Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 185, 13 May 1911 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT.
THE RICHMOND PAIXADIUM AD SUX-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1911.
HOLE JOE'S" FEW WORDS. HOT GIVEU
House Leader Refused to Permit Him Floor on Ad- ' journment Question. Wiihlniton, May 13. The boose yesterday adjourned until Tuesday after a short session. . Former Speaker Cannon had a few words he wanted to ay about this effort to adjourn'over Monday, on which motions to discharge committees would be in order, but Mr. Underwood, the Democratic leader, declined to let him say them and Insisted upon adjournment. "Uncle Joe" pleaded for just Ave minutes time, Ktflnx all sorts of reasons, but Mr. Underwood was obdurate. Mr. Cannon would not tell the Democratic leader what he wanted to say and he would not assure Mr. Underwood that It was a "purely personal matter. The Republicans forced a roll call on the motion to adjourn until Tuesday. They also opposed the motion to adjourn for the day, but were defeated In both cases. Speaker Champ Clark, aRalnst the advice of hla physicians, lert his bed and appeared In time to preside over the session. Representative Ilathrick of Ohio, Introduced a resolution to protect government employes who may be called upon to testify before investigating committees of congress. The resolution sets forth that employes of the government fear persecution as a penalty for testifying against their superiors, and provides that no employe 'shall be- superseded, reduced in rating or discharged because of such testimony. A revised bill for the admission of Arlsona and New Mexico as states waa presented to the house by Chairman Flood of the committee on territories. As expected, the new bill provides that New Mexico shall be admitted Immediately upon condition that the people shall vote on an amendment to the constitution making that Instrument easier of amendment In the future. Arizona likewise Is to be admitted at once, providing the people ahall vote on a proposition to strike out of the constitution the recall of Judges. The bill will be called up Tuesday and three daya will be allowed for debate. A resolution was passed congratulating the' people of Mobile, Ala., upon the two hundredth anniversary of the founding of that city, which Is to be celebrated this year.
TO DELIVER MEMORIAL DAY ADDRESS The annual address incident to the Memorial Day exercises held at Cambridge City, May 30, will be delivered by John L. Rupe, a leading lawyer of this city, and himself a veteran of the Civil War. The exercisos will be held In Riverside cemetery and arrangements are under way to make them the most pretentious ever to have taken place.
Business College Notes
School dismissed Friday afternoon
jln order to give those who desired to J attend May Day at Earlbam an oppor
tunity to do so. IxmiIs SlnimonH. who Is well known around the Y. M. C. A. and many other places in this city, has accepted a position with the Motor Manufacturing company of Indianapolis. He has been In Richmond about three years and during that time has made friends with a number of persons here who are glad to know of his success. J. Henry Potts and I). W. Ganger who have taught school for several years near Greenville, Ohio, .entered school this week and are doing nicely with their work. Carl Welst, who has been employed with the Fetta Water Softener company the past few years, has returned from an extended trip through the west and has resumed his position, which was filled during bis absence by India Chenoweth of Hollansburg, O. He called at the school since returning and arranged for Raymond Souera to enter their employ and assist with the stenographic work. Mr. Wei3t will travel more than formerly for the business. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stant are spending Sunday in Winchester as guests of Mr. Hawkins, whose son was In attendance here this winter and who boarded with Mr. Stant. The advanced class in the manual completed that book the first of the week and took up the work in dictation. Ethel Chenoweth is doing stenographic work for Mr. Brown who has recently come to this city from New York. B. Campbell made a business trip to Muncie Wednesday and from there went to ConnerBville and Brook vl lie, returning Thursday night. Karl Spangler has discontinued his work for the summer and is preparing to take a. trip through the west. He will return some time in July and expects to resume his studies during the fall term. Florence Creek of Liberty, Ind., came for the May Day at Earlham, staying Friday night with Elsie Rush.
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When an Armenian girl attains the age of seventeen and Is not engaged to be married she has to undergo a strange punishment for her lack of attractions. For three days she has to fast and then for twenty-four hours her food consists of salt fish and she Is allowed nothing to quench her thirst
VISITORS ARRIVE , FOR COROHATIOn Great Crowds from Abroad ' to "Attend Magnificent Spectacles. (American News Service) London, May 13. The stage has been set and everything put in readiness for tlie curtain to rise on the first of the magnificent spectacles
that are to make the coming summer the most memorable !n the modern history of London. Tuesday next will witness the unveiling of the Victoria Memorial, the imposing exercises forming a fitting prelude to the grand ceremonies of the coronation to follow a few weeks later. The arrangements for the unveiling of the memorial have been completed under the general supervision of Colonel Sir Frederick Ponsonby, the King's Equerry. The "war office is In charge of the arrangements for the great military parade that will be a leading feature of the program and the Archbishop of Canterbury has prepared the religious service. In anticipation of the ceremonies London is already becoming filled with visitors from abroad and from the country. The metropolis, in fact, is already receiving warning of what crowds may be expected to be at the coronation next month. Piccadilly, Pall Mall. Charing Cross. Whitehall, the Strand, the City, and the neighborhood of Westminister Abbey are now thronged from early morning until midnight. Visits to the Carltoh, the Cecil, the Savoy, and other leading hotels today showed the same conditions everywhere practically all accommodotions engaged and the dining roms and restaurants filled to overflowing. - Visiting Americans were largely in evidence. t The unveiling of the Queen Victoria Memorial will naturally serve to materially increase the number of early arrivals for the coronation. It is estimated that probably 1.000,000 visitors will be In London by Tuesday. Londoners expect to make a great deal of money out of these visitors and the hundreds of thousands of others who will be here during the summer. The Americans are especially expected to furnish wealth for the Londoners, for while the bulk of the visitors will be from the English provinces, by far the greatest number of foreigners will be from the United States. Canadians also will be much In evidence. The Home office is preparing to take every precaution for the protection and safety of the visitors. In the congested districts of the metropolis the force of police will be practically doubled until after the coronation festivities -have ended. Detectives from many of, the continental countries have been borrowed for the season to
look after the undesirable element
that is already surging into the city from abroad. Scotland Yard will have
its hands full looking after the safety of the many royal visitors. During the month of June crown princes and princesses, grand dukes and ; even kings- and queens will be almost - as thick as bees in London. A number of the most distinguished representatives of the royalty of Europe will also be here to add their tribute to the memory of Victoria the Good at the unveiling of the monument in the Mall on Tuesday. The most notable of the visitors next week will be the Emperor William and the German Empress. Their Impetial Highness, accompanied by Princess Victoria Louise, will arrive at Port Victoria Station by royal train at mid-day. They will be the private
guests . of King George and Queen Mary at Buckingham Palace, and as the visit is purely a family one the Emperor will not be accompanied by' any minister of state. In addition to the opening of the Queen Victoria Memorial on Tuesday and the special performance of "Money" at Drury Lane on. the following day, the Emperor and Empress will attend a court ball next Friday night. They will 'leave England in the Hohenzollern on their return Journey Saturday. ? , , . ., v . .
Oil of tho Porpoise! . ' t The porpoises killed In winter are the fattest and produce most oil. The largest! size measure a boat seven feet In length, five feet in girth anaweigh n bunt 300 pounds. Such porpoise yields from six to seven gallons of oil. The blubber of a big porpoise weighs about 100 pounds and is one and a half inches thick in summer and two In winter. The jaws of ; the porpoise yield a superior quality of olL When bung up in the sun it readily drips away into cans provided for the purpose, the quantity of oil thus prooured. however, being not more than half a pint to the jaw. The oil from the blubber gives an excellent light and is in demand along the coast for lightbouse use. It bus no offensive odor.
T BOYS TO CAMP Summer Outing to Be Held at Burns Grove.
Arrangements are being made for the second annual boys outing camp of the Y. M. C. A. wbich will be held June 19 to July 3 at Burns Grove on the Whitewater river about 40 miles south of this city. ' About fifty boys made up the last camp and it is expected that this will be about the number this year. Many boys have already signified their intention of taking the outing. It is the purpose of the camp to provide for the boys a summer outing under the direction and supervision of competent physical directors at a small cost. The camp of last year was a splendid success. A. A. Pettijohn, head of the boys department of the local "Y." will be in charge of the camp.' He will be assisted by several others. .
Busy All tho Tim. Little Howard came In the other day. crying and rubbing several bumps caused by a series of "butts' adminls tered by a pet sheep. " "Well. Howard," said his sympathetic auntie, "what did you do wben the sheep knocked you down?" "I didn't do anything. I was getting up all the time." Delineator.
Tho Trouble. ' "Do you find any trouble writing stories, Dawdly?" "None whatever. But I'd pay a man well that could sell them for me." Philadelphia Inquirer.
A Winning Play. Old Friend Your plan is a most excellent one. But do you think your wife will agree to it? Married Man 9h. yes. I'll tell her some one else sugjested it, and I'll call it an Idiot's idea.
Yon can't order remembrance ont of i man's mind. Thackeray.
Palladium Want Ads Pay.
POLAR MESSAGE OF 1902 RECEIVED New York, May 13. In the Arctic ice pack for eight years, a message, dispatched by balloon from the Bald-wln-Zeigler polar expedition In Franz
Josef Land. June 24, 1902, is now in
the hands of the sender, E. Briggs Baldwin. The message was , found by the
Swedish Spitzenbergen expedition and
forwarded to Upsala university, which In turn delivered it to the American Consul General at Stockholm for transmission to the State Department at Washington, through whose courtesy it has justTSeen returned to Mr. Baldwin. The messages were in sealed casks. Mr. Baldwin, in speaking of the pack, said: "I have already received similar messages found on the north-east coast of Iceland, Spitzenbergen and Norway, thus continuing to confirm the now well ' established southern drift tf the pack Ice. It is this drift which I expect to utilize in my 1913 expedition across the Arctic Ocean from the Bering Straits."
RETUR S
TO JAPAU
TO EI1TER THEARMY Motoiche Mimaki, of Tokyo, Recalled Home Learned Floriculture Here.
ANSWER
CRITICISM
il
Carnegie Failed to Keep His Word in Trust. Case.
A Wonderful Bore. The most wonderful boring apparatus In the world is possessed by the great Ichneumon fly. It is composed of three black filaments, all extremely fragile, no larger or stiffer than a horsehair and about five inches long. These fit together with grooves and glide easily along their entire length. The three when fitted together are no larger in diameter than a small needle and so flexible that a slight breath of air will bend them. Yet with this remarkable instrument its owner can bore three or four Inches into the hardest wood. This tool Is possessed only by the female and is her ovipositor, or egg laying apparatus. Boring which takes hours to accomplish is for the purpose of laying one egg.
After spending two years in the employ of the E. G. Hill company of this city for the purpose of learning floriculture, Motoiche Mimaki, a young Japanese, began a return trip home on Saturday that he may enter the Mikado's army in compliance with the national custom. Mimaki, who is but about 21 years of age, left for San Francisco, where he will take a steamer for the land of the cherry blossom. The young Japanese returns home as a result of a letter received a few days ago from his father, who is private secretary to the Prince Imperial and one of the most prominent men in that country, advising him that he should enter the army. Mimaki came to Richmond about two years ago after attending the Alaska-Yukon exposition, and entered the employ of the E..G. Hill company with the determination to learn the florist business r so that he could return to his country later and engage in the growing of " carnations and roses after
American methods. This he will jio doubt do as soon as, he has completed
his military service. He told the offi
cials of the local company that he intended to establish a greenhouse in
Tokio.
According to those in charge of the Hill greenhouse, west of the city, Mimaki was one of the brightest and
most adept young men ever to have entered their employ. He applied him
self energetically to the work and never let up in his determination and persistence to learn every detail, of the business so that he would be com
petent to conduct ' a greenhouse in
Japan, and within the two years that he has worked here he is accredited with having accomplished his purpose. At the very beginning Mimaki became well liked ny the other employes and he soon established for himself a reputatio nfor honesty, .faithfulness and cheerfulness of spirit. His departure is deeply regretted by the officials of the company and employes alige. During his stay in Richmond Mimaki tried his best to emphasize upon those with whom he came in contact that he knew whereof he was speaking when he declared that nothing but the best of feeling existed among the better classes of Japanese toward the United States and that the war scare was merely a hoax.
Wanted Men and teams; street work; South F street, 11th to 13th. A. F. Hooten, contractor. Apply Monday A. M. It
New York. May 13. In answer to the "unjustified public criticism directed toward the state banking department for its-failure to close the
Carnegie Trust company before January 7, 1911, State Superintendent of
Banking. C H. Cheney, declares that
It was Andrew Carnegie's assurance -
that the institution would be saved that prompted the delay. In a long report to Governor Dix. Mr. Cheney says that on the very eve of January 6, when he announced that he would have to close the trust company on the following day unless at least $500,000 in cash was furnished to relieve it, Mr. Carnegie pleaded with the state officials not to take such a step, but finally refused to furnish additional funds. Two weeks after December 15, 1909 he says 'William J. Cummins reported to the department that he had arranged with Mr. Carnegie for a loan to himself and bis associates of $2,000,. 000. The sum of $2,104,000 was then paid into the trust company by Mr. Cummins and four large loans were eliminated, and "the condition of tho Carnegie Trust company was greatly improved." In January, 1910, he says, more than $2,500,000 in questionable loans were cleared up. Dr. Guy Potter Benton, President of Miami university Blnce 1902, who will deliver the commencement address at the Richmond high school in June, has tendered his resignation to the Board of Trustees, effective at the end of
the surrent school year. Dr. Benton has been elected secretly president of the University of Vermont, a nonsectarian institution, located at Burlington, Vt. A meeting of the Board of Trustees or a portion thereof, was held at Hamilton, Ohio, today to consider the resignation and probably to take steps toward the securing of a successor. Under the Presidency of Dr. Benton, Miami university has made very rapid, progress In the work of educa-' tion. Liberal appropriations have, been made by the state of Ohio and : a normal school has been established as an adjunct of the university. .Many new buildings have been erected and the number of students In attendance has greatly increased. r About a year of two ago an effort was made by the Boston university, of Boston, Mass., a Methodist-Episcopalian institution, to secure the services of Dr. Benton as president. The' proffer received serious consideration from Dr. , Benton at the time, but he ' was finally prevailed upon . by members of Miami university board and friends of the Institution to remain there.
What Is civilization? I answer, the power of good women. Emerson.
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