Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 239, 6 July 1911 — Page 6

PAGE SIX.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1911.

All APPROPRIATION OF $6,000 IS MADE FOR INSANE WARD

County Council Meets This Morning and Takes Favorable Action Without Discussing the Bill. (Continued from Page One.) these expenditures were diligent, in that they paid out $50 when the estate of the deceased was sufficient to meet the funeral expenses. The bad state of repairs of the court house necessitated an appropriation of a thousand dollars. The board of review, will be reimbursed for rig hire, amounting to about $10. For constructing a cement curb, gutter and sidewalk in front of the jail property, the county will pay $192.60. A $400 appropriation for insanity inquests passed unanimously, though a protesting "yea" vote was past by Harvey Cook. The other appropriations passed on first reading were for deputy county assessor for thirty days $60; Jail repairs and care of grounds, $600; poor farm supplies, $1,000; poor farm repairs, $350; circuit court bailiff, $350; and about a thousand dollars for repairing, with either concrete, wood block or planks, the floors in the National road bridge, just west of Centervllle; new Werking bridge, on Hagerstown pike, Middleboro bridge and Henley bridge. In case the money appropriated for these various purposes is not used by January 1, it will revert back to the .general fund. The council will take (final action on Friday, as a second reading and vote on all appropriations is necessary before the money can be iplaced in the different funds. National League

' Baseball Results

' "Won Lost Pet. (Philadelphia 44 27 .619 Chicago 42 26 .618 'ew York 43 28 .606 Pittsburg 39 30 .565 St. Louis 39 31 .557 Cincinnati ......... r.. 29 39 .426 Brooklyn .26 43 .377 BoBton 1G 54 .229

American League. Won Lost Pet Detroit 48 23 .676 Philadelphia 47 23 .671 New York 37 32 .536 Chicago 34 31 .523 Boston 36 34 .514 Cloveland 34 40 .459 Washington 26 46 .361 St. Louis 18 51 .261 American Association. Won Lost Tct. Columbus 45 34 .570 Kansas City 44 34 .563 Louisville 39 38 .506 Milwaukee 39 40 .494 Minneapolis 38 39 .494 St. Paul 38 40 .487 Toledo 35 43 .449 Indianapolis 35 45 .438 RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. R. H. E. Boston 2 8 2 Brooklyn 5 7 2 Weaver, Tyler. Griffin. Collins and Kling; Rucker and Bergen. (First. Game) R. H. E. New York 4 11 1 Philadelphia 6 14 3 Matheyson, Meyera and Wilson; Burns and Dooin. (Second Game) R". II. E. New York 10 11 2 Philadelphia....... 1. 6 4 Marquard and Meyers; Rowan, Chalmers, Stack,' Dooin and Madden. R. H. E. St. Louts 3 9 1 Pittsburg 6 8 2 Sallee, Geyer and Bliss; Lei field and Simon. American Leagur R. It. E. Chicago l 7 2 Detroit 8 12 1 Young, Olmstead and Block; Willets and Stanage. R. H. E. Philadelphia 8 12 0 New York 9 IS 3 Plank. Bender. Thomas and Lapp; Ford, Warhop, Sweeney and Blair. R. II. E. Washington 7 S 1 Boston 2 6 2 Johnson and Henry; Pape, Moser and Williams. R. H. E. St. Louis 7 9 2 Cleveland 11 14 2 Mitchell. Pelty. Hamilton and Kritchell; Harkner, Krapp and Fisher. American Association R. H. E. Indianapolis 5 7 2 Columbus 7 15 2 Brady, Kimbal and Ritter; Doyle, Berger and Ludwig. R. H. E. Toledo 4 11 7 Louisville 9 10 3 Freive and Carrisch; Higgan, Gotham and Hughes. R. H. E. St. Paul 5 12 4 Minneapolis 6 10 1 Gehrhig. Check and Kelley; Cavet, Leevcr and Dawson. R. H. E. Milwaukee 5 10 2 Kansas City 6 7 1 Marlon and Orendorf; Powell and James. t

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Harry M. Atwood. the youthful Boston aviator, photographed while soaring over the Singer building an J other ofNew York'u hujre structures, while on his recent trip from New London, Conn., to New York. Atwood is the first aviator to undertake such a daring feat and its accomplishment places him among the leading flyers of the world.

MANCHESTER TODAY IS AN ARMED CAMP (National News Association) Manchester, July 6. This city was an armed camp today with hundreds of soldiers on duty to suppress strike violence. Rioting throughout the night resulted in troops being called and 300 were rushed from London. A squadron of cavalry and infantry were on the scene. The local police were unable to put down the disorder. In clashes with the mob a number were injured and a great amount of property damaged. The ringleaders of the men assumed a threatening attitude but the presence of the armed troops had a quieting effect. Har Artistic Instinct. The girl was a dainty thing in pink, evidently a stranger in Boston. The fellow had Harvard written all over him. Tbey were standing In the delivery room of the public library, and he was explaining to her the decorations by Edwin Abbey which illustrate the legend of the Holy Grail. As he talked be glanced occasionally at his fair listener and seemed pleased to tlnd her apparently lost In rapture. Finally, when bis stock of knowledge was exhausted, be exclaimed: "Why, 1 never before knew that you were so Interested in art!" For a moment longer she continued to gaze at the painting; then, with a tremulous sigh, she turned to him with: I have been wondering how many pieces it would make If cut up into one of those picture puzzles." Harper's Magazine. Old Age of Oysters. Oysters grow xnlj during summer, and especially during loug. warm summers at that, and are scarcely big enough for the mouth before the third year. It is easy after looking over a bunch of shells to tell how old an oyster is. A summer hump and the winter sink come across the shell every year, but after the seventh or tenth year full growth comes; then by looking at the sinks between the humps It Is bard to tell anything more about Miss Oyster's age. Oysters easily live to be twenty years old. New York Press. A New One on Him. It was after the stone laying ceremony, and a wire was sent to the builder with the news. "Stone laid with great eclat" The builder, smothering an awful oath, muttered. "Another new foreign cement!" and flung the missive from him in passionate disgust. London Globe. Labor rids as of three great evils Irksomeness. vice and poverty. Yoitaire. Harvard. Harvard is the oldest university tn the United States, having been found0 la lt&

TEACHERS FLOCK TO

GOLDEN GATE CITY (National News Association) San Francisco, Cal., July 6. Hundreds of delegates and visitors are arriving in San Francisco for the annual convention of the National Education Association. For the most part the early arrivals are going to the near-by resorts to remain until the end of the week when they will return for the convention proceedings. Saturday will be the opening day of the gathering. The next day will be "Educational Sunday," and special sermons will be preached in all the city's churches. The real business of the convention will begin Monday afternoon, when the first general session will be held in the Greek Theater oT the University of California. Oratorical Effects. I once heard Everett, whose platform oratory was the acme of American art. His language was unimpeachable. But his every word, and not only his every word, but his every gesture, was unmistakably prepared. He seemed to gesticulate not only with his hands, but with bis legs. He even planned scenic t-ffects beforehand. Having to deliver a Fourth of July oratiou. he introduced a veteran of 1S12. put him ia a conspicuous place and told the old man to rise to him at his entrance into the hall. The old man did as be had been bidden. Everett apostrophized him with "Venerable old man. sit down! It is not for you to rise to us. but for us to rse to you." The veteran said afterward: "Mr. Everett is a strange man. He told me to rise when he came Into the hall, and when I did rise be told me to sit down." From Goldwin Smith's Reminiscences in McCiure's. The Lightning Rod. Though Frankliu will continue to receive the honor that is his due as the iiwentor of the tirst practical lightning rod. the study of atmospheric electricity goes back at least to the time f Tullius Hostilius. who perished in an attempt to "draw fire from the sky." A learned priest of the name of Divisch is said to have erected the first lightning conductor in Europe. He set it up at Prendiz. Bohemia, in 1754. and it was 130 feet high. Though the Emperor Stephen and the Empress Maria Theresa publicly proclaimed their confidence in the inventor, a most disastrous drought that afflicted the couatry a year later was ascribed by the superstitious populace to the newfangled device, and Divisch was compelled to take it down. It is not probablf that Franklin was acquainted with Divisch's experiment. The Hab Of The Bedy. The orraa around which an the other etffara revolve, and op on which they are largely dapendent for their welfare, is the stomach. When the functions of the stomach become impaired, the bowels and liver also become deranged. To core a disease of the stomach. Uvet or bowels get a SO cent or SI bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Synrp Pepsin at your druggist's. It ia the promptest relief for constipauca and dyspepsia ever coooToanded.

Airwm DEFENDS

TAFJTI SPEECH Upholds President's Right to Work and Talk for the Reciprocity Bill. Washington. D. C, July 6. The right of President Taft to negotiate the Canadian reciprocity agreement, to send it in completed form to congress for enactment and to defend aod advocate it in "stump speeches" through out the country was asserted in the senate Wednesday by Senator Burton i of Ohio. Mr. Burton's speech followed criti-! cism by Snator Cummins of Iowa ear-! lier in the day of the talk made by President Taft Tuesday at Indianapolis. The Iowan said he believed it was better for the President to try to mold public opinion by appealing to the people n speeches than for him to use the power of his office to pass the bill through congress; but he criticized vigorously the Indianapolis speech, in which the President said the Canadian agreement probably would not reduce the cost cf living. Defends Course of President. "Some degree of censure has been visited on the administration for sending in this agreement," said Mr. Burton. "It is the clear right of the President under the constitution to make communications and recommendations to congress. It. also is his right to express, on the stump, in whatever terms he may choose, his advocacy of a certain line of policy. "Not only President Taft, but his predecessor and other presidents, have made free to advocate, with no uncertain sound, national policies recommended by them in messages. Otherwise the President would neither be the leader of his party nor occupy that place in the public attention which the public demands of him. "Of course it is for the senate or the house to accept, reject, or amend any proposition that he may send to congress. I think, however, we overlook numerous instances in which bills or completed laws have been sent to congress by Hie President or members of his cabinet and passed practically without change. Secretary Chase, in a special session called July 4, 1S61, sent in a complete tariff law which was accepted almost verbatim by congress and become a law without delay." Mr. Burton urged that the agreement, notwithstanding the power of congress to change it, be passed without amendment. He said it undoubtedly did not please everybody, and that it probably had satisfied neither President Taft nor the Canadian commissioners when it was completed. "But it is here," said the Ohioan, "and I strongly urge that it be adopted without change. It is different from other legislation. Consultations must be had at long range. Any modification makes a situation now delicate more intricate and liable of failure." Mr. Burton emphasized that those who based their objections to the agreement on the ground that the farmer would suffer injury were virtually fighting for higher duties for the-farmer. He said no injury to the farmer could follow the removal of duties on farm products, except in certain localities along the border. Seen In a Dream. Mr. Hilprecht, professor of Assyriology in the University of Pennsylvania in 1893, when puzzling over sketches of objects excavated at Babylon, learned in a dream the solution to the difficulty that confronted him. Two drawings represented fragments of agate inscribed with characters. They were supppsed to be bits of finger rings and. being apparently of different colors, wese not closely associated together by the professor. But in a dream he saw an Assyrian priest, who told him how the priests of the Temple of Bel. having received a votive cylinder of agate from their king, were ordered to make earrings for thoir god. They made three by cutting up the cylinder, and the professor would find by fitting the fragments together that these were two of them. He did this and found that they gave a continuous description. Helping Him Out. For years Squire Latham, of whom many amusing stories are told, was a resident of Bridgewater, Mass., and it was while he was living there that the incident occurred which is related below. It illustrates his habitual coolness and whimsical temper. He was awakened one night by his wife, who told him she thought there were burglars in the bouse. The squire put on his dressing gown and went downstairs. In the back hail he found a rough looking man trying to open a door that led into the back yard. The burglar had unlocked the door and was pulling it with all his-raight. "It doesn't open that way. you idiot!" shouted the squire, taking in the man's predicament Instantly. "It slides back!" Not a Disease. T can't understand my husband, doctor. I am afraid there is something terrible the matter with him." "What are bis symptoms?" "Well. I often talk to him for half an hour at a time, and when I get through he hasn't the least idea what I've been saying." "Don't worry any more about your husband. 1 wish I had his gift" Ail Depends. "I don't like to listen to hard lack stories. Do you?" "That depends on whether they are reminiscence or the preliminaries to a touch." Washington Herald. Warned. Too many cooks spell the broth," qtioted the wise guy. "Tee. just as toe many appetizers epoil the appetite." agreed the simple mug. Philadelphia Record. It doesn't take any grit to grumble. Chicago Trib.ua

Cookery Notes

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Baked Apples and Figs. Apples baked with figs are very nice. Select the plumpest and juiciest dried figs you can get and wash them, carefully pinching them into their natural shape. Then select good, firm apples and wash them. Seoop out the cores and into each of these holes pack two or three whole tigs. Place them in a baking pan and bake in a hot oven. While they are baking baste them with sirup made from the juice of half a lemon, two tablespoonfuls of sugar and half a cup of water. If when they look done they are not soft to the core, place a cover over your baking dish and let them steam for a few minutes. Then remove the cover and brown the fruit slightly. These apples may be served either aloue or with farina, hominy or other breakfast food. Strawberry Cream Pie. A strawberry novelty is made as follows: I toll out a rich paste and cut into circular pieces about nine inches in diameter. From one of these rings cut out the center, leaving a border about one and one-half inches wide. Bake the circles In a hot oven. Place the circles together with cream filling between. Place the open ring on top and fill the space with fresh strawberries, sweetened to taste. This is a delicious, dainty pastry with which to complete a luncheon or a dinner. Cold Strawberry Shortcake. Cream together two tablespoonfuls of butter and a cup of powdered sugar, then add three eggs, beaten light, and a quarter of a cup of cream. Beat very hard and add a cup of flour that has been sifted twice with a teaspoonful of baking powder. Butter layer cake tins, pour the batter into these and bake. When done turn out to cool. Place ou each layer berries that have been halved, pile the layers on top of each other, sprinkle with sugar and serve with rich cream. Indian Pudding. To make a delicious lndisn pudding take one pint of scalded milk, two heaping tablespoonfuls meal and one tablespoonf ul flour. Wet meal and flour in a little cold milk and stir into the hot milk aud cook until thick. When cool, add one egg. one-half cup sugar, one tablespoon molasses, one-quarter teaspoonful cinnamon, two-thirds cup cold milk, n small piece of butter, salt to taste and a few raisins. Stir twice while in the oven. Bake slowly two hours. Dandelion Sandwiches. Take some tender dandelion leaves, washed, dried and chilled. Pound in a mortar or chop fine cold cooked meat, poultry or fish, as preferred, mixing with a little butter, salt and pepper to season. Spread this mixture on tbln slices of bread and butter, put a few dandelion leaves on top and cover with more buttered slices. Cut into squares, triangles or fingers and serve. These are delightful for picnics, as the leaves keep the sandwiches moist and fresh. Vegetables and Olive Oil. If persons who are inclined to be anaemic or are possessed of delicate digestive powers would learn the hygienic value of simple greens, dressed with salt, olive oil and lemon juice or a little pure vinegar, there would be fewer dyspeptics, to say nothing of bad complexions. Olive oil is much more easily assimilated than animal fat and is. besides, rich in nutriment and healing power. Creamed New Potatoes. An excellent way to cook new potatoes is to wash and scrape clean, then drop into boiling water and cook rapidly until tender. Have ready cream and butter hot, but not boiling; drain the potatoes, sprinkle with salt and transfer to a hot vegetable dish. Pour over tbem the hot cream, sprinkle with a little minced parsley and serve. Whipped Cream Substitute. Put in a large bowl the white of one egg. large cup of sugar, one large grated raw apple (tart or sour), flavor with a email teaspoonful of extract of vanilla, stir (not beat) for twenty minutes. The result Is a creamy white delicate substance to be used for filling and top of layer cakes, for top of pies, custards or puddings. Cleaning Enamel. A mixture of lemon juice and salt is excellent for cleaning an enameled bath. Cut a lemon in half and have a saucer of coarse kitchen salt ready. Dip the lemon into this and keep rubbing it over the surface of the bath until all the dirt is removed. Then wash well with hot suds and you will be delighted with the result. Watercress Sandwiches. Watercress to be perfect should be freshly gathered, well rinsed in cold water, shaken thoroughly dry. seasoned with salt and eaten with thin slices of white bread and butter. Some prefer a dash of lemon juice with cress and a tablespoonful of olive oil. but the epicure takes his with salt alone. Juicy Ham. The best way to make boiled ham juicy and tender is to leave it in the water In which it is boiled nntU it is quite cold. Thackeray's Kindness of Heart. Thackeray was the gentlest satirist that ever lived. As editor of the Cornhill he could hardly bring himself to reject a manuscript for fear of hurting his would be contributors. The story of his actually paying for contributions that be never printed in order to conceal the fact that he had rejected tbem may be true or false. We do not remember exactly how the evidence points. But even if it be a story, such stories are not told of men made of the stern stuff of the Thackeray commonly mis known. London Saturday Bertew. .

LATE MARKET HEWS

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS Furnished by A. W. Thomson Co., Hittle Block. Phone 2T09. Correspondents, Logan and Bryan. New York, July 6. Open High Low Copper 6Ta 6S 67 Am Smelting TS SO 7S4 U S Steel ... 784 79H 7S IT S Steel pfd 11$ 11$ 11$ Pennsylvania 124 124 4 124 St Paul ... 124U 1257i 124 Mo Pac 4S4 49 4S4 X Y Central. 108 109 1084 Reading . . . 158V8 159s 15S Canadian Pac 237 23$ 237 Gt Northern 1351s 136 '4 133l,a Union Pacific ISo 187 185 Northern Pac 130 132 130 Atchison ... Ill 1124 111 B R T S0 $0 S0 Southern Pac 120Vi 122 1204 Am Can Com 10 Am Can Pfd 84 84 Vi $44 Northern Pac. Ex Div 1 per Close 79 78 11$ 124 125H 48 109 15914 138 135 1S7 132 111 80 122 84 cent. CHICAGO GRAIN. Furnished by A. W. Thomson Co., Hittle Block. Phone 2709. Correspondents, Logan and Bryan.

Chicago, July 6. WheatOpen High Low Close July 8S 89 8S SSU Sept 90 91 90 90 Dec 92 94 92 93 High Low Close July 62 63 62 62 Sept 64 65 63 64 Dec 64 64 62 63 Oats Opon High Low Cloa July 44 45 44 44 Sept 45 45 45 45 Dec 47 47 47 47

Cables Close: Wheat S lower; Corn lower. INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK Indianapois, July 6. Hogs Receipts 7000; top $6.75. Cattle Receipts 1700; steers $6.40. Sheep Receipts 800; best $3.00. Lambs $6.00. Calves, $8.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, July 6 Hogs Receipts 20,000; 5c lower. Cattle Receipts 5000; beeves $7.05. Sheep Receipts 15000; prime $4.85. Calves $8.00. Lambs $7.50. PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK Pittsburg, July 6 Cattle Supply light; choice $6.70 6.90; butchers $5.506.00; good $6.106.90. Sheep Supply fair; prime $3.85 4.10. Hogs Receipts 20 cars; market lower; prime heavy and mixed $6.85 6.90; yorkers $7.10; pigs $6.806.90. Lambs $7.50 down. Calves $8.008.50. ; . CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK Cincinnati, July 6. Cattte Receipts 700; steers $3.75g 6.25; calves $4.008.00. Hogs Receipts 2900; 10c lower; top Sheep Receipts 8600; prime $3.50. $6.80. Spring lambs, 15 & 20c higher. E. BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, July 6. Cattle Receipts 250; dull, steady, choice $6.75; butchers $7.507.20. Hogs Receipts 2500; active, firm; pigs $$7.007.20. $7.007.20; heavies and mixed $7.50 $7.20; yorkers $7.107.20. Sheep Receipts 1600; active, steady, prime $4.75. Lambs $7.407.50. Calves Receipts 75; active; firm, choice $8.50. INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN Indianapolis, July 6. Wheat 84c Corn 63c Oats 45c Rye 70c Clover seed .. - $10.00 TOLEDO GRAIN Toledo, July 6. Wheat .. ......88c Corn 64c Oats 46 c Alsike $9.25 Clover seed $10.50 CHICAGO GRAIN Chicago, July 6 Wheat ....88c Corn .. .. 62c Oats ..v.-. 46c The Dairy as a Temple. The people called the Todas. living in the Xilgiri hills. India, have a curious religious ritual evolved out of the ordinary operations of the dairy. The priest is the dairyman, and the temple is the dairy. Only the milk of the sacred buffalo is churned in the dairy temple. The milk of buffaloes that are not "sacred" is churned In the front part of the hats in which the people live. The dairy temples are of different degrees of sanctity, corresponding to the different degrees of sanctity of the buffaloes tended in each. Even the vessels used in a dairy temple vary in sanctity, those that eontain the milt being mora sacred than those that only receive the product of the citaxac

CONGRESS EXPECTS TO ADJOURII S001I Working Hours in Senate Increased to Hasten Termination of Debate.

National News Association) Washington, July 6. Congress it la expected today will adjourn between August one and August afteen. The reciprocity bill will be passed without amendment. Senator Penrose of the Finance Committee has been predict ing adjournment as early as August one but more disinterested observers think the final adjournment will do about August tenth or fifteenth. Sessions of the senate have been lengthened, beginning today, to seven hours and this will serve to hasten the termination of the debate on recipro city. Once the reciprocity bill is passed the fonate will not tarry long over the tariff measures. While the Democrats and insurgent Republicans insist the tariff reduction bills must have certain consideration and be voted upon no one believes that they will take very much time. Representative Underwood, chairman of the ways and means committee, called on the president today to tell him that his Indianapolis speech was "excellent Democratic doctrine." The president said in reply that he was prepared to prove that it waa good Republican doctrine. THE FOG BU0Y. A Safeguard to Fleets of Warships In Thick Weather. Trobably the greatest menace to the safety of navigation at sea is the fog. Modern steamships are seldom endangered by the most severe weather, bat when the impenetrable envelope of mist incloses a ship she is exposed to the most terrible of perils, a collision at sea. A single ship may be comparatively safe even in a fog. but where there is a fleet of vessels the danger is greatly multiplied. There is always considerable danger, too, on account of tbe fact that many of the ship lines have what could be termed a beaten path across tbe ocean, and tbey always follow this route when possible. In addition to tbe customary fog horns and sirens, a fleet of warships often keep informed of their relative positions by the firing of signal guns at intervals only a few minutes apart. Another method used is tbe fog buoy. Each vessel in the fleet, especially if it is a warship fleet, carries a fog buoy, a large cask painted a vivid red. This is cast overboard at tbe first sign of a fog. and it floats from the stern of too vessel, attached to a rope of grass fiber, which does not sink beneath the surface of the water. By this means the exact location of the individual ships of tbe fleet is maintained, even though proceeding at a moderate rate of speed. Wichita Eagle. Electricity. Franklin drew electricity from the clouds on June 25. 1772. and proved its identity with lightning. SB0NE Sl KENNEDY Kool Komfortable Mothers Negligee Shirts 50c to $2.50 Straw Hats $1.00 to $6.00 Lightweight Suits $10.00 to $25.00 AtheMe Underwear $1.00 to $3.00 Neck Ties 25c imm & BENREIY Kool Komfortable mothers