Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 66, 27 January 1913 — Page 4

I'AGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PAIXADIU3I AXD SUN-TELEGRA3I, MONDAY, JANUARY 27, 1913.

The Richmond Palladium And Sun-T elf gram Published nd owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued Every Evening Except Sunday. Office Corner North 9th and A Streets. Palladium and Sun-Telegram Phone Business Office, 2566; News Department, 1121. RICHMOND, INDIANA. RUDOLPH G. LEEDS Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS In Richmond, $5.00 per year (in advance) or 10c per week. RURAL ROUTES One year, in advance Six months, in advance. ? One month, in advance V. i. Address changed as often as desired; botn new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be catered until payment is received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS One year, in advance 50 Six months, in advance 2.60 One month, in advance..... -45

Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mat! matter. New York Representatives Payne & Young, 30-34 West 33d Street, and 29-35 West 32nd Street. New York, N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne & Young, 747-748 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111. Tl. Auuulifla a( Amsfa FilSl lean Advertiser has exWAW sunsnad and cortifUd tm tt tha ircalatiosi f thU publication. Thm fig-arc of circalatxas) contained in th Association's report only mrm guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers .Whitehall Bids. H. T. City This Date In History JANUARY 27. 1657 Viscount d'Argenson becomes governor of Canada. 1679 Boston received its first fireengine from England. 1785 Charter granted the University of Oeorgia. 18041 Great banquet given in Washington in celebration of the acquisition of Louisianna. 1812 Gen. Henry Dearborn appointed commander of the United States army. 1830 Daniel Webster made his fa'mous speech for the Union, in reply to Robert Y. Hayne. 1891 William P. Vilas chosen U. S, Senator from Minnesota. 1901 Guiseppe Verdi, famous composer, died at Milan, Italy. Born in Parma, October 9, 1814. 1909 Ambassador Bryce and Secretary Root signed the Newfoundland Fisheries Treaty. 1912 Champ Clark announced his candidaccy for the Democratic presidential nomination. This is My 63 rd Birthday LOUIS P. HEBERT. Louis Philippe Hebert, a famous sculptor and designer of many of Canada's most notable monuments, was born in the Province of Quebec, January 27, 1850. His youth was spent on a farm and his early education was such as was obtainable in the district schools. He early evinced a taste for art and what time he could spare was spent in the .study of painting and sculpture. At the age of twenty-three he won a prize for wood-carving in the provincial exhibition in Montreal. His success heightened his ambition and he went to Porls to complete his studies. Upon his return to Montreal he entered upon a career that has placed him in the front rank of American sculptors. He was winner of the prize offered by the Dominion Government for a full-length statue of George Carter. Other of Mr. Hebert's notable works are the statues of Champlain in Quebec and Maisonneuve and Chenier in Montreal. CONGRATULATIONS TO William II, king of Prusia and German emperor, 54 years old today. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, 65 years old today. Gen. John C. Black, president of the United States Civil Service Commission, 74 years old today. Rev. J. Henry Harms, president of Newberry College, Newberry, S. C, 37 years old today. Hon. John W. Daniel, a member of the Senate of Canada, 59 years old today. Right Rev. William L Mills, Anglican bishop of Ontario, 67 years old today. Ralph Modjeski, noted civil engineer and son of the late Mme. Modjeski, the famous actress, 52 years old today. A Little Relief. Suffering beneath the razor of an incompetent barber, the customer signaled to the operator to halt. "Yes. sir? inquired the barber, inclining his bead. "Give me gas!" said the cus tomer. Exchange. HOOT OWLS FOND OF THIS CHURCH ; National News Association) COLUMBUS, lnd., Jan. 27. A cot owl went to church at the ;(--made Christian church. The ai'c quiet for the st of no wn net regard- -i as a ': vijror. Wh'-il -r.-H'(--s - r H-;v,er !. r '. ; :. r :u r place H - it I' aee with ' :i pole ' uutil th bird rina'ly became too tired to go further and was caught. This is the third owl Jones has captured in the church within the last few years.

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Setting a Good Example. For the past ten years brickbats galore have been showered on the large corporations in this country, and the rough handling they have received, in the majority of cases, has been justified. But every now and then some great business organization does something really progressive in the conduct of its affairs, showing that the efforts which have been put forth to improve the living conditions of the great army of workers employed by our immense corporations is beginning to bear fruit. One big business organization deserving of a bouquet is the Western Union Telegraph company and its affiliated companies. Not very long ago it provided a liberal pension system for its old employes, then it established sick, death and accident benefits for its workers and now it !s to create a system of medical supervision and preventive sanitation for the benefit of the thousands of men and women on its payrolls. In fact the company truthfully announces it is "inaugurating a new era in the relations of employer and employe." At the head of its medical and sanitation department the Western Union has placed Dr. Alvah H. Doty, formerly health officer of the port of New York. It will be the duty of this department not only to perform the usual functions of such a department but to inaugurate a method for the early detection of communicable diseases, particularly tuberculosis, and to render prompt and approved treatment of such cases. Under this system the afflicted employe is given a lighting chance for his life and his fellow workers are given better protection. Complete sanitation for offices will also be provided and they will be made as healthy as possible. The Western Union is setting an excellent example for other great business concerns to follow, and its experiments cannot be otherwise than successful.

Vocational Education.

Concerning the Page-Wilson bill, which provides vocational education and is now before congress, The Survey says: It is likely that the fate of the rage-Wilson bill, which grants federal aid to the states to promote vocational education, will be settled some time between Jan. 20 and Feb. 1. During the past three weeks mayors, school principals and superintendents, agricultural bodies, and national, state and local commercial and industrial associations have rallied strongly to its support, as had been previously done by most of those engaged in furthering vocational education for boys and girls over 14 years. The bill is on the calendar of the United States senate for early action and the hopes of its friends have risen high. It has met with the opposition of those who do not like to see a further expansion of federal activity a3 well as of those who are against its specific proposals. This measure, which has the endorsement of the National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education, grants such specified sums of money for successive years, beginning in 1913, that by 1921 the total annual expenditure under it will be, for the federal government, about fourteen and three-quarters millions. For every dollar which the national government thus appropriates, the states themselves or the local governments are required to spend another dollar of their own. The bill provides both for the instruction of children and the training of teachers, as follows: 1. For training teachers to give instruction in agriculture, industries and home economics. It gives $480,000 a year to state colleges of agriculture and mechanical arts and $1,000,000 a year to normal and other training schools. It is the intention that most of this money shall go to schools now in existence. This grant takes effect in 1913. 2. For the operation of schools which shall give instruction in agriculture, industries and household arts the bill gives $9,000,000 a year. These may be all day, part time or evening schools. This grant takes effect in 1916. It thus becomes available three years after the sum for training teachers, the purpose being to provide a period of grace in which to prepare teachers for the job. 3. A million dollars is granted yearly to branch stations which shall provides demonstration work in agriculture. This sum becomes available in 1916. 4. For the purpose of extension teaching the bill grants to state colleges of agriculture and mechanical arts a half million dollars in 1913. By the provisions of the measure this sum would increase to $3,000,000 in 1921. The most discussed administrative question in the establishment of vocational education today is the question whether this education ought to be carried on as a separate and distinct system of public instruction, . or whether it ought to be engrafted on the present public school system and incorporated in its curriculum. This is the mooted question of the "dual system." Wisconsin stands for the dual plan but the trend among those states which have lately made provision for vocational instruction seems to be toward incorporating the work in the existing system. In a few days we shall know what attitude is taken towards this most important question by the board of managers of the National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education. At the recent annual meeting of this society a committee of manufacturers, teachers, social workers and vocational guides drew up a tentative statement of principles and policies and urged its adoption upon the board of managers. This statement declared that the work in vocational education, whether administered by regular public school authorities or a separate board of control, and whether conducted in a separate building or under the same roof as the regular school, should be carried on separately and independently from that of general education, so that it may be left free to realize the dominant aim of fitting for useful employment. This, the statement continues, requires a separate organization, under a separate head or a distinctive management, and separate equipment, courses of study, pupils and teachers who shall have had extended experience in the industries they are employed to teach. The Page-Wilson bill allows each state to solve this problem for itself. Under its provisions each state is required to have a state board for vocational education to administer the act. But the state can decide whether a new board shall bear this name or whether the name can be given to the old board. The bill then requires this board to formulate its own plan for using the funds made available by the act. This plan is to be submitted to the secretary of the interior. It will probably be passed upon by the commissioner of education under him. If the secretary approves the plan, the state board then becomes the highest power in putting it into effect. Only if changes are later made in this fundamental working scheme can the secretary of the interior again interfere in the automonmy of the state board. He can, however, check up the use of funds by this board and if he finds them misapplied can withhold the misused sum from the next year's appropriation.

EDUCATION NOTES State-aided industrial schools are now maintained in nineteen Massachusetts communitnes. Austria's eight universities had 26,332 students last year, of whom 2.130 were women. The seven technical schools had 9,920 in attendance. Plans have been started by the Deutscher Verein at Columbia University for the organization of a union of German student societies in American universities. Nearly 2,000 titles In many languages make up the "Bibliography of the Teaching of Mathematics," by David Eugene Smith, of Teachers' College, Columbia University, and Chas. Goldzieher, of Budapest, Hungary. The bibliography has just been pub lished for free distribution by the J United States Bureau of Education. ! Hookworm disease costs Arkansas ! more than one-fourth of its annual i cotton crop, according to the Hon. ' George B. Cook, superintendent of ; public instruction. Physicians and teachers are co-operating vigorously with the state board of health in their campaign for rural sanitation in that state. There are 635 colleges and universal: listed by the United States Burmu . Education in the current Ed- ; Directory. Oh o and Pennsyv. ania each have 42 ins: tutions of ge rank, and New York and IIiu; is 33. Missouri has 28, Iowa and Tennessee 27, Virginia 25, North Cari olina 22, Indiana and Kentucky 21, Georgia 19, Kansas 19, and Massach usetts IS. The Massachusetts board of educa

tion has a deputy commissioner for vocational education. His duties include supervision of state expenditures in aid of vocational schools; definitions of standards of instruction; approval of courses, teachers, etc.; and, in general, the enlightment of public opinion on this form of education.

The Morning After. Mrs. Crawford Why is your husband taking a holiday? Mrs Gay boy Because he had one yesterday. Lippincotf s. Iet not thy mind run on what thon lackest as much as on what thou bast plready. Marcus Aurelrus. s

1000 MEN WANTED-YOU ARE ONE OF TEIEM

"EVERY MAN MUST COUNT Ask the men who are wearing the brown and yellow buttons REGISTER TODAY Any man entitles the holder of a ticket to Indiana. Phone 2823. Richmond Committee Dr. David

AGRICULTURE BOARD ASSIGNS SPEAKERS

I 0 . .i btrong Program Arranged; for Central Farmers' Institute. FEBRUARY 3 AND 4 ' , Various Subjects Relating toj Farm Will Be Fully Discussed. (Pulladtum Special) EATOX, O.. Jan. 27. Speakers assigned by the State Board of Ag vi!;ture for the Central Farmer? Institute, to be held in the opera house Monday jand Tuesday, February 3 and 4 are Mrs. Christena D. Laws, of Minneapolis, Minn., J. F. Hudson of Rnvqpna, i O., and R. A. Hayne. The morning sessions of the institute will begin at j 9:30 o'clock and the evening session nt 1 7: 30 o'clock. I The program as arranged is as fol- ; lows: Monday Morning. Invocation. Music by the Grassville Quartet, of Arcanum, Ohio. Horses R. A. Hayne. Discussion and Music. Alfalfa J. F. Hudson. Food Composition and Combinations Mrs. Christena D. Laws. Monday Afternoon. Music. Dairy Management J. F. Hudson Hygiene and Household Sanitation Mrs. Laws. Music. Soil Our Only Lasting Resource R. A. Hayne. Discussion and Music. Monday Evening. Music by Quartet. Farmer and the Young People J. F. Hudson. Music. Evolution of th Boy R. A. Hayne. Music. Tuesday Morning. Invocation. Music by Quartet. Appointment of Committees. Improved Live Stock R. A. Hayne. Discussion and Music. Farm Butter Making J. F. Hudson. Discussion and Music. Tuesday Afternoon. Report of Committees. Music by Quartet. Some Principles in Stock Feeding R. A. Hayne. Discussion. Tuberculosis in Farm Animals Dr. C. B. O'Hara. Music. Developing the Dairy Herd J. F. Hudson. Discussion and Music. The present officers of the Central society is as follows: President Silas Q. Buriff. Secretary Ezra Creager. Treasurer Willard Eldson. Executive Committee Tracy Aydelotte, Joseph Brouse, Wm. Brower and Chas. Fudge. HERE IS A REAL E. "Pape's Diaoepsin" Settles! Upset Stomachs and Ends Indigestion in Five Minutes. Do some foods you eat hit back taste good, but work badly; ferment nto stubborn lumps and cause a sick-1 sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. : Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's Diapepsiu . digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There . never was anything so safely quick, so j certainly effective. No difference ; how badly your stomach is disordered you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stomach so you can eat your favorite , foods without fear. ' Most remedies give you relief sometimes they are slow, but not sure. Diapepsin is quick, ' positive and puts your stomach in a healthy condition so the misery won't come back. You feel different as soon as Diapepsin comes in contact with the stomach -distress just vanishes your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructations of undigested food, your head clears and you feel fine. l Go now, make the best investment you ever made by getting a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any stomach disorder. j

DYSPEPSlft

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Laymen's Missionary Movemuentt RICHMOND CONVENTION JANUARY 30 AND 31, 1913 B'o quel at the Coliseum, Thursday, January 3011, at 6:30 P. M. FOUR GREAT V1EE1IG addressed by such men as J.Campbell While, Col. E. W. Hallord and others. No collection whatever will be taken during the convention.

wearing a Yellow Horn Button inscribed fal M. M" will be glad to explain the Movement to you and register you. The Registration fee is only $1.00 and the big supper and admission to all sessions. For further Information write or phene W. P. Harms, Executive Secretary, Y. M. C- A. building, Richmond, W. Stevenson, chairman; Timothy Nicholson, vico chairman; Arthur L. Smith, secretary; Edgar M. Haas, treasurer.

RAILROAD NOTES

The Lynn station on the G. R. & I. and Big Four railroads must be movea accoraing to orders issued oy the state Railroad commission, to a point on the town-site of the railroad crossing. For several months the Lynn commercial club has been en- ; deavoring to get the commission to ! take some action and their efforts : have at last been rewarded, i In the present position the station can only be reachd b crossing the Big Four tracks, a practice which is dangerous and has resulted in one or two deaths. SURVEY NEW LINE. A corps of engineers of the Penni sylvania railroad are making a survey ; for a proposed extension of their line j from Ilagerstown to Muncie, and it ; is thought that the extension w ill be built. BIG IMPROVEMENTS. FORT WAYNE, lnd.. Jan. 7. The Pennsylvania company has announced that it has sot aside an appropriation of $102,000 to be spent in the next six months on improvements at the Fort Wayne engine house. Plans for the changes already have been completed and work will be started as soon as the materials can be hauled on the ground. Part of the money will be expended on improvements in the round house proper, but the greatest chance will be accomplished in the space just east of the house, now known as "the round house hill." r The Masonic Calendar Tuesday, Jan. 25. Richmond Lodge Xo. 196, F. & A. M., called meeting, work in Master Mason degree. Refreshments. Wednesday, Jan. 29. Webb lodge, Xo. 24, F. & A. M. Called meeting, work in Fellowcraft degree. Friday, Jan. 31. King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4. R. A. M. Called convocation, work in Most Excellent Master degree. Coeur De Lion Lodge No. 8, K. of P. meets at Castle Hall every Tuesday night. Next Tuesday, the 28th, the rank of Knight will be conferred by Past Chancellors. Refreshments will be served. All Knights welcome. SECTIONAL BOOKCASES DESKS and SAFES Bartel & Rohe 921 MAIN Keep Watching Our Windows They are full of articles suitable for presents and prizes. You will probably find just what you want for either 48c or 75c. AM The Jeweler 810 Main St.

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NEWS OF THE STATE

AnderSOIl High School Is Damaged Today. (National News Association) AXDKRSOX. lnd. Jan. Zl Fire starting in the wood working department of the high school building here Saturday morning did 540.000 damage. The building was erected three years aj;o at a cost of $-10,000. There is SI oo .000 insurance on the building. VEPDICT OF WRECK. LAFAYETTE, lnd.. Jan. 7. Coroner Hannell has returned his verdict on the cause ol the B;g Four wreck near Stockwell, January 7, in which one was killed and forty injured, lii found that the wreck was caused by a steel tire on the express car being fractured. TALBOT HEADS OWLS. SOUTH BEND. lnd.. Jan. 27. John Taibot. of this city, was re-elected president of the supreme lodge, order of Owls at the annual meeting of the members in this city Saturday. Mr. Talbot is founder of the order. MURDER INDICTMENT. BLOOMINGTON. lnd., Jan. 27. AfT indictment for murder in the first degree was returned against Clinton ilovious. a former policeman, for the killing of former Fire Chief Frank Todd, last October. IS GIRL FIREBUG? ST. LOUIS, Mo.. Jan. 27 The case of Barbara Gladys Arnold, the 16-year-old girl whom the police allege to be a firebug, was called for trial today. The girl, who was employed as a nurse in the family of a local Baptist minister, is to answer to a charge of having set fire to the Windermere Hotel, in the burning of

Tlnfis (Geaiiraietlee Should Appeal To Every Housewife The Packers of KAR-A-VAN EL PERCO COFFEE positively guarantee a saving of $5.00 to $10.00 per year to every housewife who uses this delightful coffee, prepared especially for Percolators, if used according to directions given, and they have made it possible for us to sell you a handsome Nickel Plated Percolator at factory price. They are not selling them for profit but to promote the sale of KAR-A-VAN EL PERCO, the coffee that will go twice as far as any other grade or brand. John M. Eggemcyer & Sons

Here's one that can't be beat. A good burner, and at a saving to you

New Combination Furnace Coal, ton A FURTHER FAMOUS Was $3.90 per ton Now -

Lastly, That Good WASHBURN FLOUR Spring What 25 lbs. 70c 100 lbs. $2.75 This Is value received. Yes, indeed! We deliver to any part of the city.

Phone 2662

which several lives were lost, some time ago.

BPJUKl&inI 1 cannot 6 cerrc(W by local treatment ; to arrest the flow of secretion you must remove the cause; this symptom is only one of nature's earnings of a run-down system. Build vour strength and vital forces with SCOTTS EMULSION; it supplies the needed lime and concentrated fats; the glycerine soothes and heals the delicate organs; the emulsion nourishes the tissues and nerve centers and makes rmd, active Wood, Scott' Emaliion ocrrom catarrh by compelling health and vigor. 4 Scott Bowne. BloomBeld. K. J. IJ-79 Money to Loan j Use our money to pay your little outstanding debts. W will give you plenty of time to pay it back, from one month to one year. We make loans from $10 up on household goods, pianos, etc.. and all business strictly confidential. Mail or phone applications receive prompt attention. THE STATE INVESTMENT & LOAN CO. . 40 Colonial Btdg. Phone 2560. Richmond, Indiana DROP IN OUR GLEN COAL

ENKE

162 Ft. Wayne Ave. Only Convention For Indiana and Ohio in 1913. Convention Opens at 2:30 P. M. Thur, Jan. 30th at Reid Memorial Church.