Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 117, 4 March 1910 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, 3IARCII 4, 1910.
The Richmond Palladium -and Sin-Telegram Published and owned by the ' PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. taaued 7 days each week, evenings and Sunday morning. Office Corner North 9th and A streets. Home Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.
Hadelpfe O. Leeds .Edit Charles M. Nr(M...Hul( Editor Caifl Beraaardt Associate Editor W. R. Peaadstoae News Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. la Richmond $5.00 per year (In ad vance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year. In advance $5.00 Six months. In advance 2.60 One month. In advance RURAL ROUTES. One year. In advance $2.60 fix months. In advance 1-60 One month. In advance 2S Address changed as often as desired; both new and old addresses must be Vlven. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be enterad until payment Is received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mall matter. lv.v.v.v v HIMIIHIll Tka Auor ulian of American J Advertisers (New York City) has j L examined and eertilied to the circulation ; I at this imbllcatlon. Only the figures of x r eirenlatinn contained in its report are i t. ......A......A.J Items Gathered in From Far and Near Recreation. From the Milwaukee Journal. While some do not work enough to get the proper amount of physical exercise, there are others who wear themselves out by too close application to their labors. A certain amount of rest is needed by every one. Mental labor will tire the body as well as the mind. There is manual labor that requires close mental application, while there is some, that requires no appreciable mental strain. Everyone should do some work of some kind. And everyone is in need of some rest or recroation other than sleep. Idleness is far from being a rest, though there are instances when perfect " idleness may be required. Change of occupation brings a desired rest. If your work is manual labor, seek mental recreation, music, reading, an entertainment or a social hour. If your work is chiefly mental, take some physical exercise. Make use of a work bench, ride, walk or work in a garden. If it comes in your reach, follow example of Gladstone or Lincoln and swing an ax, but with discretion. Every one who can should cultivate a habit of walking. One gets the fresh air and a variety of things seen refresh the mind. The observing person cannot walk many blocks or far on a country road without gaining some good thought. Whatever your occupation, choose that for recreation which calls into action a different set of muscles and a different field for thought. "Change is the sauce that sharpens appetite." End the Strike. From the Philadelphia Press. Yesterday closed the tenth day of a strike most inconvenient and disturbing to the people of Philadelphia. The public is the chief party in interest and the chief sufferer from a strike of this character, yet it has borne the inconvenience and hardship which it involved with great patience and forbearance. There has been some rioting, but It has occurred for the most part in remote districts, and even there the rioting has not been of extremely violent character. . For the last twenty-four hours it has been absolutely quiet. The public is deeply concerned with the situation. It is really the most interested party and it wants peace established. It has a right to demand, and it does demand, that there shall be a settlement of this strike at the earliest opportunity. Maryland's Flower. From the Baltimore American. Now that the black-eyed Susan has been adopted as the state flower through the vote of 200,000 school children, ratified by the formal vote of the state board of education, why not have a Black-eyed Susan day when the flower is in its glory? Surely, such a signal choice should be celebrated. and the flower should have its day, when any one appearing on any street, lane or avenue of the cities of Mary land or in the highways or byways of the counties, in any public assemblage or in any home circle without the adornment of the chosen flower would be hailed as unpatriotic. Artistic Temperament. From the Philadelphia Inquirer. The artistic temperament has cost another man his wife. It's a pity some of these sapheads didn't discover their wonderful temperaments before they got married. 7 WINKLES (By Philander Johnson.) Cruelty. "This poem," said the confident author, "belongs, I might say, to the earlier school of composition." "Yes," replied the harsh editor; "the kindergarten." Business Before Pleasure. "I see that you have been reading political economy." "A little," answered Senator Sorg hum; "but I had to give It up. I got so interested I was in danger of neg-
YESTERDA Y, TODA Y ANDEveryone is wondering what is going on in Mr. Taft's mind today. Perhaps Mr. Taft Is wondering also what the people think of him. But with a year of his four years' term gone the best that can be said is that the people have not made up their minds, and the worst is that same thing. The best: Because the people are slow to condemn; quick to praise; patient and above all, with so much fair play that they still say: "Give him a chance!" There are three years yet! The worst :Becauss it means that the people do not have that confidence in Mr. Taft which is the offspring of work performed. This is the work of a year: Secured Cannon's election as Speaker. Signed the Payne Tariff Law. Discharged three federal officers-Chief Forester Pinchot, Associate Forester Price. Forced the Abdication of Zelaya. Traveled liO.OOO miles to visit 30 States and Territories. Made 848 speeches. Appointed 0,917 Federal officers. Sent 18 messages to Congress. Instituted proceedings against the beef trust. Despite Mr. Taft's aid to Mr. Cannon in his election, Cannon's power is tottering. Even his close friends have besought him to retire, lest he defeat them. Mr. Taft put his seal of approval on Cannon a year ago, saying that he needed his aid in passing legislation carrying out the "clinching" of the Roosevelt policies and his own promises. He received the Payne-Aldrich Tariff bill and signed it, though characterizing some of the notorious schedules as "indefensible." Now we find him still seeking legislation from Cannon and Aldrich.
Those thousands of traveled miles tell their tale. It was avowedly a tour of "explanation" of the tariff. The President was surprised when his hearers and readers did not accept his word as final.
"Insurgency," or the fight of the people against special privlege for the few the fight against the agents' and the principles of unscrupulous and selfish Capital saw its first outbreak in Mr. Taft's administration. Despite his efforts the appeal to party harness did not keep the members of Congress from voting as their consciences and the wishes of their constituents dictated. Nor was Insurgency discredited at Winona.
Mr. Taft, though friendly to Mr. Roosevelt's policies of conservation or the fight against the spoilation of a nation, selected Mr. Ballinger as the people's agent rather than Mr. Garfield, who had commenced the work. A storm arose, charging Ballinger though in Mr. Taft's very cabinet, with betrayal of trust. Twice Mr. Taft defended every act of Mr. Ballinger and dismissed his accuser, Glavis, without a hearing. Nevertheless public opinion was not content with Mr. Taft's approval. And the outcome is still in grave doubt as to the consequences. The people have yet to believe that the Glavis charges have not mired Ballinger and it bids fair to go farther.
Yesterday no man showed greater promise of performance. He was characterized as having had the best preparation of any man ever elected to the high seat of the presidency. Today who shall say what is in the President's mind? What does anyone know save of the things already done? In the popular mind one question is uppermost. Special Privilege. On that hangs all the hope and the fear of the people. Conservation. Insurgency These be but words into which those hopes are poured.
Tomorrow three years! Mr. Taft's judgment has been questioned but his integrity is still se
cure. Hope is in the people's hearts. for "Hypocrisy, Hyper-criticism and lecting the appropriations demanded by my constituents.'' A Meal. He heard the waiter rapidly recite The bill of fare, and then he went away Because the tip, received with bows . polite, Was really all he could afford to pay. A Household Jealousy. "I understand that there is trouble brewing In the Meekton household." "Yes," answered the woman who knows all about everybody. "The unfortunate report has gotten abroad that Mr. Meekton helps his wife write her suffragette speeches." Unable to Say. "Is your wife receiving today?" "I don't know whether she's receiv ing or giving," replied Mr. Bliggins. "She's playing bridge whist. ' Variety. You can take your choice of weather, You. can have it cold or warm; You may take it all together. From a sunstroke to a storm. The frost is lightly falling The buds begin to sprout The robin's gently calling And the snowbird hops about. There's freezing for a minute. And there's thawing for an hour; There's a dash of thunder in it, Like a fickle April shower. So swift you cannot time it, Each mood will slip away; You can have all kinds of climate In one eventful day! There are no coroners m Russia. The burials are under the control of the church and the police, and all cemeteries are owned by the church and the municipality. Cremation is contrary to law, but it has been suggested from official sources. Not ayr.lilli Trust Th Orlgisucl end Gtnuiat CsOKILDCK'S HALTED Ml LCI Th Ftod-drlnk for All kzu More healthful than Tea or Coffee. Agrees with the weakest digestion. Delicious, invigorating and nutntious. Rich milk, malted grain, powder form. A qakk hack prepared ia a auaate. rdu Msabstitate. Ask for HORLICKS. Others ore imitations.
And Mr. Taft has mistaken this Hope Hysteria:''
WATCH THE COMPLEXION Entirely Cleared After a Few Applications of Poslam. Where it goes is evidently not a very serious matter as long as the little red spot, blemish or other skin disfigurement disappears as quickly as it does after a few applications of poslam, the new skin remedy. A peculiar feature of poslam is that it is naturally fleshcolored and contains no grease, so that when used on the face for the complexion, or for pimples, red noses, or any other inflammations, blemishes or discolorations, its presence cannot be detected. It can thus be applied in the daytime, the natural color of the skin being immediately restored and the actual healing and curing process accomplished in a few days. Poslam can be had of any pharmacist who sells pure drugs. W. H. Suddhoff's make a specialty of it. Fifty cents' worth will answer either for the troubles mentioned or in curing ordinary cases of eczema. Itching stops at once. Any one who will write to the Emergency Laboratories, No. 32 West Twenty-fifth street, New York, can se cure by mail, free of charge, a supply sufficient to cure a small eczema surlace or clear a complexion over night and remove pimples in twenty-four hours. The Bit of the Saa Lion. The bite of the sea lion is poisonous; besides, it is an ugly wound from the manner in which it is inflicted. Although the creature moves painfully and slowly on land, the motion of its head and neck is extremely quick. The neck seems to have an almost elastic quality. One is surprised at its reach. The sea lion is like a bulldog. When be has caught bold he does not let go at once, but sets his teeth - firmly in the flesh. Then he twists his head, the teeth being still imbedded in the flesh, and without relinquishing his grip he gives a quick jerk. The result is to pull out a ragged piece of flesh If the animal has taken a deep bold. London Standard. A Compliment? Little Robert received a "wagon on his birthday morning, and within an hour he had broken a wheel. After trying in vain to repair the damage he called in his father, who soon mended It. "Papa," he said, "you are smarter than you look." Chicago News. MASONIC CALENDAR. Friday, March 4, King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Called meeting. Work in the Past and Most Excellent M. degree. Saturday, March 5, Loyal Chapter, No. 49. O. E. S. Stated meeting.
THOUSANDS HIDDEN
1 E Living in Pretended Poverty, Old Spinster Had Large Fortune. t ajsBasaaaBBBas FILLS BIBLE WITH BILLS MONEY WAS NOT DISCOVERED UNTIL AFTER HER DEATH WHEN THE HEIRS AND EXECUTOR MADE A SEARCH. Burlington, N. J., March 4. Professing abject poverty before the world and living more modestly than her poorest neighbors. Miss Elizabeth Hays,eighty-six years old, died suddenTays. 80 years old, died suddenly in the midst of a fortune of gold had been secreting about her old farmhouse. The real truth of Miss Hays's financial status was discovered when the heirs and her executor, lawyer Reginald Branch, made a brief search of the house. Bed and table linen yielded ten and twenty dollar bank notes by the score In an old cupboard was found several thousand dollars in gold eagles and double eagles. The old family bible yielded a twenty dollar note from be tween nearly every other leaf. Bed springs, old coffee pots, several old purses and other receptacles were found to contain hundreds of dollars. A conservative estimate of the eccentric old woman's wealth is that she left an estate valued at more than $KM,00. Guards Placed at House. Every effort was made to keep the discovery a secret, but the facts leaked out through neighbors and were verified through authoritative sources. Relatives say that Branch is executor of the estate and at his office the lawyer admitted the discovery of the money and the fact that th estate left by the eccentric woman was very large. Owing to the rumors flying through the neighborhood of the amount of gold and other currency discovered in the house, armed guards were station ed about the place to keep off curious sightseers and guard against robbery. The bills found in the Bible bear dates of issue shortly after the civil war. Despite the fact that it contained hundreds of dollars, the old book reposed on a parlor table. In a cupboard among odds and ends of every description, was a little pasteboard box. The investigators were about to toss this aside, when a jingle of coin drew their attention and they raised the lid, to discover the box filled with gold coins, amounting to nearly $$0O. Old salt bags and leather wallets filled with gold were picked from an odd assortment of trash. Coins of Many Countries. In different receptacles a thousand old coins of copper, nickel, silver and gold alloys, minted in a dozen different countries in the last two centuries, were discovered. Even the beds gave up hidden wealth Rolls of bank notes, all of large denomination, were found stuffed between the mattresses and mixed in with them were packages of civil war currency known as "shinplasters." Lifting some napkins frcm a cupboard shelf some of the linen dropped to the floor, disclosing several ten dollar notes hidden between the neatly ironed folds. In addition to the cash discovered, neighbors say the house contains much 3 Per Cent, on Savings
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silver plate. Rare old furniture is in every room, and paintings that belonged to ancestors of Miss Hays adorns the dingy walls. A curio collector is said to have offered Miss Hays a large sum for a single picure that hangs in the parlor only a few weeks ago. but she refused to part with it, declaring it was a family heirloom. Peculiarities of Russian Winters. There is one curious thing about a Russian winter in the latter part of October or the beginning of November the weather will be quite mild. Not a sign can be seen of an approaching change, when suddenly, without any apparent warning, a light haze will be seen in the northern sky. and in twenty-four hours the thermometer may fall 50 degrees. The change is so sudden and violent that travelers are frequently frozen to death before they can gain shelter. It has occurred that farmers out looking after their flocks have been caught in one of these blizzards and, missing their way home, have lost their lives, their bodies remaining undes the snow until the following spring. w . Easily Ad justed. have come to the city with my son, who is about to enter the law school. The first thing is to find a boarding place. Do you know any place that you can recommend?" "Well, no; not near the law school. But I know a good place near the medical school." "Indeed! Then I'll have him study medicine." Berlin Journal. White Animaij Among tha Japanese., A white fox is often mentioned In the Japanese fables, and a white serpent appears in their pictures of Benten, the goddess of fortune. Among the Japanese, as . among the ancient Greeks and Scythians, white horses were dedicated to the gods and are still attached to the larger temples of the country. The milk and butter of white cows were formerly prized as a medicine. DEEP SEATED COUGH CURED IN 5 HOURS. V 3iew lfoine-Made Syrup. (Cut this out.) Kron Boaten Preaa. Progress in medical compounds never leases, and now it is stated by a prominent medical man that any deepseated cough or cold on the lungs can be actually cured in five hours by the clock. Opium and morphine have been resorted to in the past, as relief measures. But now it is learned that the system must be treated to rid It of inflammation and congestion. A tonic laxative cough syrup does the work so quickly and thoroughly as to be almost magical. What heretofore has taken weeks to cure ran be accomplished in hours. Get this formula filled or mix it at home and always keep it on hand: One-half ounce fluid wild cherry bark, one ounce compound essence cardiol and three ounces syrup white pine compound. Shake the bottle and take twenty drops every half hour for four hours. Then take one-half to one teaspoonful three or four times a day until the system is purified and tones up. Give children less according to age. One filling- will usually cure a whole family, as the dose is small.
RICHMOND, INDIANA.
rr V if .
NORMAL SCHOOLS DOING BEST WORK
Dr. Gulick at Indianapolis Meeting Today Roasts the High Schools ON PHYSICAL SOUNDNESS OF THE STUDENTS IN THOSE IN STITUTIONS SAYS THAT CON SERVATION OF HEALTH IS NOT LOOKED AFTER. (American News Service) Indianapolis, March 4. That our normal schools are making much better provision for developing and con serving the physical soundness of their students than our high schools, was one of the most oovlous conclusions in the report on the statu of instruction in hygiene in American institutions. made by Dr. Luther H. Gulick, director of the department of Child Hygiene, of the Russell Sage Foundation, New York, at the session of the American School Hygiene association, held this afternoon in connection with the meet ing of the department of superintendence of the National Educational asso ciation. Dr. Gulick was the secretary of the committee apiointed by the American School Hygiene association to report on the subject. His data was gathered from many thousands of questions which were sent out to all the American normal schools and high schools by the United States Bureau of Education. What the Results Were. Results were secured from nearly 2.4x High Schools ' and 90 Normal schools, having in all a total membership of -HAM) students. It was found that more than half of the normal schools in twenty has such a department. Regular instruction in hygiene is given in three out of four normal schools and only one high school out of each six. About the same proportion held with respect to work in gymnastics and athletics. Swimming is taught in about one normal school in ten, but it is a regular subject in only one high school in 44 H. One normal school in ten has military drill, as contrasted with one high school in each hundred. About half the normal schools have athletic fields, and only one high school in five has one. Developments in respect to the status of hygiene teaching in the high schools of the different sections of the country show a remarkable preponderance of favorable conditions' in the west. Comparison Was Made.' A comparison was made in which the returns were divided into three sections; those from the northern states, thoa. from the southern states, and t.ose from the western group. A comparison was made of the number of schools having departments of physical education, those giving regular instruction in hygiene, gymnastics and athletics, the schools having medical examinations of their 6tudents and sanitary inspections of the buildings, and the ones having gymnasiums and athletic fields. In these eight comparisons, the western high schools came out first in five cases, the southern group was ahead in one case, and the south and west and north and vest were tied in the remaining two cases. The same comparison made in the normal schools showed again very good results for the southern and western sections. In the eight com par I-
sons the western states came out ahead in three cases, the southern In three other cases and the northern states in the remaining two.
MRS. HARVEY DEAD Mrs. Daniel Harvey, aged 51 years, a former resident of Wayne county, died suddenly at her home in New Castle. Death was due to an attack of neuralgia of the heart- The deceased was the wife of the well known fire chief of New Castle. Mrs. Harvey was born in Dalton township. Wayne county. She Is survived by two sons. Shelby Harvey of New Castle and A. T. Harvey of Andersou. A sister, Mrs. E. Wilson of Anderson and three brothers. Frank Evans of Rochester. N. Y.. William Evans of near Hagerstown. and James R. Evans, of Anderson, also survive. FOULKE TO LECTURE The public is cordially invited to attend a lecture on "The Drift Toward Socialism." by the Hon. William Dudley Foulke. this evening at 7:45 o'clock, at the First Presbyterian church, on the occasion of the annual meeting of the Indiana association of science and mathematics teachers. If people make a city, then Nrw York is the newest city on the continent, for only one New Yorker out of five had American ancestors three generations back. EoujcI Tcnis For GU FoCn Froo No matter how sound and healthy old people are they still suffer with their bowels. The machinery of the system doesn't work as it did when they were young and active. But while you can't restore youth you can help age to live more pleasantly. That a laxative la needed ever? Ilttla while by people as they set around fifty and beyond, there la no doubt, but it la Important which laxatlva la taken. Old people, woman and all. except those who are In tha prime of Ufa. should avoid anything- that gives a shock to the system and which at beat la but a temporary expedient. Among- these are pUla and cathartic tablet, salts and purgative waters. They are too atrong and only do temporary good. Not only that, but they really bind the bowels next day. What yon want Is something that will regulate the bowels and again get them In the habit of performing; a certain function at a certain time, wrhlle at tha same time toning and strengthening the muaclee of the stomach and bowels. Such a remedy to Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and if yea have never used It let the doctor send you a sample bottle free of charge. In this way you can try It without cost. All druggists sell It at fifty cents and on dollar a bottle, and those who have used It wftl continue to buy it. It Is pleasant to take, very effective and very economical as a household remedy, as all the faintly can use It. But Dr. Caldwell to eager to have an readers unacquainted with It to send for a free sample. Thousands of old people and heads of famulea are never without It. for In thla way they cure and avoid constipation, liver trouble. Indigestion, aour atotnacn. sick headache, sleepiness after eating, belching and similar stomach, liver and bowel disturbances. Mrs. TIIHe Homan, 404 Wautanra street. KnoxvMe. Tenn.. and T. H. Marshall. Nail. OMa.. as well as thousands of others, attribute much of their present good health to thla grand laxative tonic. Dr. Caldwen personally will be pleased to give you any medical advice you may desire for yourself or family pertaining to the stomach, liver or bowels absolutely free of charge. Explain your rase In a letter and he will reply to you In detail. For the free sample simply send your name and address en a postal card or otherwise For either request the doctor a addreaa la Dr. W. B. CaldwetL K.&04 Caldwell bulldlnav MontlceUo. 111. 3 Por Cont. on Cortificaioi
