Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 43, 26 December 1911 — Page 4

PAGE POUB.

THE RICHMOND PAJLLADIITM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAl, DECEMBER 26, 1911.

Tta Richmond Palladium tzi SBB-Telefirin M,'"i!I and owned by the (a...JiAia'ADIUM PRINTING CO. JSi Evening Except Sunday. Pii!lTrCornr N"th 9th and A streets. UumXr um -nd 8un-Tele7ram Phones Sent "m "lce' 2684; ,ew' DPrt' 1UCHMONO. INDIANA

4olsfc O. Lm4i Ballet

SUBSCRIPTION TERMS In Richmond ft.00 per year (la advance) or 10c per week. RURAL ROUTES One year. In advance l.oo M month, in advance I.te One month. In advance . Addreee chana-ed an often ee deelred; toth new and old addressee must be riven. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be fiven tor specified term; name will not be entered until payment In received. MAIL BUBSCRIPTIONS One year. In advance 52 HI months, in advance One month. In advance

Entered at Richmond. Indians, poet office as second class mall matter.

New York Representatives Payne Young-. 10-24 West 33d street, and 2S5 West 32nd street. New York. N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne Youna-. 747-748 Marquette Building;. Chlcaao. 111.

ftV The Associatiosi erf Am

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WWIthalllMf.ILT.Cirf

1 his Is My 45th Birthday

JOSEPH C. LANGLOIS.

Joseph O. Langlols, Canadian secretary of tbe International Commission

on Deep Waterways, was born In St

Bcholastlque, Quebec, December 26,

1886. His education was received at St. Therese Seminary and St. Laurent College. For a number of years be has been connected In an editorial ca

pacity with leading French, newspa pen In Montreal. In 1904 he was el

ected to the Quebec legislature and was re-elected in 1908. The international waterways commission, of which Mr. Langlols was appointed Canadian secretary in 1910, is endowed with wide powers under the terms of a treaty between Canada and the United States. Among the matters awaiting lti attention are several schemes of power development along the St. Lawrence River.

Politics and Politicians

Philadelphia Democrats are planning for a big Jackson Day banquet next month. Superior, Wis., will vote January 23 on the question of adopting the commission plan of government. The Georgia Democratic State Committee has decided to hold a presidential primary election some time prior to June 12. Jud La Moure has been a member of the North Dakota senate ever since the state was admitted to the Union

In 1889. Charles W. Poole, who was speaker of the Nebraska house two yearB ago, has announced his candidacy for tbe Democratic nomination for governor. Maine and Rhode Island are the only New England states in which women have not been granted the right to vote for public school commissioners. Former Speaker, Joseph G. Cannon expresses the opinion that the Republican party will win next year if it ticks to a stand-pat platform. Governor Harmon, of Ohio, for President and Governor Burke, of North Dakota for Vive President iB the national ticket conceived by some of the Democratic politicians. In the Massachusetts election last month the Socialists polled less than 15,000 votes, as against a total of nearly 40,000 votes cast for their party candidates in 1902. New Mexico hopes to have the official recount of the returns of the recent election completed in time to Inaugurate William C. McDonald as the first State governor, early in January. Tbe ballot for the election in Boston on January 9, will be the smallest ever presented for an election in that city. Only twelve names will appear on th ballot, as candidates for the city council and school committea. Louisiana's next governor will be selected at the Democratic primaries next month. The contest is a spirited one between John T. Michel, candidate of the "regular organization." and Judge Luther B. Hall, candidate of the good governmental league Democrats. Present indications point to a lively three-cornered contest for the Democratic nomination for governor of Illinois at the primaries next April. The prospective candidates for the nomination, are Samuel Alschuler of Aurora, former Congressman Ben F. . Caldwell and former Mayor Edward F. Dunn of Chicago. Congressman Victor L. Berger of Wisconsin is scheduled as the chief speaker at the third annual convention of the Intercollegiate Socialist society, which is to meet in New York city on December 28. The society has branches in Yale, Harvard, Brown and a number of other of tbe leading colleges of. the country. Of the twenty-sit occupants of the Prealdent's chair, six have been natlva born Ohioans, as follows: Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Benjamin Harrison, McKlnley and Taft. Virginia has furnished seven. Seventeen of the twenv ty-alT weare college graduates, the

nine nonlcollegiane being Washington,

Lincoln, Johnson,' ' CJereland and Me-

Santa Claus Or Bellefontaine? Yesterday there was no Santa Clavs in Bellefontaine, Ohio. The school board came to the conclusion that children above the age of six should be told that there is no Santa Claus. They were joined in this by all the school teachers because "Christinas trees are so much trouble." The ministers and churches swelled the number perhaps because Santa Claus is presumed to be a pagan saint.

There are people in this world it seems who ore born vicious or is it merely stupid? Is the viciousness of breaking the faith in a child's heart merely the mistaken Idea in their hearts between :t fact and a truth. A fact may be a fact but it takes many and many a fact to make a truth. Take the story of the cherry tree and George Washington. As a fact no doubt it can be proved that George Washington did or did not tell his father that he cut down the cherry tree. Perhaps there was not oven a cherry tree on the plate. The matter of fact makes not a bit of difference. What peoplf are interested in la th; truth. The story of George Washington nwl his father may be the veriest historical myth it may be the gosptl truth what difference does it make does it change the veracity of George Washington which is the only point In the story which is vital? Take the parables of Jesus Christ. Who cares whether there were three men and whether they were given talents which they lent, buried, failci and succeeded with? Is It any the less a truthful presentation of the world and its ways? Is the Bible itself any different? The matters of fact have been disproved over and over again to the delight of such people as the Bellefontaine school board, ministers, parsons and clergy but what does that matter. On matters of fact there may bo error but, In truth there is an undying flame. The body of a man may be twisted his face scarred, his arms cut off the facts in this man may be distorted tut where is the truth the truth llct at the man's heart.

Glorious Hair

For Every Woman Who Wants It. Any woman who neglects her hair cannot expect to have as lovely hair as the woman who doesn't. Wash the hair once a week, use PARISIAN SAGE daily keep your hair brush clean and in a few days you will give to your hair a beautiful lustre that you will be proud of. PARISIAN SAGE is a most reliable hair tonic; so reliable that L. H. Fihe guanantees it to eradicate dandruff, stop falling hair and itching scalp, or money back. It should be used as a dressing by every member of the family because it keeps the scalp clean, prevents hair from turning gray aud baldness. Iarge bottle 50 cents. You will have no use for ordinary preparations after once giving delightful PARISIAN SAGE a trial.

Heart toHeart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE.

A FISH STORY.

flow's This?

NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD

Out on the people of Bellefontaine! Did they think that they could drive Santa Claus out of the world? The men of Bellefontaine are mprely unpleasant, unsavory facts of the meanness and imperfection of mankind. Santa Claus is the real truth of the goodness and gentleness of all men, women and children. Which do you choose?

DOWNING STREET, LONDON. ft Bear the Name of a Clever Man From Massachusetts. Downing street, London, where are tbe British colonial and foreign offices and the official residence of tbe first lord of the treasury and where cabinet councils are held, perpetuates the name of a clever man from Massachusetts. Those were tbe days before tbe Fourth of July had any tdgnificanee in American annals, and George Downing, the first scholar in the first public school in Massachusetts and the first graduate sent out by Harvard college, came to England and became a chaplain in Cromwell's army. By a remarkable stroke of fortune he was seut to represent England at Tbe Hague when Europe was trembling before Oliver, and during three distinct eras in England's history he held the office of British ambassador at tbe Dutch court. He was as popular or as clever under the Merry Monarch as under the protector and the commonwealth, and it came to pass In the reign of Charles II. that the man from Massachusetts was granted a great tract of land at Westminster, where be built huge mansions and laid out Downing street. To this day Downing's street is Downing street still, and, though George Downing is forgotten, there is no name in the British empire which Is more familiar to as than his. St. James' Gazette.

GREEN TURTLES.

The Youngsters Have a Perilouo Time After Being Hatched. Concerning the great turtles of the southwest Indian ocean a traveler says: "The chelonian. or green turtle (Chelone mydas), Is an animal of considerable economic importance to the atoll, for it still occurs in the vast hordes which are so often described by early voyagers in the tropics. There appear to be two distinct groups one resident and small in numbers, the other migratory and visiting the atoll to breed In numbers impossible to estimate. "Tbe latter arrives in December, and from then to April tbe sea seems alive with turtles. The females seek the small sand beaches and then ascend them with the rising tide, pushing themselves laboriously above high tide mark. Holes are then dug in the sand by means of the fore flippers until a satisfactory one is obtained, and the eggs, 200 in number, are buried, the turtle returning to sea immediately. "After forty days the eggs hatch almost simultaneously, and the young turtles dig their way up out of the sand and go down to the sea in a long procession, in the course of which they offer an easy prey to their enemies, the frigate birds and herons. Once in the sea, sharks and other large fish eat them, and only 10 per cent reach maturity." Chicago News.

THUNDERSTORMS. They Kill Over 300 Persons a Year In Madagascar. Thunderstorms never occur in the arctic regions, and even tbe north of Scotland very seldom suffers from such a visitation. The nearer you get to the equator tbe more frequent and

severe tire the electric manifestations. In parts of Central Africa the average of thunderous days rises to tbe astonishing total of 250 per annum. Yet there are curious exceptions. In Java and Sumatra, both intensely hot climates, there are but ninety-two storms yearly, and in Borneo only fifty. The Gold coast of Africa has only sixty a year, which is less than occur In Florida, though the latter country Is outside the tropics. In Jamaica there is a thunderstorm every day during the rainy season, which lasts for five months. These storms almost always occur between midday and 3 In the afternoon. Perhaps tbe most astonishing fact with regard to thunderstorms is that the island of Mauritius, which is only E50 miles east of Madagascar, has. on an average, only one thunderstorm In eighty years. Yet in Madagascar the lightning is more destructive than anywhere else in the world, the annual death roll being over 300. Pearson's Weekly. Costly Privacy. Although a waiter, he was very human, so when he perceived that the young couple who had been assigned to his table had many matters tender and confidential under consideration he retreated to a respectful distance and stared at the opposite wall. The restaurant proprietor disapproved of that humanitarian attitude. "Don't stand away back there," he said. "Go up and hang over that fellow's chair back for awhile." "Oh. no," expostulated the human waiter. "They want to talk." "Of course they do." the proprietor retorted. "That is why I want you to butt in. Every time you come near they will send you to the kitcheu for a fresh order to get you out of the way." New York Times.

Grim Relics. A prison sale is held anunally in Paris. The articles offered for sale are the clothes of murdered people, the instruments with which the crimes have been committed and tbe effects which have belonged to the deceased prisoners. Articles which have been taken to the prefecture of police and have not been claimed are also sold. The proceeds go to the Paris almshouse. Unclaimed jewelry is usually bought by ordinary brokers, but the articles which have belonged to criminals, especially those who are notorious, are bought at high prices.

MASONIC CALENDAR

Suaar.

Sugar was discovered In the East Indies by Nenrcbus, admiral of Alexander, in 32." B. C.

Intellect annuls fate. So far as a man thinks, he Is free- Emerson.

I Tuesday. Dec 2fi. Richmond InAtrf

!xo. 196, F. & A. M. Called meeting.

Work in M. M. Degree. Wednesday, Dec. 27. Webb lodge, No. 24. F. & A. M., called meeting, work in Entered Apprentice, degree. Friday, Dec. 29. King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. Called convocation; work in Mark Master degree.

"THIS DATE IN HISTORY '

DECEMBER 2S. 1791 Canada divided into two provinces, Upper and Lower Canada. 1805 France end Austria signed the treaty of Presburg. which established Baden, Bavaria and Wurtemberg as kingdoms. 1S11 The governor of Virginia and many other notables perished in the burning of a theater in Richmond. 1817 Gen. Jackson ordered to take the field against the Seminole Indians 1822 Dion Boucicault, famous actor, born. Died Sept. 18, 1890. 1831 Stephen Girard. founder of Girard College, died in Philadelphia. Born In Bordeaux, France, May 24, 1750. 1837 Admiral George Dewey, U. S. N born in Montpelier. Vt. 1872 Kamehameha V., king of Honolulu, died. Born Dec, 11, 1S30.

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Chicago has six thousand union j brick layers. j Thirty-five states have established bureaus of labor statistics. Constantinople masons and house carpenters have formed a union. New York has established the first American industrial farm colony for the unemployed. Illinois has authorized the appointment of a woman investigator of domestic employment agencies. The Tokyo municipality has decided to open labor exchanges throughout the city where employers can find help when needed. An effort to have the union label on all school text books is to be made by the Boston Allied Printing Trades Council. The following daily wages are paid in Jerusalem: Unskilled labor, 24 to 40 cents; cahpenters, 52 cents to $1.05; masons, as high as $1.60; stone cutters, 42 to 94 cents. Englandts National Union of Boot and Shoe Operatives, having adopted a label to be placed upon the products of its members, has instituted an ac

tive label campaign throughout the country. The carpenters' organization of Bakersfield, California, has collected nearly the entire amount of $28,000, which is to be used for the erection of a three-story labor temple in that city. The South is beginning to get its share of the foreign labor that is being imported into this country and in many instances the foreign laborers are being employed in the place of the Southern negroes. The usual hours of work in Japan are twelve a day. Male workers of 14 get from 16 to 25 cents a day; those under 14 from 6 to 10 cents a day. Females over 14 are paid from 10 to 14 cents a day. An arrangement has been made between the Central Molders Union, of Scotland, and the International Molders' Union of North America by which the two organizations will in the future exchange membership cards. Wages for unskilled labor in Mexico, which ten years ago were about 25 cents a day and have since slowly risen by a few cents, have now been raised to 50 and 60 cents. This applies particularly to mining and railway work. Further troubles are brewing in the textile and leather industries of Sweden, as about fifty agreements In the textile trades are to come to an end on the last day of this month, and in twenty-five leather factories the workmen are under notice. Every year there are in England three important labor conventions. There are the annual British trade union convention, the annual meeting of the German Federation of Trade Unions, and the annual convention of the labor party. The last named is to be held at Birmingham in January. The New York State Factory Investigating Commission, which has just completed its hearing before reporting to the legislature, has learned that there are more than 40,000 children in New York City, working in tenements for $3 to $3.50 a week.

Keep at It. Tattered Tim I've been trampin four years, ma'am, an it's all 'cause I heard the doctors recommend walkin as the best exercise. Mrs. Prim Well, the doctors are right. Walk along. Presbyterian of the South.

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PUT YOUR IDEAL TO WORK. It is good to have an ideal. But Ideals are nothing if they do not lead up to the real. To be worth while they must lead you somewhere and lan you somewhere. This Is the test: Try your ideal on. If It is good the results will be good. You can test the tree of idealism by its fruits. An ideal is a picture in your mind of what is supremely to be desired. It is a vision of what ought to be. And it is an impulse to better things. An ideal Is more than a dream. If you only dream you are not a good idealist. If you dream long and hesitate you are not an idealist at all; you are merely a Micawber waiting for something to turn up. If you are a true idealist you will go out and turn something up.

A true ideal is a big idea that has j worked its way down from your head into your heart. It beckons and leads ! you to an objective. A true ideal has terminal facilities. You want to do or be. Well The ideal takes hold of you where you are and as you are and puts you in motion and in tbe right direction. It leads you to n goal. Lincoln had a true ideal. It was given him by his wilderness mother, who. wheu dying, called the nine-year-old boy to ber bedside and said: "I am going away, my boy, but 1 want you to remember that your mother wants you to be a good and a useful man." That ideal goodness and usefulness led Lincoln up to the heights. Jefferson had an ideal to weave the web of democracy into the warp of organic law. It took him also to the high ground of greatness. Ideals are living issues, not mere longings. And your ideal is it good? Then harness it to your life forces in such a way that it w.ill lead you to noble accomplishment. Hold fast to it. Dream the dream, but make the dream come true. Dream? Yes. but do! Link your ideal to your will power. Then something must move, because you have linked God's power with yours. Not Much of a Father. Sammie was found crying because his cart was broken. "Never mind!" consoled a sympathetic stranger. "Your father can mend that easily." "Oh. no. he can't." the boy sobbed on wretchedly. "My father is a professor, and he don't know anything about anything but blamed old books." Chicago Record-Herald.

The Man Who Told It Said It Was Simply a True Narrative, A man who formerly was a waiter on a big transatlantic liner told this story tbe other day: "On a certain trip over I had at my table an irascible old gentleman who was a fresh air fiend. No matter wbat the weather he always Insisted on ha Ting the porthole over the table open. It was no use to argue with him. but one day when the seas were very high and the ship pitching and rolling 1 ventured to remonstrate. He was up in arms in a minute. 'You are paid to obey orders. he said tartly. Open that port.' I did. The soup

course was served in safety. Then I asked him if he would have fish. 'Of course I will.' he snapped. 'And I'll have It in a hurry. Don't keep me waiting all day.' Must at that moment an unusually big sea rolled by that is. part of it did. A goodly portion came through the porthole, soaking the old man and depositing on tbe table in front of him a live tish. No waiter on board of our ship had ever served an order so quickly before. But I didn't get any credit for it. The queer thing about thnt story." he added, "is that It isn't a fish story at all. I never told It yet to any one who believed it. but it is absolutely true." New York Press,

First I itic ot "Vanity Fair." x Brighton, England, holds memories of Thackeray. It was while staying at tbe Old Ship that be commenced a novel which was to be called "Pencil Sketches ot English Society." One night as he was lying in bed a better title suddenly occurred to bim. "1 jumped out of bed." he told Miss Perry afterward, "and ran three times round my room, uttering as 1 went. 'Vanity Fair.' 'Vanity Fair.' 'Vanitj Fair.' " Protection. "1 understand tiutt. you don't speak to your neighbors." "Not any more than necessary." replied Mr. G roue ber. "Of course they are tine neighbors, but we also have a fine cook, and we don't care to have tbem get acquainted with her." Washington Star.

Recompense. Miss Passay You have saved my life, young man. How can 1 repay you? How can I show my gratitude 1 Are you married? Young Man Yes; come and be a cook for us. Women's Home Companion.

Rainfall In Ireland. Ireland has on an average a third more rain yearly, acre for acre, than the east of England.

If youare troubled with chronic constipation, the mild and gentle effect of

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Wt eflr Ob Huedrrd IfciUarc Itewant (or My. r el Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hail Catarrh Cure. r. J. CHENEY CO.. ToM O, W. the tmdenienm. have known i. cbeerr for Ue Ust 14 yrr. and twiwvc him perfectly honorable In ail trastoeas tnittttUraaa ami anaactaUy able to carry out any obtmtkn taie by h Una. NUTIOKAL Bank or Couiatm r. Tolto. Oht Hll- Catarrh Cure ia taken Internally, actio dlrecUy upon the blood and mucous surfaces of th aynem. TecUmonlala arat free. Price r orata pit bottle. Sold bv ail Drusstets. Take Mall a Family Pilla tor cenaupaUon.

HIS PLAN OF THE DAY. Rigid Rules of Living Made by a Colonial Minister. An orderly arrangement of working hours is a desirable aud time savins

thing, but when one reads the plan ol the day made by a colonial parson. h cannot help woudering where the good man's family life came in. and if the system held any possibility of relaxa tion. The record, quoted by William Root Bliss. In "Side Glimpses From the Colonial Meeting House," is taken from the diary of Thomas Trince. a minister of the Old South church. Bos ton. 1719. Oct 30th. I marry. Nov. 10. We begin to keep House. My proposed order la: At 5 iret up and sro into Study. Pray and read In original Bible till 6. and then call up the Family. At 66 go to Family Prayers and only the Porringer of Chocolat for Breakfast till 7. 7 go into my Study til! 12V4. then do something about the House till 1 to din ner, except on Thursday study till lOVs. then dress and 11 Lecture, At 2 Dress and fro abroad till Candlelight. Kxcept Wednesdays after Dinner do something about the House and Saturday afternoons visit at Dr. Bewall'a till m, then Home and study till Candlelight Study till 9Vi. 84 go to Family Prayers and go to Bed N. B. I eat no Supper. Supreme Confidence. "Mrs. Grayson seems to have tbe atmost confidence in her husband." "I have often noticed it. I believe the would even eat mushrooms that he bad picked." Chicago Record-Herald.

Dickens Cramped Quarters. Bleak House at Broadstalrs is ol Interest to the Dickens lover because the greater part of "David Copperfield" was written there. Bat it Is not the Bleak House of the novel, whict is definitely located in Hertfordshire The novelist and his family appear tc bare been somewhat tightly packed In their Broadstairs home. When I.orti Carlisle contemplated paying a visit tc "our watering place" in 1S51 DickenJ wrote promising him the North Fore land lighthouse for a night light in hi bedroom, and be continues. "As w think of putting mignonette boxes out side the windows for the younger chil dren to sleep in by and by I nts afraid we should give your servant th cramp if we hardily undertook to lodg bim " During recent years tbe housa. has been transformed out of all recog nition London Spectator.

His Own Joke. "I admit I was found in the posse sion of firearms." said the prisoner, "but it's only a joke of mine, ray lord." "Explain yourself," said the magistrate. "Why. I put two pistols in my pocket when I go out to a friendly father ing. Then I start talking of aeroplanes." -Well?" "Then I say my life was once saved by parachutes." "Yesr "And I pull out tbe pistoli and say, Pair o' shoots.' Ha! ha! See" "Yes. 1 see. Did you make up tbal Joke yourself?" "Yes. my lord." "Two years' hard labor."--LondoB' Answers.

And All of Them Americans. An English visitor has recently been expressing bis wonderment at the facility with wblcb America assimilates its stream of immigrants. A friend with whom be was talking on the subject remarked. "My housemaid is a Norwegian, my grocer a Scotchman, my butcher is a German, my druggist is a Finn, my barber an Italian, my newsman a Jew. my laundry man Is Irish, my fishmonger English, my florist Greek and my tailor Rus'lan." Amerlcnn Hebrew.

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