Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 245, 12 July 1910 — Page 4
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THE RICIIMOXD PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGIIAil, TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1910.
. , mini mm snn vr PALLADIUM FRINTINO CO. IWUMd T days each wssk. evenings and . ftuasay sno rains. Offlee Ctwir NortH ts and A streets. Uome Phone 1111. KICHMOKD, INDIANA.
O. Lm4i UNM fcsftaa Jmn ulam Ummmtf Cart mku4i AlMdlli MHM I New MIMA SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. ! Richmond fit psr sr (In advance) or ! psr wssk. MAI It SUilBCRIPTIONS. On mr, In advance , $ ' Ml aoenths. In advance Coe month. In advance . ...t RURAL ROUTES. as year. In advance I?f2 Ml otentha. In advsnce 1 OMa mant'4. In advance Addraaa chang4 aa oftsn as dsalred: bath new and aid addresses must Srven. Mubacrfbsra will please remit with rdar. which should ba atven for a aperlfied farm; name will not ba enterad uutll payment Is received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poat frica aa second claaa nail matter. (New Ysefc City) he tataaatraalattan Only tfea BncM of talasd la lu mart an 1 tetMAapNUttoa. 1 MIIIIIIII iAAAAAA RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOf CITY" Mas a population of ft.00 and la growing. It la the county aaat af Warn a County, and the trading canter of a rich agricultural community. It la located due aaat from Indlanapolie mllea and 4 miles from the state line. . Richmond la a eltr of homes and of Industry.- Primarily, a manufacturing city. It Is also the Jobbing eenter of Eastern Indiana and en Joy a the retail trade of the populous comraun- . Ity far mllea around. . Richmond la proud af. Ita splendid streets, well kept yards, ita cement aldewalaa and beautiful shade trees. It has S national banks. S trust companies end 4 building associations with combined resources af aver 14,000,000. Number of faetorlea 12S; capital Invested T.000.000. with an annual output of IS7.000.000. and a pay roll af If .700.000. The total pay rail for the city amounts to approslmately I4.t04.000 annually. There are five railroad companies radiating In eight different directions from the city. Incoming freight handled dally, 1.740.000 lb.: outgoing freight handled dally. 740.000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day 1.700 cere. Number of passenger train dally. It. Number of freight tralna dally 77. The annual past office recelpta amount to 140,000. Total assessed valuation af the city, 414.000.000. Richmond haa two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of 14.040. Richmond Is the greateat hardware Jobbing center In the state, and only second In general Jobbing Interests. It naa a piano factory producing a high grade planw every If minute. It la the leader la the manufacture of traction anSnea. atvt produces mora reahlng Machines, lawn mower, roller skates, grain drills and burial casketa than any ether city In the world. The clty'e area la 4.440 acres: haa a court house costing 4500.44; 14 public schools and haa the finest and most complete high school In the middle west under construction; 4 parochial schools; Earl ham rollea-e end the Indiana Business College: ftvo aplendld fire companies la fine hoaa houses: Olen Miller park, tho largest and most beautiful park In Indiana, the home of Rlchmond'o annual i chautauqua: seven hotels: municipal electrle light plant, under suecesoful operation, and a private electrle light plant. InMuring competition: the oldest publlo library in the state, except one. and the second largest. 44.444 volumes; pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed: 41 miles of Improved etreeta; 40 mllea of aewera: tl mllea of cement curb and gutter combined: 40 mllea of cement walka. and many mllea af brick walks. Thirty churches. Including the Reld Memorial, built at a cost of ft 14.000; Rdd Memorial Hospital, one of the most modern ' In the state: T. M. C A. building, erected at a cost of 1100.000, one af the finest In the state. The amusement center of Eastern Indiana and Western Ohio. Na city of the also of Richmond holda as fine an annual art exhibit. The Richmond Fall Festival held each October la an to ue, no other elty holds a similar , affair. It la given In the Interest of the city and financed by the business men. Success awaiting anyone with enterprise la the Panto Proof City. TWINKLES BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. A Form of Caution. : "Why do you keep your eye on the speedometer? Are you afraid you will CO faster than the regulations per mitr "No," answered Mr. Chugglns. "I want to make sure I am going fast sough to keep any bicycle from over taking me." Frigid Investigation. "My new refrigerator has a temperatur constantly In the neighborhood of the freeilng point." said Col. Stillwell. ' Ths visitor who was warm and thirsty looked up with great Interest as he Inquired: "Have , you r have - you any proofs?" Dignity's Farewell. A man, whate'er may ho his powers, True dignity cannot assert Xfho from the cob his com devours And tackles creampuffs for desert. An Accompaniment of Fame. . "I bats just been reading Boswell's roTiinn okay's (V.T POWD3R3 3 VoSv-Mitwgetrirsea.
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Manhood First
"Like the prodigal youth, we a a nation have wasted oar resources, sold our Inheritance, acquired evil habits, but, fortunately, have realized the need of radical change In time to save ourselves."
James R, Garfield in Initiating the progressive Republican movement in Ohio and' firing the first gun in his race 'for the governorship of that state has said what is in the minds of those of us who think that the world must move forward and not backward. He has enunciated the principles of Insurgency and the deeper feeling of the people behind the Insurgents he has voiced the Unrest and the Change of the Times. There is only one tenet of faith one sentence into which -he poured the whole principle and tendency of modern trend. "Manhood first property second." There be many men working on our railroads who know the sixteen hour a day law not as a thing written in a, book but as a barrier between them and death.
They know that jaw as Life Everything. -To them it means air and warmth, the pulsating blood, home. To those who sat in directors' rooms, comfortably ensconced hogany chairs nulling softly at the Havanathat law was an
upon Vested Rights against Property. And so it was. It recognized the principle that Man is greater than Money. MANHOOD PIRST-PROPERTY SECOND. Did you ever talk to a railroader about the sixteen hour law. , Did he ever tell you of the men who had worked days and nights and days and nights In a stretch and then fall beneath the train from sheer fatigue? Every man that fought the law which gives protection to those men is in reality a murderer. And as the fighting was done for money in behalf of private fortunes It was doubly mercenary murder by hired assassins. Men like Beverldge who fought for the sixteen hour law are outlawed. -MANHOOD FIRST-PROPERTY SECOND." And now the whole country faces an election. . The chance is given to vote for those who are in reality assassins of men, or those who have battled for men. It Is not so much a matter of party as it once was. , The fact Is well enough established that Greed knows no party. As Garfield says: "At the coming election we are to choose between -two great national parties. The Democratic party, while declaiming against special interests, has, when in power, allied Itself with special interest Many of its leaders have been and are the recognized representatives of special Interests. In our own state the Democratic governor failed to be on tho , people's side In the fight for a public utilities bill and the Democratic Senators defeated that measure. In the recent Democratic convention the "progressive" Democrats were ignored. I can see no hope for better things for Democracy as now controlled. "How Is It with the Republican party? It likewise has among its leaders some who are allied with or represent special interests, but, on the other hand, It has progressive, aggressive leaders who are the people's representatives. "The country owes -a debt of gratitude to the Insurgents in Congress who made the fight against the domination of special interest and who placed the common good above party regularity."
reminiscences of Dr. Johnson," said the bookish man. "What!" exclaimed the man who is not bookish. "Has somo col lege given the colored pugilist a degree already?" A Slight Encouragement. "If I were to ask you to marry me," said the timid young man, "what would you say?" "I don't know," replied Miss Cayenne. "But I'd be too polite to say what I thought." Reward of Merit "111 make some one happy," said kind Dr. Diggs. -"A picnic I'll give 'neath the tremu- . Ions twigs. And my soul shall reflect all the glee In the breasts Of the Innocent kids, both my own ' and their guests." Dear little Sue Smlthers ate green apple pie. Bho'll recover her usual health, by and by. Theophllus Scrim' has his arm in a sling Because of the feats he performed on a swing. Tod Morgan got sunburned and can't wear his coat A fishbone got stuck m his small sister's throat Bub Smlthers, who stopped a swift ball, has gone lame. And poor Robbie Ruggles he umpired the game. And ' various other events of the day Will long keep its mem'ry from fading away. And kind Dr. Diggs hurries thither and thence. His practice is, all of a sudden, Immense. And he says In the gentlest of accents, "I find That It really pays, in tbe end, to be kind." "Natural Life." A poisoner iu a western state has been sentenced to imprisonment as the news dispatches put it. "for the rest of his natural life." That phrase "natural life" bothers some people, who wonder If the law recognizes any "unnatural lift." It does not. but the old common law did recognize an unnatural death as well as a natural one. When a man or woman take tbe monastic vow people still speak of it as "leaving the world." la mediaeval times that was considered a form of death, and the phrase "natural Ufa" came Into use to describe an existence terminated by the grave, not by the convent or the abbey. New York Mall. Beating Off a Dog. If s dog spring for a man the latter should guard bis face with his arm and try to meet the animal with his forearm. With his right hand he should attempt to catch one of the animal's front paws. The paw of a bulldog la ultra sensitive. If It can be caught a vigorous sauces will make th animal howl for mercy and retire discomfited.
Property Second
family, in maAttack FILE $110,000 BOND Contractors Who Made Suc cessful Bid on National Road Put Up Forfeit. ' CONTRACT BEING DELAYED John F. Cronin and Company, the contractors to whom the commission ers awarded the contract for the con struction of the National Road im provement, filed a bond for 1 110,000 yesterday afternoon with the board. A surety company went on the bond and as bonding companies charge $10 for every $1,000 of bonding protection, their commission was $1,100. Although the contract between Cronin and the commissioners has not been drawn up, it Is not thought that there will be any hitches. The delay is caused by the necessity of having an understanding with the Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction company officials, whose road will be affected by the improvement. Saw His Finish. "On. oh." exclaimed impatient Mrs. Naggs. "I've bitten off the eud of my tongue!" "Well. I certainly feel sorry for myself," rejoined the Leu rt less Nag;. "Hereafter there will be no end n your tn:r!f" Stomachs Repaired Relieve bistres in Five MinutesGuaranteed to Cure Indigestion, or Money Back. Let Mrs. Griffith tell you about Mi-o-na, the greatest prescription for stomach trouble ever written: For years I have doctored for acute gastritis, but only received slight benefit and had to be careful, what I ate. But thanks to Mio-na stomach tablets, I can now eat anything. Last Christmas after partaking of a hearty turkey dinner, I was seized with an tttack of acute indigestion, and the doctor worked over me for hour before I got relief. He paid me eight visits before I could say I was well enough to sit up. But since then I have taken Mi-o-na tablets, and 1 have not been troubled since. Before using Mi-o-na I had attacks about every month." Mrs. Ida Griffith. 1213 C St, Washington, D. C, July 5, 1909. Mi-o-na stomach tablets are sold by druggists everywhere and at L. H. Fihe's for 50 cents a large box. They are guaranteed to cure indigestion, sour stomach, belching gas, dizziness, biliousness, heaviness or any stomach ailment Try Booth's Pills for constipation a joyful surprise 25c. Care catarrh breath it bo. ObmpleS
K-M ItaMbfa
Points For Mothers rr5. What become of precocious children when they grow up? Nobody know. It is a good thing that average gets hold of them or we would be a land overflowing with geniuses. There would be so many of them that com mon people would not be missed from the directory, says an exchange. As a matter of fact, tbe men and women who are doing things when they are fifty years old are not the ones who were pointed out on children's day. Very often precocity is a flower that blooms early and withers early. Even the big. men and women who stand out in history were commonplace children, while their precocious companions sleep in obscure graves. Tbe most precocious thing George Washington did was to lay low the historic cherry tree, and this is more than duplicated each day by boys who never rise to dizzier pinnacles than school directors. Too often the boy who stood at the head of tbe spelling class comes when he is forty years old to the boy who stood next to the end for a job. Con gress has within its halls today men who didn't learn to read until twelve years of age. Life is not a dash and sprint, with tbe prize to tbe child who gets away from the starting line first. but is a day in day out Marathon, with the laurel to the one who keeps plugging along. More life, meets are won by plugging than by sprinting. So let tbe mother of the ordinary child up and clear her looks. Do not envy the precocious child of your neighbor. Rest secure in the knowledge that tbe precocious child across the street may be only a morning glory to dazzle for an hour, while your own child, with its glories yet unrepealed, may be a lily of tbe valley to gladden hearts for many days. Overattentien to Children. Few mothers realize the risk of overcaution and overattention to their chil dren after they are old enough to play and romp about. A child is happier with few and simple playthings than with a multitude of complicated toys. There is no such good fun or good training as making oneself useful in doing little things like work, and vlt is cruelty to deprive the child of this pleasure and stimulus. Let the brain and body be trained through hand, foot and eye. Give tbe boy a carpenter's bench; encourage tbe girls to do house work. Where possible let both boy and girl have a little garden patch, if "nly a few feet square, and the care ! .' a few plants. A woman in her ome, a man in bis garden this seems be a fundamental type from which .not entirely depart without risk wOdy and mind. Cheerfulness, sin.ustry. perseverance and unseouness may be acquired by prac tice and constant repetition as much as the art of correct speaking or of -vlntr tLtf piano and are far more necessary to health. In the Nursery. Better than chairs are low. broad seats built in all around the wall of tbe room. The seat should be eight or nine inches high and from one to two feet broad and may be put up by a carpenter at slight expense. Tbe children may slide all along these and draw their toys up beside them, and there will be less danger of bumped noses and bruised elbows from tipping over of the chairs. Little pillows with durable covers may be strewn about for small, sleepy beads or to make tbe seat less bard. Such a seat is best made of bard wood if the floor is bard wood; if not it should be made very smooth and varnished, so that there may be no danger of splinters. The Value of Laughter. A famous doctor once said: "Encourage your child to be merry and to laugh aloud. A good, hearty laugh expands tbe chest and makes the blood bound merrily along. Commend me to a good laugh not to a little, sniggling laugh, but to one that "will sound right through the house. It will not only do your child good, but will be a benefit to all who bear and be an Important means of driving the blues away from a dwelling. Merriment Is very catching and spreads in a remarkable manner, few being able to resist the contagion. A hearty laugh Is delightful harmony indeed. It is the best of all music." Here's Good Advice. Never give medicine to a baby without a doctor's orders. Do not use devices for keeping baby's food warm. Keep tbe food on Ice until feeding time, then warm it and give immediately. If any food Is left in the bottle throw It away. When the Baby Steeps. Do not permit a baby to sleep with Its head under the bedclothes. Trained nurses who are supposed to know better are often responsible for this habit. They keep the bead of an Infant so carefully wrapped for fear of, draft that the child becomes accustomed to muffling. 1 in tfk. hjwir Stationery" ba etyuologteally aa much to do with standing as baa "stationary." Tbe original stationers, or tatlonarii. were so called because tbey old their books upon stalls or "stations' in London round about -old Mb Paul's cathedral, to some cases against ths walls of tbe cathedral Itself. This Is oas of many trades tbe names of which bare no direct allusion to tbe commodities sold. -Grocers. for Id stance, wars so called either because tbey sold en gros." wht-K.ile. or beeanse they were enj:n p,"! . mooop J oUxers. Londos Chronicle.
STUBBORN ECZEMA CASES
YIELD TO P0SLAM Called "Greatest Skin Remedy In Eur ope or America." "Poslam did for my wife, who is spending the winter abroad, what no doctor could do. Half the jar entirely cured her of the most disfiguring form of scaly eczema, which simply covered her face. Fourteen days after the first application her face was fair, smooth and without a spot or blemish. We look upon it as nothing short of a mir acle. It is the greatest skin remedy we have ever found either in Europe or America, and we have tried cele brated specialists, all sorts of cures and many patent remedies." This statement made by Mr. A. E. Gardner, of Bridgeport, Conn., is but one of the thousands of similar expressions regarding the actual accomplishments of poslam in the eradication of every form of skin disease, eczema, acne, tetter, barber's itch, psoriasis, shingles, etc., besides the minor skin affections (such as pimples, blemishes, red noses, hives, fever blisters, in which results are seen so rapidly. Poslam is on sale in 50-cent boxes and $2 jars at all druggists, particularly W. IJ. SudhofTs. A free sample may be obtained by writing to the Emergency Laboratories, 32 Vestv25th street, ,New York City. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye II NAKCbtU tO 1HE SEA. 'Twas thus we sung the chorus from Atlanta to 4 he ea Whrle ' were march Ins through Georgia It tbe attic of a Chicago tenement an old man. seventy-four, was beard singing about midnight that "'Marsellaise"of 'C4. The song awoke every one in tbe house, and when his room was entered tbe veteran's eyes were wide open, but be was dead. Who was he? Nobody seemed to know except that f be was an old soldier and bad lodged there several years. No mutter. Some four decades ago and more be was one of Sherman's "bummers." He bad risked bis life for a piece of bunting, and. though nameless, that fact glorified his common life. - Just a private material for piling up Into tbe great windrows of the dead, to be tumbled. into the trenches beside the fevered nwamp, on nlaln or hillside, by the dark bayous or under tbe pines. Where bad be fought? Why. man alire, be was on tbe march to the sea! lie may have fought elsewhere at the inner trench at onelson or on the flame swept bill at Chattanooga but that was nothing. 1 He marched with Sherman to the sea! He may bare been In tangled woad. In mountain glen. On battlefield, in prison pen. But can't you understand? HR marched from Atlanta to tbe sea. The greater epic includes tbe lesser. What visions must have come to the dying soldier as he shouted his war refrain! ' The hoarse shout, tbe rolling drum, the bugle call, cries at the dying, cheers of the living, over all the rippling flag In his dying dream was thunder of tbe great guus. glimpses of the old brigade, tbe line of blue. And other visionsDid he not see that best of all THE! FRATERNAL HANDCLASP OF THE BLUE AND THE GRAY, brothers together, lovers of the flag? Who was he? It matters not. He belongs to a day that Is dead. And battered, poor, wrecked, dissipated it may be. be died, with a glory In his bosom that transfigured bis poor clay. The total sale of English goods In Argenina averages $100,000,000 annually. USEFUL DISCOVERIES Are Not Always Startling, Neither Do They Create the Most Talk. It is not always the greatest, most startling discoveries of science that are most useful to tbe human race. Comparatively few people were directly interested in Herschel's finding of the new placet Uranus, but many thousands have been benefited by Prof. TJnna's experiments, which proved beyond a question that Dandruff and Baldness are the results of the inroads of a parasitic germ which invades the roots of the hair. The discovery of the true cause of baldness made Newbro's . Herpiclde possible. Herpicide effectually kills this germ. Destroy the cause you remove the effect. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c. in stamps for sample to The Herpiclde Co., Detroit. Mich. One dollar bottles guaranteed. A. G. Luken & Co., special agents. HAMMOCKS What could be more comfortable on a July day than a roomy Hammock swung under the trees to catch the breeses? Here are comfortable sorts in full large sizes, fitted with foot and head spreads, comfortable head rest and deep fringed valance. New patterns In all colors. These hammocks are fitted with upholstered. thrown back pillows. - Price $1.00 to $5.00. L jllcr Dcrness Store S27 MAIN ST. The Store for Quality Leather Goods - .
AID MOTHER COUIIIHY
Norwegians Living in America Subscribe for Purchase of Big Vessels. NEW LINE ON ATLANTIC Two thousand Norwegians 'in the United States have subscribed for stock in a navigation project author ized and subsidized by the Norwegian government, and will aid their native land in upbuilding her maritime com mercial power. Arrangements have been made for the purchase of two fast steamships, capable of making the trip from Norway to New York lu seven days. These will be the foundation for a greater Norway-American line. Other vessels will be added as funds are obtained. E. IL Hobe, Norwegian consul at St. Paul has started for the old country to attend a meeting of a board of directors of the steamship company, when officers will be elected and the business put under way. The two vessels to be-first used are already In service. Three hundred of the 2.000 stockholders live in the Twin Cities. The shares are worth 200 kroners or $54 each.. The total stock issue is $2,300,000. . ; It Is a matter of common observation that grass does not grow so well close to trees as in the open. The same is true of grains. Experiments in this country and in England have shown that the deleterious effects upon one another of grass and trees are mutual. The trees suffer as well as the grass and grain. This is especially true of fruit trees. The cause is ascribed to the excretions of the trees on the one hand, of substances poisonous to the grass, and by- the grass on the other hand, of substances poisonous to the trees. It thus ap pears that the failure of the grass to grow well near trees should not be as cribed to too much shade, nor to the exhaustion by the tree roots of the food needed by the grass. -Harper's Weekly. The rat's sight is not good, but ifcs sense of smell and locality is without parallel.' Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deaf ness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused - by an Inflamed ronamon or tne mucous Jin ing or me uustacman lUDe. When this tube is Inflamed you have a rum bling 'ound or imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed. Deafness Is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tub, re. stored to Us normal condition, heav'.ne will oe aesiroyea rorever; nine cases out or ten are caused ty Catarrh, which is nothing1 but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give - On . Hundred Dol. lars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hairs catari n Cure. Send for circulars tree. , F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O. Sold by Druggists. 76c Take Hall's Family Pills for conrtl patlon. FIRE INSURANCE E. B. KNOIXENBERG Room 6, Knotlsnberg's Annex. LAM For the next 90 days, we wilt make a specialty of short time loans, on furniture, pianos, livestock, etc., in amounts ranging from $10 to $100 on from three to six months time. Weekly monthly or any kind of payments to suit the borrower. We will absolutely guarantee a much lower rate than that charged by any similar concern in the city. Inquiry will prove that we can and will save you money. Confidential. IndianaLoanCo. 40 Colonial Bldg., City. t ' Phone 1341. GO-CARTS Special Sale of Go-Carts This week. DUNHAM'S 627-629 Main ..HOT.. Weather Is a sure sign that your horse needs a coot feed. UBIKA Is the one highest in protein and lowest in Fiber and Heat of any feed on the market. Rictuccd Feed Stere 11-1S N. Stk 2TO
FOR MORTON STATUE
Wayne County Residents Will ingly Sign Petition to the Commissioners. MUST BE 6,000 SIGNATURES Hundreds of signatures have been secured to the Morton memorial monument petition by the committee of the Young Men's Business club. The erection of the monument is being urged that it . may be one of the features of the G. A. R. encampment here in 1911 and also to be a perpetual monument to the old soldiers of the county who served in the civil war. Not enough names have been secured as jet to present the petition to the county commissioners for their consideration. There must be ti,000 names before the appropriation of about $5,0ix can be recommended by the commissioners for the making of the cast Those In charge of the cir culation of the petition have found no opposition whatsoever. It is important that reports be made as quickly as possible. Man's Troublss. Funny, isn't it. that two-thirds of a man's troubles all wear petticoats? London Telejrrnph. Frisbie Collar? front Hi is B.CW1V4 The new KiK-low summer collar. looks hi fK.- feels low, shoulder curve helps il sii HgM and fiVnghV FRISBIE, COON &Qy s4Ti6j5raooDSftasx . . 23c en s or Tw-d We wish to announce that Mr. Walter Feeger has accepted a position with us as watchmaker, jeweler and engraver. O. E. DICKINSON, ' Disacsds Llcssted Wztch Depslrlaa 523 Main SI. t Whr Pnv rJ7mf9 I WW 11 J A UJ If 1 VI V Piehl & Essenascher f Fney and 8taple Grocers. ft We sell everything that is clean 1 ' and fit to sat. : 319 N. 5th Phone JC88
Fresco Pcinlina and - Interior Decorating Dickinson Wall Paper Store Phone 2201. " 504 Main 8t
