Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 22, 29 November 1909 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE RICH3IOXD PAIXAJDIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, 3IOXDAY, XOVE3IBER 29, 1909, DEEDS, NOT WORDS,

FORMER

OVRtlOR

III All ACCIDENT

Andrew L. Harris and Wife, of Eaton, Painfully injured Here, Sunday.

MACHINE STRUCK BY A CAR

A3 THE FORMER CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF OHIO WAS TRYING TO DODGE A BUGGY ON MAIN STREET RETURN HOME.

Former Governor Andrew L. Harris, of Ohio, and his wife, while riding in their automobile yesterday afternoon, collided with a street car at Twentyfirst and Main streets, and received painful, but not serious Injuries. His Injuries Included a small scalp wound on the left side; his left ear cut, requiring two stitches to close the wound, and bruises about the body. Mrs. Harris suffered a sprained arm and body bruises. Both were able to take an Interurban car for their homo near Eaton, soon after the accident. Ex-Governor Harris, who was driving the runabout, stated that as he was going north on South Twenty-first street, he met a buggy going west on Main street, and it was necessary for him to turn to the west in order to avoid a collision. He was not familiar with the fact that the street cars were operating on the south side track due to the repairs under progress on the north side track, and gave littlj thought of a street car accident. Turned Onto Track. When he turned on to the south track the machine was struck from the rear by a city street car, with sufficient force to damage the machine considerably and throw both of its occupants to the ground. The car was stopped almost immediately after the collision. Mr. and Mrs. Harris were removed to a nearby residence and the city ambulance and three physicians were called. Mr. Harris refused to use the ambulance, saying that neither his nor his wife's injuries were of such a nature as to necessitate their going to the hospital. Mr. Harris placed no blame on the street car company employee, saying that he was as much to blame as any one else. Mr. Harris was elected to the office of lieutenant governor during the administration of Governor Patterson, and upon the latter's death, assumed the reins of the governorship. Ho was defeated for re-election by Judson Harmon, the present incumbent.

TO OPERATE ON

HIM

Dr. S. R. Lyons, pastor of Iteid Memorial church, who several weeks ago was thrown from his wheel on North A street, near Tenth street, by striking a rope stretched across the street, and sustaining a broken left collar bone an'd other injuries, will have to submit to an operation, because the collar bone has not healed properly. The operation will consist of wiring the ends of the bones together and will necessitate him remaining in one position for about two weeks. The operation, while delicate, is not considered a dangerous one.

GRIEVED TO DEATH

(American News Service) Springfield, Mass., Nov. 29. Grieving because of the death of his father in China, one of the Chinese students who arrived in this city two weeks ago was today adjudged insane and committed to the Northampton asylum. The young student was one of a party of 51 youths sent here by the Chinese government to study in American schools.

Clearly Unprejudiced. The attorney for the prosecution was examining the talesman with the bushy whiskers. "Mr. Skiles," he said, "you say you have read about this case. Have yon formed or expressed any opinion concerning it?" "No, sir, responded the possible Juror. "I never believe nothin' I see In the newspapers." Chicago Tribune.

Richmond People Have Absolute Proof of Deeds at Home. It's not words but deeds that prove true merit. The deeds of Doan's Kidney Pills, For Richmond kidney sufferers. Have made their local reputation. Proof lies in the testimony of Richmond people who have been cured to fctay cured. Renjainin F. Lunsford, N. E. Cor. Twentieth & South B Streets, Richmond, Ind., says: "The statement I gave for publication in 1906 endorsing Doan's Kidney Pills told of my experience with this remedy and at this time I am glad to confirm what I then said. I had been bothered by kidney trouble off and on for at least fifteen years and whenever I caught cold my back became so lame and painful that I could hardly get around. At times the flow of the kidney secretions was profuse then again scant and distressing. Doan's Kidney Pills, procured al A. G. L,uken & Co.'s drug store, relieved these annoyances and once or twice since, when I have taken the remedy, it has promptly relieved me." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other.

MAKE TRIPLE PROBE

Three Investigations to Made at Once of the Cherry Disaster.

Be

MINES COMMITTEE PLANS

Chicago, Nov. 29. A triple investigation of the Cherry mine disaster will be conducted at one time, according to plans completed by the state mine in

vestigating committee, state mine in-

spectors and Coroney at Cherry. To facilitate the calling of witnesses, members of the state committee which was organized here Friday, will go to Springfield to confer with the mine inspectors and then begin sessions at Cherry. Although the three investigations will be conducted at the same time, separate stenographic records will be kept. After the examination of witnesses at Cherry, where it is expected that nearly every one In the town will be called, the state committee will resume session in this city.

Walter's Buckwheat Flour made from celebrated Pennsylvania Buckwheat. The kind your grocer likes to sell.

GET SECRET ORDERS

(American News Service) San Francisco, Nov. 29. Secret orders have been received at the army quartermaster's office in this city to immediately prepare the transports Jx)gan, Buford and Cook for service. This is believed to have to do with the Nicaraguan tanglo. The work eL preparation was rushed today. The Logan, scheduled to sail for Manila on Dec. Gth, is held here, the sailing order being cancelled The gunboat Princeton, at Puget Sound, has been ordered here for ammunition and stores. She will go .o Corinto. There are 3.000 available troops in San Francisco.

EARNED GOOD MONEY

(American News Service) Chicago, Nov. 29 Eight hundred and fifty students of the University of Chicago who labored afternoons and evenings last year to help pay their expenses while in the university, earned an aggregate sum of $62,286.02. This report is based on the statistics of the employment bureau of the Baptist school. Here are a few of the things done by the seekers after knowledge: Waited tables; tended furnaces; washed dishes and scrubbed kitchen floors; wheeled baby carriages and invalid chairs; served as ushers in theaters; acted as artificial applause artists in theaters; peddled bills; worked as salesmen.

Clear Minds Have Purposes. Muddy Minds-wishes.

TOM makes clear minds.

"There's a Reason

99

Postum Cereal Company. Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich.

Mlfaill Display fl GMsttnw IFmps

THERE IS A REASON WHY BOSTON STORE FURS have held first place in south eastern Indiana for the past fifteen years. We own every piece of fur in the store. We risk our judgment and money early in the year, at a time when it is possible to get the choice of skins and labor at a time of the year when prices arc at their very lowest. IT IS NOT SO WITH MOST STORES. A great many stores, in fact the majority, have not a dollar invested in furs; have all their furs consigned by manufacturers who make that a business. What is the result? Furs are shipped from place to place, consequently can not be choice and fresh, necessarily the prices are about double when compared with goods bought as we buy them. We Invite All Buyers of Christmas Furs To Make Comparisons

FUR COATS Near Seal, Poney Skin, Mink. Coney. Near Seals $35.00 to S90.00 Poney Skin $50.00 Mink ....$40.00 Coney .' $25.00

FUR SETS Muff and Neck Piece Coney, River Mink, Oppossum. Nat. Squirrel, Blended Squirrel, Lynx, Isabella Fox, Sable Fox, Blue Fox, Sets from $3.00 to $80.00. We can supply every want.

Muffs All Kinds Both Pilow and Rug style, $1.75 to $35.C0 each. Special Bargains, $5.00, $7.50, $10.00. $12.50.

H. C. HASEMEIER CO.

Neck Pieces All Kinds Every shape is shown, 98c to $45.00 each. Endless variety with head and tail trimming, special values at $3.00, $4.50, $5.00, $7.50, $10.00.

H. C. HASEMEIER CO.

Children's and Infants Furs Shown In all furs used for children, $2.50, $3.50, $5.00, $6.00, $7.50 a set. Muff and Neck-piece. We pay special attention to children's furs.

H. C. HASEMEIER CO.

Industrial Meliorism is Needed

It Is Essential to Every City And It Is Pointed Out That Education Must Show Worth, of Factory Work.

Chicago, Nov. 29. G. Edward Fuller, in an article in the Tribune, says: The claim of meliorism is not that life is good or bad, but that it can be made worth living; industrialism chooses from the families, races, classes, casters, and cults the strongest persons, making them friends and exercising them in consideration for one another. This constitutes dependable selection and seems now to be the social line of least resistance, since eugenics, as well as natural selection, appear to lack efficient adaptability to present emergencies. In the effort to effect and maintain national equipoise do we not need less individualism and more amalgamation of the fit more team work? If so, then the sooner advanced industrial meliorism is gracefully accepted as a blending and binding force the better for mankind at large. It is either a new industrialism or the old militarism, the softer arts, cults the easy things having failed to bring honorable tranquillity. Shy at Work and Trade. Strange that we have learned to regard industrialism with pride but shy at reference to "work" and "trade." Art and culture we conjure with, like fakers in front of a side show, al though we draw our food and clothes from work and trade; while past history indicates no future prospect of the solid furnishing forth of a worthy national life with lack of broad and wholesome respect for the wage earners. The course of the nations is strewn with wrecks of culture, and no dominating art exists today nothing but fragments. There never will be enduring art and culture until the people of a nation grow up to them as a whole, and through adequate vocational pride and skill, perhaps, but certainly not through parasitism or partial views. Japan has shown us. Germany is teaching us, and our disjointed national educational system is in sore need of proper articulation with a growing, a vitalizing industrialism based upon meliorism in the factory, the warehouse, and the store, but detached from tricky and sordid forms of mere commercialism. Detached From Trickery. It is the hope of scientific meliorism that mankind has reached an epoch of betterment by a controlling, conscious evolution acting with natural evolution, and it is believed that only through enlightened industrialism shall we "find that state of things in which it should be impossible for any one to be depraved or poor." Industrial education which will imbue city bred young men with, due respect, even reverence, for the hard wrung secrets of nature that are practical to the artisan and dietitian is the need of the hour and century, when scientific and deadly competition with at least two great empires is to be met in battle royal for business and national life worth living. Iet there be no coddling delusions in happy homes about this world fact, and let it be seriously felt that it is none too well nor too soon that a city like Chicago has adopted industrial education as a part of her public school system and is awakening to the auxiliary value of her libraries and museums in school work. There are plenty of evils in the factories to be overcome, which, however, belong to sociology and human nature more than they do to industrialism, per se; but the trend of factory, development is steadily, uplifting

to the individual, the state, and the race all the races in the "melting pot" of Americanism. Changes Already Seen. Any close observer of factory conditions in any large American city knows that betterment has taken place steadily. Factory folks have improved; they have prospered and they have learned to like their work; they are healthier, they dress better. . In factory life now there is a greater ratio of intelligence and a considerably larger percentage of young folk from the higher school grades the kind qualified to understand the joy of occupation and who are competent to rebuke cynics and croakers among the superficial, frenzied and untrained thinkers. Trade building is as reputable as building houses or writing books, and Chicago or New York can as well be outfitter and purveyor to the world as they now are to the middle west and east, but this -means a louder call to the factories and salesrooms for our young men with education, ambition and courage. There is no altruism in trade building, and mere optimism is not immune, but scientific meliorism stands the wear and tear, while a healthy industrialism offers the safest and sanest means in the workshop, laboratory and marts of trade of wearing away the barriers between the races and between the classes.

THE EAGLE'S EYE.

For an early breakfast, take home Mrs. Austin's pancake flour. Ready in a minute.

It Sounded Hopeful. A young man who was not particu

larly entertaining was monopolizing ! the attention of a pretty debutante

with a lot of uninteresting conversation. "Now, my brother," he. remarked in the course of a dissertation on bis family, "is just the opposite of me in every respect. Do you know my brother?" "No," the debutante replied demurely, "but I should like to." Lippin-cott's.

The Only Way. "Is there any method that will enable a man to understand a woman?" queried the innocent youth. "The only way to understand a woman," replied the home grown philosopher, "is not to try. Under these circumstances she will reveal herself sooner or later." Chicago News.

No Chance of That. The beggar accepted gratefully a nickel from the professional humorist. "Thank you, sir," he said, bis voice vibrant with deep feeling. "Oh, thank you, sir, and may you live to be as old as your jokes!! Washington Post

Of Course. Reporter Professor, what languagedo. you suppose the people nearest thtf north pole speak? The Professor What a question: Polish, of course. Chicago Tribune.

NOTICE F. O. E. There will be an election of Three Trustees and other officers on Wednesday night, Dec. 1st. 1909. FRANK HARTZLER, Sec'y. Franklin Moore, Worthy President. 27-5t

rILilSf. c?ncera?. rou. read caierallys Dr. CaKrweU s Syrop Pepsin Is positively raaranceea to cure ndatestkm.coBstinatiM.siek hex.

acne, offensive breath, malaria n disease artatnar from itanx i,.

A Screen That Protects It Against a Too Brilliant Light. The eagle that stares proudly at the sun has now been found to be no figment of tradition. M. de Chardonnet, in a paper communicated to the French Physical society, has shown that the eagle's eye has a special apparatus adapted to this feat, though it seems probable that he Is not the only bird with this useful possession. The apparatus is not, however, the "nictitating membrane" which all of us have perceived in looking even at the barnyard fowl. That is a mechanism designed merely to wipe the eye and to keep it clear of dust. M. de Chardonnet's discovery was made while he was studying the transparency of the central part of the eyes of animals. He had already noticed that the eyes of night birds, such as owls, were more transparent than any other for ultra violet rays, and he had tried to push the experiments further by ascertaining whether they would be affected by ultra violet rays alone. These experiments failed because of the absence of responsiveness on the part of the birds, which did not appear to manifest any sensation in passing from darkness to light, whether this list was visible, to human eyes or not. M. . de Chardonnet's failure led him to inquire whether there was any orgau of which he was ignorant in the bird's eye, such as would intervene in such circumstances. While dissecting a bird's eye he was struck to find an organ to which French naturalists have given provisionally the name of the peigne or comb. A better idea of its function would be obtained by calling it a parasol. This organ is formed of a very thin membrane, black-opaque and situated in the eye where the optic nerve penetrates it. The structure of this membrane Is such that the retina is completely masked when the "parasol" is open. It is reasonable to suppose that the parasol is therefore a screen to protect the eye against a too brilliant light, whether the light is visible in the ordinary sense or whether it consists of ultra violet rays.

Surgeon Tattoos a Blind Eye Skillful Operation Performed With Perfect Success at a Clinic Before Students in a Medical School.

Philadelphia. Pa., Nov. 20.-An operation performed only a few times by the greatest eye specialists of the world was successfully completed in a hospital clinic on Friday before the senior class of the Medico-Chirugical college, by Dr. L. Webster Fox, who occupies the chair of ophthalmology in the college. By the use of six needles, India Ink and a vegetable dye. the doctor succeeded in tattooing the perfect semblance of an eye on a young girl's blind eye ball, which was covered by an ugly white blemish the size of a 5 cent piece. The girl asked Dr. Fox to pufa glass eye in place of the diseased tissues, which made her face repulsive to the sight. The doctor, upon examination, found that the growth over the cornea was so strong that the delicate operation that came in his mind could be performed with a chance of success. Cocaine was inserted to destroy whatever sensibility remained, but no anesthetic was administered to the patient, who did not appear to suffer any pain while the operation was going on. The students saw the skilful hand of the doctor guiding the tattooing needles produce the semblance of an eye with the skill and patience of a trained artist on a surface that had been a

blank white. India ink was used for tne pupil. For the iris, a vegetable dye which had been carefully experimented with was employed, and the brown color of the other and healthy iris in the girl's other eye was duplicated. As Dr. Fox dropped his last needle and turned to bis class he was greeted with enthusiastic applause by the students. The oiteration. Dr. Fox told his class can never become a common one, as It is seldom that the eyeball of a blind person is in condition to permit tottooing.

ew England Pie. Some poor dweller in the benighted beyond of Chicago asks what a real New England pie Is like. It probably will not help him to be told, but If be means apple it Is like an essay by Emerson liquefied with the music of Massane t and spiced with the synicism of Shaw. If be means pumpkin it is like some of Gounod's music heard in a landscape all sun and flowers, and if he means mince pie, why. It ia like an increase in salary and a present from home arriving on the day when one's conscience was behaving Itself. Boaton Globe.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

A Good Substitute. Sentimental Wife I expected to find an intellectual mate In you, but you starved my mind. I asked for bread, and you gave me a stone. Practical Husband But. good heavens, woman, it was a $300 diamond! New York Journal.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

Why Worry About Cook Stovo Fuol? Ask any "K. M." that has ever tried it and they will tell yoa to use ..MATHER'S JACKSON COAL. ONCE TRIED, ALL WORRY CEAGEG. By a fortunate discovery we again have the high quality of this coal we had some years ago, but had been out of the market for several years.

Everybody bit occasionally ran short of ready cash. It isn't food policy to ask your friends to assist too and thas place yooraelf under obligations to them, when for a Terr imtll chanre yon eaa obtain the desired amount from an, have practically your on time snd terms of payment and be coder no obligation fc anyone. . Foot reasons why we are leaders w oar line : Oar easiness is erwate. Oar tanas arc the mast liberal. Oar easy efrt alae the best. Oar way af astaa easiness the eajy safa eaa far sorrower and leader. There is a reason why we are leaders fat oar line. If yoa haTe a loan with any other con cent tr is tin satisfactory eome to ov we will tale it np for yoa and adTaace you more mosey. INDIANA LOAN CO. 3rd Floor Colonial Bldg,

PHONE 1341.

ROOM 4a

RICHMOND.

THE GREAT ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC TEA e.

Special Green Stampc Nov. 29 Dec. 4 80 Stamps with a can of Baking Powder 50c 25 Stamps with a bottle of Extract 25c 10 Stamps with a package Sweet Chocolate 10e 10 Stamps with a package of Jelly Powder 10c 10 Stamps with a bottle Courtney Sauce 12c 10 Stamps with 1 lb. Corn Starch 10c 10 Stamps with a can Evaporated Milk 10c 10 Stamps with a pkg. Evaporated Peaches ....10c

Use A. a P. Blend Coffee -

727 Main Street