Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 363, 17 February 1907 — Page 7
Page Seven. HUGE STRUCTURES Oil THE THRESHOLD OF All EVOLUTION I ALWAYS HOLDING OUT A HELPING HAND. How the Y. M. C. A. Assists the friendless Young Man Along the Journey of Life.
The Richmond Palladium, Sunday, February 17, 1907.
(Greatest Offeir Ewir KM To tine Ladies of Kktaoid.
ARISING
SKYWARD
il
Spire of Old Trinity Dwarfed - By the Tall Buildings That Surround It.
MANIA FOR SKYSCRAPERS
THEY ARE STRIKING
TIONS OF PROGRESS MADE BY AMERICAN ARCHITECTS AND ENGINEERS.
x'ew York, Feb. 17. Evidence of the remarkable change that skyscrapers have brought about in the appearance of New York in ten years is reveated by a skyline photograph just taken. A picture taken in 1S96 shows the spire of Trinity church, perhaps the most famous landmark in the city, towering far above all nearby buildings. . Today this spire is barely noticeable,
so completely is it dwarfed by the tall structures which surround it. Viewed from the bay the city now seems an almost solid mass of brick and stone, broken here and there by the steel framework of some new building. In the Wall street district the greatest group of skyscrapers in the world is rising - a result of the insatiable demand for office accommodation in the lower section of the city. The present tendency of modern business towards concentration is nowhere else mo marked. Skyscraper office buildings have been erected upon almost
every available site and nineteen more, averaging twenty-three stories each, will be added within the next two years. With the high buildings becoming higher and more numerous all the time, the lower end of New York the tip of Manhattan's tongue, as it is sometimes called has, become the world's most impressive center of commercial activity.
Skyscrapers built within the last ten years are a striking illustration of the progress made by American architects and engineers. Though these buildings rise hundreds of feet from the ground they have proved to be absolutely safe from collapse or fire. This Js largely due to the structural work of steel and the floors and partitions of hollow tile bricks - the combination which successfully withstood the earthquake and four days of conr flagration in San Francisco. The
steel and hollow tile type of construction has made the modern skyscraper the safest and most enduring type of building. There are now more than 600 first-
A letter which aroused considerable interest among those present, was read at the meeting of the various Y. M. C. A. committees last Monday night. The writer, Edward J. Dingley was born and raised in Richmond, and graduated here in 1&02.
lie is the son of Alfred Dingley, of;
North Seventeeth street, and is now employed in the establishment of the
ILLUSTRA-' ctor Talking Machine company at
wmden, N. J. His letter was accompanied by a pledge for $23. The communication was as follows: Camden, N. J., IT. S. A., Feb. 7, 07. Prof. W. S. Hiser, Richmond, Ind., My Dear Mr. Hiser: I have been trying to answer your letter for some time, but have not found the opportunity. Being new in this business, I have many things to learn, and what spare time I have outside of the office I spend in reading and study that will be beneficial to me, consequently I always have something to do. I take a Richmond daily paper and have been watching with keen in
terest the progress that you are mak- j
ing in your campaign for a Y. M. C. A. ' The people of Richmond do not realize what they are missing without such an institution, and if they could see the Y. M. C. A. as I have seen it, there Is no doubt as to the result. - Since I have left my paternal roof
of this kind can not be estimated in dollars and cents. As you know I left Seattle to accept a iosition in Pittsburg, Pa., and here again found the Y. M. C. A. to be my first friend. I arrived in Pittsburg at 7 o'clock in the morning, New Year's day. As this was a holiday, the office at which I was to report was closed, and as I did not know the ad
dresses of my friends I was left in the cold streets with snow flying in the air. I immediately looked up the Y. M. C. A., was met with a hearty hand-shake and a cheerful greeting. Having made my wants known, I was Immediately shown to a tidy rooming place, secured a comfortable room, and returned to the building and spent a very pleasant New Year's. A striking feature of the work here is the night classes. There are several hundred young men in Pittsburg, many of them being employed as clerks in the general offices of the Pennsylvania Railroad company, and by attending night classes at the Y. M. C. A. are enabled to fit themselves for higher positions. And now in this land of sweet potatoes and mosquitoes, I am a member of the Y. M. C. A. of Camden,
N. J. We ate greatly crippled here for facilities, but I think the day is not far distant when we will have a new building. In a campaign now in progress, about 500 members have been added in about six weeks, which will bring the membership up to about
Humanity Soon to Realize Meat Is Not Essential to Good Health.
VIEWS OF DR. THURSTON
EXCAVATIONS SHOW THAT THE MAN OF GLACIAL PERIOD WAS ENTIRELY VEGETARIAN IN HIS DIET.
the Y. M. C. A. has been home to me. J 1,400. Consequently we are greatly
I first became affiliated with this crowded, but the good work
body in Seattle, Wash. In this faraway western city they are doing a great work. While I was in that city, young men were coming in from the eastern states by every train, and as the first arrivals filled most of the positions, many a young man, flushed with the hope of making a fortune in the west, was filled with despair when he arrived and found
is still
going on. As a result of this campaign our supply of literature has been exhausted, and I can find nothing of interest to send you at this time. Here, worn out by a day's confinement in the office, I can step into the Y. M. C. A. building on my way to my room, take a few turns in the gym., a shower bath, and a plunge in the pool, and come out feeling like a
no ready employment. Here is where new man all for the sum of two the Y. M. C. A. did their work. They i cents to pay for the laundry of a
were a friend to all comers here towel. Where is the boy in Richmond
the young man found a home, an ad
viser and a help in
Here he found an honest employment bureau that would stand by every dessrving man until he had some employment. He was directed to a
place where he could find a room
at reasonable rates, and in proper j
surroundings. More than this, he found friends, companions and a social life that is necessary for every young man, and which he will have. If there is no Y. M. C. A. in which to- find it, he .will go-other' places to
class, modern buildings in the lower section of New York, where the great shipping, manufacturing, railroad, and financial interests of the country have their headquarters. Until recently the 'buildings boom" was confined to the district east of Broadway, the Wall street side. Now, Tiowever, the demand for offices has compelled builders to use territory to the west, and the latest photograph of the skyline shows two huge skyscrapers, just finished, standing almost on the banks of the Hudson. The rapid skyward growth of NewYork has led to the prediction that a skyline photograph taken a few jears hence will show the tallest building now standing as completely dwarfed by newer skyscrapers as the spire of Trinity church ia - today. Already j
foundations are being laid for two
office buildings, to be completed in 10S, each of which will be forty-one stories high thirteen stories above
the highest building erected up to this
time.
Bertram Case Hearing.
In the circuit court yesterday morning evidence was heard in the matter
of the estate of Mary Bertram by
Benjamin Peelle, administrator. Ar
guments win ue Heard in this case
tomorrow. Mrs. Bertram was insol
vent at the time of her death.
Weak
A
Heart Seldom gets strong again without help. Awake or askep, it never stops, and consequently has no period of rest or relaxation in which to regain lost vigor. You should avoid exertion, excitement and worry as much as possible, to relax the strain, and take Dr. Miles' Heart Cure, which is a heart tonic, to strengthen and restore vigor to the heart nerves and muscles. The symptoms of a weak heart are shortness of breath, palpitation, feeble or too rapid pulse, hungry spells, hot flashes, dizziness, smothering spells, pain in heart or side, etc. "I had been treated for hejirt disease rr different phvslciana without any improvement. Finally my doctor informed me that tfter. was little hop of my ever bein able to do a dav's work arain. About that time a gentleman railed upon me. and said. I heard of your condition, and have eom to tell you that Ir. Miles Heart Cure aved ray life, and I want you to try it." I did bo. and after a week or so I went to my physician and told him I had been taking Dr. Miles' Heart Cure. lt examined m and said. 'God bless Miles' Heart Cure, it has made you better in a few days than I over ex peeted to see you again.' I am now well, having fully regained my health by the use of this remedy." B. R. LAJN'SIMO. Rensselaer. N. T. Or. Miles' Heart Cure Is cold by y&ur druggist, who will guarantee that the first bottle will benefit. If it faila he will refund your money. Miles Medical Co,, Elkhart, Ind
get it, and which often prove his down-fall. . We had our gymnasium, baths, swimming pool, games, reading-room, class rooms, debating club, orchestra,
and glee club, and, with such an assortment of attractions no young man has a chance to be lonesome, and has
no excuse to uoie nis time. More than this, we could meet in the resting rooms, form new acquaintances and have a good social chat. I think I met men from almost every state
' in the Union. The young man from
Boston took a plunge in the pool with the Hoosier, and the Chicago man played basket ball with the man from Texas. The spirit of good fellowshio is a feature that impresses me very much, and which draws the men toward the Y. M. C. A.
Every Wednesday evening we had
our dinner at the association build
ing, after which we would have some
music and a good social time, in
which the new-comer, to use a sin ng
expression, wa3 given the "glad hand,
and learned that in the Y. M. C. A. he
had found a friend. They did not have dormitories i
Seattle at that time, but a new build
ing was under way which provided
for rooms for the boys and a restau
rant, which would make the institu
tion so complete that a man would
not have to leave the building ex
cept as his work called him.
Along this line the boys were do
ing much good work. The older members would organize boarding
clubs. Shortly after my arrival in
that city one of the boys gathered together nine of us who were late ar
rivals, and the ten organized and
rented a house, hired a house-keeper and had a home of our own, and by thus co-operating we maintained our
expenses. If you have ever boarded
away from home, you will appreciate
the value of this. It was a branch of the Y. M. C. A. work and bore good
fruit. I kaew of one club of about
twenty-five members who had every convenience a man would want. On Thanksgiving day, 1905, -a din
ner was given by the wives and lady
friends to the association officers and
directors, which proved very interest
ing to me as well as profitable. Invitations were sentout and all who were to attend sent in. a card, giving
the name, native state and date of arrival in Seattle. We were seated in
groups accordingly, and during the
toasts a statement was given out
which was about as follows:
There were seventy-four present
representing twenty-four states . and
thirteen foreign cotmtries. Of this
number forty-eight had been in this
country less than a year and thirty-
four of the forty-eight had been there
k-ss than three months. This goes to
who would not give two cents every
all his troubles, day to take a swim?
In all the cities which I have mentioned, 4 o'clock devotional meetings are held on Sundays, which prove very successful. Generally some out-of-town speaker is advertised to give an address. I have seen from three to four hundred men in attendance at one of these meetings, of which number probably not more than fifty would ever find their way to a church, and I may say, with all due respect to the
able ministers to whom I have listened, that I have been more deeply impressed at 'these meetings than I have ever
been at a church service. We recently had a good example of the results here. A young man who had been tending bar came into a 4 o'clock meeting and was so moved that he gave up his job and secured more worthy employment, and is now bringing his former associates to the meetings with him. As you know, the work of the association is not confined to men, and the boys' departments have proved very successful. Instead of running in the streets after school, learning to smoke cigarettes and practicing the longest profane clauses, they go -to the
gym. or the swimming pool and get good wholesome exercise, or read in the library. Last night, when I went to the gym., the .boys had the floor in charge of a physical director and
his assistants, and the little fellows, all clad in red Jerseys and gray trousers, were going through all kinds of capers, and reminded me very much of a large cage of monkeys. I trust you will pardon me for writing such a lengthy letter, but when
I start to ramble on this subject it
is hard to find a stopping place. I have been looking over the booklets you sent me showing cuts of the proposed building. A branch of the association in Richmond, with such equipment, will certainly fill a longfelt want in that city. On account of other financial obligations, my contribution is necessarily small, but if I could, I would gladly give ten times the amout, for I feel that the benefit I have derived through my affiliation with this institution is of much greater value than any amount I will be able to pay in legal tender. Walter Fulghum and I both like our work here very much, and as far as we know are getting along very wjell. Walter has a slight attack of lumbago,
but is improving. Having good winter weather here. Just had a snow fall of thirteen inches upon two inches from former snows, and the sua has
shown brightly for two days and made j
no impression upon it, so I guess it
is here to stay a while. The mercury
is creeping down toward the zero
point tonight.
un Dest regards ana wisning you
and the people of Richmond success
in this undertaking, I remain,
Yours very truly, EDWARD J. DINGLEY, "
236 X. Seventh St.. Camden. X. J.
Dr. J. M. Thurston Is one of the
most pronounced vegetarians in the
city of Richmond, and he has no
hesitancy whatever in expressing his views upon the subject. The recent discovery of tuberculosis in a Wayne
county bullock draws from Dr. Thurs ton some remarks on meat eating.
"Let me remind you," said the doctor yesterday, "that some five years
ago scientists settled the question
definitely that the origin of the tuber-
clor or consumption germ was in cattle, and especially is the milch cow liable to be infected with it. A cas
ual study of statistics will, I believe
convince the most skeptical of the un-
healthfulness of meat-eating. For in
stance the death rate from cancer lithe United States in 1900 was 60 per 100,000 of population; in beef eating
England ;t was in the same year 82
per 100,000 of population. Xorway
with a population in 1S73 of 1.7C3.000 rears great numbers of cattle of an
inferior breed. In 1866 Xorway rais
ed 953,056 cattle, 1,705,394 sheep, 290,985 hogs, making a total of 2,949,415 besides some 101,768 tame reindeer, then add to this the immense amount of fish consumed, and we may easily guess why it is that Xorway has not only the highest death rate from cancer, 84 per 100,000, but also has the highest death rate from consumption. It will be remembered that the two are simply varieties of the same species of disease. "So far as the strict government inspection of meat at one common
abattoir is concerned the idea is right because the people should be protected until they learn that neither the flesh or milk of animals are not essential to health or strength by any means, and that the day has come when civilized men can no longer kill
and eat animals, and escape the penalty of their physical sins. Recent excavations In Xebraska have shown conclusively that man of the glacial period was entirely vegetarian in his diet. Studies of prehistoric times developes the fact that the primitive flesh eating man was a cauibal. When the human family commenced killing one another they discovered that the burned flesh tasted good and so they ate it, and from that took to killing animals. "I have been asked what is to be done with the babies, and I say in reply thereto: 'furnish them fully developed mothers instead of puny hot
bed child-mothers, stop the prevalent race suicide, and thus afford the babies mature vigor-giving mothers milk, instead of tubercular cows milk, and diptheria, small-pox, scarlet fever, cholera infantum, consumption, and all so-called diseases of childhood will be things of the past. "Talk about sterilizing milk! Do
m
M
1 A3
HE RICHMOND DRY CLEANING CO. has established in your midst one of the greatest Dry Clean
ing Establishments in this part of the State. All equipped in the most modern and up-to-date machinery and the latest appliances. As a special inducement to the ladies we, will dry clean all short spring jackets at less than half price for only SO Gents Three-quarter length spring jackets for only 75 Cento each. Take advantage of this offer, for it only lasts one week, and as spring is almost here, it will pay you to visit us this week and bring your jackets, skirts and waists and let us clean them. Men's suits cleaned, pressed and dyed at special prices. Remember the number ('
RICHMOND DRY CLEMG 1024 MAIN STREET. FOUR DOORS EAST OF WESTC01T HOTEL.
CO.
L
22 This coupon entitles any lady to 2 This coupon entitles any lady to Q have one jacket dry cleaned half price, Q nve one three-fourths length jacket Q. 50c, at the Richmond Dry Cleaning Q. cleaned half price, 75c, at the Rich. 3 Company, this week, and this week 3 mond Dry Cleaning Company, this O only. O week nd this week only. Q EDW. L. CHAUNCEY, Prop S " ;?;. Q EDW. L. CHAUNCEY, Prop. ' " 1 1 , 1 ' .v-i . . , . . . .
Memorial to Miss Anthony.Chicago, Feb. 16. The woman's
suffrage convention decided that at
least $100,000 shall be raised for a memorial to Susan B. Anthony. The
money is to be used to found a per-
I manent f'.nd to spread the tenets of
show in a small way what the nssccia-j started tQ raiRe the m aEd Jesg
tion does for the stranger withm its
gates. There were five of ns from In
diana, and it was here that I made the acciuaintance of a young man who
proved a striking example of what the Y. M. C. A. is doing. He had
been in that city five years, and came
from our little suburb. Lynn, Ind.
About seven years ago he had been a baker boy at Bayer's bakery. He went
to Seattle and became associated with the Y. II. C. A., and, we may say, was brought up by them. He apparently had not had many educational advantages in his youth, and while working there he took up courses in the night classes of this institution, and when I met him he was in business for himself, following journalism, a hustling business man with a clear eye and a pure mind. I tnink you will agree wito me that the returns from -a work I
hour delegates pledged
than an $23,000.
Funeral of Mrs. Bolton. New York, Feb. 16. Funeral services for Mrs. Joseph B. Bolton, wife ot a juryman in the Thaw trial, were held Saturday. Mr. Bolton is bearing up well under his bereavement, and ais family physician telephoned the iistrict attorney that Mr. Bolron nould b? able to take his place with the other jurors Monday. Lower Fare In Alabama. Montgomery, Ala.. Feb. 16. Governor Comer approved the bill reducing passenger railroad rates in Alabama frria 3 cents to cents and the Jaw gc--x into effect in CO diy.
Palfadrcrm Want Ads Pay.
you know that the tubercle bacillus is a lving organism, one-thousandth of an inch in length, and one fifty-thousandth of an inch in breadth, vet as
much a living thing as the man, horse or elephant. It eats grows, and enjoys animal existence as much as man. It also raises large families who also do well and prosper when the proper soil or conditions within the body are afforded. It breeds and multiplies invisibly and so rapidly that the consumptive will expectorate a lively family of several bilions every time he coughs and spits a mouthful on the sidewalk for the grand society lady to mop up with her resplendent trail, and carry home to the dear household. I have actually demonstrated that
alter subjecting the bacillus to 350
degrees of heat for 30 minutes that
a -'culture could be made, that is
test tube with the proper material
could be infected, and a colony of sev
eral million grow within 24 hours:
water boils at 212 degrees. It has been demonstrated that these germs
will live and be happy even after
subjected to 400 degrees of heat.
"I am asked if this condition cf af
fairs would not be hard on the doc
tors, and I answer in the negative
It would render the practice of rational medicine the easiest and most sat
isfactory profession in the world.
The patent medicine curse, the great
host of quacks and charltans all over
the land would be put out of service, and the educated, skilled, honest conscientious physician would then have a fair chance to make an honest living. "The day is coming when this condition will exist. This is not a world of chance by any means; there is a supreme Omnipotent and Omnicient Causation 'Who maketh all. I am
a radical optimist let me tell you. The living body is undoubtedlv the Tem
ple of God and the human intellect
is not of the animal-intelligence, but
the fruit of eternal wisdom. 'Let us
make man in our own image after our own likeness. It is the spiritual endowment of man and man only. We
re on the threshold of a wonderful
evolution, more so even than the
world has ever known before.
POISONED MILK IS SOLO III ILLINOIS
The Food Commissioner Says Many Infants Are Sent to Premature Graves.
REPORTS ' TO GOVERNOR
TESTS SHOW THAT MILK IS ADULTERATED WITH POISON "MUCH USED AS AN EMBALMING FLUID."
The first " knive3
gland in 1539.
were used in En-
Publishers Press.J Chicago, Feb. 16. That thousands of infants in Illinois, as well as many larger children, are being sent to premature graves through taking Into their stomach in milk the same poisonous preparations that are used to embalm the dead, is indicated by a special report ready for submission
to Governor Deneen by the state pure food commissioner, A. H. Jones. The report was made to Jones by his assistant, Herman E. Schucknecht, the dairy expert of the department. It is stated in the report that out of 35 cities visited, not one escaped having sold within its limits . milk from unclean and unsanitary cans and
vessels, or milk not properly strained, showing a deposit of filth in the bottom of the bottles or other vessels. In 32 cities skimmed milk was sold as standard and was adulterated with formaldehyde which, authorities say, is poison "much used as an embalming fluid." The department was amazed to find that only from 30 to 35 per cent of the milk on sale in the various Illinois cities visited was in the condition It should be at easily could be in if only ordinary sanitary regulations are observed in care nnd handl'.Tg of it.
FROM LAIS FAR AWAY F
STORM WIPES OUT TOWN
No Lives Destroyed, but Monetary
Loss Amounts to $2,000,000
"White Australian Laws" Cause Trouble in Solomon Islands.
Publishers' Press. Victoria, IS. C, Feb. 16. News received here by the steamer Miaowera that a hurricane completely wiped out CooActown, in north Australia. No live were lost. The monetary loss will amount to $2,000,000. News that constant troubles were occuring in the Solomon islands as a result of the men expelled from Queensland, following the enactment
of the "white Australian laws," alsoC.
came by the MInowera. The British
warship Promothus, placed in the vi
cinity of the group to protect the returning blacks, shelled the village of Sieuwa, which so badly frightened the
natives that they took to the brush
and have not returned. Missionaries
fear a massacre by the villagers, who
resent the intrusion of the blacks. From Papua news was brought of a
punitive exDedition following a raid
by cannibals on a Cape Cupola village, two children being murdered and eaten at a cannibal, feast. .
Notice, Farmers !
"Doddo" 22721 the Imported French Percheron Stallion, better known as the "Clevenger' horse, and Prince Wilkes, will be at my farm this season, 22 miles north of Richmond, on the Middleboro pike. The public is invited to call. A. H. PYLE, Phone 805-C. R. F. D. No. 4.
x
H. R. DOWNING & OON .. UNDERTAKERS .. 16 N. 6th Ot., Richmond f. Both Phonos 75
The present population of Rio de
Janeiro is SOO.000.
O
Bears tLe
Saature
of
Tha Kind 133 Have AiAavs tott
5
Aberdeen, O. Elijah Sutton, accidentally shot by a companion when hunting, is dead. Previous to his last accident Sutton had been shot "three different times when hunting. Indianapolis, Ind. Miss Nora Baggott, 34, leaped from sixth floor of department store, where she was em
ployed, and met instant death. She grieved over recent death of mother.
St. Louis, Mo., Ernst De. Kargaa,
formerly city editor of the "U'estlicbe Post, for 40 years a well known Ger
man newspaper writer and author,
died of blood poisoning. Born in Greenborg. Germany.
Vienna. The Princess Clementine
of Saxe-Cobnrg-Gotha. mother of
Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria, is d?ad. Born Jan. 3, 1S17, daughter of King l-ionis Philippe; married in Pari3 April JO, 1S43, to Prince Augustus of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, who died July 2(5, US1, eaving four children.
Millions For Pratt institute. New York. Feb. 16. By the will of Mrs. Mary H. Pratt, widow of Charles Pratt, who was a prominent official of the Standard Oil company, the greater portion of the estate goes to Pratt institute, founded by Charles H. Pratt There are other charitable bequests. While the amount of the estate is not Biven It is known that the old Pratt tstate amounted to several millions. Boshaw's Wives. Cheyenne, Wyo., Feb. 16. Herman Uoshaw, arrested here on a charge of bigamy, consented to return to Buffalo without requisition. An alleged Sfth wife was discovered by a telegram from Cincinnati saying Boshaw married there under the name of Herratn Allison.
Artificial gas, the loth Century fnci ; 10-tf
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IREDELLGcFERGUSON Real Estate and Loans.. 0 IHSPttAHCE 4 H. 9th St. Dcz:s C2C
