Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 16, 28 November 1912 — Page 4
rAGrE FOUB,
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA5I, THURSDAY, XOYTS3IBE1X 2S, 15lS.
Tire Richmond Palladium and Son-Telegram PAXOLDIUM PRINTING OA ImumI Every Bming BMpt BuntoT. Oftlo. Corner Nsrth tn and A trfc Palladium and 8un-Tela PhonjT mant. RICHMOND. INTIANA Maaalah O. s ataUt SUBSCRIPTION TRM In JlJcbmond s.O per ysar I vanca) or lto par wakuhal notrriw M On year, in advaaea ...; Wi months. In adrano ........ -J? too inontb, in aavanoa Address chanced a oftan aa '.r; both new and old addr " Subscribers will plaaa rami "J"1" rder, which should b iff-, specified term; nam will aoi D i until paj-aeni is received. MA.ll. SUBSCRIPTIOW1 One year. In advance ! ' Blx months, in advance .......... One month, in advance .......... Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office as second class mail matter. New Tork Representative Payne Touns. 30-34 West Sid street. d 11 SS West 32nd street. New York, N. T. Chicago Representative Payne Toung. 747-74 Marquette BuUdtn. Chicago. I1L
What to Give Thanks For.
nfiTn i a a has . )
theeircelatioaertiuspeiD-
licalien. The figures ot cireuianea contained in the Association' report only ere guaranteed. Association ef American Advertisers
No. 1C9. .Whitehall Blag. H. Y. City
Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A.NYE.
AN INVESTIGATION." "In your opinion, who was to blame
tfor the wreck?"
This question was asked the officials
of an eastern railroad who were placed on the witness stand at an investigation of a terrible wreck.
"Undoubtedly the engineer." The answer was made by all of them.
pCbB blame was put upon the engineer jof the train. And the engineer? He was dead. Being dead, he was Incapable of appearing in his own behalf, and, the preponderance of the testimony being! against him, he was adjudged guilty, j "Is there any way," was asked, "by i which such an accident could be prevented?" "The only way Is to tighten the discipline upon the employees." ! Jt was patiently explained that no matter how good your roadbed and equipment, no matter what safety appliances may be employed, you cannot Insure the perfect working of the human brain And so on. Nevertheless It was afterward shown that operating officials had recently Issued a circular letter to the passenger engineers calling attention to the lateness of the trains in reaching the terminals and urging the necessity of maintaining the schedules. The engineers easily understood the significance of the warning. Whatever the condition of the road, they were expected to take the risk and make the time. i The dead engineer knew the track was bad over a certain section. Two wrecks had recently occurred there, but He must either lose his job or Jam his heavy train through on schedule. He took the risk, held the train to the time tables, put the train into the ditch and died. What caused the wreck? A soft roadbed and rotten ties! To go over that section according to orders was to invite disaster. Therefore the engineer was guilty. There was nobody to stand up for the dead engineer, who did only whet he was ordered to do. And there was no one to speak In behalf of the 200 pnssengers. Moreover 1 The engineer was dead. 1 And the people easily forget
Don't waste your money buying strengthening plasters. Chamberlain's Liniment is cheaper and better. Dampen a piece of flannel with it and bind over the affected parts and it will relieve the pain and soreness. For sale by all dealers. Advertisement.
L
The Masonic Calendar
As civilization has advanced through the centuries the appeal to arms in the settlement of disputes has become more and more repugnant to mankind, but the people of the larger European nations are now confronted with the prospect of the greatest war in the history of the world. Many of them are ignorant of the cause of the complications which threaten to set all Europe ablaze, but they will be herded Into regiments and batteries, uniformed and given guns and told to go forth to fight for "the glorjf of their country." Today as the Aemrican people give thanks for the blessings of peace and prosperity which walks hand-in-hand with it, trembling peasants In Austria, Italy and Russia are cowering in their miserable homes waiting In terror for the call which will send them forth to battle against fellow men to whom they bear no grudge human pawns, to quote the London Times, played with in an international game of chess by men in the chancellories of Europe "who have become so enmeshed in formulas and the jargon of diplomacy that they have ceased to be conscious of the poignant realities with which they trifle." You, Mr. American citizen, who grumbled today that Thanksgiving is a grim farce to you because your pay is small and the cost of living high, are an object of envy to your brothers across the broad Atlantic, who, as you eat your modest Thanksgiving dinner, hear the tread of armed hosts marching past their doors.
'A Number of Historical Facts About - The Popular Thanksgiving Dinner
The American people today can give thanks for other things besides the fact that the spectre of grim war has not raised its blood stained form upon this continent, notably the dawn of a new era which is to bring political and economical reforms to this great republic. On November 5, this year, nearly five million people cast into ballot boxes all over this broad land a demand for the restoration of popular government and for the safeguarding of human rights, and their demands cannot be ignored. Surely thi is a triumph we can give whole hearted thanks for, if one is broad enough to forget his petty misfortunes and grievances. ) And as we offer our thanks this day, let us not forget a prayer that our European brothers may be spared the horrors of a war which would check the progress of civilization for a century.
The center of the turkey producing industry is not far from the center of the population of the continental United States, near Bloomington, 111. Hotel restaurant, club and steamboat bills of fare would make it appear that most turkeys come from Vermont. The principal achievements of turkey raisers within five years have been a remarkable general Improvement in stock that has eliminated the run down breeds once common, east, west and south, and a tremendous expansion of the industry by which the nation has today the largest number of prime turkeys, reckoned upon the basis of the country's population, ever recorded. As beef, mutton and pork began to mount to very high prices five to six years ago railroad and steamboat operators and others interested in getting good loads of way freight
began to take a deep interest in get
burg why Newburg nobody ever knew. Weinberg's bill of fare for his special annual banquet to. the good livers of the exchanges was land crabs and mangoes from Haytl, "spread eagles," mallard ducks, candied yams, Virginia corn pones, South Carolina
bis travels In a book: published In London just a ft eh the great fire. He also told the absurd story of the starving condition of the Pilgrims and of their being reduced at one time to a dinner of three grains of corn. The fact was that none of the early or late colonists could have starved at Plymouth or elsewhere along the north or the south shore, as the sea teemed with fish and shellfish and the woods
I were alive with game. As late as thirty
years ago Brant kock and M&rsnneia.
L .11 1 1 I LIl i j
uouea rice, appie Pie. nue uranuy. neRP Plymouthi Mas8.t were resorted New Jersey peach brandy, claret, to bv hundreds of hunters of wild birds champagne and coffee from Aden, Ara- and , thl h r de(r and ild blrd bia.
I R tuft to f,VVU i a j tuv u a vruaa j What the Pilgrims and the Puritans
Puritan Turkey
In spite of the statements of popular historians, roasted turkey with giblet gravy and with cranberry or apple sauce was a very popualr Sunday and holiday dish many years before turkey became standardized as the central
dish of the Thanksgiving Day dinner j in Plymouth Colony and among the Pu- i ritans and their descendants settled j along Boston Bay and the north shore j
of Massachusetts. The story that tur- j
craved for in the early years of the
settlements was roast beet and matton, pork, wheat, oat and barley bread, venison pasties made from the red deer stock, native to England; jams
! and Jellies from English fruits preserv
ed with brown sugar from the Orient
and English mead, ales and Holland spirits. Most of them disliked Indian corn In all forma of products for human consumption, and they disliked oysters, clams, lobsters, mussels, scallops, turkeys and native venison. It was only when marriages of the early English settlers and their descendants in New England with Indians brought about many persons of mixed bUxvl that the English prejudice against certain native American food products passed away.
ting in the work of the fanners' socle-1 ky the mainstay of the Thanks-,
American Prosperity.
Surely American business men will have no excuse for failure to give thanks today for the return of prbsperity. This prosperity could be distributed on a fairer basis, for the wage earner who has contributed so largely in creating the existing industrial conditions is not receiving all the rewards his brains and hands have won for him, but the voice of labor has been heard and the day he will receive the recognition he Is entitled to is not far distant. What the American workers have done for this country commercially within the year is set forth in the following editorial appearing in the Washington Times: It is announced by the statistical sharps that foreign commerce broke all records in October. October isn't commonly the star month for exports, that distinction almost always being held by December. It is fairly to be expected that the present year will be no exception to this rule. The splendid autumn weather has facilitated moving of crops to the seaboard, and we may anticipate that the holiday month will climax the showing of a record-making year, with some figures that will make past performances look modest. Almost $257,000,000 of exports left our shores in October, against $288,500,000 in December, 1910, which till now has been the record for any single month. For the first ten months of 1912 our exports have aggregated $1,870,000,000, which is over $200,6oO,000 in excess of last year's showing for the same period. A little more than half the October exports were agricultural products. That trade is necessarily reciprocal, is once more shown by these October figures. Much as our exports have increased, imports grow yet faster; the balance of trade continues to shrink. The balance is over a million less than it was on the smaller aggregate business of October, 1911. It is altogether probable that our grand total of exports and imports for the completed year 1912 will touch four billions of dollars. Yet; it is only a few years since the nation was pluming itself on having reached a billion of exports, while the imports were vastly less.
This is My 39th Birthday
SUZANNE ADAMS. Suzanne Adams, the noted operatic singer, was born in Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 28, 1873, and received her early education in Boston. Later she studied music In Paris, where she made her operatic debut at Juliet in 1894. After singing for several seasons at Covent Garden, m London, she made her American debut at Chicago in 1898. This was followed by a period of five or six years, during which time Miss Adams sang almost exclusively at Covent Garden, appearing in many leading operatic roles. At the command of Queen Victoria she sang a number of times at state concerts at Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle. Miss Aaams was last heard in America on the concert stage. In 1839 the singer was married to Leo Stern,
the well known violin-cellist. Congratulations to: Earl Grey, former Governor General of Canada, 61 years old today. John Barrett, director general of the Pan-American Union, 46 years old today. David Warfield, one of the foremost American actors, 47 years old today. William H. Lewis, assistant attorney general of the United States, 44 years old today. Henry Bacon, the architect, selected to design the Lincoln memorial at Washington, 46 years old today. Swager Sherley, who has been reelected to congress from the Fifth Kentucky district, 41 years old today. Lemuel P. Padgett, representative in congres of the Seventh district of Tennessee, 57 years old today.
One Kind of a Good Time. Some men's only idea of a good time is to see how much sleep they can do w'thont. Washington Star.
oooooo BORN AGAIN oooooo
o o
o o o o o o o o o o o o
o
The body is never at rest. Every seven years we are practically bom again. Our original edit have been broken down thrown out and replaced by new ones.
THIS process is a necessary grind of life's cog wheels or cycles proceeding rapidly while we work hard with brain or nraacle and slowing down while we rest or sleep. Thus the chief factor in this constant rh antra this death and birth of the tissues. Is the bleed. ,
IN anaemic (' those who ;
'thin blooded") people,
are pale and puny, or
those who carry the signs of poor, poisoned blood in pimples, blotohee or boils upon their body we know the calls of thebodyarenot (retting-soffleient oxyeen carried them by the red-blood corpaaolea.
o o o
o o o o o o o o o
which removes the poisons and supplies to the organs of the body pare, red blood. 0 Old people, especially in the spring- season, shew the effects ef "thin" blood, feeble circulation cold hands and feet. Children and people ef all aires recovering- from
frrippe" fevers and acute diseases should obtain this tonic and blood builder either in liquid or tablet form of the druggist.
A true reliable blood maker vohich has gitmn satisfaction for over forty yearn in its liquid form is Dr. Pierce's (E olden Tffledical npiscovery
Send SO one-cent stamps for trial box of tablets.
o o
OOO Address: Dr. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N.Y. OOO
Friday, Nov. 29. King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Called Convocation, work in Mark Master degree.
CONSTIPATION CORRECTED. The quickest and most permanent way of correcting constipation, biliousness, stomach, liver and bowel trouble is to take Blackburn's Casca-Royal-Pills better than castor oil. Physic, tonio and purifier. 10c and 23c. Druggists. advertisement.
PIANO TUNING--D. E. ROBERTS 15 Years Practical Experience. Formerly with the Steinway 4 House at Indianapolis. 4 PHONE S684
Change of Schedule Effective Sunday, Nov. 24, 1912 EAST-BOUND No. S Limited for CintL, Southern and Eastern points, Lv. 4:53 A. M. No. 6 Limited for Cinti, Norfolk, Washington, N. Y., Lv. 4 : 13 P. M. No. 2 (Cinti. Local) for all local points, Lv. S:56 A. M, WEST-BOUND No.1 Limited for Muncie, Marion, Peru, Chicago, Lv. 12:20 noon. No. 3 Limited for Muncie, Marion, Peru. Chicago. Lv. 12:48 midnight. No. 7 (Peru Local) for all local points, Lv. 7:20 P. M. All Limited Trains will arrive and depart from Central Union Station. Cincinnati. Local trains use Fourth Avenue station. Pullman sleeping cars on Limited trains. All trains Daily.
C. A. BLAIR,
City Ticket Agent.
HOME TELEPHONE 2062.
ties for stimulating poultry nroduc
tlon. Then the landlords and restau-1 rant and boarding house keepers be-, gan to feature turkey as a special j Sunday and' holiday dish instead of roast beef or lamb, and largely extended the season for serving turkey. In those days plenty of wild turkeys were found in woods, and many organizations of volunteer firemen and mechanics made up as target shooting companies spent Thanksgiving Day blazing away in the woods at turkeys or in shooting turkeys for prizes in the stable yards of inns in and near this city. In those days tens of thousands of turkeys were raffled for on Thanksgiving eve and the winners had the birds cooked the next morning in the brick ovens of bake shops after the manner in which to this day people in New England take a pot of parboiled beans to a bakeshop on Saturday night, receive a check therefor and on Sunday morning present it and get a steaming pot of pork and beans, buying at the same time a loaf of brown bread. Noted Turkey Hunters. When Louis Napoleon was a guest of the Stevens family at Hoboken he shot wild turkeys in parts of Hudson county now occupied by the western part of Jersey City. On one occasion he accidentally shot a cow and was arrested and fined $10. As Emperor, Napoleon III. had a system of getting regular supplies of turkeys, wild ducks celery, cranberries, oysters and preserved peaches from the purveyors to the Stevens family. King Edward VII., traveling here in I860 under the name of Baron Renfrew, conceived a liking for roasted turkey with oyster and chestnut dressing and with cranberry sauce and for Albemarle pippins and Baldwin apples. In after years, when he came into possession of Sandringham, he caused arrangements to be made by his steward where under those delicacies were forwarded from this port at regular times. "Spread Eagle," a young turkey, split and broiled over a hot wood nre and served with a sauce of chopped oysters, crabs, wild cherries and apples mixed with old brandy and Madeira wine, a dish popular among clubmen and army and navy officers, was first brought out by a shipping merchant of frim fifty to seventy years ago Jerry Weinberg. He was the inventor of lobster a la Weinberg, which became afterward known as lobster a la New-
giving Day dinner of the arly colonists of New England seems to have come from the pen of a visiting Englishman at Plymouth, who described
Rip Out Your Dress ShioldsFiro 'Em Quick!
at
Men and Women Marvel
PERSPI-NO. Good-bye forever to hot, wet dress shields and excessive, unnatural armpit perspiration. Ubc PERSPI-NO.
If You Value Your Eyesight
IZ&yiP Lamp
You will equip your reading table with a
Authorities agree that a good kerosene oil lamp is the best for reading. The Rayo is the best oil lamp made the result of years of scientific study. It gives a steady, white light, clear mellow. Made of solid brass, mckel plated. Can be lighted without removing chimney or shade. Easy to clean and rewick. At Oeosers Eamrywher STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(Asl
3
Men and women use the wonderful powder PERSPI-NO, which stops that excessive perspiration that is unnatural, wherever it may be. You will never again have your clothing in the arm-pits soaking wet from perspiration, or have them get stiff, fade, and have the colors run, or have your dress shields curl up like ropes under the arms, if you use the new marvel, PERSPI-NO. No more fading, staining or spoiling of dresses, coats, shirts or waists. No more humiliation and perfect misery. Use it in summer when it's hot; use it In winter when wearing heavy clothing. PERSPI-NO is a wonder, too, in removing all perspiration and body odors immediately,, it is not a sticky cream,' but a cooling, wonderful powder. A powder pad free in each box. PERSPI-NO sold at drug and department stores, 25c a box, or sent on receipt of price by The Perspo Co., Chicago, Illinois.
Folger P. Wilson Henry J. Pohlmeyer Harry C. Downing Harvey T. Wilson FUNERAL DIRECTORS Phone 135. 15 N. 10th St. Automobiles, Coaehee, and Aanbulanes Sarvlea,
SEE OUR FIXTURES, DOMES, SHOWERS Varied assortment from which to choose. No old stock. CRANE ELECTRIC CO.
12 North Fifth.
Phone 1061.
You'll get what youVe looking for in our stock. The K. & K. line is different from most clothes they are always a little in advance of others and have that perfect made look that convinces the buyer on first sight. Our Clothing is the Society and Kuppenheimer makes. Let us show you what values we have at $10 to $27.50.
jLK 0ne Price eaClothers & "Furnishers
Krone (Si
803 Main Street
laiGisiovoiii
overwear
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY - NOVEMBER 29 AND 30
Winter has just begun! Surely a seasonable time for an underwear sale. Over 200 styles of Men's, Women's and Children's Underwear. Ten thousand garments. You are sure of a comfortable fit if you buy your underwear here. Our entire stock is offered at a general Discount of 10
Many Special Assortments at tremendous price cuts, Friday and Saturday, now and save these discounts.
mmmm
L55sfSK
buy
You need Underwear
