Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 248, 15 July 1910 — Page 4

PAOC FOUB.

Tins mcnuoND palladium and sux-telec ham, fkidat, july is, 1910.

: is J Sca-Tctesraci , MIUIm4 nd owned br tha

PALLADIUM PRXXTXNO CO. Iwud T dara each week, evenings and Sunday morning. Offles Corner North Sth and A atr. Ueme Pboae 11JI. RICHMOND. INDIANA. Staelk O. UN) SSSIta LaMaw JMM........SmtoM Nuigti Cart Bernhardt ...AaooHat CdNov T. SU PM4ilM.. Mrwa SSSIter. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond 15.00 par ear (In advance) or lOo pr week. MAIL. SUBSCRIPTIONS. On rar. In advance Six snonths. In advance J On month. In advance .......... 1 flVRAl. ROUTES. On year. In advance 1 5 Bin saontha. In advance 12 On month. In advance Addreoa change aa often aa dealred: both now and old addreaaea muat be Stven. Nubscrtbers will nlease remit with rdar. which should be given for a peciriod term; narre will not b enter. 4 an tit payment is .celved. Encored at Rlehm6n1. Indiana, post fflee second claaa mall matter. f (Naw York City) has aaJaartltotaesiMaUttea Est this jajhllssttw. Oalytktlwsst fJBJMtsMBJSBsl BJ MaV MfVS f tte r I I i r ' " RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Has a population ot fl.OoOand is growing-, it Is the county est of Wayne County, and tho trading center of a rich agricultural community. It Is '" rated due east from Indianapolis miles and 4 miles from tho state line. Hlrhmond la a city of homes and of Induatry. Primarily, a manufacturing- city. It la alao J he Jobbing center of Eaatern ndlana and enjoys th retail trade of the populous community for miles around. Richmond Is proud of Its splendid streets, well kept yards. Its cement sldswalRs and beautiful shade treee. It haa 3 national banks. 2 trust comr antes and 4 building aaaoctalona with combined reaourees of over ll.OeO.OOS. Number of factorleo 12: capital Invested 7.000.S00. with an annual output of IJ7.000.00. and a pay roll of fS.1SO.eo. Tho total pay roll for tho city amounts to approximately ls.IOO.oOA annually. There are five railroad compan lee radiating In elaht different direction from tho city. Incoming freight handled dally. 1.7S0.000 lb: outgnlna- frelK-ht handled dally. 750.000 Ihn. Tard fscll'tles. per day 1.700 care. Number of paaasnger trains dally, 19. Number of freight trains dally 77. Ths annual post office receipts amount to 110.000. Total asaeaaed valuation of tho city, m.000.000. Richmond baa two Interurban railways. Three newspapera with a combined circulation of IS. 00S. . Richmond la the greateat hardware Jobbing center In the state, and only second In general Jobbing interests. It has a piano factory producing a high grade planu every - II minutes. It Is the leader In the manufacture of traction engines. an4 produces more - threshing inachlnaa, lawn mowera, roller akatea, grain drills and burial csakets than any other city In the world. The city's area Is S.S40 srrer; has a court houao coating 1500.OOC: 10 public achoola and has ths flneat and most complete high school In the middle west under construction; S parochial schools: Earlham collar and tho Indiana Pualneaa College: , five splendid fire cnmpanlee In , fir. hoae houaes: Olen Miller park, the largest snd most beautiful park In Indiana, the home of Richmond's annual Chautauqua: seven hotels: municipal electrlo light plant, un- , der successful operation, and a private electrlo tight plant. Inducing competition: the oldeat public library In the atate. except one. and the eecond larrnat. 40,000 volumea: pure, refreshing water, una'irpaaaed; 0t mllea of Improved streets: 40 mllea of sewsrs; IS miles of cement curb and gutter combined; 40 miles of cemnt walks, and many mites of brick walks. Thirty churches. Including the Reld Memorial, built at a cost of 1110.000; Reld Memorial Hos. riltal. one of the moat modern n tho state: T. M. CL A. building, erected at a coat of 1100.000, one of the flneat In the atate. The amusement center of Kantrn Indiana and Weatern Ohio. No city of the also of Richmond holda ea fine an annual art exhibit. The Richmond Fall Veetlval held each October la vntnne. no other city holda a elmllar affair. It te arlven In the Intereat of the city and financed bv the bualneaa men. Succeee awaiting anyone with enterprise In the Panto Proof City. Items Gathered In From Far and Near From tho Baltimore American. An eastern fable tells of a potentate who demanded that there should be brought to him the stings of a thousand bees killed because one ot their colony had dared commit less-majeste by stinting the hand ot royalty. When they were brought In a tiny golden thimble the king was so mazed to find that a thousand ot the hypodermic points made such a little mass that he lsued a manifesto to the effect that thereafter no person within the bounds of the kingdom should complain at the sting ot a bee. The lesson of the fable Is that petty annoyances hurt because they are exaggerated in tho mind, that when they are seen in their actual proportions they are to slight as to merit only contempt How much comfort would come to the majority ot persons it they could but see the tiny site of the bee stings that lend them to acts of petulence, words ot anger, expressions ot reproach. The bee sting annoyances have caused lifelong breaches of friendship, they have broken up families and caused anger and resentment to take the place ot love and fealty. Milwaukee's New System. From ths Chicago Tribune. A, surrey of the results already achieved by Milwaukee's socialist administration does not disclose anything subversive of the present social order. On the contrary, It arouses In ths bourgeois bosom panes sot of fear

A Circus

The ShelbyvlUe Republican, a standpat organ. Is having a great iime over what Roosevelt Is going to do." It begins by saying: "The closest personal and political friends of Col. Roosevelt are somewhat at sea concerning his actus! state of mind, politically. It has not been many moons since the ShelbyvlUe Republican along with many other journals of equal Independence had it all dope'd out Just bow Mr. Roosevelt was coming back to this country to lambast those who found fault with the Payne-Aldrich bill. The ShelbyvlUe organ is not Important In itself, but only as It exhibits the strata of the standpat mind. Behold a month or so agone these gentry were quite sure that owing to the fact that Mr. Nicholas Longworth had married into the family that the pater families wouldn't dare show any of his old form In combatting predatory pillage. Now the bellows menders are Jubilant because Mr. Roosevelt has not come out and hamstrung Mr. Taft. The most of us have only been disappointed in the President at times and wished that he could distinguish between his real friends and some others. Says the Standpatter: The closest personal and political friends of Col. Roosevelt are some, what at sea concerning the actual state of his mind, politically. This fact' is Indelibly Impressed on the minds of all who have been privileged to meet him since his return from Africa. The Insurgent whom he invited to meet him has done so and retired smiling. Why, he does not know. The standpatter who felt certain of bis position called, smiled and is as uncertain as the other fellow. "The insurgent claims. Invariably, that he is "not at liberty to tell just what occurred," and the standpatter is equally as non-committal. "The situation is puzzling both scions of the house of Republicanism 'Teddy' in reality is not telling anybody just where he stands. While the insurgents may claim him and the regulars feel certain that they hold him. nobody but Teddy knows who he is for. Neither faction can tell how Roosevelt regards Taft and his administration, aside from the fact of his strong personal regard for the President. Even then her may not indorse all his policies." From the county seat in Shelby from which our esteemed contemporary gazes at the "amphitheater of politics" It may be that the vision is obscured by hope that Mr. Roosevelt will sidestep a moral Issue. Perhaps It will be at that place that Mr. James E. Watson will deliver a speech reading Mr. Roosevelt out ot the party. The sight would be worth the price of admission.

but of envy. The closing of 104 disreputable saloons, the initiation ot legal proceedings to recover $72,000 unpaid street car fares, the separation of dance halls from saloons, the Improvement of street car service, the reorganization of the system of street and alley cleaning, and other results belong In any Individualist good government program. What these results seem to emphasize for us all Is the ease and promptness with which a young party, not yet poisoned with spoils, can accomplish them. The path to responsible representative government Is over the ruins of the spoils system. Beware Poison Ivy. From the Boston Transcript. David Hsrum said the only seasons ot his boyhood that he could recall were two, "those of chilbains and stun bruises." He might have added a third, that of poison Ivy, which Is now at Its height. Celestial Green Ray. From the Philadelphia Inquirer. We positively refuse to become excited over that mysterious astronomical green ray that is poBlng as a rival of Haley's comet Once stung, twice cautious. TWINKLES BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. Tools of Trade. "So you pardoned that convict because he was a poet?" "Yes," replied the governor. "I want to encourage American literature. We iiave tried our best with midnight oil and a fountain pen. Now let's see what we can do with a dark lantern and a Jimmy." . How It Happens. "How does it happen that so many waiters In New York restaurants have pug noses ? "It's the result of turning them up at twenty-five-cent tips." Facing the Future. "Even when Henrietta gets the A Dead Stomach Of What Use is it to Anyone? Thousands? yes hundreds of thousands of people throughout America are taking the slow death treatment daily. They are murdering their own storasch. the best friends they have, and in their sublime ignorance they think they are putting aside the laws of nature. This is no sensational statement; it Is a startling fact, the truth ot which any honorable physician will not deny. These thousands ot people are swal low ing daily huge quantities of pep-j sin and other strong digesters, made! especially to digest the food in the stomach without any aid at all from the digestive membrane ot the stomach. In other words, they are taking from the stomach the work that nature In tended it should do. and are also re fusing It the only chance for exercise It has. MI-o-na stomach tablets relieve distressed stomach in five minutes; they do more. Taken regularly for a few weeks they build up the run down stomach and make it strong enough to digest its own food. Then indigestion, belching, sour stomach and headache will po. Ml-o-na stomach tablets are sold by druggists everywhere and by I. H. Fihe who guarantees, them. 50 cents a box. Uvea catarrh or montv hack. Jn breathe it In. Complete outfltjiacludins

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vote," said Mr.'Meekton. "I don't believe she will be quite satisfied." "Why not?"

"We'll have to reorganize the ballot so that when there's an election she can stay home and let me attend to that along with the rest of the er rands." Sport and Coin. "Why didn't you get up. before the referee counted 'ten'?" asked the dis appointed backer. "I was a little confused," confessed the vanquished pugilist "I thought he was counting, up the gate, receipts, and I was listening for bigger figures." As it May Be. It's hot enough an egg to fry x Upon the pave In this July; That is to say, if you can beg From some cold storage man the egg. A Moment of Emotion. She was tall and she was stately. In her speech she favored greatly All topics of a scientific drift. And her eye, which shone severely. Looked out candidly and clearly On this little world she studied to uplift. She was haughty, though intending To be kind and condescending To each ordinary mortal here below. And we listened to her readings, Her orations and her pleadings With all the deep respect that we could show. But one day when we assembled To catch every word that trembled On her lips, to erudition so inclined, We were plunged in consternation To behold her agitation In a quite unprecedented state of mind In a quite unprecedented state of mind. "Wow!" she cried, with voice capacious, "Ain't it. awful!" "Goodness gracious!" Her gesticulations left her in a wreck. When we said. "What is the mat- . ter?" She had scarcely strength to chatter, "There's a caterpillar crawling on my neck!!!" His Autobiography just received at Nicholson's. Largs 12 Mo., 420 pages, sixteen Illustrations. 8es window. Price $1.50 net NICHOLSON oV BRO. 729 Main St THE

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John Jacob Astor Purchases "Noma" from Estate of Dead Railroad King. A MEDITERRANEAN CRUISE New York. July 15. Although more or less disclaimers are heard on every side, there is a lurking suspicion in the minds of many of his friends that more than ordinary significance can be attached to the recent purchase by John Jacob Astor of the late.W. B. Leeds handsome steam . yacht. Noma. For some years Mr. Astor has been the owner of the Nourmahal, probably the moat completely equipped pri vate yacht in the world. On It, he; said recently, be had 6pent some of the happiest moments of his life and some of the most miserable. It will be remembered he was on this yacht last winter when it ran into a heavy storm in the Carrlbean sea, and was supposed for a week to have been lost. With so pretentious and seaworthy a boat available, the purchase of the Noma, which is not near so handsome a yacht, is hard to understand. At the time his wife divorced him and resumed her maiden name of Ava ' Willing, Mr. Astor in deep chagrin, declared he would never again use the Nourmahal and would give up yachting altogether as a pastime. This was but six months ago, and he is now making preparations for CuredbyLydiaEPinkham's Vegetable Compound ' Galena, Kans. "A year ago last March I fell, and a few days after there was soreness in my right side. In a short time a bunch came and it bothered me so much at night I could not sleep, it Kept growing larger and y fall it was as large as a hen's egg. I could not go to bed without a hot water bottle applied to that side. I had one of the best doctors in Kansas and he told my husband that I would have to be operated on as it was something like a tumor caused by a rupture. I wrote to you for advice and you told me not to get discouraged but to take Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetable Compound. 1 did take it and soon the lump in my side broke and passed away." Mrs. R. R. HrKT. 713 Mineral Ave., Galena, Kans. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ComEound, made from roots and herbs, as proved to be the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms of female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, and nervous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result has been worth millions to many suffering women. If you want special advice write f orit toMrs.Pinkham,Lynn,Ma8s. It is free and always helpful. BUY YOUR WINTER SUPPLY OF COAL NOW Prices Low H. C. BULLERDICK -& SON. PHONE 1235 The Flower Shop K1S Uala SL Phone 11)1 GREAT Q Stamps with, a package of Ball Blue j Qq Q SUmps with a package of Jelly Powder. Qq Q SUmps with a large can of Baked Beans Qq 727 Uxia i 01.00

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an extended trip to Mediterranean and other ports in the Noma in the company of congenial friends. Those who have their ears to the ground and are credited with having the confidence ot the new master of the Noma have Intimated that single life is palling on the multi-millionaire and that an important announcement along these lines may be made before the late fall.

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