Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 231, 28 June 1911 — Page 6

THE RICHMOND PALIADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1911.

PRESIDENT IS TO

SPEAK AT

MARION

His Only General Address .While in Indiana to Be

i Made There, July 3.

(Palladium Fprclal)

Marlon, Ind., June 28. The only pub

lic address to the whole people to be

inade by PreMdont Taft In Indiana

will be that delivered by the President on the Marion Soldiers' Home grounds on the afternoon of Monday, July Srd,

at 3:30 o'clock. The site selected for

this out-door speech Is one of the most delightful on the beautiful home

grounds. It is estimated that from

, forty to fifty thouxand people can b ' comfortably Accommodated within tie sight and ' hearing or the President, who will speak from a stand

under the trees. The Invitation to the meeting is a wide as the State of l.tulana. and thoHe fn charge of the meeting, beaded by Col. Geo. . V.

Steele, governor of the Marlon Home, wish this to be understood. Those who go to the Homo to sett and hear the President will have opportunity to inspect one of the largest and finest of the national Institutions for veterans of all wars of the nation. Here more than two thousand soldiers re housed In handsome brick barracks, surrounded by hundreds of acres or green sward and woodland which have been beautified by the landscape artist. The buildings- include a magnificent hOHpital, a fine

chapel, an amusement hall, green-

. houses, a model dairy and many other structures of Interest. The mess hall has a seating capacity of more than a thousand, and the veterans fill this vast dining room, the largest in the atate of Indiana twice at ench meal. The Soldiers' Home has a fine military band, which renders a concert very day. Those who wish to remain at the Home for the Fourth, will witness an Interesting celebration of Independence Pay on grounds where the glunt firecracker Is absolutely forbidden. The features of the day Include a baby ahow, athletic contests and many other Interesting daytime features, and at night a fine display or fireworks and moving pictures and music by the Soldiers' Home band and a huge music machine called the autetophone. President Taft and party will arrive at Marlon by special train direct from Boston at 3: IS p. m. on Monday. The President will go direct to the Home and speak to the people. He will remain at the Home until 9:20 p. m. He will speak nowhere In Indiana except at Marlon and Indianapolis, and at Indianapolis there will be no opixirtunlty for the general public to hear him, according to present arrangements. An arrangement has been made for the President to specially receive. the editors of Indiana newspapers, without regard to politics. Immediately following his public address, and it Is expected that more than two hundred newspaper men will take advantage of the opportunity to greet the President. The original Invitation to the President to visit Indiana on July Fourth was extended by Eleventh district newspaper men In session at Marion in January. The Soldiers' Homo Is reached by local street car service from Marlon.

A Strange Likeit.'ea. All extraordinary resemblance bar recently been discovered at tie Londoi: Natural Illstory Moseosa between r. specimen of tbe huge African elephan' and tbe pygmy shrew mease. Sir E. Bay Lankester suggested comparison of tbe two, and tbe result has been that practically every bone, muscle, blood easel and nerve of tbe giant beast bn been found Identically reproduced in the little animal, which Is scarcely two Inches In length. In the museum a stuffed mouse hss been placed between the fore feet of Its enormous mounted prototype for the purpose of bowing tbe curious likeness. eaaaassBBBasBBSBBMSHBSBssasesMSSSBB I TheTreuMe. ' MfJe she doesn't return your affection, eh? Well. I shouldn't get msd about that What's the use of bothering bout glrir saldVWatklns. MI dont mind her not returning my ffect!on.w said Poblelgh, "but confound it she won't return my diamond ring; either!" Harper's Weekly. When a Jeke'e Net a Joke. - To the joker who writes jokes for a living It isn't much of a joke when the editor can't tnke a Joke. Llpplo-cott's.

King Manuel and His Mother

fi vt i A 'r ' '";

w

Latest photograph of ex-King Man

uel and his mother) Queen Amclie, taken at the races at Ascot, England.

Manuel, who still clings to his empty

title despite the fact that his kingdom

of Portugal was taken away from him

and turned into a republic, was a spectator of the Coronation and the subsequent pageant. As he and his

mother gazed upon the wondrous scenes, It brought back sad remembrances of the days when Portugal crowned her kings and the effect of those thoughts was noticeablo.

Rough en the Pianos. Once in the company of President Diss I spent a few nights In the Mexican earthquake zone as the guest of tbe governor of the state. As a measure of precaution tbe plaster ceiliugs of our sleeping rooms had been replaced with strips of matched boarding. "If a trembler should come In the night, senor," remarked my host as be was bidding me good night, "wait for nothing, but make straight for tbe patio. I think these boards will hold until you get from under cover." And that evening, when I took the governor's wife out to dinner, she had remarked sadly: "We are so benighted here In tbe hot lands. It Is Impossible even to have music, for no sooner do I have my grand piano tuned than an earthquake comes along and tips It over." E. Alexander Powell, F. K. O. S., In Everybody's.

DONT GET TOO SEDATE Play Is as Good For Grown Persons at For Children. riay is Just as necessary to keep a grown man young and a middle aged man from growing old as it is to make a child grow into a man. Wordsworth's lines are as sound physiology as good poetry: My heart leaps up when I behold The rainbow In tbe sky. So was It when my life began; So bo it when I am a man Or let mo die. In childhood we piny because we are young. In middle age wo are young because We play, and if we keep it up we shall never know that we are old until we are one day suddenly dead. Yet the absurd idea has grown up. and Mrs. Grundy has adopted it with ber usual fatuousness, that play Is something undignified In a grown man and unbecoming In a lady. And this unfortunately is one of the rare Instances where "thinking makes It so." After a man has practiced this belief In the uselessness of exercise for half a decade or so and become fat and pompous and red faced or pale and slack muscled and short winded then .the contortions that be Indulges in when he decides to unbend and try to play furnish considerably more entertainment to spectators than to himself. Dr. Woods Hutchinson la Outing. In the Shadow of Fame. There are a number of former celebrities who are now running rooming and boarding bouses In New York city. Many a singer, actress or writer who formerly held a place in tbe public eye has now settled down to the prosaic occupation of bousing and feeding a small portion of that 'same public. Their bouses are a magnet for young persons with the artistic temperament Ono woman who once enjoyed a fair reputation as a riolinist has five furnished apartments which she sublets room by room to aspirants for dramatic, operatic and literary honors. Reflected glory rather than physical comfort Is tbe portion of most of these satellites, but tbe privilege of hobnobbing with yesterday's greatness compensates for material discomfort New York Press.

PRISONER ARRESTS "SOUSED SHERIFF Iowa Deputy Going Through Chicago Falls Helplessly by Wayside.

Chicago. June 2S. The next time Deputy Sheriff M. W. Robinson of Des

Moines, la., comes to Chicago he will steer clear of South Clark street saloons. With a prisoner, whom he was taking back to, the Iowa capital for wife desertion, the deputy made the rounds of several drinking places yesterday and the officer imbibed too freely. The prisoner. C. E. Dugan. noticing the condition of Morrison, took him to

the Harrison street station, where both were locked up. Duggan was sober. Lieut. Ryan nearly fell out of his chair when Duggan, leading the deputy sheriff by the arm, entered the sta

tion, from which both had gone two hours before to take a train for Iowa.

til, t in uavi a&aiu, oniu ' gan. holding Robinson to steady him. "The sheriff ain't feeling well, and we decided to lay over for a few "hours. Truth of the matter is. we had a few drinks, and the sheriff ain't used to it. I guess you had better lock both of us up until the sheriff feels better." Deputy in Witness Cell. Robinson was put in a witness cell and Duggan in the same cell that he had occupied Monday night. The journey to Iowa was resumed this morning. Duggan, who is a painter, 39 years old, was arrested' last Thursday at Indianapolis. Deputy Sheriff Robinson, who has held the position seven years was sent after him. He arrived at Indianapolis on Saturday With requisition papers. Having relatives at Bridgeport and Plainfield, Indiana. Robinson visited them. He left Indianapolis with his prisoner on Monday and arrived here in the evening. After placing Duggan in a cell at Harrison street, Rotttnson took in the sights of the loop district. It was midnight when he retired at the new Victoria hotel. He appeared at the police station about 8 o'clock yesterday morning and his prisoner was turned over to him. Robinson and his charge went, to a restaurant for breakfast, after which they went to a railroad depot to meet two daughters of the deputy sheriff, who were passing through Chicago on their way to Indiana. Goes on Sightseeing Tour. After seeing his daughters off Robinson suggested to Duggan that they "take a look around." as it was two hours before their train left for Des Moines. In "looking around"" they found a place where the "largest and coolest glass of beer in town" was advertised. Duggan says he didn't keep track of how many they put away, and Robinson thinks it was two or three. "I hadn't touched a drop of anything in six months," said Robinson, "and the denied, stuff went right to my head." Prisoner Tells of Trip. Fickel telegraphed Sheriff Ness at Des Moines and the latter will arrive in Chicago this morning. "I could have made my getaway from Robinson," said Duggan, "but he treated me so nice that I wouldn't do It."

GRAIN MEN HOLDING CONFERENCE TODAY (National News Association) .Milwaukee, Wis., June 28. The semi-annual meeting of the" Council of North American Grain Exchanges met in Milwaukee today with an ottendance of representatives of the leading grain exchanges of the United

States, and Canada. The conference will continue over tomorrow.

SIGMA CHI HOLDS CONVENTION TODAY

The great $5.00 Bargain Sale at Knollenberg's tomorrow Thursday.

"REPUBLICS IN GERMANY. Three City States Whose Constitutions the Empire Respects. Hamburg. Bremen and Lubeck are theoretically three republics which have for the mutual convenience of themselves and the empire come under the rule of the kaiser In all but purely local affairs. As they had Joined the north German confederation, which was formed after Prussia's victory in 1S0G. there was nothing left for them to do but to give their allegiance to Its successor, the empire. Each Is represented in the bundesrath, or federal council, as well as in the reichstag. and each retains the republican principle In its local legislation. Tbe Hamburg senate may have fallen from Its highest estate, but It still lives and legislates concurrently with the house of burgesses. The burgomaster of Hamburg remains tbe great man in the estfmate of the Hamburg people, the inheritor of the great traditions of the Hansa. Bremen and Lubeck have constitutions In cousinship with Hamburg. A wise empire respects the constitutions of these city states and refrains from any action hinting of tbe application of the steam roller in pursuit of harmony. The survivors of the Hansa have been .more fortunate than some other republics of continental Europe. They have outlived several that had hopes of being left ignored In their republicanism. Cracow was once a republic, but, being surrounded by Austrian possessions, was Anally swallowed up in 1846, Since that time it has been a city of Austrian Poland. Boston Transcript

DROWNED THE MUSIC

The Audience Was Angry, and Theodore Thomas Was Obstinate. Theodore Thomas once undertook to raise a subscription fund for a series of concerts in San Francisco', but only $10,000 bad been raised, and the enterprise bung fire. Tben be announced that Emma Thursby would sing at each concert, and the guarantee fund promptly went up to $50,000. Thomas had a rule against encores for soloists. . They were allowed to appear and bow in recognition of applause, but that was all. Tbe San Franciscans held that as It was Miss Thursby's engagement which was responsible for the raising of tbe fund tbey were entitled to encore her if they chose. Thomas, however, insisted stubbornly on bis rule. On the last night a determined effort was made to encore ber. She appeared again and again, bowing her thanks, and each time tbe applause increased instead of diminishing. , At last the audience began to shout Its demands instead of merely applauding, and Miss Thursby turned to Thomas and said. "What shall I do?" "Keep on bowing if you have to bow all night," snapped Thomas grimly. And she went out and bowed again. This time Thomas directed the orchestra to go ahead with the final number. The audience, thoroughly indignant, shouted down the music, but Thoma3 was inflexible. The orchestra went on playing, utterly unheard, in a pandemonium of shouted protests. And It was probably tbe only time that a Thomas number fell on deaf ears. Ladies' Home Journal.

(National Xews Association) Pittsburg, Pa.; June 28. College men from all parts" of the country to the number of 200 assembled In Pittsburg today for the thirtieth grand chapter meeting of the Sigma Chi fraternity. The fraternity was founded at Miami university in 1S55 and has nearly 12,000 members. The grand chapter will be in session three days, and the program of entertainment that has been arranged extends over Saturday.

The Sanity of Paris. Tbe French live within their means and by a sense of economy wholly unknown to us manage to save and retire to enjoy whatever fortune has stored up for them, says F. Berkeley Smith in Success Magazine. To them France is sufficient They voyage rarely and gamble less. The spendthrift or the man who plunges on the bourse, tbe races and the gaming table is regarded by the masses lu the light of a rogue and a fool. The Parisians work hard enough for their leisure, but they never eliminate it nor allow their work - to encroach upon their traditional dally vacation, as luncheon, the aperitif hour, dinner and fete days. They work, not to amass millions and die in harness, but to save enough to give their daughter ber dot, without which she may never marry; start their son in his chosen trade and hare enough income left to retire before they are too old to enjoy their freedom.

COMRADE SAVES A FALLING WORKMAN (National News Association) Chicago, June 2S. Pat A. Eustace swayed on the edge of the elevator shaft on the 20th floor of the Heisoa building and toppled over. "Look out below!" he called. Jack Murray, a rtreter, looked and saw Pat falling. Murray was on the floor beneath. Wrapping his left leg around a girder Murray leaned far out and as Eustace fell, grasped his body about the middle, yanked it in a manner so that Eustace fell to safety on the ISth floor. Both were at work today. For the information of those who wish to know what recompense a hero such as .Murray received, it might be chronicled that Eustace reached for his hip pocket, drew out his plug and tendered it to his saviour with "Say, you're a heller."

Wonderful Bargains at $5 in Knollenberg's Ready-to-wear Department tomorrow, Thursday.

Old and Modern Customs. Talm Sunday in certain places is called "Fig Sunday" from the custom of eating figs n this day, as snapdragons on Christmas eve, plum pudding on Christmas day. oranges and barley sugar on St. Valentine's eve. pancakes on Shrove Tuesday, salt codfish on Ash Wednesday, frumenty on "Mothering Suaday" (mid-Lent), cross buns on Good Friday, gooseberry tsrt on Whitsunday, goose on Michaelmas day. nuts on Allhallows, and so on. New York American.

Leading the Leader. A very small boy was trying to lead a big St. B3rnard dog up tbe road. "Where are you going to take the dog, my little man? inquired a passerby. "I I'm going to see where where he wants to go first." was the breathless reply. Argonaut.

An Exceptional Case. "What are you doing these days?" "Flaying the horses." "No money in that." "Yes, there Is. I get $2 a night for Imitating hoof beats in a melodrama." Washington Herald.

BAD BLOOD. Is tbe cause of nine tenths of tho Ills

Which the human body is afflicted.

The symptoms of which range from the dreaded contagious blood poison to the minutest eruption on the skin. They include rheumatism, catarrh, scrofula, eczema, erysipelas, pimples, boils, ulcers, running sores, Inflamed eyes, and enlarged glands, down ' to sick headache and a muddy or sallow complexion. The prescription of Dr. Simpson, (the noted blood Specialist of Richmond, Ind.) known as Dr. A. B. Simpson's Vegetable Compound, la th most powerful alterative, or blood pur ifier, ever known. Its reputation was firmly established a few years ago, by curing apparently hopeless cases, was certified by county and city officials, and widely noted by the press; sine which thousands have been relieved by its use. Good blood Invariably means vigor ous health, and appetite, good digestion, strength, and a clear, healthful complexion. This la assured to all who try this remedy; Its remedial effects are apparent with the first few doses. Dr. Simpson's Vegetable Compound is purely vegetable, and is harmless as it is effective. It Is put up in convenient form at one dollar per bottle and is sold at all drug; stores.

The Original White Laundnr Soap

NEVER. DISAPPOINTS

ALL ARE WELCOME LAWN SOCIAL Residence Wm. Hawekotte, S3 8. 17th Street. Tomorrow, Thursday Eve. Auspices Luther League, Trinity Church. Come, Hear the Orchestra!

SPARKLERS? The Harmless Fireworks make your Fourth of July celebration a sane one and still have the enjoyment of the old fashioned Fourth. Nicholson & Dro. 729 Main St.

These Prices Will Last Only a Few More Days Pocahontas Lump or Egg. ...... .$4.50 Pocahontas Mine Run . .$4aQ0 Anthracite Egg or Stove $7t35 Anthracite Nut .......... ..... $7sG0. Better book that order now. Haclanan, Klehfofh & Co. South G Street, Between 6th and 7th. Phones: 2M5 - 2016

CLE AIR Aff CE S ALE OIF GQRflIVaEIJCIIIJG THURSDAY, JHUFME

HJMUMEIR FOOTWEAR ENDING SATURDAY, jnULY IS

ALL WW SERINES Oxfords, Pumps and Slippers, Tan, Kid, Patents, Gun Metals, Suedes, Cravenettes, Whites. Everything regardless of cost, to make room for fall goods.

$4.00 Men's Patent Ox Tramps $3.25 $4.00 and $3.50 Tan, Blk., Vici Ox. $3.45, $2.98 $5.00 Tan Russia Calf and Gun Metal $4.00 1 special lot 200 pairs patent $2.98 1 special lot Patents $1.98 1 special lot Patents $1.48 1 special lot Patents 98c

150 prs. Lace Tan Ox and Pumps, $3.00 and $3.50 grades, all small sizes. .98c 1 lot $3.00 Suede Ox.. .$2.50 1 lot Strap Slippers 98c 1 lot $3.00 Pat. Tramps $2.25 All $4.00 values $3.25 All $3.50 values $2.98 All $3.00 values $2.65 All $2.50 values $1.98

Everything Reduced in Misses' and Children's Oxfords, Pumps and Roman Sandals in Patents and Whites. Also Tan Russia Calf, Suedes, Gun Metals and Vici Kids.

AU Barefoot Sandals $1.25 Misses Willow Cf. $1.00 $1.00 Child's Willow 85c 75c Child's Willow . . ...65c 50c Infants' Willow .... .45c Some Extra Good Ones with Elk Soles. $1.25 Child's ........ $1.00 $1.00 Child's .... .. . ... .85c Keep the children cool.

Boys' and Youths Oxfords Patents and Gun Metals $3.00 at ..............$2.48 $20 at $1.98 $2.00 at $1.69 $1.75 at ...$1.48 Boys' Scouts at . .. . . .$1.79 1 special lot Tan Cf. at $1.48 1 special lot Tan Cf. at.-. 98c

soy iwmra st. jjo WILL CUMNIMGHAM good shoes