Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 234, 1 July 1911 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADJUU AJTD SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY JULY 1; 1911.
Tte Richmond Palladium tzi Son-Telegram Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PZIXNTINO CO. Usaed T days each wmk, eveningSunday mornlna-. Office Corner North tth and A streets. Palladium and Sun-Telegram Phone Busloeaa Office. 2SJ; Editorial Uoom mi RICHMOND. INDIANA.
adelah O. Leeds Bditwr S. P. Rlackafl Baataess Maaaaer Carl Bvraaardt Aaeoelate Editor W. WL Poaadatoaa Newa Belter SUBSCRIPTION TERMS, la Richmond 15.09 .-er year (In advance) or 1O0 per week. KAIL SUBSCRIPTIONa On rear. In advance '22 Six months. In advance - One month, In advance RURAL ROUTE One rear. In advance Six montna. In advance " One in on to. In advance " Add. -ess chanced aa often aa desired; both new and old addresses muat ba Ivan. Subacribera will ploaae remit with order, which should be riven (or a peel fled term: name will not be entered until payment received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana. -oet office aa second clas mall matter. New York Representative Payne Totr.f. J0-34 West Ird atreet. and tit West S2nd street. New York. N. T. Chlcafo Itenresentatlves Payne A Ynunir, 747-741 Marquette Bundle-. Chicago. I1L f.s.v.ee.e hhtvuhmhib Thai Association of American 2 !; Advwtieers (New York City) ha j ', OTawiaed and esrtitoa to ths ctreolatlon j i at this publication. Only the tUrores ol i f cinuiavttoa contained In Its report set 1 r - a .a.- a i.a!.. P)T UN .mieKKnBUOIla A RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Haa a population of 22.934 and Is growliiK. It In the county at of Wayne County, and the trndlnK center of a rich agricultural community. It Is located due east from Indianapolis 9 mllos and 4 miles from the state line. Richmond Is a city of homes and of industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It la also the JobblriR center of Eaetern Indiana and enjoys the retail trade of the populous community for miles around. Klrhmond la proud of Its splendid strocta, well kept yards, tta cement sidewalks and beautiful shade treea. It has three national banks, one trust company and four building asMociatlons with a combined resource of over $8,000,000. Number of factories 125; capital invented 97,000.000, with an annual output of $27, 000,000, and a pay roll of $3,700,000. The total pay roll for the city amounts to approxlmatedly $3,600,000 annual. There are five railroad companies radiating In eight different directions from the city. Incoming freight handled dally, 1,750,000 lbs., outgoing freight handled dally, 760.000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day 1,700 cars. Number of passenger tralna dally SI. Numbet of freight tralna daily 77. The annual pout office receipts amount to $80,000. Total assessed valuation of the city. $16,000,000. Richmond has two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of 12,000. Richmond Is the greatest hardware Jobbing center In the state and only second In general Jobbing Interests. It haa a piano factory producing a high grade f ilano evary IS minutes. It la the eader in the manufacture of Traction engines, and produces more threshing machines, lawn mowers, roller akatea, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city In the world. The city's urea la 2,640 acres; haa a court house costing $500,000; 10 public schools and has the finest and most complete high school In the middle west; three fiarochtul schools; Earlham colege and the Indiana Business College; five splendid fire companies In fine hone houses; Ulcn miller park, the largest and most beautiful park in Indiana, the honm of Richmond's annual Chautauqua; seven hotels; municipal electric light plant, under successful operation and a private electric light plant. Insuring competition: the oldest public library In the state, except one and the second largent, 40,000 volumes; pure refreshing water, unsurpassed; 65 miles of Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers; 25 miles of cement curb and gutter combined: 40 miles of cement walks, and many miles of brick walks. Thirty churches, including the Held Memorial, built at a cost of $260,000; Held 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 atate. The amusement center of Kastern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the size of Richmond holds as fine an annual art exhibit. The Richmond Fall Festival held each October is unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It Is given in the interest of the city- and financed by the business men. Success awaiting anyone with enterprise in the Panic Troof City. 1 his is My 8 1st Birthday PARIS GIBSON. Paris Gibson, at one time United States senator from Montana, was born in Urown-field. Me., July 1, 1830. He received his preparatory education at Brldgton and Frysburg. Me., and then entered Bowdoln college, from which he graduated in 1S31. He entered politic and, three years later, was elected to the Maine legislature. Four years later he went West and settled in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Together with W. W. Eastman, he built the rirst flour mill and the first woolen mill la Minneapolis. In 1879 he settled In Fort Benton. Mont. In 1SS2 he made a trip to the falls of the Missouri river and founded the city of Great Falls. He was a member of the convention which framed the constitution of Montana In 1SS9, was elected State senator in 1891 and to the United States senate in March, 1901, to fill an unexpired term ending March 4, 1905. ADORN THE HOUSE. You can adorn your house with some really beautiful pictures at absolutely no expense except the cost of framing, by sending the Hewitt Brothers Soap Company, of Dayton. Ohio, a two-cent stamp and twenty-five wrappers from Hewitt's Easy Task Soap. Hewitt's Easy Task soap is the original white laundry soap, which has given satisfaction for upwards of a quarter of a century.
A Summer Garden
This Bummer weather is the sort that makes people wonder about parks. Richmond has done well by its parks but has it done as well as it could. Nobody will doubt that the Palladium thinks well of the management of the Glen in the hands of Kd Hollarn. He has done particularly well under the considerable handicaps that he has had to combat. The city of Lafayette has a park which Is full of human interest. It contains playgrounds for children wild animals, and has all the thing3 to attract people to the parks with something for them to enjoy themselves with. The Palladium has always held that the Glen should be preserved or at least the major part or it as a reserve of the natural timber. We are not disposed to think it would be improved by the entrance of too much civilization. But some part of it at least that that is already encumbered with pavilions and animal c ages or no great beauty ought to be the best of ltf kind. This town can afford to put money into the band concerts and animal cages because the people of this town do not go away in the summer. The park is the town's summer vacation place. The policy of killing elks instead of trading them for animals of another sort may be fine for those who like free-lunch and elk meat but it doesn't do much good toward building the park up. Moreover we seo no reason why the pavilion at the Glen should not be used more for human comfort and less for the sale of pop corn and chewing gum. If there were music at the Glen, this could be used for dancing at least. The movement throughout the country for municipal places of dancing is enough of an answer to those who think that this is too great a departure from puritanical standard1?. If any one wants to know about the beneficial side of a well conducted place for dancing, he car. consider the recommendations of the Chicago Vice Commission. One of the dangers of any town, large and small is the absence of any proper and well conducted place fcir public amusement. The town has always held back consider what German municipalities do for their citizens the 'animal gardens," the places where the whole town goes every evening where they listen to the music and where families gather together. The summer is the time when this ought to be done is there any reason why Richmond should not make a beginning now?
CHARLES TUPPER IS NOW 90 YEARS OLD Ottawa, Ont., July 1. According to the cable despatches of the past few weeks one of the most honored visitors to the coronation in London has been Sir Charles Tupper, the Canadian statesman, who will tomorrow celebrate the ninetieth anniversary of his birth. The honors heaped upon the distinguished nonegenarian have been pleasing to all Canadians, whatever their political creed. Sir Charles as the great leader of the confederation movement in the Maritime Provinces did much' to make the Canada of today possible. In the course of his long public career he held most of the portfolios in the Federal ministry, as well as the premiership of Nova Scotia and the office of High Commissioner of Canada in London. Two Brusque Notes. When Andrew Miliar, the publisher of Dr. Johnsons dictionary, received the last proof sheet from Dr. Johnson, he wrote him this brusque note: "An drew Millar sends his compliments to Mr. Samuel Johnson, with the money tor the last sheet of the couv of the 'dictionary and thanks God he has done with him." To this the doctor replied. "Samuel Johnson returns his compliments to Mr. Andrew Millar and Is very glad to find, as he does by this note, that Audrew Millar has the grace to thank Uud tor anything " Surveying Land. The art of land surveying owes its origin to the fact that the Egyptians were unable to keep permanent monuments on land which was overflowed every year by the Nile. Under such circumstances it became necessary to have some means of reldentifying the various pieces of land. The instruments and mathematical methods of astronomy, with suitable mod.tlcations, were used by tjie Egyptians for land surveying. 'THIS DATE
JULY 1ST. 1S10 King Louis, of Holland abdicated. 1811 Rr. Rev. William J. Boone, first P. E. Missionary bishop to China, born in Waterloo, S. C. Died in Shanghl. July 17, 1864. 1837 First city census taken in Chicago, showing the population to be 4,170. 1S63 Beginning of the three days' battle of Gettysburg. 1867 Act of Confederation came into effect in Canada. 1873 Prince Edward Island entered the Dominion of Canada. 1S74 Charlie Ross abducted at his father's home in Germantown, a suburb of Philadelphia. 1SS9 Theodore D. Woolsey. president of Yale college, died in New Haven. Conn. Born in New York City, October 31, 1S01. 1S9S American force carried the Spanish earthworks at El Caney with heavy loss. 1910 Thomas B. Turley, former United States senator from Tennessee, died in Memphis. Morn there, April 5, 1845.
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ARE TO MAKE TOUR
OF UNITED KINGDOM (National News Association) London, July 1. The parliamentary visitors to the coronation, represent ing Canada, Australia and other selfgoverning dominions of the empire, will leave London tomorrow night to begin their tour of the United King dom as guests of the Lords and Com mons committee. Monday and Tuesday will be spent in Dublin and Belfast as the guests of Lord Aberdeen. Scotland will next be visited, the itinerary in eluding Edinburgh and the Glasgow exhibition. The party will journey south and reach Carnarvon in time to witness the investiture of the Prince of Wales. LETTER LIST The following letters remain un claimed at the local Post Office and will be sent to the Dead Letter Office if not called for within two weeks: Ladies' List Mrs. Mary A. Arnold Myrtle Bration, Miss Alice Cartier, Mrs. Neal Hartman, Mrs. E. Henley, Mrs. M. F. Hunt, Mrs. Elizabeth Maclin, Mrs. Grant Middlesworth, Mrs Gertrude Miller, Miss Clara A. Reed Mrs. EHse Rogers, Mrs. Sallie J. Webb Mrs. Mary Ella Wright. Gentlemen's List Frank Ault, Mr and Mrs. S. R. Barry, Wallace Boyd John R. Clark, Thomas A. Connell W. R. Dally, Cspecial del.), Chas. M Downey (5), Coz Druley, Fred Fastner (special del.), Frank Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. Leona King, Mr. Scott Long, Ralph Mallen, Chester Martin, Del bert Martin, Jno. S. Munce, Herbert Nye, Harry Sanger, Norman Seiple (2), Charlie Shoop. E. M. Haas, P. M. The Blue Fox. Blue arctic foxes are bred extensively on the islands of the Alaska coast. These creatures cannot be tamed, but they are fed all the year round and trapped in special houses In the winter when their coats are in suitable condition. IN HISTORY'1 Fee to Yea and Every farina trem Wmkmi'i I Mm a I know woman's BufferingI cave round we cure. I will maiL free of any chars, my with full instructions to any sufferer from
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Heart to Heart Talks.
By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright. 1908, by Edwin A. Nye DECORATED BABY'S GRAVE. This is a true story of what happened in Prospect Ilill cemetery, at Omaha. Neb. Two boys were strolling through the cemetery, where many of the graves were decorated with flowers. In their walk the lads cam to a small grave that had no flowers on It. The younger, aged about seven years, stopped and looked at the grave. He turned about to see If any one was near. The coast appeared clear, whereupon he crept over to a nearby mound that was almost covered with tine blossoms. And thenTelling the other boy to keep watch, the little fellow selected several bouquets from the elaborately dressed mound. Hiding the flowers under bis jacket, be crept back to the neglected grave and gently bestowed them. Then he said. "That wasn't stealln, was Itr "Course not," responded the other. "Don't you think that little baby had just as good right to flowers on its grave as some of those old folks'" Aye. boy! Somebody had forgotten baby's grave, or was unable to get flowers, or was 111, or something. That was no reason why the boys should stand by and allow baby's grave to be neglected; that was no reason why the tender feelings of two boys should be hurt. Benisons on their heads and hearts! They felt the reproach caused by the neglect or inability of baby's friends. They removed the reproach and repaired the neglect by taking a few flowers that would not be missed. Trust a boy's right feeling; trust the sweet instincts of a right thinking, observant, tender hearted lad to do justice and love mercy. It was not stealing! I do not care what the calf or buckram bound books in the law libraries may have to say about the legal phase of the boys' actions. Or, if you must stick to your Blackstone's definition of petty larceny, why, let us appeal to a higher court Let us put It along with Uncle Toby's slip. Uncle Toby was guilty, but yoa know what happened. The recording angel dropped a tear upon the oath, and blotted it out forever. GERMAN RED TAPE. A Lesson In Picking Up Things In the Streets of Berlin. Take enre how you pick up a thing that is lost in Berlin. The other day one of our deputies going through the Prussian capital on his return from a convention at Frankfort noticed a key at the edge of the sidewalk. He picked it up to hand it to a police agent. The representative of the city police refused to take it, saying, "You should take this key to the special bureau of things that are lost." "Very well. Where is It?" The agent named the street. "Is it far from here?" "A half hour, three-quarters of an hour if you don't walk rapidly." The deputy replaced the key on the pavement. "Some one else will pick it up," he said. "Not at all," said the agent in a commanding tone. "You should have left it where it was, but now you are obliged to go to the bureau. If you don't I'll make a complaint against you and you'll be fined, perhaps given a day in prison. That's the law." The deputy was compelled to obey orders. Since that day he carries his hand in his Dockets. Cri de Taris.
LZNBS
EXCURSIONS FROM RICHMOND To the Seashore Niagara Falls
$17.00 Round Trip, August 10, to Atlantic City, Cape May and Eight Other Resorts. 4th of July Excursions July 3 and 4. Get particulars from Agents.
30- DAY ROUND TRIP TICKETS To Mew YofUs 27M PENNSYLVANIA STATION ONE BLOCK FROM BROADWAY $26.00 to Atlantic City and Oth-r Ocean Resorts On Sale Daily, Good Returning 30 Days DIRECT ROUTE OR VIA WASHINGTON WITH STOP-OVERS Ask About Tourist Tickets to NORTH MICHIGAN RESORTS COLORADO, CALIFORNIA and WEST and NORTHWEST The undersigned will take pleasure in furnishing particulars about these excursions. C. W. ELMER, Ticket Agent, Richmond.
TWINKLES
THE COURSE OF DEVELOPMENT. "Have they gone any depth in that mine you invested in?" "No," replied Mr. Hardluck. "Nothing about that enterprise has made downward progress except the values." COURTING CELEBRITY. "I want to do something that will cause me to be talked about, said the ambitious man. "That's easily arranged." answered his wife. "Merely move into a strange neighborhood." 1911. How beauteously the roses blo'om! How swiftly fade their charms intense! And this year's presidential boom How will it look a few months hence? ANCESTRAL RESPECT. "The Chinese have great respect for their ancestors," said the distinguished oriental. "Well," replied Mr. Cumrox; "hav en't we- Some of us pay experts thous ands of dollars to find out who they were." WORRIMENT. "The King of England seems to have a worried look," said the man who was looking at the pictures. "I don't se-e what he has to worry about," replied Mrs. Flimgilt's husband. "His wife doesn't play bridge." A SELF DECEPTION. His touring car buzzed through the land A thing both swift and strong, Though ofttimes stubborn to command He called it "Driftalong." His lands where hundreds toiled each day He christened "Idledream." He had a yacht named "Dozeaway" Which went like mad by steam. His private car called "Easigo" He hitched to many a train. He traveled far but never slow, Alert of mind and brain. And still for soothing phrases sought Amid his busy quest; And with his vast resources bought Imaginary rest. The Hangman's Stone. There is a large bowlder lying in a field near Foremark, England, which Is known throughout Derbyshire as the "hangman's stone." The exposed portion of the bowlder rises about six feet above the surface of the surroundj ing field and has a narrow ditch or inuentation running across tne lop. jlub mark, so tradition says, was made in this way: A sheep thief in the dead of night, while leaning against the bowlder to rest, placed his booty above on the flat surface of the stone. The man had the sheep tied with a rope, and in its effort to escape the crea'ture slipped oh the opposite side, and the rope, catching under the thief's chin, choked him to death. The indentation in the rock was made by the friction of the rope while the dying man was engaged in an effort to extricate himself. A Good Loser. Arthur's, Almack's, Bootle's and "White's were the chief clubs of the young men of fashion. There was play at all, and decayed noblemen and broken down senators fleeced the unwary there. Charles Fox, a dreadful gambler, lost 200,000 at play. Gibbon tells of his playing twenty -two hours at a sitting and losing 500 an hour. That indomitable punster said that the greatest pleasure in life after winning was losing. What hours, what nights, what health did he waste. over the devil's books! I was going to say what peace of mind, but he took his losses very philosophically. After an awful night's play he was found on a sofa tranquilly reading an eclogue of Virgil. From Thackeray's "The Fo" " $7.50 Round Trip, August 22. Rail and Steamer or All Rail via Cleveland and Buffalo. Auntie City $24.15 Round Trip. July 7, 8, 9. Elks Convention when pleasure will be at high tide.
uW work of combina- k (III tions with one operation. Ya FUrto KnnrlUr. Rn'IUnnt ll
ill lasting. Makes leather last longer. IJJ m-Ia.F.DalW Ca.Ls4. M
WHAT OTHERS SAY
CUNNINGHAM CLAIMS REJECTED. From the New York Kvening Post. The decision announced by the commissioner of the l.ci i office, and approved by the Seen -.try of the Interior probably brings to c definite end the struggle over the Cunningham claims to Alaskan coal .i:ils, which have so long been umiei investigation and attack, and. which for a time formed the storm-center of American politics. And now that the decision has been made, it seems extraordinary that it should have been .-. long a time in coming. E.traord:v.uy not because the case has invo.wd no perplexities or difficulties, l'it t.ccause Commissioner Bennett a-.- ;t.s for his disallowance of the cla.trs reasons so simple and untechnk-;! ihat one can but wonder that it should have required any very prolong 1 consideration to find them conc!usie. RECIPROCITY NEARER. From the Philadelphia Press. The prompt votit: down of the Root amendment to th.' Canadian reciprocity bill without e.n calling the roll is an important s;. p toward the final enactment of that n -a sure in the form in which it was i.otiated and in which the House pa.-sd it. This was really the first test vote on the measure, and the result is in every way encouraging. Th. possibility that the Republican insurgents and others of its opponents might succeed by any desperate means in d. f.-ating it has nowbecome still more remote. The Root amendment, was admitted to be the most dangerous t suggested. Its elimination will hf hailed with satisfaction throughout Hie country no lass than in the White House. WHISKY BY EXPRESS. From the Chicago Inter Ocean. During an interstate commerce com mission inquiry into express classifications at Washington the fact was brought out that over 20.000,000 gallons of whisky are shipped annually by ex press into "dry" territory. This whisky is distributed as a rule, by mail order houses, and the greater part of it goes to the southern states, where the large negro population and the ex GOOD? nOSTETTERT. STOMACH BITTERS
Lung trouble and catarrh have been successfully treated by his INHALATION MKT HOD. By this method the oils are applied directly to the diseased prtsHYDROCELK and VARICOCELE under one treatment has effected cures in several cases. Dr. Mayo has treated successfully Blood Poison, Skin Diseases, Kidney, Bladder, Prostatic Troubles, Piles and Fistula. Dr. Mayo has treated a number of cases of CANCER ; without the knife. CANCERS AND TUMORS HAVE BEEN TREATED WITHOUT THE KNIFE. Dr. Mayo has treated successfully all forms of chronic diseases that are curable, such as diseases of the brain, heart, lungs, throat, eye and ear, stomach, liver kidneys, bladder, blood poison, rectum, female diseases, impotency. seminal emissions, nervous diseases, catarrh, rupture, piles, stricture, gleet, eczema, varicocele, hydercele, etc. DISEASES OF MEN SUCCESSFULLY TREATED. After examination we tell you just what we can do for you. If we can not beneit or rure you we frankly and honestly tell you to. Patients have been sur vssfullv treated at a distance. Write for examination and question blank. W. R. MAYO. M. D.. Indianapolis. Ind 715 N. Alabama SL
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Big Six Thunderbolts, Mines, Roman Canjles, Sk Rockets, Torpedoes, Cannon Crackers, iFire
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921 MAIN
tensive prohibition area both contribute to an extremely active demand. However, this official revelation of the situation will hardly be required by any one who has traveled much in dry territory, particularly that part of it which lies south of Mason and Dixon's line. He has seen the evidences himself. Clear cut in his memory as a cameo is the recollection of the average express agent in a southern small town as he generally appears on Saturday red, prespiring, irritated, surrounded by numerous jugs addressed to all sorts of fictitious persons.
LESSONS FOR THE FOURTH From tiie Baltimore American. Already distressing accidents from fireworks have been recorded and th annual warning needs to be given with actual cases to all their force to it that the toy cannon and the cannon cracker and the entire range of fire works accessories and fraught with injury and death to the users. Fortunately, the sentiment for a safe and sane Fourth of July has taken strong hold of the country. Here in Baltimore the movement is fully alive, and there will be no excuse for any one not having rational enjoyment upou the national holiday without recourse to the deadly instruments of noise. A Long uivca t-ike. . In 140? an enormous pike was caugbt In a lake near Iluilleruui. in Suabia. with a brass ring attached to It. engraved on which was a statement that the fish was put lu the lake in th year 1230, thus indicating that it must have lived at least 2t7 year KNOWLEDGE. The sure foundations of the stat? are laid in knowledge, not in ignorance, and every sneer at education, at culture, at bock learning, which is the recorded wisdom of the experience of mankind, is the demagogue's sneer at intelligent liberty, inviting national degeneracy and rum. C W. Curbs. SURE IT IS It's Good when the stomach is bad. It's Good when the bowels are clogged. ' ' It's Good when the liver is inactive. It's Good in any malarial disorder.
Avoid Substitutes. Try a Bottle Today
DR. W. R. MAYO, 715 N. Alabama St. Indianapolis, lad. Specialist WDX BEAT Richmond , Arlington! Hotel Wednesday, July 5th And Every Pour Weeks N Thereafter. i t t Fire Works in the city and 0 STREET
