Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 71, 1 February 1913 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

THE KlCIMIOM 1AIj1jAIJU3I AND SUN"-1 liLLGKAJI, SATUKDA V, FEBRVART 1. 1913.

DATE FOR HEARING OF ALLENS FIXED

Grandparents of Child Wife ' to Be Arraigned on Wednesday. Joseph and Mary Allen will be arraigned before Judge Fox next Wednesday morning to answer to the charge of contributing to the delinquency of Georgianna Doyle, their thirteen-year-old granddaughter who married Benjamin Kinsley, aged 25, now confined at the county jail where he 1b serving a term for the same charge with which the Aliens will be tried. The defense of th.s defendants depends largely upon whether or not they knew of the age of the child, fend whether or not Joseph Allen signed the affidavit before Justice of the Peace Morgan. The affidavit bears Allen's signature. The affidavit subscribed and sworn to before Morgan, gives the age of the child as sixteen years. Alleu denies that it is bis signature. The family Bible will figure largely in the arguments of the state and the defense. The maximum penalty for the offense is $500 and costs and six months in the Jail. The child is retained at the Homo for Friendless Women and will be kept there until the case of the Aliens is disposed of. LIQUOR CASES ARE TO BE HEARD SOON The cases of the violators of the liquor law will be brought up in circuit court as soon as possible and probably some will be heard next week. Judge Fox is not inclined to be too severe with those who have sold liquor to minors who have not violated the law here-to-fore and will allow the fines imposed to be suspended pending their future conduct. "Further violations will result in the maximum penalty being dealt out to the defendants" said the judge. The case of bootlegging at Dublin will be heard soon. The defendant, Cnarles Howren, against whom thirteen indictments were returned, has hired an attorney and may contest the charges. Whenever whiskey was purchased, the purchaser had only to ask for "White Mule" according to persons who are said to have purchased the liquor. City Statistics Birth. Mr. and Mrs. John E. King, 323 North Thirteenth stret, girl, fourth child. Real Estate Transfers. Samantha Albertson to Elgie Wyatt, part of the P. and B. addition to the city of Richmond; consideration $2,200. Sarah A. Chestnut to Emma H. Hadley, part 31 and 32 of the F. A. C. addition. Dickinson Trust company, administrator, to Julius Melle, parts 83-84-87 of the J. S. addition to the city of Richmond; consideration 51,000. Dickinson Trust company, administrator, to Mary O. Croker, part N. E. quarter section five of township 13, range No. l. .Transfers 4; consideration $3,300. Married 'Young to 'Beat Smaffpox. When I "was a lad. the number of people whose faces were pitted with smallpox was legion. "Blind from smallpox" was on the curd won by most of the unfortunate street beggars who had lost their sight. The anxiety of parents to have their daughters married at an age which would new be considered almost scandalously Immature was one by-result of the frequency and severity of smellpox. If a girl's faoe van marred her prospects of matrimony were, of course, impaired, and the ambition of toothers so common was small po wss to see their daughters safely married before they caught the disease. From Walter Gil bey's "Reoolleotloos of Seventy Years" In Nineteenth Century. What Life Is. Nothing is of real Talue in the world except people. Never hurt a person by a' wrong thought or by word or by act. Never hurt each other. Then go en a big discovering expedition sad find each other. Never say, "That person has nothing in him," for that only mean that you havent found It yet Then, last of all, never think you are the only person. You are Just a part of "each other." You are not somebody and the rest of us everybody else. We are each other. life is eachotherness, not every body -el seness. St. Nicholas. The Hornbill, .The horn Mil, a bird which is widely distributed in India, the Malay archipelago and Africa, has a very loud note. Its call has been described as between the shriek of a locomotive and the bray of a donkey and can be heard a distance of about a couple of miles. Twitted. ,T!'ks I hear that Brown's speech t '! Hub dinner last nlaht was quite f,iii ,v Wicks The opening sentence Wiis -iry! He rose and said. "While !., sitting on my thought a chair tni U me." Everybody roared. Bosum Trauscript. Company. A crowd Is not company Faces are but a gallery of pictures where there is no love, and talk but a tinkling cymbalFrancis Bacon. When men are pure, laws are useless: when men are cerropt. laws are fcrokso. Disraeli.

Gould Emp )yes

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(Left to right, Timothy Dowd and George Sountag.) Hearty and Jovous sanction of the marriage of former Miss Helen Gould to Finley J. Shephard, was given by two of the veteran employes of the Gould estate at Irvington-on-the-Hudson. The men are Timothy Dowd and George Sountag, who have ben working for the Gould family forty and fifty-five years, respectively.

HEARING JFJOBEHTS Man Faces Serious Charge in Police Court. The case of Ambrose Roberts, chargJed with having attempted to assault Mrs. Ida Doyle, 167 Bridge avenue, is being heard n police court this afternoon. A large number of witnesses have been called by the state and the defense. It is alleged by the prosecution that the defendant grabbed Mrs. Doyle on the morning of January 22 and that she Jerked away from htm. It is also alleged that Roberts had made a previous attempt. Roberts denies the charges. The case may be continued until Monday morning ot afternoon. FIGHT F0HRATI0!IS Starved Flood Victims Given Succor. (National News Ansociatlon) CALHOUN, Ky.. Feb. 1.- Eight hundred flood refugees were almost unmanagable today and fighting among them was prevented with difficulty when two boatloads of provisions from Evansville reached here. For four days they have been living on the scantiest rations. Because of the rush of the refugees ot the boats it was deemed unwise to distribute the supplies from the boats and the provisions were transferred to the court house. Each refugee was given ten days' rations. (National News Assooiation) MEMPHIS, Tenn., Feb. L With the crevasse in the levee at Bealah widening, conditions in the Mississippi river flood districts today were practically unchanged. The river here rose a tenth of a foot last night, the stage today being 50.2 feet. The crest of the flood is erpeoted ta reach Bsulah and points in that section on Wednesday. REV. GEORGE BEEMAN WILL SPEAK SUNDAY Under the auspioes of the National Reform Association, Rev. George H. L. Beeman, Held secretary of the Second Worlds Christian Citizenship Conference will speak Sunday at four churches, Reid Memorial, First Presbyterian, First Baptist and First M. E. and the Y. M. C. A. He will discuss the principles of citizenship, the authority of Christ over the nations and will outline the plans and purposes of the Second World's Christian Citizenship Conference to be held at Portland Oregon, June 29 to July 6. Rev. Beeman urges the eleotion of delegates from the divers denominations of the city to he S. W. C. O. conference at Portland. This will be the 6econd conference, the first being held in Philadelphia in 1910. The purpose of the conference is to promote good citizenship and to introduce in a larger measure the influence of Christ in the principles of citizenship. Wintsr. I have never doubted the fact that winter was really at heart a Jolly good fellow, brusque, but sincere. His bark Is worse than his bite. If you expect smooth phrases or flatteries from his lips you will be disappointed. His language Is vigorous, direct and effective. His reign as "ruler of the inverted year" Is absolute. His qualities are distinctly masculine. We think of spring as a shy maiden coquetting with the breezes, summer as the perfect flower of gracious womanhood. Autumn reminds us of a widow, to whom bereavement has brought a chastened melancholy. But winter is the vigorous gentleman with the wisdom and judgment of age, strong and unyielding where great issues are at stake, yet withal revealing at times a winning beneficence in both looks and actions. Suburban Life.

Palladium Want Ad3 Pay.

Made Happy

MEET WITHJUCCESS Local People Attract Big Crowds in Vaudeville. The following from the Vlncennes Morning Commercial concerning Mrs. Gertrude Kolp, Miss Elizabeth Kolp and Peter Lichtenfels, of this city, will interest the local public. They go to St. Louis from Vlncennes and then go on to the "bJg time." The Commercial says: Since the initial performance of the current bill at the New Lyric, great crowds have thronged to this popular playhouse to witness what might be termed as the classiest of all vaudeville programs that has ever been seen here. It is one of quality and merit and will surpass anything In that line of amusement that has ever been offered In this city for several times the price of admission. The Three Dancing Mars are the center of all local theater gossip, and are indeed deserving to be classed among the classiest of any artistic and refined dancerB that have been seen here and elsewhere on a vaudeville bill with the price that is charged to witness the entire bill with the Mars featuring. The audience's at tention is held constantly while their ; act is in progress, and to grasp the story and plot it is necessary that one j should ever be on the alert, and watch ! every movement made by the cream of all artistic dancers playing in vaudeville. The stage settings are in ' every detail elaborate and exquisite, ! and beautiful costumes are worn by ! all three members of the trio. A more classy and refined act could never be located in another popular priced theatre and this one should be witnessed I by those who ordinarily do not fancy vaudeville, as It will appeal to them. PAINFULLY INJURED Al "Winters teen Struck By a Train. While driving a wagon across the North Thirteenth street crossing of jthe Pennsylvania railroad, James A. Wintersteen, an expressman, 92 Fort j Wayne avenue, was struck by a train at 1:30 o'clock this afternoon and sustained several painful injuries about the head and body. His scalp was cut, several ribs fractured, and his left hand was so badly mangled that the j amputation of some of the fingers may I be necessary. He was taken to the Reid Memorial hospital in the city am- , bulance Th Vatican's Precious Manuscripts. The Vatican library is probably the most sumptuously housed in the world. This, of course, is only as it should be. for the collection contains some of tbs most precious manuscripts in existence, including the Biblical "Codex Vatlcanus" of the fourth century, the fifth century Vergil and the palimpsest "De Republica" of Cicero. The printed books include over 3,500 fifteenth century editions, many of them vellum copies. The total library has been estimated to comprise over 220.000 volumes and 30,000 manuscripts, but it has never been adequately catalogued. Pall Mall Gazette. Extra Touches. Smith I see you're paying the expenses of that painter wbo fell off the roof. Brown Sure; he's too geod a man to lose. As be went down he touched up three or four places which would have been extremely difficult to ', reach in the ordinary way. Lendon j P. I. PA Benefactor. "Do you know, old man. that young fellow saved me from absolute bankruptcy last year? "How was thatr "He married the girl I had been engaged to for months." London Telegraph. Cautious. "Is Mrs. Prettyface In mourning for her husband?" "Can't say. Only now she's ia blsvek terbiak." Balttmere Amerieaa.

NOT ENTHUSIASTIC ABOUT COMMISSION

City Officials Discuss Bill Passed in Senate Yesterday. City officials are not enthusiastic about the commissi :n form of government which may be optional with Richmond voters. The bill was passed by the senate yesterday. It is the belief of city officials that the commission form of government will not av money for the city j.s the promoters of the bill claim. The chief criticism of the bill is the provision for the recall of city commissioners by a petition s-gned by 25 per cent of the voters of the city. This, they claim will keep the city in a perpetual stir, as disappointed office seekers will seek recourse for their failure to get into office in trying to remove successful candidates. Several instances were cited of where men had appeared at the city building and told city officials that they had signed various petitions to retain the friendship of the petitioner or to keep the petitioner from bothering them by asking them to sign a petition when their time was required for other things. There was some disagreement on this point, some of the officials contending that, since it would take the signatures of more than 1300 voters to recall a commissioner, it would be a difficult matter to petition against a man unless there was a good reason for the act. Ab the recalled commissioner would be a candidate for reelection by law, it is believed by these men that this gives the removed commissioner a fair chance as a majority of the votes would re-elect him. Baits Bescher, eity clerk, believes that more offices would be established under the commission form of government than at present. He stated that each commissioner could appoint deputies, according to the provisions of the commission form of government act, and that if unscrupulous men were elected to office, they could make enough dputies so that they would not be required to perform any of the duties of their respective offices. This feature is one of the chief objections to the commission form of government as It would increase the expenses of the city fn salary and take away from other funds and appropriations. The point emphasized was that It would be necessary to employ as many men as under the present form of government and it would be possible to add many more men to the city's payroll as deputies. CONVICT GRAFTERS (National News Association) PHILADBLPHIA, Feb. 1. Hefcry Clay, director of public safety; John R. i Wiggans, contractor; Willard H. Wall. ' also a contractor, were found guilty of , conspiracy to defraud the city bymeans of contracts today. Carl Zilen ziger, city architect, was found not guilty. Tasting Coins. "There goes another man suffering from degeneration of public manners," said the clerk in an aggrieved tone. "I gave him five pieces of silver in making change, and be tested every one of them to see if it was counterfeit right before my eyes. It is only : lately that people who buy have got rude enough to do that. Clerks always did t with coin that customers gave them, but that was a prerogative of i the trade. For the customer to assume the same privilege is a usurpation of. ancient rights. The worst of it is most people nowadays are pretty good judges of bad money, and every little while a coin is refused because It Is counterfeit. The only way tradesmen can teach customers the respect due them is to turn their own backs when testing money. That has always been the custom in England. No tradesman over there would dare fillip a coin under a customer's nose, and as a consequence no customer has ever taken that liberty with him." New York Press. Tennyson and. His Pipe. Tennyson was an unwavering devotee of the clay pipe. "I take my pipe," I he wrote to a friend in 1S42. "and the muse descends in the fume, not like j your modern ladles, who 6hriek at a ' pipe as if they saw a 'splackmuck' " "splackmuck" being the word which the dwellers in Brobdingnag applied to e man. When invited on a visit to Mr. Gladstone in 1S76 Tennyson wrote, "As you are good enough to say that you will manage anything rather than lose my visit, will you manage that I can have my pipe In my own room whenever I like?" London Chronicle. Not His FsuH. "Before we were married," the poet's wife complained, "you often said that you would never be able to do your best work until you could sit and hold my hand while you courted tire "muse." "Yes. I know I said it." "And now you csn't do anything if I even happen to be In. the same room with you." "Well, am I to blame because holding your hand Is like clinging to a bunch of celery? Get the old tingle back Into your hand and I'll agree to make the lyre hum." Chicago RecordHrald. NURSES The Children's Memorial Hospital, Chicago, offers a three years course, including children's and adult nursing, to young women, high school education, from 19 to 30 years of age. Short probation term, salary after second month. The hospital is most, beautifully located. Just a few minutes from Lincoln park. Our course conforms with Illinois law requiring a ppecific amount of work In order to use the degree of R. N. (Registered Nurse). For full information, write to Principal ot Training School. 735 Fullerton AvMuie, Ctiicago, X1L

Great Fin After

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George Bonhag, one of the greatest distance runners ever produced in America, who has about retired from the game. Bojihag has hung up world's records for distances of from two to ten miles, and Hans Kohlemainen, the great Finnish Olympin Champion, has set him to the task of bettering everyone of Bonhag's marks.

STIVERS TOO SWIFT Local High School Team Defeated. Is The Richmond high school basketball team went down to defeat before the fast aggregation from Stivers high school of Dayton last night. The game was fast ami spectacular at times though the local team was outclassed in every department. Inability on the part of the Richmond team to locate the baskets was responsible for their defeat. Capt. Mayer played the best game for the Richmond team. The score was 28 to 19. The game was played at the Coliseum, before the Earlham-Indiana contest. The local lineup was as follows: Meyer, Quigg and Thornburg, forwards; Hart, Lyons and Phillips, guards; Ball, center. GREECSFORK TONIGHT Clay Township Lads Crescent Team. Play A good game is expected tonight when the Greensfork independent basketball team will play the Crescent Bible class team at the Y. M. C. A. tonight at 8 o'clock. The Crescent team has been victorious in every game with the exception of one. This was with Earlham, when they were beaten in a close game. The team is made up of three members of last year's high school varsity team and two of the substitutes. The Greensfork team is a husky bunch and is fast The lineup of the Crescent team is as follows: Lannlng and Long, forwards; Nicodemus, center; Schepman and Parker, guards. Fins Theorist. Bill-What kind of a fellow Is Dobkins? Will Be can tell you how to adopt a national system of currency that would pay off the national debt, but be can't raise the price of bis grocery bUL Cincinnati Enquirer. DIAMONDS 7c Discount During; Sale We Sell Diamonds for Loss O. E. DICKINSON GLASSES TO SUIT your eyes Glasses to overcome the error of refraction, to make your vision normal once more that's my aim, as a registered Optometrist take advantage of this service. C. M. Sweitzer Phono 109 27', Main St.

U. 5; Records

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THE PEOPLE KNOW THAT PE-RU-NA IS A GOOD CATARRH REMEDY

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tiWifhiiStimWMSIH W i Will B. HARTMAN, M. Columbus, Ohio A man may have tried a drug and found it efficacious. Or his neighbor may have tried the drug and found It efficacious. Upon such experience he csii. base something like certainty. 4- Jing upon this be can make himself absolutely certain. For instance, suppose I have catarrh. I take a remedy. I rapidly improve. I finally get well. Now. there Is a certainty here which I can believe. The certainty that the remedy cured my catarrh. To be sure, it may not cure every other case of catarrh, but the probabilities are strong that it will. I have in my flies thousands of letters where people have been cured of catarrh by taking Pe-ru-na. I could not prove by the books that Pe-ru-na will cure catarrh. I could not prove It by the medical profession I could not prove it by reason. But I can prove it by experience. By the experiences of the masses of the people. People Say Pe-ru-na Cures Them. People who can have no possible in terest In Pe-ru-na further than the good they have received from it Such people write me these letters without any solicitation on my part, without any pay, direct or indirect, to tell me

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- . - - You'll get yours if you place an earlv order. Everv dav adds to

early order, every

the already unprecedented demand for Ford cars. In spite of the greatly enlarged production late buyers are almost sure to be disappointed. Get yours today. "Everybody is driving a Ford" more than 200, K0 in service. New prices runabout $25 touring car $600 town car $800 with all equipment f. o. b. Detroit. Get particulars from Bethard Auto Agency.

CARTHAGE DEFEATED The Centerville Team "Came Back" Last Evening.

ll1t.im peciai) CKXTIJRVILLK. Ind .. Feb. 1 ThCenterville basketball team "can:c back last evening in the (tamo here with Carthage by winning by the score of 4: to 19. Three week? aso at Carth ago. the Centerville team was defeated by the score or 27 to 20 Ralph MrMinn reforeed the first half and Joi. s. of Carthago retereed the second h:li. COL. BOOTH RETIRES. (National News Asm.icia t Ion t WASHINGTON. D. C. Feb 1 - After nearly forty five cars of acth serieo. Col. Charles A. Booth, forme' 1 in command of the 2tth Infantr. was placed on a retired list f the army today upon his on applieatici Col. Booth is a native of Vermout and was graduated from West Point in ls72. For twenty-eight years he served with the 7th Infantry. lit lMHl he was promoted major of the fetb In fantry. Recently he has been stationed at the headquarters of the Central Division at Chicago. An Insulting Offer. A well known but broken down Detroit newspaper man who had been a power In bis day approached an old friend the other day in the Fontchartraln hotel and said: "What do you think? I have Jut received the prire Insult of my life. A paper down In Muncie. Ind.. offered me a Job." "Do you call that an Insult f "Not the Job. but the salary. Thvy offered me $12 a week." -Well." said the friend, -twelve a week is better than nothing." Twelve a week thunderf exclaimed the old scribe. "I can borrow more than that right here In Detroit-" De- ! troit Free Press. the benefit that Pe-ru-na has been to them. To me this is better evidence than as if all the medical books in thf worlcj agreed that P-ru-na was th best catarrh remedy ever invented. It Is better evidence to me than as if all the doctors in the world would Jdin in declaring Pe-ru-na to be tho best remedy In the world for catarrh. The experience of the people 'ta th best kind of evidence. Neither reason nor book , learning nor the schools could furnish data fo complete, so f.atisfactory as the experience of the masses. Not only docs '-u na cure chronic catarrh, but for bs and colds and ti inter diseaseis, fir grip and Irynigiti, and the various deranaoments of tho respiratory organs to which every oih is subject. I can confidently say Pe-ru-na is an excellent remedy. Why? Because I find it in the books? Because the medical profession say so? Because I have reasoned it out? Nothing of the sort. Because I have tried it thousands and thousands of tlnr.es and Jit works. Are You Looking fo a Catarrh Remedy? Now, then, you may be hunting for a catarrh remedy yourself. You tnay have searched in vain In the books to find one. You may have inquired and tried to find one through the medical profession. You may have futilely attempted to reason It out for yourself. j You hsve just one more chance io work out your problem. That Is experience. If your experiences are not sufficient, take the experience of your neighbor. Your neighbor has been 'cured by Peruna. There is not a village or town, hamlet or city that does not contain one or many people who have recovered while taking Te-ru-na. If you want to become one of this multitude just get a bottle and try it. You can find It in any drug store. The directions are on the bottle. If you want to make doubly sure, write me. 1 1 will send you some literature and ; perhaps some personal advice. Address S. B. Hartman, M. D., Columbus. Ohio. Pe-ru-na, Man-a-lin and La-cu-pia. manufactured by the Pe-ru-na Company, Columbus, Ohio. Sold at AD drug stores. No. AZ. -,.