Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 281, 17 August 1910 — Page 3
Tins mcnnoim paxuldiuh akd sttij-teiakuixasi, wkxutesdat, auuust 17, iio.
PAGE TUUEE 1
- PufeHsked and wn4 by the PALLADIUM PRINTINO CO.
!uud 1 days each week, evenings and
, . , uaaar merainjt
MNce Corner North Ith and A streets.
Home pnone mi. . IUCMMOND. IKDIANA, -
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Carl aWraaarot A Mart at Miter
SUBSCRIPTION TERMS.
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Dne roar. In advance fS.Oo
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Ono year, la advanco M la months. In advance 15 Cn month. In advanco .......... Addrooo chanced aa of ton aa desired:
on tli now and old addresses must bo
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fruir, wnicn onouia p " pec I fled term: name will not bo ontorrd until pay meat la received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office aa second class mall matter.
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JVCHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY"
Haa a population of 11.000 and la BTOwfna-. It la the county seat of Wayne County, and the trad In a center or a rich aerrlrultural community. It Is located duo east from Indianapolis mllea and 4 miles from tho state, lino. . . Rldtimond is a city of homes and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It Is also tho Jobbing; center of Eaatrrn Indiana and enjoys tho retail trade of the popufoua community- for miles around. Richmond Is proud of Its splendid streets, well kept yards, Its rement sidewalks and beautiful shade trees. It has I national banks, I trust companies and 4 building associations with combined resources of over M.000.000. Number of factories 116; capital Invested $7,000,000. with an annual output of SI7.000.000. and a ' pay roll of 1J.700.000. Tho total pay roll for tho city amounts to approximately M.100.000 annually 'There aro flva railroad companies radlattn In eight different directions from tho city. Incomlna; freight handled dally. 1. 7S0.000 lbs.; outgoing freight handled dally. 760.000 lbs. Tard facilities, per day. .1.700 care. Number of passenger trains dally. M. Number of freight trains dally. 77. Tho annual post office receipts amount to tlO.000. Total assessed valuation of tho city. 15.000.000. Richmond has two Interurban railways. Three newspapera with a combined circulation of 1S.000. Richmond la tho aroatest hardware Jobbing center In the state and only second In general Jobbine Interests. It has a piano faotry producing: a high grade f itane overy IS mlnutos. It is tho eader la tho manufacture of 7 traction engines, and produces more threshing machines, lawn mowers, roller skates, grain drills ' and burial caskete than any othor city In tho world. ' Tho clty'a area la S.040 acres: - haa a court houao coating 1500.i 000: 10 public achoola and haa tho finest and most eompleto high " school In tho middle west under 1 construction: I parochial schools: Earlham college and tho Indiana Rualnesa College: five splendid fire companies In fine hoso " houses: Glen Miller park, tho largest and most beautiful park In Indiana, tho homo of Richmond's annual Chautauqua; seven hotels; municipal electrle light , plant, under auccessful operation, and a private electrlo light plant. Insuring competition: the oldeat public library In the state, ex- , cpt ono and tho second largest. .40.000 volumes: pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed! 01 miles of . Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers; tl miles of cement curb and gutter combined; 40 miles of cement walks, and many miles of brick walks. Thirty churches. Including the Reld Memorial, built at a coat of $1(0.000: Reld Memorial Hospital, ono of the most modern In tho state T. M. C A. building, erected at a cost of tlOO.000. ono of tho finest In the stste. The amusement center of Pastern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of tho else of Richmond holds a" fine an annual art exhibit. The Richmond rail Festival held each October la unique, no ether city holda a similar affair. It Is given In the Interest of the city and financed by tho buelneee men. Succeaa awaiting anyone with enterprise In tho Panto Proof City. . -
This Is My 67th Birthday
CARDINAL RAMPOLLA. Cardinal RampoUa, ( whosa family nam it Mariano RampoUa del Tlnda ro, was born la Pollsso, Sicily, August 17. 1840. Ha traa oducatod at the Collogo Capranlca aad tho Academy of the Nobla Ecclesiastic la Rome, and la 187S became attached to the Nunciature at Madrid. In 1S77 be became Secretary of the Congregation of Oriental Rltoa. la 183S he was created titular Archbishop of St. Heracles and aant to Spain aa Nuncio. He waa created and proclaimed Cardinal, March 14, 1S87. taking title from the church of 8t Cecelia, and a few months later was named Secretary of State. At the present time he holds the position of Archprteat of tho Basilica of St. Peter. He la one of the leading diplomats of the world and la very popular with the Italiana-aad English. Upon the death of Pope Leo XIII, Cardinal RampoUa was one of the prelates mentioned to succeed him on th throne of St. Peter.
Items Gathered In From Far and Near
Still Discussing tho pistol, 'from the New York World. , Discussion of the shooting of Mayor Gaynor has led In Parts to a strong advocacy of the idea of making the sale of firearms a government monopoly. iA correspondent of the World baa suggested, similarly, that locally tho dlatrlbntion of Pistols and suns
should be held rigidly within the con-
Tendencies
'i
Richmond can put up the sign board "A Good Place to liveNo longer Is It asleep yet It waking does not complicate life to such an extent that there Is no chance gren for rest, recreation and sleep. Consider one of these nights that you call hot-and then think of the asphalt streets slssling till 1A.M. Think of the clatter of the great distributing centers of the country. The men who see their children grow up with no chance to play. The tired shop 'girl with never a friend on earth. The strenuous rush of business and the game of "Money! , Moneyl Money!" all these are meaningless to Richmond and hi who tries to tell the story lets it fall on unllstenlng ears. The best asset that could be extensively advertised Js-MRlchmond, A Good Place to Live. .
And how to keep it so and yet to grow 7 , That is a question for the business men and the average man the man who works and the man who hires. , The first Is to get the public service corporations In their proper place public servants and not overlords. Light , t i Heat- - Water. Here is a chance right before Richmond. Such a chance there has not been since the time when Richmond gave away franchises for a song. And here the average man must look to' the future for his children. Look at the time when these franchises were given away and wonder why it was done. ' ' . There was some selfishness in the average man's heart and the average man has paid the penalty. If the city will surrender principle for immediate gain, it will surrender principle for ultimate gain. "So shall ye also reap." " And Richmond is a good place to live." .
i Tonight when you go down Main street look at the young boys and girls. Notice what Is going on- Then ask your physician a few questions. A change Is going on before your eyes. A problem 'is facing Richmond..' And every mother and every father wostby of the name should face It, ( ' " ' (
Vv x IV . The new High School building and the joining of the work of the Art 'Association and the Symphony Orchestra that means good incalculable. There Is no place In this country In a small town where this work is going on in so noteworthy a way. 1 Its effect is to give the next generation a source of pleasure within themselves. r ' ' "
Pittsburg, like every other city, has reaped the whirlwind of the bipartisan machine. Pittsburg has a bad name and the figures looming out of the. Survey mean something. But it wss Brand Whltlock of Toledo a big sane man who saw what the real trouble is. It is the sepsration of religion from the moral code, the sepsration of both religion and morality from the business code. The world Is getting better. Hypocrisy is still extant but recognfied in all its forms. There are some things still in Richmond which are glossed over that , veryone knows . The man that will do an Injustice in his attitude toward wealth '(for Instance and do it In a spirit of complaining greed will do as great an evil as be conceives In others. - - And the man with the money the public service corporation the director who takes the attitude of "The public be damned," will reap his reward. The only thing that Richmond can do in making this a good place to live Is to establish the idea of justice to poor and rich. The tendencies at work that have been set forth are those things which can only be seen by those who look on it from the outside.
Richmond has a chance to tell a new story to hit a higher level than fees ever been struck In the Middle West,
Greed and insincerity sre tho deadly sins in a community will Richmond tell the tale? ' A good place to live."
Thanks Mr. Glaypooljor the Tip!
Says Mr. Jefferson Claypool, of Indianapolis, In the course of a long letter In the Cincinnati Enquirer: "It Is also a well-known fact that Beveridge is not satisfactory to exVice President Fairbanks, ex-Senator Hemenway, former Gov. Durbin and ex-Representative James E. Watson, the real leaders of the party In Indiana, and that their combined influence would be 'used to prevent his return to the senate In the event of a Republican legislature." Now Mr. Claypool either does or does not know what he Is talking about It he does not know what he la talking about, then his very good friends, whom he mentions In the above paragraph, should take steps to .shut off his loquacity.1 Mr. Claypool goes on to say:- ' ( "Forty per cent of the men nominated as Republicans for the legislature are known to be opposed to Beverldge's re-election to. the senaate, ' and a sufficient number of these, If elected, would never vote 'for him to prevent his election. , - . - - "Even here in his home county a majority of the Republican legist latlve nominees are known to be against him, and were selected on that account - ' - ' .' Now 'If Mr. Claypool does know what be is talking about, progress tva Republicans Insurgents It you please, and Indiana is full of these, Jdr. Claypool notwithstanding have reason to be glad of his outspoken- . ess. If a Republican legislature is elected In Indiana this fall It will be because a great majority of the Republican voters of the state believe that that self same body should return Albert J. Beveridge to the United Statea senate. In other words Senator Beverldge's real service to the nation in the senate In opposing the country's des pollers and therefore the absolute necessity from the common people's standpoint of bis re-elec- . tion, Is the main reason why the next legislature should have a Republican majority on joint ballot Furthermore, It will take the great personal popularity of Senator Beveridge to make safe the legislative ticket for the Republicans this falL If, however, aa Mr. Claypool says, forty per cent of the Republican candidates for the legislature . figure on winning by means of the senator's popularity and then intend to knife him and .prevent bis re-election well, Senator Beveridge, If this be true, had better retire from the race,' take from the Republican legislative ticket the immeasurable snsport of his following among the rank and file of Indiana citizens and then see If the Wataon-Durbln-Hemenway-steel-and-etJgar-trust gang can J elect a socalled Republican legislature this fan. . "": j
trol of the police.' Judge George C
Holt of the United States circuit court writes in the Independent that it would be. In my opinion, entirely justifiable for the government to prohibit the manufacture or sale of any pistols in this country except In nat
ional armories, for the use of the military and police." At the least Judge
Holt would limit the making, selling
and buying of revolvers, to persons
I . , licensed by a ' strong, responsible board. That weapons. designed for the legitimate purposes of war and self-defense have become the promoting instruments of murder; that km-' lngs In passion multiply which might be averted were these weapons less handy to obtain and hold these facts have long and openly been reoognlxed. The awakening to the nubile necessity of meeting these facts with. eCectlve
measures comes but slowly. The statistics of bloodshed point to the fu
tility of waiting on time, education
and police court warnings to remove tho pistol menace.
The Grouse Season, From the New York Times. London's bad season, with dull gray skies snd chill winds, is partly compensated for by the promise of good grouse shooting. Parliament nas risei
in time for the sport, and that part of
society which. Is not already "on the
continent Is bound northward for the
moors. Summerless England Is ex
changed for Scotland, which, when the
grouse are plentiful and in good condition, la. a good place to be, even if the weather Is wet Bright skies over
the moors transform thes sportsman a
part of Scotland into a semblance of paradise. To be sure, the serpent is there. The guns crack and the birds
are slaughtered by the thousands. But
they have fulfilled their destiny. Who
can do more? And mighty good eat
ing is a well cooked grouse from the
Grampian hills.
, The Busy Photographer.
Henceforth the public will Insist
that every attempt at assassination be
accompanied by photographs Illustrating every phase of the incident .-
BAD BLOOD.
Is the cause.of nine tenths of the Ills
which the human body is afflicted. The symptoms of which range from
the dreaded contagious blood poison
to the minutest eruption on the skin. They Include rheumatism, catarrh, scrofula, eczema, erysipelas, pimples,
boils, ulcers, running sores. Inflamed eyes, and enlarged glands, down to
sick headache and a muddy or sallow complexion. The prescription of Dr.
Simpson, (the noted blood Specialist
of Richmond, Ind.) known as Dr. A. B.
Simpson's Vegetable Compound, is the most powerful alterative, or blood pur
ifier, ever known. Its reputation was firmly established a few years ago, by curing apparently hopeless cases, was certified by county and city officials, and widely noted by the press; since
which thousands have been relieved by its use. '
Good blood invariably means vigorous health, and appetite, good diges
tion, strength, and a clear, healthful complexion. This is assured to all who try this remedy; its remedial effects are apparent with the first few doses. Dr. Simpson's Vegetable Compound Is purely vegetable, and is harmless as it is effective. It Is put up In convenient form st one dollar per bottle and is sold at all drug stores.
Conmcas' BuSietln No. 7
- k -
'483 babies under 5 years old paid their lives
as a caciifiee to the common summer ailments, such as impore milk, stutfy rooms, tight clothing.and overfeeding." July Report State Board of Health.
OtlE IUFAI1T LIFE , III EVERY HOUR IS JULY DEATH TOLL Nearly Thousand Young Lives Snuffed Out, Half by Summer Ailments. 1
EPIDEMIC HITS VINCENNES Southern City Has Death Rate of 32.9 for Month Because of a Typhoid Spread.
Death's fingers closed upon a child under 5 years of age in Indiana every, hour during the month of July and found time to rob more cradles besides. July was a. disastrous month for the babies, according to the monthly report of the state board of health which has just been compiled. The total number of deaths of infants under 1 year was 23, or 21.1 per cent of all the deaths. During the important period from the first to the fifth year 313 little lives were blotted out. Four hundred' and eighty-three babies under 5 years old paid their lives as a sacrifice to the common summer ailments, such as impure milk, stuffy rooms, tight clothing and overfeeding. This makes a total of 930.5 or under, who died in July. The death rate for Indiana was 12.3 with a total loss of 2,047 lives. Vincennes, Ind., shows the most alarming rate of all the cities, 32.9, due to an epidemic of typhoid which the state health authorities have j done , everything possible to check. Indianapolis Sun, Aug. 16.
The emphasis on IMPURE MILK is our own We want to impress indelibly upon your mind the aosolute necessity of pure, wholesome, SANITARY milk for young as well as old. Commons' Dairy Co. has the only sanitary mil piant in Richmond it is the only concern that can supply you with pure, pasteurized milk, because it alone' has made, the large investment of money in the mar chinery and equipment necessary to the proper prov duction of sanitary milk. Sanitary milk costs you more than common, ord nary milk, because it costs us more to produce it. It' worth more to you because you know sanitary mil? contains no deadly disease germs.
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For QmaUII lr3smGO
'O1
All Departments Unite in the Endeavor to Make August the Greatest Month of Value Giving. NOW is Unquestionably the Time For ECONOMICAL BUYING.
ft Jl l lLa" .11
An Opportune Time BUY , YOUR KCKEK
HERE
$15.00 Rockers on sale now 012.00
B S13.50 Rockers on sale now 310,80
010.00 Rockers on sale how 00.00 $5.00 Rockers on sale now 03.95 Others on sale at $1.25, 01.C3 end cp eaajBOaBaBaBaaBWBOBBoaBBea-PBBeaaaaaB . ' " - ' 3:
Cosimplleefte 41-Rconm iittffitt Sop Only
For the Ded Room 1 choice Quartered Oak Bed Room Suite, Colonj ial. consisting of chiffonier, 1 Napoleon bed, 1 i rocker, 1 dresser., with targe beveled plate mirror, 1 felt mattress, 1 spring, 1 pair pillows, 1 room size Tapestry rug, . all for;...--C47.D0
For The Mllrary Early English and Leather combine, a beautiful Library Set, 2 rockers, 1 large library table, 1 lamp, 1 desk, 1 chair, 1 couch, 1 room size rug, one pair lace curtains, all for ...... r... $03.00
For The Parte A beautiful three-piece Mahogany Parlor Suite, upholstered in genuine leather: One round par-, lor table, 1 odd corner chair, 1 large rug, 2 smaH rugs, 2 pairs lace curtains, all for . . .003s00
Fo The
1 Hoosier Special Kitchen Cabinet, 1 chair,; 1 gas range, 1 small table, linoleum, 2 shades, alf for 049.75
vuuuuvevu ii-i.ah avuuu. Hevuuuimufi? viLUC.vva, viLWfrtw cpivcrd Come in,1 look around," ask questions. Reserve for later deli veix if you like, or make arrangements that suit your convenience. The QaaSlty SCg?e MHV DflERE We Ala to lriscsg
Ccscei? N:t cc3 Elldta Street
