Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 92, 21 February 1912 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND 8UN-TELEOKAJI, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1912.

Tb rJctz::3 ?aiiz3 ..... t ezi Ssa-Telrca Published and wnd by the PlLADIUM PRINTING CO. Mutd Rvry Kvenlna- Escept Sunday. Office Corner North th and A streets. Palladium and 8un-Tle;ram Phones Jluslness Office. 2SM; News Department. Illl. RICHMOND, INDIANA

Kaeelah G. Leeds.

.Blo

SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Jn Richmond fS.OO per year (In advance) or 10c per week. RURAL. KOUTKS One year. In advance $1.00 SIX months. In advance J. 21 One month, in advance 25 Address changed as often as desired: both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will plensn remit with order, which should be given for a pacified ters: name will not be enteral until a.jient Is rerelved. MAM, MURHCRIPTIONS Oae year. In advance $S.OO 81k months, in advance 3 0 One month, In advance 46

Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post ttfflce as second class mall matter.

New York Representatives Payne A lYouna-. SO-84 West 3d street, and 2'8 West 2nd street. New York. N. Y. Chicago l?epres-ntatlvs Payne 'Young. 747-74H Marquette Building, i Chicago. 111.

The Associatioa mi Amer.

teaa Advertisers bag mmamtned and certifies to taeircUtieaethWM-

licatiea. Thm fifties of circulation esatalesd in the Association's report muly mrm ansarauteea. tez&a if Ascrksa Wverfetrs

No. - mitotoN IMff. M. T. City

This Is My 43rd Birthday

JOHN M. JONES. John E. Jones, who has been promlrtianf In the consular service of the United States for some years, was Iborn In Virginia, February 21, 1869, and was educated at Columbia University and the National Law School, l'revlous to entering the consular service he had attracted attention as a Journalist and politician. For eighteen years he was a member of the editorHal staff of one of the leading newspalers In the national capital. He was a delegate to the Republican national national convention of 1900 and served 'a assistant secretary of the national it nmpalgn committee of that year. Mr. tJones was the first American consul iat Dalny. Manchuria, from which post he was transferred to his present poilllon as Consul General at Winnipeg.

Congratulations To: Brander Matthews, celebrated author and critic and apostle of the system of simplified spelling, 60 years old today. Hon. Donald A. MacKinnon, former X lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Is'and, 49 years old. today. John Nicholas Brown of Newport, R. I., known, as the. "righest boy in the world," 12 years old today.

w, COLDS CAUSE HEADACHE LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine, the world wide Cold and Grip remedy, removes cause. Call for full umei Look for signature E. W. GROVE, 25c.

MASONIC CALENDAR

ro. 24. F. ft A. M., stated meeting. Friday, Feb. 23. King Solomon's Chapter. No. 4, R. A. M. Called convocation. Work in Past Master decree.

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Raising Benevolent Funds . S. Kendall in the Religious Teletcope

SOME things are fundamental in the organisation, of the local church, if they are to provide adequately for the missionary and other benevolent interests. Many churches are failing in this particular because they have no well-thought-out plans. They are not applying the same tact and business sense In this department that they use in their local church affairs. It Is not in the province of the stewardship commission to order the plan a- church should use. Every church will pursue the plan which seems most desirable for its locality; but several years of experience and careful observation of churches of every kind leads us to believe that we can safely make some suggestions as to the requisites for success. There must be organization first of all. This organization must have, first, a pastor with a vision. The relation of this servant of the church to the financial welfare of this department of the congregation's finance la unique and important. Especially is this true of the smaller churches. Second, there must be a strong benevolent committee. This committee ahould be chosen wisely. It should have members who are Interested in and are in touch with the various benevolent boards. Third, there must be a co-operation of the various departments In the church. The Sunday school and Junior and Senior Christian Endeavorers should be enlisted. "Benevolent Budget" Needed. The plan Is to provide a benevolent budget which will Include all that the local church is to be called upon publicly for the regular benevolence of the congregation. The benevolent committee is to direct an every member canvass of the entire church for an annual pledge on the weekly basis, to be paid weekly or monthly. Where practical, thle canvass should be separate from the canvas for the current expense budget. This committee should see that the pledged amount Is fully adequate to meet the entire budget. The offering la to be made In connection with the regular church offering, using for this purpose the duplex envelope, either the single or the doubly pocket, as the church may furnish. These envelopes should be numbered and dated and every member supplied with one for every Sunday of the year. Every church ahould have a benevolent treasurer, who should be a member of the benevolent committee, and In connection with the general steward should open all envelopes and make the proper entries In books provided for this purpose. He should make a remittance once a quarter to the partiea designated to receive the benevolent funds. Quarterly statements should be furnished the benevolent committee for every member. This committee should distribute the same and look carefully after delinquents and collect unpaid pledges. Work of the Church. Preparation should precede the canvass to be made for benevolences. The church should give information as to the needs and work done by these varioua societies that are supported by this offering. The church should be called upon to give herself to prayer for these various interests. Secure, if possible, some one who is thoroughly familiar with the plan to present it He should show how it works elsewhere when worked. The church should provide those who are to do the work with the needed helps. Have those who are to take the pledges thoroughly familiar with the system, so that they can give the needed Information when desired. In the financial awakening of a church, in the majority of cases. It is wise to have two distinct campaigns of agitation, one for church support, the other for church benevolences. The pledge getting may be worked in one canvass, using cards especially prepared for' the double budget, having both subscription blanks on the aame card. Experience is proving that separate canvasses are resulting In the greatest success. Where this is done, the people should be given a little time to breathe between the canvasses.

THE ONLY SURE RHEUMATISM CURE ON EARTH If you suffer from rheumatic agony or have a relative or friends who ia tortured, read the following thankful letter, then go to Leo. H. Flhe and get a 60c cent bottle of RHEUMA. He sells it on money-back plan. "One year ago I had a most severe attack of rheumatism, lasting over nine weeks. Two bottles of RHEUMA cured me so completely I have never had the slightest return of the disease. We have a friend, an old lady, living here, who had rheumatism for more than a year, and ahe too was cured. Her Joints were all stiffened and swollen, and ahe had previously tried everything for rheumatism she had ever heard of." George M. Ross, 308 N. Warren Ave., Saginaw, Mich., July 27. 1911. RHEUMA startB to drive the uric acid from your system within a few hours after the first dose. It acts on kidneys, stomach, liver and bladder and brings blessed relief in one or two days.

MICROSCOPIC MESSAGES. How a Single Pigeon Might Carry a Whole Library. For more than 2,000 years carrier pigeons have been used to carry messages when no other means sufficed, and during the siege of Paris, when 363 birds were sent out from the doomed city, one of the birds performed the almost incredible feat of carrying to the outside world on one trip no less than 40,000 messages averaging twenty words each. This was 800,000 words, or the equivalent of five or six average novels. This marvel was accomplished by means of microscopic photography, the messages being first printed with ordinary type and then photographed and rephoto graphed until they had been reduced several hundred diameters. The final photography were taken on films or pellicles of collodion, each of which, about two inches square, contained 50,000 words. A dozen of these films, rolled up in a quill, weighed but one twenty-eighth of an ounce. The messages could, of course, be read with a microscope without the necessity of rephotographing and enlarging. Under favorable conditions and for comparatively short distances pigeons have carried as much as three-quarters of an ounce. Using the photo reduction method, it would therefore be possible for a single bird to carry messages equal in words to no fewer than 120 ordinary volumes. Harper's Weekly.

PHYSICIANS MEET (National News Association) ' COLUMBIA. S. C. Feb. 21. The Tri-State Medical' society, embracing North and South Carolina and Virginia, met in this city today and was called to order by the president. Dr. J. Howell Way of Wayoesville, N. C. The two days' program provides for more than one hundred papers and addresses dealing with subjects of interest to the medical profession.

CEMENT SHOW OPENS mmmmmmmmmmmmam (National News Association) CHICAGO, 111., Feb. 21. Chicago's tfth annual cement ahow opened in The Coliseum today and' will continue for one week. The principal attraction this year is an exhibition of Thomas A. Edison's concrete furniture. Besides the Edison exhibit there are numerous new features, from the "poured house" to the cement "gun."

STRONG MAN OF FRANCE

Raymond Polncalre. the new prime minister, is one of the most interesting figures in the French republic. In him are combined all that one under stands by French culture, dignity and charm of manner, added to a reputa tion of stern integrity that is nation wide. This is the third time that the French Academy has . supplied the third republic with a prime minister. The first was the duke of Broglie in 1873, and the second was M. de Freyclnet in 1890. Poincaire comes to power with ripe ideas on the subject of government. He once expressed the triple wish, which may be taken as the key to his attitude, that deputies would legislate without attempting to govern, that ministers would govern on their own responsibility and that justice should know no politics. The new premier's versatility is to a considerable degree a matter of

family influence, for his father, uncle, elder brother and couBin have all been distinguished in science and literature, and, as was said by Lavlsse when Poincaire was introduced Into the academy, they might be said to constitute a little family university all by themselves. In his private and domestic life, the new premier is anything but a recluse. He has a fine house near the famous Bois de Boulogne, where he entertains largely, but his family, his friends, his books and his works of art occupy the greatest place in his affection and his attention. He does not miss' many first night performances at the theater. He Is fond of racing.

Sparks can be kept from going up a chimney by mounting on a damper at right angles a disk of perforated metal or wire netting that will fit the flue easily.

If a new hammer handle be rubbed well with a thin paste made of plaster of parte and Unseed oil It will ! it a good grip and be nonabsorbent of moisture or grease.

' THIS DATt JN HISTORY '

FEBRUARY 21. 1791 David Humphrey of Connecticut appointed first United States minister to Portugal. 1813 Ogdensburg, N. Y., taken by a force of British and Canadian soldiers. 1831 Robert Hall, a famous religious writer and public orator, died in Bristol, England. Born May 2, 1764. 1847 American army under Gen. Zachary Taylor arrived before Buena Vista. 1848 John Quincy Adams, sixth President of the U. S., died in Washington, D. C. Born in Quincy, Mass., July 11, 1767. 1885 Dedication of the Washington Monument in Washington, D. C. 1905 Measure introduced in the Dominion parliament creating the provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan. 1J08 Harriet G. Howard, noted sculptor, died in Watertown, Mass. Born there, Oct. 6, 1830.

No Home in This City Need Have a Dirty, Discolored, Water-Closet Bowl The household duty that was always the most unpleasant is now made easy. Sani-Flush, a powdered chemical compound, cleans water-closet bowls without scrubbing or touching the bowl with the hands. No matter how badly

discolored, it will quickly make the bowl as white as new. It won't injure the bowl or plumbing nor is if dangerous to handle, like the acids so often used.

m Cleans Water-Closet Bowls Quick, Easy, Sanitary

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