Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 10, 21 November 1912 — Page 6
THE RlCIlilOXi) PA-LLADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGBAli. THURSDAY NOVEMBER 21, 1912.
PAGE SIX.
JURY PONDERS
EVIDENCE Accused Slayer Told Jury that Saunders Had a Razor and that He Killed in Self Defense. (Continued from Pas One.) ed away. We did pot run. I told my wife all." Intended To Return. Whalen told the jury that he did not see his wife at the market house but went to his nephew's. A short time afterwards the nephew went to a grocer's and learned that a killing had been committed. He told Whalen that the man was 'dead. Whalen stayed there all night and went to his home on North Fifth street the next morning. He told his wife of the affair and said he intended to give himself up. His wife told him not to do so, arguing that he did not have enough money to defend himself. He stayed at home on Sunday and went to work Monday. Monday evening, after reading In the local papers that Henry Abeshire was arrested on the charge of murder, Whalen said he went to Boston, thence to Cincinnati and to McKinneysburg. He told the jury that he went away to make enough money to hire a lawyer to defend him and that he intended to return and surrender himself to the authorities. BOWLING NOTES The Slims won two games last evening at the City Bowling alleys, thereby leaving the cellar. The Reliance Five were the losers. Lintz bowled over 218 pins and had average with a score of 178. Summary: Reliance Five. Blind 155 158 13J Lintz 137 218 182 Hosier 137 149 142 YoungfleBh 159 126 146 Hunt 185 158 115 Total 773 809 722 Slims. Ed. Lichtenfels 177 162 166 Allen 178 143 167 Blind 177 134 152 Steinkamp 168 130 177 Miller 164 130 148 Total 867 699 810 Standing. W. Li." Pet. Keystones 11 4 .733 Giants ..13 5 .722 Lichtenfels Socks 9 ' 9 .500 Reliance Five 9 9 .500 Travelers 6 9 .400 Starr Piano . . ...... 6 9 .400 Slims 7 11 .389 Bonesetters 5 10 .333 Is your husband cross? An irritable, fault-finding ; disposition is often due to a disordered stomach. A man with good digestion is nearly always good natured. A great many have been permanently cured of stomach thouble by taking Chamberlain's Tablets. For Bale by all dealers. Advertisement. Lovely, but Unwashed. In former times even highborn ladies and gentlemen seem not to have troubled even to wash their hands with . any frequency. Even the fair and witty Margaret of Navarre on one occasion avowed her neglect of elementary cleanliness In the frankest 'way. "Look at these lovely bands of mine." said she to one of her courtiers. "They have not been washed for eight days, yet I'll wager they outshine yours." In an old French manual of etiquette. "Lolx de la Galanterie." published in 1640. the complete dandy is advised to "take trouble to wash his hands every day and his face almost as often." Reasons Why You Should Be Associated With Our Agency. BECAUSE It is unnecessary to No. 9. worry over the Burglary question when protected by a Burglary Insurance policy. The cost is small. (To be continued) Dougan, Jenkins & Co. Eighth and Main Sts. Phone 1330 7 For Correct Glasses GO TO MISS C M. SWEITZER OPTOMETRIST Phone 1099 927', Main 8t.
IN CASE
Misery Hates Company But Loves TIZ
A TIZ Foot Bath on Reaching Home Will Make You Feel Pleasant. Try It With a Free Trial Package. You can't hide foot misery. It runs up into the nerves, draws the expression Into the face, makes you look footsick. TIZ is for all people for all kinds of feet. Whether it is corns, bunions, chilblains, calluses, or ju6t feet, TIZ causes all those acid poisons to 'come out. Foot pores are always enlarged. Nature intended them so. And TIZ was designed to aid nature: millions know this to be a fact. Do you? Get a 25 cent box of TIZ at once and have your share of foot comfort Any druggist, department or general store, will supply you. And for a free trial package, write to Walter Luther Dodge & Co., 1223 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. (Advertisement) A FREAK OF THE SEA. Fury ef the Mighty Rollers That Sometimes Attack a Coast. Among the many dangers which "those who go down to the sea in ships" have to encounter must be reckoned that strange phenomenon known as "the, rollers," a succession of immense waves which in certain localities set in upon a coast without the least previous indication, rendering the use of boeta Impossible or at the best highly dangerous. The places where tbey chiefly occur are in the fine weather trade wind regions of the south Atlantic and south Pacific, being markedly felt at exposed islands such as Ascension and St. Helena in the former ocean and in the latter at the Chinchas. Lobos and other islands off the coast of Peru. The sea may be of perfect smooth ness, the breeze for days previously the faintest zephyr, when suddenly a huge wave appears rolling landward, at first apparently quite leisurely, until it reaches any solid mass of reef, rock or shore, when, as if roused to anger at the obstruction, the hitherto lazy undulation becomes a sharp ridge, flings Its crest high in Hie air, dashes forward with redoubled energy and bursts upon the shore with tremendous fury. This wave is quickly followed by others, and tLe. rollers set in. ever augmenting in violence, until tbey attain an awful grandeur not to be exceeded in the wildest storm. A visit of the rollers may last from five or six hours to two or three days, and a strange feature is that they come from leeward, in a widely different direction from the usual wind of the locality. World Wide Magazine. Thanksgiving "spreads" require perfect Table Linens. We have Table Linens, 35c to $2.00 yard. The Geo. H. Knollenberg Co.
Our Leather Goods Department Contains Numerous Xmas Gift Suggestions.
Almost every woman is crocheting something for Christmas. The real D. M. C. Art 151 is the only cotton that answers the purpose. It's scarce it's hard to get, but this is where we "shine." We have all sizes of white mercerized crochet cotton, the genuine D. M. C, Art 151, at the following prices:
No. 1 2 3 5 10 15 20 Price 10c 10c 10c 10c 10c 10c 10c No. 30 40 50 60 70 80 100 PKce 12ic 12Jc 15c 15c 15c 15c 20c
Tell Your Friends Where They Can Get D. M. C. Art-151 The New Winter Quarterly Illustrating the Ladies' Home Journal Patterns, price 20c including a 15c Ladies' Home Journal Pattern, can be found at our Pattern Counter. This magazine is larger and more artistically gotten up than ever before. Not only valuable to the dressmaker, but also to all who are doing "home sewing." Remember this quarterly costs you but 5c when purchased with a 15c Pattern.
Today's News of the Sporting World
(National News Association) CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Nov. 21. The Harvard back field, ends and about ten subs left for New Haven today. They will be joined by the linesmen and the rest of the scrubs there tomorrow and will have two workouts in Yale field before their clash with the blue on Saturday. Coaches and players are confident of victory. The team regarded as one of the best that ever represented Harvard, is in tip-top shape. Brickley's booting toe has gained in accuracy and the squad has mastered some new trick plays which will be sprung in the game and which the coaches feel sure will be productive of big gains. The line-up of the team will be the same as those who defeated Dartmouth Saturday. SHEVLIN IS COACH. NEW HAVEN, Nov. 21. Tom Shevlin, the old Yale star, assumed charge of the Yale squad today to put the team through signal drills and light practice in preparation for the battle with Harvard on Yale field, Saturday. The eleven is in good physical conACTORS WILL WED ON STAGE TONIGHT (National News Association! LOUISVILLE, Ky., Nov. 21. The stage of ' the Gayety theater will be the scene of a wedding tonight. Fern Adesse Ferrler and H. Albert Raycob of the Social Maids company, will be the contracting parties. They met this Bummer when the company rehearsed at the Hurtig theater in New York and it was love at first sight. When the marriage was announced the members of the company clamored for a chance to attend so it was decided to hold the wedding oh the stage. Members of the company will be bridesmaids and chorus men attendants. George Stone, the leading man will be best man and his wife Etta Pillard will attend the bride. MEDICINE ECONOMY. A pleasurable physic, tonic and blood purifier combined in one sweet little pill makes an economical treatment for constipation, biliousness, stomach, liver and bowel trouble. Obtain a 10c of 25c pk'g. of Blackburn's Casca-Itoyal-PIlls of any good druggist. (AdvertlsemepO Perturbation. "Don't you want to leave any footprints in the sands of time?" "I don't know," replied Senator Sorghum. "There's so much sleuthing going on that a man gets shy of a thumb print, a footprint and even of leave to print." Washington Star. Her Hope. Josle I was taken for twenty -five today, aud 1 am only eighteen. Julia What will you be taken for when you are twenty-five? Josle For better ot worse, I hope. The Test. HeIf I should propose to yon what would be the outcome? She That would depend largely upon the Incomo. Judge. Novelty Is the great-parent of plea tire South.
Afraid of It? Co To Your Doctor Afraid to use hair preparations? Don't know exactly what to do? Then why not consult your doctor? Isn't your hair worth it? Ask him if he endorses Ayer's Hair Vigor for falling hair, dandruff, a hair tonic ..id dressing. Have confidence in his advice. Follow it. He knows. iiSvfT5fiz
Do rMo C
dition, but the coaches are disappointed at its failure to develop speed. The team has lumbered through plays all week and unless Shevlln changes the
I yuwo uxc taoi uuuuu; uie uiuca will go into the game Saturday with instructions to stick to the old style foot- . ball and depend upon mass plays to bring the ball within kicking distance of the Crimson goal posts. HELD TO A DRAW. NEW YORK, Nov. 21. Johnny Coulon, bantam champion, was held to a draw last night by Charley Goldman, a Brooklyn second rater. NAVY MASCOT DEAD. ANNAPOLIS, Md., Nov. 21. Bill, for many years the goat mascot of the middies, is dead. An Angora cat will replace him in the army-navy game November 30. McCURREN IS WINNER. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 21 Jack McCurren of Allentown, Pa., was given the popular deecision over Mike Gibbons of St. Paul in their 6-round bout here last night. FAMOUS MUSICIANS APPEAR AT COLISEUM The Lyceum Festival on for this week at the Coliseum gave two successful entertainments yesterday afternoon and evening with the Kaffir Boys' choir as the chief attraction. Tomorrow musical people will be interested in the appearance of Mus. grove, the well known London pianist and organist, and of Fabrizia, the first violinist of the Boston Symphony orchestra, with Edwin Whitney, the famous "lyceum entertainer. This evening Hanly and Hobson will debate on the subject of disarmament. COLORS OF THE RAINBOW. They Vary According to the Sis of the Raindrops. Violet, Indigo blue, green, yellow, orange, red the colors of the ram bow. Any child knows that, and the high school pupil can refer you to half a dozen textbooks to prove It. It is true, however, of only a very few rainbows, as C. Fltzbugb Talman demonstrates In the Scientific American. The colors of rainbows vary with their width, and their width varies with the size of the raindrops, big drops producing narrow bows with bright, clearly defined colors, small drops producing wide bows with pale colors. Here are the colors as generally seen: (1) When the raindrops average one millimeter in diameter, violet, light blue, bluish green, green, yellow, orange, light red, dark red; 2) when the drops average three-tenths of a millimeter in diameter, violet, light blue, bluish green, green, yellow, orange: (3 when the drops average onetenth of a millimeter, very pale violet, violet, whitish blue, whitish green, whitish yellow, pale yellow; (4) wben the drops average one-twentieth of a millimeter (fog), white tinged with violet, bright white, white tinged with yellow, very pale yellow. 'lava you trouoio of any nsaig treai Usoraered stomach? Go to your dranris xet a 50c or tl bottle of Dr. Caldwell rv?.lii. which is positively anarantee' 1 1 .
RECALLS OLD DAYS Old Railroader's Death Recalls First Engine.
(Palladium Special.) CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind., Nov. 21. Old residents of this place are recalling the days of the first locomotive in these parts, anent the death of Reu-, ben Wells at Patterson, N. J whoStived here many years ago. He was one of the first conductors on the old Rushville and Shelbyville railroad in 1851. The rails were scrap iron and two and one-half inches wide, spiked to longitudinal timbers instead of cross-ties. He later designed the first hill climbing engine in the United States to be used on the big hill north of Madison. When the standard gauge was adopted, Wells as superintendent of the Louisville and Nashville railroad made the change on that road in twenty hours. In this time the tracks were changed and altera tions made on all the cars and en1 gines. The old wood burner engine that was piloted for several years by K. P. Diffenderfer, of this place, was named after Mr. Wells. It is now at Purdue. Several years ago it was brought to Cambridge City at the solicitation of Mr. Diffenderfer for exhibition purposes. Hanly and Hobson this evening at Coliseum in joint debate. Men In Petticoats. The petticoat was ttrst worn exclusively by men. In the reign of King Henry VII. the dress of the English was so fantastic and absurd that It was difficult to distinguish one sex fiwu the other. In the inventory of Henry V. appears a "petticoat of red damask, with open sleeves. There is no mention of a woman's petticoat before the Tudor period. Ail Our SUITS and OVERCOATS are made in the best styles. We haven't a garment here that does not measure up to success. The question of "which one" is for your decision. We have them all and we want to please you. We do not. hesitate to guarantee you absolute satisfaction and think of the saving in price.
HOUSE COATS and SMOKING JACKETS Prices $5.00 to $12.00
Irresistible. A New York broker was praising Charles W. Morse's ability as a money raiser. "They tell a story about Morse." ha chuckled. "Morse went to a millionaire one day and said: "'Lend me three millions. I must have three millions for that new deal of mine." ""Sorry. Morse. said the millionaire, 'but I've got only two millions in ready money today. -Is that all? said Mora. 'Well, hand it over then. You can owe me the other million. Exchange.
ire in
Richmond Dry Cleaning Co. Phone 1072 CASH BE ALL, Prop. Phone 2411 Office : 500 Main St Works: Seventh and Sooth H Men's Suits, $1.50 Overcoats, $1.50
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FOO TBALL mm im mi . i n i i mi i mimi iiiimi EAKliAffl vs. iEPAUW SATURDAY, NOV. 23, 2:30 P. M. Last Game of the Season
Sr5
RALSTON SHOES Find favor in the eyes of the
most critical. well as they enjoy wearing
moment's discomfort; for they need no breaking in a
fact
we shall
be
to. prove.
(Co i o. f Change of Schedule Effective Sunday, Nov. 24, 1912 east-bound-no. 8 Limited for CintL, Southern and Eastern points, Lv. 4: S3 A. M. No. 6 Limited for Cinti., Norfolk. Washington. N. Y Lv. 4:13 P. M. No. 2 (Cinti. Local) for all local points, Lv. 8:56 A. M. WEST-BOUND No. 1 Limited for Muncie, Marion. Peru, Chicago, Lt. 12:28 noon. No. 3 Limited for Muncie, Marion, Peru, Chicago, Lv. 12:48 midnight. No. 7 (Peru Local) for all local points, Lt. 7:20 P. M. All Limited Trains will arrive and depart from Central Union Station. Cincinnati. Local trains use Fourth Avenue station. Pullman sleeping cars on Limited trains. All trains Dally.
C. A. BLAIR,
HOME TELEPHONE 2062.
Sale of Real Estate msA Personal Property " On Monday, November 25th, at ten o'clock a. m.. the undersigned will offer at public auction a good frame house and lot, known as Number 2232 North E street. In the city of Richmond, Indiana, and also all of the furniture and furnishings therein and one set of carpenter's tools, one work bench and other articles too numerous to mention. Said Bale will occur upon the premise. The real estate will be offered first and the personal property immediately thereafter. Abstract of title furnished for real estate. TERMS: Said real estate will be sold one-third cash in hand, one-third in nine months and the remaining one-third in eighteen months from the day of sale, purchaser to execute bankable notes for the deferred payments, secured by a first mortgage upon said real estate and fire insurance poller to the satisfaction of the Administrator. Said personal property will be sold strictly for cash and no discounts will be allowed. Real estate will be sold free from all liens and encumbrances excepting taxes payable in 1913, which purchaser shall assume and pay. DICKINSON TRUSTXO., Administrator of Estate of Corydon A. Eliason, DecM SHIVELY & SHIVELEY, Attys.
DEVON MROW COLLAR CXXJETT PEABOnf&CQTSCTrOC in... I'll, They feel as look. You'll them not a which JJ&rl glad Neff & Nushaum, 7th & Main St. City Ticket Agent.
