Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 101, 18 February 1911 — Page 8
lAfIE KIGIIT
THE RICHMOND PALLADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1911.
DUSIflESS MEtl OF BICHMOIID HEAR A SPLEI1DIDJ.ECTURE At First Annual Banquet of Y. M. B. C, Dr. C. B. Morrcll Delivers an Address on Salesmanship.
(Continued From J'nge One) Interest, u desire for tho goods and Anally tho .action of buying moving jour cuslomer. After the sale confidence must be Inspired In order to continue business with that customer. Cheating Poor Business. "The man In nothing but u fool who tries to cheat the people. As Is the old naylng, 'You can fool some of the peoplo all the time, all the people some of the time, but you can't fool all the people all the time.' "Tho time is past when men can Ju.t blow their horn and start business. They've got to be prepared they must have knowledge. It is not power, nor not Ideas we want, but It Is both. Floih arc essential. What Is better than doing a thing right? Do it right, right now. "On your program I sec the words The Panic Proof City,' I believe it, but to continue so the business of Kkhmond must be placed on a foundation of honesty and confidence which from the looks of you men here tonight I have no doubt It will be." In conclusion Dr. Morrel proposed the toast, "Here's to the twentieth century business man, the nwu of heart and brain, of power and will, whose vocation and avocation are one; who lives, loves and labors us a man." Was Well Attended. The banquet was attended by about 30 members of the V. M. H. C, Commercial club and guests. It was served by the ladles or the Eastern Star. Tho menu was elaborate. Vocal music by a quartet composed of II. li. Kamp, K. N. Wilson, Myron Malaby and G. W. Craighead, was furnished. The first speaker of tho evening was It. U. I.cedg, who was Introduced by W. D. Foulke, the toastmaster. Mr. Leeds dwelt chiefly on the growth of the T. M. FI. C, from its organization with sixteen members to the present membership of 250. "The narrow, singlo-guagcd, finebore business man, who sees nothing but his little business and who never has time to say a pleasant word to bis family, go to church, attend business meetings or take a vacation Is a detriment to the community,' declared Charles W. Jordan, secretary of the Commercial club. "Harmony. Is what we want between businesses and business organisations but such men as that will never promote it. "My Idea is not to offer big bonuses to secure Industries for Richmond, but to make the city beautiful so that when a manufacturer stops here, ho will say, 'hero's where my factory belongs.' Great pratso Is due public spirited business men of Richmond." "There are are many kinds of mouths, said George P. Karly of Pittsburg. "Itig mouths, loud mouths. shootlng-off mouths, akin to the loud species, and then there Is the mouth that will go off on any subject you can mention, on a frietional cock." Karly address was on "Stomatology." Ho spoke of kissing in his early boyhood. , One girl, Jennie Rrown, he remembered, whom no ono would kiss. Her face looked like It had been run over by a wagon. Jennie had an awful figure. She grew up though and married a galoot who had always been at tho 'bottom' of his arithmetic class. Tho galoot cared nothing for figures,. Mr. Early assured the banqueters. Wilfred Jessup sKke on the "Individual Member." He mentioned W. W. Keller, U. O. Leeds and K. L. Torrenee as especially actlvo members. UtiNESS HOUSE CLOSES DOORS. An old customer of a retail store called up the Proprietor on tho telephone and Inquired w hy his front door bad been locked during the morning. ,The Proprietor was frankly puzzled, for his doors had been open as usual at seven o'clock sharp. On the contrary Insisted the old customer I tried nine times during the forenoon to enter your place of business and on each occasion the doors were closed against me. Tho Proprietor, as jwlltcly as Anglo Saxon permitted, implied a mistrust of the old customer's powers of observation and reminiscence. Xln times, pursued the old customer! I attempted to enter your store and place an order with one of your clerks and each time 1 was Informed that your wires were busy No, I did not try to enter your store by the street doors, I tried to enter by means of the telephone wires. Finally. I bad to place my order with another firm. Would it not be potable to keep all of your doors opened to customers at all times. It was. for the loss that one order Involved a sum sufficient to pay for cn enlarged telephone service for four mouths. ejamaammna You may be a high speed engine HUT You may have the brakes on. ' 1S-U Prof. H. R. Forbes says that Arizona has a potential water supply for purposes of Irrigation, including the ordinary flow of streams, storage and subterranean waters available by lumping, an ' approximately 4,393,000 acre feet a year, enough to permit the IntenslT farming of over ouc million uvrcs of land.
Sunday Services At the Churches
St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran C. Huber, pastor. Sunday schookat 9. English services both morning and evening. At the morning service the Sunday school will render a foreign mission program. Young peoples meeting at 6:30. Evening service at 7 o'clock. Second - Presbyterian Nineteenth and C streets. Rev. Thos. C. McNary pastor. Preaching morning and evening 11:30 and 7:30. Theme Experimental Religion. Sunday school 9:15. Mr. C. A. lteigel, superintendent. C. E., :45, Rae Lawder, president. Praise and prayer service Thursday 7:30. Earlham Heights Presbyterian Sunday school 2:13. Mr. G. W. Ncff, superintendent. Silver medal contest IW. C. T. U.) and box social Wednesday, Feb. 22, Washington's birthday. South Eighth Street Friends Levi T. Pennington, pastor. Bible school at 9:10, John H. Johnson, superintendent. Meeting for worship at 10:30. Junior meeting at 2. Miss Ruth Wiekett. superintendent. Special rally service of the Christian Endeavorera at 6:30, led by the pastor. Roth old and young arc invited to this meeting. Prayer meeting Thursday evening at 7:30. Miss Margaret Wiekett. leader. All are Invited to these services. St. Mary's Catholic Masses every Sunday at C:00, 8:00 and 9:00 o'clock a. m. and High Mass ana sermons at 10:30 a. m.; Vespers and Benediction every Sunday at 3 p. m. Rev. J. V. Mattingly, rector. Rev. M. T. Shea, assistant. St. Andrew' Catholic Fifth and South C streets. Maps at 7:30; High Mas3 at 9:43; Waiters, sermonette and benediction at 3 o'clock. Rev. Frank A. Roel!, rector; Rev. M. II. Wetland, assistant. Univerlist Church Masonic Temple, Sunday, Feb. 19. Rev. Martha Jones will preach at 3 p. in. Tho Rev. Martha G. Jones will preach In the Boston Universallst church at 11 a. m. Sunday Feb. 19. First W. E. Church Corner Main an Fourteenth street. J. F. Radcliffe, pastor. Sunday school 9:lo a. m. Preaching 10:30 and 7:30 p. m. Junior league . 2 p. ra. Service "Old People's Home" 17th and Main 2 p. m. Epworth league 6:30 p. m. Official board meeting Monday 7:30 p. m. Rev. J. W. Carr will preach In the interests of the conference claimants in the morning, and the pastor in tho evening. A cordial welcome to all. Grace M. E. Church Corner 10th and North A streets. Arthur Cates pastor. Sunday school 9:15. The pastor will preach at 10:30. Rev. J. W. Carr, secretary of the Preachers' Aid society will speak at 7:30. A cordial welcome to all. United Brethren Corner Eleventh and North B. H. S. James, pastor. Bible school at 9:30 a. m. The pastor will speak at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. All are welcome. Second Enqlish Lutheran Coiner of Pearl 'and Third streets. E. Mi liter, pastor. Rev. Wo". ford will preach at 10:30 a. m. and Rev. Howard at 7 p. ni. Sunday school at 9:I." a. m. A cordial welcome to all. Christian Science Service Masonic Temple. Sunday services, 10:43 a. m. Subject. "Mind." Wednesday evening experience meeting 7:13 p. ni. Public Invited. Reading room No. 10 North loth street. Open to the public dally except Sunday, 9:00 a. in. to 12:00 Noon 1:30 p. in. to 3.00 p. in. First Baptist Church II. Robert Smith, pastor. Preaching by the pastor at 10:40 a. m. and 7::'.0 p. m.; Sunday school at 9:13 a. in.; Junior at 2:30 p. in.; B. T. P. V. at 6:30 p. I1. First Presbyterian Church Bible school at 9:13 a. m.; morning church service at 10:30: Preaching by the Rev. I. M. Hughes. D. li.. Pastor Emeritus: Vespers 3 o'clock; Sermon by the Rev. 11. A. James; Prayer Meeting Thursday, 7:30 p. m.; Session meeting. Friday. 7:30 p. in. First English Lutheran Corner of 11th and South A strevts. E. G. Howard, pastor. Morning worship at 10:30 a. m. Vesper Service at 4:30 p. m. Music will be led by the Mixed Quartet, Sunday School at 9:13, Dr. A. L. Bramkamp. Supt. As this will be Foreign Mission Day in church and school the offerings will be devoted to that purpose. Every member should have part In the same. A cordial Invitation is extended to all to come and worship with us. Whitewater Friends Church Morning worship and Sermon at 10:30. Evangelistic and Song Service at 7:30. S. S. at 9 a. m. C. E. at 6 p. m. Midweek prayer meeting Thursday evening at 7:30. A cordial invitation to the public. A. Tmeblood. pastor. West Richmond Friends At Earlham College. Bible School at 9 o'clock. E. P. Tmeblood. Superintendent. Meeting for worship at 10:30. Elbert Russell, pastor. Prayer meeting Thursday evening at 7:30. Women's Aid Society. Tuesday in Karlham Hall at 1:30. All Interested are cordially Invited to attend every service. East Main St. Friends' Meeting Truman C. Kenworthy, pastor. Bible School at 9:10. Meeting for worship at 10:30 and 7:30. Christian Endeavor at 6:30. Special music will be rendered at the evening service. You will be made w elcome to any of these services. Mid-week meeting for worship Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. Prayer and conference meeting in the evening at 7:30. Raid Memorial-r-Corner . Eleventh and North A street Rev. S. R. Lyons pastor. Preaching by the pastor 10:30 a. m. and by Prof. Elbert Russell at 7:30 p. m. Sabbath school 9:15 a. m. Christian I'nion 6:45 p. m. Earthquakes. Earthquake s nocks travel, as a general rule, at a pace of about 1S.000 feet per second.
CORRUPT METHODS HIT BY THE RILL
Senate Passes Measure that Provides for Clean Elections in the State. (Palladium Special) Indianapolis, Feb. IS. A bill Intended to prevent corrupt practices In elections, of which Senator Trayler is the author, was passed in the senate Friday afternoon with 28 Democratic votes and 2 Republican votes. The opposition to it consisted of 10 Republican votes. The bill provoked email discussion, yet if no leaks or wajs of evasion are discovered, it may become one of the most stringent reform laws on the statute books. The vote ttood as follows: For the bill Alke, Beal. Caiicton, Clark, Crumpacker. Curtis, Farlow, Ferrell. I.lemlng. Gers. Grube, Greenwe'l, II ul leek, Harlan, llauck, Jack son, lyjng. McCarty, Nettervllle, Parks, Jowers. Proctor, Shively, Sul livan, Tilden, Trautinan, Trayler, Yarling. Against the bill Brady. Commons. Durre, Gavit, Wanna, IHbberd, Hunt, Jenkins, Kane, Kimniel. Iinibert, Moore, Ratts, Strange, White and Wood. Not voting Higgins, Kistler, Roysc, Sexon, Stotsenberg. The Traylor bill prescribes complete publicity of campaign accounts and restrictions upon contributions, enumerates what expenses are lawful, and what constitute corrupt practices. No candidate for any judgship nor any judge uion the bench is permitted to spend any money or anything else for campaign purposes. Also it is made unlawful for any corporation to give or lend any aid to any political party or to any candidate, not feven through the party treasurer whose accounts are public documents after election. Like Maryland Bill. Following closely the Maryland law. It permits the spending of campaign funds or the receipt of them by a political party only through a duly selected and authorized treasurer of the state committee or of the county or city committee. The treasurers of the county or city committees may appoint deputy treasurers for each voting precinct. All election expenses must go through the county party treasurers' hands and they must make them public by filing an account of them with the clerk of the circuit court in must have his report of receipts and disbursements in the hands of the county party treasurer within ten days after election. It is made unlawful for any political committee or officer to solicit auy contribution, payment or favor from any candidate or from any person who desires to become a candidate. The candidate may make certain limited voluntary contributions to the treasurer, and all contributions made by any other persons within six months before the election must be made to the political treasurer or agent. There is nothing to prevent large gifts prior to six months before cl6ction not going through the treasurer, but if the money is spent within the six months prior to election the treasurer's books must siow it. Candidates are permitted to pay their own personal expenses in campaigning, and these are enumerated as postage, telegrams, telephoning, stationary, letters, circular letters, printing, expressage and traveling. This will cut out the campaign cigar unless it be obtained through the regularly appointed political treasurer. Other expenditures which are permitted to candidates, it is provided, may not exceed $23 for each one thousand voters in the district up to SO.ooO; $10 for each additional one thousand up to 100.000; and $3 each one thousand beyond. Any iHilitical chairman may solicit campaign contributions. Lawful Expense. Tho lawful expenses which enumerated are summed up in for still are the hiring of halls, printing circulars and ballots, renting rooms; compensating clerks, stenographers, assistants to committees, challengers, watchers and messengers: traveling cost, postage, telephoning, telegraphing, conveyances for sick and infirm. Corrupt practices outlined, consist of vote buying and selling, giving campaign funds to anyone save the authorized party treasurer, except regular dues to political clubs which In turn act through the treasurers, putting any olitical advice or emblem on pay envelopes, threats by employers to influence votes, and attempting to vote in any other person's name. Within thirty days after election the defeated candidate may file a complaint of any fraud with any circuit judge, and if the court s-es sufficient evidence to warrant it, a judicial inquiry Is to be started and the other candidates to be brought before the bar. The penalty for violation of the act Is a fine of from :J0O to tl.ooo or a jail sentence of not more than one year. "Ohio and Illinois arc not the only states In which they buy votes." declared Senator Traylor. "Tiiey buy them In Vanderburg county. Indiana, I have heard on this floor. Indiana Is behind her sister states in legislation looking toward the purity of elections." "What fund In campaigning would there be under this bill." asked Senator Fleming. "I'm afraid there wouldn't be much," said Senator Traylor. In Barry O'Brien's new book on John Bright the writer tells how Sydney Smith, while looking critically at the unfinished portrait of a celebrated
nonconformist churchman, said to the free for trjal. references from your artist: "Do you not think you could j o-a j locality if requested. Immediate rethrow into the face a stronger expres-1 lief and permanent cure assured. Send no sion of hostility to the established I money, bet tell others of this offer. Write church ?" ' today to Mrs. M. Ssmacrs, Boa P. ISotta - 0 Caat. lad. - " , : " , "
WOMAN CAN STOP KILLING OF BIRDS At Least This Is Opinion' of S. P. C. A. Slaughter Largely in South. New York, Feb. 18. Wealthy New Yorkers who go south" every winter can do a much beter service for the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals than by establishing an espionage on the negro hack drivers, if they only would, according to a bulletin of the society. The form of service suggested by the society is to aid in putting a stop to the ruthless slaghter of snowy herons and egrets. Certain southern sections in this respect are called "the black belt of cruelty." "Florida, where many northern people j?o each winter," says the bulletin, "is the scene of the barbaric slaughter of the snowy herons and egrets. True, the slaughter is growing less every year, not through any diminuation of the desire to kill, because these beautiful birds are on the very verge of extinction.
"The graceful plumes which are carried by the birds at nesting time," continues the bulletin, "are still worn by women in great numbers in the north and as long as fashidn decrees it new plumes must be supplied while there are any birds left. Florida people think all northerners favor the slaughter; consequently it is difficult to sustain public opinion locally. Northerners in Florida frequently ex press ignorance of the whole matter, or indifference. Killing of the Egrets. "The worst phase of the butchery of the egrets has never been published. Humane readers know the mother birds are killed and the young birds drop out of the nests and die of starvation, but particulars as to how the old birds are killed are meager. Leaflets on the subject say they are shot with small calibre rifles, but that is not correct in every instance. The most expert plume hunters say that by shooting there is danger of break ing or soiling the plumes when the birds fall off trees or from the air Consequently they prefer to net or trap the birds and tear the plumes from the backs of thir living victims, leaving them to die lingering deaths in the swamps. Often their last moments are further harassed by encounters with water rats and snakes that lie in wait for their defenceless prey Foxes and wildcats also run riot among the young birds, which literally fall from their nests into their jaws. Creating a Sentiment "Northern sentiment is highly re garded in Florida. If every S. P. C. A. member wintering there would quiet ly insist that plume bunting be abol ished, it might come to pass through them more than by any other agency. Ten or fifteen years ago they could have saved whole colonies of birds Nov they can save at most a few hun dred specimens, but once their perse cutions are ended the egrets will slow ly but surely increase again. "In Georgia and the Carolinas the wholesale shooting of song birds, protected in the north, is widely practic ed. It is an ordinary sight to see negro boys coming into the towns early in the morning carrying long strings of dead robins. The strict bird laws of the north can never count for much if the poor songsters have to face an ordeal of shot in their winter abodes. Neting robins at the roosting grounds is alsoa favorite practice. Thousands are sometimes secured in a night only the choice birds being used and the others thrown away. Wild Pigeons Extinct. " 'There are millions of them,' remarked a noted robin trapper. That was the language used by the hunters who trailed the wild pigeons twentyfive years ago in Pennsylvania, New York and other northern states. Today wild pigeons are as near extinction as a bird can be. The prizes offered by the American Ornithological Union in the hope of securing a nest and protecting the young have gone begging. To use the words of Professor C. F. Hodge, secretary of the movement, 'We have not seen so much as a feather since our search began.' "Mourning doves, which in some northern states are preserved by common consent by sportsmen, and repay the courtesy by diligent work against insects, are trapped by thousands in the south. So great has been the slaughter it is a wonder that any are able to fly northward in the spring. "The great number of influential members of our society who will so soon leave for the south can individually and collectively turn the tide if the will. The awful destruction and mutiliation of the egrets can be stopped, robins can have protective laws passed for them, and larks and doves and hosts of other birds which drop in countless numbers before shotguns will have pow-erful influences at work to save them. To work for the society and for humanity would add a priceless pleasure to one's winter outing in the south. Just Greek. Hewitt What happens when Greek meets Greek? jewctt-It's all Greek to me. New York Fress. FILES CU3ED AT COSE Dl DEV7 ADS03PTI0n CETCOD. If you suffer iron bleeding, itching, blind or protading Piles, send rae your address, aad I will tell you how to cure yourself at borne ty the new absorption treatment; aad vl alrA mrA csnrmm nf h,e fw-HTMt treatment
ELECTRIC FLOGGING
E WAS USED Minnesota Legislator Charg es Brutality in State Training School. St. Paul, Feb. 17.' Following charges made by Senator A. D. Stephens of Crookston that electric flogging machines were used in the State Training School at Red Wing, and charges that girls at the Industrial Home have had their hair cut for insubordination, the legislature ordered an investigation. Daniel O'Leary, of St. Paul, says he is willing to go before the legislature and testify regarding cruelty he says inmates of the training school under went when he was there. He was dis charged from the school in 1903. "I was twenty years old when I was sent there," said O Leary. "I was there two years, and during that time I saw and suffered enough brutal punishment to make me now wonder that I am alive. They had a method of whipping boys that was part machin ery and part hand. They used a con trlvance by which they stretch a boy out and hold him immovable while a guard beats the victim with a thick strap. "This whipping post was formed so that the victim's feet were fastened in a standing position to the floor, while his boy was stretched out over a board in a bent position and his bands tied to hold him there. Boys received from 50 to 200 lashes. The attendents laid wet towels over the victim to guard against marks, but I have known boys being marked for weeks despite this precaution, and saw some who fainted under the beating. "This whipping post was formed so the 'paint shop,' and the mention of the name was a dread to the prisoners The least breach of discipline brought a trip to the 'paint shop' for a beat ing. The roof was on the third floor and was locked to visitors. "Another means of punishment was a period in a room on bread and wa ter. I have known of boys spending thirty days in this place and coming out physical wrecks. The guards would bring bread and water when they felt like it, and sometimes it was 4 o'clock in the afternoon before the boys would get their noon rations. At night the steam would be turned off in the room, and the boys imprisoned there had nothing on but their night shirts, without a single blanket. "For great punishment they would handcuff boys to a ring overhead and leave them to endure torture, with arms stretched over their heads, for hours at a time. One night an official, who is still there, I believe, beat and kicked me into insensibility for talking with other boys. I was unable to raise my arms above my head for days, and I was black and blue for weeks thereafter." UNMARRIED MERELY LAXY, CLUB SAYS Trenton, N. J.. Feb. 18. The report of the Anti-Old Maid club for December shows that its endeavors have resulted in four marriages and ten engagements. The report declares that four "chronic old maids" each more than thirty-five years old, realized their duty to throw aside "old-maid-ism" and become "human beings." The members assert that if their efforts are as successful during the next six months Trenton will then be old maidless. One old maid, a school teacher, who fell a victim to operations of the Anti-Old Maid club, consented to marry an expressman whom she had known all her life. She had refused his previous offers of matrimony because she thought she could not stand "his grammar." Another spinster, who had seen the light had determined to die unmarried because the man she loved chewed tobacco. Laziness is called the cause of old maidism. One believed that if married she would have to wash dishes, and she had a horror of this. GETS VERDICT AFTER TEN YEARS WAITING Terre Haute, Ind., Feb. 17. Judge Aikman, of the Parke circuit court, has given judgment for $1,400 against the Terre Haute. Indianapolis & Eastern traction company In favor of Henry Roberts, colored, as guardian for his son, Frank Roberts. The case has been in the courts ten years. The boy was injured by a street car, several verdicts have been rendered in his favor and higher courts have sent the case back- on technicalities until now at the end of ten years, another judg ment is given. The boy is now a man in years but he is an imbecile by reason of the injuries. i ne litigation in tnis case was recently described in the News in the series of articles showing the manner in w hich such cases are delayed in the courts. REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD. Hit. Wjxstow Soottiiso Yrr has tx-cn -ed for over SIXTY TEAKS bv MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD. SOFTENS the OCMS, ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC and is the best remedy for DIARRHCEA. It ts absolatelv harmless. Be tare and ak for "Mrs. WiasloWs soothing Syrup." aad take so other kind. Twesty-Bvc cents x bottle. Be Sure and Get Oar Prices Before Pnrebssin Any Article of Furniture. Dunham's C27 sd C23 Esa
MACHIN
WOMAN TELEGRAPH
OPERATOR YEARS Pensioned at Chicago Meet ing Keep Tab on Journeyman Operators. I, Chicago, Feb. 17. Mrs. Mary A. Hanson, in point of service the oldest woman telegraph operator in the world, was the first old-time operator to profit by the Western Union com pany's new policy of pensioning employes who have grown gray in the service. With nine others in what is known as the "Chicago district," Mrs. Hanson has been retired on half pay. Mrs. Hanson has worked in the Chi cago offices of the v e6tern Union since 1869, and during her forty-three years' service has handled some of the most famous "stories" that came over the wire during that period. Handled Garfield Murder Copy. Her most noted achievement was taking all of the copy that was sent to Chicago over Western Union wires at the time that President Garneld was murdered. Mrs. G. W. Tillotson is another woman operator who was retired on pension. .Other pensioners are: J. K. Goodwin, Earnest Stevens, John E. Dayhoff and George N. Willis. Dayhoff was for years night chief operator at the Chicago office. In all, ten pensions were granted. Operator is a Wanderer. Along with the pension system the company has started a system of checking up the careers of their operators by a card index system. Tho telegraph operator is a wanderer often. Of the ten pensioners, at least five of them are said by their fellowoperators to have worked in every state in the nation. As a result, the company requires the older men to submit cards to them stating the places in which they have worked for the company and the length of time. This is checked up by queries when the question of pension comes up. About one thousand operators throughout the country will be pensioned in the next few days, the policy of the company being effective wherever the wires touch. No age limit is set and the retirements are voluntary. ! GERMAN MISSES WILL EMIGRATE TO CANADA Berlin, Feb. 18. According to a letter from a Prussian suffragette to the Tageblatt, German girls are preparing to compete with English girls for Canadian husbands. Referring to a recent announcement that five thousand English girls are wanted to become the wives of young Canadian farmers, the writer says:' "Since the German government does not pay the least attention to the colossal surplus of German girls, and as the high cost of living makes it increasingly difficult ' for respectable girls to get married, the girls of our circle have decided to become British subjects, emigrate to Canada, and become the wives of Canadian farmers. "The Prussian government will then realize that the women to whom the right to vote is refused have been driven into the arms of England. ALCOHOL SAME AS WATER TO STOMACH Philadelphia, Feb. 17. Jules Rosendale, a translator, and father of Mar garet Dale, the actress is dead aged 76 years. Mr. Rosendale in his will directed that his body be cremeated and his brain and stomach be given to the University of Pennsylvania to discover the reason for his immunity from the usual effects of intoxicating drink. Physicians say that. Mr. Rosendale could consume almost unlimited quantities of alcoholic liquor without any effect whatever on his brain or ner vous system.
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222-224-22S West 33t& Street
DECALOGUE BETTER THAN PHYSIOLOGY aasaSSMBSSS " " Professor Says Idea of Edu cation Is Loose Stands for Moral Ideals.
Providence, Feb. 18. "Children who can" wheedle' their parents into letting them act foolishly are being educated to bribe legislatures Into letting; them act lawlessly. The American parent has proved unfaithful to the state, to say nothing about his children, when he has given bis sons and daughters a monthly allowance and has let them do what they pleased." So declared Dean Shatter Mathews of the University of Chicago divinity school, in an address at the closing session of the Religious Education association's convention. Thrift Nearly Extinct. "Thrift," continued the speaker, "ia all but extinct In the average American family. We not only live up to our income, but we live beyond it. i Thrift may be a 'bourgeois' virtue, but we have not yet established a Utopia in which It will be unnecessary for our children to pay their bills." Regarding the teaching of eugenics, which President G. Stanley Hall, of Clark university, advocated as one ot the solutions of the social problem, Dean Mahcws took an opposing view. "We hear," he said, "a vast amount of advice to the effect that children are to Be taught mystries of sex. I profoundly believe that the maintenance of moral ideals in families will profit vastly more by the maintenance of chastity than a perpetual discussion of eugenics. "It is a mistake to teach boys and girls to substitute physiology for the Decalogue. Lives grounded on moral idealism will stand temptations better than lives which have been taught only a prudential chastity. Cleanness of mind is caught rather than taught. "If parents want their children hap pily married they must make their own marriage happy. "Divorce is a domesticated pathological individualism. It can mostly be prevented by sanctified common sense, the practice of commonplace self sacrifice and the revived devotion to the upbringing of children." REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Clarence M. Druley to Henry R. Robinson, Feb. 13, N. W. sec. 31714. $15,000. Frank Dillon to Peter Doddy, Oct. 14, 1909, lots 14, 15, 16 blk 2, M. & F. add Cambridge. $100. Stephen Mann to Chas. F. Haisley, May 24, 1910, pts S. E. sec. 26. S. W. sec. 24-18-14. $4,522.50. Wm. V. Johnson to Alonzo It. Feemster, Jan. ll, lot 25, 26, blk 16, V. R. S R. Cambridge. $275. . Ada B. Mcintosh to Harry Fossenkamper, Feb. 13, pt. lot 43-44, T. Woodnut add Richmond. $1,150. , TEETH BLEW ACROSS ROOM UPON SNEEZE New York, Feb. 18. To prove his false teeth were a misit James Bray, a deputy personal tax collector, removed the molars as he sat in the witness chair in Patterson, N. J., testifying in his suit against a dental company. He told Judge Lewis the teeth flew across the floor of the tax office the other day when he sneezed hard. "They all . laughed when my teeth flew out," he told the court, "but I couldn't see the joke." There was more laughter when the court directed that the teeth be marked exhibit A. The jury awarded Bray $50 damages. The defendant was the White Dental company. koz. asc THIS BIG BOOK. coatarnfntf OVER 1500 ILLUSTRATIONS of The Newest Spring Styles ONLY 5 CENTS wlm purckaacd at but PICTORIAL REVIEW PATTERN AGENCY together with a 15 cent pattcrau If purchased by mail. 33 which iacluJca a 15 cent patters. forth, a W S Suit. Iwoata tor travelliatf aad i coataaas a Cuttiag aad a
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New Ysci, 'N.'V.
