Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 287, 23 August 1910 — Page 2
t,7Y, today. Gcren lmadrsdjLng adTertUin matter,
.'. "w t " ft'r ijfcfc the muimunu rAi auiiix awd bvtclegraii, Tuesday, august 23, 1010.
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WOR THIES TO
cuno HIS TROOPS Victorious Nicaraguan Army C Making Things Hum in X the Capital Today. .y u URINES ARE HELD READY AND IP ATTACK 1$ MADE ON ANY AMERICAN THEY WILL .BE RUSH ID' PROMPTLY TO SUPPRttt THE RIOTERS. f lfejw Orleans. Aug. 23. Victorious after almost a year of lighting. In which 5,000 men have fallen, the Estradan gorernment todar la making a desperate attempt to ' curb Its riotout soldiers and partisans and to protect Americana from violence at Managua, according to dispatches from there today. General Mena, In command of the army that occupied Managua yesterday today doubled the police detail and threw a heavy guard about the American consulate. At the same time Consul Ollvares prepared to call marines from the American gunboats Yorktown and Vlcks- ' buff at Corrinto, should the situation get beyond the control of the insurgents. . Till late last night mobs paraded the streets, and the demonstration was renewed with dawn today. Down with the Americans," Is the orj. This Is ascribed partly to the fcgstsrla of the . moment, but to a greater extent to the unpopularity of the course pursued by Washington. NIcarsguans hold the United States responsible for the prolongation of t&o war through the failure to reconcile officially either the government tfe facto or the rebels. ' Yankees Net' Popular. That the revolution was pushed on jr American capital, and that American commercial , schemes dominate the country now, Is the belief of the average Nicaraguan a belief which Increases the seriousness of the situation. . Since the word spread that Madrli ' had resigned to General Estrada's brother, It haa been unsafe for an American to appear unguarded on the Streets. -Many have fled to Corlnto for protection.. - ,, : - . i Hadrls, who returned to the city after its capitulation, has attempted to aid In the preservation of order. " Mena and other! leaders today were taC communication 'with'- General Ee- , txada, urging him to hurry to a decision as to the next step. ' Already' dissension among the victors has become apparent In regard to the presidency. Estrada Is not expected to head the new government though he will play an Important part ta It. Kmitiano Charoorro Is named CS presidential timber, and Mena Is popular with his . troops. There Is still another danger in the amity between the provinces of Leon and Granada. Leon supplied the bacbone of Madrls's. army. Zelaya and Madris. both from Leon treated Granada, as If It were subject territory 8hould Granada retaliate, furth- , tr lighting might follow. BASEBALL NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost Pet Chicago 73 35 .67$ Pittsburg 66 41 .617 New York 63 41 .685 Philadelphia 54 55 .495 Cincinnati .. ..54 57 .486 Brooklyn . . ,. .. ,k ..44 65 .404 et. Louis .. 43 68 .387 Boston 41 73 .363 AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Won. Lost Pet Philadelphia ...... ..77 34 .694 Boston 65 48 .575 Detroit. . .. 64 49 .566 NSW York 63 50 .553 Cleveland 50 61. .450 Washington 50 64 .439 Chicago.. 44 66 .400 t Louis .34 75 '.313 . , AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. " Won. Lost Pet Ulaneapolls 87 43 .669 Toledo 70 58 .547 St Paul 70 59 .543 Kansas City ..66 60 .527 Columbus ..61 63 .493 Milwaukee 55 73 .430 Indianapolis ...... ..54 74 .423 Louisville.. .... .. ..46 79 .363
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. National League.' 'Brooklyn t; Cincinnati 5. ', New York 11: St Louis 4. Chicago 7; Boston 0. Pittsburg S-6; Philadelphia 4 5. American League. Washington 4: Chicago 3. ' Boston 8; St Louis 2. . -Philadelphia 7; Cleveland 6 (12 inn.) . Detroit 4; New York 5. . . . American Association. v Columbus S; 8t Paul 1. . Izlanapolls 5; Minneapolis 0. Toledo 8; Milwaukee S. raasaa City 4-1; Louisville 0-3. V GAMES TOOAY. , National League. Crooklrn at Cincinnati. Now York at 8t Louis. 'Caste at Chicago. ' riayhla at Plttaburg. . AmSrlcan League. , Ct Lclt at Carton. dvrCzzl a PttUdelphla, VxCX at New York. Ctaz9 at Washington. Amorleon Aeeeeiatlon. f V Ctrl U Columbus. y -1 CT K LMlavllle. o
ADVICE TO FARMERS GIVEN BY COL In His Address at Utica, New York, Conservation Was His Must Take Advice from Giants of Busm
TJtlca. N. Y Ao. 23. There are bo two public quettot uf more vital Importance to the future of fble country than the problem of conxerrntlon and the problem of the betterment of public life. Moreover, these two problems are really Interdependent, for neither of them can be successfully solved save ou condition tbac there Is at least a measurable traccem In the effort to solve the other. In any great country the prime physical asset tbe physical asset more valuable than any otber Is the fertility of the soil. All our Industrial and commercial welfare, all our material development of every kind, depends In tbe last resort upon our preserving and Increasing tbe fertility of the soIL This, of course, means tbe conservation of the soil as tbe great natural resource, and equally, of course. It furthermore Implies. tbe development of country life, for there cannot be a permanent Improvement of tbe soil If the life of those who live on It and make their living out of It Is suffered to starve and languish . io become stunted and weazened and Inferior to the type of life lived elsewhere. We are now trying to preserve, not for exploitation by Individuals, but for the permanent benefit of tbe whole people, the waters and tbe forests, and .we are doing this primarily as a means of adding to tbe fertility of the oil. although in each case there Is a great secondary use both of tbe water and of tbe forests for commercial and industrial purposes. In tbe same way It Is essential for tbe farmers themselves to try to broaden tbe life of the man who lives In the open country, to make It more attractive, to give It every adjunct and aid to development which has been given to tbe life of the man of the cities. Therefore, friends, tbe conservation and rural life policies are really two aides of the same policy, and down at tbe bottom this policy rests upon the fundamental law that neither man nor nation can prosper unless In dealing with the, present be steadily take thought for tbe future. Problem Old One. In one sense this problem' with which we have to deal Is very, very old. Wherever civilizations have hithertosprung up they have always tended to go through certain stages and then to fall. No nation can develop a real civilisation , without cities. . Up.- to a certain point the city movement Is thoroughly healthy. Yet it Is a strange and lamentable fact that always hitherto after this point has been reached the city has tended to- develop at the expense of the country by. draining the country of what Is best In It and making an Insignificant return for this best' " vIn consequence In the past every civilization In its later stages has tended really to witness those conditions under which "the cities prosper and tbe men decay." There are ugly signs that these tendencies are at work In this nation of ours. Dut very fortunately we see now what never before wasseen In any civilization an aroused and alert public Interest in tbe problem, a recognition of its gravity and a desire to attempt its solution. The problem does not consist merely In the growth of the city. Such a growth In Itself Is a good thing and not a bad thing for the country. The problem consists In the growth of the city at the expense of the country, and even where this Is not the case la so great an equality of growth In powerand Interest as to make the city more attractive than the country and therefore apt to drain tbe country of the people who ought to live therein. The human side of tbe rural life problem la to make tbe career of the farmer and the career of the farm laborer as attractive and as remunerative as corresponding careers in the city. Now, I am well aware that the farmer must himself take the lead In bringing this about - A century and a quarter ago tbe wise English farmer. Arthur Young, wrote of tbe efforts to Improve French wool: , "A cultivator at tbe bead of a sbeep farm of 3,000 or 4.000 acres would In a few years do more for their wools than all the academicians and philosophers will effect In ten centuries." It Is absurd to think that any man who has studied the subject only theoretically Is fit to direct those who practically work at tbe matter. But friends. I wish to Insist to you here, to you practical men wbo own and work your farms, that it is an equally pernicious absurdity for tbe practical man to refuse to benefit by tbe work of tbe student Tbe English farmer I have quoteYoung was a practical farmer, but be was also a scientific farmer. Why Farmers Lag. I ' One reason why tbe great business seen of today, tbe great Industrial leaden, have gone abead while tbe farmer has tended to sag behind tbe others la that they are far more willing and Indeed eager to profit by expert and technical knowledge tbe knowledge that can only come as a result of the highest education. From railways to factories no great industrial concern can nowadays be carried on. save by tbe aid of a swarm of men who have received a high technical education In chemistry, in engineering. In electricity and In one or more of scores of special subjects. Tbe big bustnesa man. tbe big railway man, does not ask college trained experts to tell him bow to run his business, but be does ask numbers of them each to give bim expert advice and aid on some one point Indispensable to his business. He finds this man usually In some graduate of a technical school or college In which he has been trained for his life work. In Just tbe same way tbe farmers should benefit by tbe advice of tbe technical men wbo have been trained la phases of the very work tbe farmer does. , 1 am not. now speaking of tbe jrho .baa, J4 sa nrdieKy general
trali'iluU. '.;!; In x-h:i or c-ol'ese. While l !!:- Stnu:tt undoubtedly be such a tr.iinf:j;i a fimndailou lextent diSTiTius r.ywnl'Hjr in the kind of wort '::-h :' "V.rentI l d as a uan. It I lie vert '.JfV!! ;:-t:: tfcnt ur educational ri!:i :i:u'.d iure and more be turned i:i tl:r dirmimi f educating men tr.-rJ cot cway from tbe farm and Hie ho;v , During thJ lHt fcalfrrnsury tre bave bejniu t' li've!: v:rni of agricultural ciTtun tioii at owe practical and scientific, ar.d v.e mum go on developing It Hat after developing it It muftt be rst-d- Tlir rich man wbo spends a fortune ujhiu a fancy farm with entire Indifference to cost does not do mucb Kod to farming; but on the other baud. ut aa little Is done by tbe working farmer who stolidly refuses to profit by tbe knowledge of tbe day. wbo treats any effort st Improvement ss abaurd on Its face, refuses to countenance what he rejrards as new fangled Idra and contrivances and jeers at all "book farming." 1 wish I could take representatives of tbltt type of farmer down to Long Island, where I live, to bare fbem see wbat litis been done, not as philanthropy, but as a plain bnatness proposition, by men connected with the Long Island railroad, who believe It pays to encourage the development of farms along the line of that ml I way. They bare put practical men In charge of experimental fiinn. cultivating tbem intensively nnd lining tbe bent modern methods nut only In raising crops, but In aectirlng the best market for tbe crops when raised. Tbe growth has been astounding, and lund only fifty miles from New York which, during our entire national
lifetime bus been treated as wortli-v less, has within the Inst three or four years been proved to iHMsess a really high value. , Interest to Farm Life. Tbe farmer, however, must not only make bis land puy. but be must make country life interesting for himself and for bis wife and bis sons and daughters. Our people as a whole should realize the Infinite possibilities of life in tbe country, and every effort should be made to make these possibilities more possible. From tbe beginning of time It has been tbe man raised In the country and usually the man born In the country wbo has been most apt to render the services which every nation most needs. Turning to tbe list of American statesmen, it la extraordinary to see bow large a .proportion started, as farm boys. .But it Is rather sad to see that In recent years most of these same boys bave ended tbeir lives as men living In cities. It often happens that tbe good conditions of the past can be regained not by going back, but by going forward. We cannot recreate wbat Is dead; we ; cannot stop the march of events. But we cau direct tbla march and out of the new conditions develop something better than the past knew. Henry Clay was a farmer, wbo lived ail his life In the couutry; Washington was a farmer, wbo lived and died In tbe country. And we of this nation ought to make It our business to see that tbe conditions sre made such that farm life In the future shall not only develop men of tbe stamp of Washington and Henry Clay, but shall be so attractive that these men may continue as farmers, for remember that Washington and Henry Clay were successful farmers. 1 hope tbst things will so shape themselves that the farmer can have a great career and yet end his life as a farmer, so that tbe city roan will look forward to living In the country rather than tbe country man to living In tbe city. Farmers should !earn bow to combine effectively. r.s has been done In Industry. I am particularly glad to speak to tbe grange, for I heartily' believe In farmers' organizations, and we should all welcome every step taken toward nu increasing co-operation among fanners. The Importance of such movements cannot be overestimated, acd through such Intelligent joint action It will be possible to Improve tbe market just as much as tbe farm. Equal Terms With City Folks. Country life should be as attractive as city life, and tbe country people should Insist upon having their full representation when it comes to dealing with all great public questions. In other words, country folks should demand tbst they work on equal terms with city folks in all sucb matters. They should have their share) In the memberships of commissions andcousells. In short of all the organized bodies for laying plans for great enterprises affecting all the people. I am glad to see ou such bodies the names that represent financial Interests, but those Interests should not have the right of way. and in all enterprises and movements iu which the social condition of the country Is Involved tbe agricultural country the open country should be as well represented as tbe city. The man of the open country la apt to bave certain qualities which the city man has lost Tbese qualities offset those which tbe city man baa and be himself has not. Tbe two should be put on equal terms and the country talent be given tbe same opportunity as tbe city talent to express It self and to contribute to tbe welfare of tbe world in which we live. Tbe country church should be made a true social .renter, alive to every need of tbe community, standing for a broad Individual outlook and develop ment. takln- th ter.d ? wor!s nod a Day Fever nzza hot Be CS2ABS3L VAPOR-OL NO. 7 ftoecia! vfll lm Instant relief. Absolutely harmless, and la poclUTe 'la Its results. ; Write for circular. Serial No. 23 Sold and guaranteed by Leo H. Fine, Rlcfc-
ROOSEVELT TODAY KeynoteTillers of the Soil :ss World.
recrenilon. iatZSj: ' Cit7 ttr.idnct than fur dojruia. ranrr for ethical, spiritual, practical Interment Hiao for merely formal piety. Tor country fair offers far greater (hi I hi Mile for -on-tinuous ar.d healthy usefulness t!:an it at present aiTurt!. Tbe conn try hool should he mnde a vital center for minncik. kk ial and educational ci-upi-ratiu. it is naturally fitted to r.r iiHi u cemer for those engaged In coi:sn n lal farming and still more for thosr engaged lu domestic farming, fur thosr who live on and by the- small farms they themselves own. Tbe pro'oleni of the farm is really tbe problem of the family that lives on tbe farm. On all tbese questions there Is need f Intelligent study, such as marks the hooU of Professor Bal-. ley of Cornell and of Horace Plunkett's book on the "Rural Lire Problems of tbe United Stiite." . Laborers oi Farms. One feature of tbe i roMcm should be recognized lv the farmer at once and an effort made to deal with It. It Is our duty and our latsluoss to consider tbe farm lalnircr exactly as we consider the farmer. No country life can be satisfactory when the owners of farms tend, for whatever reason, to go sway to live hi dries instead of working their farms, and. moreover, it cannot be really satisfactory wheu tbe labor system is so utanatfed that there is for part of the year a demand for labor which cannot lie met and during another part r the year no demand for labor at all. so that tbe farmers tend to rely on migratory laborers wbo come out to work In tbe country with no permanent interest In It and with no prospect of steady employment It Is exceedingly diSIctilt to make n good citizen out uf a man who can't count iiMn some steadiness and continuity in the work which means to blm bis livelihood. Economic conditions on the farm ht variety aud kind of crop growing especially as distributed In time and In housing for the men must In st shaped as to render it possible for the man wbo labors for tbe farmer to he steadily employed under conditions which foster bis self respect and tend for bis development. Above all, tbe conditions of farm life must always he shaped with a view to the welfare of the farmer's wife and tbe farm laborer's wife quite us mucb as to tbe welfare of the farmer, and tbe farm laborer. To have tbe woman a mere dnidxe Is at least as bad as to have tbe man a mere drudge. It is every wbit as lnixrtant to Introduce new machines to economize her luhor within tbe house us It is to Introduce machinery to increase the effectiveness of bis labor outside tbe house. - I haven't tbe "slightest sympathy with any movement which looks to excusing men and women for the non. performance of duty and fixes atten tion only on rights andnot on duties. 1 Tbe woman wbo shirks her duty as housewife, as mother. Is i contemptible creature, just as the corresponding man is a contemptible creature. But the welfare of the woman Is even more Important than tbe welfare of tbe man. for the mother is tbe real atlas wbo bears aloft-In ber strong and tender arms tbe destiny of tbe world. She deserves honor snd consideration sucb as no. man should receive. She forfeits all claim to tbis honor and consideration If she shirks ber duties. ' ' ' - : ' ' But tbe average American woman does not shirk them, and K is a matter of tbe highest obligation for us to see that they are performed under conditions wbicb make for ber welfare and happiness and for tbe welfare and happiness of tbe children she brings into tbe world. The Thoughtful Parent. ' The. professor of, ancient languages
Bag Sale To Ce Cesflssel Jul lids Week
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tied' Mrn te-i for m iu.:.ri : la cbarse of bis nty swu sitd belr. aged eisbteea months. lie was In bis study, and tbe mm ber. who had been content while she heard her uusliaud's voice, was uneasy when the sound of a triumphant 'There r came from the study. . ' She stepped to tln deor. left wide open lit case she mis lit he needed to assuage some Vtrfdch woe.- looked In and then rrtng uver the threshold to the baby. "James."? she crd Imllcnantly. "did yon give iHli.v this i play wltli IVa't you know tie always puts hnttons In bis mouth I've t.iid yuu so a hundred times." "Why. yes. n:y dear, certainly t am aware of that." !! t he prof-.ssswr. rudely recalled fru;:i Assyrian research. "Inn whea I saw Imw he desired the ln:tloii I enwe-lved the Idea of urtaihln- it firmly to a long string, so that In case the button did slip down It could he seellly recovered and all harm prevented."
BASEBALL GOSSIP Four triple plays bave been made in the National league this season. Manager McGinnity of Newark has canned the veteran "Steve" , Brodie, who has been with tha Redskins for three weeks. . . Rube Waddell made an auspicious debut in the Eastern league by beating Montreal and sending Newark back Into first, place. - The Cubs have it on the Giants. During 1909 the latter team defeated Chicago's crowd but three times ou the Polo grounds. The record this year is worse. . A cub bear ias been forwarded to the Chicago Cubs by the Spokane club. The Spokane fans hode that it will bring luck, "but Manager Chance and his men don't take much stock in the real live animal. The full name of Outfielder Thomaaon, the new player from Tacoma who has just joined the Naps, has been revealed. It is Arthur Wilson Townsend Thomason. Enough names for a whole outfield and a utility man. Player Fred Hunter of the Kansas City club was fined $50, in addition to suffering a three-day suspension, for striking Umpire Bush during a game lu Kansas. City August 4. Umpire Bush has been reinstated. Eddie Collins, wno gave Ty Cobb such a warm struggle for batting honors last year and who threatened to eclipse the Tiger star in base-stealing records, will not lead the league la bitttng this season, neither does he promise to beat Ty out for the record of stolen sacks. Derrill Pratt, foot ball and baseball star at the University of Alabama last season, later a member of tbe Montgomery Southern league team and said to be slated for a try-out at third next fall by the Chicago Cubs, haa
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A few left of our Chrono Watches, gun metal or, nickel, stem wind and - setting, compare, with goods at $1.50 and $24)0. Written guarantee for one 'year. BRASS FERN DISHES Choice of 6 or 7 inch, 98c Extra heavy, one piece solid brass, complete with Inset, can be seen in 'our window across the street,'-choice
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been anoointed foot' ball coach at the
Southern University located at Greens boro, Ala. Kansas City fans came close to setting a minor league attendance record a Sunday or so ago when 17.748 of them turned out to see the Blues give Louisville a double beating. And Dusty Rhoades, ex-Nap, showed that he knew what a psychological moment was by pitching a one-hit game in the first half of tnattVuble bill, shuting out the American Association cham pions. The Brooklyn club has relinquished its right under optional agreement to H. Brady with the Springfield club: T. Catterson and Pem Finlaysonn, with Lawrence; Walter Clement, with Jersey City; A. C. Downey, with Oklahoma; Bruce Evans; James Hamilton. David Kraft, WV K. Prout, Charles Swalm and Clyde Webster with Hannibal; Andrew Herbst and Georgu Sherwood, with New Haven. - , (American News Servlca.) Boston, Mass., Aug. 22 The Armory Athletic Association has arranged an attractive card for the initial boxing show of its season tonight. In the main event Harry Lewis and Leo Houck, of Lancaster, Pa., will meet in a twelve-round bout. City Statistics . Marriage Licenses. George Carrell, Richmond, 23, salesman and Sara Kramer, Wayne county, 19. Patrick Francis Qulgley, 203 South j Eleventh, 23, letter carrier and Abbie Eliza Veregge, 219 South B street, 22, domestic. Hugh D Morris, Cambridge City, 22, salesman, and Lela Jones, 21, Hagerstown. It this concern yon, read carefully: D: 'aldwvll's Syrup Pepsla is positively gnarsn :4 to cure indiffoition. constipation, alck ba .ilM, offensive breath, malaria and all dlseaact -sJajr from stomach trouble. ..Panic Proof.. Magazine Just Off the Press IflDe At All News Stands and Dook Stores s Meat lVIorket
BOXING
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Many persons wttl .recall the famous paradox of Zeao by.whlch he sought to prove ihat all motion la lutneas'.ble. A body,- he argued, "must move either In a place where it fat or la a place where It is not. Now. a body In the place where It Is ts stationary and cannot be in motion, nor. ob?!outy. can It be Ik motion in the place where It 1 not; therefore it cannot move at all." Bodies do move, however, and that la a sufflcler t answer to the ingenious philosopher
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V , :. , UN
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