Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 80, 2 April 1907 — Page 10

Page Ten-

The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telegram.

re i 19! aa , ?2

!5 i2t: a

"Health Is the First Wealth"

DR. JOHNSON'S Educator Crackers Educator Wafers Educator Toasterette AM to be had at T!E BEE HIVIy grocery

A rut! Line of

Franco-Amer

Soupy

(can

' it K P. k .JS ' H Jf tt.

a

The City in Brief.

Butterick's Patterns, aiCrrls & Co'.

William Fic-kinger, who was the guest of Benj. Hiser over Sunday has returned to his home at Indianapolis.

"Water bills due Ai

t pilist.

i f -

31-10t

There were ten fin alarms during March with an approximate loss of SIO.O). The chief loss was at the Davis carriage factory.

RJetimona

jRidrjr.

steam tf .

Telephone the

Laundry to get your la

Dr. W. J. Smith spent Sunday with relatives and friends at Winchester, Ind. c

Water bills due

lst.

31-10t

Has His Own Opinions On Child Labor.

L;idy Maccabees will meet Thursday

evening, April 4. All members are

urged to be present.

Take your laundry A1

Steam Laundry. 91

151. Carpets Clea

o toe

ff Main

See the ladies from

demonstrating at the

RIchmon? St.. Phon

july31-tf Indianapolis First M. E.

Iks a h af a, a "a a a a a a a a :

: a a a a a

- s - i

is, .'church Wednesday evening at :.'0. l-2t

MISCELLANEOUS Staple Grocery MENTION Properly Priced for Tomorrow! Best granulated sugar! (25 lb. cloth bags.. .... .1 ..$1.25. Daisy brand flour ;(25lfis.) . .50c.

(Every bag guaranteed.)

Soap (Swifts Pride).

Lima bean3 (cam

ity) I . cans 2oc.

Succatash (canned good quality) 3 cans 25c. Kidney beaus (canned good quality 3 cans 25c. Rolled Oats (our best brand) .... . .3 boxes 25c. Corn (Good standard pack) 4 cans 25o..

ide).Sbars 25c. nned food qualf Pino

Phone Your Orders.

J. M. EGGEMEYER 4tb and Plain Sts.

J A case of scarlet fever has been re- ; ported in the family of Enos Allermau,

!.".'; Main street

Water bills due A

-if e Anri 1st.

31-10t

9 ,

EMINENT EDUCATOR AT HIGH SCHOOL

Supt. J. F. Greenwood, of Kansas City, Makes Two Splendid Addresses.

ESSENTIALS IN TEACHING.

CONTINUAL GROWTH IS NEEDED TEACHING, SAID THE SPEAKER, IS A DYNAMIC POWER; NOT A STATIC ONE.

copxhUmt iiDb or VMOinwooH VNOCbWOaO'N.'r 1UTHER BURBANK, THE PLANT WIZARD.

Marguerite Hart has left for Tn- Tne subject of child labor, which has been agitating congress an5 tne

dianapolis to visit her cousin. Miss Ma-; people, brings to mind some utterances made not long ago by Luther Bur-

rie Quinn.

Thursday evening Ap

ters. of Rebecca of H will give a dance at I. Tickets, 25c.

til 4th

armjn

Daugh-

lia Lodge

F. Hall. 2-2 1

Taube Bros, will hve another horse

Country Cured Hams !

Very mild, just i

4

PHONE 292. HADLEYBROS.

sale on Saturday, A Will offer 75 to 100

well broke horses, so

farm mares and fai

fsw good mule team 124 and 126 North

IP'il 6, -A

fieaaar

M

tne be

a v

m m .

I. Sale

11 a. m.

good and

)d teams of

Irivers and a

stables at

cth street. 2-4t

bank, the California plant wizard. Mr. Burbank expressed the belief that

children should be trained and cultivated just as flowers are and that by constant attention to the rearing of the young a higher type of humanity in time may be evolved. He holds that children should not be Bent to school as early as is the present custom, but should be allowed to run free with nature under proper care. Mr. Burbank of course considers all child labor a crime against the race.

In Turkey, the tombstones of the faithful, where the departed is a man of eminence, are capped with a fez carved in marble.

Mr. S. L. Bowe writes: "I was sul

sease, so that at tim

out of bed, and whe

stand straight. I took

Cure. One dollar bottl

the second cured me

ley's Kidney Cure

where others are tota

Luken & Co.

Aitlflcial gas. tne 20th

nvof Wayne

JSfr from

C 1 COUJI i lid

yhtVely

worKsx v

rfailurtX A.

1 7

PA

W. Va.,

idney di-

not get

could not

y's Kidney

part of

Fo-

onders

G.

ntury fuel.

10-tf

An Italian, G. B. Bladego, has writ

ten a book of over 1,20 pages on the

Alpine tunnels.

s Bought

Bean the ,nB ino "avryvav

V

Artificial gas, tne -atlj: Century fueL

10-tf

Insure Yourself Against The Future By regularly Putting Aside a Portion of Your Income The savings of the people cause the prosperity of the nation. YOUR. SAVINGS cause YOUR PROSPERITY. . " I A safe and convenient place to deposit your savings is the RICHMOND TRUST COMPANY, which isi now own for business at 715 Main street. Your account is invited and solicited. With a capital and surplus of $::75.l0Voo anfd with about one r hundred well known local people as stockholder, the RICHMOND TRUST COMPANY immediately becomes! onej of ' the strongest financial institutions in this section. Following is a list of the directors who will safeguard the deposits patrons: Adam H: Bartel. John B. Dougan. alenry Gennett. Howard Campbell. George H. Eggemeyer.'iJohn J. Harrington. Edwin H. Cates. john M. Eggemeyer. Elgar G. Hibberd. George L. Cates. Jonas Gaar. Charles H. Land.

Richmond Trust Company 3 Per Cent. Interest Paid on Saving Deposits.

MEAT INSPECTION DEPENDS UPON THE ACTION OF COUNCIL (Continued From Page One.) from meat shipped into this city from neighboring towns in the county where there is no government inspection. He pointed to section one of the ordinance which reads that it shall be unlawful for any person, corporation or compauy, to sell or offer for sale meat which has not been inspected as required by the ordinance. Milk Inspection Wanted. Councilman Deuker asked what the committee had done concern ins- the in

spection of milk sold in the city. He ment that the ksPItal is a Private in-

MONEY IS VOTED FOR REIfl HOSPITAL OVER MAYOR'S VETO (Continued from Page One.)

ed his gavel and council" sustained Mr. Deuker s point of order. Then Mr. Deuker moved that the hospital appropriation ordinance be passed over the mayor's veto, and the council unanimously followed the suggestion. Mayor Gives Reason. When the hospital appropriation ordinance was returned to council Monday evening with the mayor's veto, it was accompanied by a statement from the mayor covering several foolscap pages, in which he explained his action. The mayor set forth in his state-

stated that this was as important as the inspection of meat. Mr. Deuker said that milk dealers carried their milk in large cans and that the lids of these cans were constantly being lifted so that the milk could be ladled out. This permitted dirt and germs of all kinds to contaminate the milk. Mr. Deuker suggested that an ordinance be drawn up providing for the delivery of milk in bottles or the carrying of milk in cans provided with faucets. Dr.

Bond stated that the committee had had its hands full with the meat ques-

stitution notwithstanding the state

ments of the trustees of the institution, and that the law recently passed by the legislature for the benefit of Reid Memorial hospital did not authorize council to appropriate money for its maintenance. He stated that, using as a basis the number of sick poor from this city, cared for at the hospital last year, the city in appropriating ?7.X for the institution, was actually paying the hospital something javer Si! a day for each charity case from this "city cared

ifor at the hospital. When the clerk

Hon and as snnn it hari Wr, !had finished reading the communica

ed of, some method for providing pure tion Mavor Schillinger arose from his

milk for the consumption of local peo

ple would be considered. Butchers Approve It. The arrangement with the govern-

chair and stated that a member of the

hospital board of trustees had made a personal attack on him in one of the city papers, but that he had not yet

stooDed to engage in personalities. He

ment which in all probability will be ; then read the articles of incorporation entered into by the city, meets nf Rpld hosDital and on concluding.

with the approval of the local butch-Ls1,0h tt these read like the institution

ers, and the general public and the spe-lwat? a. nublic hospital "If this does land keeps persistantly at it will f,ure

committee which has brought j not show the hospital is a private in-

(By Prof. W. A. Fiske.) The coming of Dr. J. F. Greenwood, superintendent of the Kansas City, Mo., schools to Richmond is another mile stone in the educational interests of the city. It is of value to any teacher to look in the face and to listen to tlie voice of an educator with the ripe experience and wide range of knowledge possessed by Supt. Green

wood. He became superintendent of tlie Kansas City schools when there were but forty-eight teachers; now there are nine hundred teachers connected with that system. The high schools alone, of which, there are four Iiave an enrollment of four thousand four hundred pupils, while the school enrollment of the city has representatives of almost every nationality. Delivered Two Addresses. During the , last few years Supt. Greenwood has traveled all over the union, and many places in Europ in his study of schools and school systems, and is well acquainted, if any man could be, with what goes to make up a good school. He gave two lectures In the high school Monday, one 'in the morning to the student body, on the subject, "Some Essentials for Success in Life," and another in the afternoon to the teachers of the city on, "Means Employed for Making the Entire School System a Compact X?nit." Compliments Local Schools. In introducing his lecture he complimented the earnestness and enthusiasm manifest on the part of the teachers and school authorities of Richmond and stated that Indiana,

while not the largest state has always

been in the advance guard of the establishment and improvement of a school system. The three essential forces, the speaker regards, in making

the school system a compact unit, are

the superintendent, principals and teachers. The superintendent should

know the nature of school work in all the states and abroad, if he wouH be most efficient in his duties at home.

Many duties of superintendents and

principals toward the teaching forces were pointed out. but the main force

in the great system after all is the varied influence and power of the.

i teachers.

"There is a soul as well as a body,"

said the speaker, "and the soul of the teaching force is more powerful than

that of any other body in the world." Continual Growth Needed. To bring about a compact unit of the

system there must be a higher aim

than to merely keep the machine running. There should be no relying upon brilliancy, no feeling that the cause will succeed because of some previously accomplished work, but there must be a continual growth, a constant

! pushing on to something better, high

er and nobler. Teaching a Dynamic Power. The speaker laid special emphasis on the fact, that the teacherwho undertakes to rest upon great deeds of the past, will surely fail, while the one who starts out with small promise

stitution I would like to know why?" said the mayor. Mr. Study's Objections. After the speech from the mayor the city attorney delivered the speech of the power behind the throne, which was interrupted by Mr. Deuker before

its completion. Mr. Study stated that

ly win in the end. "The teacher who does not bring in a new face each day will never be a great teacher. Teaching is a dynamic power, not a static one, and at no point should there be arrested development." Dr. Greenwood is much in favor of the teacher visiting other schools loth at home and in other cities, that in

cial

about this good work has been receiv

ing deserved congratulations on all sides. The ordinance will be reported to council in two weeks and will then undoubtedly be passed. Provisions of the Ordinance. The ordinance presented to council, and which is now before the ordinance committee, is in part, as follows -

Section 1. It shall be unlawful to I last fal1 he had said the ordinance apsell or offer for sale in this city any t propriating money for the Institution meat not insnected as herein nrnTw was illegal and that subsequent events

Sp,. rarMwec of an o,ihad borne him out. He told how the of the school, which is a thing very

and hn?s fiia,,Phtereft in th,-. xu' m ! trustees had had to go before the legis-j difficult to explain and which includes J

at the time and while the same are be- Mature and secure a law legalizing the ine slaughtered and Arexrt he in. appropriation of money for institutions

sDected under the rp'eiiinHmm' nH reJ similar to Reid hospital. Mr. Study j questioning, which should

quirements prescribed by the depart- said -that not withstanding the efforts j stant growth and lead to the perfect

ment of agriculture by a meat inspec-ior tne trustees, me law mat was pasa-

tor to be appointed by the city. If the ea aia not 111 lIie cahe UL lvem

in the beginning of the hospital strife j this way much inspiration may be ac

quired and many mistakes corrected. Some of the points of observation should be: 1 The spirit or atmosphere

many things in relation to the opera

tion of the school. 2 The manner of

be a con-

Qulck Delivery

OF ALL KINDS f-

m rr . i

hon Your

Orders

OFFICE BULLER DICK'S CANNERY 0. .D. BULLEROSCK, S. 5TH ST. Phone 1235

carcass of any animal slaughtered shall be condemned by the inspector, it shall be unlawful to offer this carcass or any part of it for sale. Sec. 3. The slaughtering of such

animais snail oe done at a place pro-

He stated that the law reads that insti-

development of the subject in hand.

Questions are Answered. A number of questions were a?ked

tutions costing $75.0(!0 or more and i at the close of the lecture which showgiven by its builder or builders to aied that the speaker did not possess city could be maintained by the city, j a high regard for the elective system Mr. Study stated that Mr. Reid had not! in the high school, as many endeavor

presented the institution to the city of

vided for by the local butchers. This j Richmond, ana like tne mayor, poin,.place shall be provided with a sub-1 ed to the articles of incorporation to stantial cement floor of .sufficient' size i show that the institution was a pri-

LET US . . .

CUT YOUR LUMBER

yoa want 5 ptll Sc4

St. We

us for

Into any sizo boards or finish, jnst as

iVnc- Posts, Shiuijleei r anything in Lumber '.-' .

LOU CK & HILL CO.1

200-210 North Fourth St., Richmond, Ind.NJ

and so constructed as to hold offal and waste matter. There shall be a tank and tankage facilities constructed. ''to receive such offal. The slaughtering floor shall be kept clean, free from stench and in good sanitary condition. Sec. 4. Any person, corporation or company violating the provisions of this ordinance shall forfeit to the city

the sum of

vate one. . Says Is Bad Precedent. He warned council that in appropriating money for the niaintainanee of the hospital it was establishing a bad precedent. ." He said that he was not a prophet, nor the son of a prophet, but that he would- venture the prediction that at the next session of the legisla-

! ture a law would be passed authorizing

to select the easiest work which is much to their disadvantage. He thinks high school students should pursue a few difficult subjects rather than a larger number of easier ones and that the work should be hard and amount to something rather than to be made a thing of play and a good time.

AN INSIDIOUS DANGER.

One of the worst featur&s of kidney

trouble is that"

sease and befon

Iu section 2. it Is noted that the in-; municipalities to purchase wich insu'-jhis danger, he. may

tutions as Reid hospital and that an ef-! iv. Take Folev's K

This provision was made in case the;" would tneu be made to pawn otfj first sign of trou

government would refuse

. . . , 1 . l . . : a

. . .j- . 1 i .e- '

to provide! the hospital, which Mr. Study regards j regularities and

government 'inspection. If the gov-j as a ernment takes such, action the ordi-; r

nance can -be revised. !

'white elephant," on flie city.

sease and

Co.

is anr insidious di-

LheXictini realizes

ve a fatal mala-

ey Cure at ihe

t corrects ir

vemx rsrigiit s di-!

Les. A. V Luktn & i

iWi

Barometers were first made by Torricelli in 104:1.

Norwaj- has five leper hospitals with about patients.

British ' mills turn out daily more than KM miles of cotton cloth.

The United " Kingdom, which Is the largest importer in the world of cat

tle and sheep for slaughtering purpo-j cs. is oddly enough the largest exjKrt-l j- of horse? for the same puiie.

.STOMACHj CSt'VTe!

You will re

ehe. the highest d-!

gree of satisfaction from a trial of the Bitters in cases of Spring Fever, Colds. Grippe, Indigestion, Dyspepsia,

Costiveness

iai

Try it today.

NOTICE. j Commencing Tuesday. April 2nd, i We the iindersigned Milliners' agree j to close eur respectiyf places of busi-j

ness onjeach week sray at 6 P. M.. excepting Monday jmd Saturday evenings: KIu Millinery Co. Marl' P. Afistirt. ElizbethPorter. TomJTTinney. Lena Rohe. Mrs. R. R. VanSant. Rose Sharkey. Kate Gadbury .

SECOND NATIONAL BANK

United States Depository. The Second National Bank of Richmond offers to depositors every facility which their balances, business and responsibility warrant.

Capital $250,000 Surpms $3O,000 UDpffCERS:

PR ESIPEXT: Johu B. Lkugan. VICK-PREH.: C. W. timer.

John B. Donsdiu Panlfl O. Held, tit-o. II. Kgnemeyer, t W. Kimr. HHmTW. t-laar. Howard Campbell.

VUJE-PRF.S.: Daniel U. KelA CASH IEU; fam 1. V . G an r.

DIRECTORS :

. Ft. Htrattnn, Jr. O. II. ljancl Clm A. (ir. K. W. Hill. H. C. tttarr Henry UeanetL

V1CK.VRW.J Oeo. 11 KggpmTr, AssT.ASlttKn; Will O, eek.r.

v.. a. nthrt. John It. Howard. John J. Harrington. I. W. (Smith, oeo. Miller,

DOUBLE 5TARyllfS l)0llRLE

Tuesday Evening at 6 O'clock until Wednesday Evening at 6 O'clock. Tuesday evening at 6 o'clock until Wednesday evening at tS.

Bring your order Tuesday night, store open until 9 o'clock.

Dry Goods coming in on every train J A good, clean, new stock to choc-sa

from.

Princess Flour in cloth sacks 55c.

fiolrt Medal Sorina Wheat. The

18 lbs. granulated, 15 A or 20 X-C

Hood's Leader Coffee 15c poundJ

Hood's Morning Glory Blend co Hood's Fancy Blend coffee and

Best and smoothest potatoes inj

7 bars Lenox or 8 of Santa Claufc

100 Piece Dinner set of English Vjfa

Pictorial Review Patterns.

i s

he st 70c.

;Sugar for $1.qj

fme at 20c is' ground. 13 stamps or 25c.

M

city 60cushel.

soaD for 25c.

re VSr $9.98,

worth Sf5 every where.

HOOD'S MODEL DEPARTT3ENT STORE Trading Stamps with All Purchases. Free Dclirery. New Phone 1079; Old Phone 13R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. 411-413 Main Street. '

..IF YOU ARE GOING TO NEED SOLIE...

n n

1

nn r

mum m m m m c v m u

SEE--

SLATHER CO. Phones 49

DICKINSON TRUST GO. Capital, Surplus and Profits, $140,000 STATEMENT OF CONDITION At th Closo of Business March 30th, 1907. RESOURCES Mortgage Leans!.. $506,567.00 Collateral Loans! 330,223.61 Stocks and Bondi 267,270.93 1,104,061.54 Company's Building , 8.0CC.00

Other Real Estatd Owned 12,0C0J)O Cash and Due frotn Banks 151,183.82

$1,275,245.36

JABILipS

Capital Stock .. :. 100,000.00

Surplus Fund . . . . . . . .f. 20,000.00 Undivided Profits ,.. 22,789.56 Premium Reserve 30.00 Trust Deposits $ 12,008.58 Deposits 1,120,417.22 1,132,425.80 $1,275,245.36 SAVINGS DEPOSITS v January 1, 1901 $ 2264.92 January 1, 1902.. 110,339.25 January 1, 1S03 305,480.78 January 1, 1904 439,222.37 January 1, 1905 576.201.60 January 1, 1906 742,6CC18 March 30, 1907 $978,916.88 OFFICERS. E a nine! Dickinson, President. Howard Campbell, Vice-President Edgar F. Hiatt, Sec'y and Treas. Charles A. Francisco, Assistant Sec'y.

DIRECTORS.

Edwin H. Cates. Howard CaninleI. Samuel Dickinson. Joseph J. Dickinson. Samuel V. Gaar.

Omar Hollingsworth. P. W, Smith. John L. Rupe. Ifonry C. Starr. Elgar G. Hibberd.

1

I )