Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 109, 24 February 1910 — Page 3
THE RICII3IOXD TALLADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1010.
PAGE THREE.
SENATOR ALDRICH TO INVADE STATE
To Speak at Indianapolis on the Work of Monetary Commission.
IS NOT A POLITICAL MOVE
COMMISSION WAS ORGANIZED IN INDIANAPOLIS AND THAT CITY CLAIMS CREDIT FOR IT COMES IN MARCH.
(Palladium Special) Indianapolis, Ind.. Feb. 24. Senator Aldrich. of Rhode Island, has notified the Indiana Manufacturers bureau that he will come to Indianapolis some time during the early part of March and deliver an address on "The Aims and Work of the National Monetary Commission." H was to have come on January UO, and several hundred invitations were sent out to manufacturers and bankers of the state to attend the
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meeting, but at the last moment Senator Aldrich sent word that hi3 health would not permit him to make the trip and the date was canceled. He promised to come later, and his telegram received yesterday is in keeping with that promise. It is understood that the coming of Senator Aldrich will not have any political significance whatever, and that his address will be confined solely to the monetary commission. , This commission was organized in this city, and has always been known as the Indianapolis commission. Senator Aldrich is the chairman f the commission. Is Big Question. Inasmuch as the monetary question Is regarded as one of the big questions before the people today, the Indiana Manufacturers' Bureau believed that
an address by Aldrich would be not j
only Interesting, but of great value to the business interests. When it was announced in the first place that Senator Aldrich was coming to Indiana, there was some fear on the part of certain republicans that he would talk politics, but it is said that this subject is not to be touched upon. The Indiana Manufacturers' Bureau says the invitations which were sent out for the January meeting, will hold good for the meeting next month, when the senator will make his address. The bureau has several hundred members scattered throughout the state, nearly every city and town in th state being represented in its membership.
put on some lively singing and, dancing and Pick is popular with the audience with his songs and dances. The Clay and family quartet are furnishing several excellent instrumental selections and the two young women render one vocal number. Miss Nellie has won quite a reputation as euphonium soloist The head liner this week is the sensational one act play "The Light," and the three characters of Nance, Tom and the invalid, all good, presenting a play which has well brought out in ,it, pathos, tragedy and comedy. It is well to remember that Mr. Lawrence is an invalid in reality. With the motion pictures a big bill is assured all the patrons of Richmond's popular playhouse.
For an early breakfast, take home Mrs. Austin's pancake flour. Ready in a minute.
Big Snow Crop.
At Local Theaters
The Golden Girl. The very best music and lyrics written by Hough, Adams and Howard, a clever combination of musical comedy builders, are to be found in "The Golden Girl" which comes to the Gennett Saturday matinee and night after a run of 200 nights iu Chicago. Following a !:no Iriid down in their former sncrc ;-, I'rfnco of Tonight" these authc: i- 'h i" ncr.t venture, "The GoU'-en f. vi." have utilized a similar theme, and gone into the world which shimmers and glimmers on the grey border of this the world of dreams, for their material and have evolved therefrom a story that offers a most pleasing source of entertainment, with unlimited opportunity for effects, stage pictures and costuming. "The Golden Girl" as a play is vibrantly youthful in its makeup. The scene chosen for the events is West Point, during graduation exercises; and being youthful the story has to do with love and love's young dream. At the academy are two young men, one has money and influence, the other has neither. Both these boys love a maid who is the ward of two old soldiers; one from the North and the other from the South; neither of them is willing to admit that the Civil War is yet over. The girl has a dream and sees the man with money changed by greed to a cruel tyrant, who showers her with gold until she is turned into a golden statue. She awakes from this ordeal to find that rhe really loves the penniless youth, whose only heritage is a much boasted ancestry, which he sees in a vision as pirates, convicts, anarchists and thieves their introduction affording much amusement. The Traveling Salesman. Following the policy established by Henry B. Harris with his "The Lion and the Mouse" and other companies, the presentation in this city of James Forbes's comedy, "The Traveling Salesman" will be of the same high character as was in evidence when Mr. Harris's other plays were presented here. "The Traveling Salesman" will
make another bow to the patrons of j
the Gennett at an early date and will no doubt be received with the same hearty acclaim as on its previous visit to Richmond earlier in the winter. At the Murray. The lady member of the La Croixs, playing at the Murray theater this week is a former Richmond girl. As acrobats they are clever and display remarkable strength. The Chapman sisters, introducing Raymond Thomas
From the Cleveland Leader. If snow is as good for winter wheat as many farmers believe it is, there ought to be a great crop next summer.
New Murray Approved Vaudeville. WEEK OF FEB. 21ST Special Feature, Sensational One Act Play THE LIGHT 5 Other Exclusive Features. Matinee, 2:30, any seat, 10c Evening performances, 7:45 and 9:00. Prices, 10, 15 and 20c. Loge seats, 25c.
UNITED STATES post-office building, Richmond, Indiana, February ia, lyiO. Sealed proposals will be received at this building until 2 o'clock p. m., Friday, February 25, 1910, for furnishing fuel, lights, water, ice, miscellaneous supplies, washing towels, hauling ashes, and sprinkling streets for this building during the fiscal year ending June "0, 1911, or such portion of the year as may be deemed advisable. The right to reject any and all bids is reserved by the Treasury Department. J. A. Spekonhier, Custodian. l':j&2t
GEM M ETT Saturday Night and Mat. Seats now selling THE GOLDEN GIRL PRICES, Matinee, 25c to $1 Evening. 25c to $1.50
Too' Much to Believe. "I should like to be excused, your lordship." said a man who had been summoned on a jury in England, says Cassei's Journal. "What for?" "I owe a man 5, and I want to hunt him up and pay it." "Do you mean to tell this court you would hunt up a man to pay a bill instead of waiting for him to hunt you nn?"
"Yes, your lordship."
"Yon are excused. I don't want any one on the iurv who will n nt
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Our February Sweep Sale ENDS
A great many have purchased complete outfits during our sale and have saved from $15.00 to $40.00 by doing so. Others have purchased many articles needed at house cleaning time and made small down payments to hold for them until ordered, and they also have saved the-eby. Can't you think of some article which you will need at the spring
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outfitting when you see an opportunity to save dollars? Buffets, Sideboards, China Closets, etc., to close at 10 per cent off. Iron Beds and Sanitary Couches, 10 per cent off. Chiffoniers, Dressers, Commodes and Wardrobes, 10 per cent off. Gas Ranges, 20 per cent off. China, 10 per cent off. Dining Tables and Dining Chairs, 10 per cent off.
We guarantee the quality and workmanship on any article purchased during this sale
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Take flae FesOffice unit d Fojifa In. attempting to charge up the deficit in his Department against the magazines the PostmasterGeneral has done the country a genuine, even if an unintentional, service. He has drawn attention to the necessity for a thorough reorganization of the Postal Department. He has emphasized the importance of taking the Post-Office out of politics for all time. The Fifty-ninth Congress authorized an investigation of postal affairs, and a joint commission, headed by Senator Penrose and Representative Overstreet, made a thorough investigation of the whole subject. As a result, the Overstreet bill, which contains many excellent recommendations, was presented. It is not from guesswork that we have concluded that the Department is in need of radical reorganization, but from the official reports of this Joint Congressional Postal Commission and of the disinterested accountants hired by it to investigate the business methods of the Department. We quote from these reports, remembering that the findings and criticisms are not ours, but those of a Congressional Commission and its authorized agents. First read these recommendations from the preliminary report of the Joint Postal Commission, in this week's number of
MVENING POST
Then read these extracts from the report of the public accountants employed by the Joint Commission : " The service has grown from small beginnings over a long period of years, hampered by restrictive laws which may nave been necessary in the past and may even now be considered necessary to some extent for a Government department, but which would render it practically impossible for any private business to survive. " The general absence of any efficient methods of accounting has been brought to light by the inquiry carried out by the Joint Commission on second-class mail matter. This report was referred to Congress on January 30, 1907, and our investigation has confirmed the impression gathered from the study of it, that the whole of these methods are crude in the extreme and such as no private business concern or corporation could follow without the certainty of loss, if not of financial disaster." There are half-a-dozen more of these extracts on the Editorial page of this week's issue of The Saturday Evening Post. In the Joint Postal Commission's report of 1907 we find: "As an indication of the views at present entertained it is proper to say that the commission is profoundly impressed with the wisdom of the accountant s report in recommending the following: " That the actual direction of the business of the Post-Office Department and postal service be committed to an officer with necessary assistants to be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, for long terms, so as to insure the continuity of efficient service, and that the Poct master-General, as a member of the Cabinet, be chargeable only with general supervisory control and the determination of questions of policy." Lr-w" We ask Congress to give us a Director of Posts as recommended by the Joint Congressional Committee of 1907, an officer who shall be non-political, and whose term of service shall not be subject to political changes, and who shall conduct the workings of the Post-Office Department with the efficiency, economy and businesslike methods which distinguish high-class American business enterprise. The Curtis Publishing Company Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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