Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 73, 4 February 1913 — Page 2
PAGE TWO.
THE RICHMOND P!lXXAIIUU AM SUX TEL.EGRA3I, TUESDAY,! EBRUARY 4, 1013.
LARGE CROWDS ARE ATTENDING COURSE P. R. Edgerton Delivered Address At This Morning's Session.
PUBLIC SCHOOL DAY Students of Many Schools in County Witness Demonstrations. (palladium Special) CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Feb. 4. This morning's session of the Cambridge City short course was largely attended. An address was given by F. R. Edgerton at 9 o'clock this morning on "Dairy Herd Improvement," at the opera bouse. Judging of corn, stock and poultry was held this morning and afternoon. J. C. Beavers delivered an address on "Practical Methods of Maintaining Soil Fertility at the Masonic Hall at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon. Otis Crane spoke rtn "The Management of the Laying Hen" at the Hurst Opera House at 3:30 o'clock this afternoon. Today was public school day, which was observed in connection with the short course. The enrollment waB takenat 9 o'clock. Talks were made on the importance of agriculture and its relation to other branches of the public school curriculum; on the collecting, caring for, and testing of seeds and the study of plants. A demonstration of capillary movements of water through soils, percolation, flocculation, heat, color, water capacity, texture, structure with illustrative materials, was made at 1 o'clock. A talk to boys and girls and the organization of boys and girls club work was made this afternoon, conducted by Prof. Z. M. Smith. The following program was observed in the domestic science department at theopera house this afternoon: 9 a. m. Lecture The Home Vegetable Garden ...... M. W. Richards 10 a. m. Demonstration Vegetables Mrs. Foulke 1 . p. m. Lecture Home Management Mrs. Foulke 1:45 to 3:15 p. m. Demonstration ; Meats Mrs. Foulke 3:30 p. m. Lecture Managament of the Laying Hen Otis Crane Tonight's program is appended: 7:30 p. m. Music . Rev. A. V. Scheidler Invocation Mrs. C. W. Foulke More Live Stock for Indiana D. O. Thompson Tomorrow' Program. . The regular program for tomorrow follows : 9:00 a. m. More and Better Corn to the Acre . . ...J. C. Beavers Hurst Opera House 10:00 a. m. Section lStudy .of Weeds, Weed Seeds and Small Seed Improvement . . . Masonic Hall Section 2 Stock Judging . Boy's Building Section 3 Poultry and Horticulture City Hall 12:00 m. Section 4 Dairying City Hall 1:00 p. m. Section 1 Stock Judging Boyd Building Section 2 Study of Weeds, Weed ' Seeds and Small Seed Improve'ments Masonic Hall Section 8 Horticulture and Poultry . City Hall 2:30 p. m. Section 4 Dairying City Hall 2:30 p. m. Section 4 Dairying.... City Hall 2:30 p. m. Silos and Silage. D. O. Thompson Hurst Opera House The domestic science department will carry out its program for tomorrow: 9; 30 a. m. Lecture Raising Chickens Otis Crane 10:00 a. m. Demonstration Breadmaking and Judging Mrs. Foulke 1:00 p. m. Lecture :Household Furnishings .............. Mrs. Foulke 1:45 to S:30 p. m. Demonstration Milk and Eggs Mrs. Fonlke .'' v.; L Quoer Ntt of th Tsntsbsns. Thai oddest ef all birds' nests Is the one built by the tontobane, a South Africa n songster. It Is built of cotton and always upon the tree producing the material. In constructing the domicile the female works Inside and the male outside, where he builds a sentinel box for bis own special use. Be sits In the box and keeps, watch or sings nearly all the time, and when danger comes In the form of a bawk or a snake he warns the family, but never enters the main nest. Sour Stomach Gas on Stomach Bloating Constipation Quickly Vanish with a Home-Mad Remedy Here is the recipe: Take two teaspoonfuls of ordinary baking soda, add two ounces of LOGOS Stomach Tonic extract and enough water to make a pint. Shake it up and you have a home-made . remedy that drives away all signs of stomach trouble in & Jiffy and then builds up the entire digestive system. If you are troubled in any way with your stomach, get busy with this tonic treatment. The remedy is easy to prepare; it does the business and saves considerable money. Get busy with your stomach now, and save trouble later on. . You buy the LOGOS Stomach Tonic extract for fifty oents a two ounce Dot- ; If your druggist does not have it send 60 cents to Logos Remedy Company, Fort Wayne. Ind., and receive a full sis package, postpaid.
RATHER FAR FETCHED ,
Was the Action of Omitting the Inaugural Ball, the One Great National Party Where Everybody From Ruralville to Gotham Could Dance Together
BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. The writer has an admiration for Mr. Woodrow Wilson. Mr. Wilson very amiably responded to a request for hi'j distinguished bookplate. But nonetheless the writer thinks Mr. Wilson's move on the inaugural ball was an unfortunate one. It is the one big, general." democratic function of the nation. It is the one time in every four years when anybody who will and can pay the price has an opportunity to mix cheek by jowl with the gilded diplomats. To attend with the first gentlemen and ladies of the land. To see and, it may be, to be seen. Mr. Wilson's scruples were regarded as democratic. Not Democratic. The impression is that he regarded the ball as not consistent with our alleged democratic institutions. And we well say "alleged." For they are certainly little heeded nowadays. There is no country in the world, in short, where snobbery is more rampant or social lines drawn closer than in the United States. You will find this in every community in the land. Everywhere you will find a set of persons called "society." They may or may not be the "best" people of the town. It's according to what you call "best;" of course. , But they exist. And are played up in the local papers as "society." "Society" as it is known in the average American community, is largely a creation of the society column. And the average society column merely follows the rules as promulgated by Mr. William Randolph Hearst when he started out on his sulphurous journalistic career. It was the Hearst papers that first nucleusized and plaod a false value on "society," as it is interpreted in this country. He recognized the importance of "seeing your name in the paper." He knew the average human entity could not resist the lure. The latter might pretend he didn't like it. Storm, rage, denounce. And then send the office boy round the corner to the news-stand to buy twentyflve copies which he carefully marks and sends to his friends. Hearst knew this. And played on the vanity and egotism of men and women. Especially women. Hearst in his yellow journals started the society pace as it is now known in every local paper from Maine to California. I And which frequently makes our social activities amusing and more or less ridiculous. But, no matter what a paper may regard its relative value to the, paper's news columns, the paper has to play to the artificial taste created. It is an artificial taste. And fed on artificial pabulum. For "society" as it is in some instanstances and as it should be in the rest, does not exist save outside the society columns and the imaginations of their readers. To return to the inaugural ball. . If Wilson really wanted to display his democracy not political but so? cial he would not have asked that this great national dancing party should be omitted. Here, as just said, meet the citizens of the country from the four corners of the United States. Go there arrayed in their "glad rags," more or less fearfully and wonderfully, and hand down to posterity the tales of the grandeurs of the inaugural ball which they attended. There they see the "social leaders" of the average community from Oregon to Florida. For it is these that go to the inaugural ball. It is the well-to-do person of the smaller city that betakes himself to the festivities of inauguration. Hence its democratic character. It may not look democratic. But it Is. And this person can hand it down the years that she "went to "Wilson's inaugural ball with the British am bassador and the French legationist. The ball is rather Bcorned of the exclusive Washingtonian. And the social stellar attractions of the metropolises are rarely seen there. It is the social rank and file that attends and supports the inaugural ball. Social "leaders" from Maine and Minnesota there rub shoulders. Beaux from Omaha dance with belles from Alabama. Dames from Schnectady can whisper with dowagers from San Antonio. Legal lights from Waukesha can stand up against the wall with those from Kokomo while their wives, in confections from the department stores in Chicago and Indianapolis, tread the terpsichorean measure with the congressmen from their respective districts. Pshaw! Why rule it out? It's an innocent, it vainglorious, amusement. As for the president and his party they only lead the famed "grand march" at ten, let us say, go sit in a balcony until 6ome time after eleven, and. ten to one, as stated otherwhere, ar- bed by midnight. The truth is that it is a mistake to try to be different. Mrs. Taft tried it when she went to the White House. Determined to make a record, to contrast herself with her predecessor, Mrs. Taft took over the entire management of the White House menage.
And "broke down' as a consequence.
And was out of physical commission j the rest of the administration. The nation provides certain things. And certain servitors. The first laay of the land 4s merely a temporary resident and the canny one avails herself of the means for the greatest household expedition. So did Mrs. Roosevelt. So did not Mrs. Taft. There's no use trying to be too remarkable. For you will frequently fail. The Roosevelts gave official society, during their regime, eclat. For the reason that they knew the game, so to speak. The most democratic of all the Presidents, Roosevelt was still one of the most aristocratic in point of birth, education, training and experience. The nation gets nowhere by flaunting a false democracy. This is a great Republic. And one of the greatest perhaps, from one point of view, the greatest nation now extant. Our power and dignity should be fittingly symbolized. And elegance of deportment and knowledge of social etiquette is required to sustain our position before the more socially assured countries. WTe get nowhere by a pretense of simplicity. The greatest simplicity is naturalness. And naturalness 1b attended by innate, if unconscious, knowledge. While this is, perhaps, a little off the point, it still remains that the omis sion of the inaugural ball has caused disappointment not so much in Washington as In the outlying districts. It's too bad Wilson should have thought it necessary. DON'T YOU BELIEVE IT. Some say that"chronic constipation cannot be cured. Don't you believe it. Chamberlain's Tablets have cured others why not you? Give them a trial. They cost only a quarter. For sale by all dealers. MOLDED HIS DEATH TOLL Legend of "ths Poor Sinner's Bait" . That Was Cast In Brsslau. The. poor sinner's bell is a bell In the city of Breslau. in the province of Silesia. Prussia, and bangs in the tower of one of the city churches. It was cast July 17. 1880. according to historic records. It is said that a great bell founder of the place bad undertaken to make the finest church bell be bad ever made. When the metal was melted the founder withdrew for a few moments, leaving a boy to watcb ths foac and enjoining him not to meddle with the catch that held the molten metal, but the boy disobeyed the caution, and when be saw the metal flowing into the mold be called the founder. The latter rushed in and, seeing, as he thought, his work of weeks undone and his masterpiece rained, struck the boy a blow that caused bis immediate death. When the metal cooled and the mold was opened the bell was found to be not only perfect, bat of marvelous sweetness of tone. Tbe founder gave himself op to the authorities, was tried and condemned to death. On the day of bis execution the bell was rang to call people to attend charch and offer a prayer for the nnhappy man's soul, and from that it obtained the name of "the poor sinner's bL" The best kind of
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Baby A Sight With Eczema
Mother Thought He Couldn't Be Worse. Resinol Acted Like a Charm. Newark, N. J., Sept. 6, 1912 "I wish you could have seen my baby before I started to use Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment, and see him now. He is now one year old, and the eczema started when he was about one month old. I was ashamed to let anyone see him, his little head was a sight. I thought he would never have any hair on his head at all. I used remedies for about five months. "Then I thought I would try Resinol Soap and Ointment. I thought the child couldn't be any worse. I got the samples all right, and, I tell you they acted like a charm. I used Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment for about two months; I saw a change from the first application. Now he is as pretty as a picture, and his hair has come in beautiful and curly." (Signed) Mrs. M. Whiteley, 797 Hunterdon St. Is your little one suffering from any such distressing trouble? Then how can you fail to profit by Mrs. Whiteley's experience? Even in such a terrible, stubborn case. Resinol brought prompt relief. It is ready to do as much for you. Resinol Ointment and Soap are sold by all druggists, or you can try them free by writing for samples to Dept. 8-T, Resinol Chemical Company, Baltimore, Md. (Advertisement) BOWLING NOTES Y. M. C. A. STANDING. Millers 13 8 Harlans 12 9 Hares 12 9 Neffs 13 11 Weeds 9 9 Gentles 4 19 .619 .571 .571 .541 .500 .195 The Millers stepped into first place in the association league last evening and the Neffs dropped from the leadership to fourth place. The former team won three games. Miller rolled high score with 204 and secured high average with 163. Score: Millers. Miller 126 158 204 Firth 127 153 190 Buhl 346 156 103 Sprouse 124 145 .144 Blind ...181 100 118 Totals 704 712 759 Neffs. Price 127 142 133 Lyons Robt 121 141 137 Thomas G. 136 87 . 86 Saettel 125 123 144 Lyons Ross 129 134 141 Totals 638 627 641 Lest No Tims. Two brothers went hunting. Henry had a woodep. leg and had to be persuaded to accompany his brother, who had. a reputation of being fleet footed. They went up in the mountains, where their pack of hounds scared up a big bear. William emptied his gun at the bear, but it kept on coming. William dropped his gun and struck out for home, leaving his poor wooden legged brother to look out for himself. William, when he got to the house, dove through the window, sash and all, landing in his father's arms. William began to cry, telling how Henry had been left behind and how way back there in the woods the bear was picking his bones clean. "Stop that moanin' and weepin'," said tbe father. "He done come beatin it home with the dogs a half an hour ago." Kansas City Star. a
starts at the breakfast table
Good Humor Follows
Purs Foo3 Factories, Battle Creek,
YESTERDAY IN THE ASSEMBLY
SENATE Housing bill, applying to all cities, passed by vote of 35 to 9. Seventeen new bills introduced, including one by Ballou revising laws governoring appointment of county health officers; Zearing's bill, providing heavy fine for auto drivers who collide with other vehicles or pedestrian and who fails to give his name and address to the injured person. HOUSE j Resolutions introduced calling for an investigation of Weisman's statement i that a member borrowed money from j a paid lobbyist. Voris bill, amending law relating to the regtsteration of nurses, killed, 62 to 38, when an alleged joker increasing the salary of a state official is pointed out. W. W. Spencer's public utilities bill ordered printed by speaker without usual formality of committee report, the speaker declaring that he will pay the bill himself if payment is not authorized. Committee on county and township business decides to recommend passage of Tingl's bill for inebriate departments in county workhouses. TODAY'S SCHEDULE Both Houses convene at 10 a. m. j Sullivan's bill amending the drainage law as it applies to court procedure, will be up as a special order of business in Senate at 10 a. m. Shiveley's public utilities commis sion bill, will be up as a special order in the Senate at 2 p. m. Ways and means and Senate finance joint session, room 58, 4 p. m. Senate Democrats to hold caucus on regtsteration and corrupt practices hour not set. Public hearings tonight House labor committee, 7:30 p. m. in House chamber, discussion of minimum wage for women and children; House insurance committee, room 99, 7:30 p. m. ; House fees and salaries committee, room 104, 7.30 p. m. A Ring Island. Many coral reef islands in the Pacific are in the form of more or less perfect rings or, ovals, inclosing lagoons. The ring island of Nlnafou. halfway between Fiji and Samoa, is not a coral reef, but a volcanic ring inclosing a crater containing a lake two miles in diameter. Toward tbe sea the ring is bordered with walls of black lava, and on tbe inner side these break down in cliffs 200 to 300 feet in height An eruption in 1886 formed a peninsula on the eastern side of the lake. While the ocean outside is trembling and thundering under a heavy wind the lake remains smooth or is 6imply wrinkled with ripples. Conceit, The more a man thinks about himselfif he thinks clearly the more bumble he will become. Conceit is a sign of confused perception and entire j inability to see the true proportions of j things. (if the meal is right) Mich.
"A Shine In IPI Every CJU Drop gaSl
BIG SMOKE HANGED A KNOCKOUT BLOW
Writ Of Error Denied Jack J Johnson Iodayby United States Supreme Court. (National News Association) WASHINGTON. Feb. 4 The I nit-
ed States supreme court has refused known horsewoman of Fond du Lac. the writ of error in the case of Jack Wis., bas been convened to the ue Johnson against United States Mar, of motorcycle, and demonstrated shall Hay. involving his arrest for h virtues of the two-wheeler at the violating the white slave law. The recent annual auto show in Milwaukee, court did not pass on the merits of Victor Hausr. a bridge contractor his case on the ground that the pug-!f Wooseter. Ohio, finds he can sav. ilist must exhaust all means to tost j time in traveling from one Job the law in the lower courts before ap-'1 another by using a motorcycle, pealing to the supreme court. I In several of the northern cities, Johnson must, therefore, stand trial I motorcyclists are converting their ma
in the lower court before his case Can;cnln lnto motor skls.
be reviewed by the supreme court. MOTORCYCLE NOTES The Maryland Motorcycle flub has started a membership campaign, in which each of the 100 members is
pledged to secure at least one other the Eastern Indiana Hospital for the rider to Join the club. j Insane, for the month of March, will Among the new motorcycle clubs ! be received by the Board of Trustees recently organized tre; The Lyons, j at the hospital before 3:00 p. m- MonKansas. M. C, the Bellevue, Ohio M. i day. February 10.1913. Specifications C, and the Brainerd, Minn., M. C. may be seen at the Second National Another use for the motorcycle Bank, or at the hospital.
A. E. Dunn, who owns a repair shop at Gait, Can., ordered a motor to run bis shop machinery. However there was delay in delivery, so he connected
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his motorcycle to the main shafting, and it supplied power for operating the machines. Reno. New. contemplates following in the wake of other up-to-date cities 6y the purcnase of motorcycles for use In the police department. California boasts of having more
imorcJ1Vle "ders than any other state in the I nion. Fjftyt thousand of these time saving, money saving machines are now in use in that state. Montgomery. (Ala), police department Is replacing its old motorcycles with new 1913 models. Miss Vere Matthews, a former wellPresident Patterson has received an 'announcement that two states will hold motorcycle conventions this spring. Reports show that cyclists of other communities are rapidly perfecting their state organizations. NOTICE TO BIDDERS. Proposals for supplies for the use of By order of the Board. S. E. SMITH.Medical Supt Feb 4 and 5. The "Favorite Prescription" is known everywhere and for over 40 years as the standard rf a dy for the diseases of women. Your dealer in medicines sells it In liquid or tablet form: or you can send SO onecent stamps for a trial box of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription tablets. Address Or. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo. N. Y.
