Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 134, 22 March 1909 — Page 8
PACKS RIGHT.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, 3XD AY, MARCH 22, 1UUU. lyiij
M UJ S IB- A HJ M' 9 S .:
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IBEGMNMG TOMdDEEdJW, TUESDAY, Our entire store in throes of bright, new, snappy Spring Merchandise. Every section bids you investigate. We're rightly prepared for a phenomenal Spring trade, and are off ering some grand Early Spring Buying Opportunities, the like ol which y ou can not afford to miss. Come early, for we promise a busy lime will follow this extraordinary Spring announcement
oo
TT i u Si
oo
IK 2s Over Fifteen
Years
since we made Optica a Specialty and our records show that numbers of Richmond's representative business and working men have stuck to us faithfully all this time. Why? For the reason that we have done their work right, promptly and always, have guaranteed satisfaction. Call and give us a trial. CHias. M. Haner
The Jeweler
810 Main St
F. 0. Edcacds, Optometrist.
WASHINGTUII POST COIJOEMNS EAHLHAM
Ycsr fcssse refcallt Your home preserved If yea will INSURE with L B. KnoUenterg, 1 S. 8th Ycsr teny sustained Yoor income assured
Eraaons Tailoring Co. Efilsrce Tfeelr Cosiness Electric fressing System Installed. Emmons Tailoring Co. have enlarged their business this Spring. In addition to the large and fine line of suitings they make at $15 and $18, they have added an extra fine line ot Imported suitings that they will make op . at $22. This is the same goods sold by high price tailors at $35. The connection of Kmmons Tailoring Co. with one of the largest Woolen Hous
es in the country gives, them unusual advantage in prices., Emmons Tailoring Co. have also installed this Spring an Electric Press-
One System. This system does the
best pressing work and at low prices. Pressing suits. 55c; trousers, 15c Beet work or no charge. They are also showing surprising values in their Spring line. A cordial, Invitation is extended to ell to look over their new Spring styles. '
FAIRFAX HOME BURNS
BURPEE'S SWEET PEAS
IN BULK. . HADLEY BROS.
Was the Manor House of a Real American Member Of Nobility. WAS OVER 250 YEARS OLD
Washington, March 22. Word has just been received of the destruction by fire of "North Hampton," the famous manor house of the late Lord Fairfax of Baltimore, twelfth baron of Ameron, at Lord Fairfax's estate, in Prince George county, Maryland, ten miles from Washington. Communi
cation by phone or telegraph with Largo, the nearest town-, had been rait
orr since the storm of March 4. The
grant of the estate was made by Lord Baltimore in 1630. The house was known to have been, more than 250 years old. It is said President James Madison spent a night there during the battle of Bladensburg. The plantation; was purchased by the late Lord Fairfax In civil war times, and is the birthplace of his seven children.
FOR A FEW THINGS FOR YOUR) HOME WHEN YOU CLEAN HOUSE.
FOR YOUR GROCER, RENT, INSURANCE, OR TO PAY OFF YOUR LOAN WITH ANOTHER COMPANY.
won . SPRING CLOTHE AND OTHER NECESSITIES
TO PAY YOUR WINTER OBLIGATION! OR FOR ANY OTHER PURPOSE.
. w wake all loans on household goods, pianos, fixtures, horse and waaona, or other personal property of value, left In your poeeeeaion. You can have from one to twelve months' time in which to pay It back, In email weekly or monthly payments, as you pre. far. $1.20 ie the weekly payment on a fifty dollar lean for fifty weeke; ether amounts at the eame proportion. ' PLENTY OF MONEY to loan and PLENTY OF WAYS for you tm pay It beck. liSiiiiiond Leon Oompony Estet!; 1C95. V Home Phone 1545 Room 0,Cc!cnial BliJg. Corner Main and 7th St. Richmond, Indiana
Criticises the,Action Taken by The College in Ratliff Matter. EXAMPLE OF INTOLERANCE EDITORIAL OBJECTS TO ACTION OF FACULTY IN DENYING DIPLOMA TO ALUMNUS ON THE REASON ASSIGNED.
Washington, March 22.--The Washington Post Saturday printed an editorial criticism of Earlham college, Indiana's ancient Quaker seat of learning. The Post says: "Indiana has just furnished an example of tolerance that will hardly add anything to the good name of that state. Earlham college is an institution of learning under control of the Friends; it has stood high as an. educational institution. A young man of that state was desirous of obtaining a collegiate degree and for that purpose took a special course at Earlham, complying with all the rules of the faculty and passing the required examination. "Before the degree was conferred the young man was elected to the state legislature. Among the burning questions and. they always have burning questions in Hoosierdum was one as to whether the township or the county should be the unit in voting on the matter of licensing saloons. Earlham was for the county unit. The younsr man voted for the
township and now comes Earlham,
which took his money for his course of special study and pronounced him
fit for his degree and says he has forfeited his degree because he did not vote to meet the particular views of
the college. Questions Right of College.
The question naturally arises, what has a college to do with matters
coming before a legislative body, and how it comes that the college faculty
are the keepers of the conscience of
all who attend its courses? "The young man may have had
views of his own on the question of
local option and he certainly is entitled to have such views; or, it may be his constituents, the people who elected him to represent them in the legislative body, may have favored the township instead of county unit, and, as they had elected him to represent them, he was In duty bound to vote as they desired and not as the college faculty wished. "What is the value of a diploma from a college which demands that
the recipient surrender his conscience
In order to receive it?"
SEIATOR
BURTON
WILL BE INVITED Want Him to Speak at Greenville Commencement.
Eldorado, O., March 22. Senator Burton of Ohio, will be requested to make the address at the commencement exercises of the Greenville high school, to be held in the opera house Friday night, May 28. There are 37 graduates this year.
START SESSIONS Oil APRIL SIXTH
Next Month State Tax Board Will Hear Corporations' r Complaints. SESSION CLOSES IN AUGUST
EXPRESS AND TELEPHONE COMPANIES WILL BE THE FIRST HEARD, TWO DAYS BEING ALLOTTED TO THEM.
ROAD MAKING IS
TO BE CONSIDERED
Preble County Commissioners
Call Meeting.
Eldorado, O., March 22. The Preble county commissioners have called a meeting of the twelve township trustees -and all road supervisors, to be
ueiu id wo common pieas court room Tuesday to discuss the different methods of road making- and preservation. The meeting will be addmaml hp w
M. Maxwell, of Cleveland, and Jesse
Tayior or Jamestown.
A Real Tummer.' -: aw a goblet today mafle of bene." "Pshaw! I saw. a tumbler made of
can ana blood last Bight.'
Special Correspondent. Indianapolis, March 22. Next month the State Tax Board starts in on its annual hearings, that will continue for several weeks. The session opens on Tuesday, April 6. The board will hear complaints of corporations about
their assessments during April and will be in session until August making assessments and fixing valuations on corporations property- in the state. A schedule of dates for the hearings of various corporations has been fixed. The express and telephone companies will be heard first, two -days having been set aside for these. According to the schedule the express and tele
phone .companies will, be .heard on
April 15 and lk . Sleeping car and
pipe. line companies will be heard on
April 10, 17 and 18, and the electric
street and interurban railroad companies will be heard on April 21, 22 and 23. The steam roads will appear on
April 29, 30, May 3 and 4. Personnel Is Same,
The personnel of the board Is the same as last year, with the exception
of John C, Wlngate, who was succeed'
ed by Fred I Gemmer. The other
members are John W. MeCardle, Parks M. Martin, Fred A. Sims and John C. Billheimer. Whether Martin will remain on the board is not yet known, for Governor Marshall has not given out any word with reference to his intentions in that direction. Martin is the first mem
ber of the board whose commission is
to expire, and this takes place this
spring. There is a good deal of talk to the effect that Governor Marshall will give the -place to some other man.
though the friends of Martin are working hard to have him retained as a member of the board. There are many
candidates for the place nearly all sec
tions of the state having produced a
candidate. - But if Governor Marshall has his mind made up as to whom, he
will appoint, be is keeping it to aim
self, just as he is keeping to himself his intentions as to the other appointments. - And yet there are some who believe that he will make an announcement this week of a successor to Parks
Martin on the state tax board.
SEATTLE BOY IS FINE PRESS AGENT Writes to Palladium Telling About Great World's Exposition.
SHOWS WESTERN SPIRIT SINGS THE PRAISES OF HIS NATIVE CITY AND OF HIS NATIVE STATE ONLY EIGHTH GRADE PUPIL. .
Frank Lochow, a Seattle, Wash., schoolboy, shows the true western spirit. He has joined in te publicity movement to boom his home city and he has taken up the work with a vengeance. ; Seattle is going to have a great worlds fair, the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition, this summer' and Seattle people, from babes-ln-arms to infirm grandsires. want exerybody in the world to know it. Young Lochow, with whom the Palladium, unfortunately, is not acquaint
ed, has written the following to this
paper concerning the exposition:
Rainer School, Seattle, Washington.
Editor of the Palladium, Richmond,
Ind.
My Dear Sir: All over the country people know that there is to be a great exposition in Seattle, opening June first, but we would like to give you a better idea of It, and other interesting
features. The grand scenery will
make the fair still more, beautiful.
There are very high and beautiful mountains and lakes, falls and forests. Some of the large cedar trees which
grow out here are 20 feet in diameter.
Monster Mt. Baker.
When looking north from the Alas
ka-Yukon-Exposition grounds, you can
see Mt. Baker, which looks like a large .white monster . standing alone
and looking to the east you see the snow-capped Cascades, branch of the Rockies. When looking to thesouth you can see ML Rainier, the highest mountain in Washington, with its
large round top covered with snow, and on looking to the west over Puget Sound, you can see - the Olympics, which are very beautiful. We have gorgeous sunsets, which make' the sound look: like a living sheet of fire. ' We have three lakes near the city. The A. Y. P. EL Is on Lake Washington, which is the largest. A Great Water Front. Seattle has a thirty mile water front which contains many large piers. Fort Lawton is a very nice place to visit and across from it at Bremerton- is the navy yard, which was -visited by the Atlantic fleet last summer. Asking you to kindly invite the peo-
pie to the Alaska, Yukon, Pacific ex-1
position through' your paper, I remain
yours truly, FRANK LOCHOW.
SI
S1PEOAL STAO?
60 STAMPS with one 18-os can of A. a P. Baking Powder at SOc a can, perfectly pure, best - made. 15 STAMPS with one lb. of Coffee at 25c a lb. 20 STAMPS with one lb. of Coffee at SOc a lb. 25 STAMPS with one lb. of Coffee at 35c a lb. 10 STAMPS with one box Macaroni or Spakhetti at 10c a box. .10 STAMPS with one bottle of Liquid Blue at 10c a bottle. 10 8TAMPS with one boa A. at P. Jelly Powder at 10c a box.
20 STAMPS with one 2 on. bottle of A. 4k P. Extracts at XSe a bottle. 40 STAMPS with on lb. of TM at 60c a lb. 45 STAMPS with one lb. of Tea at 60c a lb. 80 STAMPS with one lb. of Tea at ,70c a lb. 10 STAMPS with one bottle C 4b Co's Sauce at 12c abottla. ? 10 STAMPS with one box Pas cake Flour at 10c a box.
10 STAMPS with two cakes i
tile Soap at 6c a cake.
Deaufllcl prcrslcnrj riven away ens 18-oz can A. P. Ccatrq PovvCcr cl CO eca
it Y " IF
It a i K
Hi Groat Atlantic
Cl Pacific Yoq Co.
727 IScIn Otroet
1S13
ayWaani
3
MUST PAY THEIR TAX
New Statute Says Prosecutor "Must" Act Against Delinquents. T REASURER RECEIVES FEE
One of the last laws passed by the legislature is of special Interest to tax dodgers, scores of whom afflict this county. It is provided by the law referred to that the treasurer 'shall receive a fee of 50 cents for every delinquent he brings to book and it further provides that the prosecuting; attorney must proceed against those persons who refuse to disgorge delinquent taxes upon demand. The law no longer says "may"; it says "must.'
PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.
Smart end Sncy
For r.!en j Yczzi Eai
csl Cssst sn vttzU
eSsrteb. i csrred te!2sit3toE3
every e3tts2i
ci C2. m a ce
-srn cite cl . .
NOKSSE muss Every, garment bears .our Ironctaq
guarantee for perfect satisfaction and full value or money cheerfully refunded. Come investigate and
Ssvc C $5X0 CrSarers
tZVCZZZD
ki
The Armenians. ' ; Araaenia is a eountrr of stroar
trasta, of opposite extremes of beat and cold, light and shade, drought and
and centals many myate-
gUt is stm m doubt as te what branch of the great European family the Armenian people belong to. The philologist has asc yet classxlad their lan-
WALTON'S BOOK IS
SOLD FOR S1.085
Was a First Edition of His
Work, "The Angler."
London, March 22 A perfect copy of the first edition of Isaak Walton's Complete . Angler, brought 11.085 at
auction. . This , was the second high
est price ever paid for a copy of the work. The third highest price was recorded -at the Hacbscher sale in New York last month.
OM taw
Utile Dot Is there a cry month, mamma?
Little Dot And
God cut
tTJhcn orrcruli.c Llonoy you should, lika) when buying supplies, seek to set it where it ean with the least inconvenieace and at the least cost, to you. Inwmjadea will prove that, when yon place your application wanV as. you saw aaaartd that you are dome this. We mb moBey fa sums of from tl la fSU. oa ail. blade at ersoaal property, wlthrai laaisial.
aThis" ycji saci. tjjie and eaymaats as
(HL3UtrrCatO TC9 aV
aa be had of
etty. No red taj
borrowing: if ysavaicsst osS
'pbaaa csasja teSu
a letter or a
oar aaaat to your door.
1ML.
Third Sear. 4041 Colonial Bids,
01 V - 7
eld
anm!nert3eassTe5fcM SCWssW'
