Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 194, 22 May 1911 — Page 4

PACU2 FOUR.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM A2H 8UN-TELEGRA2X, MONDAY. MAT 22, 1911.

czi Ssa-Teltcrtm Publish and wn4 by the PAULADIUM PniNTINO Oa ImmrI I ays 4ih week, evenings u( Sunday inornlan. Ofrtee Corner North tth ana A etreeta. Palladium and Bun-Tsl.e-ram Phonaa Jiusinsea Office. ; Editorial Jtoema, 1UL RICHMOND. INDIANA.

Rudolph O. Loodo Bdltwr J. P. RlashoM Baeteooe Manager Carl BsreaaraH ...... Aeoeelata Bdltor V. IL Poaadatoao Xowa Bdltor

STDSCniPTZON TERMS, la Kiebmond $ jar lsar a advanes) or iOo por week. MAIL BTJBSCniPTIONsV On Tear, la advance 'J J! Six months, la advance ......... One tnenth. In advance ........ RURAL ROUTE I One year, la advance Six vonthe. In advance One month. In advance. am.wi rk.ni.ii a.a often as dealreds

f both new and old addreeaea nmii bo

I Slvea, uku.ik.M will alsasa remit with

larder, which should bo given for a

specified term; name win not bo muw ' ad until payment Is received. it 1 .1 i

Entered at Richmond. Indiana. 30St i office aa second dais mall matter.

New York Representative Fayn Young. - West 13rd street, and till West 2n1 street. New York. N. Y. . rklr.ra nnraantatlvee Peyne Young. 11 -Tit Marquette Building. vnioego. tii. ' FJV.MIIHrUIJ Association of American (Now York CitrfaM and oarUIUd to tta drw'nttaa Only too Ugnans ox talaed la Ita reportkaw 9 tb Association. , . IK its RICHMOND, INDIANA ''PANIC PROOF CITY" Has a population of 22,324 and is growing. It Is the county seat of Wayne County, and the trading center of a rich agrlcultural community. Jt Is 1?rated due east from Indianapolis mlta and 4 miles from the atale line. - Richmond 1" a city of homes sand of Induatry. Primarily a manufacturlna city. It Is alao the jobbing crntwr of Kaetern Indiana and enjoys the retail trade of the populous community for mllea around. ... , Rlrhmend Is proud of Its splen did at met a. well Kent yaraa. n r.ni.nt ilil.wilki and boautlfulV -I shade trees. It has three nationai banns, one trust company nu four building associations with a romMned rsourre of over .- 000,000. Numher of factories ItS: capital Invested $7.000 000. with an annual output of $27.000.000. and a pay roll of $J1.700,000. The total pay roll for the vity amounts to approxlmatedly $1,600,000 annual. There are five railroad companies radlatln In eight different directions from the city. Incoming freight handled dally. 1.710.000 lbs., outgoing frrlght hanrifM dally. 780,000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day 1.700 cars. Number of passeng-er trains dally St. Number of freight trains dally 77. The annual poet office receipts amount to $80,000.. 'iotal asaeastxt valuation of the city, $16,000,000. Richmond baa two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with n combined circulation of 12,000. Richmond Is the grrateat hardware Jobbing" renter in the state and only serond In general Jobbin Interests. It has a piano , .factory producing, a high grade piano every IS minutes. It Is the leader In the manufacture of Traction engines, and produces more threshing msrhlnes, lawn mowers, roller skatra, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city In the world. The clty'a area Is 3.640 acres; baa a vourt houaa costing $600,000; lOlpubllo schools and has th finest and moat complete high school In the middle west; three Jtarochlal schools; Karlham colge and the Indiana Hustneas College; five splendid fire companies In fine hoae houses; Olen miller park, the largest and moat beautiful park in Indiana, the home of Richmond's annual Chautauqua; aeven hotels; municipal electric light plant, under ' aucceaeful operation and a private electric light plant. Insuring competition; the oldest public library In the state, except one and the second largeat, 40,000 volumea; pure refreshing water, unsurpassed; 65 miles of Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers; 21 miles of cement curb and. gutter combined: 40 miles of cement walks, and many mllea of brick walks. Thirty churches, including the Reld Memorial, built at a cost of $250,000; Reld Memorial Hospital, one of the most modern In the state; Y. M. C. A. building, erected at a cost of $100,000, one of the finest In the state. - The amusement renter of Kastern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the else of Richmond holds as fine an annual art exhibit. Th' Richmond Fall Festival held each October Is unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It la given In the interest of the city and financed by the . business men. Hucceas awaiting anyone with enterprise In tho Panlo Proof City. This Is My 50th Birthday CHARLES H. MARKHAM " Charles II. Markham, president of the Illinois Central Railroad, was born In ClarksvIUe, Tenn., May 22, 1861, and at twenty years of age he began his railroad career as a section laborer on tho Atchison. Topeka and Santa Fe. A tew months later he became a station agent for the Southern Pacific at Iteming. N. H., and held similar positions lor six years. From 1891 to 1897 he was district freight and passenger agent at Fresno, Cat., and in 1897 was promoted to be general freight agent of the Oregon lines of the Southern Pacific Company. In 1901 he was transferred to San Francisco as as gfatant freight traffic manager and in 3901 was made vice president of the Houston and Texas Central. In April of that year he was chosen as general manager of the Southern Pacific and In June, vice president. He resigned the following November to engage in the oil business. Last December he was induced to re-enter the railroad field as president of the Illinois Cen tral. New Yorkers are the biggest bor rowers In the world; at least. they are so collectively, for the city owes seven times as much as any other city lr the country and more than one-half as much as the largest twenty-seven cities

II at taia ambUcaUon.

J th land. ' : " '

The Forum of

One of the customs in newspaper offices which has been handed down from the first publication of journals and gazettes is the letter the people's column The Forum of the people. The only thing which any newspaper demands is that the letter shall not be libelous or in the opinion of those in authority be of a character to do harm either intentionally or unintentionally and that these contributions shall be in good sbaqe for publication, of a length which is convenient for the management of the paper and that the identity of the writer be known to the paper. These are the only restrictions which the Palladium places on its cole uon The Forum of the People.

Within the last few days the Chicago Tribune sent out. questions asking newspapers all aver the country (1) whether they favored the reciprocity treaty- of President Taft; (2) whether they tavored a further revision of the tariff; (3) what articles should be put on the free list. We should like to hear from our readers in short communications. The Palladium wishes to know what the people in this community think about these questions. The manufacturer has his mediums of expression; so has the merchant; what do other people think about things? If any considerable number of people are working together it would be interesting if they would take a straw vote and send the returns in. In this way the sentiment "of the citizens can be tested. Congress is in session. 'What do you think?

Here are some other questions which the people of other states are Interested in. What do you think of them? 1. Election of United States senators by direct vote of the people. 2. Direct primaries for the nomination of all elective offices. 3. Direct election of delegates to national conventions with opportunity for the voter to express his choice for President, and Vice President. 4. Amendment to the state constitutions providing for the Initiative, Referendum and Recall. 5. A thorough going corrupt practice act.

A Native Grouth

The May Musical Festival has become an integral part of the commuv nlty. There Is scarcely a city in the West of any size that attempts to j- do the Bort of thing that Richmond does and does well. The symphony orchestra; the two choruses; all of native growth these did not happen by mushroom processes nor by forced growth. This has attracted the attention of men who are musical critics of national reputation. .The work has been of two parts the interest of the public and

the Interest of the hundreds who are

touched the whole of Richmond. The appreciation displayed last Spring apparently came from the deepest Interest In good music of a sturdy growth. Richmond seemed last year to have come to the point when it knew good music by Richmond performers and was not dazzled by mere foreign prestige. If it happens again this year, Richmond has added something to Amer- ' lean music not known elsewhere in the United States.

NEYVTJN WILL PROBE RUSH COUNTY BOOKS Charles Newlin, former deputy coun ty auditor who is a field accountant of the state board of accounts was here on Sunday. He went to Rushvllle on Monday to begin with his field partner the examination of the county of ficials' books In Rush county. For several weeks he has been located at Delphi, Carroll county, the work In examining the records in the , county offices there .having been completed ast week. Woman and Pain. "Ton women bear pain more heroic ally than men." "Who told you tnatdoctor?" "No; a shoemaker r "THIS DATE

MAY 22. 1795 Mungo Park set sail on his first voyage to Africa..

1802 Martha Washington, wife of non. Born in New Kent County,

1813 Richard Wagner, famous composer, born in Leipzig. Died in Venice,

Feb. 13, 1883. ,

1854 Jacob Gould Schurman. president of Cornell University, born in

Prince Edward Island. - . 1863 Grant's assault on Vlcksburg repelled. 1867 Queen Victoria signed the proclamation uniting the Canadian provinces into one dominion. 1885 Victor Hugo, famous French novelisL died. Born Feb. 26, 1802. 1898 Edward Bellamy, sociologist and author of "Looking Backward," died. Born March 26, 1850. "

1906 Henrik Ibsen, famous Norwegian poet and dramatist, died in Chris-

tiania. Born in Kkien, March 20, 1S28. 1910 United States and Canada concluded a treaty settling the disputed coast boundary between Maine and New Brunswick.

Divorce Seeking

Children Tell of Their Evils

- New York, May 22. Eight-year-old Georglana Caspar, daughter of the wo man named, was.the principal witness against her mother in the supreme court in the divorce suit of Mrs. May Ellne against Charles Eline, tried be fore Judge Newburger and a jury. In a little, piping . voice that the jury could hardly hear, the girl de clared that Eline was a frequent visitor at her home 2110 Mapes avenue. Bronx, last summer, and that on one occasion, finding the door locked, she climbed through the window and sur prised him with her mother, Mrs. Daisy Caspar. ' Eline, who is a solicitor employed by a milk company, declares that he called at the Caspar home merely oa business and that his company requlr ed him to be nice to Its customers. . Mrs. Caspar, now separated front her husband, George W. Caspar, sat within a dozen feet of little Georglana when she was testifying. The child did not seem to notice her motheer's presence, and when she had finished went directly back to her father' knee.

Tjr Yi j Then why rest contented with JrSe JrrOUd tWn.scragy,roughhair? Ayer's aw Hvigorjtajftnessauidrich. nssi to the hair, makes it thicker, heavier. Cannot change the color. Safe to use? Ask your own doctor. iJLtiVS;

the People"

engaged In this movement it has CENTERVILLE WILL IMPROVE STREETS (Palladium Special) Centerville, Ind., May 22. In order to avoid the dust nuisance, merchants on Main and Cross streets have decided to treat the two streets in front of . . i i.u i..t weir piaces oi uusjues wnu biuuiu, a preparation which has so effectively been used in Glen Miller park at Rich mond. It was after an Inspection of the different treatments tried on Rich mond streets and in Glen Miller park that the business men decided on glutrln. The streets already have been scraped preparatory to treating them and about forty loads of dust were taken from six squares. IN HISTORY" George Washington, died at ML. Ver Va., In 1732. Parents Have New York. May 22. Eleanor O'Reil ly, 8 years old, by her testimony against her father, William B. O'Reil ly, sent him to prison for one year, and possibly for two years, for aban donment. In addition he was fined $1,000. The penalty was imposed by Judge Mulqueen in Part 1, general ses sions. . Mrs. Catherine O'Reilly of 736 Am sterdam avenue was the complainant. Her husband was arrested in St. Louis where he bad a position as a salesman. The wife told this story. "We were married ten years ago In New York. My husband was an under taker and made $50 a week. After ten years of married life he gave up his business and disappeared. I wrote letters to him, but he did not answer them. My little girl wrote him for money to buy medicine when she waa sick and he did not answer the letters. He instituted a suit for dwivorce In St Louis on the ground that I abandoned him." The little girl weepingly confirmed all her mother had said. The $1,000 fine will be applied to the maintenance and education of the girL

A GREAT PHYSICIAN

What He Said of Germs that Cause Disease, XL Pasteur, sometimes called the Greatest Physician, often said "I be lieve that we shall one day rid the world of all diseases that are caused by germs. Of all the diseases caused by germs. catarrh is one of the most persistent and loathsome. Catarrh can be cured. but only y destroying the germs. Breathe HYOMEI (pronounce it High-o-me) and cure catarrh by killing the germs. The HLOMEI method is the only sensible method, because you breathe the highly antiseptic and germ killing air directly over the entire membrane infested with catarrh germs. HYOMEI will cure catarrh. There may be some complicated cases where it will fail, but the chances are ten to one in its favor, and the sufferer from catarrh takes no risk, because HYO MEI is a guaranteed remedy, and if it doesn't cure, Leo H. Fihe will refund the purchase price. HYOMEI will also give instant re lief and cure in bronchitis, coughs, colds and croup. A complete outfit, including hard rubber pocket inhaler, costs only $1.00. If you own a Hyomei inhaler you can get a bottle of HYO MEI for 50 cents. WHAT OTHERS SAY This is the time of year when flow ers blow, leaves grow, farmers sow, the sun's rays glow and autos ko. Laporte Herald. A man never blames himself so much for being guilty of something reprehensible as he does the newspapers for printing it. Huntington Herald. Another curious writer is asking "why beautiful women marry ugly men." Ever get a B. W. to admit the brute she married was ugly? Hammond Times. This is the time of the year when you spend ail your time trying to make two blades of grass grow where one grew before and in 80 years you will have a lawn. Hammond News. Having discovered that scientists find water under Arizona, permit us to submit that perhaps it leaked from the stock in some fictitious mines in that agreeable state. Portland Com mercial Review. The man who is square and who has a square proposition is never afraid of investigation or open discussion. He surely will not want to do Iubllc business as if it were a private affalr.-Noblesville Ledger, I The Unjted states supreme court Lag held that the American Indian lg not civilized. It's a good thing the court has no occasion to pass on the qualifications for citizenship of some people hereabout. Washington Her ald. Dr. Wiley is going after headache remedies, some of which do their work by deadening the nerve and putting the heart i well nigh out of business. His idea is that it is better to have a headache and know it than to be dead and not know a thing about it, Sey mour Democrat. The original document of the United States constitution was inspected last week after being locked up nine years, but it must be longer than that since some of the congressmen have read that instrument. Frankfort News. What In the world are we coming to, anyhow? The government is actually going to make a patent medicine manu facturer make good his claims on the wrappers on his bottles. If this idea shall be carried out, the jails will have to be enlarged or else some manufac tories will close down. Monticello En terprise. . You won't enjoy the summer you will lack ambition unless the system lis cleansed of impurities and invigor ated. Nyal's Spring Sarsaparilla is what you should take. Quigley Drug Stores.

SPECIAL SALE IVIav 22 to 27

Extra Stamps with Tea and Coffee

10 STAMPS with one lb. Coffee at .....25c 15 STAMPS with one lb. Coffee at 30c 20 STAMPS with one lb. Coffee at 35c 40 STAMPS with one lb. Tea at 50c 45 STAMPS with one lb. Tea at 60c 50 STAMPS with one lb. Tea at ........70c

Don't Forget Wednesday RED LETTER DAY

The Great Atlantic & PacffieTeaCo. 727 Um. FCC5E 1215

A HEALTHJULLETIIi

For the State for April Is Just Issued. The bulletin of the state board of health just issued for April says: The deaths in April, 1911, exceeded those in April, 1910, by 218. Measles was reported as the most prevalent disease, with tonsIliti3 next Scarlet fever was prevalent in many places in the state but generally in mild form. the total deaths for the month was 22 while measles caused 89 deaths. The people are" gradually learning that measles is a dangerous disease. Like scarlet fever it leaves bad results, and its mortality has become greater than that of scarlet fever. The cities report 1448 deaths, rate 15.3, of 1.6 higher than the rate for the whole state. The rdral deaths numbered 1,606, with a rate of 12.6 or 1.1 less than the total rate for the state. Pulmonary tuberculosis wrought its usual destruction, 300 deaths, al most ten each day being caused by it, Infantile paralysis caused three deaths and number of cases not known. Cancer caused 134 deaths, violence 173, whooping cough 30, diphtheria 17, ty phoid fever 40, smallpox one. Small pox prevailed to a very considerable degree, being reported from 32 differ ent localities. This disease does not cause alarm any more for it causes few deaths and severe cases are rare. Births for March. Birth reports are always a month late because the law gives twenty days in which doctors and midwives may re port. Total births 4,901, still births exclud ed. Still births 154, white 148, colored 6. Males 2,478; females 2.423. White males, 2,431; white females, 2,373. Colored males 47; colored females 50. State rate, pop. 2.700,876, 21.4. North1 Krone & Kennedy NOW ES THE TIME to buy your Summer clothes. Make living a pleasure this hot, sultry weather. STRAW HATS Sailors, Panamas and Soft Straws, all the new shapes, price $1.00 to $6.00. UNDERWEAR Price 50c to $2.50 SHIRTS Price 50c to $2.50 SUITS Price $10.00 to $25.00 25 STAMPS with one bottle Extract at 25c 10 STAMPS with 1 bottle Sauce at 12c 10 STAMPS with 2 pkgs. A. & P. Washing Powder, each .......... 5c 10 STAMPS with one package of Rice at .........10c 10 STAMPS with one cake bitter chocolate .......20c 10 STAMPS with one cake sweet :hocolate at ... .10c

ssWVMnrV

SORE FEET GO

Leo H. Fihe Lands the Agency for Ezo, Already the Greatest Remedy for Painful Feet ; " -r. . "... Rejoice and be glad all ye residents of Richmond who suffer from sore, painful, burning or smarting feet, for Leo H. Fihe now sells Ezo, the different remedy that banishes all misery from the feet and makes them feel fine in almost no time. Ezo is a refined ointment, very pleasant to use, and a large glass jar only costs 25 cents. It surely is the finest thing on earth for swollen or aching feet, and It promptly extracts the pain and soreness from corns, bunions and callouses. If you want a pair of comfortable feet that won't give you any bother throughout a strenuous day, get Ezo and rub it in. And Ezo is mighty good for other things too, sunburn for instance, and chafing, and is very soothing and healing in skin diseases. Only 25 cents. Ezo Chemical Co., Rochester, N. Y., Makers. em sanitary sec. pop. 927,229, rate 20.8. Highest rate. Clay county, 29.3. Central sanitary Sec. pop. 1,114,087, rate 20.7. Lowest rate, Union county, 11.3. Southern Sanitary Sec., pop. 659,560, rate 23.3. STERLING SILVER PIN SETS The latest patterns suitable for commencement presents. HANER, the Jeweler 810 MAIN STREET

DON'T HESITATE

About where to go when you want to borrow money. Come to us, and if our METHODS and EASY TERMS don't please you, then go elsewhere. It won't cost you a cent to find out why our business ' is growing so rapidly. ' OUR METHODS PLEASE THE PEOPLE. We loan on FURNITURE, FIXTURES, PIANOS, HORSES AND VEHICLES. OUR CUSTOMERS RECOMMEND US.

a

llaB IkDSii , (Ik 40 Colonial Building. Elevator to Third Floor Cor. 7th and Main, Richmond, Ind. Phone 2560.

I(lMEY9

BUY A HERRICK Cold Dry Air Circulation

rv a i

mm :nzdi-L I i 4 i

The Herrkk Way.

Our Refrigerators are Priced $9.00, 0M.50, 3119.00 up

BUYYOUR Library Chairs We're selling some beautiful mission and hand croft

LIBRARY CHAIRS, ROCKERS, SETTEES, ETC. PRICED $4.75, 159.50, $12.50 UPWARDS Bay a Maccy Sectional Boole Case 3 Sections, Top and Base in Fumed Oak, Early English or Golden Oak, only S 1 3.50

Otli and

A ROADS CONGRESS OPENS ON TUESDAY

(American News Service) Birmingham, Ala., ; May 22. Dc'gates and visitors from many states are pouring into Birmingham to attend the annual meeting of the National Good Roads congress. It is believed that nearly two thousand delegates will be on hand when the gathering is called to order tomorrow by President A. C. Jackson, of Chicago. The eosslons of the congress will last four days. Governors, members of congress, mayors of cities and other per sons of prominence will be among the speakers. Of the thousands of Mono and Yosemite Indian tribes who roamed the districts in this county many years ago only one of each remain, accord ing to the Indian census which has just been completed by Miss 1 Tibbets and C. C. Dorsey, who are em ployed by the government. Young Farmer's Practical Library Cloth, IIKa.tr.tvd, 7S cnta as sack From your b.oWt.U.r. or mm oomlyfca 84 cat. (stomp, or moo.r oroor Practical handbooks by practical experts for practical use. Baaed on the investigations of the Country Life Commission WaisahaHisaa EatortaiaatsaUi Winter and Summer amuowusnta plraaars and profit. Ur fUne B. Stem. Horn. Wstorwiaa. Obtaining and Introduction of water into hooana aatt outbuildings at a moderate coat. By Prof. Carleton J. Lynda. From Kitcaoa to Garrst. TbS bosaowife's duties atada esay . By Virginia Terhane Vaa da Water. ml Caanpotltora. How to set rid of four-footed peats, or how to raise taaat for pro. Br Eraeat InceraotL atroa. of muouoiu , it- rwv lished bjr authority af Cnssmlsaiaa, SEND FOR CIRCULAR Sturgi & Walton Company 31-33 East ZTtk St., Now York - I

lU DEsllILiw. REFRIGERATOR ANYWHERE

"It's tlie clreof WITH THE CUILL IN IT

Main St.