Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 93, 27 February 1913 — Page 4

THE RICmiOTO FALLADIOI A5D SU-TJSlEGRA3I, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1913.

PAGE FOUR.

The Richmond Palladium And Sun-Telegram Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. laaued Every Evening Ercept Sunday Office Corner North 9th and A Street Palladium and Sun-Telegram Phones Business Office, 2566; Newt Department. 1121. RICHMOND, INDIANA.

A Good Lawyer and Citizen.

MI-O-NA ENDS INDIGESTION One Week'a Treatment will Banish all Distressing Symptoms. There Isn't a sufferer from stomach

misery. Dyspepsia, Gastritis or Catarrh

RUDOLPH O. LEEDS Editor SUBSCRIPTION TERMS In Richmond, $5.00 per year (in advance) o10c per week. RURAL ROUTES One year. In advance '?'?' Six months, in advance One month, in advance . " Address changed as often as desired; ootr new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with orde' which should be given for a specified term name will not be catered until payment received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS One year, in advance 5.00 Six months, in advance 2.6 One month, in advance...,. .45

Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mail matter.

New Vo't Representatives Payne Young, 30-34 West 33d Street, and 29-3 1 West 32nd Street. New York, N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne & Young 747-748 Marquette Building. Chicago, 111.

!

Tk. Association (f Amsf 9

i icaa Advertiser baa cx

amin ad and eartifid

the eircnlatioa mi Ibis Pub

lication. THwfigttra of circwlatioS) contained in the Association's report only- are guaranteed. Assodation of American Advertisers

No. Whitehall Bldg. . Y. City

Richmond is to lose a very able lawyer and a good citizen, Mr. John F. Robbins, who is to go to Indianapolis to engage in the practice of law. His connection with the new Indianapolis law firm is an acknowledgment of his ability as a lawyer, and he leaves

this citv with the best wishes of his clients whom he has served of the stomach that cannot be wonder

, . i , i. .it t fully benefited bv iust one week's

A large' part of his practice was for unfortunate individuals

whom he believed were victims of circumstances, and from whom

he received little, if any remuneration.

And these penniless victims of an offended law Mr. Robbins ought for as vigorously as though a fat fee was to reward him

tor his services.

His charity to those whose paths in life were tortuous ones, ut who followed them bravely and without complaint, is well

known despite his efforts to draw a curtain over his good deeds.

lis purse has been open to struggling mothers, to sad-eyed, ragged

children and to ambitious young men and women striving to im

prove their condition in life. With a nature less sympathetic and

responsive to the mistortunes 01 otners, iur. .rcooDins wouia, no doubt, be a wealthy man today.

Mr. Robbins has erected no memorials, nor built any libraries.

He has done better. With his keen knowledge of human nature

he has been able to discern those of his fellow townsmen deserv

ing of encouragement and a helping hand and he has always been ready to aid them to the best of his ability, but always fearful that his kind acts would be discovered behind the veil of his unostentatious charity.

Heart to Heart Talks By JAMES A. EDGERTON

YOUNG AT FIFTY. Are we to get fid of the obsession of old age? We have been in the habit of thinking men or women old at fifty, and perhaps our thinking and their own has had much to do with their growing old before their time. A man at fifty should be at the very prime of his powers. He should have twenty-five or thirty good years of work ahead of him. Recently a number of eminent German scientists, artists and others gave their opinions on this subject One said that a man at fifty is not even beginning to grow old. Another stated that the man of fifty Is of highly superior intellectual 'worth. On account of his reliability, steadiness, experience and rational living be possesses countless physical

and moral advantages over a younger

man.

The president of the Royal academy

asserted that artists do their best work

'between the ages of forty and fifty.

With right thinking and living, sane

and wholesome exercise, elasticity perennial Interest and constant occu

pation at congenial tasks, the normal

man and woman should be useful, hap

py and hale no to eighty, ninety or

even the century mark.

There is every reason to believe that

the future man and woman will be so,

Why cannot we as individuals an

ticipate the future man and woman?

There is an adage that a man is only

as old as he feels. Why not stop thinking of old age?

Some trees . live for thousands of

years. They are not obsessed by old

age thoughts. Faith, hope and work constitute trinity that will keep us young. Retain the forward outlook. Avoid excesses.

We can have excesses in physical

toil as well as in eating, drinking or

gratifying the passions. Seek the gol

den mean.

The soul and not the body is the

senior member in the human Individ

uallty, and the soul is ever young.

treatment, or less than one 50 cent box or MI-O-NA stomach tablets.

Many thousands of people are cured in three days and blessed relief comes in a few hours. MI-O-NA is a specialist's prescription of great value and no matter how chronic or how stubborn your stomach ailment it will cure you or money back. "I had indigestion in its worst form and was advised to use MI-O-NA. I then weighed about 117 lbs. The first few doses gave me marked benefit and after using two boxes I was entirely cured. Am now 67 years of age and weigh 162 lbs., and am in perfect health, thanks to MI-O-NA." C. C. Cook, 235 South Main Street, Herkimer, N. Y. Leo H. Pihe guarantees MI-O-NA stomach tablets. Advertisement)

EDITORIAL VIEWS

The Value of a War Scare.

It would be a good thing for our army if there was a war

scare about once a year, for it would then be necessary to mobilize it in some part of the country, thereby giving the general officers the benefit of handling troops in brigades, divisions and corps. An

annual war scare would also provide interesting tests of the ability

of the railroads to transport large bodies of troops promptly to

wherever their presence was demanded.

It is fortunate for this country now that it is not threatened

with an invasion by a powerful foe over the Mexican border, for the railroads have been completely demoralized by the call made

upon them to carry an army of ten thousand men to Galveston,

Texas, because of a shortage in cars. The Twenty-third infantry left Indianapolis yesterday after being delayed forty-eight hours.

We shudder to think what the result would have been if the

railroads had been called upon to transport one hundred thousand

men to Texas to repulse the, raid of, we will say, a Japanese army.

But all the blame for our inability to hurriedly mobilize an

army must not be placed on the railroads. Congress, by its refusal

to concentrate the mobile troops in continental United States at strategic points, is equally at fault and would be open to the

charge of criminal negligence if this country was ever threatened by a military power.

For political reasons congress has been afraid to order the

abandonment of many small company, battalion and retrimental

posts, scattered about the country at points which have no strategic value and with poor railroad connections.

Until the regular troops are concentrated in brigades and di

visions at important railroad centers the army will have no opportunity to improve its efficiency.

FOUNTAIN CITY TO ASK FOfUIGHTING Agitation Started to Secure Current For Streets and Homes.

SCHOOL TO HOLD FESTIVAL MARCH

14

Divers Entertainments on Program Barlow to Direct Minstrel.

R'-hmond high school is to have a 1913 festival which augurs well to be bigger and better than ever. This was the gist of an announcement made yesterday by Principal John P. Thompson. The date has been fixed as March 14. This announcement came as a result

PREPARE CATALOGUE OF BIGJORSE SALE

Up to Present 307 Horses Have Been Entered For the Event.

(Palladium Special) FOUNTAIN CITY, Ind., Feb. 27. The matter of electric lights for Fountain City is being agitated and there is a strong sentiment in favor of their installation. The current would be supplied from Richmond. The plan is to have electric street lights tor the town and to furnish current also for private lighting. It is estimated that the street lighting would cost the town about $500 per year. The same thing was proposed a year or so ago bvit was finally dropped but with Lynn, Centerville, New Paris and other points getting electric lights a revival of the proposition has come up. Nothing definite has been done as yet other than simply to learn the sentiment among the business men

and others.

WHEN IS A JOKE. (Terre Haute, Ind., Tribune.)

Foreign letters tell of a great hoax played upon the German troops at Strassburg, when a discharged officer sent a message to the commander, signing it with the name of the emperor, and ordering a grand review. The lieutenant had a lot of fun fr a while, but he is now laughing out of the other side of his ruu... . be put to death for his escapade. At Meriden, Conn., a young couple fitted out a beautiful cottage, got married and went on a wedding trip. When they returned they found the dainty curtains ripped off the poles and dirty burlap hung at the windows. The carpets were torn up, beds taken apart.

all the dishes in a heap and nothing seems to have been left undone to cause the newly married couple all the annoyance possible. The jokers are to be prosecuted. In one of the larger cities a highly respectable young doctor hung out his shingle and was beginning to get a few patients when the town joker sent an item to the newspaper telling of a dinner party given by the doctor and naming the most notorious women of that section of the city as his guests. The poor German lieutenant who

may be shot had a higher sense of humor than the scoundrels who tore ' up the bridal cottage, and they are ; likely to escape scot free, though they ought to be sent to the penitentiary i

for housebreaking. The lieutenant saw something ridiculous for his pains, and I one can discern some elements of hu- j

raor in a mind that woud delight in the solemn review of the pompous soldiers who thought their emperor's eyes upon them. But the average, everyday cut-up, who does brutal and disgusting and injurious tricks in which nobody can see the slightest element of fun that's the gentleman who ought to be confined in the institutions where they keep other persons of doubtful sanity.

ELDERLY LADIES ESPECIALLY

Don't let your complexion be wrinkled and spotted; keep it young appearing and bright. You are just as old as you look, and you can have a fine complexion if you only give it care. Advertisement. OPERA CREAM A Liquid Btautifler. It has ben used for twenty years by ladies of refinement and good taste. When properly applied with a sponge, 't never shows, but Impart s a velvety 'oftness to the complexion that is unobtainable with any other preparation. Not only that, but it preserves the complexion so that the longer it is used the better the complexion becomes. Advertisement. TRY IT. For sale by all druggists, or by mail direct from manufacturers on receipt of price. 25c. Manufactured by Dayton Drug Company. Dayton, Ohio. Advertisement. (Advertisement)

flict with Mexico presents itself and young men become alert to the possibilities. In times of peace this spirit has manifested itself in daring the perils of land and sea in the search for

the unknown. The vikings knew what cwn

it was. Columbus knew. Capt. Scott j always fight.

land his men knew. ' In this latter day not much opportunity for wild and dangerous adventure offers and the combative energies find vent in conquering the industrial problems that develop on all sides land in subduing the earth to their needs through every modern agenc. j But to many all pursuits are tame ; compared to war. Civilization with all ; its peaceful ways and enervating inj fiuences has not yet extracated from the nature of the normal youth the d sire to fight his fellow man. He fights furiously with his companions as a lad and nothing so interests him later as physical contests of whatever sot. Man is. in short, a fighting animal anJ will continue to be such while time goes on.

It is not likely that we shall have a serious war with Mexico; but there is no doubt that a host of young men would welcome a campaign that would enable them to offer their services and so win a taste of martial glory. It is the strength of this warlike spirit. th spirit of the primal man, that makes the dream of universal and perpetual peace cherished by many excellent folk so impossible of fulfillment. To get his own. or what he wants for his

man. singlv and collectively, will

at

Champion lady skater

the Coliseum tonight. 27-thur-fri-sat

FOURTH QUARTERLY MEETING PLANNED (Palladium Special) FOUNTAIN CITY, Ind., Feb. 27. The Fourth Quarterly conference of the Fountain City circuit M. E. church will be held here Saturday afternoon, March 8, at 2:30 o'clock. Rev. Freeland, district superintendent will preach in the evening and will administer the sacrament of the Lord's Supper.

MAN A FIGHTING ANIMAL The talk of war invariably arouses the instinct of courage and combativeness and the spirit of adventure in the heart of youth. The same inclination that led men willingly in all ages to follow their leaders into battle erops out at once when a prospect of a con-

lAKIENS PW

Absolutely Pure The only Baking Powder modo from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar NO ALUM, NO UME PHOSPHATE

Knees Became Stiff Five Years of Severe Rheumatism The cure of Henry J. Goldstein, 14 Barton Street, Boston, Mass., is anoth" er victory by Hood's Sarsaparilla. This great medicine has succeeded in many cases where others have utterly failed. Mr. Goldstein says: "I suffered from rheumatism five years, it kept me from business and caused excruciating: pain. My knees would become as .stiff as steel. I tried many medicines without relief, then took Hood's Sarsaparilla, soon felt much better, and now consider myself entirely cured. I recommend Hood's." Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs.

Tax ExemniDtt Bounds

WE OFFER High Grade Non-Taxable Bonds Netting from 34 to 44 Per Cent INCLUDING CITY, COUNTY, MUNICIPAL AND GRAVEL ROADS

See Us for Your Investments Bond Department

DtcMmsoe Trastt Co.

(Palladium Special) CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Feb. 27. The Lackey horse sale catalogue will be in readiness March 1, for distribution, listing the 307 horses entered in the sale.

The entries in the sale are represen-

vl a uwisiuu reauuea Dy a committee i tatives or the leading stock farms in Itf ? ,thG bfrd f the United States an especiallv is the control Tuesday evening for a discus- . , . t sion of the nronnsri wu-ni Central West represented. The sale in

The Masonic Calendar

Tuesday, Feb. 24, 1913, Richmond Lodge No. 196, P. and A. M. Called meeting. Work in Master Mason degree. Refreshments. Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1913. Webb Lodge No. 24, F. and A. M. Called meeting. Work in Entered Apprentice degree. Thursday Feb. 27, 1913 Richmcnd Lodge No. 196, F. and A. M. Called meeting. Work in Master Mason degree. Refreshments. Saturday March 1, 1913. Loyal Chapter No. 49, O. E. S. Stated Meeting

Paul Miller was selected by the board as general manager of the festival. Prof. Torrence will handle the money and Prof. Kelly the theatrical end. Other departments will be under the charge of different members of the faculty as follows: Sales, Miss Nolte; fakes, Prof. Arnold; shows of merit, Miss Whitacre; telegraph and police. Prof. Wissler and posters, Miss Kraft. Many excellent features are in the course of preparation, chief among these being the minstrel show, under the direction of Prof. Thompson and Benton Barlow.

former years has been among the most prominent sales in the country and has been extensively advertised

among norse fanciers. The sales this year will range unusually high. The demand for speed and driving horses is exceedingly great and record prices are expected to be obtained for thor-

ougnDreas. A large consignment will

be sent from the Reidston Stock i Farm to the sales.

SHELBYVILLE WOMAN IS GRANTED DECREE

APPROPRIATION FOR

AGRICULTURE DEPT.

(National News Association)

Washington, Feb. 27 The Sen

ate today passed tho bill making apDroDriations for thf airrioiilf iir rta.

(Palladium Special) Dart men t airirrfratinir ann,rvi,(,

ma, reo. zi. 51S.000.000, which is an increse of

.-ntri icii jars oi married life, Mrs. Anna Fultz was granted a divorce

from Lewis Fultz. On the

stand she told Judge Blair that for the

last four years of their married life her husband had refused to support her and that he gave her no money w hatever. She was compelled to gain her livlihood by taking in washing and working in restaurants.

SI, 000,000 over the appropriation made

by the house on the same measure

witness j One of the interesting items is $30,000

for the appointment of a commission to investigate co-ooerative land mort

gage banks. One thousand dollars is appropriated for the purchase of an oil portrait of James Wilson, secretary of agriculture for the past sixteen years.

Mutual. "George, do you know you snore?" "Do I? I am sorry to hear it" "So am 1." Fun.

Jit

IF

YOU HAD A

K

AS LONG A8 THIS FELLOW AND HAD SORE THROAT

TONSILINE

WOULD QUICKLY

CURE IT.

A quick, safe, soothing, tmllnc, antJseptlo ear for Sore Throat, briefly describes TONSsUNB. A snail bottlsof TonsUine lasts longer than most an 7 case ot ore ThrM- TON SsL INK cures 8 ore Month and Hoarseness and pre rent Qatosy and Diphtheria. 25c. and 60c Hatoital Size tl.00. All Druggists.

DATE OF FEB. 22 VERY PROMINENT

Palladium Special. MILTON, Ind.. Feb. 27. In honor of George W. Crulls fifty-second birthday, a number of his friends and relatives gav-? a surprise party for him on February 22. Mr. Crull was named after the father of his country because his birthday anniversary came on the same day as Washington's. Mr. Crull is now assessor of Washington township. In a speech Mr. Crull declared that the date February 22, was more prominent in the family history than any other date. On February 22, I860, he was born; on February 22, 1873. his father died; on February 22. 1S95, his sister, Elizabeth, was married, and on February 22, 1900, his grandmother died.

GROWS BEAUTIFUL, HEAVY I PROVE IMS CENT

HAH

it

DANDER HE

11

Destroys dandruff Stops falling hair Cleans and invigorates your scalp Delightful dressing.

To be possessed of a head of heavy, beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, fluffy, wavy and free from dandruff is merely a matter of using a little Danderine. It is easy and inexpensive to have nice, soft hair and lots of it. Just get a 23 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine now all drug stores recommend it apply a little as directed and within ten minutes there will be an appearance of abundance; freshness, fluffiness and an incomparable gloss and lustre and try as you will you cannot find a trace of dandruff or falling hair; but your real surprise will be after about two weeks' use, when you

will see new hair fine and downy at first yes but really new hair sprouting out all over your scalp Danderine is, we believe, the only sure hair grower; destroyer of dandruff and cure for itchy scalp and it never fails to stop falling hair at once. If you want o prove how pretty and soft your hair really is, moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair taking one small strand at a time. Your hair will be soft, glossy and beautiful in just a few moments a delightful surprise awaits everyone who tries this.

0

SPACE FOR STORAGE OR MANUFACTURING PURPOSES. We are equipped to handle all kinds of storage. Space with plenty of light for manufacturing purposes. RICHMOND MFG. CO. West Third and Chestnut Sts. Telephone 3210.

622

This Personal Attention Prompt Service All Around Satisfaction Is what wins us lasting friends for our furnaces. From our big and varied stock we can supply any job quick. Let us figure with you.

Pilgrim Furnace Co. 529 Main St 714 to 720 S. 9th St. Phone 1390 Phone 1685

Oakland "THE CAR WITH A CONSCIENCE'

The Spring Showing of these Famous Cars how on at the iettlaari Aifi Ajjcicy SaHcESirotDiniii The Factory Representative, Mr. O. E. Morrell. will be present on Thursday and Friday and will be glad to meet all who are interested in fine cars. The Oakland is the strongest and most beautiful car built in America today. Its trimmings are all of German Silver and its equipment includes every convenience. Call in and talk with Mr. Morrell and compare the Oakland car to any other on the market. Prices range from $1,000 to 3,000, according to sixz and equipment

B

ARD AUTi

1117 MAIN STREET

ENCY