Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 12, 21 November 1910 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE XZICII2IOND PAIXADIUX AKD 8UX-TELEGRAM, 310NDAT, NOVEMBER 21 , 1910.

Tb nict."nc:d PaHlon ' cJ S:a-Tcft;ra--Published and ewnd by the , . PALLADIUM PRINTINO CX). Issued 7 days aach wk. evenings and Sunday mornta. Of flea Cornr North th and A'streata, Palladium and 8un-Telea;rara Phon Itualnass OffU, Editorial Kooms, Sill. RICHMOXD. INDIANA.

Mdlb C Lttii E4ltar I. r. tabaff IwImh Maaaser Carl aWrafcarat Aaaaelata Ealtar W. It. raaaaataaa Hawa Kalta SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. 2a Richmond 11.00 jr year (In ad vanc or lOc per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. Ona rear. In advanea ..... '2 Six months. In advanea ......... 2.40 On month. In advance .4 RURAL ROUTES Ona yaar. In advanea IJ JJ Six month. In advanea .......... - Ona month. In advanea . Addro changed aa often aa dsslrad; both new and oi'l addree must be Slven. Subaerlbora will plana remit with order, which ahould ba siren for a ar-adrled farm: name will not be en tarad until payment ta received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, poet Office aa second claaa mall matter. Now York Itpresmtatlvea Payne ft Voima. 30-14 Writ 33rd street, and tWeet 32nd atreet. New York. N. Y. Chlr-aao ttepresentatlvea Payna ft Voun. 747-74 Marquette Uulldtna. Chicago, 111. TVs Aainaliriia f msrlra (New Yark Cky) has aadstrtlMtotkaslreaUtiaa at Ula ajabUeattaa. Only tha flaw ot esatataed ta tts rtpert sn sytM ea wa a a a aawaaaa a a s a asf RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Haa a population of 13,000 and la row In a. It la the county aeat of Wavne County, and the trading center of a rich agricultural community. It la located due eaat from Indlanapolla O rallaa and 4 mllea from the atate Una Richmond la a city of homee and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturer city. It la alao the Jobblna rer.ier of Eaetern Indiana and enjoye the retail trade of the populous community (or mllea around. Richmond la proud of Its apiandid atraats, well kept yarda. Ita cement aldewalka and beautiful ahaie trass. It baa 3 national banka. 3 trwat companlea and 4 bulldlna association with combined reaourcea of over 18,000.00. Number of factories 115; capital Invested 17.000.00. with an annual output of 137.000.000. and a pay roll of I3.700.OOC. The total pay roll for the city araoanta to proximately 14.300.900 annualThere ' are five rattroad rompan las radlatlne in eight different dlroctlona from the city. Incoming freight handled dally. 1.730.00 Iba.; outgoing freight handled dally., TtO.600 lba. Yard facllltlea, per day. 1.700 care. Numbr of paaeenger trains dally. 30. Number of freight tr-lne dally, 77. The annual pout office reeelpto amount to 30.000. Total aaaeeaed valuation of thj city. 11.000.000. Richmond haa two Interurban railways. Three newapapera with combined circulation of 11.000. Richmond la the greatest hardware Jobbing ener In the atate and only rerond In general lobblnr Interests. It baa a pfe.no fectrr pr.odurnr a high grade rlano every IS mlnutea. It la tha adr In- the mnnufartura of trartlor enaMnea, and produces more threshtna machine, lawn run rn roller skates, -rraln drills and birlai matte's than any other Mtv In the world. Tha rltv'e area la 3.440 arraa! haa a court house coating 3800.MO: 10 ptiMIc schools and haa tha finest and moat complete hlgl arhosl In the middle weat under construction: 3 parochial school: Karlham college and tha Indiana Ittiatneea College; five splendid tiro companies. . In fine hose . boneae: Glen Miller park, tha largest and meat beautiful park tn Indiana, the heme of Richmend'a annual cbautaaqua: aeven hotels: municipal elect rlo light p!nt. under successful operation. , and a private eleetrlo light plant Ineurlnr competition; the oldest public library In the state. ' cent one and the second tare-as 40.00 volumes; pure, refreshing water, tinanrpassed; at tittles of Improved atreata; 40 mllea of oewera: S" mllea of cement enrb and gutter combined; 40 mllea of cement walka. and many mllea of brick walks. Thlrtv churches. Including the Tteld Memorial, built at a coat of 3330.000: Reld Memoris! Hospital, one of the moat Tnonem in ina araia- i. M. C A. bnUdtng. erected at a cost of tlOA.000. one of the ftneat In tha state, The amuaement center of "tem Indiana and Weatarn Ohio, ' No cltv of the alio of Richmond bnlde a fine an annual art exMhlt. The Richmond Fall Festival held each cVober 1a unique, no other cltv hold a similar affair. It ta given In the Interest of the cltv and financed by the bttslneen man. Suceeea awaiting anvnne with enterprlae In tha Panlo Proof i City. s This Is My 59th Birthday ARCHBISHOP OF VANCOUVER. Moat Ry. Nell McNeil, who waa recently conaecrated aa archbishop of the Roman Catholio archdiocese of YaacouYer. B. O, was born In Hillsboroutb. N. 8., NoTcmber 21, 1851, said received his primary education there. In 1873 he was sent to the college of the Propaganda In Rome, where he remained alx yeara. He was ordained a priest In 1879 and returned to Nova Scotia the folio wins year to become rector ot SL Francis Xavler college. He remained with the college until 1891. Four years' later he became biahop of Nllopolia and vicar apostolic of 81 George's, west coast of Newfoundland, where he remained until chosen last January to become rchtlshop of Vancouver. Ready la a Jiffy, delicious brown cakes, Mrs. Austins Buckwheat Flour. , Practically all of the thirty thousand osa which were exiled from Cecxtaatlnople this summer to an iabni lu the Marmoraa aea have died c the barren rocks of disease and thirst, Bread waa seat each week Kvbi wftii,nuuvywi in i v was sw vaw fn tsalltr that the dogs preferred to sat tlztr dead conpanloas. .

Tolstoi

The world stones the prophets and builds their sepulcbers. We in America have only an Inkling of what the straggle over the ecclesiastic rites of Tolstoi's funeral means. We are apt to think of it as like something near home the burial service in one of our big churches. In Tolstoi's case It. has the germs of something bigger the germs ot a possible revolution. Tolstoi's protest was a protest against the Iniquities ot organized society; he put by the world, the flesh and the devil; stood out for the life which is not tinctured by the material in any form. That this brought him into violent conflict with the Greek church and what is the same thing-he Russian government shows precisely what that organization with two heads on the aame body Is. It Is like the explosion from a thirteen inch gun showing up only when the fuse lights the powder what an' engine it is and Tolstoi's was the divine spark that set It off.

Like all men strong and sane Tolstoi doubted whether man made things were sacred, hence be fought ecclesiasticism by teaching God and Love. Whatever Tolatoi combatted it was with these weapons. Tolstoi an Incendiary? Yes, of the most revolutionary sort, God, Christ and Love (The Holy Ghost) are the forces of revolution and evolution growth toward perfection. . My farewell message to the world at my age every greeting la also a farewell Is my view as to how life should be framed in order that it may be henceforth, not aa heretofore, bad and sad, but as God wishes and as we wish ourselves; that is, that it may be full of happiness and contentment.

The attainment of this aim dependa upon the conception we have of our lives. If my conception' of life Is that my body (the body of John, Peter or of Mary) is given me in order that I may find in it as much pleasure. Joy and fortune as possible, In that case my life must always, under all circumstances, be miserable or bad. The reason is that what I desire, every one else desires. As every one wanta the greatest amount of pleasure, and aa the sum total of pleasure remains the same, there la not enough to go around.. Therefore every man who lives for himself must make something from others, he must combat others, hate others and make others unhappy. Even those who attain their purposes are never happy; they are tortured lest others should deprive them of their , wealth, and envy others who have accumulated more than they.

The life of all men who live in the body must be miserable. All such men are unhappy. Life is given to us for real happiness. But to attain auch happiness a man muat understand that the real life is not in the body; that happiness is not reached in obeying the body's dictates, but In obeying the dictates of the spirit which lives in all men. The spirit asks for spiritual happiness. And as the spirit is one in all men it asks for the happiness of all. To wish all men happiness, however, means to love all men. And the more a man loves, the freer and the more Joyful Is his life.

The world Is so constituted that despite the best efforts no man can live as his body demands, because what his body demands Is sometimes unattainable, and even if It be attained, that is only at the cost of fighting with others. But the spirit, the soul, can always live happily, because all that it demands is love, and to attain love no man has to fight with another. The more a man loves the nearer is he drawn to others. Why then do we not love? Each will be happier and more contented the more he loves and he will make others happier and more contented at the same time.

. According to a legend, the Apostle John, in extreme old age, was obsessed by one feeling which he gave expression to in the words: "Children, love one another." That was the counsel of a man who had reached the extreme limit of life. It Is In this way that the life of man must develop when it reaches a certain stage.

All Is simple; all la clear.' Man livee that is, man is born, hegrows, matures, decays, and dies. Can the Object of such a life lie within itself? Surely not. "What Is the object?" we ask ourselves. "What am I?" The answer comes: "A being who loves." At first it seems as if man loves only himself. But a short experience of life and a little thought are enough to show that such love has no aim. Whom then ahall we love? A man loves his relatives, his friends, all who love him In return. At first that seems to satisfy. But not always. Firstly, these men and women are Imperfect; secondly they change; thirdly, they die. Whom then shall man love? There is but one answer. We must love all, must make love the baaia of all, muat love God. Man muat love not for the aake of the object loved, not for the aake of aelf, but for the aake of love. We need but to realise this and the ills vanish out of life and life becomes clear and joyful. Let the world pause today and let the little matters . slide, a great man la dead, and he shall, not have died -in vain if at least one man learns his message or even a very small part of it. And there are many who follow In his footsteps and know It not. '

CANADIANS ARE TO HOLD BIG BANQUET Boston, Mass., Nov. 21. The Canadian club of Boston has completed elaborate arrangements for its annual banquet at the Parker house tomorrow night Sir James Grant of Ottawa, James Brierly of Montreal, C. R. McCullough of Hamilton. J. F. Mackay of Toronto.. H. S. Evans of Winnipeg and a number ot other prominent Canadians are among the ' scheduled speakers. D. A. R. OF GEORGIA HOLD CONVENTION Savannah. Ga Nov. 21. Many distinguished women from over the state have gathered In Savannah for the annual convention of the Georgia division of the Daughters of the American Revolution. The business sessions, will continue over tomorrow and Wednesday and will be Interspersed with receptions, luncheons and other features of entertainment arranged by the local chapters. " THIS DA TE

NOVEMBER 21. 1729 Joslah Bartlett, one of the signers of -the Declaration of Independence, born In Amesbury,.Mass. Died May 19, 1795. 1784 Governor Thomas Carleton arrived in Parrtown, and the new province of New Brunswick was proclaimed the following day. - 1789 North Carolina accepted the federal constitution. 1806 Napoleon declared a blockade of the British Isles. 1859 Mail steamer Indian wrecked off the coast of Newfoundland, with loss of 30 lives. , 1861 United States vessel Santee captured the privateer, Royal Yacht, off Galveston. 1S78 Halifax award of $5,500,000 paid to Canada. 1886 Charles Francis Adams, noted diplomatist, died in Boston. Born there August 18. 1807. . -. . . " . 1899 Garret A. Hobart, twenty-fourth vice president of the United States died in Paterson, N. J. Born In Long Branch. N. J, In 1844. 1902 Premier Dnnsmuir of British Columbia, resigned and was succeeded by E. O. Prior.

l,73r,000 ACRES OPEN FOR SETTLEMENT Washington, D. C, Nov. 21. Lands reaching the grand total of 1,737,000 acres in California and Nevada are to be opened to settlement today and to 'entry one month hence, in accordance with a proclamation of the Interlon Department. The lands were originally withdrawn for the TruckeeCarson irrigation project, but have been restored owing to tlie fact that they are not easily irrigable.

MASONIC CALENDAR Tuesday, Nor. 22 Richmond Lodge No. 196 F. and A. M. Called meeting. Work in Masters' degree. Refreshments.' Wednesday. Nov. 23 Webb Lodge No. 24 F. and A. M. Called meeting. Work in Masters degree. Refreshments. Friday, Nov. 25 King Solomons's Chapter No. 4R.A.SL Special meeting. Work in Royal Arch degree. Refreshments. The percentage of Infant mortality In New York City was greater last year than ever before. IN HISTORY"

Career of Late

Was a Most LATE COUNT TOLSTOI AND WIFE. Count Leo Tolstoi was born on August 28, 1828; at a place near Tula, about 150 miles south of Moscow. His mother died when he was three years old and his father six years afterward. His early schooling was under the influence of the general feeling among wealthy Russians that religion was a superstition and one quite unnecessary for the best development of really cultured people. Tolstoi attended the university of Kazan, but did not pass the final examinations. In 1855 he went to visit with an elder brother in Caucasus. The rugged wilderness of the country influenced him profoundly. He entered the army and and sought an assignment to an artillery post near his brother. In 1854 the Crimean war influenced the young man to apply for active service. But in the interval he wrote many short stories which attracted the attention of the literary set in Moscow and St, Petersburg. In the Crimean campaign, as the commander of a mountain battery Tolstoi distinguished himself by brave and effective service. He had a first hand experience with war which was most valuable to him in his later work. Leaving the army at the close of the war. Count Tolstoi found a most flattering reception in St. Petersburg. He was sought as a nobleman, as a returning hero and as a literateur. ; He soon became utterly disgusted with' his surroundings at St. Petersburg and with his own life there. He described himself afterward as having been a murderer, adulterer, robber and liar in this period, although his crimes were not of a sort usually described by these terms. He retired to Jasnaya Poliana, near his birthplace and remained there the rest ot his life. Count Tolstoi was married! in September, 1862, to the daughter of a Moscow university professor. She had obtained & diploma from the university when she was 17 years old. In her society he found the utmost comfort and happiness. They had sixteen children, but the cares of motherhood did not prevent the . countess from serving as his amanuensis all through his labors as an author. One of Tolstoi's first acts on retiring to his country estate was to free his serfs in advance of the decree- of the czar. He Is said to have been the first nobleman to free his serfs. He devoted himself to plans for the education and betterment of the peasantry. After a while he became wrought up over what seemed to him the purposelessness of life. He contemplated suicide but gave it, up. He went into all varieties of philosophic investigation. k Among some of his own peasants Tolstoi reached the conclusion that a literal following ot the gospel brought about the living of a truly useful and happy life. He settled down to a life of manual labor and extreme simplicity of diet and conduct. This was about 1880. In the last twenty years the principal writings of Tolstoi have been "My Confession." "A Criticism of Dogmatic Theology," never translated, "The Four Gospels Harmonized and Translated." "What I Believe," sometimes called "My Religion." "The Gospel In Brief." "What Must We Do Then?" "On Life," also called "Life." "The Kreutzer Sonata," treating of the sex question, "The Kingdom of God is Within You." "The Christian Teaching." "Where Is Art?" and "Resurrection." In these books he set forth progressively and fearlessly his views of true living. They were much more at variance with the views of the Russian government. Tolstoi expected to be persecuted for writing them. The government, however, went no further than to suppress some of the books to mutilate others and to banish some of his friends. The government has inspired the publication of books combatting the Ideas of TolstoL Recently the author went even further than preaching through novels and addressed himself directly to the czar in a letter in which he predicted the renewal of nihilism and the horrors of the prevention of nihilism by massacre if the czar did not manifest a change of heart. , A frequent visitor at Tolstoi's home thus described the distinguished author at work. "He haa always been a hard . but apa smodic - worker. There

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Leo Tolstoi

Remarkable One are times when for a month he will hardly put. pen to paper, but when he haji a task In hand that interests him he will .work with relentless purpose and absorbing zeal. When he is actually working no one dares interrupt him even his wife makes it a rule not to disturb him." . For many -years Tolstoi refused to accept payment for his writings; he gave away much of his property. These things, as well as his love for associating with the poorest peasantry were not altogether pleasing to his wife. . Tolstoi's chief literary work in the last years of his life was an exclusive autobiography, on which he spent hours of steady work nearly every day.. He was a strict vegetarian and almost a total abstainer, drinking only a sip of wine at the urgent advice of his physician v'ho had practically been a member of the household and always within call for more than four years. The publishing of his novel "Resurrection" In 1901 earned the count excommunication from the Greek Catholic church and two years ago, on his eightieth birthday, the holy synod addressed a circular to all believers stating that the count was a pagan and that all true believers should abstain from participating in the celebration of his birthday if they wished to save their souls from the. wrath of God. Within a year of his death, Tolstoi rode out regularly on horseback and when the weather was not too cold he bathed often in the river near his home. He was opposed to both anarchism and socialism. He once said he believed the salvation of Russia depended upon the peasant ownership of land, the application of the single tax system of Henry George. Henry George and Garrison were in his opinion, the two greatest Americans. He opposed the Russo-Japanese war vigorously, blaming Russia chiefly for it. He prophesied that the duma would not accomplish anything, referring to its members as "babblers." Order individual turkeys for Thanksgiving dinner at Price's. 21-3t The Scrap Book A Perplexing Inquiry. . In a New York furniture store a young engaged pair were looking at mahogany tables for the nest they were about to furnish. As the clerk was doing his best to make a sale the young woman turned to her betrothed and said: "Mamma has one just like this. Perhaps she'll give it to us." The clerk hastened to expound the beauty of curved legs, and the Benedict to be turned to bg sweetheart and asked Innocently, "Are your legs curved?" It was sixty seconds before he could account for the furious blushes of his betrothed and the uncontrollable merriment of the clerk. New York World. Hypnotic Triumph. A doctor related the following story: "I had a patient who was very 111 and who ought to have gone to a warmer climate, but whose means were Insufficient, so I resolved tp try what hypnotism would do for him. I had a large sun painted on the ceiling of his room and by suggestion Induced him to think it was the sun which would cure him. The ruse succeeded, and he was getting better rapidly wben one day on my arrival I found he was dead." "Did it fail, after all. then V asked the doctor's hearers. "No." replied the doctor; "he died of sunstroke." Circle Magazine. And the truth

is spreading from city to city and town to town in an -ever-increasing wave, a demand that is taxing factory facilities to the utmost

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LARN TO LIVE. A man who does not learn to Eve while earning a Eying is poorer after his wealth is won than he was before. J. G. Holland.

AN ENGINE SPARK SETS BARN AFIRE Eaton, O., Nov. 21. A passing Panhandle train at noon Sunday is believed to have thrawn out a spark that alighted on a stable roof at the home of Charles Rover. East Main street, and started a small fire, which was extinguished by tbe fire department before much loss had been incurred. Tha v-.. v .. ain. . The game of quintain survives only in the villifge cf oarhatu Green, In Kent, England. It la so named from on instrumeut used in tiltias on horseback with the lance. It consisted of an upright post, surmounted by a crossbar turning on a pivot, which und at one end a flat board and at the other a bag of snnd. The object of the tilter was to strike the board at such a. rate of speed that he would be past and out of the-way before the bag of sand as it whirled round could hit him In the back.

YOUR SICK, SOUR, UPSET STOMACH I'M REALLY EL HUE HI HUE .1II1UTES.

A little Diapepsin will promptly regulate .any bad Stomach. You can eat anything your stomach craves without fear of indigestion or dyspepsia, or that your food will ferment, or sour on your stomach if you will take a little Diapepsin occasionally. ' Your meals will taste good, and anything you eat will be digested: nothing can ferment or turn Into acid or poison or stomach gas, which causes Belching, dizziness, a feeling of fullness after eating, nausea, indigestion (like a lump of lead In stomach), biliousness, heartburn, water brash, pain in stomach and Intestines or other symptoms. Headaches from the Btomach are ab

Turkeys, Buctis, Chickens "Let us select your poultry for your . Thanksgiving , dinner. , We will have a nice lot of small turkeys averaging from 8 to 10 pounds, besides larger ones to select from, also plenty of ducks, chickens and fresh oysters, ' , . Jones little Pig Sausages .We are the exclusive handlers of the products of this famous farm. One box of these little figs will convince 'you of their superiority over other 'brands, also their pure leaf lard In 5 lb. buckets Is the heighth of perfection'. Oranges! Oranges! 20c a Dozen We will run a regular 30c size Florida orange, thin rind and Juicy, on sale Tuesday and Wednesday. Grimes Gold Apples, Extra Fshcy Will have 5 bbls of the finest G. G. apples you have seen this season. Also plenty of Jonathans and Belleflowers. Grapes Tokays, Malagas and Concords. Extra quality M Meat, .New Nuts, Nut Meats, Layer Raisins. In fact e verythlng good the market affords. Your order will be appreciated and carefully filled. .

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Many a Gloomy Countenance In Rich mond Now Lishttrs With Happiness. A bad back makes you gloomy. Cant be happy with continual back ache. The aches and pains of a bad back Are mostly due to sick kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills cure sick kid neys. They hare made many a happy home in Richmond. Read what a grateful citizen says: Mrs. James Henry Brokamp, 62 Sherman street. Richmond, Ind., says: ; "Doan's Kidney Pills have been used in my family oft and on tor at least six years and they have brought such good results that we alwaya keep a supply on hand. Whenever an attack of backache or any other symptom of kidney complalint appears. Doan's Kidney Pills are used and they never fall to bring relief.- I have no hesitation in recommending this remedy. For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name --Doan'a and take no other. To hold a pencil on a writing desk when it is not in use there has been devised a simple magnet with a steel cap to be placed on the end of any pencil. ' " . solutely unknown where this effective remedy is used. Diapepsin really does all the work of a healthy stomach. It digests your meals when your stomach can't. A single dose will digest all the food you eat and leave nothing to ferment or sour and upset the stomach. : V Get a large 50-cent case of Pipe's Diapepsin from your druggist and start taking now, and In a little while you Will actually braar ahnnt vonr - - m t healthy, strong stomach, for you then can eat anything and everything you want without the slightest discomfort or misery, and every particle of impurity and gas that is in your stomach and intestines is going to be carried awaywithout the use ot .laxatives Should you at this moment be suffering from Indigestion or any stomach disorder, you can get relief within five minutes.

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