Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 173, 25 May 1912 — Page 2

THE RICHMOND PAIXADIUM AND SUX-TELEGKAJI. SATURDAY MAY 23, 1913..

MEDICAL ACADEMY ' TO HOLD MEETING

annual Convention Will Be Held at Atlantic City Last of the Month.

(National News Association) .ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., May 25. One of the moat interesting' sessions in the history of the American Academy of Medicine is'promised by those In charge of the coming convention in this city. May 31st-June 1st. In addition to the, routine business thlB year's' delegates -will be addressed by a number of settlement workers, prominent physicians and sociological experts, on subjects of vital importance to the growth ancf welfare of the nation. ' - The program. for the two day meetings, as announced today, is as follows: Friday, May 31. The report of the committee to investigate the teaching of hygiene, in the public schools, by Helen C. Putnam, of Providence, R. I.; the. report of the" Committee .on teaching preventative medicine in universities, by Henry P. Hemen way, M. . D., of Evanston, 111., and the report of the committee on publishing- the details of suicides in the public press &)so by(t)r. Hemen way. These committee reports will be followed by discussions. Paper to be Read. . The papers to be read at the first day's session are as follows: "Women Wage Earners and Modern Industries" by Dr. James H. McBride, of Pasadena, Cal.; "Different Civilization Levels in Modern Society," by M. P. E. Groszman, Ph. D. of Plainfield, N. J.; "A Medical Study of Delinquent Girls," by Dr. Alice Weld Tallant, of Philadelphia Pa., and "The Relation of the Medical f o the Teaching Profession," by Dr. Ernest Bryant, M. D. The second day of the convention will be opened with a symposium on the medical problems of immigration. .Those who will deliver addresses on this subject will be the Hon. W. W. Husband, Secretary of the Immigration commission, Washington, D. C, the Hon. John S. RodgerS .United States commissioner ;of. immigration, Gloucester City, N. J. and Dr. Leland BJ. Cofer of Washington. , Other important papers to be read at this session include, "The Effect of Modern Immigrant, on our Industrial Centers," by Dr. Thomas W. Grayson, of Pittsburgh; "The Immigration of Tuberculosis into the United States," by Dr. S. Adolphus Knopf, of New York, "Immigration and the Midwife problem," by Dr. Ira S, Wile of New York; and 'Qn.the Exclusion of those Affected with Diseases of the Skin," by Dr. L. Duncan Pulkeley, of New York. Dr. Alvah H. Doty, Health Officer of the port of New York will also speak on a subject to be announced later. The convention will . close with a banquet .Saturday night."

TRACKS DYNAMITED BY ORDZCO REBELS Retreat of Defeated Insur-

recto Army in Mexico Still Continues.

(National News Association) JIM INEZ, May 25. Dynamiting railroad tracks and burning bridges behind them the remnants of Gen. Orozco's defeated rebel army in retreat from Corralitos to Jiminez, the insurrecto leaders new base of operation. The rebel column extends in a straggling line over 21 miles of territory. Orozco has already opened headquarters here and declares that, although he was forced to retreat from Rellano before the superior numbers of General Herta's Federal army, his forces are still strong enough to meet the governrrient troops on the open field with a chance of success. Orozco's wound turned out to be but a scratch on the leg. The rebel colums under Maj. Fernandez and Gen. Campos are somewhere near Corralitos. Orozco fears that their northern advance has been cut off and that the federals are between him and his two missing columns. Much of Orozco's artillery has fallen into the hands of the federals. Despite this lack of heavy armament he threatens to make an attack upon Chihuahua city. Orozco is sending out bands of workmen to repair the tracks of the Mexican Central railway between this point and Chihuahua City, which is 125 miles away. Most of the rebels probably will be shipped in trains which the insurrectos plan to seize.

TAFT WIHS VICTORY Captured County Convention at Cleveland.

(National News Association) CLEVELAND, O., May 25 The Tafe men won out in the county convention here today and had complete control, despite the fact that Roosevelt national delegates swept the county Tuesday. Warren Maschke, the Taft leader, dominated the proceedings and his committee dictated the 53 delegates to the state convention, where the delegates-at-large to Chicago will be named. The Taft crowd only allowed the Roosevelt faction ten of the fifty-three delegates. The others are all tried and true Taft workers. Senator Theodore Burton heads the lisL The victory of the Taft men here gives them a good chance to control the state convention.

COLUMBUS, O., May 25. Governor Harmon won a victory in his fight to secure a solid delegation to the national convention today when the Franklin County convention instructed its delegates to vote for the unit rule at the state convention.

FLYER BEATS TRAIN

In an Exciting Race Boston Today. ,

Near

A

MEMORIA

L

SUNDAY

Centerville to Honor Dead Veterans Tomorrow.

M E. CONFERENCE ELECTS A BISHOP

' - (National News Association) 1 MINNEAPOLIS, May 25. W. P. Eveland, president of the Williamsport, Pa., seminary, was elected missionary bishop of Southeastern Asia on the third ballot today at the general conference of the M. EL church. Bishop William Oldman was nominated as secretary of the board of foreign missions. '

: A ROAD PETITION

(National News Association) BOSTON, May 25. Arch Freeman, driving a biplane with George C. Parks as passenger, beat an inbound Boston and Main express train across the West Lynn marshes today in a mile brush. Freeman started from Atwxod park at Cliftondale, flew over to West Lynn at 300 feet elevation and circled the general electric river works while 7,000 employes applauded. The express, train was on the shore branch of the Portland division. From there he headed the biplane down the track, caught up with the train, held it neck and neck for three-quarters of a mile, then passed it and came back while te passengers came out on the platform or leaned from the windows to watch. Coming back over Fairfield, Freeman dropped a small U. S. Flag, a sponge and two letters.

(Palladium Special) CENTERVILLE, Ind., May 25. Decoration Day exercises will be held in this town tomorrow afternoon, the exercises to be held in the Methodist Episcopal church. Commander Annies Kitterman of the local G. A. R, will have charge of the exercises. Judge Ed. Jackson of the Henry circuit court at New Castle will deliver the memorial address. The Lewisvllle band has been secured. Children will have a prominent part in the services, they having a number of drills to perform. Following the exercises the veterans and others will march to the cemetery where the graves of all soldiers will be decorated.

TWO DIVORCE CASES Were Heard in the Circuit Court Today.

. Petition was filed in the office of the county auditor, L. S. Bowman, this morning,' asking for the improvement ef West Fifth street (in part) under 'the three mile gravel road law. The petition asks that the Improvement be made, beginning at Linden avenue and extending to the intersection of the Richmond and Williamsburg turnpike in Wayne township, a distance of three-fourths of a mile. The petitioners request that the width of the roadway be forty feet, with eight foot cehient sidewalks and curbing and gutters on both sides. There were 102 signeraTto the petition.

FEAR PERSECUTION

KIEV, Russia, May 25. The second investigation of the death of the boy Yoshichimsey, who was alleged to have been murdered under a Jewish ritual requiring a human sacrifice was opened today by the government. Jews fear that the government will take advantage of the .tragic charge to cause further persecution of the Jewish families here.

FLIGHT TO MILWAUKEE MILWAUKEE, May 25. Farnum Fish, the aviator, making an over water flight from Chicago landed in Milwaukee at 1:20 o'clock. He made the trip in two hours and five minutes.

ERUPTION

CAUSED

TERRIBLE SUFFERING

Baby's Body Covered with Large Sores. Seemed to Itch and Burn. Finger Nails FeJI Off. Little or No Sleep. ' Used . Cuticura Soap ; and Ointment. rs Iiv6, Weeks Cured.

. "When my baby boy Was sit months eM. his body was completely, covered with largo cores-that seerced tb itcb and burn, and cause

terrible sufferine. The eruption began in pimples which would open and run, making large sores. His hair came out and flaccr nails fell off, and the oics were over the entire body, -causing little or ro sleep for baby or myself. Cret scabs would come oft w hen I removed his shirt. "Vi tried a reat many remedies, but nothing would help him. till a friend induced me to try the Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment but a short time before 1 cculd see that lie was improving, and in six weeks'

Ifcrse he was entirely cured. He had suffered about six weeks before we tried the Cutieu.-tt Soap and Ointment although we bad tried eevertl other things, aad doctors too. I think the Cuticura Rfmecies will do ail thct la claimed for them, and & grrat deal more." (Signed) Sirs. Koble Tu'onaa, Dodwn, liont.. Jan. 28, 1911. 9ot mere than a generation Cuticura Soap and Ointment have n Sordid the most economical treatment tot affections of the skia and scalp of Irfarts. children and adults. A Blnjlo caka ef Caticua Scap (25c.) ajd bos of Cuticura Ohnment 50c) are often sufficient. AltbeueH sold by drutrcirts and dealers throughout tea world, m iideral vamp!? of each, with S?-p. book on tb aVro.-wia be sent (m, oa application to Policy Erus & Chea. Corp., Dept. ISA, Cos:oa.

Judge Fox today refused one divorce and granted another. Because it appeared to be a simple case of having grown tired of one another, the Judge refused to grant a divorce decree to Mary Brumfleld, who

sought to have the marital ties between her and Walter II. Brumfleld broken. The Brumfields have been married but a short time. A decree was granted Pennsylvania Williams from Johnathan AVilljams on the grounds of abandonment. The plaintiff alleged that she had not heard from the defendant for some years. She alleged that they were married in the west and that the defendant sent her to this city to the home of her father, saying he would follow her within a short time, or would send for her to join him again in California. She stated that she received no reply to her letters to him.

His Little Joke. He Yes, 1 pass most of my time between Boston and New York. She But I thought you were studying at Yale. He Well, that's between Boston and New York, isn't it? Boston Transcript.

A WARM RECEPTION FOR GERMAN. SHIPS

! I American Navy to Be Host'

to Squadron of Kaiser's Big Navy.

(National News Association) WASHINGTON, May 25. The warm welcome accorded a division of the United States Atlantic fleet on its visit to Germany last year will be equaled, and if possible outdone, by the demonstration that will greet Rear Admiral Rebeuen-Paschwitz, in command of the German flagship Moltke, and the cruisers Stettin and Bremen, when he and his ships visit this country this week. From the time they arrive off Cafce Henry, on May 30, to the date of their departure from New York on June 13, the German officers and men will be the guests of the Navy Department, and will be the objects of a program of entertainment that will include everything from a visit to the President of the United States to receptions by the cities on their itinerary and private dinner parties. For weeks the navy officials have been buBy planning the entertainment of the foreigners, even arranging to meet the German admiral and his fleet off Cape Henry with two of the new

est ships of the United States navy

the Utah and the Florida. These boats

will salute the visitors and escort them to Hampton Roada where they are expected to arrive on June 3.

Here their anchorage will be made to

the accompaniment of a roar of welcome from the sailors of the entire

Atlantic fleet, which will be assemb

led especially for the occasion. Long List of Events.

June 4th will be given over to visits

between the American and German of

ficers and men, and the performance

of naval - maneuvers for the benefit

of the visitors. Beginning June 5th, the German

Admiral and his officers will be the

guests of the Navy Department and

President Taft. They will be entertained by the President in the evening,

and on June 6, they will visit the Uni

ted States Naval academy at Annapolis, lunching there and dining with the

Secretary of the Navy. On June 7, they will visit Washing

ton's home at Mt. Vernon, lunching on

board the Mayflower, the President's yacht, and returning to Hampton

Roads by boat in the evening.

Although not definitely arranged,

the President is expected to pay a per

sonal visit to the German fleet. This

visit will probably be made on the

evening of June 3, the President jour

neying to Hampton Roads aboard the

Mayflower, lunching aboard the flag

ship Moltke and returning to Wash

ington parly the next morning.

Beside these official arrangements for the entertainment of the German fleet, ihe municipalities of Washington and New York are making extensive preparations for the reception of the visitors, in all of which GermanAmericans will take a prominent part. In fact, the visit of the German fleet has aroused an interest second only to the excitement occasioned by the visit of Prince Henry of Prussia, Bom, years ago. In Washington, the municipal cele bration will be somewhat overshadowed by the pomp of the official reception. Germans of the capital, however, have arranged to tender a banquet to the visiting officers and seamen and

flags and bunting will decorate the streets during their stay. On the other hand the reception in New York, according to reports received by the Navy Department today, will equal if not exceed the official entertainment of the government. The German fleet, conveyed by an escort of honor, is due in New York Harbor on June 9, sailing for home on June 13. In order to greet the visitors with a purely representative and GermanAmerican committee, the Mayor of New York has called upon the heads of the great German societies to act and has composed a reception list that embodies the names of Herman Rld-

der, J. P. Morgan. Jr., the Hon. Seth Low. Brig. Gen. Tasker H. Bliss, U. S. A., Rear Admiral E. H. C. Leuti, U. S.

N.. Ogden Mills Reid, and a number of the most influential Germans in the city.

This will be the first time that the

city of New York has extended a wel

come to a visiting fleet and the plana, so far as made, insure the German visiters a round of fetes and feasting, "both at the hands of the municipality and the many German societies, that will live long in the memories of the German officers and sailors.

CIRCUIT COURT

Judgment on the verdict returned by the jury in the case of James W. Brumfield versus Philip Franzman, demand $2,500, was rendered by Judge Fox this morning. The jury awarded the plaintiff J133. A motion made to withdraw the motion for a change of venue from the judge of the Wayne circuit court in the case of James C. Welch, administrator for the estate of 'James R. Welch, deceased, versus the P.. C, C.

V St. L. Railroad company suit for $10,000 damages was granted by Judge Fox today.

Rules to answer againatthe

entered this morning. The Vj. ttrj Pearl Alexander versus Frank Alexander; Jerry Berkhelmer versus Martha

i Berkheimer; and Elvln T. Benson ver

sus Jessie Benson. Answer to the interrogatories to the rase of William J. Brannon versus the P.. C C. & St. Louis Railroad company, suit for $2,000 damages, were riled today by the defendant. Rule to answer In the case of Walter H. Williams versus Harry 1. Johnston, suit for a change of venue from Wayne county was granted by Judge Fox In the divorce case of G rover C Winters, versus Jeanette P. Winters. The case will be sent to Fayette county.

KILLING A COBRA.

A Plucky Crow For Which the Big Snake Had No Terrors. If the testimony offered by an English naturalist in Ceylon be given full credence, then the cobra is not so dangerous a snake as popular reputation makes it. In at least two instances, reports this naturalist, cobras

; were chased by large birds. Iu neither

case did the snake seem to baTe any hypnotic power, uch as is generally credited to snakes In general. A crow was seen fighting an intruder into its nest situated at the very - top of a tree The crow was circling at close' quarters and pecking hard at the nest, cawing loudly all the time. The nest was some forty feet above ground. ' , Presently a snake came out of the nest and, started' to descend, with the crow in hot pursuit, pecking, at the cobra continually. The snake took" refuge about ten feet down in a clump of dead ferns, from which it was chased out by the crow. It came from branch to branch until it reacted a large horizontal limb, which stretched out about twenty feet. Here the snake was at a great disadvantage, inasmuch as it could not turn upon the crow. The latter seemed fully to appreciate the situation, and its tactics were excellent. It would peck hard at the spine close to the tail and then peck near the snake's neck. At each peck pieces of the snaJke's 6kin were torn ouj, whereupon the cobra would lie quite motionless. But just as soon as It evinced signs of again attempting, to escape the crew would recommence Its attacks with extraordinary surety of aim. After fifteen minutes the cobra was dead. Harper's, V

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