Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 265, 1 August 1909 — Page 8
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TOOTLE SOUP TOE DELIGHT OF HOST a claw of a turtle through it and add a little red pepper and a slice of lemon. TO PUT HGtlDURAS 00 AfIRM BASIS Real Object of United States' Interest in Turbulent Republic. RESPONSIBILITY IS PLAIN It's an art to make the stuff. The flavor can't be got In 10 minutes. It's like a rose. -" Takes time to - blossom and smell and taste good. That's the reason few people make good soup. They may have the turtle, but they don't take the time to get the right ingredients and to get all the things properly combined. I can tell when it's made right by the aroma itself. Enthusiastic Man Tries to Describe It But Words Failed Him. "Perhaps it can't - be helped, he make: but once it's made um say, come in and have a bowl for yourself.'
ZKJEBLIN CALLED OFFICERS SNOBS Educational Sensationalist Casts Mud at the American Service. IN CHAUTAUQUA ADDRESS
AMERICAN GOVERNMENT WOULD CONCENTRATE THE DEBTS OF CENTRAL AMERICA COUNTRY IN YANKEE HANDS. -
SEASON HEARING A CLOSE AN AUTHORITY ON THE SUBJECT 8AY8 FEW PEOPLE, EVEN WITH INGREDIENTS, CAN MAKE THE SOUP QOOD. Richmond epicures are deploring the fact that it will soon be time for them to witness, with tearful eyes, the passing of turtle soup not to reappear again until next season. Mr. Turtle came with no blare of trumpets or shoutings of the populace, but he Is here as any epicure will tell you or any white-aproned chef in a Richmond cafe as he casts an affectionate glance at a steaming kettle and whiffs a dreamy fragrance. That's the turtle offering up his soul for your delecation. Just outside the door of a cafe Saturday night stood a high box, screened at the top and 'inside moved a half dozen sluggiBh, hard-shelled turtles, awaiting the signal of the soup-ladel. Nearby stood a white-aproned dispenser of foaming steins. A reporter be- ' gan to talk and naturally the theme was soup and the creature that gives It the piquancy of all that's delicious and appetizing. Can't Describe Real Thing. Quoth the waiter: "A fellow, to look at that bunch of turtles, would sniff his nose and say, 'I wouldn't eat that old moss-backed thing, don't like the looks of if That's the fellow who never tasted real turtle soup. Of course there - are' all varieties. Some soup that goes by the name of turtle never came within four miles of one. It's' made of veal and seasoned up with lemon and the chopped yellows ot eggs. A self-respecting turtle wouldn't even say howdy' to it. That's one kind of stuff. But the real thing is different. It's got the old boy swimming around in it and the taste is well it's made, of all the vegetables and all the sweetness and all the sunshine and all the flavors that have been invented since Adam saw the first snapper in the Garden of Eden. I can't describe it. Who can? It romps with the palate and plays tag with the appetite. It's a morning sunburst, a garden of flowers and a hallelujah chorus. ; I read that somewhere but I won't tell .the turtle or hell get welled on himself. - " Cant Remember Makings. ' " "Just now we don't have much trouble in getting lots of them. They come out of their holes to sun themselves and then we can get a shot at them or bag 'em alive. A piece of red flannel on a hook will often do the business. After we get them in a box or barrel the next job is to fatten 'em up for soup. A turtle is a kind of a sponge. It absorbs for weeks. Then we kill it, Quarter the meat and add the ingoedients. I can't remember all of them and you wouldn't believe me if I gave the list. Let me tell you, however, that real soup has about a hundred choice selections and takes a good day to make. The more it simmers, the better. We don't just drag
"Wanted COO Men
Fcr Automobile . .........
rectory" ThMsxwell-Brlscoe Meter Co Is just completing sn addition to Its New Castle, Ind., plant that will add 180,000 sq. feet of floor space to its manufacturing department. The company requires the servic- ' es of 800 men to work In this new' addition. There sre excellent openings ' for good mechanics: Toolmakers, Die Sinkers, Sheet Metal Workers, Blacksmiths, Painters, Benchmen and Machine Operators. This plant also presents sn excellent opportunity for men with some factory experience to come In ss machine operators and handy men and eventually learn the Automobile trade. Permanent employment Is assured and rapid advancement to those who make good. ' ..New Castle presents some very good attractions, the Company maintains a band of thirty pieces, a bass ball team; minstrel troupe, a publie park with dancing pavilion and . other amusements, . a gymnasium and a club room -, for the benefit of Its em-. ployes, and Is presently con- ' sldsrlng the erection of a trade school in which to train mechanics. Msn entering the employ of this Company are given every chance to advance and eventually earn the, highest wages paid In the State for this class of work. Now Castle is a delightful r' little home city and presents - desirable facilities for men . with families to buy or build their own homes. - If you t sre Interested, you will please address giving your age, experience, wsges expected to start, The Employment Bureau, . MaxwellBriscoe Motor Cow, New Castle, Ind.
PROFESSOR DECLARES ANNAPOLIS AND WEST POINT GRADUATES ARE TAUGHT TO THINK 8ELVE8 SUPERIOR.
Chautauqua ,N. Y., July 31.-Snobs
are the annual product of West Point and Annapolis, according to ex-Professor Charles Zueblin, the former university of Chicago sociologist, who
is now in charge of a $3,OO0,0UO settlement ln Boston. Professor Zueblin
expressed himself on the work1, done by the government army and navy schools in an address on "Democratic
Culture at Chautauqua assembly.
"We are turning out of West Point
and Annapolis a generation of snobs,"
said Dr. Zueblin emphatically. "These young soldiers are brought up to think
themselves better than their fellows.
Simply because they wear the garb of , the soldier or sailor they consider
themselves on a different plane from their fellow Americana
"These snobish young warriors to be
always remind me of an incident famous in German military annala A Ger
man general, long retired, was at a
big military function, and had donned
his old uniform. A sprightly young
petty officer whose only military had
been in the training school and on the
ballroom floor, thought he saw a
chance to get off a clever quip before
the ladies. So he praiced up txx the
general and said: 'Why, general, your uniform smells fearfully of camphor.'
"The grizzled old warrior turned on
this military product of the new gene
ration. 'You don't know that smell,
young man, he said; 'That's not camphor; it's powder.' The same thing could be said about our West Point-
era.... . , i . , ,
Army life Is tremendously degenera
ting in its influence, the professor fur
ther asserted.
"Perhays it can't be helped," he
sand; "but there never is a barracks without its trail of wasted womanhood
and never does a vessel put Into port without orgies that make us hang our
heads with shame. The life is abnor
mal, and it seems an inevitable accompaniment of our present military conditions.
"Smoke over a city indicates bad
business management," added Dr. Zueblin. "A smoke nuisance is a disgrace to a city. Instead of symbolizing prosperity, it marks that city as a city where waste and careless management
are countenanced." "
Had Forty Hemes. Tollon, the painter, was a. unique
personage even among the odd charac
ters ef Paris. While he was essentially a behemian, there were times when even his patience v taxed to the utmost, and to obvia. te necessity of meeting unwelcome people he
conceived the idea of multiplying his
lodging places. At the time of his death he owned no less than forty homes, all in apartment houses, situated in all the out of the way corners of Paris, plainly furnished and with
just enough accommodation for him
self. He changed from one to the other all the time in order to escape Importunate acquaintances and to take refuge from his friends. It was in order to throw them all off the scent that he engaged rooms all over the
city. He finally died in the Hue de Dunkerque, where he had as many as
three different apartments, all within
a stone's throw of one another.
The Stone Houses of Easter Island. The remarkable stone houses of Easter island are built against a terrace of earth er rock, which in some cases forms the back wall of the dwelling. They are built of small slabs of stratified basaltic rock piled together without cement. No regularity of plan is shown in the construction of a majority of them. The average measurement is as follows: Height from floor to ceiling, 4 feet 6 inches; thickness of walls, 4 feet to 10 inches; width of rooms, 4 feet 6 inches; length of rooms, 12 feet 9 inches; average size of doorways height, 20 inches; width, 19 inches.
8keptical. "1 kind of agree with the folks who say that stery about George Washington aud the Cherry tree is a myth." said Farmer Oorntossel after a thoughtful silence. "For what reason?" Inquired his wife. "Well, human nature Is party much the same In all generations, and If 1 had a boy who picked up an ax as' voluntarily went out to chop wood 1 wouldn't chide him. Td hand him a medal." Washington Star. , - Practical. "X send you 10,000 kisses, he wrote. "Bah!" she exclaimed, tossing bis letter : aside. "Why doesn't he corns and look over bis terminal facilities In person I" Chicago Record-Herald.
stoat heart may be rutaecTta for-
tune, bat not Id spirit. Victor Hgo.
Washington, July 31. With so many contradictory reports in circulation as to the purposes of the United' States government in Central America the real object of the state department is obscured. It may be stated flatly that the Taft administration desires to establish no protectorates for the sake of
extending American influence. The
difficulties which the president has experienced in keeping "the lid on" in the Philippines, Cuba and Panama hare convinced him that the government has enough irons in the Am. Nevertheless the continuance of turbulent conditions in certain Central American republics, notably Guatemala, Nicaraugua and Honduras, imposes a responsibility on the Washington government which it can not evade, nor does it wish to do so. It is hoped here however that the restles condition due to long affiliation with the insurrection habit may be cured without recourse ot protectorates or diplomatic Intervention. . Greatest Danger. The greatest danger to the interests of the United States in Central Amerca lingers in the possible coercion of delinquent states by European creditor powers. Therefore the state department is favoring every opportunity that arises for the concentration of obligations of these states in American hands. That done, the United State3 will not only have the moral argument
of its role as "policeman of the West
ern Hemisphere," but also a distinct commercial reason for any representations it may make to put an end to petty quarreling and chronic revolution. In such a course the government has the support of the progresive Latin American states, which feel that the revolutionary republics are a disgrace to the name Latin America. It also has the support of powers like Great Brit
ain, Germany, France and Italy, whose
subjects hold Central American bonds, These powers are being constantly im
portuned to take strong measures to
matte lue aeiiiuiuog suixes pay up. They dislike to act by force of arms
because punitive expeditions are never
popular in an international way and offer possibilities of complications with other powers especially the United States, which is so sensitive about the Monroe Doctrine. The negotiations for the refunding of the Honduran' external indebtedness by an American syndicate are proceeding satisfactorily. The British syndicate which had planned the refunding
of the debt and had entered into an
agreement to that end through the
British minister to Honduras is dis
posed it is understood, to stand aside
and let the United1 States have the deal. With the refunding accomplished the United States will have good reason to protest against the continuance
of iternal warfare In Honduras or the
making of war on that country by any
of its neighbors save for good cause.
Refunding the Debt. The refunding of the Costa Rican
debt reported to have been accomplish
ed through the National City Bank of
New York, is another, step in the same direction. Already the United States
has exercised a compelling influence
for good order in Costa Rica by firmly intimating that no scenes of partisan disodrer would be tolerated in close proximity to the canal zone in Panama which adjoins Costa Rica on, the south.
The attitude of President Zelayas of
Nicaraugua in encountering Senor Ji-
mlnez, an anti-foreign candidate for president of Costa Rica, has caused some apprehension here. The financing of the debts of Honduras and Costa Rica by American bankers will tend to isolate the influence of President
Zelaya's strong influence over these
states. . "'
SWIFT FAST ENOUGH Machine Was Faster and Now
Driver and Two Companions Are in Hospital.
MAY
FBbvE
FATALITIES
(American Nws Service) Lake Geneva, Wis., July 31 Philip
Swift, son of Edward Swift, the Chicago packer, is today suffering from probably fatal injuries, as the result
of an automobile accident last evening. The young man was accompanied by
Mason and Swing Starring, both of whom are seriously Injured.
The party left the Swift country
home for the Lake Geneva club. Young
Swift was at the wheel and sent the
car along at a sixty mile clip. It skidded Into a telegraph pole.- Swift was
pinned under -the -wreck, one leg and an arm were fractured and -he suffered Internal Injuries. The Starring brothers were thrown violently to the ground. v. v. . .. The attendants of the adjoining places quickly turned a spring wagon into, an ambulance and brought Swift,
who was unconscious, and Swing Starring, bleeding almost to exhaus
tion, to town. .
Nave AprBvedl Quid 'llfSBB ' ZZ?e ohd QoUo
IVc havo had throe sales of these choirs and each tlmo ttioy havo Bono In less than two days. If you wpnt one do not wait until Tuooday or IVodnesday, for thoy will not last that lona and yod will bo disappointed acaln.
Mememlbeir Wfe Are BMimg qgBoB PfBggo on TiruinhQ, w1t aceo, Naimdl IBqqg9 Nannmocha, IPofcEh FuiriniBltuiir, (Boeud IKgg auddlLoweo BViloweirQ.
ALLIED A
Elate Ot?.
THE STORE THATAIPPREGTEGVOQJRT
Don Carlos Hated in Venice; He Started War on Gondolier
Venice, July 31. Though Don Car
los has very many sincere mourners in Venice, where he lived so long and where his place on the grand canal is now draped in black, there is one
class of Inhabitants which has no af
fection for his memory.
These are the gondoliers, who con
sider him, rightly or wrongly, the source of all their growing trobules.
They do not take off their slouch hats pr Tarn o' Shanters as they pass
the draped palace in gondolas, nor can
they be heard saying anything agree
able 'about the man who first introduced the naptha launch in the lagoons of Venice.
For a number of years Don Carlos
spent many hours of each day in a sumptuous gonddla propelled by two gorgeously attired domestics of his
own household. Then he grew tired
of his rather slow means of getting about and suddenly appeared, in a brand new naptha launch. Later on he changed this for an electric motor
boat. - This was an infringement on
the rights of the gondoliers' organiza
tion, which has been long recognized by the municipality of Venice, but on account of the royal rank of the Pretender they were unable to gain redress.
Since that time launches of all de
scriptions are growing more and more common on the canals and lagoons.
Even the hotels have usually two or
three in front of their doors, and it is
Easily Changed. -Said the magistrate to the officer: "But . this man . doesn't correspond to the description. He hss no deep scar on his forehead." r "Wen," replied the officer, "that can be easily supplied, and. besides. I think I am entitled to at least a portion of the $500 reward for bringing him here. It was no easy Job. Fliegende Blatter. ..
evident that the picturesque gondola, which was once one of the main attractions to a foreigner, is bound to disappear before many years. Especially the nervous American millionaire, accustomed to swift getting about, is expected to give up the habit of taking a gondola by the day and rent a motor boat instead. Thus the unfortunate gondoliers see a disastrous diminution of their takings. They have lately tried a campaign of opposition, amounting occasionally to forceful intervention, but the tide of modern progress is too much. for them. The Initiative set by Don Carlos, they bitterly declare, has taken from them gradually their very livelihood.
Razor (tesrssteed) ' Strop Shaving Soap
1M
The only razor with a guarantee including strop and shaving soap, sold for $1.00.
Clem Thisllelhwcite Phone 1445 415 N. 8th St
FOR OALC
Satan tract f las i
city astatic
t wlo? raarrvav a sen I 1 as a.Wcatcatt CimtU
$15 V4S3.
NO KXCSZ
PALLADIUM WANT AOS. PAY.
y B 0 K The Highest Grade of concentrated feed on the market. . . . . ARB TOUR FEED BILLS HIGH? For remedy call IUchncnd Feed Stcrc,
Phone 2196.
11-13 N. 9th
Tana (D)xfl(D)i?(fl Sailfe
mie WeeEs, Aung. 2 to Aung. 7 Ms1I tee WceEs
Sl-
Any Ladies Tan Oxfords in our store, dark or light color, heavy or light. Hand sewed soles, just ' the Shoes for warm weather. $330 Tan Pumps ......... ......$1.98 $3X0 Tan Pumps $138 $4.00 Wickert & Gardner Tan Oxfords $138 Dark Tan Oxfords,. Hand turnsoles $138 $150 Dark Tan Pumps with Champagne Trim $138
$1.83
721 e3 C7I tZzln CL
