Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 72, 3 February 1913 — Page 2
X-AUE two
THE KJOIIJIOXD PALL.ADIUJI AND ML X-T ELEG KA31, 3IONDA V, FEBRUARY H, 1913.
ANNOUNCE MEDICAL SOCIETY PROGRAM Subjects Assigned to Members for Monthly Sessions of Year.
MEETING WEDNESDAY 'Co-operation, No Knockers, Alt Boosters" Is the 1913 Motto. "The wind that blows Is the wind of progress, the current is the current of hope and the haven ahead is the harbor of health. Behind lies the troubled sea of chaos and despair." This quotation was adopted by the Wayne County Medical Society to be placed on their program for the year 1913. The 1913 motto of the society is "Co-operation; No Knockers, All Boosters." The meeting of the society will be held in the St. Paul's parish house in the afternoon of the first Wednesday of each month. There are 53 members of the society of which number 32 are Richmond men." The officers elected are J. C. Blossom, president; J. M. Fouts, vice-president; Geo. B. Hunt, secretary-treasurer; D. W. Stevenson, secretary. The censors are L. F. Robs, J. E. King and H. B. Boyd. The" following program for the year will be given. February 3. The Treatment of Flat-foot T. Victor Keene Indianapolis 'Diabetes . F. P. Buche Do You Advertise?..'...W. R. LIttell A Few Notes . ; . .t . . . .C. E. McKee March 5. Glandular Insufficiency , ..,... Hugo O. Pantzer Indianapolis 'Spondylbtherapy, Its Value to PatientB and Physician .....S. E. Bond Scarlet Fever ,..... b. N. Deardorff Colles Fracture ...... ..v. T. Fackler April 2. Ethics . Garrett Pigman Liberty i Some Diseases Treated by Electric- ' ity M. W. Yencer Hysteria J. N. Study Asthma H. C. Burcham ! May 7. The Kallikak Family, a Study in Heredity R. D. Meyers Bloomington Medical and Surgical Aspects of ome Intra-abdominal Diseases... A. L. Bramkamp Apoplexy C. S. Bond Erysipelas C. A. Roark June 4. Pituitrin J. E. Hiatt New Castle Sources and Mode of Infection . J E. Kins Anesthetics Geo. B. Hunt Sarcomalta S. C. Markley July 2. Picnic at Park Address Pres. R. L. Kelly August 6. The Nervous Patient. Chas. P. Emerson Indlanaoplis Disturbance of the Motor Functions of the Stomach R. D. Morrow Smallpox ..,..'.,,.. F. W. Krueger Hernia R. H. Schillinger September 3 Gonorrhea In the Female. ...... ..-...-.. Frederick R. Charlton Indianapolis Carcinoma of the Stomach ...................O. M. Deardorff Typhoid Fever W. T. Fisher Neurasthenia Mary Wickens October 1. Treatment In Renal and Cardiac Edema Martin H. Fisher Cincinnati, Ohio The Vw of Chloroform in Obstetrics .... .......... i 2. M. Fouts Constipation ...,... M. Gentle Consumption J. E. Wright November 6. i Dementia Precox ........ S. E. Smith Gisrbosls of Liver Microscopical Slide . ... W. G. Huffman Carolruomata ...... w Chas. Marvel Angina, Pectoris .....,.. L. F. Ross December 3. , j Serotherapy along the Tines of Therapeutlo Vital Conservation..,, tm J. M. Thurston Health Ppertrmonia H. Davis 4 T TT f u. uie R. I. Pierce Chorea Marriage Licensee. Russl H. Pharea, 25, dniggust, city, and Z&lda Thompson, 23, city. Herbert Crawford, 44, salesman, and Theresa May Sehl, S4, city. Deaths and Funerals. OVERSTREET Velma Elizabeth Overstreet, aged 12 years, died Sunday noon at her home, 200 Williams street. She is survived by her father and one sister. Death was due to heart trouble. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. Real Estate Transfers. Francia Maddock to Mark Bosworth Pt. 35 South West section, township 13, range 1, Centerville; consideration $185. C. B.- Coggshall to George C. Davis, Pt. N. W. section 35, township 17, range 14, Centerville; consideration $1 200. Mary E. Hasemeier to Wilbur E. Hasemeier, range 1, of township 13 N. E : consideration $6,350. , Dickinson Trust company to Benjamin Thomas, Pts. 10S, 107,108,109 and 110, Jenkins addition to the city of Richmond, consideration $50 each. Total transfers 4; consideration 17,785. Zurich. The commercial center of Switzerland is Zurich, the present jpopalatioo of waJoh is about 200,000. ,
City Statistics
Leading Fight
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SECRETARY OF PROMINENT WOMAN DIES AT CAMBRIDGE (Palladium Special) CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Feb. 3 Margaret McCaffery, aged 51 years,
died Sunday night at the home of her ed Saturday night at the Coliseum ! brother, Harry D. Bond, in this city, and taken to the Home of the FriendDeath was due to a complication of less, charged with petit larceny. The ;
diseases. Mrs. McCaffery was well girl was tried in police court this known throughout the country. She morning and tearfully admitted taking owned several large farms near this j the purse, saying that she had come place. She is survived by a sister, ! to this city to obtain work and needed Mrs. JameB Peacock, of Rochelle, New j money. She stated that she had nevYork, a brother Harry D. Bond of this i er taken anything beforeand regretted place and a daughter 4iice McCaffery. j the act deeply. Sentence was suspend-
She was the daughter of "Mr. and Mrs. Abner Bond. In club circles, Mrs. McCaffery was very prominent and was identified with several leading societies of the M. E. church, she having ben a member of the church at this place for many years. The funeral will be held Wednesday afternoon from the M. E. church. Burial near this place. DOUTY SELLS NORTH NINTH STREET SHOP T JOi oe .1. Maibach and Carl Piatt, form erly connected with the Sanitary barber shop in the Murray Theater building, have purchased the shop operated by John Douty, 10 North Ninth street.J The new proprietors took charge of the shop this morning. Mr. Douty in tends to go West. PRANKS OF A POET. De Musset Had Mania For Destroying Women's Clothes. "I was once at the Comedie Francaise. but as a spectator, not as an actress. I had on a white hat, which 1 had been told suited me quite well. From the box In which I sat I noticed Alfred de Musset. and he caught sight of roe. too, so he came to see me between the acta. "He planted himself In front of me and said rudely: 'You've got a hideous hat on, mademoiselle. I can't imagine how pretty women can dress badly. It's sheer stupidity for any one who has a white skin like yours to go and spoil the effect of her complexion by wearing a white hat' As he spoke he gave me a bang on the head which quite crashed my hat, turned on his heel and took himself off. "When I told my friend, Roger de BeatiToir, who knew De Musset well, of the Incident he said: 'He is rather addicted to such pleasantries. The other day he was at Tortonis with La Mogndor, -who was wearing a light green dress, when suddenly, without the slightest warning, he seized a bottle of raspberry simp and ponred Its contents over his companion's clothes, completely raining her toilet. He seems to be afflicted with a mania for spoiling women's clothes. ""My Autobiography, by Mme. Judith. HE WAS A GROUCH. And He Furnished a Good Text For a Good Sermon. "I had a little lesson several weeks ago," remarked the man with the gray mustache, "and it called me in good shape." "Go ahead," said the stout man. "I was in the garage where I keep my car and happened to overhear a conversation among the boys. A certain man had been injured while traveling abroad very badly Injured, it wae reported and one of the boys was telling the others about it 'The story In the paper says he can't get well, the youngster went on. 'Did you know him, Pete?' And the boy addreesed promptly replied, 'Sure, I knew th old gTouch. Mfinv fho Yti4) m a nraffv Ka v4 TTam .was a leading citizen dying, and all the j boy could remember about him was that he was a grouch. Yes. sir. it made me sit up and think hard. And I got in my mind that when I passed out I'd like to be remembered for something different" , He paused. "That's worth considering. said the other man. "Good text" said the first man. j "Good sermon.' said the other. 1 Cleveland Plain Dealer. V J
for Big Navy
NAVY MEYER. NEW CASTLE GIRL IS ARRESTED HERE For stealing a purse containing eight cents. Miss Mable Griffin, age 17, of New Castle, Indiana, was arrested and she was given money to re turn to Newcastle where she Bays she has a good home. SINGING CRICKETS. They Are Kept In Cages Like Canary Birds In Japan. Selling crickets is a lucrative business in Japan, where the insects are valued for their songs and kept in ' cages like canary birds. In Tokyo there are two wholesale merchants who send their agents into the streets of the large cities. The insects are carried hi little bamboo cages. A good seller clears approximately from 80 cents to a dollar a day. An insect valued for its music brings from 2 to 7 cents. The Kusa hibari is the most valuable of all the songsters, but the common cricket and the grasshopper are considered excellent singers. The singers are collected from the fields in September, before laying time. They are taken from the grass and shut up in glass jars. Soon after they are imprisoned the females lay their eggs and die almost immediately afterward. The Jars containing them are kept in a temperature of 80 degrees C. The young com3 forth in March. The loss of eggs is about 10 per cent The male is the singer. He only is an object of commerce, and from a hun dred eggs the cultivator, despite all his care, has only fifty salable insects. The lot of the locust is a martyrdom from birth to death. The locust is the toy of the Japanese child. He is caught on bamboo twigs rubbed with a gluey substance and tormented according to the Ignorance or the cruelty of his keeper. The life of the singing Insect never exceeds a term of five weeks. Harper's Weekly. FISH AND THEIR FOOD. Queer Ways by Which'" Some of the Toothless Species Get a Meal. The curious ways in which fishes eat form quite a study. Some fishes have teeth and some have none at all. In some the teeth are found upon the tongue. In some in the throat and in some in the stomach. Some draw in their food, by sucton; the sturgeon is one of this class. The Jellyfish absorbs Its food by wrapping its body around the prey it covets. The starfish fastens itself to its victim, turns Its stomach wrong side out and engulfs its dinner without the formality of swallowing it through a mouth first. ...,.., '.;V ; So there are all sorts of methods for those regularly toothless, and the fishes which have teeth show, almost as great a diversity In the number, style and arrangement of them. The ray or skate "has a mouth set trans versely across its head, the jaws working with a rolling motion like two hands set back to back. In the jaws are three rows of flat teeth, set like a mosaic pevement and between these rolling Jaws the fish crushes oysters and other mollusks like so many nuts." The carp's teeth are set back in the pharynx, so that It actually masticates its food in Its throat, while the sea urchin has five, teeth surrounding Its stomach and working with a pef "liar ntraliaed motion, which makes them do as good service as If they numbered hundreds. Harper's Young Peoole.
NOTICE
FRANK I. STRAYER, Lawyer. On and after Feb. 1st I will move my office and will be located in suite No. 409-10-11-12 Second National Bank Building. Formerly located in Colonial Building.
WAHT INCORPORATION
Greensfork Citizens Enter a Petition. Attorney Allen, representing 42 voters of Greensfork. appeared before the Wayne County eommifesioners this af ternoon and petitioned the commis- I sioners fnr an lprtion which will de-1 cide whether or not the town shall be incorporated. According to Mr. Allen it is the desire of the majority of property owners to-have police and fire protection ; wnicn lias not ren sausraciornj hi forded. The population of Greensfork is now 3fi7 and there are 127 voters. Of the 127 voters, 42 signed the petition which was presented before the commissioners. No action was taken by the officials up to a late hour. The direct causes of the articles of incorporation being asked for were the numerous fires which have occurr- j ed in the village and because of the numerous violations of the liquor laws. COURT NEWS COMPLAINTS ON NOTES Complaints to foreclose promissory notes were filed by tbe First and Second National bank against Frank and Martha Osborne. The Second National demands $100 and the First National $300. DIVORCE GRANTED Laura Boyd was granted f divorce from George Boyd in circuit court Saturday afternoon. The plaintiff alleged that she was deserted by her husband in 1904 and has necer heard from him since. SUIT IS FILED. Charles Henderson, residing west of this city, has filed suit for divorce against Gertrude Henderson alleging that she has violated her marriage vows. Henderson also asks the court to grant him the custody of a daughter. FINAL READING Qtf APPROPRIATION ACT The third reading of the light plant appropriation bill will be heard at the meeting of the City Council tonight. $70,000 is asked for improvements to the light plant, which will be enlarged to a capacity large enough to furnish electricity to the entire city. The proposed ordinance for placing lights in alleys, courts and other dark places will receive the second reading tonight. It is possible that the building code will come before the council. PAINTED OUT HIS HEAD. Revenge of Carolus Duran on His Pupil, 8argent. When John S. Sargent, the famous portrait painter, studied in the atelier of Carolus Duran in Paris his teacher showed his fondness for him by painting in his head In the great celling of the Luxembourg palace. Even after he branched out for himself his master often sent for him to come over to his studio and pose, his hands having especially won the admiration of Carolus Duran. The time came, however, when Sargent could no longer answer the beck and call of his teacher, for he was getting work of his own to do, which would not allow him to leave his studio at a moment's notice. One day, it Is related, Carolus Duran sent a hurry call for him, and when he received a note saying that Sargent was compelled to decline his request owing to pressing work he was furious. A few days later a friend, to whom he bad confided his anger at his recalcitrant 'pupil, asked him: "Well, how Is it with Sargent? Have you, made ap? How is her "Ah, no," said the painter, and he looked sad and his shoulders went up. "How is it with Sargent? C'est fini!" Another shrug. "Cest fini! It's all over! I have been to the Luxembourg. I went and got a ladder, and I painted out his head!" A Notable Day's Work. Robert Burns composed his masterpiece, "Tam o' Shanter," in one day in the open air. Burns went out of the house In the morning and, not returning, his wife Joined him in the afternoon with her two children. Seeing that he was "crooning to hlmselV she forebore to interrupt him, but stayed in the fields at a distance, where she could see him. She observed him wildly gesticulating and at times fairly leaping with Joy. She said to Allan Cunningham, the poet, after her husband's death, "I wlsht ye had seen him; he was in such ecstasy that the tears were happing down his cheeks." He committed the poem to writing by the riverside and wont Into the house and read it to his wife at the fireside with great triumph one of the most notable day's work ever done in Scotland! A Fool For a Fool's Mission. The government was contemplating the dispatch of an expedition to Burma, with a view to taking Rangoon, and a question arose as to who would be the fittest general to be sent in command of the expedition. The cabinet sent for the Duke of "Wellington and asked his advice. He Instantly replied, "Send Lord Cambennere." "But we have always understood that your grace thought Lord Cambermere a fool." So he is a fool, and a fool, but he can take Rangoon. "Collections and Recollections," by One Who Has Kept a Diary.
CLUB MAY SUPPORT Tiir nnioinii nn i
Ini rCNd U i D LL! C. C. Committee on Education Favors Pensions for Veteran Instructors.
The educational ommittee of the!plaved at the Y. M. C. A.
Commercial club held a meeting at the' club rooms this afternoon and discussed several matters relative to edurational interests of this city. Their report will be submitted to the directors of the club tonight. The members of the committee were unanimously in favor of the Teachers' Pension bill which is now pending before the state legislature. Their favorable attitude relative to the bill will be discussed bv the direi tors of the club and it is probable that the club will be asked to use its influence as a body to promote the interests of Kill T 1 . . ' teachers in this city who will be af - fectcd by the bill. It provides that a pension be awarded to all teachers In public schools or municipalities of over 20,000 who have taught for a period of i"r uhi. luyre ar rwenrv-riv ufi twenty-rive roilRolif Ito veara The Bill, if passed, will regulate the amount of the pension, according to the length of time over twenty-five years the teachers have been employed. All teachers who have taught for forty years will necessarily have to be placed on the pension lisr. Thr are four teachers in this city who have taught for forty years. It is believed that some teachers are incapable of teaching after they have taught for a specified length of time and the school authorities neglect to dismiss them because they realize they are dependent on their positions. In this manner the school children are handicapped by incompetent teachers. The school authorities have the privilege of retiring a teacher after twenty-five years of service though the retirement is not compulsory on the part of teachers unless they are so requested by the local board of education. CURIOUS BURIAL CUSTOM. The Pigeonhole Tombs In Use In the Cemeteries of Spain. A rather curious and to our ideas somewhat unpleasing custom obtains In Spanish cemeteries. AH around the burying ground a building is erected whose design can only be compared to that of a nest of pigeonholes, often seen In postoffices and similar instituHons. Each pigeonhole is a tomb. When a person dies his relatives hire a pigeonhole for five years, and the remains are placed inside. The end is then sealed ud with mortar and a memortal tablet affixed on the outside. The lease of the pigeonhole may be renewed at the end of the five years, but if it is allowed to expire the tomb is unsealed and the bones removed to make way for another tenant I i Needless to say. the plan has some : good points. The space taken up by the "pigeonhole cemetery" is comparative- ; ly small, as is also the cost of burial. Picturesqueness is, however, conspicuously absent nor is sentimental grief catered for, as it would be impossible to go and mourn at tLe grave of a person buried in a pigeonhole so high up that a ladder was needed to reach It To such as prefer the old fashioned graves the central space of ground is offered, but the pigeonholes are the most popular. Wide World Magazine.
Our IBest AdvertiSsementis are never printed. They are around town business men, professional men, clerks and mechanics, who are wearing jewelry, diamonds, or are carrying watches that came from our store. Of course they tell all their friends about us. A PLEASED CUSTOMER is the very best advertisement. We know we can please you
ODkoim
The Diamond and Watch House
We Give S. eV H. Green Trading Stamps. Ask for Them.
February 3d to lbs. Peaches 25c
3 lbs. Prunes 25c
100 Stamps with one can Baking Powder 50c 10 Stamps with one bottle oiTe 10c 10 Stamps with one jar A. & P. Jam 16c 10 Stamps with one can Sardlp 10c 10 Stamps with one can Kara srrup 25 lb. Bag Granulated Sugar. 19 lbs Granulated Sugar . . . . The Great Atlantic 727 Main
LOCALS VICTORIOUS
Crescent Team Wins From Greensfork Five I i ne i rescem n:oie lass russet rmi 'team defeated the Greensfork high school basketball team Saturday uight I In a one-sided contest. hich ended in a score of 4. to 15. Tne same was The whole team played a fast game ! and defeated the visitors with little trouble. The two teams lined up as , loiiow s: Greensfork Crescent Nicholson Parker Forward Bovd Lannins Forward v.,01. Martindale Nicodema , ! Fagan Schepman v rmri Guard -Ridge Uong i Guard THREE ARRESTS -.i . . i . t.. i i f v oaries ifau. Aiurri iuiuiiuu ami lpaul Ryeman were arrested Saturday I night for public intoxication. They ! wer fined $1 and costs each in police ! court by Special Judge Abbott. J THE ASSAILANT OF MAYOR GAYNOR DEAD National Nws Association TRENTON, N. Y.. Feb. 3. J. J. Gal lagher. the man who shot Mayor Gay - ! nor of New York, nearly two vears aeo. 'died at the New Jersey State hospital j for the insane today. Gallagher was; never prosecuted for the shooting of the mayor. REPORT MEnEiNK DEAD TENTH TIME (National New Association) ROME. Feb. 3. King Menilink of Abyssinia is again reported dead in ' a dispatch from Adis. Abbeba, where he is said to have died last Friday, This is the tenth time that the African monarch has been reported dead or assassinated during the past ten years. Today's dispatch announced that his successor had entered the Abysslanian capital and assumed the throne. SECOND COLD WAVE INVADE INDIANA National News Association) -INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 3. Another cold wave for Indiana is predicted by the weather man. Thermometers will j raster from five to ten degrees above j zcro D? tomorrow nigni ir me com 1 wave. enroute from Montana, reaches nere on time- Several inches of snow "were reported from nearly all the cit- . le tnrougnout me state loaay. Legs of a Galloping H Thousands of pictures exist In our galleries showing horses at fun gallop with the front legs extended forward and the hind legs extended backward, and no one ever suspected anything wrong with the representations of galloping horses until instantaneous photography made visible movements quite beyond the power of the human eye. A series of cinematographic photographs of a galloping horse. If shown slowly on the screen, would astonish most people. Each time all the legs were seen off the ground they would be actually folded np under the animal's body, and the artistic full stretch gallop would never once materialize. Pal Mall Gazette. SIfi) IE 8th, Inclusive 2 lbs. Apricots 25c 25 Stamps with one bottle of Eltract 25c 10 Stamps with one package P- 10c 10 Stamps with one package Buckwheat Flour 10c 10 Stamps with two packages Grape Nuts 12 '4 c 10 Stamps with one 4 lb. pkg. ats 25c SI .30 S1.00 & Pacific Tea Co. Phone 1215
A WIFE MURDERER WAS FOUND GUILTY Covington Jury. However,Only Convicts G. Crumley of Manslaughter.
(National Sfwi AMaUoii) COVINGTON. Ind.. Feb. 3. Gilbert CrumleVf fharge, with tne murdor of his wife, Mrs. Anna llutchena Cmra- ! on th niht of October 3, was today found guilty of manslaughter. j The jury had been out forty hours and thlrty banol8 mw tak.n. Mn of the . , , . , , mMM jurors held out for conviction and life . ... . . , , i sentence, while three held steadfast j fo'a "'T.JTt?0' I Crumley killed his wife ivith an axe 'lie struck thirteen bloms. eight of which would have caused death. The defense was temporary insane and the case will probably be appealed. RAILROAD NOTES More than two and one-half million dollars in benefits were paid in 1912 to members of the Relief Funds of the Pennsylvania railroad system. This has been made public in a report issued by the company which showed that since the funds for both in nnes a8t ana west oi inttsourgn 1 wr' 'tablished some twenty-seven lJear B nave Deen distributed ;o members or their fam ilies. Payment to the families of members who have died during the past year amounted to $875.0S5.12. while $1,759.266.00 were distributed to those incapacitated for work. In December alone, these figures c mounted to 191,825.00, and ?139.7S4.u5 respectively. On the lines east of Pitsburgh. $1.812.720.66 were distributed last year. $1,211,552.20 for the relief of members unablie to work, and J601.16S.46 to the families of members who died. On the disbursements amounted to SS21.630.46 for the year, representing $547,713.80 on account of sickness and $273,916.66 on account of death. The Reman Method of Heating. Like many other Roman houses that have been unearthed in England, one recently brought to light was heated by a system called hypocau8t The entire basement was otto big furnace, from which flues ascended, built Into the walls. A wood fire was kept In the basement, the fuel being fed In from an outside annex through an arch In the wall. Detroit Free Press. Let Us Send You a SENGBUSCH INK STAND On 30 Days Trial Saves 75 Per Cent of Your Ink Saves 75 of Your Ink Bills. BARTEL & ROHE, Phone 1916. 921 Main. PIANO TUNING D. E. ROBERTS 15 Tears Practical Experience. Formerly with the Stelnway House at Indianapolis. e PHONE 3684 TRY COOPER'S BLEND COFFEE For Sale a Cooper's Grocery. Do You Follow Us? CALABASH PIPES 75c to $11.00 A Pipe of Quality Is Proven by Its Past Popularity. ED A. FELTMAN Cigrar Store See Our Window for Specials 1 it X 4 WHEN HUNGRY between meals, drop In and try one of our appetising Tomatoe or Vegetable Bouillons. Also our Hot Chocolates will please you. Come to r The Greek Candy Store HOME READING at night is often denied to many because the eyes blur and tire under artificial light. If this is your case see me at once my examination of the eyes, and Reading Glasses will overcome the trouble. C. M. Sweitzer Registered Optometrist. Phone 1099 927' '2 Main St.
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