting he will leave again for Beverly, stopping one night In New York City, to speak be fore the National League of Republi can Cluba. It Is very doubtful now if the preatdent will make a trip to Panama this fail. He had planned tentatively to leave for the Isthmus on November S, returning to Washington shortly beCrane, of Massachusetts, and others of the president's political advisors, are credited with having urged him to give up thla trip and to remain at the balm In Washington in the weeks 1m mediately preceding the ' opening of congress. ' The president regards the building of the Panama canal as one of the most Important tasks, confronting hia administration, and soon after hia in auguration announced hla intention of getting firsthand information . In re gard to It, by making a trip each year, If possible, to the isthmus. The prest dent may decide, however, that the condition of the party and the legislative program which he expects to lay before congress In December de mand his presence in Washington. The only place to have your Fountain Pena repaired -while . you wait Jenkins A Co. ll-7t FRAUDS REVEALED 9 I mmtmmmmtm Former Government Employe Tells of the Dishonest 1 Practice. GOT HALF THEY "SAVED" New York. Sept. 1 5. Sensational revelations of the extent of the underweighing frauds were made on the witness stand Wednesday by James P. Hyland, who was an assistant gov ernment weigher from 1891 to 1909, testifying at the trial of George E. Bedell and other custom officials on underwelghlng fraud charges. Hy land waa asked If he had ever done any underwelghlng. "I underwelged the very first cargo I waa assigned to weigh." was the nsply of the witness. He said he con tiaued underwelghlng from that time on. receiving most of the corruption mosey from Big George Lunny. who has been described In the testimony a the "go-between" for Importers and weighers In bribery operations to secure underweights. The under weigh ers alwaya get half the amounts of the duties of which the government was defrauded, Hyland testified. Hyland said that a one time he waan't satisfied with the amount of bla "rake-off a one dock and offered Bedell $50 a ship if he would have him tranafered to a more fruitful field. The transfer waa made, the witness testified. Bedell waa chief dark to Deputy Surveyor Veil He paid Bedell on the average Just what ha promised to. Hyland declared. Hy land aald he had never known weigher that would not accept bribe. digestion 4 If not, try ' , FOOD There m. Reese" . ftead The Road . to . Well vllie.T , - im pksa. .
IN OLDEN TIMES. People Wsrs Content to Take Thlnge
Easier Than Now. If our forefathers could behold the modern locomotives, automobiles and. electric cars, they would hold up their hands in astonishment. Tn tue-coach was fast enough tnen people were more couieuv iu take things easy. They used to be satisfied with any sort of a hair lotion that came along j If It did not prevent Baldness they thought it waa because Baldness could not be prevented. Ifa different now. People know that germs cause Baldness and that Newbro's Herpicide kills the germ, thus curing Dandruff and preventing Bald' ness. Sold by leading druggists. Bend 10c in stamps for sample to The Herpi cide Co., Detroit, Mich. One dollar bottles guaranteed. A. O. Luken A Co., Special Agents. SATURDAY IS TAG DAY Ladies Aid Society of Reid Memorial Hospital Expects to Raise $1 ,000. THE SOCIETY HAS NO FUND "Tag Day" will be held Saturday under the auspices of the Ladies Aid Society of the Reid Memorial hospital and an attempt wl'! be made to real ize $1,000. Booths will be placed about the city and every person com ing within a stone's throw of them will be tagged. Last year "Tag Day" was a big suc cess and over (800 was realized by the Ladles' Aid society and it is hop ed that this year's event will eclipse that of former years. There are no funds In the treasury of the society now and the organization will make every attempt to raise the needed money. The funds will be used by the soci ety for the benefit of patients and oth er needed work of the organization. RICH MEN WILL FLY Millionaires to Participate in the Big Balloon Races , This Week. HELD AT INDIANAPOLIS . (Palladium Special) Indianapolis, Sept. 15. Millionaires from New York, St. Louis and other cities who follow ballooning for pleas ure that is In it, will either as pilots or passengers sail from the Indianapoils. Motor Speedway at 3 o'clock next Saturday afternoon in an effort to win the national championship race which the Aero club of America will conduct. The three balloons making the best showing in this race both in endurance and distance traveled will be eligible to enter the international contest which starts from St. Louis in October. The entries so far include Louis von Phul, who will be bis own pilot. William T. Assmann, H. E. Honeywell, all of St. Louis; H. J. Wade, Jr., Cleveland; Allan R. Hawley and Ar thur T. Atherholt, New York; Charles Walsh. Kingston, N. Y.: Carl G. Fish er, Indianapolis. All of these balloonists are aerial sailors of much experience, as under the rule of the coming race they must have a record of ten day flights and trip alone at night. It is expected that the free-for-all race, which will immediately start from the speedway as soon as larg er craft are out of the way will have more entries than the national race. Dr. L. E. Ouster Dayton. O.. Eugene Brown, Peoria, 111., John Barry. St. Louis, Dr. Crenne, Dayton, C. A. Coey, Chicago are entered in this race. The prize for the free-for-all will be a dia mond studded cup which the winner will have to defend again next year before It becomes his permanent property. There will also be three gold medals awarded. In this race the dis tance traveled will determine the win ners, and in the national race both distance and time in the air will count. There are so many balloons nominated for the two races that the gas-fill ing capacity at the. Speedway has been doubled and sixteen of the flyers can be filled at one time. Charging the gas bags will begin next Friday morning, that all may be ready to Bail on the afternoon of Saturday. The balloons. If the weather is favorable, will be carried within the sight of the people in several states. BROTHERHOOD MEETS ' Montreal, Sept. 15. Scores of dele gate and visitors, leaders in the P. E. church In England, Canada and the United States, and many of them of high standing in the educational world, gathered In this city today for the opening of the seventeenth Do minion convention of the Brotherhood of St Andrew. The convention began with council meetings thla afternoon 1 and will continue until Monday. In addition to the many Americans who will address the convention dor-1 ing Its sessions, there will be several i from Great. Britain. Including the Rt. Rev. Dr. Ingram, the Lord Bishop of London. .... ; Among the others of prominence ex pected to take pert In the convention are the Rt Rev. A. E. Campbell. D. D., Lord Biahop of Glasgow and Galway: the Rt Rev. J. Phillip Dumoalin. Bishop of Niagara, and the Rev. 8. J.
WoodroCL Dartmouth, N. 8.
IMPORTANT SESSION
OF PRISON CONGRESS international Deleaates Will Visit Indiana Institutions on September 26th. HUNDRED CRIMINOLOGISTS AMOS W. BUTLER, PRESIDENT OF AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, WILL ACCOMPANY DELEGATES ON JUNKET. (Palladium Ppeclal) Indianapolis, Sept. 15. The largest number of official representatives of foreign governments ever gathered in any one body on the western hemisphere is promised for the international pr,Bon the delegates to wnicn win visit traianapous on ineir itinerary September 26. For the first time in its history the congress will meet In the United States. A hundred distinguished criminologists and Penologists representing forty-one I tllCB Will U3 Amos W. Butler, president of the American prison association, left for New York Thursday, to attend a provisional meeting and organization of the congress. Prom September 18 to 28 will occur the excursion on which the delegates will make Indianapolis. The regular meeting of the congress will be In Washington, October 2 to 8. The delegates will arrive by special train from Chicago in time for breakfast Monday, September 26. The party will be the guests of the governor, the board of state charities, the president of the American prison association, and of commercial organizations. They will visit the correctional and charitable institutions hereabouts. From this-city they will go to Louisville. Indiana will point proudly to their institutions before the- delegates who will have come all the way from the Scandinavian peninsula to the Straits of Terra del Fuego, from England to Japan and China. They will be shown the women alone are In control of the woman's prison, Indianapolis, and the Girls' school, Clermont. The state offlceTs will refer to the fact that uniform, non-partisan management on the merit systetm, is required by law. All the institutions as well as the 92 county jails and one county workhouse are' under the supervision of the board of state charities, a nonpartisan, unpaid body of six members appointed by the governor. The' congress will work along lines' toward making over men in prison and giving them a fresh start in life with good health, knowledge of a trade and- improved morals instead of putting men down by deadening punishment which will not prevent them from committing more crimes but will rather incite them to other offenses. This can be done in most cases with the exception of those of instinctive criminals. BY OSCAR WILDE. The vilest deeds, like prison weeds, Bloom well in prison air. It Is only what is good in man That wastes and withers there Pale anguish keeps the heavy gate And the warder in despair. For they starve the little frightened i child Till it weeps both night and day; And they scourge the weak and flog the fool And gibe the old and gray. And some go mad, and all grow bad And none a word to say. Charles W. Fairbanks is chairman of the local committee for the entertainment of the delegates: John Hollett, vice chairman, and R. J. McClure, secretary. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAt. APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat or the disease Catarrh ta a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure It you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure Js taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucoul surface. Hail catarrh cure in not a quark medicine. It was prescribed by one of the beat physicians in this country for years and is a regular prax-rip tion. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combina tion of the two Ingredients Is what Droducea such wonderful results In curing Catarrh. Send tor testimonials free. . ' F. J. CHENET at CO., props., Toledo, a. Sold by nruggists. price 7sc Take Hall's Family Pilla for consti pation. FIRE INSURANCE E. B. KNOLLENBERG Room 6. Knollcnboni Annex OstcrcccrrJcttrcsscs At Less Then Hew Ycrk Prices DUNHAM'S Furniture Store -THE PLACE YOU waTT
VACATION REQUISITES- Cameras and supplies. We do amateur fin. ' lahing. Blue Jay Com Plasters, Bathing Caps. The new drink Tacco.
Confcey Dreg Ctx, Corner Ninth and Main Sts. -If It's Pilled at Cenkey'sr If e Bight.- .Use our Free Delivery. Phone ns; the distance lo our store is the distance to your phone.
CURE FOR STOMACH
Maine Doctor Sold Sawdust Remedy for AilmentsHints on Liquor. ' v CHAMPAGNE FROM CIDER Washington, September 15 The gul libility of the public was probably nev er more extensively assailed than by Dr. II. F. Merrill, of Gardiner, Me. With proverbial Yankee ingenuity, he did not attempt to make wooden nut megs, but he did widely advertise to extract from sawdust a cure for all stomach troubles, and from the root of a common garden flower a cure for ep ilepsy. , ' In such a prohibition state as Maine the method of making whisky from potatoes must have appealed to those with an appetite and the doctor knew the frailties of his fellow-men when he held out the allurement of converting sweet cider, permissible in all localities, into the seductive, : sparkling champagne. Hair Tonic and Incidental. In hia category Dr. .Merrill did not overlook the unfortunate persons who, because of advanced age or for other reasons, had bald spots on their craniums. To those he offered for sale an infallible hair tonic which would in three weeks produce a luxuriant growth. It seemed to the postal officials that he was offering too much for the money and an investigation was started, which resulted in Dr. Merrill being forced"' to disclose that his "hair restorer" was a 30 per cent, solution of lactic acid, and that he made "whis ky by chopping potatoes fine, placing them in a jar and pouring in molasses, the mixture to stand three months. Cider and Brown Sugar. To make champagne he advised his clients to place fifteen pounds of brown sugar in a ten-gallon cask and then fill the cask with sweet cider, per mitting it to stand eighteen days. The doctor's cure for. 6tomach troubles was horn bean or ironwood, and he asserted that epilepsy and other fits could be cured by the root of the peony. He also advertised a method of making hard water soft, and to his dupes advised that a two-ounce vial be suspended in the water, promising Asthma I Asthma! POPHAM'S ASTHMA REMEDY gives instant relief and an absolute cure in all cases of Asthma, Bronchitis, and Hay Fever. Sold by druggists ; mail on receipt ot price 91.00. lnal Parkar by mall 10 cents. WILLIAMS MFG. CO.. Props.. CUvalaad. Okie for sate ny 1. t. Aicixmneu. - . r-i-e-e-i I Why Pay More? Piehl & Essenmacher Fancy and 8taple Grocers. We sell everything that Is clean and fit to eat. 319 N. 5th Phone 1688 TIME GOES MERRILY ON. Watches, Watches, Watches, Clocks, Clocks, Clocks, Jewelry, Jewelry, Jewelry FRED KENNEDY, JEWELER, ! 526 Main St. LIFE INSURANCE E. B. KNOLLENBERG Room . Ka ollcnberg Annex SCHOOL BOOKS and SUPPLIES QuigJey Drug Stores Second-Hand Carpets and Wash Stands For Sale At Westcott Hotel Very Cheap Issire at Office Riebmond Feed Store 11 & 13W.9G Ftce215S COHKEY'GTHE MOST CHANGE BACK."
that after boiling all impurities would
adhere to the vial. Unable to prove to' the postal offi cials that any of his formulas possessed virtue, a fraud order was" issued be brought to trial. DLUEY 75 YEARS OLD Boston, Mass., Sept. 15. Receiving congratulations from distinguished friends in many parts of the United States, and alSo from abroad, Richard Olney. one of the most .noted sons of Massachusetts, today observed his seventy-fifth birthday. Mr. Olney is a native of Oxford, Mass., and a graduate of Brown University and the Har vard Law School. In the administration of President Cleveland he served as Attorney-General of the United States and subsequently as Secretary of State. AIR CRAFT WRECKED (American w Srvics: New York. Sept. 15. At the conclu sion of his first long flight in an aero-; plane, Harry S. Harkness, an ambi tious young aviator of Cleveland, O., has his machine wrecked at the Garden City, Long Island aviation field today by making a precipitous de-1 scent. Harkness had flown the length oi me neia in ms Antoinette mono plane. In attempting to land his ma chine was totally wrecked. The aero naut was unijured. DON'T GET RUN DOWN Weak and miserable. If you hava Kidnnr or Blad. der trouble, Uull head pain, Dizziness, Nervousness, Pains in tlie back, and feel tired all over.eet a packnu I Sit pleasant berb cure. It never fails. We have man testimonials rrora grateful people who have aed this wonderful remedy. As a regulator it bas no equal. Ask for Motner Gray's Australian .Leaf at Mrugglsta or sent of mail for 60 eta. gampto FKEii. Address, The Mother Gray Co., UBoj, H. Y. Rexall Hair Tonic We recommend this tonic for dand ruff and to stop falling hair and guarantee it to give satisfaction. If it j does not do what we claim, bring back the empty bottle and get your money, This medicine has a remarkable rec ord in growing hair. If the roots are not dead there is a chance to form a new growth. Try it on our liberal guarantee. 50 cents and $1.00 per bottle.' Sold only at . Adams Drug Store The Rexall Store" 6th & Main LINES Last Lake Maxinkuckee (Culver) , $1,75 Excursion NEXT SUNDAY Leave Richmond 5:55 a. m. Big Reductions In Wall Papers For the Next 30 Days The Wall Paper Store Phone 2201. 504 Main St
OEtltlSTLVAIIIA l : LINES
The Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co. EXTRAORDINARY SUGAR SALE FRIDAY Cl SATURDAY, CEP. 16-17, WE WILL GELL
WITH A DOLLAR PURCHASE OF TEA, COFFEE, DAKIttC POWDER, OPICEO OR EXTRACTS Faft Ifiamp ifJop
WITH A 50c . PURCHASE OF TEA, COFFEE, BAKING ; powder; spices op EXTRACT WE WILL SELL Pte 1215
ii Pounds Granulated Sugar
REUNION OF BRIGADE
(American News Service. Syracuse, N, Y Sept. 15. Survivors of the First Iron Brigade, one of the famous organizations of the Army of the Potomac, assembled in Eighth annual reunion today at the state fair ground in this city. The reunion waa attended by a number of veterans from distant parts of the country. Hospital Tag Day Saturday. IK - One Price St - Clothiers JtC - Furnishers Buy Your Son
Ml MMM IIIMI.iSTImiMI Hill I
III Hi l"J9 lWt
He Is 21 Years Old such as this thin model case with a fine Elgin, Waltham, Howard or Hamilton movement in it. Call and see:6ur. line. v Qiiais Hfl. DHanmei? The Jeweler 810 Main St F. H. Edmunds. Optometrist
Lbs. Best Granulated Sugur For
10 Stamps with one pkg. Corn Starch 10c 10 Stamps with one pkg. Baking Soda, 10c 10 Stamps with one . pkg. Jelly Powder 10c 10 Stamps with one bottle A. A P. Furniture Polish for 25c 10 Stamps with two -cans of Campbell's Soup, each ....... 1 0c
DWELLING HOUSES AT YOUR OWN PRICE. Both frame and brick with aheda and barns, to b told for removal, at auction Thursday, September 22d, at 2:00 o'clock en the premises. Wash tngton Ave, abutting our. factory. GAAR. SCOTT A CO. 139
Wanted Ladies Bicycle, 20 in. frame, must be in good - AAMMifiAn Jl Hfg4aea IiDiAiiaIA " care Palladium. SEE THE NEW LINES FALL CLOTHING There are no better clothes made than the K. & K. clothing. We give you the very best of material, new patterns and perfect fit at prices that suit. What better can you ask for than that. KRONE a KENNEDY 803 Main Street a Watch NOW! Before school begins next Monday so that he will not have to depend on the old clock for the correct time? Teach him while he is , J stiH young the value of punctuality. Give him a reasonable priced watch this tinie, promising him a higher grade one when J WITH A 25c PURCHASE OF TEA, COFFEE, BAKING POWDER, SPICES or EXTRACT 5 Pounds Granulated Sugar 2Sc 727 Em SI
ft
