Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 199, 27 May 1911 — Page 4

l-AGE FOUR.'

THE RICHMOND PAJLIADIU3I ABD SUN-TELEGIIA3I, SATURDAY, MAT 27, lOll.'

Tto Rlct..Mpr.d Palledium tzi Ssa-Teltcrtsi

prUNTINO CO. Ml V days Mtb wook. alns M aunoar mornm. Offteo Corner North th and A otroots. Palladium ant Bun-Toloe-ram Phono' Buslaosa Office, ZtC; Editorial ttooma. lilt. RICHMOND. INDIANA. Ralfc1o. Lo4a 4lt J. r. RlaskaM In" Carl BoraaaHIt Aaoootata Bailor W. Paa4ataa Kmrnm K4lt SUBSCRIPTION TEKMa la Richmond It M ."r yr l advanea) or io por wook. MAIL. SUBSCRIPTIONS Ona rear, la advanea 'I,22 Six Month. In advaooa Oaa Month, In edvanco RURAL ROUTE On roar, ta odvoneo .......tJOJ tlx Bjrontao. In advanea .......... ; Oa Month, In advanea .......... Add.-osa caancod aa otton aa doalrod; both hair and old addraaaoa must ba ''sataertbara will ploaaa rsmlt with ardor. whUn ahwule bo sivoa for a acind tarm: noma will not ba ontorod anttl poyroot.1 rMolvod. Cn tarad at Richmond. Indiana. ?oat afftca aa soeoad claia mall mattor. Now Tor ttposntatla Parna Tom. 0-3 WmI aard atroot. and 1i Waat atnd atraat. Naw York. N. T. Chleaco Raproaantatlroa Payno 4k Tnunc. T4T-74I Marquette Bulldl&rf. Chloaca, IIL Lm.m.w a "J v a a a rrrarra f Awarirasi (Naw Yark CHy) kaa tdtottaatnalatlaa at ttii alUatt , 0U Ua nararaa at 1 m - - - vaaBwanaai no tS Tnrir r r ............ RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Maa a population of 23.324 and ta growtnic. It la tha county oat of Wayna County, and tha tradin renter of a rich agricultural community. It la lorn tad duo oast from Indianapolis mlla and 4 mllea from tho atata lino. Richmond ta a cltr of homea and . of Induatry. Primarily a manufacturlnir city, It la alao tha jobbing- center of Kartern Indiana and enjoy a tho ratal! trado of tha populous community for mllea around. Richmond la proud of Ita splendid afreets, well kept yarda. Ita cement aidowalka and beautiful ahada treaa. It haa three nation al banka. ona truat company and , four building association with a combined reaourco of over $.- 000,000. Number of far tor lea 1: capital Invented $7,000,000. with an annual output of 97, 000,000. and a pay roll of 13,100.00(1. Tha total pay roll for tha city amounts to, approxlmatedly $J,00,000 annual. There are flva railroad compartita radiating In eight different directions from tha city. In- ' coming freight handled dally. 1.70.000 Jba.. outgoing freight 1 handled dally. 7S0.000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day 1,700 cara. Number of paaaenf er trains daily tl. Number of freight trains dally 77. Tha annual pot office recalpta amount to 1-0,000. Total aaeeaeed valuation of tho city. 111.000.000. Richmond haa two Interurban rail way a Tbraa nawapapera with a combined circulation of 12,000. Illchmond Is tha greatest hardware Jobbing; center In the atata and only aecond In general Jobblng Intereata. It haa a piano, factory producing a high grado f ilano every IS minutea. It la the eader In tha manufacture of Traction engines, and produces mora threshing machines, lawn mowers, roller skates, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city In the world. Tha clty'a area Is 2,040 acres; haa a court house coating I&00.000; 10 public schools and has the finest and most complete high achool In tha middle west; three parochial schools; Karlham college and the Indiana Business College; five splendid fire companies In flna hose houses; Ulen miller park, the largest and moat beautiful park In Indiana, the homo of Richmond's annual Chautauqua: seven hotels; municipal alectrio light plant, under successful operation and a private . electrlo light plant. Insuring competition; the oldest public library In the state, except one and the second largest, 40,000 volumes; pure refreshing water, unaurpassed; S miles of improved streets; 40 miles of sewers; 21 miles of cement curb and gutter combined: 40 miles of cement walks, and many mllea of brick walks. Thirty churrhea. Including tha Reld Memorial, built at a coat of 1360.000; Reld Memorial Hospital, one of the moat modern In the atate; Y. M. C. A. building, erected at a coat of $100,000. one of tha flneat in the state. Tha amusement center of Kaatern Indiana and Western Ohio. No elty of the site of Richmond holds aa fine an annual art exhibit. The Richmond Fall Festlval held each October Is unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It la given in the Interest of tha cltr and financed by the business men. 8ucoess awaiting anyone with enterprise In the l'anlu Proof City. This Is My 63rd Birthday ADMIRAL DILLINGHAM. Rear Admiral Albert C. Dillingham, 1C. 8. . N, retired, was born May 27, 1848, and before entering the navy he served in the army during the civil war. In the 7th Pennsylvania Regiment of Volunteers. He graduated from the naval academy In 1869. As a lieutenant he served on board the Nashville during the 8paniBh-Amcrican war. While he waa In temporary command of the Nashville May 11, 1893, that vessel was In the engagement at Clenfuefos, Cuba. The Nashville ran close In shore, and under a heavy fire from the Infantry covered retreating cable-cutting boats. For that service, Admiral Dillingham was promoted two numbers on the navy llrt. He reached the grade of captain In 1906 and that of rear admiral In 1909. He retired for age a year ago and has Ince made his home In Wisconsin. DUKE OF GRAFFTON IS 90 YEARS OLD (National News Association) London May 27. The Duke of Grafton, who will be 90 on the day of the coronation, baa been confined to his bed at his Northamptonshire residence since Sunday with a cold, but his Illness gives no cause fgor alarm. His Grace passed a comfortable night, and waa slightly better yesterday morning.

One Way of Doing It

There has lately been called to our attention a method of securing attention from the Board of Works. One man vouches for the statement that it is a most efficient method. Due to the electric current and the attending circumstances of wires of the city light plant which are rapidly spoiling the trees of this city a limb of some slzo was blown down, in the wind storm in the earlier part of the week. It lay before two residences. What happened? Did the city take it away? Perhaps they were not notified? One of the property owners, however, did notify the President of the Board several times. There was nothing doing. Then the other neighbor was called into consultation. He called up the gentleman In question almost a week having Intervened since the lawa of gravitation separated the limb from the tree. He was advised that the city was not to bo dictated to by a citizen. Then the mere citizen replied that if it were the business of the citizen that he would remove it to the premises of the President of the Board. The limb was removed the next day early In the morning.

If there is any moral the fact seems to stand out that if you want any public business transacted make it a personal matter.

The Glorious Fourth

It is several weeks till the Fourth of July. That American festival of noise and distraction turned over to the children of America as one large time in which they are at liberty to blow their beads and fingers off has become a commonplace to every one but them. . Last year the squabble that went on in the city council over the fireworks question succeeded in causing some attention to be paid to it. Restrictions can be put on the sale of fireworks that will leave the fun and eliminate most of the danger. Our recollection is that council did not do a thorough job last year.

But that is up to the council. We hape that the movement frequently talked of to make something out of the Fourth which is worth while will not be given up. .The truth seems to be that the people who can, get olut of town. Within the last few years the exodus has been greater and greater. We are not putting this on the basis that people shouldn't go out of town, but on the ground that this is enough of a town to do something on Its own hook. Will It be a commonplace thing called the "Glorious 4th?"

PRESRVED IN KEROSENE WORKER SAYS Pine Bush, N. Y., May 27. James H. Lawrence, who has just celebrated his ninety-first birthday, holds the record of having been employed by the Ontario & Western railroad for thirty years as a cleaner of engines. During that period Lawrence and his assistants cleaned 70,641 engines, using a large quantity of kerosene In the work, which the aged man claims prolonged his life. Musical .Glasses. Richard Fockrich, an Irishman, was the inventor of musical glasses ordinary drinking glasses tuned by selection and played by passing wet fingers over the brim. He showed his Invention first In Dublin and took It to London about i?r.o

News Forecast For Coming Week

Washington, May 27. Tuesday will be given over by a large section of the country to the annual observance of Memorial Day. Of general Interest will be the address of President Taft at the Arlington National cemetery and the address of ex-President Roose velt at the unveiling of the Lincoln statue In Newark, N. J. Saturday the anniversary of the birth of Jefferson Davis, the only pres ident of the Confederate States of Am erica, will be observed as a general holiday throughout nearly all the states of the south. President Taft is scheduled to leave Washington Friday evening for Chicago, where he is to speak Saturday night before a conference called to consider the subject of reciprocity between the United States and Canada. The president will return from Chica go In time to take up the work at the White House Monday morning. Many Democrats of national prominence are to gather at St. Paul Thursday for a conference of leaders of the party in the northwest. The big feature of the gathering will be a banquet at which Judge Martin Wade of Iowa will be toast master, while the noted speakers will include William J. Bryan, Alton B. Parker, Governor Norris of Montana and Governor Burke of North Dakota. The first cotton report of the department of agriculture this season will be issued at noon Friday and will give "THIS DATE

MAY 27TH. 1661 Earl of Argjie beheaded in Edinburgh. Born in Lochow, Scotland, In 1598. 1736 Patrick Henry, statesman and orator, born in Studley, Va. Died in Charlotte County, Va., June 6. 1799. 173S Nathaniel Gorham, who served as president of the Continental congress, born in Charlestown, Mass. Died there, Junell, 1796. 1811 Richard Penn, governor of Pennsylvania 1771-73, died in England. Born there in 1734. 1819 Julia Ward Howe born In New York city. Died in Newport, R. I., Octover 17, 1910. 1S63 The Federals made an unsuccessful attack on Port Hudson. 1S96 A cyclone wrecked a part of St. Louis, causing the loss of several hundred lives and much property. 1903 Monument to Governor Simcoe unveiled In Queens park, Toronto. 1905 Japanese destroyed the Russian fleet in battle of the Sea of Japan.

ELOPERS MARRIED AT 3 IN THE MORNING

Scottsburg, Ind., May 27. Jack Edwin Howard and Miss Laurel Wallace obtained a marriage license and were married by the Rev. O. E. Haley, of the Methodist church, about 3 o"clock Thursday morning. They arrived here In an auto from Louisville, accompanied by Mr. Howard's mother, after having lost their way and driving several hours. They said they eloped owing to objections of the girl's parents. Norway mines iron, copper, silver, nickel, zinc, feldspur, magnesia, rutils. apatite, molybdnlte and other quartz. Exports of marble are Increasing, largely across the Atlantic. The 1910 output of mines and quarries was worth $7,000,000. the estimated acreage of cotton planted this year with the condition of the crop on May 25. The work of taking the decennial census of Canada will commence Thursday. Over $1,000,000 is to be expended in the work. The census will embrace the subjects of population, mortality, agriculture, manufactures, minerals, fisheries and dairy products. Five banner events In Ive distinct fields of sport will interest all lovers of sport and athletics. The events will be the $25,000 automobile prize race at Indianapolis, the international polo games at Westbury, L. I., the annual intercollegiate track meet at Minneapolis, the -Intercollegiate balloon race under the auspices of the Williams college aeronautical society, and the start of the Boston-to-Bermuda race for sailing yachts. ' During the three days beginning next Saturday the little city of St. Die in the Vosges, France, is to be the scene of a notable celebration In honor of the 400th anniversary of the publication of the "Cosmographiae Introduction in which this continent was first termed America. hTe annual renewal of the great Epsom Derby, the British amateur golf championship, the assembling of the fourth congress of the international musical society of London, and the celebration of the birthday anniversary of Pope Pius X will be among the other interesting events abroad. IN HISTORY"

That uneasy feeling that dull depression, thnt dragged out. spiritless condition it's biliousness. Take achea Miaink PI 11a and see how different you'll feel. Recognised 73 years as a specific for all stomach and liver Ills, biliousness, constipation, sick headache, giddiness, heartburn, flatulence. Jaundice. Wholly vecetaMe absolutely harmless plain or sugar coated 35c. Sold everywhere, Sea4 a paetal for r free task, and learn to prescribe tor yourself. DR. J. H. SCHENCK ft SON, Philadelphia. Pa.

Has asinsmum

ii n Absolutely Puro st cf tcrtzr AlTii:Dir.2F;!ATE A MOTORCYCLE CLUB Organized Last Evening with 25 Members. The Richmond Motorcycle club was on Friday evening organized at a meet ing of about twenty-five of the riders at the Commercial club rooms with the selection of the following officers: President, George Kramer; vice president, Charles Tangeman; secretarytreasurer, Carl Brown. At the next meeting, next Friday evening at the Commercial clum rooms, it Is hoped to have all motorcycle owners of the city, numbering close to a hundred, members of the organization. The purpose of the organization is chiefly social and with this end in view several runs will be planned for the summer. The first so far arranged is to Indianapolis on next Tuesday morning, the riders, whether members of the club or not, being instructed to meet between Fourth and Fifth streets on Main. The start will be made promptly at 5 o'clock. Business undertaken at the organi zation meeting included discussion of how best the club could co-operate with the police and citizens In elimi nating violations by some of the riders that all were being blamed, the majority unjustly. CUT GLASS AND CHINA. Dainty pieces of china and sparkling gems of cut glass tastefully arranged bespeak a housewife"s sense of the beautiful. The most essential factor in 4he care of chinaware and cut glass is freedom from dirt and grease, the enemies of brilliancy. Best results In this regard can be obtained by the use of Hewitt's Easy Task Soap. It loosens the dirt and cuts the grease, but does not scratch. Costs five cents and keeps things sparkling. WHAT OTHERS SAY The Indianapolis Star reproves the Grand Army veterans for the resolution adopted at the Richmond encampment protesting against the reception of the Lee statue for Statuary Hall in the capitol at Washington, and seems to believe that their action was prompted only by the animosities of the civil war. The Star fails to comprehend the attitude of the survivors of the civil war who fought for the preservation of the Union. It is possible to admire and to esteem Robert E. Lee, but it is impossible for the Union veterans to admit, or for any one but a doughface to admit for them, that taking up arms against the national flag and the national government is worthy of national commemor ation either at this time or later. Moreover, while Robert E. Lee broke the oath of the service for which he had been educated by the United States government in behalf of an abstraction concerning the rights of the states as opposed to the rights of the government, every one knows that back of this was the shadow of human slavery, but for which the rebellion would never have been thought of. So long as thousands upon thousands of men sleep in nameless graves on the sites of battlefields and prison pens in the south, it is grossly improp er that Jefferson Davis or Robert E. Lee or any of the men who by rebel lion against the authority of the nation these men died to save should be be fore any -one of them the objects of national commemoration. The placing of the statue of Lee In Statuary Hall by the state of Virginia, which has many sons who have rendered great service to the entire country, and the imposition of the effigy of Jefferson Davis on the silver service of the bat tleship Mississippi waa Intended as a defiant assertion of the justice of the cause of secesion, which, indeed, is openly taught in the public schools of eight states of the old Confederacy, The national government can not afford to pay national honors to any man for doing a thing for which any man would be shot or imprisoned should he do that same thing now or in the future. Marion Chronicle. MISS LORLMER NOW ON HER HONEYMOON (National News Association) Chicago. May 27. Ralph G. Graham, son of a wealthy banker, and his bride, who unitl Thursday was Miss Ethel Lorimer, daughter of the junior senator from Illinois arrived in New York yesterday on their honeymoon. More than 3,000 friends of Lorimer. who is accused of having ob tained his seat in the U. S. Senate through bribery, were present at the wedding.

MINDS WRECKED BY

THE "YOGIS" CULT Daughter Says Mother by Duress Was Led to Give Up $500,000. Alfred, Me., May 27. That Mrs. Ole Bull Vaughn was driven from her home and her mother by the yogis and members of the mystic cults of the east, and that they had poisoned the mind of Mrs. Ole Bull against her daughter. Attorney Sherman Whipple offered to prove in the contest over Mrs. Bull's $500,000 will. A previous will, written in 1903, leavng Mrs. Bull's property to her daughtre, was read, and Mr. Whipple read to the court numerous letters written by the daughter. In one of these Olea expressed the belief that her mother, enthralled in a mesh of mysticisms, must have been acting under a spell. Letters written by Mrs. Bull to her brother, Mr. Thorpe, were read also, the intent being to show by them that the writer was incompetent during her later years and at the time she made the will disinheriting her daughter. Some of these letters, Attorney Whipple urged, showed decay of mental and moral faculties. Others, clearer and to the point, although ostensibly written by Mrs. Bull, were dictated, the daughter's lawyer believes, by Miss Noble who is now in India. Mrs. Bull left. $30,000 to Miss Noble. The destructive influence of the Hindoo teachings on the woman who came under their spell, through the seances in the Bull home, it is assert ed bereft them of their mental pow ers and injured their health. Many of the letters referred to May Wright Sewall, honorary president of the International Council of Women, who, it is said, had power to look at a picture and make its eyes move. Mrs. Sewall was an inmate of the "Studio House" during the reign of mysticism. Nicola Roberto, the psychic barber, testified that when Miss Farmer lost her mind as a result of the Raja Yogi studies they used to tie her down and treat her with psychic methods. "While you were in Cambridge with Mrs. Bull how much time was there that she did not have any Yogis, swamis, Japanese, or some other believers in this Indian cult at ther home? Roberts was asked. Attorney Coob objected to this ques tion and brought forth this statement from Mr. Whipple: "We contend that Mrs. Vaughan did not go to her mother's house because she could not stand the people there. although Mr. Coob says that she was unfilial. We say she was practically excluded from her mother's house be cause her mother was under the influence of these people, who made her believe her daughter brought Mrs. Shapleigh's hostile influence with her." "You may answer the question," said Judge Hoblis. "She was alone only a short time in the fall of 1909," said Roberto. .NOTICE. Members of Carpenters Union are requested to be present at next meet ing, Tuesday night. May 30. Import ant business. Jeff Cox, Secretary. Tired of Chicago Summer Life, Take Up Farming. Chicago, May 27. Mrs. John D. Kales of 1356 North State street and Miss Ethel Mason of Winnetka are the latest women well known In Chicago society to enter the ranks of business. Mrs. Kales has gone to her fruit farm north of St. Joseph, where, this summer she will launch out into the can ning and preserving fruits for the market. Miss Mason already is established on the farm of Theodore Dickinson, where she is beginning her first seas on as the manager of a chicken farm Although Mrs. Kales and Miss Ma eon are launching out actively this season, they have been interested in their respective fields of effort for some years. Mrs. Kales was one of the early supporters 'of the school of domestice arts and sciences. Always she has found interest in the things of the home. "I liked to putter around the kitchen." is the way Mrs. Kales puts it. Wish for Farm Realized. Itwas some half dozen years ago, when one or two of the society women won attention through management of their own farms, that Mrs. Kales desire to delve into this line of endeavor crystallized. "I wish," she said to her husband, Dr. Kales, "that I could do something of that kind. The summers are so lacking in activity." "Why." said Dr. Kales, "if you really feel you would enjoy it, I will buy you a small fruit farm and you can manage that." A farm of ten acres, four and onehalf miles north of St. Josenh, on the lake was purchased. That was five years ago, and since then Mrs. Kales has been devoting much time during her summers to the business. But In the past most of the management has fallen to the man who does the labor. Mrs. Kales has decided this year to enter into the business of the fruit farm In earnest. Miss Mason spent the winter at the Lansing agricultural school, where she devoted her time to the study of chicken farming. She now has 600 small chickens under her care. The municipal council of Paris aims to teach history by means of street names. Two of the signs already in place read "Rue Rivoli French victory. 1797." Avenue Victor Hugo French, poet and novelist, 1802-1SS5."

WOMEN

BUSINESS

Some Gossip Gatherd From The Gay American Metropolis

New York, May 27. The women interested in the success of woman suffrage movement in this state seem to be thoroughly aroused. Their failure to obtain a favorable hearing in Albany and the hostile attitude of the judiciary committee of the state legislature toward the suffrage bill seem to tion not to abandon the fight, but to carry the war right into the territory of the enemy, so to speak. The women have decided to raise a campaign fund of $100,000 to be used in a fight against the member of the legisla ture who are opposed to the woman's i suffrage cause. The women say they have been tricked by the politicians, treated with discourtesy by them, and now the mean to play politics in the masculine way. One of their plans is to obtain a houseboat on the Hudson, which is to be used as the headquarters of the women who are to con duct the campaign. The houseboat will travel up the river and wherever it stops meetings will be arranged and speeches delivered to arouse the women and the men favoring woman's suffrage. It is hoped in this way to ex ert a powerful influence upon the com ing legislative elections throughout the 6tate and perhaps, to defeat the opponents of woman's suffrage who are candidates for the legislature. The first conviction under the new automobile law, which provides a penalty for a chauffeur who takes out his employer's automobile without leave, was obtained the other day before Judge Foster in general sessions. The defendant, employed as chauffeur for a wealthy merchant, had taken the wife of the employer home from the opera and had been instructed to take the machine to the garage. Instead, the chauffeur went on a wild "Joy ride," which ended In his arrest for speeding. He was indicted for grand larceny and the jury found him guilty of petty , larceny. It is almost unbelievable how careless some persons are in taking care of valuable property. Every day brings new evidence to support that fact, and strange to say also of the phenomenal luck of these same careless persons. The other day a woman reported to the police that she had sent a shoe, in the toe of which she had hidden $1,000 worth of diamonds, to a cobbler and that the diamonds were gone when the shoe was returned. A detective was sent out to Investigate the case and instead of arresting the cobbler, as the woman demanded, he made a careful search in her apartment. It was not long before he found the diamonds hidden in the toe of a slipper. On the same day a man applied at the surrogate's office In Jersey City for permission to look at the record of a will admitted to probate about twenty years ago. The book containing the record was handed to him and he spent some time in examining the records of the case. On the following day he returned to the surrogate's office and Inquired whether anybody had found a wallet containing a large sum of money and some valuable papers. No euch wallet had been found, but the clerk took down the volume of records which the man had been examining the day before and In it he found the valuable property. There Is no record that the woman who had misplaced the diamonds showed her gratitude for the recovery of her property, but the man who had misplaced his wallet gave the clerk an order for a suit of clothes. Suburban newspaper correspondents are in a clat.s by themselves. They may not be like George Washington who, according to popular belief would have been Ineligible to the Ananias club, but their imaginative power is simply fierce. They could give Victor

A Spring Tonic

EMBLEM OF PURITY AND EXCELLENCE SINCE I860 Duffy's Pure rjalfi UH-lcCsey is an absolutely pure distillation of malted grain, and as none but sound, clean grain can be malted, it has for its base the most carefully selected grains of the field. It is a predigested liquid food in the form of a medicinal whiskey ; its palatability and freedom from injurious substances render it so that it can be retained by the most sensitive stomach. It is a gentle, invigorating stimulant and tonic that influences for good every important organ of the body. It is a remedy that should be in the family medicine chest. It is especially valuable for use at this time to enrich the blood and rebuild the system that has become run down and weakened from the long strain of winter. Daffy Pore Malt Whiskey is the only whiskey that was taxed by the Government as a medicine daring the Spanish-American war Get the genuine; sold by druggists, dealers and grocers, or direct. SL00 a large bottle. Medical booklet and doctor's advice free on reauear - The Dnffy Malt Whiskey Co, Rochester N. Y. "Wfc

Hugo, Dumas. Jules Verne and Rider Haggard cards and spades and defeat them easily. The Tarrytown correspondent of one of the New Fork papers is a worthy representative of his class. Some time ago he told In one of his daily correspondences a wonderful story of the white Leghorn hen of a certain man In Glenville, which followed her master to the trolley car to bring him a nickel for car fare which he had forgotten. The other day he supplemented this story of the

intelligent hen by another remarkable account. According to the Rtory Mr. Grohan, the owner of the wonderful fowl, havlng a half holiday, started to build a small chicken coop. The hen stood by and watched him pick up nails and drive them home. After he had picked up half a dozen the hen Just walked to the nail box, picked up one of the nails with her beak and dropped it Into her master's hand. This was sim ple and Grohan was getting along well with his job when he smashed his finger and couldn't hold the nails. The hen, however, was equal to the occa-L sion. She took a nail in her beak, held her head sideways near the board so that Grohan with a gentle tap could start the nail, driving it home after the hen had released her hold on nail. Nail after nail the faithful hen picked up and held until her master could drive it home and in a short time the hen coop was finished. Can anyone beat that? , ; Judge Carey of the Jersey City common pleas court taught a lesson to man addicted to the filthy habit of spitting on the floor the other day, which it is to be hoped, wilt make that man at least more careful in the future. The man was a witness In a case before Judge Carey and while ( waiting to be called upon the witness stand, chewed tobacco and expectorated upon the marble floor. The mat' ter was brought to the notice of the court and Judge Carey had the spltter brought before the bar. It Is not known what the judge said to the man during the few minutes of serious conversation, but when he had finished a court officer was sent out to bring a bucket of water and a mop and the spitting witness washed the floor which he had defiled. Some time ago the inspectors of the bureau of weights and measures made a raid on Wallabout Market, Brooklyn, and confiscated more than three thousand market baskets which contained short measures and which the "honest farmers" of Long Island had intended to palm off as full measure upon their unsuspecting customers. Since then the above mentioned "honest farmers" made many desperate efforts to regain possession of these baskets, but even their threat to go to court did not induce the commissioner of weights and measures ' to yield to the farmers. , He decided that the only way to prevent the farmers from cheating the purchasers of provisions with these baskets was desstroy the latter and consequently he had them piled up In the middle of the market place the other night and burned. Consul-General Henry Bordewich, of Christlania, gives the commerce of Norway for 1910 as $175,330,209; Imports, $104,195,666, and exports, $71,134,543, a gain of $13,400,000 over 1909. REST AND RttlTH TO KOTKEI D CHI19. Ma. WiKitoWt Roothimo Svapr hss beca used for over B1XTY YEAUS by MILLION! of StOTHEKS for their CHILDREN WHILB TEKTHINO. with PERFECT SUCCEaS-U BOOTH ES Oie CHILD, KOKTENS tho GUM. ALLAYS sll PAIN ; CURES WIND COLIC and Uthe bert remedy for DIARKHCEA, It is aholutely harmless. He sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow a booming ayjvy, w ' kind. Tweoty-n cni uuuts.