Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 162, 13 May 1912 — Page 6

VAGE SIX.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, MAY 13, 1912.

DANE

L

RED

WTNESS

STEEL PROBE

Former Richmond Man Tells Government Inquisitors the History of the Tinplate Industry.

(Continued from Page One.) selling to any of the tatter's competitors. Reid said he could not remember it. "Is your mind a perfect blank on that question?" snapped Dickinson. "It is," replied Reid. Dickinson then confronted him with some testimony given by Reid before the Industrial commission in 1899 concerning contracts between the American Tinplate company and

the manufacturers of tinplate machinery. Reid could not remember that either. He said it was quite likely he had so testified but it was thirteen years ago and he had forgotten. "How old are you?" hotly asked Dickinson. "Fifty-three" snapped Reid as he glared at his inquisitor. "Have you forgotten everything you ever knew thirteen years ago?" Hot Retort Checked. Reid was evidently preparing a peppery retort when Attorney Severance jumped up and said, "now I submit that that is unworthy of you, Judge Dickinson." Telling of the organization of the New Jersey concern Reid said that it had issued $18,000,000 each of common and preferred stock, although it was incorporated for $46,000,000. He could not explain what had become of the other $10,DOO,000 unless it had been divided among the stock holders. He eaid that the New Jersey corporation was formed because the tinplate industry was in a bad way in 1898, and he quoted price figures of the product for a few succeeding years to show that the merger had greatly benefited the industry. Recess was then taken.

One lot of Untrimmed Hats on sale, EOc aid $1.00. Mae Newman, Parlor Millinery, 69 Ft. Wayne Ave. It

BASEBALL RESULTS

NATIONAL LEAGUE. New York 17 4 .810 Cincinnati '...17 5 .773 Chicago 11 12 .478 Pittsburgh 9 11 .450 Boston 9 13 . .409 Brooklyn 7 11 .389 Philadelphia 7 12 .368 St. Louis 7 16 .304 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Cincinnati, 4; Brooklyn, 2. St. Louis, 4; BoBton, 3. New ork-Chicago, rain. GAMES TODAY. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. New York at Chicago. " Boston at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Pittsburg. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Chicago 19 5 .792 Boston 13 8 .619 Washington 11 11 .500 Cleveland 10 10 .500 Philadelphia 9 10 .474 Detroit 11 13 .435 St. Louis 6 14 .300 New York 5 13 .278 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Cleveland, 6; Washington, 1. GAMES TODAY. Chicago at Philadelphia. Detroit at New York. Cleveland at Washington. St. Louis at Boston. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Columbus 19 9 .679 Minneapolis 17 9 .654 Toledo 15 11 .577 St. Paul 14 15 .483 Kansas City 12 15 .444 Milwaukee 10 15 .400 Louisville 9 15 .375 Indianapolis . ." 10 17 .370 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. .Indianapolis-Louisville, ran. Minneapolis, 2; St. Paul, 1. Milwaukee, 11; Kansas City, 7. Columbus-Toledo, rain. GAMES TODAY. Louisville at Indianapolis. Columbus at Toledo. Milwaukee at Kansas City. Minneapolis at St. Paul.

Th Damon of tha Nlgar. The natives inbabltiuu th country Bear the aourca of the Nlgar believe that a devil Uvea In the rock from whence the rlTer springs. They are very superstitious and greatly fear this dfviL who is supposed to kill any person who dares to look at the source. "Whenever the natives are showing a stranger Ue spot they cover op their faces and walk backward In the direction of the spring, pointing toward it with outstretched hand behind the back.

Confederates Beauty Queen

( X fro.''- ' fV

ROW

WOMEN

WILL BALLOT IS QUESTION

They Are the Uncertain Factor in the Primary Election Which California Will Hold Tomorrow.

(Continued from Page One.)

weapon that his foes have been able to bring against him is the argument that he is not a standpatter on the burning question of immigration. The success of the Clark campaign in other States has naturally had its effect upon the Democrats of California, which, aided by the influence of the Hearst newspapers, has resulted in placing the Speaker farther to the front in the race than would have been deemed possible six weeks ago.

HAGUE CONFERENCE TO BE CONSIDERED By Delegates at the Lake Mohonk Conference Held This Week.

Miss Mary Scandrett, who is now enjoying the highest honor that can be conferred upon a Southern girl. Miss Scandrett is now at Athens, Ga., reigning as the Queen of Beauty at the annual reunion of the old soldiers of the Confederacy. Miss Scandrett was so honored as the result of a contest in which over 16,000,000 votes were cast, and in which the most .popular beauties in the South were being supported by their friends and admirers.

MIAMISBURG WINS FROM THE LOCALS

Betts, Twirling, for Richmond, Lets Down in Fifth Rain Mars Game.

THINKS RICHESON MAY BECOME CRAZY

Arsenic Eaters. The average Englishman has a horror of arsenic, but the peasantry in Austria-Hungary and othet parts of eastern Europe eat it habitually, be

lieving that it gives plumpness and i

beauty to the figure and longness of breath. Peddlers sell white arsenic about the countryside quite without restriction. The quantities taken are small, and so long as the doses are regular no illness results. Once they are stopped, however, symptoms of arsenical poisoning at once become manifest Mountaineers in eastern Europe often take a dose of arsenic before commencing a climb, and it is also customary to give It to horses and dogs to give brightness and gloss to their Hkins. London Chronicle.

(Palladium Special.) MIAMISBURG, O., May 13 To the patter of the rain drops and the strains of the military band of this place the home team took the honors from the Richmond K. I. O. league aggregation yesterday afternoon by the score of 7 to 6. The weather man saw fit to order an incessant drizzle, but the two teams took the field and decided to play the game through. Richmond's 1,000 mark in the league was brought down to .500 by Betts weakening after the fourth allowing the locals three clean hits in the fifth, which the burger's made good for tallies, and a base on balls and two hits in the seventh placed the Burgers in the lead, which they held during the remainder of the contest. Until the fifth Betts, the Quaker City twirler, had his opponents completely baffled. But when the local lads did get next to the former's twisters, it was all off, and Rttty. the hitting kid for Miamisburg did himself proud. Williamson was extremely wild in the third, giving five bases on balls. This with a hit batsman and an error by Flaherty netted the visitors four runs. Behringer, second baseman, secured free transportation every time he made the trip to the plate. Score :

(National News Association) BOSTON, Mass., May 13 Warning that the incessant examination of alienists might drive Rev. Clarence V. T. Richeson to insanity was sounded here today. Dr. C. V. Cilley said: "The prisoner is absolutely sane, but give the alienists enough time and they will make him insane, just as they would any man. "He stood the tests in an admirable manner, but too much of that kind of stuff will surely have its effect. "No man can stand a continuous program of experts putting him up day after day for this and that kind of an examination. ,Dr. Cilley is the physician at the Charles Street jail where the former minister is a prisoner.

Meteors. The frequency of meteors is at its highest toward the end of July and the beginning of August During the first six months of the year the total number of meteors observed on a clear, moonless night is only about six an hour. At the beginning of July the frequency increases and attains its maximum, sixty-nine an hour, on Aug. 10. The mean for the entire year is twenty-four meteors an hour. London Standard. Progressing. "I understand your boy Josh Is experimenting on the lines of perpetual motion." "Yes." replied Farmer CorntosseL "And I feel some encouraged about it I thought for awhile that the only thing Josh was going to take in was perpetual rest" Washington Star.

(National News Association) LAKE MOHONK, N. Y., May 13. The approaching Third Hague Conference, the proposed International court of arbitral justice, and arbitration treaties, general and particular will be considered at the eighteenth annual Lake Mohonk Conference on International Arbitration, to meet by invitation of Albert K. Smiley at Mohonk Lake, N. Y., May 15th and 17th. Prominent among the speakers from abroad will be Dr. Christian L. Lange. Secretary ef the Interparliamentary Union, and Dr. Albert Gobat, director of the International Peace Bureau at Berne, who will discuss the work of their respective organizations: Dr. Offried Nippold of Germany, Professor of International Law in Berne University, who will speak on The Third Hague Conference; Abdul Baha Abbas of Persia, Leader of the Bahai movement, and J. P. Santamarina of Buenos Aires, who will discuss Pan-American International Arbitration. General Stewart L. Woodford of New York, Justice William R. Riddel of the Ontario High Court of Justice, William C. Dennis, of Washington and

others will speak on the arbitration

treaties with Great Britian and France while Hon. Pete W. Beldrin of Savannah wilL make an address on the proposed court of arbitral justice. Some of the latest developments in international law will be described by Professor George Grafton Wilson of Harvard University and Professor L. S. Rowe of the University of Pennsylvania. The presiding officer of the conference will be President Nicholas Mur

ray Butler of Columbia University.

who has several times filled that office and made notable opening address

es. Other speakers will include Hon.

Henry Watterson of Louisville, Judge

Seldon P. Spencer of St. Louis, Charles P. Neill, United States Commissioner of Labor, and Hamilton

Holt. Some of the Speakers. Forty or more prominent chambers

of commerce and boards of trade will be presented by official delegates, and

several business men mill hare a part in the program. The relation of the press to International arbitration will be considered by John Lewis, Editor

of The Toronto (Canada) star and W. C. Deming. Editor of the Wyoming Tribune. Cheyenne. Like relations of the church will be the subject of an address by Rabbi Joseph Silverman of New York, while Dr. Henry C. White of the University of Georgia and Dr. John li. Gray of the University of Minnesota will deal with the bearing of the education on international peace movement The trst session of the conference will include a number of short addresses on peace work in the United States, among the speakers being Theodore Marburg of Baltimore, Samuel T. Lutton of New York. Benjamin F. Tmeblood of Washington and Dunbar Rowland of Jackson. Mississippi. Among others who have accepted invitations are the Mexican Ambassador and the Ministers of Bolivia. Nicaragua and Panama; Dr. Andrew D. White. Oscar S. Straus. Andrew Carnegie, Alton B. Parker, Jean de Pulligny. Chief Engineer of Roads and Bridges of France; M. Papamichalopolls, former minister in the Greek cabinet; Rustom Rustomjee, Editor of The Oriental Review, Bombay; Justice Louis Henry Davies of the Canadian Supreme Court; H. A. Powell, of St. John N.B. member of the Internamen Arthur L. Bates of Pennsylvania. James L. Slayden of Texas. Joseph R. Knowland of California and George H. Utter of Rhode Island; Brigadier General Anson Mills, and Rear Admirals Theodore F. Jewell. French E.

Chedwick and John P. Merrill.

BUTTERMILK.

It le Rich In Protein, the Meat Ceetfy of Ftood Ingredients. Aa ordinary glass of buttermilk costal as a boat as much nutriment as two . ounces of hread. a good sized potato or a half plut of oysters, says a bulletin. ; of the United States depart snent of agricultureIt thus contain about tha same food constituents as BkimmlZk, bat it has an added hygienic value because the protein is more eaailr di-t gested than the protein In aklmmiik ; and therefore is often prescribed by physicians for children and Invalids, . especially those euOrinc from lnteatlnal trouble. Protein, being the most costly of food ingredients, is the one most likely to be lacking in inexpensive meals, and this Is the nutrient which both skimmilk and buttermilk supply in a cheap and useful form, and when taken with bread or used in rooking they form a very nntritions addition to the diet." Two and one-half quarts of sklmmllk or buttermilk contain about the same . amount of protein as one pound of round steak and cost about one-quar-ter as much. Two quarts of milk have a greater nutrient value than one quart of oysters. The nutriment In the form of oysters would cost SO to 60 cents, while the skimmilk or buttermilk would ! have a vWue on the farm of from 2 to 4 cents.

Fashion is powerful, but it is also

sensitive. A few days ago the Dorothy

bag was carried by thousands of

women and girls in London. Today few are to be seen, for the suffragettes

have given the bag the death blow.

Richmond

AB. H. PO. A. E.

Feldhaus, If 3 0 0 0 0 Smith, cf .4 1110 Stupp. ss 4 1 3 2 0 Martin, 2b ..... 3 0 1 5 0 Stines, 3b 2 1 3 5 0 Shattell, rf 5 1 0 0 0 Powell, lb 4 1 12 0 0 Boll, c 5 1 4 1 0 Betts, p 4 1 0 2 0

Totals 34 7 24 16 0

Have too trotrole of y cUrt arramsr fro a disordered stomach Go to yojirArxsnis' and ret a 50c or $1 bottle of Dr. Caldwell t trrup Pepsin, which is positively (manatee! to smmsaaktDwvU

Miamisburg

AB. H. PO. A. E.

Behr'ger 2b 0 0 2 6 0 Buck, cf 4 2 3 0 0 Ritty. ss 4 3 2 2 0 Pheister, lb 4 1 11 0 0 Flaherty 3b 4 1 0 0 2 McBrair, If 4 1 0 0 1 Grote, rf 4 0 2 ' 1 0 Sheibly, c 4 0 6 1 0 Williamson, p 4 1 1 3 0

Totals 32 9 27 13 3

Richmond 0 141 0000 06 Miamisburg 1 0 0 03 0 3 0 x 7

Two-Base Hits Boll, Buck. Stolen Bases Boll, Stupp, Buck, Ritty. Double Plays Smith to Stupp; Grote to Ritty; Williamson to Pheister. S crifice Hits Smith, Powell. Bases on Balls Off Williamson, 8; off Betts, 5. Hit Batter Stines. Wild Pitches Williamson, 2. Struck out By Williamson 6; by Betts, 4. Left on bases Richmond, 11; Miamisburg, 5. Time 1:40. Umpire Hagan. Scorer Schneider.

Cinder concrete is in favor for roofing, not only because of its substantial character, but because nails may be driven into it The nails take a good hold and are preserved in place. The material is prepared in eight-foot lenghths and, as it may be nailed in place, it is very convenient for roofs of large buildings such as armories, halls and rinks.

The Man Wearing K & K Clothes is the Particular Dresser

That is why our clothes appeal to the majority of men as most men (the good dressers) are particular. They have the style! They have the fit! . They have the wearing qualities! They are tailored correctly! They are of the best woolens! These are the many reasons for you (the particular man) to consider in purchasing clothing. Our prices are low considering the quality as all prices are based on value ranging from $10 to $27.50 The Society Brand and Kuppenheimer Brand

Wildcats of Great Britain. The wildcat the oldest member of the British fauna and a resident ever since the days of the mammoth. Is rapidly becoming extinct. It still lingers in parts of north Wales and the more secluded districts of Scotland. Wildcats, like snakes, were never known in Ireland, the specimens reported from there having been domesticated "tabbies' which bad taken to the woods.' These ferocious creatures have to face the hostility of a dual alliance, being detested alike by gamekeepers and. owing to a partiality for lamb, by shepherds. But the reforesting of rough tracts of country may possibly save them from extermination.

Magnesium is the principal ingredient in a new alloy brought out in France that weighs about two-thirds as much as cast aluminum.

" A QUEER PRESENT. : The Memento Henry Irving Once Pre ' eented to Helen Keller. In J. Henry Ilarper's book, TTae: Flouse of Harper," be tells a story of Helen Keller and Henry Irving. They met at Laurence Huttonfs bouse, and the blind girl seemed to be so conver sant with "Hamlet that Irving Invited! her to "witness his performance, and! she readily accepted. "After the sec-., ond act Irving sent word to her that he' should like to have ber come on the1 stage if she was so inclined, and when she arrived he showed her around and explained the stage setting. She rani her hands gently over his costume and' seemed to be much pleased with his makeup. "As she was leaving to return to her, box Irving thought that be ought to give ber some little memento of the occasion. He reallzed'that In his costume as Hamlet there was nothing he could readily spare, but as It was his custom to put on his eyeglasses as soon as the curtain went down be took them off and banded them to her. "In the middle of the next act he suddenly recalled the fact that Miss Keller was blind, and he told me that It almost broke him up when bt thought of the faux pasihe bad made.

A "WOLVERINE" FOR WARMTH

Three hundred Wolverine Furnaces tteated three hundred Richmond homes during severe . . .... . ti m ... k. . u... ....i..tnM anrl lnilH hw the Marshall

Winter J u si pasi. i ncoc lurnaua ns wvm miiiihiv " j Furnace Co., for thirty-two years. We do not experiment. Ask the man who has one. FULL LIST OF CUSTOMERS ON REQUEST. Get your furnace In early; nothing to pay until fall, then one-half of contract price, ths balance to be paid when YOU are satisfied that furnace ia satisfactory, with a written guarantee to take furnace out and refund your money in the spring if we fail to heat your horns. We live in Richmond.

E. M. CATHCART, Supt. Installation. B. W. WELCH, Local Representative. 519 So. 7th. Phone 1693. 25 S. 17th. Phone 2739.

Copyist 1012, AHrod Ecix k Cofea

Straw Hats all Styles and Weaves In the best quality straw. Price $1 to $6

Emory

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Tested, Approved and Endorsed by Good Housekeeping Institute conducted by "Good Housekeeping' Magazine. OVER 100 IN USE IN RICHMOND HOMES For Demonstration Phone Either 2278 or 2782. CLEM A. GAAR Clly Representative

Is the Time to Buy THAT GAS RANGE

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You Need One, So Why Belay ? Gas is the Best and the Cheapest Fuel for Cooking

We Sell All Ranges and Water Heaters on Easy Payments. This is a 1912 Model Gas Range WITH 18 INCH OVEN AND BROILER My $18offi(D) SOLD ON PAYMENTS OF $2 PER MO. CONNECTED FREE IN YOUR HOME.

Tele. 1267 And Our Represefative Will Call Richmond Light, Heat and Power Co.