Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 205, 2 June 1911 — Page 2

PAGE TWO.

THE BICHUOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM- FRIDAY,.' JUNE 2, 1911

ME OCCUPATIONS

PRAISED BY CLUBS

Chicago Weaker Sex Says Woman Must Be Educated to Kitchen.

Chicago, June ?. "Women must b educated 'down' to the kitchen and the atandard of domeatlc employea raised." This is the verdict of prominent Chicago clubwomen. They decided that women themselves are to blame for the lack of popularity of home occupation!. The occasion was the eleventh annual reciprocity meeting; and anniversary of the Artcraft Institute and guild, 28277 South Michigan avenue, and the subject was "How may our widespread interest in art, as a factor in everyday life, be best employed. to raise the standard of domestic occupations?" Some of the Epigrams. "There is Just as much 'art' In laundering a piece of lace as in drawing the design." "Let the second maid use the piano, The dressmaker does." "Flats and dellcatessan stores have destroyed home life." "The little things in life, such as washing dishes and preparing food, are included in are. as fully as painting or sculpture." There were other opinions to receive favor. Incidentally, Mrs. D. Harry mer, Mrs. F. K. Bowes and several other women, clad in fine dresses and wearing costly Jewels,-not only admitted, but took pride in announcing that they were not strangers to household duties. ' "I would rather wash dishes than embroider," said Mrs. George Sykes. "Even with the widespread interest in art as a possible lever to raise the standard of domestic occupations, I confess my Inability to apply the lever until the dignity of all work Is demonstrated." said Mrs. Hammer. To dignify dishwashing is difficult, but possible." Mrs. George P. Vosbrlnk could not entirely agree with the others. "Suppose you do raise the standard," she said, "what pood is it all going to do? I would like to know how many women here would mingle on an equality with their servants " But Mrs. Bowes interposed, Raising a warning finger.' "Why," she said, "there are leaders in Chicago society who worked as domestics, and I know of a prominent Boston woman of high atanding who used to sell cigars and my husband bought from her, too." Mrs. George B. Colby questioned whether it would not be educating a woman "up" and not "down" to teach her more of kitchen life.

BUT OIIEJM TO Will Became a Minister to Gain Heart of Bride.

Chicago, June 2. Finding there was only one way to win the girl of his choice, Miss Annie McClure, daughter of Dr. J. G. K. McClure, 2348 North Halsted street, dean of the McCormlck Thelogical seminary, and that way was to become a clergyman, Dumnt Clarke, late of Hackensack, N. J., has accordingly become a full-fledged minister, and has the promise of Miss McClure to become Mrs. Clarke. The marriage was announced to take place June 28. Young Clarke had not inteded to become a minister. In fact, that was the last profession he would have chosen. He is young, only 24, and his father decided that he should become nan electrical engineer. He had a taste for engineering and an equally pronounced antipathy for church and ecclesiastical things. Then he met Miss McClure and promptly fell in love with her. He soon noticed that the many other young men who alco were hit with Dan Cupid's little arrows, and who were spurned by the young Chicago girl, were all studying for other than ministerial callings. He discovered also that the girl had fallen in love with one Ideal her father. Apparently the man she would marry must equal him or at least show some possibility of attaining to his height. Dr. McClure is not only a PresbyterIan clergyman but la dean of the McCormlck Theological seminary. He used to be pastor of the Presbyterian church in Lake Forest.

DIAZ OFFERS HIS SWORD TO MEXICO Sends a Message to Reyes Praising His Decision to Return Home.

(National News Association) Havana, June 2. "My 8ord is at my country's disposal to help maintain its integrity." This is a striking

sentence from a wirelesa message received by Gen. Bernardo Reyes, from ex-president Poforlo Diaz on board the liner Ypiranga. The message was received by Gen. Reyes just as he was boarding the steamer Fuerst Bismarck to sail for Vera Cruz. It was as follows: "I am glad you have finally resolved to proceed to Mexico and cooperate with Provisional President De La Barra find Francisco I. Madero in the pacification of our country. God

' grant that with your patriotic influence and the support of your compai triots and of other countries, order . must be speedily restored without fur

ther bloodPh'.-d. Mexicans must sacrifice party ties and personal ambition; they must close their ranks to prevent alien intervention. My heart is with you; my sword, if needed. Is at the disposal of my country to help maintain its integrity."

NEGRO 17ASJ.YIICHE0 For Attempted Assault on a Planter's Wife.

(National News Association) Memphis. June 2. While a posse of deputy sheriffs were conveying Pat Crump, a negro, charged with attempted criminal assault, to jail, early today, they were overpowered by a mob of fifty masked men who forcibly seized their prisoner and lynched him.

) The avengers tied a rope around the

negro's neck, dragged him a quarter of a mile, hung him to the limb of a tree and filled his body full of bullets as it was .writhing and twisting in the death agony. Crump lived near the home of L. M. Whitsington, a rich planter. Early yesterday the negro went to the plantation home and attempted an assault upon the beautiful young wife of Whitsington. Ad Italian gardener frightened Mm away. The woman notified her husband by telephone but the negro remained about the place. Last night the sheriff's posse arrested him secretly and started to bring him to the county jail. At the city limits

ARMY ISJROMBLIIIG Over Terrible March the Men Had to Make.

LOOKS FOR LEADER

Aldrich Seeks a Senator to Push Bank Bill.

(National News Aaaociation) Galveston, Tex., June 2. The border army, sent here several months ago in the interests of peace in Mexico, today is on the verge of mutiny because of the long, hot hikes it has been compelled to take in the last few days. The first separate brigade of 4,000 men, ' General Mills commanding, is marching from Galveston to Houston, 500 miles. With the mercury ranging from 97 to 106 degrees, the troops were compelled to march despite the scarcity of water. There were scores of prostrations and men fell all along

the line, bleeding from the nose awl mouth. '

So outspoken was the rebellion that

officers were hissed the minute they turned their backs and those responslvle for the march are being anathem-

lzed for further orders.

Railroad water tanks along the way

are being dopenaea on lor tne warer supply and the facilities are so meager

for getting water that it Is hours before the' whole force can be supplied

once a water tank is reached.

Washington, June 2. Kelson W. Aldrich, former United States senator from Rhode Island, has been here several days looking over the United States senate with the view of picking a Republican senator to have charge of his bill for the establishment of a central reserve association. The former senator's friends understand that he is somewhat discouraged in his search for a champion for. his banking and currency program. Under ordinary, circumstances, all legislation relating to banking and currency

would be In charge of the chairman of

the finance committee, but with Boles Penrose, senator from Pennsylvania, at' chairman of this committee, the circumstances arc extraordinary.

' Mr. Aldrich naturally will want his central reserve association bill to be in the hands of a man who can defend

it. He could not count on Senator Penrose being of much assistance to him. Indeed, it Is said, the former Rhode Island senator is inclined to feel that there is not any one on the

finance committee that can rise to the occasion. During the former senator's stay here one of his friends suggested that it might be wise for him to invite Senators Cummins, the Iowa insurgent Republican, to take

charge of the legislation. Mr. Aldrich, so this friend said, was not enthusias

tic over the suggestion. Not the Rsal Author.

It is perhaps not generally known (hat former senator Aldrich is not the real author of the central reserve

association plan. The man who work

ed out the plan and who has prepared

the bill that will be presented to congress in due time, is A. Piatt Andrew, asslstan secretary of the treasury, in

charge of the fiscal bureaus. Mr. An

drew Is an Indiana man. his home being at La port e, where his parents still

live.

At the time the national monetary

commission took up the study of pro

posed banking and currency legisla

tlon, Mr. Andrew was professor of

economics In Harvard University. At

the request of Mr. Aldrich. chairman

of the monetary commission. Mr. An

drew obtained a leave of absence' for one year in order that he might be

come the expert advisor for the monetary commission. It was while he

was serving the commission in that ca

, pacity that Secretary MacVeagh, of the treasury, offered htm the director

ship of the mint. He : declined that

place, but later with the understanding that he was not to give up his place with the monetary commission.

accepted the place in the treasury de

partment. Mr. Andrew devoted much

sw w y ivi sjs v tral reserve association before he fin ally recommended it to Mr. Aldrich.

The Rhode Island man was impressed with the plan from the start, and as

the chlalrman of the. monetary com

mission, and therefore with perfect

right, made the plan his own, and it hat come to be known as the Aldrich

YANKEE POLOISTS

TOOK FIRST GAME (National News Association) New York, June 2. With the Am

ericans victors in the first game of the nrst polo series against the invading Britons for the international cup by

score of 4 goals to 3, confidence

was expressed ty devotees oi tne

sport today that the cup would remain in the United States.

The players on both teams rested

up today in preparation lor tne sec

ond contest which awaits them on

Monday afternoon. W. E. Palmer, a

sub on the British team, attributes the defeat of his fellows yesterday to the condition of the British ponies.

The line-up of the teams was main

tained throughout without change. Al

though there were several bad spills no player was injured seriously enough to be taken from the game.

CHARLES P. REEVES GETS $75 A MONTH Charles P. Reeves, beneficiary under paragraph eight of the last will of the late Mark E. Reeves, receives 75 a month from the estate according to the partial report of the Dickinson Trust company trustee to Judge Fox of the Wayno probate court. Mr. Reeves is now in Germany where he is traveling and studying. The estate which he received includes real estate in this city and Iowa and also a few bonds. The rentals on the property since May, 1909, have amounted to $8,476.81 and after the allowance was paid, Mr. Reeves und the taxes and improvements to the property paid for which amounted to S7.137.0S, during the two years which the report covers, the balance on hand, as reported by the trustee, amounted to $1,339.73.

QUE JAIL SENTENCE UNDER SHERMAN ACT Kenyon's Bill Makes Imprisonment Compulsory by a Conviction.

ed them and seized their man.

UNCLE SAM IS FAR FROM BEING BUSTED

(National Xews Association) Washington, June 2 Uncle Sam has nearly two billion dollars in gold coin In his1 safety vaults in the big treasury building. The piling up of gold coin and bullion in the vaults continues steadily. A little more than $1,815,000,000 is there the highwater mark for the treasury's gold holdings. May's receipts from all sources exceeded $61,000,000 and beat April by a round $10,000,000. Expenditures, however, were held down to about $56,000,000, some $3,000,000 greater than last month.

(Palladium Special)

Washington, June 1. Only one jail; sentence under the Sherman anti-trust

law since it was passed in 1S96, and, in that case, no "time" done. This striking fact is brought out by the renewal of talk, since the tobacco trust decision yesterday of criminal prosecutions of the oil and tobacco trust officials, and by the resolution

oi senator rumerene oi uoio, wuica i passed the United States Senate the j other day, asking Attorney General

Wickersham to tell the Senate what criminal prosecutions have been begun against the Standard Oil company or against the Rockefellers and their associates. The only Instance of a prison sentence under the Sherman law was, it is asserted, in the case of the United

a mob rushed the officers, overpower- Lstates against the Naval Stores Com-

the -rules of a higher authority." Some managing officer, for instance, may, in violating the Sherman law, either be obeying a specific order of, say, the board of directors, or perhaps he Is onlyytrying to make it possible to cut some big dividend melons. Senator Kenyon of Iowa, chief "trust buster" for the government, knows of this reluctance on the part of the trial judges to send trust officials "down"; and he has also seen the dufficulty of "getting" corporation individuals. The very purpose of hit bill, introduced in the Senate, is to leave the judge no alternative than ta jail the convicted defendants In hU proposed amendment to the Sherman law it is noted, how he is "feeling" for the directors: "Every person t.o convicted, whether acting individually or as director of a corporation, shall be punished by imprisonment not exceeding one year," etc. There is no option for the judges here. In this connection. Senator Kenyon is reported as saying immediately aft

er the decision in the pil case: , , - . "I am strong now as ever for my amendment to the Sherman anti-trust law. 1 still believe that we should provide that" those guilty of violating it should be punished by confinement, it is not sufficient, in my judgment, to limit the itenaltv to a fin and di.

solution of the obnoxious corporations and combinations found guilty of violating the law."

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

A. Hose Reel will keep your hose nice, keep the water from standing in it and make your hose wear longer.

529 Main St.

Phone 1390.

SUIT ON ACCOUNT

The Ostrander Seymour company has brought suit against John Noss, the Richmond Electrotype and Engraving company on account, demand $100.

HORTON ATTENDING Y. M. C. A. MEETING

Roy J. Horton, head of the physical training department of the local Y. M. C. A., is attending the annual Tri-An-gle Conference of North American associations at Columbus, Ohio. He will return Saturday, and General Secretary Herbert S. Weed will then

leave for the convention. He will attend the sessions until Tuesday. All phases of association work will be considered at the convention. - It is one of the most important Y; M. C. A. meetings held in the country. Speakers of national prominence are included in the program.

GARFIELD SCHOOL

HOLDS TRACK MEET

The Garfield school track and field meet will be held on Saturday at the

public play grounds on South Twenty-

second street. There are about eighty entries, the teams being divided into

seniors and juniors, fourteen years being the dividing line. There will ue

two teams from each of the four class

es to compete for the prizes to be awarded. There will be no admission charged, although programs will be

sold and refreshments served by the

students. Some of the field events which are too difficult or dangerouB

for pupils of the Garfield school will be substituted by such events as sack races, standing broad jump, throw, ing baseball and the like. The event promises to be very close and interesting.

Of theh 5,500,000 inhabitants of Sweden 110,000, or 2 per cent, possess onethird of the total property, and one-

third of the total income of the coun

try. ej- k

Russian immigrants to America

show a marked preference for the Dutch steamship lines, and Germany is trying to divert the stream of travel to her own lines.

pany and others, in 1909. The defend

ants were indicted and found guilty of , monopolizing and restraining inter-, state trade under the Sherman law, and Judge Sheppard, United States cir- '

cuit judge, southern district of Georgia, sent two of the defendants to jail, as well as fining them and three others $17,500. The defendants have taken the case on a writ of certiorari to the Supreme court, and they are waiting for that court to say next fall or winter whether or not they will have to go to jail. That there has been only one jail sentence cannot be charged to the Department of Justice, certainly not to Attorney General Wickersham. The trouble is, it is said, in the Sherman law. That law gives the trial judges the option of imposing prison sentence; that is, the judge may Bend an individual convicted under the anti

trust act to jail if he likes, but he does

not have to do so. And all the judges with one exception, have stopped short of jail sentences. The Sherman law says that on conviction for directly restraining interstate trade, the sentence may be "im" prisonment not exceeding one year, or by both fine and imprisonment, in the discretion of the court." And the judges in exercising their discretion have leaned to mercy. Another reason for no imprisonment sentences under the Sherman law is, it is said, that it is difficult to fasten the responsibility on an individual connected with the corporation. Such individual may be merely carrying out

Drink GAY-OLA It's Better It is richer, smoother and better than Coco-Cola, does' not have bitter taste found in Coca-Cola, while color and flavor is the same. Gay-Ola is the popular drink all over the country. Mfgrs. of Ginger Ale, Orange. Cider, Soda Watera and BromoHygeia. y Foster Bottling Works PHONE 2191. 118 NORTH 7TH ST.

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JiMe Brides mi June fradiafes

Host Be Remembered If you want to give a present you will not be ashamed of If you want to give a gift of QUALITY, good taste and style If you want to give something that is bound to be appreciated If you want to get it at a reasonable price our Great REMODELING Sale

Presents an Opportunity Never Before Offered in This Community NOW IS YOUR TIME TO GRASP IT DO IT THIS COMING WEEK Watches, Diamonds, Clocks, Silverware, Rings and Fine Jewelry. Everything at a Bargain.

jEras&co.?26WN8J

Family Trade Supplied by J. F. ROWLETT, Mgr. Richmond5 Branch, 435-39 S. 4th St. Phone 2185.

Both 1-EGGEMEYER'S I ppu Stores salarday Grocery Specials Stores ....... v . , . ' '

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