Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 286, 22 August 1911 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE RICH3IOXD PALLADIUM AXD SUX-TELEGR AM, TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1911.
Tt3 mcteo:.d Paltediem t3 Ssa-Telesrasi - Published and owned by ths PALLADIUM PKINTINO CO. issued 7 days each week, evenlnirs and Sunday morning OfficeCorner North th and A streets. Palladium and Sun-Teleeram Phones Business Office, 2566; Editorial Itoems, 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA
Rllh Cl. Ieds....... KrfHor Carl Hmmmrmt . .... . . Aaaoelate Editor W. IC Faaadafoa Newt Editor
SUBSCRIPTION TERMS In Richmond 13.00 per year (In advance or 10c per week RURAL ROUTES One year. In advance . -tj 00 Six months. In advance........... - One month, in advance , Address changed as often as desired; both new and old addresses must be Iven. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be Kivn for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment is received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS . . ' One year. In advance Six months. In advance 2.60 One month, in advance "
Kntered at Richmond. Indiana, post office as second class mail matter.
' New York Representatives Payne & Younir. 80-34 Wst 33rd street, and 293.3 West 32nd street. New York. N. Y. " Chicago Representatives I'ayne & Youna-, 747-748 Marquette Ruildlngr, Chicago, 111.
Thai Association of Amer-
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of circau tiara
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port only ara s-warantsed. Asssta if bsrraa Advertisers
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Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyrl&MK 1908, by Edwin ANye .
I Tii HOMELY GIRL. The Lomely girl la a fine girl. . By homely I mean plain of feature la contrast with the pretty girl. The handsome girl is apt to be capricious and exacting, demanding mora than she is willing to give "uncertain, coy and hard to please." The homely girl is apt to be sympathetic and kindly. . The homely girl knows she cannot win by the arts of coquetry and therefore cultivates simplicity and graciousness. She is genuine, congenial, thoughtful of others, qualities that are likely to wlu over mere prettiness. "Beauty is only skin deep." GraciouMnwss is soul deep. : Meu may ndmire the handsome girl; they dote on the handsome ways of too homely girl. . . -.... . More than mere "beauty, which makes Ha impression for the moment, 1 the homely girl's desire to please or help or forgive, her nense of sympathy, her hearty manner of comtmdery. The homely girl makes an ideal sweetheart 8he usee no special arts to beguile. Ebt offers -'herself for what she is. She does not flirt. She Is stanch and dependable. Sue is not difficult to please. She is a safe counselor and will keep your secrets. The homely girl makes a good wife.
"When she Is called upon to meet the test of wifehood and motherhood she
will take up ber task cheerfully, tin like the handsome wife, who may in
dulge In sighs for romance situations
or who may complain that she is not "understood,' the homely woman looks her duties fairly in the face
without fuss and without nonsense.
Toe homely wife looks out for no conquests abroad, but glories in her
home. She wraps her soul like a man
tle about her husband and her chll dren.
.The handsome wife may have the weakness of vanity and because of her desire to be admired may sometimes stumble, even fall. Danger
goes with beauty. ,
11 hail the homely girl and woman! She may not be beautiful in face and figure, bat she grows more beautiful
In mind and heart as the days go by.
..The heart of her lover and ber hus
band may safely confide in her. ' Sha homely girl is a fine girt.
The Rights of Pedestrians The automobile has been on the road long enough to give the courts much business and to add to the number of law books. "The Law of Motor Vehicles" is the title of a 700 page volume in which is to be found the .law as it has been set forth in the decisions of federal and state courts. All who have to do with motor vehicles should read it and thus learn what things are lawful for them and what are not. . ' There are some passages in the book which are of interest to the pedestrian,' for they specify what he has a right to expect of the motor car driver. . "In addition to sounding a signal of warning, the driver is bound to reduce the speed of his vehicle, and if a collision is Imminent he must bring it to a stop, and he must not take chances of the pedestrian getting out of the way. Nor does the duty to stop arise only where a'collision is threatened; it exists In every case where a pedestrian may be placed in a position of danger by the vehicle continuing its course. "A pedestrian has an equal right upon a crosswalk with the driver of a motor vehicle, and he has a right to expect that the driver, by operating the car at a controllable speed, will avoid running him down while he is on his original course along the street." In approaching and passing a street car standing at a regular stopping place, it is the duty of the driver to exercise very great care. He must change the course of his automobile so as to pass the car at a distance, reduce the speed of the vehicle, or even bring it to a stop. And if he passes rapidly by the street car he is guilty of negligence. The pedestrian should learn his rights. Where be has been injured by the negligence of a driver he can recover damages. There would be more suits if pedestrians were better informed. Chicago Tribune.
A New Phase of Col. Roosevelt Col. Roosevelt, to whom congratulations have been extended, is entering, with unknowing feet, a new period in his important and 'consequential life. Grandfathers are true conservatives. They even incline towards toryism. A man cannot have an interest in three generations and remain a lithe spirit, rampaging on the highways, attacking goblins; putting giants to flight, and defeating the black magic of enchanters. A grandfather gets home before dark and counts the members of the" family to see that they are all at supper. He puts the cat out and makes sure that the milk card is marked. He goes the round of the house, sees that the grandchildren are sleeping, that the back door is locked, that the dog Is turned loose, and that the fires are out. Then he goes to bed and sleeps lightly. An interest in three generations is a sobering thing. Even a universal force like the Colonel must yield to its influence and become, if not timid, at least cautious. Chicago Tribune.
This Is My 53rd Birthday
Hard to Kill. An alligator's tenacity of life is re
markable. "I remember one time,"
says an English traveleen India, "1 ,was with a shooting f-irty on the
Ganges, when the natives brought in
six foot alligator. They hoped some
one would want to buy it; but no one did, so it was determined to kill the
creature. It was hauled out of the tank and tied to a tree. Bullets from
a small rifle or an ordinary twelve bore gun seemed to only irritate the sau
rian,! and be did not seem to care very
much j when a native thrust a spear down his throat Finally they were obliged to get axes and chop off its
head. Even then the tail thrashed around, and the body was almost cut
to pieces before all movement ceased.
Jumping id v.'rong Conclusion. Jimmy, lite alt healthy boys, was fond of playing outdoors, and like boys in general, he usually got himself scandalously dirty. He was about to sit down to dinner one day, when his mother happened to notice the soiled condition of his hands and sent bim out to the kitchen to wash them. "You incorrigible boy!" she exclaimed as soon as she saw the basin of water in which he had performed the required ablutions. "How In the world do you manage to get your hands so dirty?" "That didn't all come from my hands!" indignantly answered Jimmy. "I washed my face in that water too! Youth's Companion.
DON'T BE DECEIVED Newbro'a Herpicide Is the Only "Original Remedy. Just because you happen to see or hear the statement somewhere that another preparation will kill the dandruff germ, stop falling hair and is Just as good as Herpicide, don't be fooled and allow yourself to be swindled out of your money. You want Newbro's Herpicide, the remedy that has been tried, has stood the test of time and now has more satisfied users than all other similar preparations combined. An attempt
to sell you something else is merely
another effort to profit from the good name established by the only genuine
dandruff germ destroyer.
Herpicide kills the dandruff germ,
and prevents falling hair. It stops
itching of the scalp almost instantly. It may be claimed that other hair remedies will do the same things, but Herpicide really does them. Its years of success prove this. Send . 10c in postage or silver for sample and booklet to The Herpicide Co., Dept. R., Detroit, Mich. All druggists sell Newbro's Herpicide. Applications may be obtained at good barber shops. A. G. Luken & Co., are special Agents for Richmond. One dollar size bottles are guaranteed. v
Politics and Politicians
Newport is the first Kentucky city to try Jhe commission form of government. The late General Frye served in congress continuously for over thirty years. , Congressman Rodenberg of Illinois has accepted an invitation to deliver the Kansas Day oration at Topeka next January. Edward Freeman, editor of the pine Bluff Commercial, is a candidate for the congressional nomination in the Sixth Arkansas district. Tacoma would like to have the Democratic national convention meet in her new stadium, which has a seating capacity of thirty thousand. United States Senators Gore of Oklahoma and Martine of New Jersey, are to speak at the Democratic outing at the Trenton Inter-state Fair on August 23. The "wets" have begun their campaign to have the question of local op
tion submitted to the voters of Oklahoma this fall. The ' State , is now
State-wide prohibition.
Adherents of Governor Woodrow
'THIS -DA TE IN HISTOR Y"
.:-.' AUGU$T-.22.'-;;, ..'",. -..j ' --v V .'' 184&yRichard III. slain in the battle of Osworth Field, the final conflict , between the houses of York and Lancaster. v . 1651 Charles II. defeated by Cromwell at Worcester. 1776 Gen. Howe landed 10,000 British soldiers on Long Island, near the ' Narrows. . . ; 1811 William Kelly, inventor of the Bessemer process for making steel, born In Pittsburg. Died In Louisville, Feb. 11, 1888. 1849 Venice capitulated to the Austrian army under Marshal Radetsky.1861 The Confederate Provisional Congress' at Richmond closed its third '' session. f 1870 The President proclaimed the neutrality of the United States in the Franco-Prussian war. ? 1878 The , independence of Servia proclaimed at Belgrade. 1889 President Harrison laid the corner stone of the Indiana Soldiers , and Sailors Monument at Indianapolis. 1896 David R. Francis of Missouri succeeded Hoke Smith of Georgia as Secretary of the Interior. 1903 Lord Salisbury, former Prime Minister of England, died. Born in . : j 1830.
Wilson are now in Vermont and New! Hampshire laying plans to capture the i delegations to the Democratic national convention for Wilson. j In the Maryland primaries next week Philip Lee Goldsborough", who holds the position of Internal Revenue collector, will receive the Republican nomination for governor without opposition. Lieutenant Governor Frothingham, Speaker Walker of the general assembly and Norman H. White, also a member of the general assembly, are engaged in a lively contest for the Republican nomination for Governor of Massachusetts. The Illinois Equal Suffrage association is planning an automobile tour which will begin at Danville, Sept. 11 and terminate in Chicago a week later. Members of the association will speak in the interest of equal suffrage at all cities of importance along the route. The Prohibitionists will be the first
to arrange for the national campaign,
having decided to choose the date and place of their convention the sixth of next December. This will probably be the only party to begin the presidential activities of 1912 in 1911. Louisiana is in themidst of one of the livliest campaigns for United States Senator that it has experienced in many years. It is a three-cornered race, with Governor Jared Y, Sanders, Congressman Robert F. Broussard of tht Third district and Congressman Arsene P. Pujo of the seventh district as the contestants. The passing of Senator Frye of Maine means that Governor Plaisted will name a. Democrat to fill his unfin
ished term, which will expire March 3, 1913. It will be the first time in half a century that the Pine Tree state has been represented by two Democrats in the United States Senate. The last time was In 1S48-53, when her senators were Hannibal Hamlin and James Ware Bradbury, both Democrats. .
LIFE'S TESTING GROUND. The middle of life is the testing ground of character and strength. There are many who hold a foremost place in the heat of youth, but sink behind when that first energy is played out, and there are many whose follies happily die and whose true strength js only known when serious existence with its weights and responsibilities comes upon them. Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
The Japanes Rothschilds. The richest family la Japan, who are known as the Japanese Rothschilds, are worth SC50.0CO.00a
SCIENCE MAKING LIFE EASY. The small things in life are nsuallj the most important for example, s cake of poor soap may not only spoU the week's wash, and the temper ol the housekeeper, but ruin valuable fabrics. For twenty-five j-ears we have spent a large sum of money educating peo pie as to the soap situation, and it has paid us so far. We will continue the good health campaign and invit you most cordially to give Hewitt's. Easy Task soap a trial, giving you the opportunity to do so on the most liberal basis we can offer. Buy twe cakes from your grocer for ten cents and if the first does not please you return the other and get your monej back. Is this good enough?
WILL MONEY HELP YOU? IF SO, CALL ON US. We will loan you any amount from f 5.00 up and take your personal property as security such as household goods, pianos, team, wagons, etc. Your loan will be arranged in small weekly or monthly payments to suit your income and so small you will hardly miss the money. If you have a number of small bills' outstanding, call on us and get the money to pay . them all up and have one place to pay. All business is strictly confidential.
1 KS Vttl? r.
ylOAiDlRlIKrc
Phone 2560 Take Elevator to Third Floor.
J
The flame of a powerful blow-torch which is intense enough to even melt iron will not burn J-M Asbestos Ready Roofing when held on om .An fnr narlv mn Knur Nn, mril it mt Am, tv
lJf$!&T' boarda underneath. This has been proven by . . impartial testa made by Fire Chiefs and City II Council representatives of many large cities.
J-Al Asbestos Koonng is absolutely nre-proot because its base consists of several layers of pure Asbestos Felt. And Asbestos, you know, is the fire-proof, practically indestructible, mineral used in gas grates, stove mats, theatre curtains, etc. These layers o Asbestos (stone) Felt are firmly cemented together with
genuine 1 nnidad Lake Asphalt that wonderful mineral cement which, in asphalt pavements, stands the grinding of wheels and pounding of hoofs for thirty to forty years. J)-EU3 Asbestos Roofing is, therefore, composed entirely of minerals. Not a particle of perishable ' material in it. Because of this mineral cr stone construction, J-M Asbestos Roofing is also rust-proof, rot-proof and acid-proof. And, like all stone, it never needs painting or coating. No other ready roofing gives a building such absolute fire protection. -None other lasts so long with so little attention. J-M Roofing is still in good condition on many buildings after nearly a quarter of a century of service; You owe it to yourself to examine J-M Asbestos Roofing before you buy. Call or Write for Samples and Booklet
Jones Maidvv&iz& Co,
caQQCsanni::
a
oo
oo
We Elaine AppiPpiFnaiae
for feet in every walk of life, and are mailing great inducements In all kinds of low cuts and outing shoes for travel and recreation. x Ellis a case of unload wiflHi us--siQlt dollars and cents. I
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JAMES O'CONNELL.
James O'Connell, president of the
International Association of Machin
ists and one of the foremost labor leaders in America, was born in Min-
raville, Pa., August 22, 1858. His father died when he was 2 years old and later the family moved to Oil City, where Mr. O'Connell spent his boyhood
and received his schooling. At 16 he became a machinist apprentice, spending six years In learning the. trade. After becoming a Journeyman he went to Detroit, where he remained abouta year and then returned to Oil City. He affiliated with , the Knights of Labor In 1836 and five years later he became prominent in the International Association ot Machinists. In 1892 he was elected president of the . last-named body. The organisation at that time had but 2,500 members. Under the presidency of Mr. O'Connell the membership has increased to T5.000 and the machinists are now among the best organised of any of the crafts. Since the affiliation of the organization with the American Federation of Labor Mr. O'Connell has , been one of the vice"aldenls ot the federation; ; v " r - "
C3EAT PARES GUILBm ILL Summer is a very trying period for young children, and many a child who is usually healthy suffers during the heated term. There are many dangers for the child in summer. These lie in milk, food, water, fruit, etc. The greatest peril USE ' s from some form of stomach or bowel trouDR. CALDWELL'S J'i.,1' isJ?sually the starting point of graver ftyni ID DirDRiri troubles. The, child becomes constipated, or j I V . gets indigestion. Perspiration is interfered with, worms develop, the skin becomes scaly and itchy, and the poor child is in much n"sery- 1)0 not ! so, and trust to luck or fate for a cure. Use a remedy like Dr. Caldwell s Syrup Pepsin, which is intended to cure-that very condition and " especially adapted to children's ills because of its mildness and purity. If the Child has anv of these svmntnm. nr ha nnf hast 9 : .j.
- - T ' " " l""6v " iivjui a, it HCCU3 Dr. Caldwell s Syrup Pepsin at once. It will act promptly but gently, and as, it IS TlMnt tn talrfk vmi wrill nr tilt., t. S- it- A Vtl. V- -!.
r j iv uiv.k ii. uuiuc can ue uuuunea of any druggist at 50 cents or $1.00, and you should obtain a bottle today, so
T ' v" tasi;tt:iiM.v. XX. VUU IlclVC alCVCr tried It YOU CU1 obtain a SAMPLE BOTTLE FREE OF CHARGE by addressing
UW. w. P. WALUWU1, 4QO Caldwell Bldg., Monticello, III.
What Ms Fa it sea. . ,
Emae That last case has made me sas the big dinner tbia evening to the
extinguished Dr. Jay. It's too late new. HI Wife Nerer mind, dear; ta speeches will be published. EmtrsYes, bat the dinner won't Bos-
PURE
FoetiDBinig Smiegair Remember, the best Is the cheapest. Our Vinegar will keep your pickles. Fresh Whole Mixed Spices. cm. lhiaisjLlIY
1035 MAIN STREET. We Make Deliveries to the Chautauqua Ground.
PHONE 2292.
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Ladies' Tan Blucher Oxfords at ....$2.49 Ladies' Tan Button Oxfords at $2.99 Ladies' Tan Pumps ...... .$2.70
Ladies' Patent Gun IVetal or Kid, $3.50 grade .VV... $3.00 Ladies $3.00 Oxfords or Pumps ........... A , . $2.70 Odd sizes in all leathers a1:. , .98c
Armor Clad Shoes For : Eo$s Built Like a Battleship For Service
Sizes 9 to 13. Sizes 1 to 2 .
. $1.75 & $2.00 .$2.00 to $2.50
Sizes 22 to 5y2 $2.50 & $3.00.
Every pair guaranteed to bt the best. . .
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BARGAINS IN MEN'S LOW COTS 50 PAIRS MEN'S PATENT AND TANS, $3.50 & $4 grade. ... $ 1 .00 $3.50 LOW CUTS IN PATENT, GUN METAL AND TAN.. $3.00 $4.00 LOW CUTS IN PATENT, GUN METAL AND TAN. .$3.50 $4.50 LOW CUTS IN PATENT, GUN METAL AND TAN. .$4.00 ANY $3.00 LOW CUT IN THE STORE for .02.50 Get Right With Your Feet While the Prices Are Cat Deep , 100 Pair Children's Tan Oxfords 79c All Patent and Gnn Metal Low Shoes subject to 10 Per Cent Discount. We cater to tee wssts of fc IK3e folks. Crteg Cea to cs. TriEIEIF3ILJIE SHOE CO; 718 MAIN ST.
II ) ita m Ifcx Ut: Hi? cr-, nrr i v
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IF7IL,IL, WOOLEMS AIRE UN
BLUES AND BROWNS ARE IN STYLE THIS FALL See as f op your Fall and Winter Suit We guarantee each and every salt sold by as.
ed. .wniL,S(0)PJ .... :
1002 rtiAirv xx.
WITH MURRAY HILL
PHONE 17GG
$ 'Urn
