Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 62, 17 January 1912 — Page 3
THE RICH3IOXD PAIiliADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY JANUARY 17, 1912.
PAGE THREE.
LOCAL LAND HEIRS
RECEIVED Wealthy Sacramento Hotel Man Left an Estate of Over a Million. Legacies bequeathed to Richmond Qieirs of the late William Land, of Sacramento, Cal., according to the will whlchhas just been probated, will aggregate approximately $100,000. The deceased was at one time mayor of the California city and well known on the coast as one of its most prominent business men. He was actively engag ed in the hotel business, though he held investments in many other bus! ness enterprises. He died at his home last December at an advanced age. To his nephews, Frank and Harry Land, of this city, he gave $15,000 each, and to the children of the late Charles Land, a nephew, a similar amount, which they shall receive upon arriving of age. His niece, Mrs. Charles llolton, and his sister-in-law, 31 rs. Emmellne Land, widow of the 'late Horatio Land, were bequeathed $15,000 each. His brother, Leroy Land, is given $10,000, and to each of the tatter's children $5,000. The decedent was much interested In the future of Sacramento and the bulk of his fortune is given to that city. He willed that $250,000 should be utilized for park purposes and $200,00 for the poor of the city. The Sacramento Orphanage is given $10,000, the Catholic Convent $5,000, and the Young Men's Christian HHHOciatlon $5,O00. His estate was of the value of a million or more. Frank Iand, Attorney C. II. Dunn, and a niece, Mrs. Nettie I .and, of Sacramento, are named executors of the will. Walker Land, son of Frank Land Inherits the deceased's gold watch chain and diamond locket, diamond ring, Btud and sleeve buttons. Mr. Land was never a resident of this city. At an early age he settled in the West and engaged in the hotel business, amassing a great fortune. His brother, the late Horatio Iand, was one of the founders of Gaar, Scott nd company. WHIZ Is a sort of creamy paste that contains NO free alkali and one that will remove any kind of stain from thu Hands instantly. It is guaranteed not to Injure the most delicate skin. Mechanics say It is wonderful and It is. Try It Just a little Whiz-water-jub-rinse-and-off-comeB-he-dlrt. Kach can of Whiz contains a coupon which will enable you to secure Rogers Genuine Slrverware of a beautiful design. For sale by all grocers and druggists. An Eeonomie Suggestion. Gladys Tommy Tightwad is the meanest man I've ever encountered. Gwendolyn What has he done? Gladys He's engaged to Tilly Tlltou, you know. It appears that be picked up a ring at a bargain sale and had the nerro to offer it as nn -rement ling. It was much too wci.. . fur her finger. What do you suppose lie sug- j gested? Gwendolyn What? Gladys That she diet until she could get it on. Detroit Free Press. Plenty ef Rest Is Necessary. The best work, however hard. Is always methodical enough to permit of timely rest and regular nutrition, and the full recognition of this fact is a mere question of pnblic utility which we hope to see more and more widely admitted Into practice. London Lancet. A Help When Ironing. A floor pad of newspapers, piled two Inches high or so, will be the delight of the busy Ironer. One side should Iw covered with floor linen, the other With enrpeet the linen for summer and the carpet for winter. It is an unbelievable relief to tired feet. Philadelphia North American. Ne Time to Think. Father Have you done any thinking .bout how you are to meet yonr debts? Bon No. dad. but I've done a deuce of a lot of wondering. Puck. If you hare knowledge let others flight their candles by It Thomas Fuller. JUDGE FOR YOURSELF
$100,000
Which is Better Try an Experiment or Profit by a Richmond Cltixen'a Experience. .Something new is an experiment. Must be proved to be represented. 1 The statement of a manufacturer is not convincing proof of merit. But the endorsement of friends is. Now supposing you had a bad back, A Lame, Weak or Aching one. Would you experiment on it? You will read of many so-called Cures. Endorsed by strangers from far away places. It's different when the endorsement comes from home. Kasy to prove local testimony. 1 lome endorsement is the proof that backs every box of Dean's Kidney Pills. Read this case: Mrs. Fred Heater, 607 N. Thirteenth St., Richmond, Ind., says: "Doan's Kidney Pills were used in my family several years ago with the beat of results la a case of backache. This remedy was procured at A. O. Luken and Co.'s Drug Store and it effected a complete cure. I publicly recommended Doan's Kidney Pills in 1906 and at this time I have no hesitation In verifying that Por sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-MUburn Co, Buffalo, New York; solo agents for too United ifitate. Remember the name Doan's and
A Boston, Mass,
MISS EDITH CAMBRIDGE CITY, IND. CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Jan. 17. Mrs. H S Bond received a letter from Mrs. Omar Guyton, written from Cal gary, the sixth of the month, in which she states that the thermometer registered thirty degree below zero. Indiana temperature, the past few days was not far from that mark. The ladles of the" Presbyterian church will hold an all-day quilting in the church tomorrow, (Wednesday). Max Feemster has returned to Wabash college, after two weeks spent at home on account of sickness. The game of basketball between the Cambridge City, and Centerville teams last Friday evening resulted in the score of 44 to 6 in favor of Centerville.' The flag station at the Jones street crossing has been abandoned, and John Wilson, who has, for the past twelve years, been in charge, has been transferred to Greenfield. Mr. Wilson will go to that city for residence within a short time. Miss Grace Hitchcock, representing the general mission field of Africa, made an address upon that subject at the Presbyterian church Sunday morning, telling of the mission stations conducted by the South African General Mission, and bringing out much of interest in regard to the manners and customs of the people, and portraying it as a country of contrasts. Miss Hitchcock has spent several years in Natal. The duet "One Sweetly Solemn Thought." by Miss Harriet Overbeck and Walter Krone, and a song by Miss Hitchcock in the Zulu language were pleasing features of the service. Miss Gertrude Routh entertained at dinner Sunday, Miss Grace Kelley, A. S. Kelley, and Will Simmons, of Winchester; Miss Daisy Ayler, and Fred Cornell, of this city. Gatty Sellars, the English organist, who will be remembered as having given a recital in this city the past summer, will give a second concert in the Methodist church, the evening of the twenty-fifth, at which time he will play the music used at the Coronation. K. P. Diffenderfer, whd has been suffering from an attack of lumbago, is not as yet, able to resume bis work on the J. M. and I. The Epworth League, at the last meeting elected the following officers: President. Gaynelle Hageman ; First Vice President, Mabel Stawn; Fourth Vice President, Pruda Danner; Secretary, Nina Harrison; Treasurer, Mrs. T. K. Fraier; Organist, Carl Reese; Chorister. Irene Toms; Librarian, Emmanuel Isenhour. Mrs. W. K. Roth spent the day (Tuesday) in Indianapolis. Undertaker C. T. Wright was called north of Richmond, Monday to take charge of the remains of Mrs. Clint Markley. Solving a Difficulty. A painstaking mother of two children was attempting to give them a serious idea of her anxiety to make them good and to make plain to their minds the gravity of the task before her. Overcome with the Impossibility of ever attaining her mother's ideal, three-year-old Frances answered In all earnestness, "Don't try to make vis good, mother; Just shoot us." Everybody's.
Society Leader
DEACON EAST GERMANTOWN. EAST GERMANTOWN, Ind., Jan. 17. Miss Edith Miller was in Richmond Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kocher entertained Mr. and Mrs. Frang Gipe and daughter Hazel to dinner Sunday. Rev. Arbaugh, of Mulberry, Indiana, preached to a large audience at the Lutheran church Sunday morning. Mrs. Charles Winter is on the sick list. Miss Cora Behr was a Richmond visitor one day last week. Mrs. Andrew Reigle, who was sick with a severe case of acute indigestion, is slowly improving. Mr. Edward Miller will move his family from Piqua, Ohio to this place in the near future. Mr. Miller is in poor health. The ladies of town have prepared a box of clothing to send to the Salvation Army at Richmond. The average attendance of the Evangelical Sunday schdbl for the year 1911 was 42, and the average collection was 97 cents. Mr. William Weissmeer and wife, of Spokane, Washington, enroute home from the southern part of the state, is spending several days with his sister and family, Mrs. Philip Franzman, east of town. ECONOMY, IND. ECONOMY, Ind., Jan. 17. Mrs. Jesse Greenstreet in very poorly and has been for the past several days. Bert Veal spent Saturday in Richmond and returned here in the evening. Rev. Charley Hunt, of Modoc, was here Saturday afternoon. The Lecture Musical Comedy, that was given in the M. E. church Saturday night was fairly well attended considering the weather conditions. Park Hunt, of Modoc, was here Saturday night. Revival services commenced Sunday in the M. E. church by Rev. G. W. Martin, the regular pastor. There is to be outside help. Perhaps a noted singer will be secured by the last of this week to conduct the musical part. Howard Stanley is at New Castle with his brother. Carl Stanley, who recently moved there from Indianapolis. Miss Vergie Stanley who has been visiting relatives in Richmond tle past week is now back home. Miss Vera Fleming, of Earlham, spent Sunday here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Fleming. Miss Erma Veal, of central office, spent Sunday at her home near Modoc. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Ullery and son, of Modoc, were Saturday night visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Replogle. Utterly VVretched Nervous Prostration Long Endured Before .Remedy was Found. Miss Minerva Reminder. Upper Bern. Pa., writes: "For several years 1 had nervous prostration, and was utterly wretched. I lived on bread and beef tea because my stomach would not retain anything else. I took many remedies, but obtained no relief until I took Hood's Sarsaparilla, when I began to gain at once. Am now. cured." Pure, rich blood makes good, strong nerve. and this Is why Hood's Sarsaparilla, which purifies and enriches the blood, cures so many nervous diseases. Get It today in usual liauid farm or
WHO SUFFERS FROM RHEUMATISM " Surely No Reader Of The Palladium When Leo H. . Fine Sells RHEUMA For 50 Cents On Money-Back Plan. If you suffer from torturing rheumatic pains, swollen, twisted joints, and suffeY intensely because your system is full of uric acid, that damnable poison that makes thousands helpless and kills thousands years bofore their time, then you need RHEUMA, and need it now. Start taking it today; in 24 hours it will begin to act on kidneys, liver, stomach and blood, and you can sincerely exclaim: "Good riddance to bad rubbish." Many people, the most skeptical of skeptics right in this city and in the country hereabouts, bless the day when Leo H. Fine with characteristic enterprise offered RHEUMA to the afflicted at the low price of 50 cents a bottle. If you have rheumatism, get RHEUMA today.
Amusements THEATRICAL CALENDAR. At the Gennett. Jan. 19 "D. Boone on the Trail." Jan. 20. "The Confession." Jan. 25. Polk-McGibeny recital. Jan. 29. "The Chocolate Soldier.' At The Murray All Week Vaudeville. At Coliseum. Feb. 28 Symphony orchestra con cert. "Boone on the Trail." The hardships and dangers from wild beasts and Indians which continually menaced our forefathers in the early settlement of our country, and especially in this portion of the United States, is cleverly and truly depicted in the historical drama, "Daniel Boohe on the Trail," which comes to the Gennett for a matinee and night engagement on Friday. The plot of this piece is taken from historical facts connected with the life of Daniel Boone, the famous hunter and frontiersman, during hia days, he so courageously cintributed to the making of the settlement of Kentucky, safe for our ancestors. To bring out the piece in all its realism, Indians wolves and bears are used, Rolling Thunder, a Siouv, who is a direct decendant of Sitting Bull, not only appears for scenic effects, but is assigned a difficult roll in his assuming the character of Black-Fish, the White Man's enemy. Rolling Thunder is pronounced the leading actor of his race today. "The Confession." The above is the title to a new play that will be seen at the Gennett theater on Saturday afternoon and night. The players presented by the management are certainly worthy of attention of the discriminating theatergoer; the list contains such names as Mortimer Snow, Clifford Dempsey, William Sheehan, Charles Canfield, Elsie Williams, BertLne Robertson and others. The play, as the title indicates, is on the order of "Quo Vadis" and "The Sign of the Cross," and it is at least refreshing to note that something is about to be presented to the public which have been of a disgusting nature. It has been a matter of deep consideration when considering a night's entertainment at the theater of late, as to the propriety of taking one's wife or those of tender years. The Gaar Nurseries of Cambridge! City, Ind., established 1888, have j 50,000 fine healthy trees of general I nursery stock growing on their j grounds. Send them an order for spring. Prices very reasonable. wed-tf The Wrong Market. Mrs. Newlywed Have you any nice slumps this morning? ButcherSlumps? What are they? Mrs. Newlywed Indeed, I don't know, bnt my husband is always talking about a slump in the market and I thought I should like to try some. Philadelphia Record. Plenty. Wife But we we shall not begin our married life with a secret shall we, dearest? "No, darling," he murmured: "there's plenty of time." Worse Luck. Fatigued Philip Did the lady t'row boilin' water on youse? Wandering Walter Worse'n dat Phil, worse" n dat It was soapsuds. Toledo Blade. Rules. Weary It's a poor rule that doesnt work both ways. Willie G'wan! It's a poor rule to work at all. Toledo Blade. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. Hj Kfcd Yea Kits Atesjs fc3Jrt Bears the Signature of GENNETT THEATRE FRIDAY, JAN. 19 Matinee and Night Daniel Boone on the Trail With CHIEF YOUNG BUFFALO and His Tribe of Sioux Warriors. Matinee Children, 10c; Adults 25c Night. 10, 20, 30, 50c
SAVED THE SHIP'S CREW. Oaring Rescue by a Hsroio Newfoundland Fisherman. Sir Edward Morris, prime minister of Newfoundland, triis In the Wide World magazine a remarkable story ot heroism on the part of a Newfound land fisherman. The name of this map was George Harvey, and he resided in a low. rocky island, a few miles east of Cape Kay. In those days the emigrant ships t Canada were crowded with passen gers. In the autumn of 1S32 the brU Dispatch, bound to Quebec, with US souls, in a gale of wind, struck a nxl about three miles from Harvey's borne He heard the signals of distress ant immediately launched Uis boat, wit! his boy of twelve, his girl of seventeen and his dog, and tried to get out tithe wreck. On the deck of the doom ed ship were crowded the crew am: passengers, in imminent peril of the!i lives. A terrible sen raged between his boat and the wrecked ship, bui across that awful waste o water tbf gallant fisherman and his. brave chil dren urged their frail skiff. To get close to the stranded ship was to court instant destruction, and the task o! saving those on hoard seemed well nlgb hopeless, but Harvey's nobUNewfouudland dojr. with marvelous in telligonce. seemed to understand what was required of him and at a signal from his master sprang out of the boat and swam toward the ship. The seas overwhelmed him and drove him back, but he persevered and finally came near enouph. The sailors threw blm a rope, which he gripped with his sharp teeth, and Ht last he pot back to his master and was drawn Into the boat almost dead from exhaustion. Communication was now established between the ship and Harvey's skiff, and with the most laborious efforts every soul was saved.
LIGHT AND THE EYES. It's the Amount Rather Than the Intensity of ths Rays That Hurts. It is not so much the intensity of the light focused on the retina as it is the quantity received by that sensitive organ that causes retinal fatigue or worse. In the great suow fields of the arctic regions the natives protect their eyes from the glare of the snow by goggles made of hollowed pieces of wood in which they have made small boles to look through. These, says the Optical Review, reduce the quantity of the light which passes into their eyes with consequent relief from the glare. So. too, if we look through a minute pinhole disk at the sun we can endure the very bright light much longer than when we look with the naked eyes. If we look at a distant electric arc light there is no retinal fatigue, while if we look at the same light from a short distance there is great discomfort, and yet the two retinal Images are of equal brilliancy, only In the first case this image is very much smaller than in the second case that is, the quantity of light is very much different Then there is the flaming electric light which Is now to be found in all of the large cities of the country. This light is much less brilliant than that of the arc light, and yet its size is so great that this more than makes up the difference, and it is therefore very glaring and uncomfortable to look at In skiascopy it is possible to nse a very intense light if it is made small in area, for the reasons above stated. Chickens breathe 8,278 cubic feet of air in twenty-four hours for every one thousand pounds of live weight, while men require only 2,833 cubic feet and cattle but 2,804. Hence for poultry ventilation is a matter of first importance. people need more coal, clothes and doctors than the strong, robust and hearty. ' Scott's Emulsion saves coal bills, tailors bills and doctors bills. U-SS SBCfflfa
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SUNFLOWERS.
Their Pith Makas Fine Interlining For Battleship Armor. The most remarkable Use to which the sunflower has been put is in the construction of battleships. The stalk of the plant is very pithy, and even when compressed into blocks this pith is capable of absorbing a tremendous quantity of water. These blocks, in which the pith retains some of its flexi bility, have been employed with much I success in the solution of the vexed problem of the lining of a battleship's sides. They are placed between two wails of steel, and the substance is so resilient that it completely closes up the hole made by a projectile, keening out the water for a loag time. Another little known use of the sunflower is In the manufacture of cigars. There is not a part of the plant that is without commercial value. The seed, which is raised by hundreds of millions of pounds every year in Russia, makes a palatable edible oil. with a residue of seed cake for cattle, or it may be fed in the kernel to poultry. The blossoms furnish honey first and then an excellent yellow dye. As for the stalks, the Chinese are clever enough to get a sort of silky fiber from them, and they are also good for fuel and for the production of potash. In New England It is believed that the sunflower "keeps away malaria." It is also believed that the blossoms follow the sun in its daily course, but that is not true. When the Immortals Nodded. The French papers have made much of a slip by M. Eiuilie Fajjuet in his oration before the ncadfcmy. The academician rendered to Caesar more than was Caesar's, fr be gave the "fighter and writer" credit for a line which belongs to Cat. But it seems the immortajs are not immune from lapsus linguae. General Langlo!s got mixed up with Palestro and Solferino. Even Scribe and Moiiere refer to the revocation of the edict of Xantes. which took place in 1CS5, twelve years after Moliere's death. But perhaps a more glaring instance is that of Moutesquin, who, In his "Esprit des Lois," volumn 1, chapter xxl, writes, "1 have many times deplored the blindness of the council of Francis I., who rebuff ed Christopher Columbus when he propounded his scheme for India." Bui Francis I. ascended the throne In 1315, nine years after too, date of the death of Columbus. Ioudon Globe. VALUE OF TIME. Bind together your spare hours by the cord of some definite purpose and you know not how much you may accomplish. A man is commody either made or marred for life by the use he makes of his leisure time. Taylor. Stop a Gold Almost Instantly The speed with which colds or la grippe are conquered by Pines Cold Tablets will surprise you. Two doses give wonderful relief and the trouble is usually wiped out completely in twenty hours. These tablets have a gentle but very prompt effect on every feature of a cold. They reduce the fever, check the naml discharge, are pleasantly laxative and tonic, restore normal activity in the pores or the skin and quickly banish the aches and pains. Pinex Cold Tablets do not contain a particle of ooiates or coal tar heart depressants. Simple, harmless and very asxeeoble. Cost no more than quinine capsules and are immensely superior. Don't accept a substitute one trial of this quick-acting remedy will show you that there is nothing else "just as good" as Pinex Cold Tablets. Money refunded if disappointed. 25c per box. If necessary, send to The Pinex Co., Fort Wayne, Ind., (makers of "Pinet" Cough Remedy). The Crisp Outdoors Invites Your KODAK Kodaks and Everything for Kodakery at Our Store. W.H.Ross Drag Co. Phone 1217. 804 Main Street. We Have a Full Line of Flashlight Specialties. Coliseu ALL WORK PAINLESS Over NohVg
id
WORTH WEIGHT . in GOLD Udy Lesnsed &oet Csi&& Tfcs Woman's Tonic and is ttesr Enthusiastic to its Preist. Mount Pleasant, Ten."Cardui is aO you claim for it, and more,' writes Mrs.
M. E. Rati, of this place. "I was a great sufferer for 2 years and was very weak, but I learned about Car dui, and decided to try it- Now 1 ant is perfect health. "My daughter, when changing into womanhood, got in very bad health. I gave her Cardui and now she enjoys good health. "Cardui is worth its weight in gold. I recommend it for young and old." Being composed exclusively of harmless vegetable ingredients, with a mild and gentle medicinal action, Cardui is the best medicine for weak, sick girls and women. It lias no harsh, powerful, near-poisonous action, like, some of the strong' minerals and drugs but helps nature to perform a cure in a natural easy way. Try Cardui. What Gold Beatera Can Oe. Gold beaters by hammering can reduce gold leave so thin that 2S2.0UO must be laid upon each other to produce the thickness 5f an inch, yet each leaf Is so perfect and free from holes that one of them laid upon any surface, as in gilding, gives the appearance of solid gold. They are s thin that if formed Into a book 1,500 woe'd only occupy the space of a single lent of common paper, and an octavo volume of an Inch thick would have as many pages aa the books of a well stocked library of 1.500 volumes with 200 pages in each. MO 03 LOCK'S It Bocss Orlgbsl cai Css&a MALTED MILK Tfc FMi-erfc fcr 1 Apt. , More healthful titan Tea or Coffee. Agrees with the weaken digestion. Delicious, mvigorating and nufxaious. Rich milk, malted gab, powder form. A quick IsBck prepared n a sntacta. Take no substitute. AakfsrilOXUC&TS. Other are imitations. GENNETT THEATER SATURDAY, JAN. 20 Direct from m Suceessfuf Ren at the Bijou Theatre, New York. By James Hal leek Reid THE CONFESSION A MODERN UP-TO-DATE PLAY That Startled All New York A Superb Cast of Metropolitan Players. Magnificent Production. Prices Night, 25, 50, 75, $1 eV 1.50. Matinee, 25, 35, 50c. CYCLC3ES cd WILL COME but DCUGAN.JENKITJSfiCO. Will Protect You Against Loss From Them. PHONE 1330. Room 1, I.' O. O. F. Building MURRAY'S WEEK JANUARY 15 HAWTHORNE'S MINSTREL MAIDS Other Features The Best Uay to begin lie Km Yea Sit down and sum up your bills, putting those ot the butcher, the grocer, the rent man, the Insurance agent, etc, . etc., all in one amount, then come and see us and give us an opportunity to explain our plan for relieving your "financial pains." We loan on Furniture, Pjanos, Teams, rtc, without removal, giving you weekly, monthly or quarterly payments, in which way you may not miss the money. If you need money, fill out and mail to us the following .blank and we will send a representative to you. Phone 1545. Tour name ... ................ Address COLONIAL MJlLDIMa Room ft. ' RICHMOND, f NO,
N. B. Write to? Ladiea Advbenr Dept. CheHaoooga Medicine Co . Ckattanoega. TMk. for 9trari Instructions, and 4-pce beak, Hoiae TreatneH for W oaten.' scat ia euin vm-;cr. oc toqbmL
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