Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 143, 20 April 1912 — Page 6

PAGE SIX.

THE RICH3IOXD PALLADIUM 4XD STJX-TELEGKA3I, SATURDAY, AFKIL 20, 1912.

L SOCIETY f MEETS TODAY. i A meeting of the Mary F. Thomas W. C. T. U. will be held Monday afternoon at two thirty o'clock with the president, Mrs. Marth Little at her 'home, 123 South Eleventh street. The i 'members are invited to be present. GUESTS HERE. Miss Shyloh Van Meter and Miss Jeannette Van Meter of Cambridge City, Indiana, attended the annual Easter ball of the Phi Delta Kappa fraternity held last evening in the Pythian Temple. SOCIAL EVENTS FOR THE WEEK. Monday A meeting of the Dorcas Society will be held in the afternoon. The Magazine club will hold its regular meeting. Tuesday Mrs. Julian Cates will be hostess for a meeting of the Tuesday jjiridge club at her apartments in the ..Wayne Flats. Members of an Afternoon card club will meet. The hostess will be aniHounced later. Supper at First Presbyterian church. Wednesday The wedding of Mr. Norman Craighead and Miss Fannie kjones, daughter of Mrs. Maud Jones, 'will be celebrated in Dallas, Texas. "rhe young people will come to this xity for a residence. Mr. Ray Bussen will be married to iMiss Stella Johnson in the morning of (this day at the St. Andrew's Catholic 'church. Miss Etta Jones, daughter of Mr. and iMrs. F. M. Jones, will be married to iMr. Frank Fagan. Thursday Mrs. Milton Craighead jWill be hostess for a meeting of the Buzzers' whist club at her home in (North Tenth street. I "The Bohemian Girl" will be the attraction at the Gennett theater. A meeting of the Woman's llelief 'Corps will be held in the Post Rooms tat the Court house at the usual hour. '..Friday The annual banquet of the Tourist club will be held. Saturday The April social committee will give a musical at the Country Nclub. The first submarine boat was indented and successfully tried in the eighteenth centuryComing To Richmond Associated Doctors, Specialists Will Be at the Westcott Hotel, Wed. and Thurs. Apr. 24-25 One Day Only t Hours: 10 A. M. to 8 P. M. j Remarkable Success of These Talented Physicians in the Treatment of Chronic Diseases. Olfer Their Services Free of Charge The Associated Doctors, licensed by the state of Indiana for the treatment of deformities and all nervous and chronic diseases of men, women and children, offer to all who call on this trip, consultation, examination, advice free, making no charge whatever,, ex cept the cost of medicine. All that is asked in return for these valuable jservicea is that every person treated will state the result obtained to their friends and thus prove to the sick and 'afflicted in every city and locality, 'that at last treatments have been discovered that are reasonably sure and certain in their effect. These doctors are considered by many former patients among America's leadins stomach and nerve specialists and are experts in the treatment of chronic diseases and so great and wonderful have been their re sults that in many cases it is hard ndeed to find the dividing line be tween skill and miracle. Diseases of the stomach, intestines, liver, blood, skin, granulated eyelids, nerves, heart, spleen, kidneys, or bladder, rheumatism, dropsy, sciatica, diabetes, bed-wetting, leg ulcers, weak Jungs and those afflicted with longstanding, deep-seated, chronic diseases, that have baffled the skill of the family physician, should not fail to call. According to their system no more operations for appendicitis, gall stones, tumors, goiter or certain forms of cancer. They were among the first in America to earn the name of the "Bloodless Surgeons," by doing away with the knife, with blood and with all pain in the successful treatment of these dangerous diseases. If you have kidney or bladder troubles bring a two-ounce bottle of your urine for chemical analysis and microscopic examination. Deafness often has been cured in sixty days. No matter what your ailment may be. no matter what others may have told you. no matter what experience you may have had with other physicians, it will be to your advantage to eee them at once. Have it forever settled in your mind. If your case is Incurable they will give you such advice as may relieve and stay the disease. Do not put off this duty you owe yourself or friends or relatives who are sufferWfc because of your sickness, as a visit this time costs you nothing. Remember, this free offer is for one day only. Married ladies must come with their fbusbands and minors with their parents. Ap-10-13-17-20-23

A0DITIO1

ANGLO-SAXON FINE

.That Class Sometimes Called Effete Develops Highest Form of Heroism. Suffrage Leaders in Indiana Easily Raise Funds.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. Life is dramatic. You may think it, on the contrary, tame, monotonous, on a dead level of sameness. Neutral-tinted, pale, flabby. But it is never so. In its seeming is merely translated your attitude toward it. It is full of surprises, replete with contrasts, with sudden and annihibating changes, with shocks and with theatric situations. How could the dramatic be more superlative than in the sinking of the Titanic. It was a splendid drama the saving of the women and children while the men stood aside. After all the Anglo-Saxon man, when put to the test, is god-like in his heroism and his chivalry. Contrast the masculine dtnizens of the first and second cabins with those of the steerage the latter from the continental countries with one or two Asiatics who, at first, scrambled for place in the lifeboats. In the end it is the most highly civilized of the human species who is the bravest. Who practices the great virtues of self immolation, of renunciation. See the much maligned John Jacob Astor "decorously stepping to one side," when he had seen his young wife safely put into the life-boat. "Decdrously stepping to one side," epitomizes the whole story of the Gentleman. It is not always the "dude" who is the white-livered coward. Nor the dandy who shows the white feather. v One of the greatest reputations for bravery made in the Civil War was that of a regiment from New York's most aristocratic families. And let it not be forgotten that Colonel Astor gave his private yacht! to the government to be turned into a gun-boat for use in the SpanishAmerican War. Nor that he did gallant service as an officer. There 5s a type familiar to the readers of the stories of Richard Harding Davis and Robert Chambers, which is sometimes derided, but nonetheless exists, and which rises to just such an occasion as the sinking of the Titanic. Henry B. Harris, one of this country's greatest theatrical managers, never staged anything that remotely approached the climax of his own life. Taking a seat in the life-boat by his wife's side, Mr. Harris looked up when he heard "Ladies first." "All right," he responded. Kissed his wife, pressed her to his heart, said "Goodbye, my dear," and also "decorously stepped aside", to assist women and children to safety and to -disappear forever with the Titanic. The shooting down of three men in the steerage by an officer would be denounced as impossible melodrama on the stage. The playing of the band as the ship sank! The coterie of card-players who calmly continued their game while the boat tilt-d on end prior to the final plunge! Bravado, you say? Rather, the most exquisite heroism in the history of such catastrophes. They were "up against it." ' They faced the grim spectre at closer range than an army on the battlefield. And there wasn't a whimper. It is a splendid spectacle of the stoicism of humanity. News Forecast WASHINGTON, D. C, April 20. The coming week will afford something of a breathing spell in the hardfought contest for the presidential nominations. The conventions and primaries to be held will be neither so numerous nor so important as those that have marked the week just closed. The interest of the Republican politicians will be confined largely to Missouri and Iowa, where State conventions are to be held for the selection of delegates to the national convention at Chicago. The Roosevelt claims appear to be stronger so far as Missouri is concerned, though the Taft managers are not ready to concede' that they have lost the state. In Iowa, the Taft people Tiave strong hopes of winning as a result of the progressive vote being divided between Roosevelt and Cummins. The Republican State and district conventions in Rhode Island will be held Wednesday. The Taft people are in control of the regular party organization and expect to win out in the convention. A different situation exists in New Hampshire, where Tuesday's primaries are expected to determine the complexion of the Republican State convention. Governor Bass and a strong progressive following in the Granite State are working hard in the Roosevelt interests. Encouragement has been lent to their efforts by the recent Roosevelt victory in the neighboring State of Maine. In pursuance of a movement initiated by President Taft, representatives of business organizations throughout the country are to meet in Washington Tuesday to discuss plans for the formation of a "national board of trade." which shall have for its object the bringing of business men unto touch with the Government for advice and counsel in the administration of laws, the enactment of new statutes and the development of commerce. Among other large and important gatherings of the week will be the an

TYPE OF GENTLEMAN

When these qualities lie dormant ready to spring into fine flower under the warmth of stress, philosophers need not despair. These are the crises which make you proud of your kind. You are not ashamed to belong to that innumerable band of human beings who man the ship of life. The other day in Indianapolis the members of the Woman's Franchise League raised one thousand dollars in five minutes for the prosecution of their work. They need five thousand dollars and will get it. It is a fine thing to see women subscribing to a fund for their own emancipation. For active freedom. For something else besides a prize .for a bridge party or a box for a charity ball. Women have been accused, and justly, of a lack of esprit de corps. But it is because, for one reason, they have too long been confined to competition for the minor prizes in the game of life. To the scramble for sex supremacy. To the capturing of man's emotions. To petty awards, to insignificant ends. Most women are possessed of a certain amount of executive ability. Indeed this quality in the average woman is far more dominating than in the average man. You only have to observe the management of the average household to know this. The conduct of a menage, even on a modest scale, is a complicated affair. It calls for varying activities, self repression, sudden decisions and a controlling hand. This executive capacity, directed to larger ends, shows itself in the successful manipulation by women of their campaigns for civic recognition. That in Indiana, in instance, is being engineered with system. A year 'ago no-one would have dreamed that a state organization with constantly increasing momentum would be in existence. As stated, at the recent state convention held in Indianapolis, twelve out of thirteen, congressional districts into which Indiana is politically divided, were represented. Many new branch leagues over the state have since been organized, although the convention is scarcely three weeks distant. And, by the way, let all women interested in this propaganda discourage the use of the word "suffragette." This is peculiarly English in origin and application. American women are suffragists. The movement in this country is dignified and deserves considerate treatment. And this consideration it should have at the hands of its friends. Nothing is gained by leering at ; phase of activity in which you may be either openly or secretly interested. And the interest is there. Here in Richmond many women are ready to be convinced. But their information is limited and vague because they have not followed the details of the propaganda by publication either in the newspapers or otherwhere. To all these the Richmond League gives an invitation. The next meeting will be held April 26th at four in the afternoon. At this time information as to the purposes of the League end the movement in general will be discussed. For Coming Week nual convention of the National Retail Grocers' Association, at Oklahoma City; the annual meeting of the American Newspaper Publishers' Association, in New York, and the annual convention of the Southern Wholesale Grocers' Association, in Montgomery. Of interest in church and educational circles will be the unveiling of a statute of Bishop Carroll at Georgetown University. Bishop Carroll was the founder of the university and the first Catholic bishop and archbishop in the United States. The anniversary of the birth of General Grant will be made the occasion for the customary memorial exercises and banquets in various parts of the country next Saturday. President Taft is to speak at the Union League Club banquet in Philadelphia and Vice President Sherman will be heard at a similar function to be given under the auspices of the American Club at Pittsburg. Archbishop Ireland has accepted an invitation to deliver the annual oration at the memorial exercises in Galena, 111., the old home of General Grant. "My little son had a very severe cold. I was recommended to try Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, and before a small bottle was finished he was as well as ever," writes Mrs. II. Silks, 29 Dowling Street. Sydney, Australia. This remedy is for sale by all dealers. DR. HALL LECTURES ON SOCLA.L HYGIENE Dr. Winfield Scott Hall, social hygiene expert, and educator of the new science of physical hygiene, spoke for some time to an interested audience of the high school boys of the city at the High School auditorium yesterday afternoon at 1:45. Dr. Scott HalL of Chicago, is waging the fight under the auspices of the school board, Earlham college, and of the Young Mens Christian Association.

y PLAY I JS TOLD TO Ml) S-HillerTon BY GEORGE MORIARITY. Third Baseman and Field Captain Detroit Tigers, and Who Is Regarded One of the Best Inside Players In the Game. Bosh has made the three plays that I consider the three greatest I ever saw, and the greatest of them all, I believe, he made in a game against New York on the Highlanders' park last summer. The play was made while we still thought we had a Chance to win the pennant, and for quickness of thinking and action it was simply wonderful. I had the opportunity to know just how fast he thought and acted because I had a part in the play myself that of assisting him to make it. although he came near being too fast for me. The play came in the eighth inning of the game, with one of the Highlanders out, runners on third and first, and a run needed to tie us up. You know in that position the Detroit team plays the second baseman and shortstop Just a little closer to the plate than when no one is on bases, while the third and first baseman are pulled close up. We try for a double play if the ball is hit to either short or second, unless the batter is extremely fast. If the ball is hit slowly to second or short it goes home to cut ofT the runner, while, third and first baseman throw home to shut ofT the run, unless the ball is bit directly at them and fast enough to make a double play the other way and retire the side. In this play I was close up, and Wolters, I believe it was. hit one past me, Just out of reach on my left side. I made a dive loward the ball, almost reached it, but It went past. I thought it had passed Bush, too, but in leaping for it I turned toward him and saw him coming like a flash, angling out onto the grass to meet the ball. I kept on as hard as I could to be there if he blocked the ball. Just then I, heard him yell to me as he made a scoop of his hands. Instead of trying to hold the ball he scooped it to me, squarely into my hands. 1 slammed it down to second and O'Leary drove it to first, completing a four-handed double play. In a fraction of a second Bush had figured GEORGE MORIARITY. that tf he held the ball and tried U turn and throw he would lose so much time in stopping and turning that thedouble would be impossible. He decided that as I was facing second base, we could gain time if he scooped the ball to me. We got the decision at first by a short step saved the run that already had crossed the plate, and saved the game as well, as neither side could score again. I regard that as the most wonderful play I ever saw on a field, and no one but Bush could have done it. (Copyright. 1911. by W. O. Chapman.) Palladium Want Ads Pay. You Want Good Tire Service and You Are Not Getting It, Or if you believe it possible to reduce your present yearly tire bill a comparative test of G & J on the same car with other brands will satisfy you that such a result can be had without extra cost over .the price you pay for other tires. You can't do a better thing than try them out. Specify the old reliable G. & J. Tires, made at Indianapolis, Ind. RODEFELD CO., 96 W. Main St, Phone 3077. Local Distributors. HEARSEY-WILLIS CO, Indianapolis, Ind, -State Distributors

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VJWrTED STATES IF 1

Poultry Dept. By Mrs. S. P. Pike

ARTIFICIAL INCUBATION. In these days of extensive poultry culture, artificial incubation is the rule rather than the exception. The greater profit obtained by the sale of the early hatched ' chick and the dif-! ficulty in persuading the hen to set i early enough, .has taught the wideawake poultryman that he must rely on the incubator to produce his early fries. , I cannot recommend any special make of incubator nor any special style, for any of the standard makes have been tried and proven success- j ful, and the style should be selected 1 to meet the needs ef the operator. Every manufacturer sends out a cer-! tain set of fixed rules adapted to the use of the machines he manufactures and these directions should be closely followed by the operator if he would be successful. These directions usually pertain to regulating and adjusting the machine. The amateur should always run an incubator empty for at least twelve hours after the damper is regulated, and the least trouble will be caused during incubation if care be taken to have the damper raised about oneeighth of an inch when the temperature in the egg chamber reaches just 103 degrees, for then the regulator will be able to take care of any sud den change in temperature, either higher or lower, and the regulator I screw will not have to be changed at any time after the eggs are placed in the machine. We do not begin to air and turn the eggs until the second or third day after they were placed in the incubator, and then they should be cooled every morning from ten to twenty-five minutes, depending on the temperature of the room and the length of time they have been set, starting to air them the first week for from ten to fifteen minutes, and gradually increasing the length of time up until the eighteenth day. They should be turned twice a day; after the cooling process in the morning and again at night without cooling them. It is not necessary that they, be turned half over. Just so the position of the eggs are changed, thus changing the position of the germ and allowing it to develop in all directions. A gentle movement with the palm of the hand is nearest like the motion given by the old hen than any other way, and the closer we stick to nature the better the results we are sure to have. And then too, rubbing the eggs against each other has a tendency to make the shells sleek and smooth, again imitating the natural way. On the evening of the eighteenth day is usually the last opportunity to turn the eggs, for if the heat has been kept up to the required temperature the chicks should begin to pip through the shells on the nine teenth day and the doors of the machine should be closed and not opened until the greater per cent of the hatch is finished. Now about testing the eggs in the incubator, something not usually done when the eggs are set under the hens. We always test twice during the incubation period, usually .'about the tenth day for the first test and on the seventeenth for the second and last. When you leave unfertile eggs in your incubator, you are just requiring that much more heat to keep up the temperature, for there are no germs in the infertile eggs to create heat. Then at the time of your second test you are able to take out all the eggs containing dead germs which might create an unpleasant and unhealthy odor in the machine, thereby contaminating the live germs and causing weakness and disease in the chicks that hatch. Then another thing, when you test the eggs, especially the last time, you can ascertain whether or not the aircell is large enough to provide sufficient air to support the chick until the shell is broken. On the seventeenth day the air cell should occupy a space equal to one-third of the contents of the egg. If the air space Is too small, the circulation of air in your incubator is not right and should be remedied at once. Now, we have found that a greater amount of heat is needed this year to increase the hatch. Last year we 3

IH SgSg $2.25 sj i and up

Richmond Made Mowers

keep it from turning yellow and getting coarse. Buy your mower early. Grass should be cut early and every

JOMS HARDWARE CO.

Buff Orpington Cockerel and Three Pullets Full brother and sisters to first prize pen at Richmond show. Quitting Business is reason for selling:. You can buy these cheap.

0. E. OLER

kept the temperature at from 101 to 103 degrees. This year, we start with the temperature between 102 and 103 degrees and at the time the hatch Is due. we are running the heat at 105. " I cannot account for this difference in any other way except that on account of the severe winter through which the hens have just passed, and the consequent lack of exercise, the germ in the egg Is weak and can only develop in a higher temperature. Care should be taken after each hatch to thoroughly disinfect the machines, and there is nothing better for this than crude carbolic acid in a little warm water. Spray this mixture into every crevice and corner of the egg chamber, then close the doors and keep them shut for about twelTe hours or until you have the next

batch of eggs reauy to piace in vac machines. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Thunder and Eggs. Does a thunder storm hurt the eggs in an incubator? S. S.. Liberty. Answer. Some claim that thunder does effect the eggs in an incubator that are about to hatch, but personally we have never had any such trouble. How Long to Mate. How long does the male have to be with the hens before the eggs are fertile? Answer. I have known eggs to be tertile jfter a few days, but it is best to allow ten days or two weeks. Savina Eaai For Hatching. Should eggs that are being saved for hatching be laid out so that one does not lay on top of another? Will it effect the percentage of the hatch 7 Answer. Eggs should be laid so that they can be turned every other day at least. There can be no harm in placing them on top of the other, provided they are kept in a room of uniform temperature. If they are placed in egg crates and the crate turned, of course every egg is turned at the same time. It is always advisable to let eggs cool before placing them in any receptacle. Toe-Marked Chicks. Will a hole in the foot of a chicken disqualify It from winning a prize? 4 Mrs. W. E. D. Answer. No, this will not disqualify them. It is quite common. In fact. It is the best plan to punch the web of the feet of the chicks as they are hatched; in keeping a record of their ancestry and the toemark. This system is understood by the judges, and no cuts are given for the hole in the web. Mixing Breeds. Is there any danger of contamination of pure bred eggs through the male if he is allowed to consort with hens of another breed? For example, suppose I have a flock of pure bred It. I. R. hens and also some Barred Plymouth Rock hens in the same flock, and allow a R. I. R. male to minale with the whole lot of hens. Would the eggs that the R. I. R. hens lay be pure or would they produce a flock of mixed chicks? Q. . Answer. In such a case the eggs laid by the pure bred R. I. R. bens that mated only with a R. I. R. male should Droduce pure bread R. I. R. chicks. The chicks produced from the eggs laid by the B. v. kocks wouia be mixed. BRAZILIAN BALM "The Old Reliable"" is magic for coughs, grip, croup, asthma, catarrh and quick consumption to the last staee. KILL8 THE GERMSI THERE ARE THOUSANDS OF PECK-WILLIAMSON UNDERFEEDS in use all over the country. Get our booklet of testimonials. When you get an Under feed from us you are conscious of the fact that you have the best possible beating plant. Pilgrim Furnace Co. 529 Main St. Phone 139C 714 to 720 S. 9th St. Phone 1685 ALL SIZES Including Oiler week to Dublin, Ind.

ORPINGTONS. S. C BUFFS,

Eggs for Hatching. From "Zero" Egg-laying strain. Egg record 189 January, 205 February, 22S March, 4 .. 175 eighteen days ef April, from 1 hen. Why pay more when you can get these for $1.00 per 15. A. E. SCHUH, 420 West Main Street. Use Globe and Purina SCRATCH FEEDS , For Sale at ' W. . GARVER'S 910 Main St. Phone 219. PRIZE WINNING S. C W. ORPINGTONS Five Ribbons and 7 Specials on 7 birds. Bock your order for eggs., Some extra good pullets for sale. Also S. C. B. ' Minorca. Milton Poultry Yards, Milton, Ind. FOR SALE ALL SIZES INCUBATORS manufactured by "J. G. Hindertr. Box 225.. Factory 2123 Pitt St, Anderson, Ind. FOR SALE S. C. White Qrplngtons. Cockerels, Hens, 'Pullets, Setting Hens and Eggs. A. R. HOWSER. R. F. D. 8 Easthaven car at Delcamp grocery 'Phone your order now for settinge and baby chicks from White Plymouth Rock. The kind that lay in the winter. Falrvlew Poultry Farm. R. R. No. 7. Phone 4033. FOR SALE 2 PENS WHITE WYANDOTTES Phone 4155 RALPH COOPER, R. R. No. 3 EGGS FOR HATCHING From 'Tecktonius Strain, single and rose comb Buff Leghorn. Prize winner Richmond, 1912 Poultry Show. C. H. BENTLAGE 401 South 11th, or Phone 2162 SACRIFICE SALE 45 S. C. White Orpington Hen and Pullets, $1.50 and $2.00 per head. Get first choice. A. R. Howser, 619 So. 9th St, City SCHNELLE WHITE ROCKS Awarded prizes at the" Richmond shows as follows: 1st pen. 1st cockerel, 1st pullet, also high scoring cockerels In the Plymouth Rock class, also 2nd, 3rd, 4 th prize pullets. These White Rocks are equal to the best Id the world. Setting Eggs for sale, $1.50 and $2 per 15 eggs. Fertility guaranteed. Also stock for sale. C. H. SCHNELLE, R. R. 3. FOR SALE ROSE AND SINGLE COMB RHODE ISLAND REDS EGGS FOR HATCHING Phone 2511. BUY A PETALUMA INCUBATOR Oldest and Most Reliable Made SEANEY & BROWN 915 Main SL FOR SALE EGGS From Thoroughbred Black Lengthens, 8. C White Leghorns and Barred Ply mouth Rock Pent, 2 and 3 of each variety at 50 cents per setting of 15 eggs, at the house; packed to ship, 10c extra. From pens No. 1 of each variety, prices on application. 18 Premiums in 10 and 11. Book your orders now. T. C. Hough, Fountain City, Ind. Phone 172C. S. C. Buff Orpingtons Cook Byers Martz strain. Eggs, Pen No. 1, $2X0; Pen No. 2, $1.50 per setting. Good hatch guararvteed. Richmond show, 1912 9 entries; 6 prizes. J. W. RETHMEYER 355 Richmond Ave. WHJTE WYANDOTTS The famous Dustow Strain. Eggs for Setting, $1.50 per 15 D. E. ROBERTS. R. R. No, 3 Phone 3634. BARRED ROCK EGGS FOR HATCHING $1X0 per Setting; $5X0 per 100 Write for prices on eggs from yard containing our exhibition 4 Birds. U M. PIKE, Fountain City, Ind.