Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 216, 13 June 1911 — Page 4
PAGE FOtTH;
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AUD SUK-TEI.EGILVSI, TUESDAY, JFXE 13, 191i.
Pvsllekea ana own ad by the
f AUaADIVH FZIXNTINO CO.
f dare Mck week, evenings u
unaair nernina?. Offles Corner North th and A afreets. Palladium and un-Telestram Phonee uetaese Offles, Editorial Rooms, RICHMOND. INDIANA.
RbSoIbB 0. Loots KtM S. r. SUB7fceM. ...... elaeea Maaaajet Carl Bamkarolt ...... Aaeeelate BSlte
to Howe Miter
SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. tm Richmond l.e ar roar (to 4 , vance) or tOo par week. mail subscription So roar, la advaneo I months. In advance . o Month, la advenoe RURAL ROUT KM Oao yoar. ta advaneo ! !! la atoatha. In advaneo LI; Ono Month, la advaneo Add.-oaa chancad aa oftan aa deelredj both bow and old addraaaaa aiuat be Ivan. SiiBserlbers will pleas remit with order, which should bo eiven (or a OBoolAod term; name will not bo eater ai aatll paymei.t la received.
Entered at Richmond. Indiana. ?ot office ao aecond clans mall matter.
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RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY"
Ilea a population of 12,124 and la growing. It la the county Beat of Wayne County, and the trading canter of a rich agricultural community. It la located due eaat from Tndlanapolle inline and 4 mllea from tho atate line. Richmond la a city of nomea and of Industry. Primarily a, manufacturing- city, It la also tho Jobbing; canter of Eactarn In dlana and enjoya the retail trade of tho populoua community for mllea around. Richmond la proud of Ita aplendld atroata. well kept yarda. Ita cement aldewalka and beautiful ahade traea. It haa three national banka, one truat company and four building- aaaoclatlona with a combined reaource of over 18,- - 000,000. Number of factorlea 111: capital Inveated $7,000,000. .with an annual output of 127.000,000, and a pay roll of 1S.T00.000. The total pay roll for the city amounta to , approxlmatedly S, 400,000 annual. There are five railroad companlea radiating; In elaht different dlrectlona from tho city. .Incoming freight handled dally. l. 710,000 lbe outgoing frclg-ht handled dally, 710,000 The. Yard facllltlea. par day 1,700 cara. . ? lumber of paasenger tralna dally 1. Number of freight tralna dally 77. The annual poet office recelpta amount to $80,000. Total aaaeaaed valuation of tho city, $11,000,000. Richmond haa two Interurban . rallwaya. Three newapapere with a combined circulation of 12,000. Richmond la tho greatest hardware Jobbing venter In the atate and only aecond In general Jobbine; tntereata. .It haa a piano factory producing a high grade f ilano or .try IB minutes. It la tho aader In the manufacture of Traction engines, and producea more threonine; machines, lawn mowers, roller akatoa, grain drllla and burl! caaketa than any other city In the world. The clty'a area la 2,040 arret; haa a t-ourt houae coating; $&00,- , 000; 10 public echoola and haa tho finest and most complete high school In the middle west; three parochial aohoola; Earlham college and tho Indiana Buslnesa College: five splendid fire com- , panlea in fine hose houaes; Glen miller park, tho largest and moat beautiful park In Indiana, the homo of Itlchmond'a annual Chautauqua; aoven hotels; municipal electric light plant, under aucceaaful operation and a private electric light plant; Insuring competition; the oldeat publie library In tho atate, except one and the aecond laraest, 40,000 volumes; pure refreshing- water, unaurpassed: OS mllea of Improved atreeta; 40 mllea of sewers; 21 mllea of cement curb and gutter combined; 40 mllea of cement walks, and many mllea of brick walks. Thirty churchea. Including; tho Reld Memorial, built at a coat of $2s0,000; Reld Memorial Hospital, one of the moat modern In the atate; Y. M. C. A. building, erected at a coat of $100,000, ono of tho flneat In the atate. The amusement center of Kastern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the alio of Richmond . ttolda aa fine an annual art ex- . hlblt. The Richmond Kail Festival held each October la unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It la given In the Interest of the city and financed by tho buelneae men. tluceeea awaiting anyone with enterprise In the Paolo Proof City.
This Is My 52nd Birthday
Earlham
AMU EL PLANT2.
1 Dr. Samuel Plant, president of
"Lawrence university, and a man of national prominence In educational cir
clea, was born in Johnstown. N. Y., . Juno 13. 1859. After graduating from
Lawrence university at Appleton, Wis
In 1180 he took a course in theology (at Boston university. This was fol
lowed by a year of study at the Uni
versity 6f Berlin. He was ordained to the ministry of the Methodist Episcopal church in 18S5, and from that time to 1894 he officiated in various churches of that denomination. In 1894 he was elected to the presidency of Lawrence university. Dr. Plants is a member of numerous religious, scientific and educstlonal societies and is on of the trustees of tho Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
MASONIC CALENDAR Wednesday, June 14. Webb lodge No. 24. F. A. M. Called meeting. Work In Master Mason degree, commencing work promptly at 7 o'clock. Refreshments. Thursday, June 13. AVayne Council No. 10, R. tt 8. M. 8pecial Assembly, work in Royal and. Select Master degree. Refreshments. Saturday, June 17. Loyal Chapter ' No. 49, O. E. S., Statel meeting. Re
freshments.
The good and sufficient reasons for the Earlham campaign for funds have been set forth by President Kelly of Earlham already in the news columns of the Palladium. Everyone who wants to know why Earlham is asking money at this time can get the information very shortly by telephoning the president's office. , ' The men who are asking money for the college know all the financial details. Doubtless there are some men who will be asked to give to the fund for Earlham who will inquire in their hearts as to how much they will get out of it. There are certain men who always have taken the injunction to cast their bread upon the waters in a spirit which leaves no doubt as to their anxiety for the return of the bread.
We fancy that we can see into the type of mind that will refuse to give anything to Earlham. There are many people who are Just waking, up to what has been done across the river. Even in passing on theCstreet car their eyes open a little wider when they see the growth of the college. But the addition of Bundy Hall and the Library have been very slight additions in comparison with the change that haa come over the whole college in the last ten years. From a comparatively Bmall institution just emerging from the bewilderment of the millions given to great university the millions given to state universities the blow given sectarianism by the pension funds the blows given to all intellectual endeavor and scholarship by the amalgamation of great fortunes and the steady pull of what is called a business age It was a hard task to look blithely into the future and hope. And, indeed, to hope was easier than to know what the real meld of the college was, and how, then, to get it started in the new current. It is not because Earlham happens to be situated in Richmond that we say that there Is today no higher standard of scholarship In the state than at Earlham. Does the public know that although the standards of scholarship are as high or higher here than in any other college in the state that the college has not the same amount of money at its disposal as other colleges have? A college like Earlham must be on the alert to get good men and good men will not come to a place which has not a high Btandard of scholarship. Perhaps business men will not think highly of a mind that clings so closely to an ideal that it would turn down a greater salary to come to a place which has a standard of the highest but he will under: stand it if he knows that men are only willing to come to such a place until they can get a better position. If Earlham does not get this endowment If it does not clear up its books and start with renewed activity and full vigor on the next cycle of its existence this is what will happen: The men who will come to Earlham will come only to teach for a year or so. -They will be men with their post graduate work only half completed. There will be more teaching force of immature material and less of the finished scholarship that will hold up the standard. Then this disintegration will fall into the slough of pessimism until, at length, instead of a joyous, battling graduation class, tempered and edged for zest of life there will go out a weary, stunted, dr. 'led bunch of provincialism Into a generation crying for the truth. There are many things which can be said about Earlham which may be faults or not according to the man who says them. It is not a university, it is not an eastern college it is not like any other college in the country. . But the college is of honesty itself there is as little pretense and as little of the sham of this modern age about it as things human are likely to be. We can see possibilities for Earlham things which the trustees and faculty of that institution may or may not have contemplated. We can see work for Earlham to do which by right should be done by the state university. If you will pick up the Outlook for this month and read of the work of the University of Wisconsin you will see what we mean. The University of Wisconsin serves the state as a place where the young men and women are -toeing trained for the conflict of the many against the few. This is a progressive community. That has been proved over and over again. Earlham has a splendid opportunity in Indiana. The sectarianism which she has is no bar to that endeavor for the splendid heritage of the Society of Friends has been the protest against human slavery. Earlham College is already dedicated to that work from the very nature of the men and women who have founded the college What will you have Earlham do? No college can be progressive when it is laboring under the debts of the past and the future darkened by the possibilities of going into a reacttonarism of inaction. ' What would be the effect of the removal of Earlham College from this community? ' , Of course you will Bmile at such a statement. But something far worse than the removal of Earlham could happen and that is its decay.
HAS 13 SLOSTITUTE
ute enacted last December to remove
the capital from Guthrie was unconstitutional.
Both branches of the Wisconsin leg
islature have passed a bill granting
suffrage to women. The measure will
be submitted to the voters of the
state for approval and if it receives the necessary votes it will go into effect two years hence. The suffrage organizations are preparing to wage a vigorous fight in its behalf.
SIMIANS TAUGHT TO PICK COTTON CROP
i Savannah, Ga., June 13. An attempt is to be made in Fulton county by French cotton experts to teach monkeys to pick cotton. If the experiment succeeds a colony of monkeys will be imparted and put to work. The idea was suggested by the an
tics of a pet chimpanzee carried by a
INSANE ACROBAT, ON WIRE, DOES STUNTS
1 Absolutely Puro msdo from Hsyaf Orspo Oroom of Tartar JUlUnil? FILIATE
Politics and Politicians
ACROBATIC EELS UNABLE TO CLIMB DAM York, Pa., June 13. Fishermen who visited McCall's Ferry found awaiting them one of the greatest runs of eels ever experienced there. The new dam of the Pennsylvania Water and Power company is credited with the condition. The eels, measuring from four inches to a foot in length, are said to be swarming in the waters below the dam, evidently prevented from continuing up stream by the big concrete structure. Many are seen to attempt to scale the rocks at the York county end of the breastwork, only to fall back. Thousands are being caugh.
GREENCASTLE MOTORISTS HURT SUNDAY (National News Association Greencastle, Ind., June 13 Auditor John Whitaker, of Martinsville, was badly injured . when his auto, turned turtle on Sunday night. His daughter's arm was broken. Mrs. 'Victor Duncan of Louisville, had an ear severed., In a second accident, the Rev. and Mrs. Black and Mat Johnson or Bainbridge, were badly injured. Their machine was wrecked.
Senator Joseph W. Bailey of Texas has made formal announcement that he will be a candidate for re-election. The Indiana Democratic Editorial association has indorsed Governor Marshall for the presidential nomination in 1912. Friends of Congressman J. Hamp
ton Moore of the Third Pennsylvania district are urging him to become a candidate, for mayor of Philadelphia. Norwich, the first city of Connecticut to vote on the adoption of the commission plan of government, has rejected the proposal by a majority of 387. The Prohibitionists of Kentucky met at Lexington recently and nominated a complete state ticket, headed by Rev. J. D. Redd of Paintsville as candidate for governor.
It is said that Francis J. Heney. who was chief counsel in the graft prosecutions in San Francisco, will become a candidate for United States senator to Bucceed Senator Perkins. Arthur Capper, publisher of the Topeka Capital, has announced his candidacy for governor of Kansas on the Capper is one of the leaders of the insurgent element of his party. If Governor Wilson of New Jersey Is nominated for president by the
Democrats next year it is thought likely that Col. George Harvey, the New York editor and one of the original Wilson boomers, will be selected to manage the campaign. Prof. Thomas Sterling, dean of the law school of the University of South Dakota, has resigned his position in order to make the primary race for the' "United States senate to, succeed Senator Robert J. Gamble, whose term will expire in 1913. Speaker Champ Clark, Governor Wilson of New Jersey and probably Representative Underwood of Alabama, will be the speakers at a big
rally to be held in Harrisburg on June 15 under the auspices of the League of Democratic clubs of Pennsylvania. A. J. Angle, a member of the Florida legislature, has announced his candidacy for the governorship. His platform is something out of the ordinary, the principal planks declaring for the abolition of the convict lease system and the adoption of a goqd roads policy by the state. Two United States senatorships will be settled by the state primary in Virginia next September. Senators Martin and Swanson ' will be candidates for re-election. The other candidates will be Representative William A. Jones of the First district and Carter Glass of the Sixth district. The capital of Oklahoma will remain at Oklahoma City as far as the supreme court of the United States is concerned. That tribunal has just declined to hold that the Oklahoma stat-
Philadelphia, June 13, Residents along Reed street, between Twelfth and Thirteenth streets were startled early in the morning at the sight of a man swinging from the electric light wires pust outside their windows, going through all the evolutions of an accomplished acrobat, and seemingly unmindful of his danger. The frail wires swayed and threatened to snap at any moment, but the man continued his contortions thirty feet above the pavement. Policeman Foley of the Fifteenth and Jackson street station was attracted by the cries of the spectators. He climbed the electric light pole and tried to induce the man to abandon his perilous perch. For a time it look as if both would be dashed to the street, but finally succeeded in getting the man to the ground. Taken to the station-house, he gave the name of Dominick Borro, 37 years old, 1515 Couth Clarion street. Later he was sent to city hall, where policesurgeons will make a mental examin
ation.
fanner's boy into the fields. The animal after frisking around for a time
and watching the negroes at work, be
gan on his own accord to pick the cottan with almost incredible rapidity. An animal trainer finds it very easy to teach monkeys to perform an manual trick of labor. By utilising monkey labor the cost of cotton harvesting would be infinitely leas than with human labor.
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If there werebut one potato in the world a careful cultivator might produce ten billion from it in ten years, and thus supply the world with seed again.
"THIS DATE IN HISTORY"
JUNE. 13. 1673 Cataratful ; (Kingston, Ont.) was founded. 1786 Gen. Wlnfleld Scott born near Petersburg, Va. Died at West Point, N. Y., May 29. 1866. 1798 Malta taken by Bonaparte in the outset of his expedition to Egypt. 1841 Opening of the first United Parliament at Kingston by Lord Sydenham. 1861 Fast day observed in the Confederate States. 1864 Fugitive Slave Act repealed by the house of representatives. 1882 Mr. G. A. B. Walkem resigned the premiership of British Columbia, 1886 King Otto ascended the throne of Bavaria. 1910 Charles K. Hamilton made an aeroplane flight from New York to Philadelphia and return with two stops.
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