Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 256, 23 July 1911 — Page 2
f PAGE TWO.
THE RICHMOND PALLAD ITTM AXD SUN-TELE G RAM. SUNDAY, JTTLY 23, 1911.
OLD PUPILS SHED
TEARS AT Passing of Old Bear Creek School Marked by Start on a New One. The pausing of the old Bear Creek school in Jefferson township, which was marked yesterday with the laying of the corner stone for the new school, a half mile away, brought a tear to the eyes of many a one in the audience of several hundred former pupils and teachers of the old school. The reunion of the former students and teachers was held at the school grounds yesterday. The bis event on the program was the laying of the cornerstone for the new building, which will replace th Hear Creek echool, which has been in use for fifty or more years. The program other than the laying of the corner stone Included addresses by former students and teachers. Charles Teeter acted as chairman of the mooting, assisted by lj. S. Howman. county auditor-elect who is president of the school organization. The program was as follows: 10:30 a. m. Arrival and registration. Koll CallWho will answer? Bong by the School. Address "Why We Came" Mont Torrence Dlnntr Hour ('has. Teeter, Chairman Offering of Thanks.. Uev. L. W. Teeter 1:00 p. m -Kecreatlon hour Seniors In charge of Chas. E. Werking Old School Games. Jir.tiora In charge of MIbs Nellie P.rant 0.30, 1,. s. Howman, presiding. J,. I. C. Rand History of Hear Creek School. la) L. S. Howman (n) H. F. Mason Music The Relationship Hetween the School and Church , . Rev. I... W. Teeter polo , Geo. Howman Greeting; from former teachers. Recitation "School Pays" Neva Howman Dialogue of "Forty Years Ago' L. I. C. Hand "The Old and the New" C. O. Williams, Co. Supt. Addreses "Reyond the Sea" .... I,. E. Replogle Music Girla Chorus Reralnlscenses L. I. C. Band The menu for the dinner, which was provided by those attending the reunion bringing well-filled baskets, consisted of the following delicacies: Bouillon, Consomme. Relishes Pickles, olives radishes, celery, cream cabbage. Beets, sliced cucumberB, tomatoes with mayon.nalse. Meats Roast beef, brown gravy, veal loaf, escalloped tongue, country boiled ham, roast chicken and dressing, pressed chicken, spring fried chicken, young tusltey, roast duck, game In season. Vegetables Boston baked beans, green beans, sweet potatoes, mashed potatoes, Saratoga chips, royal coquettes, steamed corn, corn on cob. Salad Potato, Waldorf, Hunters, Devonshire, deviled eggs, cheese au Gratim. Bread White, brown, Graham, rye, corn, puffs, rolls, Vienna Parker, apple dumplings, sweet sauce peach cobbler whipped cream, assorted pies, fruits. Cake White cake, loaf and layer with red drops, sunshine, angel food, devil food, spice, orange, jelly roll, molasses, Ice cream all flavors, watermelons, canteloupes on ice, coffee, Iced tea, milk shake, butter milk mints, salted nuts. TO LET For Construction of an sane Ward. InContracts for the construction of the custodial ward for the detention of insane who can not be admitted to Eastern Indiana Hospital upon being declared Insane, will be awarded by the county commissioners on Monday, September 6, to the lowest bidder. No contract can be awarded In case the bids are over $6,000. They must in elude, besides the construction, the Installation of the heating and plumb lng. County officials say th.- the ex pense entailed in the consttutclon of a ward of this character should not reach this I sure. .The hospital, which will be entirely for the use of insane people, too dan gerous to be allowed to run at large, will be located at the county jail where Sheriff Steen will at all times have supervision. There will be six apanuit-ms, one oi wuicu W1U De a padded cell. The plans have been approved, calling for a one story brick structure with a basement. .Unless somo unforseen condition arises to delay the letting of the con tract, the building should be ready for occupancy by January 1. upon completion it wuu satisry a long felt need, which the public and officials, who understand the present system of caring for the nsane, have demanded for years. The male insane have been confined in the jail proper while the women have been cared for at the home for Friendless, either arrangement has been satisfactory as it has necessitated placing tho unfortunates in quarters which are not conducive to their improvement. Hi Last Venture. "What is our old friend Hardm dotal nowadays r. "Oh, he's cone Into real estate." That's the very last thins I should have supposed he'd do. "It was. He's dead." New York
REUNION
BIDS
SOON
Bines. -
For the Children
Princess Juliana, Heir to the Throne of Holland. The charming little lady shown in the illustration is Princess Juliana, only child of Queen Wllhelmina of the Netherlands, or Holland, as it is often called. The father of the princess is Henry, prince of the Netherlands and duke of Mecklenburg. Queen Wllhelmina succeeded her father. King William III., in 1S00. when she was but ten years old. her mother acting as regent until the young queen reached the age of eighteen. Princess Juliann was born April 30, liX9. She i.s heir apparent to the throne and may some day reign as queen. The Parrot Scolded. If parrots seem ill nutured it is not always their fault. They say ill na tured things, but they say nothing that has not been taught to them. So Mrs WntUins' parrot must not be blamed for speaking ill naturedly to the bur elar. The burglar got in Mrs. Wat Litis' house one night and was trying to steal something or other that Mrs. Watkins would have preferred to keep, and in looking around the house he woke up the parrot. You know how grumpy you feel If you are awakened before you have had enough sleep. It was Just the same way with the parrot, and she scolded the burglar. She told him that he was a bad man and that he must get out, and the burglar, who did not know that It was a bird that was talking to him, got out as quickly ns he could. He probably thought that he had been visiting a ghost. A Doughnut Twico Cooked. They had a fire in the window of a bakery in Boston. It started in an overheated doughnut In the rim probably and not in the hole. The doughnnt was n large affair, as much ns a hungry small boy could eat in two seconds, and over it was a large mag nlfying glass, so that the small boy. if he should come along, would not bite off more than Iw could chew. He die' not have a chance to try, because the sun got around to the window and shone through the magnifying glass on the doughnut, and pretty soon thf doughnut got so hot that it burned You know how such things happen, because you have probably burned your hands with magnifying glasses, but you did not have to have tho fire department come to put out the blaze. Some Odd Names. Vereshchagin. painter of the celebrated picture "The Russian Feast," had a puzzling cognomen. His own pronunciation of his name is Vert-shah-gin, second syllable accented. Munkacsy. the Hungarian painter of the well known picture "Christ Before rilate," pronounces his name Moon-kotch-n, second syllable accented. Mr. Gladstone, who was prime minister of England, pronounced his name Glad-stun, first syllable accented. Mr. Carnegie pronounces his name Car-na-gy, second syllable accented. A Queer Little Animal. In Chile there lives underground like the mole a queer little nnimal with a long name, chlamyphorus. which really means armor bearing. Its fore feet are adapted for digging. The whole upper and hinder parts of the body are covered with a coat of mnil made up of a series of square plates. The peculiar tall is protected by small scales. but the under parts of the body and legs are covered with soft hair. Origin of an Old Rhyme. "ITumpty Dumpty" was a bold, bad baron who lived in the days of King John, committing many cruel deeds in his strong stone castle, bnt at last was rumbled from power. His history was put into a riddle tho meaning of which was an egg. The rhyme more than' 400 years old. is The Gift. Fate gave a chill these letters four With which his lot to spell: O-H-E-R. no less, no more. The mystic letters fell. The boy received them with a frown. "Give me that hoe," he said. "Tut dooms me for a drudglne clown I" For H-O-K-R he read. ' Tate's fault!" they cried. Fate smiled serene. "Why blame me for ills hoe? With wiser eyes he mlffht have seen And ppelled H-E-R-O!" Youth's Coraponloa. Kaiiway Language. Tne old elaborate booking process has given way to the impersonal railway ticket taking, but the old name "booking office" remains as a fossil. Railway language in this country is full of such relics. Our railway carriages are "coaches," the engine is in charge of a "driver" and a "guard" is in charge behind. All these expressions are directly inherited from the old coaching days. In America they have "ticket offices." "cars," "engineers" end "conductors," good enough words, but without any history. Lon
DELAY A GENERAL TARlFfJELlSIOd
House Democrats Will At tempt Nothing More During Present Session. BY RODERICK CLIFFORD. Washington, July 22. The House Democrats have about decided to call a halt in their plans to undertake general revision of the tariff at the extra session, this recent decision being based upon the apparent attitude of the Senate not to vote upon any tariff legislation other than that which is now before it. The Ways and Means Committee of the House is now at work on its bill revising the cotton schedule, and this measure will be probably brought into the House and passed. This does not mean, however, that the House will insist that the Senate take action on the cotton bill before it adjourns. The Democratic body will be content in the event the Senate votes upon Canadian reciprocity, the wool bill and the farmers free list bill. There is a genial understanding at both ends of the Capitol building that the Senate will have to take action upon those three measures before adjournment is possible. The passage of Canadian reciproeity is assured and it is by no means improbable that the Senate, through -a coalition of Democrats and Insurgent Republicans, will also pass the bill revising the woolen schedule, of the Payne Aldrich law, and the farmers' free list bill. These two latter bills, however, are apt to be amended in the Senate by some of the insurgent Republicans, but it is not believed that the amendments will be such that all differences cannot be straightened out in conference. On the other hand, there is a report which follows President Taft's recent cruise with a number of the Senate leaders of both parties, that the President will veto all tariff legislation attempted at this time. As an excuse for this action it is understood that Mr. Taft will plead that the tariff revisionists should await the report of the Tariff Board. Be that as it may. the Democrats of the House are bound to demand action at the hands of the upper body on the three bills named. It was first intended by the Democrats that their legislative program would not be considered complete until the Senate had taken definite action upon the cotton schedule, the steel schedule, the sugar schedule, the iron schedule, and others. It is only within the past week that the word has been passed among the house Democrats that they are willing to halt operations temporarily it the senate will make some disposition of wool an dthe free list. This does not mean, according to the Democratic leaders of the house, that thetariff revision plans of the Democrats are not to be taken up with renewed vigor at the beginning of the regular session in December. In the event that it becomes apparent that a Republican senate and a Republican President will frown upon all further attempts to amend the present tarift law, the house Democrats simply will bide their time, and wil begin right where they left off, once the new con gress is reassembled. 'ine Democrats feel that a prompt revision of the cotton schedule is ne cessary, but the farmers' free list bill and the bill revising the much de nounced schedule K the woolen sche dule of the Payne-Aldrich bill is deem ed of paramount importance. The house Democrats propose to stay here all summer rather than miss an op portunity to put on record the action of the senate on these two important schedules. Representative Underwood, the chairman of the ways and means committee, on the other hand, has let it be known that his party will con sent to an adjournment, even though the cotton schedule is temporarily sidetracked, in the event the senate gets down to business and votes on the wool bill and the free list bill This latter plan, however, does not indicate that the house has stopped worn on tarur revision. The ways and means committee is now hard at work on the bill revising the cotton schedule. The cotton schedule will be ready for report within a few days, and it will mean a cut of about for ty per cent in the present rates on all cotton goods and laces. The bil will be acted upon by a Democratic cau cus, and will be brought into the house and rusched through that body irrespective of what reception it may later receive in the senate. ' The hot weather in Washington has practically precluded the chance that the senate will consent to remain lon ger in session after it votes on reciprocity, Schedule R and the free list bill. The latter two bills have now been over at the senate end of the capitol for two months, while the de bate has dragged along on recipro city, which was sent there soon after the extra session convened in April. The senate realizes that it must eith er pass or kill the wool bill and the free list bill at this session. It is wiling to compromise with the house and take action-on these two meas ures in the event that the house, in return, wil agree to adjournment af ter such action is taken. The Democratic leaders of the House, while they are willing to sit out the hot summer in Washington, are nevertheless willing to make some concessions to the perspiring Senate, and, as a consequence, the cotton bill will probably go by the boards until next December, when both bodies, on the eve of a Presiden tial campaign, will start in for another long legislative siege. ine situation nas been tnus sum med up by one of the Democratic leaders of the House. "The Democrats were successful at the polls last November because the country wanted tariff revision and be cause it particularly demanded a revision of the iniquitous Schedule K. We have revised this most obnoxious
ed the farmers' free list bill to recompense the farmer for any damage that may accrue to him through the Canadian agreement. The House and the country will demand that the Senate shall take some action upon both of these bills. He would prefer to have action upon the cotton and other schedules also, but we have received intimation that the Senate proposes to stoy work within a short time. We will go ahead with out tariff revision in the Hou'se, passing our bills as fast as possible, and demonstrating to the county that the Democrats are willing
to keep faith. When the' Senate calls for an adjournment, we will probably consent to a cessation of tariff revision provided, of course, that some definite action shall have been taken on wool and the free list. We are not willing to leave Washington until these bills, which the Senate has had for weeks, have received consideration." Present prospects are that the Senate will vote upon all these three bills prior to August 10. It is then expected that an agreement will be reached whereby further tariff revision will be postponed until next December. SCHOOL OFFICIALS TO HOLD MEETING The organization of school superintendents of Henry, Delaware , Randolph and Wayne counties will hold its first meeting at New Castle with H. B. Roberts, the county superintendent of Henry county on Thursday. The matter of keeping records of cerified commissioned schools will . be discussed. At the meeting to be held here in August the school houses will be visited, at least some of the more modern ones and heating and lavatory systems inspected. The object of the organization is to establish uniformity of school work in the four counties. These counties have about the same number of pupils in the district schools and conditions are otherwise so similar that all of the county sui perintendents allied with it believe its benefits will be numerous. A Glorious Pari. "At last;" exclaimed' the low co median, "I have a part that just suits me." "Good," said thev first old lady. "Yon are the only actor I,. ever knew who was thoroughly satisfied with his part What is it?" "Ob, the part isn't much, as fat as that goes, but I'm supposed to be a burglar, and I break lot a pantry and eat a real meal at every performance." Chicago RecorS-Herald. Ho Worked On. Wife George, this burning of the candle at both ends means an untimely grave. It is nearly 12 o'clock. Come to bed. George But I'm doing, this night work in order to find money enough to buy you a birthday present. Wife Well, if you will persist In work ing of course I can't stop It. .Good night, dear. Deduction In a Street Car. The Heavyweight Pardon me. did I step on your foot, sir? Coogan If yes didn't begoiry. then the roof must hov fell on it. Puck.
'V PaDadiUm '
G. MASHMEYER DIES AT RIPE OLD AGE Gephart H. Mashmeyer, aged 77. one of the best known and prominent German residents of Richmond, died last evening at 5 o'clock at his residence, 204 South Seventh street, after a long illness. He was the father of George Mashmeyer, who is engaged in the -dry goods business; Oscar Mash
When a duck lays an egg she just waddles off as if nothing happened. When a HEN lays an egg there is an awful noise. The HEN advertises, and hence the demand for hen eggs instead of duck eggs. It is the same with Butter Krust Bread. Unless we tell you about it, you do not know that we make it, and unless you have used it, you do not really know how good it is. , '
Try your level boot See If you can malro a batch, of bread sxa good, as
IT IS NO DISCREDIT THAT YOU FAEC EVERY CONDITION IS AGAINST YOU. YOU HA VENT THE FACILITIES- WE HAVE. OUR MEASURING IS ACCURATE TO THE OUNCE. IS YOURS? Our mixing is done by tireless, clean machinery. Isyours? ' Oqr rising is done in a room of even heat protected from all drafts. Is yours? Our baking is ttone in ovens of constantly correct temperature, and lasts the right length of time. Is yours? -No wonder Butter Krust Bread is so much better than the average home-made bread. Besides, it Costs Less and saves all hot wprje.. Order from your grocer tomorrow. IRIsIhiinni(rj)iniril USaJklcujg env
An advertisement inserted in the Palladium's Want Ad columns will bring that want to your door. Ask yourself the following questions. If there is any one of 'them that you can answer "yes" t0 then place your want ad in the Palladium and reap in the coin, as you are bound to get results the Palladium's large circulation assures you this.
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meyer, former deputy sheriff, and Edward. He had been residing with his daughter, Mrs. George Cutter. The funeral will be held on Tuesday afternoon but the hour and other arrangements will be announced later. Friends may call Monday 2 to 5 o'clock in the afternoon and 7 to 9 o'clock in the evening. He had been a machinist for twenty-five years at Gaar, Scott and Company.
TRY TO EQVAIL
Youll Suroly Fall
Awe Ymm
WaumQs Mppflfi(Ml
CHANGE OF'VENUE Change of venue from Judge Fox of the Wayne circuit court was taken in the case of James Carpenter and others against William F. Brown and others, in comersion preceedings.' Judge Ed Jackson of the Henry county circuit court was appointed.
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