Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 283, 6 October 1913 — Page 10
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PAGE TEN THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, OCT. 6, 1913
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ARREST SWINDLER ON SHORT NOTICE Police Take Ralph Richeson Into Custody At Telegraph Office.
Giving his name as John Hager, Ralph Richeson, a colored man 22 years old, telegraphed from the local office of the Western Union company to the Commercial Savings bank ' at Xenia Saturday, saying he was in Richmond, and asking that money be sent him. When the telegram reached the Xenia bank, John Hager, a wealthy farmer, was in the bank transacting business. He immediately notified the authorities here, with the result that Richeson is being held for trial in the Wayne circuit court. He is charged with trying to obtain money under false pretenses. Richeson first went to the First National bank here and attempted to get a check for $75. Owing to the fact that he could not be identified, the bank refused to cash the check. He was asked if he had money in any of the institutions of his home town. He replied that he had, and was advised to telegraph for the bank's "O. K.", after which the local bank would give him the money. Going to the Western Union office, Richeson wired his request, signing the name of John Hager, one of the wealthiest farmers living near Xenia. when the message reached the Xenia bank, Hager happened to be there. He immediately sent back a message saying that "Hager" was a swindler, and asked the police here to hold him. Patrolman Vogelsong arrested Richeson at the telegraph office while he was waiting for his reply. Richeson is a well dressed young man, who seems to be intelligent and well educated.
Mrs. Cooke, Modern Peter Pan, fo Fight Husband's Suit
PRESS CLUB ELECTS OFFICERS FOR YEAR
The Earlham Press Club, which publishes the "Earlham Press" the weekly college newspaper, held its first meeting Saturday night when officers for the coming year were elected. Plans for the year were discussed. The members of the staff are: Editor-in-chief B. N. Nusbaum, city. Associate Editor Roland Nusbaum, city. Managing editor Howard McMinn, Centerville. Circulation Manager F. Glenn Wood, city.
SENATOR LEWIS AND HIS WHISKERS
rk kim fell kfm Aft ' Wff n fefrfe : ft it v , I :'4mMm ii ' MK - : W
DEMAND POSSESSION! WIFE ABUSED HIM
McMahans File Suit, Asking $2,000 Damages.
Possession of property and damages totalling $2,000 are asked by Jamos M. McMahan and Mary S. McMahan from Wirt Ashbaugh in a complaint filed today with the county clerk. McMahan asks 5800 and his wife wants $1,200. The parties reside near Centerville. The plaintiff alleges that a farm of 160 acres, which was held jointly by them at the time, was leased to Ashbaugh for "one year, which ended March 1, 1913. Since that time, he has held possession although they demanded that the farm be vacated. During the term of the contract the land was divided, Mrs. McMahan holding i4 acres and her husband 66 acres. They claim that the profits of the farm since March 1, have amounted to $1,-000.
Geo. Eagle Makes Charge in Divorce Suit.
TOO MUCH
CARE
After forty years of wedded life, George Eagle, farmer, is seeking legal separation from Jennie Eagle, now a resident of Indianapolis. The plaintiff filed a complaint today charging cruel and inhuman treatment and allegiug that his wife called him vile names and made threats of bodily harm and that she incited her sons to abuse him. They have not lived together siuce 111.
Palladium Want Ads Pay
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448 CATTLE KILLED
Inspector Pitman Files Re
port With Clerk.
j ARE YOU PARTICULAR? I Are you one of the many people that complain daily about mussy r?strjnnt food? If so give us a trial one is all we ask. We serve you In Vhat I dainty manner at restaurant price. E erything new. modem and santary. FINNEY'S LUNCHEONETTE, 919 MAIN STREET
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MRS. COOKE. In. her palatial home just outside the limits of New Orleans. Mrs. A. M. Cooke, one of the wealthiest women in Louisiana, declared she will fight to the bitter end a divorce suit brought by her husband, who charges that she eloped on a steam boat with the mate of the boat, named J. T. Landry. Mrs. Cooke stoutly denies the allegations, but her husband says one of his strongest witnesses will be Landry's wife. Friends of Mrs. Cooke are inclined to look upon the whole affair as a joke. They say that she has been a regular torn boy all her life, affecting mannish attire and going in for mannish sports, and that if she did have any escapade with Landry, it was al lin the form of a ark.
A total of 448 head of cattle were killed in the county during September, according to the report of Charles Pitman, meat inspector, which was filed at the city clerk's office this morning The detailed report follows: Cattle, 193; calves, 62; hogs, 154; lambs, 39.
Kolp School of Dancing Mr. and Mrs. Kert Kolp announce the opening of a beginners class in dancing Friday evening. Oct. 10th. at seven-thirty, ia Pythian Temple. Opening children's class, Satutiay afternoon, Oct. ilth at three-thirty. Private lesions in social, and all the new dances given by appointment. Residence, 326 North Tenth Street After Oct 1st. Send for Circular. Phons 2610,
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Money-making Secrets
w-H Farm Journal
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AGED PIONEER DEAD Mrs. Behr Succumbs At Germantown Home.
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This picture was taken as Senator J. Ham Lewis, of Illinois, was entering the white house, where he had a talk with the president.
EAST GERMANTOWX. Ind., Oct. 6. Mrs. Christian Behr, 82 years old, one of the pioneer residents of this place, died at her home here Sunday night at 1C o'clock. Mrs. Behr had been an invalid for several years, and her death was expected. Mrs. Behr came to this county from Pennsylvania with her parents. They made the journey from Pittsburg to Cincinnati on the Ohio river, and came to Cambridge City on the old Whitewater canal. Mrs. Behr is survived by Cora Behr, Mrs. Adam Miller, Will Behr and a brother, Christopher Botsfield of Cambridge City. Funeral services Tuesday at 2 o'clock. Interment at the Lutheran cemetery.
Reynolds entered police headquarters, saying he had been delayed while laying concrete steps in West Richmond. When told that he would have to give
$25 bond or go to jail, Reynolds asked asked permission to change his plea to guilty. Mayor Zimmerman assessed a line of $1 and costs.
PROMISES TO LEAVE ALL TROUBLE ALONE "If I ever get out of this, I'll never
get in trouble again," said James i Reynolds to Sergeant McNally, as i beads of perspiration stood on his j face. Reynolds, who was chareed i
with assault and battery on Cal Stephens Thursday night, was released on his promise to appear in court today, but court was over and the hearing was set for Tuesday morning when
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FARM JOURNAL ("ere paper published for
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It this nth pnferiy itUf "Poultry Strretf" Ull Am carry fvls, nd the ttcrtti far mrt imfrmmt.
'cream, not skim milk ) is the great little
paper published lor 36 years in rhuadelphia by VVUmer
Atkinson. It is taken and read by more families than any other farm paper in the WORLD. Its four million readers (known as " Our Folks ") are the most intelligent and prosperous country people that grow, and they always say the Farm Journal helped to make them so. Their potatoes are larger, their milk tests higher, their hogs weigh more, their fruit brings higher prices, because they read the Farm Journal.
Do you know Tcter Tumbledown, the old fellow who won't take the Farm Journal ? By ahowinff how NOT to run a farm,Peter makes many prosperous. Nobody can go on reading the Farm Journal and being a Tumbledown too. Many have tried, but all have to quit one or the other. The Farm Journal is bright, brief, " boiled down," practical, full of gumption, cheer and sunshine. It is strong on housekeeping and home-making, a favorite with busy women, full of life and fun for boys and. girls. It sparkles with wit, and a happy, sunny spirit. Practical as a plow, readable ac a novel. Clean and pure, not a line of fraudulent or nasty advertising. All its advertisers are guaranteed trustworthy. The Farm Journal gives more for the money and puts it in fewer words than any other farm paper. 32 to 80 pages monthly, illustrated. FIVE years (60 issues) for 1.00 only. Less than 2 cents a month. No one-year, two-year or three-year subscriptions taken at any price.
SI. OO Per Week Will Soon Pay for aJewel
Main Street, Cor. Ninth.
The Farm Journal Booklets have sold by hundreds of thousands, and have made a sensation by revealing the SECRETS OF MONETMAKING in home industry. People all over the country are making money by their methods. POULTRY SECRETS is a collection of discoveries -and methods of successful poultnrmcn. It gives Felch's famous tnntinff chart, the Curtiss method of getting one-hall more pullets than cockerels, Boyer's method of insuring fertility, and priceless secrets of breeding, feeding, how to produce winter eggs, etc. HORSE SECRETS exposes all the methods of bishoping," "plugging," cocaine and gasoline doping, and other tricks of "gyps" and swindlers, ana enables any one to tcil ao unsouod horse. Gives many valuable training secrets. CORN SECRETS, the great NEW hand-book of Prof. Holden, the "Corn King," shows how to get ten to twenty bashels more per acre of corn, rich in protein and tbe best stock-feeding elements. Pictures make every process plain. EGO SECRETS tells how a family of six can make hens turn its table scraps into a daily supply of fresh eggs. If you bave a back-vard, get this booklet, learn how to use up every scrap of the kitchen waste, and live better at less cost. THE "BUTTER BOOK" tells how seven cows were made to produce half a ton of batter each yer year. (10 pounds is the average). An eye-opener. Get it. weed out your poor cowl, and turn the good ones into record-breakers. STRAWBERRY SECRETS is a revelation of the discoveries and methods of U. J. Farmer, the famous expert, in growing luscious fall strawberries almost until snow flie. How and when, to plant, how to fertilize, how to remove the blossoms, how to get three crops in two years, etc. GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your backyard tnnply fresh vegetables and fruit, how to cut down your grocery b:ii, keep a better table, and get cash for your surplus. How to plant, cultivate, harvest and market. DUCJC "DOLLARS tells how the Rreai Weber duck- , , farm exr Boston makes every year 60 cents each on 40,000 dockV linw. Jtt whr ducks pay them better than chickens, and just 'VMOWJtbey do everything. TURKEY SECRETS discloses fully the methods of Horace Vose, the famous Rhode Island "turkey-man." who supplies the White House Thanksgiving turkeys. It tells how to mate, to set eggs, to hatch, to feed and care fr the young, to prevent sickness, to fatten, and how to make a turkey-ranch rAi . The MILLION EGG-FARM gives the methods by which J. M. Foster made over SIS.OOO a year, mainly from eggs. All chicken-raisers should learn alut the Rancocas l ait," and how Foster FEEDS hens to produce such quantities of eggs, especially in winter. DRESSMAKING SELF-TAUGHT shows how any intelligent woman can design and make ber own clothes, in the height of fashion. The author has don it since she was a gtrl. She now has a successful dressmaking establishment and a school of dressmaking Illustrated with diagrams. SHALL I FARM? is a clear, impartial statement of both advantages and drawbacks of farming, to help those who have to decide this important question. It warns rou swindles, and mistakes, tells hcrw to start, equipment ea. iu cost, chances of success, how to get government aia, etc Tktse boolUtt artS M 9 inches, and rofuitly lUtutratt.
Farm Journal FOUR fall years with any on of thaaa booklets
TL- nrrr jj U sell wiaS F.
St ntre to May WHICH boo kit yon want.
both for $1.00
What Out Folks Say About F. J. "I have had more help, encouragement and enjoyment out of it in one year than I did out oi my other papara ia UfS. years," says C. M. Persona. " It is a queer little paper. I have sometimes read ' it through and thought I.was done with it. then pick it ap agaaa and find something new to interest me," says Alfred Krogh. j "Farm Journal is like a bit of sunshine in our homeIt Is making a better class of people out of farmers. It was first sent me as a Christmas present, and I think it the choicest present I ever received," says P. K- Le Valley. "We have read your dear little paper for nearly 40 vears. Now we don't live on the farm any mere, yet I still have a hankering for the old paper. I feel that I belong to tbe family, and everv Dare is as dear and familiar as toe laces U old li lends, aaya Mrs. B. W. Edwards. "I fear I nejrlect my business to read it. I wish H could be in the hands of every farmer in Virginia," says V. S. Cliaa, "I live in a town where the yard is only 15 x 18 feet, but I could not do without the Farm Journal," aaya alisa Sara Carpenter. "I get lots of books and papers, and put tbem aside for future reading. The only paper I seem to have la my hande ali the time is Farm Journal. I can't 6nuh reading k. Cant yea make it less interesting, so I can have a chance at my other papers t" writes Jwhn Swatl. - . . , "If I am lonesome, down-hearted, or tired. I po to Farm Journal for comic t, neat to the tiblc," aaya Mabel Dewitt. "Farm Journal has a cheerful vein runninw through it that makes it a splendid cuie for the "bloes." Whcsi coming home tired in mind and bodv, I sit dowa and read h, and It aeeaia to give me new inspiration tor life," writes G H alderman. "We have a brother-in-law who loves a Joke. We live in Greater New York, and consider oarselvrs quite citified, so when he sent as the Farm Journal as a New Year's gift we nearly died laughing. , "How to raise bops' we who only ase bacon ra glass arsl "How to keepcowe cUan' when we condensed milk even for rtr? padding I 'flow to ylant onions' when we never plant anvthing more fragrant than lilies of the valley. I accepted the gift with thanks, tur we are too weO-brcd to look a gift horse i:i the month. Snon my eve was caaght by a beaodful poem. I began to read it. tl.cn when I wanted tha r arm Joaroal I found my husband deeply interested in an article. Then my oldest son began to ask, 'Has tbe Farm Journal come vet F He is a jeweler, and hasn't much time for hteratare; but we fend so snnch interest and npliit in Ibis fine paper that we appreciate our Kew Year's gift more and more," wiitca Ella C. Burkmaa. "I received 'Corn Secrets' and 'Poultry Secrets. and consider inrrn worth their wetDt ia goM, aaya W. C Kew ail. "What your F.jre Book tells wou'd, take a beginner years to learn," aaya Roy Chancy. "Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on dockraising,'' says F. M. Waroock. "If your other booklets contain as much vain able information as the Egr-Book. I wnrld consider theat cheap at double the price," says F. W. Mansfield.
"I think your Egj-Book is a wonder," C. P. Shirey.
"The Farm Journal beats them all. Every issue has reminders and ideas worth a J tar's safaacrsptian.' wrrtea T. H. Potter. "One year aeo I took another agricultural paper, and it took a whole column to tell what Farm Jostraal iclia ja) eae paragraph." aaya N. M. Gladwsn, - -. . v "It ought to be in every home where tnere is a chick, a child, a cow, a cherry, or a cuemmber," say I. V. Boreas.
MJ1
WILMjat ATKINSON COMPANY. PUBLISHERS FARM JOURNAL
TTAEHINGTON SQUARE. pTTTT Arar; WRTa.
Special Combination Of Iter Rural subscribers of the Richniond Palladium. The Palladium to Rural Mail subscribers is 12.00 per year. If yon fmbscrfbe now, new or renewal, ire give you The Richmond Palladium for one year and The Farm Journal Four Years, with any one of tbe Farm Journal Booklets.
All For
If you are now taking the Farm Journal your subscription will be moved ahead for four full years. (If you name no Booklet, the Farm Journal will be sent for Five years.) To get both papers fill out order herewith and send It to us, not to the Farm Journal.
Richmond Palladium, Richmond, Ind. I accept your special offer. Please send me the PALLADIUM for one year and FARM JOURNAL Four years, with this booklet
.ALL FOR $2.25
My name is
Address Are you now taking the Farm Journal?
(Write -Tee," or "No.") .
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