Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 243, 10 July 1911 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, JULY 10, 1911.
PAGE THREE.
ROCHESTER A HOST TO SHRIIIER ARMY
Bunch of Jolly Good Fellows Holding Annual Convention There Now. (National News AsMor-latlon) Rochester, N. Y. July 10. When Rochester awoke this morning it found itslf the host of the liveliest and biggent bunch of good fellows that has ever aBsrmbW'd in anjr city of the Kant. The occasion was the Imperial Council of the Mystic Shrine which meets In thin city all this week. Shrlner have been arriving by thousandv since Saturday. Every hotel is filled; dwolllnKH have been prewsed into service; the raiiroad yards are filled with special trains of Pullman coaches; the city parks are made into camping grounds for the visitors pod every town within a radius of thirty miles Is filled to overflowing with the Shrlners. Never In the Kast has there been a convention that will equal this. Only the Madrl (Iras, or the Los Angeles Klower Carnival can compare with the scenes of lavish display hero this week. In the first place, the Chamber of Commerce of Rochester has donated $10,000 for illuminations. The members of Damascus Shrine have duplicated this amount. The electrical displuy for brilliance and uniqueness has never been equalled in this country. For four months electrical experts have been busy with the designs. Rochester Is the birthplace of the Shrine, and George A. Leder, the Father of the Order, is on hand to welcome all Shrlners. Damascus Temple has arranged for a week of entertainment that will not leave a moment of leisure. The entire fleet of the Rochester Yacht club is at the disposal of the Shrlners and their wives; hundreds of automobiles are free to the visitors and every saddle horse in Rochester and vicinity has been engaged for the big parade. Tomorrow evening the great pageant will move. It will be most spectacular In the history of Shrinedorn and will extend over a line of more than ten miles. Temples from practically every city in the United States will participate with distinctive floats and handsomely uniformed patrols. Over 100 bands are already In the city for this parade. The floats represent an outlay of thousands of dollars and critics say they surpass thos of the Madrl Oras at New Orleans. The Shrlners from Los Angeles, will appear In the parade on 100 coal black horses; one of the Texas Temples wll be mounted on calice-colored brenches and the Memphis, Tenn, Temple will have a herd of camels to carry them over the line of march. Besides these other Western Temples will ride astride burros; a South Dakota Temple will have a black bear for each member; and other localities will display live stock characteristic of their country. The entire display will be enough to stock a half-dozen big circuses. The animals are to be presented to the city after the parade. The line of march for the parade Is a fairyland of color. The fronts of the business houses on the main streets of the city are entirely covered with flags, bunting and electrical devices. After the parade tomorrow evening the patrols will be scattered to Rarthelemay hall where a unique vaudeville program will be given. Performers from all parts of the world have been engaged and only male members of the order will be allowed within the doors. The big feature of the entire convention will be the water carnival at Genesee Valley park. Rochester's water carnivals have already attracted the attention of the entire country, but this week's exhibition will far exceed anything that has gone before. The ts Jap Dose soap (TKANIPAXCND Skin and clothing are entirely different things. Naturally they require entirely different soaps. Jap Rose is essentially a sllin cleanser. Made from the purest vegetable oils, blended by oar own pro cess. Perfect for the bath. SoU by dealer everywhere. REFUSE IMITATIONS. LNk for the Jap Girl n every package. A Large Cake 10
HANDICAPPED
This it the Case With Many Richmond People. Too many Richmond citizens are handicapped with a bad back. The unceasing pain causes constant misery, making work a burden and stooping or lifting an impossibility. The back aches at night, preventing refreshing rest and in the morning is stiff and lame. Plasters and liniments may give relief but cannot reach the cause. To eliminate the pains and aches you must cure the kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills help sick kidneys. Can you doubt Richmond evidence? Mrs. Charles Corwin, 55 Railroad St., Richmond, Ind., says: "I was annoyed for weeks by pain in the small of my back, so severe at times that I could hardly get around to do my housework. In the morning I arose feeling very larne and hardly able to walk, and to stoop or life was out of the question. My husband advised me to try Doan's Kidney Pills and I accordingly procured a box. They did me a great deal of good and in a few days after I began their use, the backache as well as the other troubles disappeared." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and tafce no other. upper stretches of the river have been festooned with thousands of electric lights both over and under the water and myraid water craft will appear in the wonderful Venetiun display. This water carnival on Wednesday afternoon will be preceded by drills by visiting patrols from at least 100 Temples of the Shrine. Some of the musical organizations with the visiting Temples are unique and noteworthy. The San Francisco Temple brought a Chinese band. Every musician is a slant-eyed Celestial and is garbed in his oriental dress. The Lu Lu Temple of Philadelphia, has Its famous band of 62 pieces on the grounds and there are no less than ten Indian bands from Western Temples. Thursday afternoon a concert will be given by massed bands of over 1,000 musicians. Thursday afternoon the feature will be the discharging of hundreds of bombs especially made in Japan for the convention. Each bomb contains a large American flag and these banners of silk will be released far above the city when the bombs explode. The city of Rochester has hurried work on its new $2S0,000 Exposition park and every building there has been turned over to the Shriners. The longest trip to the convention was made by the Shriners from Tacoma, Washington, who came in a special train. The Shrine from Los Angeles also came in a special train attached to which was a car load of oranges and a carload of wine, besides a special section of horse cars for the transportation of the famous black horses on which the members of the Temple are to be mounted. Baltimore, Maryland; Portland, Oregon; and Los Angeles are striving for the next convention of the Shrine and each city has sent a great delegation with souvenirs by the hundreds to impress the delegates with their qualifications as entertainers. Saladdin Temple of Grand Rapids, Michigan, arrived here in the best style. The excursion was made in a special train that for elaborate and luxurious appointments has never been equalled in this country. Ten magnificent parlor cars make up the train, with two of the finest dining cars ever built and a supply car freighted with every Epicurean delicacy. One drawing room car was fitted with rich velvet carpets, richly tapestried sofas, a grand piano and a pipe organ. This car will be used by the women members of the party as a reception room and for a series of concerts and entertainments. One of the most unique features of this train will be a car fitted up as a complete printing office, in wrich a daily journal edited by some of the most distinguished literary men of Michigan, will be published. The "paper" will be printed upon white satin. "The White Satin Daily" will be distributed as a souvenir of a tour whicu has no parallel in the history of American railroading. Hundreds of Canadian Shriners are here. The entire party came from Toronto by boats. These Canadian Xobels have pitched their tents in Maplewood jark. Here they are camping in true outdoor luxury. The Canadian bunch are dispensing open house and have a brand of hospitality all their own. The Stars and Stripes and the Union Jack fly on separate poles over their camp. Among the distinguished guests in the city for the convention are Presi dent Taft, Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, Governor Dix. nearly the entire Cabinet membership from Washington, no less than 15 governors of as many states and hundreds of men high in civic and military honors. It is estimated that there are 75,000 wearers of the red fez in the city today. This number of guests is almost doubled by the Shriners' wives, who accompany their husbands. Scolding. Scolding is mostlv a habit. It 1 often the resnlt of nervousness and an irritable condition of both mind and body. A person is tried or annoyed at some trivial cause and forthwith commences finding fault with every thing and everybody within reach. Scolding is a habit very easily formed It is an unreasoning and unreasonable habit. Tersous whw once pet into the way of scolding always tind something to scold about. If there is uothing else they begin scolding at the mere absence of anything to scold at. It is an extremely disagreeable habit It Is contagious. Once introduced into a family it is pretty certain in a short time to affect all the members. fix-change.
Woman'sWorld
The Countess of Warwick, Originator of the Farm School. liADT WARWICK ASO HER FAVORITE BORSK. Long before Mrs. Belmont of New York thought of espousing the cause of women or establishing a farm school an Englishwoman, the gifted and beautiful Countess of Warwick, organized and opened a college for women horticulturists. In her school dairy work, market gardening, poultry fanning, beekeeping and horticulture are all taught. It was established to benefit well bred women thrown on their own resources in earning a living. Capable women teachers are in charge of each branch of the work. Lady Warwick publishes a paper, the Woman's Agricultural Times, which exploits the work of the school. The countess also established an association of women agricultural workers, known as the Daughters of Ceres. The products of the school, one feature of which Is a Jam factory, are disposed of for the benefit of the institution, whose preliminary expenses were borne by Lady Warwick. The Agricultural college originated in 1808. when the Lady Warwick Hostel was established at Reading. England. Later the school was removed to Studley castle, about fifteen miles from Birmingham. Gardening bas always been a fad with the beautiful Countess of Warwick. At Eoston Lodge, the magnificent heritage which she brought her husband, she has one of the finest rose gardens in the world. Every known species of rose is said to grow there. Her garden of friendship is remarkable. Everything in It has been contributed by ber friends, and each plant or tree bears a heart shaped label showing who planted it. Besides plants. Lady Warwick is devoted to dumb animals. Her dogs are always beautiex. and ber stables con tain the choicest of horseflesh. She rides to hounds regularly when at Warwick castle, her husband's famou? seat, and is said to be one of the hest horsewomen in England. Of late years the countess has been an ardent Socialist Through her ef forts much has been done to improve the condition of English working women, it is her ambition to convert to Socialism her halt sister, the Duchess of Sutherland. She is the half sister also of the Earl of Rosslyn and the Countess of Westmoreland. In her own right Lady Warwick owns about 23.000 acres of land. A GERMAN WOMAN'S PRAISE. She Says American Women Dress Better Than Parisians. "American women dress better than the women In any country in Europe, even in Paris." says Miss Helen Flasse, a German author now traveling in America. "in Europe only the wealthy classes dress well, but in America all women do. Clerks who make only S3 or $4 a week dress in perfect good taste. With a one dollar shirt waist and a one dollar skirt they have the style of queens, a style that European women do not get by spending many times that much. They dress their hair beautt fully and take good care of their complexions. The latter although sometimes more art than nature are very good. As an average the American women are pretty. "tlere in America it is unusual to see a badly dressed woman, while in Germany it is unusual to see one who is well dressed. "I am a great admirer of the middle class American woman. Uhe is intelligent, always looks the lady, makes her own clothes, does her housework and is a splendid housekeeper. The German woman of the same class never looks well dressed, is always in dressing sacks, dirty and scrubbing. One seldom sees the American woman scrub, yet ber house is always clean. "The Paris woman possibly has the better of her American sister on hats and gowns, but the American woman looks better. Only the high society of France can afford these expensive rowns. The average American woman ran make herself a beautiful and stylish gown for little money; consequently the laurels' belong to her." Shoes made of snake skin are worn by many ultrafashionable English women this year. At Fountains & Elsewhere Ask for "HORLICKT Tht Original and Gtnuint MALTED MILK Tht Food-drink for All Ages. At restaurants, hotels, and fountains. Delicious, invigorating and sustaining. Keep it on your sideboard at Home, Don't travel without it. A quick lnnck prepared in a minute. Take no imitation. Jst say"B0HJCTS."
TS INTO U. S, DOUBLE 1H DECADE Canada Is the Largest Customer for Merchandise Made in the U. S. fPalladium Special) Washington, July 10. The quantity of foreign merchandise brought into the United States and redistributed to other parts of the world increases year by year. The value of foreign merchandise exported from the United States amounted to 12 million dollars in 1S90; 24 million in 190; and 36 million in 1911, having doubled in the decade, 1890-1900, and increased 50 per cent since 1900. Art works, chemicals, cotton, fruits, furs and skins, fibers, hides and skins, India hubber, lead, lumber, tobacco, and sugar are the most important of the articles or classes of articles imported and re-exported, though to this list must be added many other articles of less importance. Canada, England, Germany, France, Belgium, Cuba, Mexico, and Argentina are the principal countries to which this foreign merchandise is exported, though the full list to which merchandise of this character is sent includes every grand division of the world, more than TO countries. It seems curious to think of the United States sending foreign merchandise to England, the greatest importing country in the world, and yet more than 9 million dollars worth of foreign merchandise was sent from the United States to England in the fiscal year 1910. This included more than 3 million dollars worth of India rubber; more than 1 million dollars worth of raw cotton; about $200,000 worth of Manila hemp; nearly a million dollars worth lear, in the form of "base bullion"; more than a half million dollars worth of wool; 1-2 million dollars worth of raw sugar; 1-3 millian dollars worth hides; a quarter of a million dollars worth of tea; also smaller values in cocoa, coffee, art works, diamonds, sisal, and furs and fur skins. Canada is our largest customer for foreign merchandise ,the total value of exports of foreign merchandise to that country being in 1910 13 million dollars value; hides and skins, about of a million dollars value; India rubber, over 3 1-3 million dollars value; manila hemp nearly 1 million dollars value; tobacco nearly 1 million dollars value; gum chicle, used chiefly in the manufacture of chewing gum, over a half million dollars value, and in less values, automobiles, bristles, coal-tar products, gyycerin, nitrate of soda, extract of quebracho, used for tanning purposes; mineral and vegetable wax, raw cotton, raw silk, raw sugar, pig tin, coffee, cocoa, burlaps and other manufactures of fibers. A f Local Theaters At the Gennett Tonight. The National Players will open a week's engagement at the Gennett tonight, in a strong four act comedy drama, entitled, "For a Girl They Loved." This beautiful play has had a very successful season in New York and has just been released for stock. It carries a very high royalty on it, and this company is the only stock organization using it. Miss Charlotte Huntington in the title role has an excellent chance to prove her dramatic ability and is ably supported by the balance of the company, high class vaudeville will be introduced between acts making the show continuous, during the week the company will present some very strong plays never before seen in this city by any popular priced attraction and a most enjoyable week is before the theater going public of Richmond. Ladies free tonight under usual conditions. Why is a man's shadow like a false friend? Because it follows him only la sunshine. Stop That Torturing MEAPACIHIEj A headache is irritating, nerve-rack- : ing and therefore weakening. Worst of , all there's a cause an organic disorder j that you must not neglect. Don't con- i tinue to suffer don't drift into serious ail- ' ments get a package of Caparine today Sparine StODS the worst headache almost instant. ly and then relieves and cures the condi- j tion that produced it. Colds, constipa- ! tion, biliousness and grip yield quickly j to this remarkable preparation. Caparine is a tonic and stimulant and a gentle ; laxative. Be prepared for the next ' headache get a package todav. At all druggists 10c and 25c. DeKalb Drug & I Chemical Company, Ltd.. DeKalb, 111. j WANTED YOUR MACHINE AND REPAIR WORK MACHINISTS REAR 220 LINCOLN STREET Phone 3040 or 31 5S !
IMPOR
CEDAR SPRINGS HOTEL Now Open For Summer Guests Mineral and Turkish Baths with experienced mate and female attendants. Finest bath house in Ohio. Elegant roads from all points. Auto parties a specialty. Dancing and all outdoor amuse-; ments. First-class music Beautiful woodland shady walks. For circular address DR. C M. BEACH, Cedar Springs Hotel, New Paris, Preble county, Ohio.
TOBACCO IN THE ARCTIC Resource of Miners When They Can Neither Chew Nor Smoki. "When the wind is blowing thirty miles an hour and the temperature is 40 below it is some cold." said a man from Alaska. "If a man used tobacco in the ordinary way out of doors during such weather and got his lips wet through smoking a pipe or chewing he would be apt to get Into trouble. First thing be knew hed have his lips cracked, and they would be raw all winter long. "The regulars stationed at the military posts up in Alaska found that if they tied a tobacco leaf in their armpit previous to undesired duty they would become very sick and could pass the post surgeou for hospital, getting rid of detaij work they wanted to avoid. "The miners up there learned something of this and found that the tobac-
J co craving could be satisfied by bind ing a quantity of the leaf either in the armpit or agaiust the solar plexus. This avoided broken and bleeding lips during the winter, and they weren't prevented from smoking indoors as well if they wanted to. It was the outdoor smoking or chewing that made all the trouble." New York SunWay to Treat Venison. The sportsman was explaining to a few of his uninitiated friends. "If you don't like venison." he said, "it is because it has not been prepared properly. I think 1 kuow the kind you have tried to eat, .and 1 agree with you it is not tit. After the deer has been shot the carcass probably has been allowed to lie around until the blood has discolored the meat and really has almost tainted it. Few hunters dress their game carefully enough. As soon as a deer is killed the carcass should be thoroughly bled, skinned, the entrails removed and the meat hung up in the dry air for some hours. Thorough and prompt bleeding is of the utmost importance. Venison prepared in thi way is comparatively light in color that is. it is a clear, bright red. and the fat is white and clean. There is no strong, rank taste." New York Press. Revenge. "Stop:" The brakes of the motor were suddenly applied, a pandemonium of whirling wheels ensued, and the motorist came face to face with Constable Coppem. who had been hiding in the hedge. "Excuse me, sir." said the portly policeman, taking out his notebook and pencil, "but you exceeded the speed limit by two miles over a measured piece of road." "I have done nothing of the kind," retorted the motorist, "and. besides" "Well, if you dou't beliere me I'll j call the sergeant bein' as it was 'im as took the time. He's in the pigsty yonder." j "Don't trouble. Robert," the other j hastened to reply. "I would sooner j pay fifty fines than disturb the ser geant at his meals!" London Answers. Faithful Woman. I tell you that women, as a ruie. are more faithful than men ten times more faithful. I never saw a man pursue his wife into the very ditch and dust of degradation and take her in bis arms. I never saw a mau stand at the shore where she was wrecked, waiting for th waves to bring back her corpse to his arms, but I have seen a woman with Ifer white arms lift a man from the mire of degradation and hold him to her bosom as if he were an angel. Ingersoil. His Way of Doing. "Could the cashier of that company explain, the muddle in the books?" j "He said he would clear It all up." "Did he?" ; "No. he didn't clear it np. He cleared out." Baltimore American. Ungaltant. nenderson Ever met with any serious accident while traveling? Henpeck Did I? I met lay wife while traveling abroad. DON'T FORGET That NOW Is the time to protect yourself against loss by WINDSTORMS. Costs but little. DOUG AN, JENKINS & CO. Room 1, I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1330. Big Reduction On Hammocks For the next few days we will offer to all pleasure lovers, a fine line of Hammocks at onehalf regular price. These Hammocks are all of best material, closely woven and regular lengths. Just the thing for these hot days. Miller's Harness Store 827 Main St.
CYCLONE FORMATION. The Mechanical Laws Are the Same as In a Whirlpool. Any one can make the exact counterpart of a cyclone If be so desires. Of course a cyclone is caused by the air over a big area getting warm and light with small pressure. This air consequently tries to rise almost in a body and leaves a partial vacuum behind, but the outside cold air rushes in from all sides. Now. it is a scientific and mechanical truth that when a fluid runs In from all sides toward a central poiut it causes a whirlpool or rotation of the fluid. The exact analogy of a cyclone, then, although with the fluid water instead of air, is seen when the stopper is pulled out of the bottom of a basin full of water. An almost perfect vacuum, as far as the water Is concerned, is causd by the water Immediately over the stopper running out. The rest of the water rushes in from all directions, and a whirlpool is the result There Is one difference here from the air cyclone. In the air the force with which It rushes toward the center greatly compresses the air whirling at that poit.t and makes It very dense so dense. In fact, that a straw carried in the central whirl can be driven into a big block of wood without bending. Of course in a whirlpool the water is not compressed, remaining practically the same in density all the time. That is one highly important property of water: it Is practically incompressible. Nevertheless it is 'very interesting to see the whirl form in a basin and know that the mechanical laws are the same as in the formation of a cyclone many miles wide. Harper's Weekly.
Man's Early Building, The ruins of successive human habitations unearthed In Asia show how man advanced from primeval savagery to the pomp of Babylon and Nineveh. First he improved the caves In which he dwelt by leveling the floors and cutting windows to give him light Afterward he constructed entirely artificial habitations for himself, at first roughly made tents of boughs and leaves, then huts of mud and finally dwelling? of wood and stone. Spiteful. "Yes." 6aid the engaged girl. "Dick Is very methodical. He j;ives me one kiss when he comes and two when be goes away." "That's always been his way," returned her dearest friend. "I've heard lots of girls comment on It." Thus It happens that they cease to speak to each other. Fell In With the Argument. "The leading question." said the colonel, "is the financial one." "Right." replied the major, "and I was Just about to ask you to add $5 to that $10 I borrowed from you yesterday," Uncle Remus' Magazine. GENNETT TONIGHT NATIONAL PLAYERS IN 'For a Girl They Loved LADIES FREE TONIGHT Under Usual Conditions DAILY, 10c MATINEES Evening, 10, 20 and 30c HAMMOCK'S AT A BIG DISCOUNT The Geo. Brehm Co. 517 Main St.
ROSS' STRAW HAT CLEANER Makes a Soiled Hat Like New. So Simple to Use Any One Can Clean Their Hat. ONLY TEN CENTS. W. H. ROSS DRUG COMPANY, 804 Main Street. Phone 1217. Ross' Liquid Corn Remedy, Ten Cents,
THE ATI AfUTlf 3UJ TEA
Specials for the week of July 10 to 15
g0 STAMPS with one can Baking Powder --50c
Have You Tried Our SULTANA COFFEE
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BIG CROPS EXPECTED
Preble County Farmers to Have Good Year. (Palladium SpeciaO Eaton, July 10. Not in years har farmers of Preble county had brighter prospects than in the present season. This is especially true of the wheat harvest, some exceptional yields having been reported. Except for a small stretch of territory just east of Eaton, where the wheat was recently destroyed by a heavy hail, the return to the farmer will be generally bounteous and golden. The general average ia 35 bushels to the acre, while is It extremely heavy, testing in many instances 65 pounds to the bushel. Corn prospects are very good, and with favorable weather conditions it is expected that 100-bushel-to-the-acre will be common statements. Tobacco is also in fine snaps. A continuation of the present prospects will insure the statement that Preble's farmers are really "in clover." Feet Tired Oat Sore, Burning Feet Makes Us all Gloomy and Blue EZO Stops all Misery. Here's a tip that will brighten up that gloomy countenance and put hope into people who are on their feet all day long. A 25 cent jar of the new discovery EZO will make your feet so good and strong anc vigorous that youj won't feel a pain' or an ache all day long. Foot misery must go that's what EZO is for, and people who suffer from painful, wear y, worn out, burning feet must have it in order to enjoy life. EZO is so easy to apply and it stops the misery at ence, and for corns, bunions or callouses it's far ahead of anything on earth today. Generous jar 25 cents at all helpful druggists. Mail orders filled, charges prepaid, from Ezo Chemical Co., Rochester, N. Y. For sale by Leo H. Fihe. JUST TELL US THE AMOUNT OF MONEY AND THE TIME you want to use the same and we will make you RATES that cannot be anything but satisfactory to you. We loan from $5.00 to $200 on Furniture, Pianos, Teams, Wagons, etc., without removal, and the same can be-paid back in weekly or monthly payments. If you need money fill out the following blank and send this ad to us. Our agent will call on you at once. We loan in all surrounding towns and country. Your Name Address Richmond Loan Co. Colonial Bldg., Room 8 0 Richmond, Ind. GREAT & PAflFIf WM CO. 10 STAMPS with one package Macaroni . 12$c 10 STAMPS with one package Jelly Powder IQc 10 STAMPS with one bottle of . 8auce 12c 10 STAMPS with one bottle Blue 10c 25 STAMPS with one bottle Extract 25c 10 STAMPS with one box Silver Polish --10c Sugar for $1.00 Phone 1215
la tio Oocabltto or Truat
