Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 189, 16 May 1909 — Page 4
tAGE FOUIt.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AAD SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, MAY 16, 1909.
Tr.s nictond Paltefflcsi tzi Ssa-Te!cra ; t " Published and owned ejr tli PALLADIUM FHIMTDiO CO. ' Issued 7 dars eeb wmK, evening and , Sunday morning. Office Corner North ft U4 A street Uome Phons 1U1. RICHMOND. INDIANA.
Charles St. Mergaa... lUaiei W. B. FmiMim... lfw Batter. SUBSCRIPTION TBRMR In Richmond 6. per year ln advue) or 10c par week. MAIL. SCBSCROTXONa On veer. advance $ fix months, In ad vane 2.60 0m month. In advance .45 RURAL ROUTES One year. In advance ii.00 Six 'months, in advance 1.2S On month. In advance .......... .SS artilrssa) ehumd as nf ton ma daslred: both, new' and old addresses must be given. ubsciibers will please rmti with order, which should be riven for a specified tarn; cim will not b entered untU payment la received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, postoffice aa second clas mall Batter. v si The Association of I fNew York City) hssH L asamlaed aad eertllied to the elrealattea j sf this pabUoaUon. Only toe saws ox 4 etrealatloa omtalaai la Its report an J eaiajfWt 9tae AMoaUttea. A LAY SERMON. "I care not what marvelous mechanilsm Its constitution may embody; Ibaek of the laws; back of the administration; back of the system of governiment; lies the average manhood of 'our people and in the long run, we lore going to go up, or go down accordingly at the average standard of our citizenship does or does not wax in (growth and grace." Theodore Roosevelt, 1902. WHO PAY8 THE TAXES? Who pays the taxes, anyway? Here are some pertinent extracts from the Congressional Record: Mr. Borah: "May I ask the Senator from New York, who, at last, pays the large portion of the real estate tax in this country, the real estate owner or the renter?" Mr. Root: "That 1b a ques tion oi ine smiting pi taxes which can be put regarding very tax. The i ?.x is impos- , ed on the property.' It is paid by the owner of the property. Where the final imposition of the tax is, in the ultimate shifting and distribution, is an ; , entirely different question." And anyone who thinks seriously about It will see that eventually it is the man "farther down" who eventually paya. Barring the exception of the man who pays taxes on the property that he lives in. and the property which he owns which is either unimproved or without a tenant some one ha to pay and the landlord or the merchant or whoever it is . on whom the tax Is : levied shifts the burden. . Just where this shifting; and reshiftlng in its circular course ends, is not entirely a matter of speculation. It can be safely said that the landlord who makes his profit or the merchant or other business man, who Is directly or indirectly taxed always must shove it' off for some one else to pay for him. ( However incendiary such a statement may or may not be. there Is an elemental truth there which cannot be overlooked. But if there is a menace in the condition of things it is fair to say that it usually happens that no class of citizens is so cr.reless about why and how fhe money derived from taxation is levied and spent as the very people who really pay the taxes. 5 Witness the heavy assurance of the man in writing to the newspapers on some question of apparent vital importance to himself signed 'Taxpayer.' It is the small taxpayer who owns his own house and but little more who really should be the man to make the greatest amount of disturbance not the large tax payer. It is probable that the non-property owners pay at least one half the taxes. Perhaps the percentage is even more. It is not our object to discuss whether this is fair or not fair it is simply a condition, And yet when you think of it, it is this very class of citizens, who when the time comes to rote, forget their duty to themselves. Especially in municipal elections they join forces with the men who are Intent on despoiling them.' "Why? For the very same reason that they are not property owners lack of foresight, j It is a cruel law and ' perhaps not an Ideal phase of evolution, but it is truly a law which is working all the time. And what is true of municipal elections la Just as true of those who take no interest in the proceedings of congress. Think of what the tariff means. Then think of how very little care this Is to any of the non-property owners class. It is the man with the property who bestirs himself and makes himself felt. And this Is not entirely because he . has " property that he is really listened to, . Votes
count One vote Is as good as another. . Let the people who are really the taxpayers ultimately make themselves felt at the polls let them not be like driven sheep and they will have quite as much attention as any other class. Thev will have more they are In the majority. .. But on the other hand let the men who are of the class who really do pay the taxes in the end learn the saving to them In municipal honesty and in true representation, then they will have something to show for what they pay. The taxes they pay will not be the heavy graft laden things of the present time. And this is true the country over. . lit Is the unthinking man and .the lazy man who encourage the extravagance which they (and they more than any other class) pay for, and for the most part they pay heavily. Who pays the taxes is it you?
THE MARK OF THE DASTARD. No doubt it is the spectacular which arouses human interest and sympathy. Perhaps it was that which has forced us all to take an interest in the Robin the Mother Robin who so bravelv made the trip on the freight car with her young. And perhaps after the person with the yellow streak had killed that brave little bird it was still the spectacular that warmed the hearts of those who fed the small fledglings. But when the Dastard wh6m some still recognize as a man. killed the fledglings too !0h, it is not the spectacular, nor the mere sentimentality which has made vows of vengeance and indignation rise in the minds of strong men. The dog ppisoner, the drivers of spavined horses are not far removed from the kidnappers, the assaulters of children and all other forms of animals which masquerade in'the guise oi men. The Yellow Streak the whitecappers the torturers of old women and old men for their money, and those who lurk and lie in wait for their prey after the day's work is done and the electric lights shine full and strong and pitiless. All these. And it is such a one who killed the Mother Robin and the Fledglings in the freight yard. All these. Those hyenas and jackals the spawn of mankind who through some terrible perversion of the basest sort have been depraved beyond all feeling these men and others what will you do with them? Think you a fine an admonition a sentence for a term of years what do these avail? ' No. they run loose on the face "and breadth of the land poisoning all that is good and pleasant to have in life they enter in in the guise of friends and would do worse than murder had they the courage even of their villainous minds. All these! For them it were better that the brand of mutilation should be placed on them that all the world might know. And like the leper of old, let them cry from their near exile from society. ' "Unclean! the Dastard!" FLY TIME ADVICE. We have remarked that fly time is at hand, and we have tried to impress on the Butler County public the fact that fly time is a time of danger a time when special precaution ought to be taken. The time has passed when humanity can Indolently regard the honse fly as a simple annoyance. He is an annoyance, but he is a deadly peril, too the most potent .disseminator of disease that we know. Health Commissioner Evans of Chicago, in his weekly bulletin " yesierday, devoted, a considerable space to the fly. He set out a number of simple rules that will aid the public in overcoming the peril of the house fly to human health. These rules 'require . a little diligence that's all. You can carry them out if you will, but take the trouble. They are worth preserving and religiously following. Commissioner Evans says: Death lurks on the feet and wings of the innocent looking house fly, and science must come to the aid of the people to fight the disease that travels from the sick rooms to the cribs of babies on these flies. In- the war on the fly, the reports prescribe the be-t death for the insects. It gives the formula for a poison that wll kill the flies-and not endanger human life. A dram of bichromate of potash. dissolved in two ounces of water and sweetened, is the cheap and effective method of encouraging the flies to kill themselves. There are other sanitary regulations, though, that the health report 6ayS ought to be exercised.. Here are some of the ways suggested: Screen your windows and doors be fore fly time. Screen all food especially milk. Keep flies away from the sick especially those ill with contagious di seases. Kill every fly that enters the sick room. , Catch the flies with sticky fly pa pers, traps and . liquid poisons. Eliminate the breeding places of flies this is . important. The following should be done: Sprinkle chloride of lime or kero sene over contents of garbage boxes and other refuse. Clean the can daily. Clean the boxes every week.. . Sprinkle them with kerosene or chloride of lime. Pour kerosene into the drains.
Keep sewerage system in good or der. ' Clean cuspidors' every day. Keep a five per' cent, solution of carbolic acid in them all the time. ' Don't allow dirt to accumulate in corners behind doors, back of radiators or under stoves. V ' Do not "allow decaying material of any kind -to accumulate on or near your premises. Remember: No dirt Xo flies.
TWINKLES . HER VOWS. (Detroit Free Press.) 0 many were the vows she made In days gone by; I'm half afraid To now recall them here; 1 well remember once she said, "No man is good enough to wed; The best man living here I wouldn't marry. No sirree! " She didn't She just married me. "I'd never darn a husband's socks," She said, "such mental labor shocks, Nor sew his buttons on; Think you that I would stay at home To cook for him, when I would roam? Such work I frown upon. That kind of toil, 1 11 never do," She makes a splendid Irish stew. "I could not be a poor man's wife To lead the stern and simple life, I'd plunge him Into debt; I'd much prefer to single be, My father will take care of me, And all I want I get." That bonnet that she wears today She trimmed herself to save my pay. "I don't like children, not at all, I cannot bear to hear them squall And dread a dirty face; Their table manners all are bad, I'm sure I'd die, if e'er I had A child about the place;" And yet, my goodness! how she flies Upstairs the minute baby cries. (Atchison (Kan.) Globe) Next to the Sultan, the biggest joke on earth is a college magazine. A man can eat onions and still find some one who loves him, but a woman can't. . Families with babies and families without babies are so sorry for each other. There is usually something wrong with the man who changes his business two or three times a year. The manager of la successful picnic never so thoroughly covers herself with glory that there isn't room for a few chiggers. The women regard it as nothing against a man if he has buried several wives, , providing he keeps their graves looking trim. It is a lesson that one of them has to learn : If the wife doesn't look more patient five years after marriage, the husband does. There is great admiration for the woman who doesn't put her husband on her back as a heavy cross and wear him to prayer meeting. . When an engagement is announced some are sorry for her and others are sorry for him; no one seems to expect that they will be happy. Items Gathered in From Far and Near Whatever That Is. (Pittsburg Gazette-Times.) Now that he has received the Order of the Rising Sun, Dr. Eliot should sit up some night and observe what Bill Nye said "must, if. all accounts are true, indeed be one of nature's most sublime phenomena." Bryan Needs No Further Information. (Charleston News and Courier) We shall defer expressing an opinion about the President's appointment of an alleged Democrat to be Federal Judge in North Carolina until we are informed whether or not he owns an automobile. Meets With Bryan's Approval. (Los Angeles Times) It is reported that Governor John A. Johnson desires to go to the United States Senate from Minnesota. He can have it if he wants it or anything else that Minnesota has to give, for that matter. Not One of Andy Carnegirfs Troubles. (Detroit Free Press.) Former Ice King Morse, once worth $22,000,000, testified, the other day that he now has nothing. The hardest part of financiering is hanging on to it. Going To Be a General Smash-Up. (St Paul Dispatch) While President Taft is working to break up the solid South, Senator Aidrich and his fellow standpatters apparently axe paving the way for breaking up the solid North. Fire and Brimstone and Then Some. (Milwaukee Sentinel.) Former Governor Vardaman will lecture. For chautauquas desiring something hotter than Ben Tillman an opportunity now offers. Sure Way to Settle It (New. York Evening Post) Pretty soon the only way of knowing a Democrat will be to wait till Mr. Taft appoints him to office. But "He" Isn't (Boston Herald.) . Happily, the world's biggest volcano, located in Africa,, remains quiescent . , She Some people profit by the mistakes of others. He Yes; like the minister who got $10 for marrying us. . -
Erects Monument to Adam, But Balks on Plan For Shaft to Eve
Baltimore. Md., May 15. John P. Brady, contractor and builder, has had erected at his country home. Hickory grounds, near Gardenville, a -monument to the memory of Adam. It is t"ie first memorial to the first man. The monument. Which was completed a few days ago, is a plain square shaft of concrete surmounted by a sun dial. The monument bears two opposite panels, which read: "This Is the first shaft in America dedicated to Adam, the first man." In the circular form surrounding the sun dial is the quotation, "Sic transit gloria mundi." Mr. Brady said today: - "After all, there is no serious reason why there should not have been thousands of memorials to Adam. RULE OF THE SEA. Old Whaling Law Applied to a Twice Caught Cod. That etiquette is observed among the fishermen that journey to the fishing banks was discovered by an amateur angler on his first trip. The amateur hooked a codfish, bat his line parted just as the fish was above the water. Back fell the codfish, carrying with him two sinkers and the book. Twenty minutes later another angler cried out that he had captured a cod with two sinkers and a hook. The amateur went up to the angler, who appeared to be an old salt, and asked for his hook and sinkers, which had his name stamped on them. He was surprised when the old salt told him to take the fish also. According to the rules generally followed on the fishing boats, the second angler was entitled to the fish, but the hooks and sinkers should be returned to their owner, The old angler explained why he wanted to give up the fish. It seems that he had followed the sea a great part of his life. When a young man be was a whaler, and, according to whaling law, a dead whale belongs to the ship whose name appears on the harpoon that killed it. Therefore the old salt figured that the amateur owned the codfish he bad taken. New York Sun. Euler's Wonderful Memory. Leonbard Euler, who was born in 1707 and died in 1783 at St Petersburg, where he spent his life as a teacher of great power and as a prolific writer, was an instance of the genuine mathematician endowed with almost superhuman powers. He left more than 200 manuscript treatises on his favorite .subject, and the bulk of the works published by his academy between 1727 and 1783 were from his pan. In his old age he was totally blind. Then be carried in his memory a table of the first six powers of the "series of natural numbers up to 100." It is related that on one occasion two of Euler's students attempted to calculate a converging series. As they advanced they found they disagreed in the result by a unit in the fifteenth figure. The question was referred to Euler, who decided to make the calcnlation. He did this mentally, and his result was found to be correct New York Tribune. The Codmoppe. Herrings are still eaten as much as in the days when Yarmouth had to send a hundred yearly to the king, baked in four and twenty pasties. But where is the codmoppe gone, and what was it like when kings dined off it in Lent? "Codmoppe sauce Hollandaise" would sound most intoning a Savoy menu. More original still would be the "rostid perpes" of a Henry V. banquet, which was the "sea swine", of the unrefined Saxon, the "porco marino" of the mediaeval ecclesiast. A malster coke gives an early receipt for "puddyng of purpasse." another teaches how to "sake porpyesse and seele," another how to "undertraunche that purpos." From which It may be seen th:tt enterprise extended also to the spelling of the porpoise. London ChromVle. Candymakers' Tricks. An Atchison man went into a candy factory. He was surprised to see one of the candymakers reach with bis bare band into a pot of boiling candy. He brought out a handful of the boiling fluid. He was testing its consistency. He first put his hand in a pail of water. After he had jerked out his hand he put it back Jn the water. The Atchison man tried the same' thing and did it without getting burned. Atchison Globe. Another Boring Question "I say. pa. is a man from Poland called a Pole?" "Yes. my son." "Then, pa. why isn't a man from Holland called a Hole?" Comic Cuts. Insult Added Big Man (with a grouch) Will you be so kind as to get off my feet? Little Man (with a bundle) IH try. sir. Is it much of a walk? Cleveland Leader. "What does your husband like for his breakfast?" "Anything I ha vent got in the house. Cleveland Leader.
Taft Uses Vice President to Say "Welcome to Our Midst"
Washington, May 35.-President Taft has found a job for Vice President Sherman, and he is now our "welcome to our fair city" orator. And it keeps him on the jump. . T - r It is a source of gratification to him. too. because it permits him to exercise a new two gallon hat, a frock coat and some steel gray striped trousers... But he bought these clothes under protest His idea was that.a gray cutaway was good enough in which to preside over the senate, but he was persuaded oth
Some of us may blame him for the misfortunes which we meet in this world but few of us wish that we had not been brought here. It was kind of Adam to come first. "It has made me feel sad to see every public committee or board leave Its names on the public buildings of the city. It it is so easy to get one's name graven in stone, I thought it was high time Adam had something to show for having been here. He had a pretty hard time of it. He was something of a hero, after all. Just think of it to be here on this big earth not a soul until Eve came, and then" Here Mr. Brady interrupted the
flow of eloquence to say that he was cot going to back any movement to erect a monument to Eve. r ffiVAL " RED TAPE " The ftaault of Having Neither Coffins Nor Graves' In Stock. A case once occurred, which Is vouchsafed for by naral officers who were present and who tell of it as a joke, showing the absurdities to which red tape can go. About twenty years ago a certain ship was in a foreign port One of the men was taken sick and on the recommendation of the surgeon was sent to a hospital on shore. The man finally died, and It became necessary to bury him. The simple and straightforward method would have been to call in an undertaker and have him arrange for a decent casket and a lot in the cemetery. This would be the usual procedure with a business man or ordinary citizen. The regime of economy aud reform. boweTer. would not permit of so simple a course. What actually occurred was this: The surgeon made a requisition on the paymaster for one colfin. Naturally be did not have one in stock and therefore it was forwared to the fleet paymaster, who also, not being in the undertaking business, bad no coffins on band. Then the admiral directed the fleet paymaster to purchase one coffin after obtaining prices from six reputable dealers. The same course had to be followed In securing the grave. The surgeon made requisition on the paymaster for one grave. Strange as it may seem, the paymaster had no graves in stock. Neither had the fleet paymaster. Consequently the commander in chief directed the fleet paymaster to procure bids from six reliable dealers in graves and parchase one from the lowest responsible bidder. All this, of coarse. Is a screaming farce, but It Is tbe horrible example to show what comes when common sense and experience are set aside to give room for the play of amateur and academic fancy. Engineering. KIDNAPING VOTERS. Once a Regular Feature of Political Warfare In England. In England a generation or two ago kidnaping was a regnlarly recognized feature of political warfare. On tbe eve of an election especially men of Influence on either side would mysteriously vanish to reappear later with strange tales of forcible seizures, mad races across country in post chaises driven by yelling postilions, followed by longer or shorter terms - of gilded imprisonment in great mansions, where they were wined and dined in sumptuous style and treated right royally In every way, only their liberty being denied them. Quite bumble voters, too. were forcibly abducted, but these did not always fare quite so well. Thus one victim made complaint before a magistrate that he had been decoyed from his house by a ruse and kept shut up in a coal hole for three days. Wholesale kidnaping of voters In batches, too. was not unknown, the process being rendered easier by the custom of candidates paying the traveling expenses of their electors to and from the polling places. For instance, at a certain Newcastle election a whole shipload of freemen of the borough, dispatched from London by sea. were taken by the captainwho had been heavily bribed to Ostend and there left stranded. During tbe same contest, too. and under similar circumstances a number of Berwick electors who happened to reside in London were dumped down in Norway, and a group of thirty Ipswich voters found themselves on the day of tbe poll cooling their heels upon the quay ' at Rotterdam. Pearson's Weekly. Pioneer Days In Missouri. In 1851 there was In Hnntsville a man who pulled teeth for 25 cents and a photographer who made dagaerrotypes at $1.50 each. The first was called "doctor" and the second "professor." They moved in tbe highest circles, as being the representatives of tho sciences and arts. With deer, birds and all manner of game in the woods and fine fish in the streams so cheap that the poorest larders were stocked with It the grocers did a big business in mackerel, herring sod sardines. The latter were real dainties, because the better food was so plentiful tbe pioneers got tired of it Macon Republican. . .. . . . -. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY. erwise. Now he appears in "full rgailia, but just long enough to turn the gavel over to a senator and depart on a speech making tour. His latest appearance was as the welcome hand to the National Feder ation of Art He also turned the keys of the city over to the Daughters of the American Revolution. The burial of Major L'Enfante took the vice president on the rostrum again, and at John Barrett's dinner to peace and all of South America,' Mr. Sherman made a great bit. '
W COMPROMISED. A Story John B. Gough Told In His Temperance Losturos. John B. Gough. tho teaaporance lecturer, was noted as a story teller, and his stcries were always well suited to bis argument W. A. Mowry In bis "Recollections of a Now England Educator recalls one of them: Compromise. eomncoaaJse! What does compromise mean? I wUl tell you. A colored mas met a friend one daj and said: ' "Sambo, Sambo, do you know dat toder night 1 was sorely tempted) You know I used to steal. Well, since I J'lned de church 1 stopped stealing, but you know Mr. Jonslng's shoo store) Well, todcr night 1 was In dat shoe store, and 1 looked on de shelf and J see a pair of boots, jes dt nicest pair of boots J re' my size. No. 14. MDere was de debit and be aay. Take 'em. take 'em.' Den de Lord aay. 'Let 'em alone; dat's stoalta. But t wanted dem boots; mine all out at de bottom and sides. Dere was de debil and me, and we both say. Take 'em.' But de Lord say, 'Don't you take 'em; dat's stealin'.' Now. dere was a clear majority of two against one. "Jes' den Mr. Jonsing he teeb dtstore. and be leeb me all alone. . De: de debil say. Take 'em quick and ske daddle. I could take dem boots aud chuck 'em under my coat and go right away an Mr. Jonsing would neber know nottin about it But. bress de Lord. I 'stood de temptation! 1 com promised and took a pair of shoes instead."
QUEENSB0R0 BRIDGE. The Greatest Structure of Its Kind In the World. Measured by the combined length and capacity of its five main spans, tbe Queensboro bridge, across the East river from Fifty-ninth street New York, to Ravenswood. Queens, is the greatest bridge in the world. Including approaches, its total length is 8.000 feet width SG feet and greatest height over 300 feet above tbe water. It crosses from shore to shore, 135 feet above the river, with three enormous spans of 1,182 feet 630 feet and 084 feet the middle one reaching across the full width of Blackwell's Island. Besides these fhere are two more groat "anchor" spans, one at each end, wholly over dry land, with a length of 3,724 feet for the five, which together contain over 105.000.000 pounds of steel. No other spans in this country, except suspension bridges, approach the longest of these, and tbe only trussed span In tbe world which exceeds it is tbe Forth bridge, which, although 1.710 feet long, has a capacity for only two railroad tracks, lest than one-third of this. There are two decks, tbe lower carrying a wide driveway and four electric car tracks and the upper one two sidewalks and two elevated? T&llroad traeks and having in all sa estimsted capacity of 200,000,000 car passengers and millions of vehicles and pedestrians annually. - ft cost over $20,000,000. Exchange. "Gentlemen of tbo jury, asked the clerk of tbo court "bare you agreed upon a verdict?" "We have.- replied tbo foreman. "The verdict of tho jury is that tho lawyers have mixed this case tip so that we don't know anything at all about it" Exchange. Kosob: -Order Cold Medal Flour next time. . Ftucm.
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