Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 144, 2 April 1911 — Page 8

THE RICHMOND PA LIi A D I U 3 L AXU SUX-TELEGRA31, SUNDAY APKIL 2, 1911.

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HOLD FUNERAL OF ' JOSEPH W. STARR THISJFTERNOOII Service at North A Street Friends' Church at 3:00 O'clock Instead of 4:00 as Previously Announced. (Contimu-il From 1ro Onei Ti ntli to tin- (ilci mill from Main to tlm Itlvtr was l.tid out ly him. On Uih of hi mother C.i affairs of :h fHl ut ro j1;iom1 in liis liumla lor tiittli'iiM-nt. 'H(ain Marr was mphllv pro-moli-il from hfcoiiil lieutenant ;f the Hecoml Irxllanu, cavalry whihe was a dlvlhlon of t lie army of the CiiiiiIhtland. He w uctivc hervlre for a Mi tie over three yearn uixl while lm hal many thrilling adventure. never tmee was ho Injured more seriously lhari powder Inirna. Once he esscapeil from Confederates who captured him and on another occasion was e.v changed. Ilo was captured by u parly of (iencral MorKan men. but rIvmi opportunity to ,Kcapc on orders from Morgan, because of an act of lifavory wSille a prisoner of this koiiiral. Since tho war he has taken an nctlve part In (!. A. It. organizations ml It was (inn of the greatest pleasures of his later life to attend the Hiinual reunions of the army of the Cumberland at ChattanoonKa. Term. Although he lias not been able to take, active part In the work of the Indiana Friends after leaving Richmond, he nevertheless always kept In close touch with their activities. He had continued his membership in the Whitewater Quarterly Meeting. For the past three inonl'is, he has been In ill health, but not critically so until thirty-six hours before his death. He suffered from Asthma which was Iho cause of his demise.

y TAKES STEPS

FOR AERIAL CORPS School of Aeronautics at Annapolis Naval Academy Is Probable.

T. P. A. Notes BY T. C. II.

(American Wows Service) Washington, April 1. in order to form a corps of competent aviators for the navy, thus recognizing that the flying machine will be a factor in future naval warfare, an aviation s hool probably will be established at Annapolis by the navy department this summer. Kxperiments conducted under the aiispicen of the World showed the great - strm tiveness made Kssible by the u.se of aeroplanes in naval

combats. Aviator Clenn II

at the instain e of The World demon

strated by use of dummies that bombs could be dropped with deadly precision on warship?. Lieut. T. 1. Kllyson, an expert, who for several months past has been receiving Instruction in the operation of aeroplanes at San Uiego, Cal., will be one of the instructors at the sc hool according to present plans. Kllyson was ordered today from San Diego to Washington for conference with the department. One or more aeroplanes probably will be purchastd for instructing the navy personnel. ('apt. Washington I. Chambers, the head of the board having charge of naval aeronautics, today was transferred from assistant to the aid lor material in the navy department to membership on the general board, lie will continue his aeronautical work. In the naval appropriations bill, as passed, there was a provision making It prohibitory for the department to purchase steel for naval vessels from any unlawful combination or trust. The restriction was aimed at the I'nit"d Slates Steel Corporation. The clause all but tied up the work on two battleships, and if may do that yet. but Attorney Ceneral Wickersham believes the method announced today will avoid this. If not it will

be necessary to purchase the armor land armament abroad, and there may be a hitch there.

MESSAGE OF THE PRESIDENT READ WEDNESDAY NEXT Congress Will Assemble on Tuesday, but Taft's Views on Reciprocity Withheld Until Next Day. (Continued From I'ae One I

proposed pact, on the other hand, will find it hard sledding when it reaches the senate. "President Taft will urge his permanent tariff commission plan, which is expected to cause a wrangle in congress and help to prolong the session. Then, again, should the committee ac-

Curtiss 'cede to demands for a general revision

of the tarift to be often to the world.

the session probably would drag through the summer and well into the fall. In any event there appears to be little likelihood that the senators and representatives will be able to. get away from Washington before the hot weather begins in earnest.

SIMPLE ACID TEST ON FOOD STOFFS Adulterations Easily Detected by Housewife by These Methods.

VIEWS jFJARDNER Regarding the Anti-smoke Ordinance Enforcement.

There will bi a special meeting of Post C In the club rooms next Saturday night to make arrangements for the Terre Haute convention to be held May 12 and 13. It Is quite certain one of the largest crowds ever going from Post C will represent the local organization At the annual state convention. Arrangements are being made to run a special car over the T. II., I. & K. through to Terre Haute with a couple of hours stop-over at IndVnapolis. If the delegation so desires. Nearly all the members going to the convention favor this way of going, so nil that remains to make this arrangement certain Is a sufficiently large delegation. The party will leave Richmond, Friday, May 12th. and will return Saturday night. May i:j. The Terre Haute House has been made the official headquarters of the convention and most of the local delegation will find quarters there. Post C Itas reserved a number of rooms in the Terre Haute House for members who have already signified their intention of going. Any member desiring to go to Terre Haute should attend the meeting next Saturday or notify Fec'y Hasty at once.

Tho officers elected last week will Assume their duties at the regular meeting In April which will tie held the last Saturday of the month. At this time the outgoing officers will make their anmuil reports.

Chas. Donning of Iafayette. has announced hl candidacy for state president of the Indiana division to succeed Chas. M. Zlnk. the present incuinlent. This Is the second person to enter the race for state president, the other candidate being Maurice Neizer of Ft. Wayne.

JACKSON ESTATE HAS BEEN PROBATED

Zinglious .Jackson who died on

March 21 left a personal estate of the

probable

Jackson of Shelbyville, the only heir was named administrator.

-Uncle Elllie" Ryan of Terre Haute, the veteran state chairman of the rcss committee will in all probability refuse to accept the office for another erm when the annual election" of tate officers I held. Tncle Hillie." as ho is familiarly known, has been Chairman cf the state press committee for many years and has been always a faithful and efficient worker doing much good for the T. P. A.'s. The members vt the Indiana division reret to see the "grand old man" of Indiana step aside and are hopeful that lie may be induced to held on to the office for tome time. In the event of Mr. Kyan'tc refusal to be an office holder again the logical successor to him would be (J. M. Kleeder of Marion. Tost C would be pleased to cast its vote for Mr. Kleeder to succeed "Uncle Rillie" Ryan.

Kd Thatcher Is still looking for the twenty-five dollars he lost at the old fair grounds.

Kverjr touso needs cleaning now. Fo does the system. Ik It right, best and surest, with Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Cleans the bowels, drives out winter's impurities, makes jou iwect and healthy, Conkey Drug Company.

BERGER FIRST SOCIALIST CONGRESSMAN Milwaukee, Wis., April 1. Victor L. rierger. representative elect of the Fifth Wisconsin district, has signed bis Beat In the Milwaukee common council anl today left for Washington to be on Land at the opening of ConKresa next Tuesday. Mr. Herger will probably attract considerable attention in Congress as ho w ill be the first Socialist who ever held a scat in the paUonal legislative tody.

Clothing Credit Spring Clothing for Men Women and Children New Goods, New Manager, Latest Styles. We are ready for the Spring tracle with the finest line of Men's, Women's and Children's Clothing that we have ever shown. You can buy our goods on easy weekly or monthly pay-nents.

Globe Credit Clothing Co. 0-3 North 6th Street Open Evenings Until 10 O'clock.

City Attorney A. M. Gardner says the smoke ordinance can be enforced agjiinst the railroad companies, even though they are corporations doing business under interstate laws. He claims that by emitf iig smoke from locomotives, the railroad company is thereby guilty of committing a public nuisance, if smoke is tixed as a nuisance by the anti-smoke ordinance. Gardner says the company could be regulat.-d by an anti-smoke ordinance, as well as the company could tie regulated by a speed regulative ordinance.

, Indianapolis, April 1. It is very' simple. If there is forniadehyde in! the butter or starch in the sausage or! haseed in the strawberry jam, it re-; quires only an iron spoon, a cup and, saucer, a few drops of hydrochloric l acid or sulphuric acid or iodine or I something else to discover it. It will probably not take more than two hours each morning to finish a com-

plete test of every article of diet j brought into the house and then you ; jwiil know exactly how many kinds ot'j I adulteration you are eating or else! you will refuse to seat adulterated!

tooils ami will eat only well, it is a question as to what you will eat. j

Grocers, manufacturers anil even the farmers are all discovered, or at least they are going to be. From the milkman to the butcher, from the corner grocery to the the canning factory, nothing can escape the woman who is looking for trouble. The grocer will have to bear the burden of proof. How would you like to be the grocery man when one woman calls you no and says she thinks the acid test for milk looks rather purple when

it ought to be brown, and another

says she dyed a whole waist with the red from the jelly and another says she has found both indigo blue and olive green spots on the sausage and knows it is full of borax and starch? Largely a matter of Color. It seems to be largely a matter of color and that makes it extremely interesting. If it is pink it is or isn't whichever it is. tl is usually necessary to make two tests. The results may not agree, but one of them is

pure food and getting adulterations. The lecture was illustrated with various tests which can be made in the ordinary kitchen. A Simple Test for Milk. The most simple test for milk is holding it up to the light and determining whether or not there is dirt in it. The presence of preservatives may be discovered by the addition of a few drops of acid, which will color pure milk brown and preserved milk purple. Mr. Barnard said it was impossible to tell whether butter was butter or oleomargerine, unless a test was made. This can be done by h.ating the stuff. If it is butter it froths, and if it is oleomargarine it sputters. One hundred and fifty iKunds of

; meat plus two pounds of starch, plus water, makes more than two hundred pounds of sausage. A drop of iodine on sausage that contains starchy ; stuff will become blue. If borax has jbeen added to the meat the iodine will turn olive green. Pure lemon extract j may be detected by adding water. If 'the mixture becomes milky the extract is real lemon. If the coffee conj tains chicory it should be tested in j water. If it sinks to the bottom, disj coloring the water it is chicory. To test flour for nitrous oxide it is necesj sary to use Greiss' reagent, which can be bought at any drug store. This becomes pink w hen mixed with ni

trate.

MASONICCALENDAR Monday, April 2, 1911 Richmond Commandery, No. s, k. T. Stated conclave. Tuesday, April 4. 1911 Richmond lxdge No. 196, P. & a. M., stated meeting. Wednesday, April 5. 1911. Webb lodge No. 2-1. K. & A. M Called meeting, work in Master Mason degree. Refreshments. Thursday. April n.uYavne Council No. 10, R. & g. NVork in the degrees.

COL. ROOSEVELT TO RESUME TOUR ( American .News Sei i-tce San Francisco. Cal.. April 1. After eight busy days spent in San Francisco and vicinity Colonel Roosevelt will resume his tour tomorrow. He is stop at Kno. New, Monday to deliver an address on "Good Citizenship" and thn will go to Sacramento to speak befre the California legisture. From Sacramento he will proceed northward to visit some of the principal citis of Oregon and Washington. i

"HOODLUM WAGONS" ARE POLICE PATROLS Two Franklin police patrols whicft are giving satisfaction to the municipal officers of the city of Omaha, are

! a very undesidable article in the mind

of Congressman James P. Latta's five year-old grandson. John Bennett Lata who classes them as ""hoodlum wagons." The boy. with his parents Mr. and Mrs. Edward Latta. of Tekamah. at. tended the recent automobile show in Omaha. The automobiles on exhibi. tion did not appeal to him greatly because they "didn't go" so he strolled out to the street where a long lintj of motor cars was buzzing merrily. After a time he grew weary of this also and walked off down the street. When he admitted he was lost a policeman called one of the air-cooled patrols and sent the boy to headquar

ters where his parents found him. j To his mother he sobbed, "I wanted I to ride in a real automobile, but they

on.' ""

The Japanese have opened hundreds of shops in the open ports of China for the sale of hardware, cheap perfumery, cosmetics, etc.

PRINCETON TO ENTERTAIN DIGNITARIES

LOST Umbrella, with gold tip on handle. Reward for return to Palladium.

(American Princeton, N.

ton university

News Service)

J., April 1. Princeis preparing for the

entertainment of a large number of prominent visitors on the occasion of the tenth annual meeting of the New Jersey conference of charities and correction. The conference will open tomorrow and remain in session over Monday and Tuesday. Governor Wilson and other noted speakers will be heard. One of the more important

Wig Wearing Very Old. The ancient Egyptians all wore wigs, and the early Christians from A. D. 427 to A. I. 117 considered a false head covering a badge of distinction this.

value of $700. Charles l!?i to. m direct opposition to Tertullian,

who in vain declared them devices and

inventions f the devil.

pretty sure to be correct. Every

man should become interested in cooking, tl is not a drudgery, it is a science and an art and a civic duty. In his address to the Housekeepers' Protective Association, in the parlors of the odd Fellows building. 11. E. Darnard. state food and drug commissioner, told ' How to Detect Impure and Adulterated Foods in the Home by Simple Chemical Tests." Mr. Barnard said that a few years ago Indiana was a dumping ground for all kinds of impure foods, many of which were marked "for sale only in Indiana." Most foodstuffs are not now adulterated to the same extent, he said. The materials with which foods are adulterated are not harmful in themselves, he said. The harm lies in paying for

wo-' questions to be discussed will be that

of state supervision of private charity. Other matters to receive attention include living conditions in rural communities, the immigrant woman, child mortality, needed legislation for child care, tenement problems and the home in town and country. In connection with the meeting there will be an interesting exhibition illustrating the work being done in mental hygiene.

IVIcFarlan SIX -- 1911

WsK rf -r W

DO YOU KNOW WHY

r

OF

CEWTERVILLE, INDIANA

can give you high grade goods at such low prices? We are a live wire when it comes to Furniture, Rugs and Stoves, and we guarantee to save you money over CITY PRICEf

We can show you the standard, nationally advertised articles in our different lines and can give you satisfactory prices as we are satisfied with SMALLER PROFITS than the merchant who has greater expense. Come in and compare our line with other spring offerings before you buy Goods delivered any place in the county.

In the 200-nile race which the McFarlan made without a stop at Indianapolis, Sept. 5, 1910, cars of only one other make finished ahead of it, and theywere cars of greater power and higher price.

BERTSCH BROS., Agents, cambrw8e city. mn.

MM'

a roil

THAT MflU PLEASE YOU

A STRAP PUMP with short vamp, mfcdium and hieh heel, hich arch, made ov

er the very newest lasts and patterns. This is one of the season's newest and most popular and practical ladies' slippers. No gaping at the side, no slipping at the heel.

..We Have It In Steele With One, Two and Three Straps, in All Leathers

Suede at $2.50, $3 & $3.50 Dull Kid at $2, $3 & $3.50 Patent, at $1.50, $2, $2.50, Bright Kid at $1.50 to $3. $3.00 & $3.50. Tan at $3.00 & $3.50 Velvet, at $2.50 & $3.00. Gun Metal, $2, $2.50 & $3.

NeM & 'MfflsflMnnnmi. Corner Seveith and Main

3

The best of all Pocahontas Coals because it produces more heat, makes less ash, and is acknowledged by the government to be the most ef

ficient of all American coals.

BLUE RIDGE SPLINT COAL

a general purpose fuel of the highest class at reasonable price." BUY THE BEST

Telephone 3165

R3P&KIY West Second and Chestnut Sts.

Ml

SUIT

ar a correctly tailored suit. See osr Spring line at $15, $18 and $20. We showing surprising values this sprbg. We do correct tailoring. A perfit or no sale. See the new Spring styles EMMOMS TAfflLOEMG CO.

CORNER NINTH AND MAIN STREETS.