Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 94, 28 February 1913 — Page 2

JTAUE TWO.

THE RICHMOND PAULADIU3I Jl"D SUX-TELEGRA3I, PRIDAY.FEBRUARV 28. lOiy.

TROOPS -KICK ON THE CAMP SITE CHOSEN

Tents Pitched on Marshland And It Is Difficult For the Soldiers to Move the Wagons. (Continued from Page One.) showing unusual constructive ability as a statesman and that in this respe:t he Is like" Porflrio Diaz, who was a brilliant statesman as well as a soldier., Huerta passes upon every proposition, that, is before the government for discussion and approves or disapproves it before it goes to the chamber of deputies. If., be disapproves, the bill is killed. The new government is showing astuteness in the disposition of army officers whose loyalty is under suspicion. They will be distributed among loyal troops or sent out of the country on various missions. Gen. Angeles, who has twice been arrested on charges of plotting against the government and of killing a loyal government officer, is to be sent to Breslau Belgium as military attache. LEBO SECUREO TO DIRECT ORCHESTRA Hamilton Musical Director to Head the Richmond Symphony. As a result of the favorable impression made byfProf. Will Lebo, musical director of the Hamilton public schools as leader of the Richmond Symphony orchestra last Sunday it was decided that he be accepted as permanent director of the orchestra. J (Prof. Lebo will take the position left vacant by Prof. R. C. Sloan, musical director of the local schools who resigned as director of the orchestra because of the large amount of work, in other departments (prof. Lebo has btfen affiliated with the schools of Hamilton for the past twelve years. He has been a resident there for thirteen years and is known throughout the middle west for his ability as a musician and musical director )b.s well as for the orchestra and band pieces of his own composition. There are several choruses In Hamilton now under the supervision of Prof. Lebo. Prof. Lebo gained a part of his musifcal knowledge under the tutelage of Prof. Ernestinoff, director of the Indianapolis Symphony orchestra. J IS VICTIM A FALL Hagerstown Man Badly Injured Last Night. (Palladium Special) ' HAGERSTOWN, Ind. Feb. 28. Charles Kinsey was very painfully hurt last evening, when he fell on the icy walk at his home on North Plum street and one bone in his right ankle was broken and another badly crushed. Several years ago, Mr. Kinsey had his left leg broken and has since been lame. For this reason the second accident may prove serious. Rr. J. H. Kinsey of Richmond is a brother of Chas. Kinsey.

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f suits EASTER. 1 finest line kJ To 'Your Meas- 11 OF WOOLENS I I lire I ) - -l11'1' 1 On ne Market V ..... hi 0 iN V in Our Store Drop in and Let Us Show You Jt& VV Why the Rest of the Fellows f Wear Dennis Clothes If HUNDREDS fjr If of ty select 1 IfcTy ' n(-M If from at your serv- I "H'iI ; .320'' I I. ice always. My per- I I ; sonal attention givMoy Wo DeooINhort" JJ Eight North Tenth Street TAILOR f

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After Consumption Ther re no many car of Comnmptlon reported whpre the details show the discus started with a fold or a congh. that it is really surprising that people are not more anxious to Immediately stop these npparently minoc troubles. Onr advice Is "stop the cough or cold. If possible, without delay." Otherwise more serious troubles are likely to follow. If the medicines you are now taklnar do not brtnjr relief, try Eckman'i Alterative, as this man did: 237 Itean SI.. Brooklyn. N. Y. "Gentlemen : I im giving you below a brief history of my ease. whl h I trust yon will use for the benefit of those suffering from snv similar tronhles. "About a year and a half ago I noticed that say healrh via rHir)!y t;tl'tnir. until at the end of six months my weight had fallen to 129 pounds. I was troubled with night sweats, a severe cough and was very weak, having in fact absolutely no ambition whatever. About this time I consulted a physician, who told me my lungs were affected. Not satisfied I went to another doctor, who after examining me said that I whs in the first stages of consumption. At this point I started to t.ifce Eckman's Alterative. The night seafs stopped almost immediately, my cough became looser and gradually disappeared. My weight Is now 14'J pounds and my physician has pronounced me perfectly sound which, together with the fact that I have been accepted by two different insurance companies for Insurance, makes me sure of my entire recovery by Kckman's Alterative, f should be very glad to communicate with any one who would be interested in mv case. (Sworn Affidavit) W. K. iKK. Kckman's Alterative is effective in Bronchitis, Asthma. Hay Fever: Throat and I.ung Troubles, and Ui upbuilding the system. Does not contain poisons, opiates or ho bit -forming- drugs. Ask for book!Pt telling of recoveries, and write to Kckman Laboratory, Philadelphia. Pa., for more evidence. I'or Kale by all leading druggists A. G. Luken and Company. Ad vert lsr n lent) RESOLUTION ADOPTED On the Death of John H. Hanseman. During a special meeting called by t President A. W. Blickwedel, the South Side Improvement association directors passed unanimously the following resolution: Resolved, That the sudden removal by the death of our esteemed fellowcitizen, John H. Hanseman, from the position which he held as a director creates a vacancy not easily filled, and that his fellow members fully realize and deeply deplore the loss occasioned to themselves and to the public at large. Resolved, That we hereby extend our deepest sympathy to the bereaved family of the deoeased, hoping that even in the sadness of their affliction they may yet find some consolation in knowing that the worth of his private qualities and the vahie of his public services are properly appreciated. Resolved, That a copiy of these resolutions be properly engrossed and sent to the family of our deceased fellow-member, and that the resolutions be also published in one of the daily paperB of the city. South Side Improvement Association. Hans W. Koll, vice president, i Cash Beall, secretary. First Turtle Soup of the Season all day Saturday. Lou Knopfs. A RAISE IN WAGES PITTSBURG. Pa., Feb. 28. The Clairton works of the Carnegie Steel company rseumed operations today, after a two days' strike of 800 employes. The company notified the men that they would receive a raise of 2V2 cents per hour which the men claimed was promised them on Febru ary 1, and they accepted.

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Eight North Tenth Street TAILOR MAKER OF THE KIND OF CLOTHES GENTLEMEN WEAR

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An Incomparable Asset to a City or Country. Alfred Waters .English Artist, in Town With a Collection of Water-Colors Depicting Rural England.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. "It is darkest just before dawn." And the landscape never looks so drear as this time o' year. Just before everything begins to burgeon. It is the season, too, when garden annuals and eeedmen's catalogues begin to be fascinating reading. When you flip over the pages of the magazines devoted to the out-of-doors and sigh over the luxuriance of trained vegetation which environs countryhouses. WThen you look in despair at your parallelogram of sodden ground in the rear maybe you view it from the bath-room window above stairs and wonder if it ever can be transformed into an attractive household asset. The well groomed landscape. We see and know little of it in this country. It is in its sleekest perfection in England. And everywhere on the continent the eye is satisfied with its formalities and trimness. The impression the traveler in this country gets in the moving picture panorama from his car window is that of unkemptness. There are, to be sure, the grandeurs of the mountains whose raggednees is their attraction and their virtue. But the ride through the level country, and there is a vast deal of it in the United States, provides a dreary prospect. Railroads usually enter cities and towns in the latter's least interesting phases. You wind through a maze of begrimed buildings, dirty streets, obnoxious alleys, with fleeting glimpses of backyards, the rear-ends of shabby houses and broken down sheds through garbage heaps and ash-strewn wastes, along city dumps and by the edges of polluted streams. In fact, if the average foreign traveler were to judge our communities by their entrances to them alone, the former would get such a distaste for the country he'd make a hasty exit. This is not as it should be. The portals of a town should, like the portals of a dwelling, be alluring and invitational. And there is no reason why this shouldn't be accomplished. There is nothing easier than improving the town's mise en scene. With a mighty little lot of trouble a town can be turned from a frowsy community into a place of roses and perfume. A half dollar's worth of garden seeds and sprouting plans and vines will transform a neutral-tinted exterior into an attractive place that people will admire as they go by. A dollar's worth of investment on a block will turn that block into one of the charming spots of the city. Old fences can be covered with vines. Sheds run riot with leafage and bloom. Division lines marked with flowering shrubbery. Railway stations set amidst greenery and color. And, as once before animadverted upon here, window boxes can adorn 221-222-223

ressed Circle

LANDSCAPE

the most modest cottage and turn the grey facades of the business section into terraces of brilliance. Why doesn't the Y. M. C. A. adorn its front and North side with window boxes? This building has a considerable expanse of surface exposed to the streets and could be made fascinating with a series of window boxes of bright-hued flowers and depending vines. The new National bank building, the Kelly block, the Westcott Hotel, the Arlington, the First National Bank building, the City Building, the courthouse, the high-school all of these and all the rest could easily have an attachment of window boxes and it would be as heavy an asset to the town as the Fall Festival, say. or the Symphony orchestra. Then if the waste-paper ordinance were rigorously enforced! And the park curbing found on almost every street in town were kept in condition the town would be a delightful place. The neglect of the latter is one of the reproaches of the town. Every bit of parking should be kept close-cut and green and the debris of the streets daily removed. As it is, you walk along a street and notice well kept stretches alternating with the ragged, unkempt ones, and it detracts from the general effect. How much better these things are done abroad. In the "meanest streets" of London, or some continental city, you will see the window-box blooming as long as the flowers will unfold to the sun. It lightens up the darkest day. And cheers the gloomiest prospect. All of England is like a garden. You glide through its sophisticated landscape with a series of visions of wonderful flower-gardens, embowered cottages, close cropped lawns and park-like vistas. In America we look messy and halfdressed. Farm-houses have an isolated appearance. Many of them set in the middle of barren spaces. Treeless wastes. This is one thing that gives the landscape of the middle west so unattractive an appearance. We build wooden houses. Mere boxes punctured with holes for light and air, egress and ingress. With no architectural effects either in their construction or their settings. Very few county houses are surrounded with well kept lawns, and yet they are the very dwellings that should be set off with close-cropt grass and picturesque groupings of trees and shrubbery. In England they do these things much better as just stated. And it is reflected in their art. And in this city, at present, through the pictures of Mr. Alfred A. Waters of London. Mr. Waters has with him a number of his own water-colors and those of several of his distinguished confreres. Mr. Waters is known aa a painter of England cottages. And the examples of his work he has with him are of Colonial BIdg., Richmond, Ind.

subjects of that character. Those charming old thatched cottages of rural England with their lovely old flower-gardens. No nation has produced the watercolor in such perfection as England. Its landscape lends Itself peculiarly to reproduction in this medium. And some of the greatest English artists have been water-colorists. The English school is given over to detail and has not followed the bizarre

1 by-paths pursued by many of its j confreres of other nations. J Impressionism and the chaos of the , Futurists has never made much head way with the safe and sane Briton. His highly sophisticated landscape he sees in detail And paints it accordingly. Detail is what you find in English art. Especially in the medium of water-color. And it possesses wonderful charm. Mr. Waters' own pictures exemplify this phase of the English painting art as characteristically, perhaps, aa those of any other artist. But it is also seen in the pictures of H. Sylvester Stannard, some of which he has with him. Stannard is a delightful painter of the autumn landscape, with Mauvelike effects in sheep and sky and fascinating vistas of remote distances through partings In the trees. Stannard is a member of the Royal Academy as is Stuart Lloyd, another English water-color 1st whose work is represented In the collection Mr. Wat? ere has with him here. Lloyd is a painter of extraordinary fascination. Lovely sunsets over river-bprdered landscapes, with a boat and a fisherman's cottage. Full of radiant feeling and exquisite color. With the richness and body of oils. His brother, Malcolm Lloyd, a painter of marines, also represented in the collection, on the other hand, has not the imaginative and senuous temperament of the former his pictures being a trifle cold although realistic transcripts of the sea. Some of the most striking pictures Mr. Waters has with him here are painted by a young Italian, Coffieri, who has sojourned much in the Breton country and whose paintings of the natives of Brittainy are full of charm. Coffieri's technique possesses a certain subUety but his medium is handled with the sureness and daring of a master and has much substance and depth. His pictures are, In short, interesting for their manner as well as for their subject and one would like to see some of his more ambitious pieces. This artist while an Italian who paints in France Is a member of the Royal Institute of England. One of his compatriots, Larringhi, a painter of oriental subjects, is also represented in Mr. Waters' collection, his work shown here being chiefly distinguished by brilliance of color and attention to detail.

FOR SAILED THREE NEW MODERN HOUSES Five rooms, furnace and bath room, electric light, hardwood floors, strictly modern, immediate possession. You can't miss ft on these. ONE GOOD VACANT LOT $175.00. WE HAVE SEVERAL MORE HOUSES under construction and it will pay you to see us for anything in the building line. SEVERAL GOOD INVESTMENTS that pay 6 per cent net and are non-taxable and guaranteed absolutely safe. Put your money where it brings you good returns. If you have a lot and want to build a house, see us.

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The above house is one of the best sellers we have and makes a satisfied customer always. We have several similar ones under construction now, and have several vacant lots on which we could erect to suit you. EDWIN G. KEMPER, 319 West Main. Phone 3234, or THE MILLER-KEMPER CO., General Contractors and Builders, 701 to 717 North West Second St. Phone 3247. Lumber, Millwork and Building Material. '- J i i 'II iegggMSf3BtnSSBSgSSSSBBSnfJfJBBSB

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LARGE MELON CUT BY PENNSY TODAY Sum of $6,807,169.25 Was Received By Its 75,492 Stockholders.

Dividend cheques amounting to $6,807,169.25 were received today by 74,492 shareholders of the Pennsylvania Railroad company. This is the largest number of shareholders to whom the company has ever paid a dividend, and of this number 36,457. or 49.29 per cent, are, women. Illustrative of the wide distribution of this stock is the fact that of those who receive dividends, 12,634 own less than ten shares each. The average holding of Pennsylvania stock is 120 shares. Nearly all of the shareholders are individuals, only 564 corporations being numbered among the holders of stock. Nearly one third, or 23,968, of the shareholders live in the State of Pennsylvania. In New England there are 15.584 shareholders, and In New York 12.966. All the cheques for American shareholders are mailed in Philadelphia, but on the same date cheques are mailed In Euroe to 10,646 foreign stockhold ers, so that American and European shareholders receive dividends simultaneously. The dividend now paid la the regular quarterly payment on 9,077,569 outstanding shares of stock, representing a total par value of $453,877,950. Since 1856, the Pennsylvania Railroad has never failed to pay a cash dividend. These dividend payments have now amounted to $414,171,006.51, or 91.25 per cent of the par valne of total amount of capital stock at present out standing. Concurrently with the payment of this dividend, the. company has made a compilation of the total number of public shareholders in subsidiary cor porations controlled by the Pennsyl vania Railroad. This compilation shows that outside holders ot the stock of these companies namber zl.468. There are thus 96,945 registered shareholders In the different eaxapanies of the Pennsylvania System. MEN! We naive a Una of Men's Quality the test. The prises are at tractive, $5.00 to $18.90. la the Annex. 11 L;V-Vw! iL DRUG STORF.i Conkey's "Hed-Eza- .... 10c Bath Cabinets, $5.50 and up. Rex Porous Plaster 20c Bell's 50c Pine Tar, Honey 39c back."

&- Gep mm ir Jm

TO AWARD CONTRACTS

The county commissioners will inert tomorrow to let contracts for retiring live bridges and for re-lecoraUcs the interior of the court house. There are several rooms of the court houe which will be decorated by the contractors to whom contracts are awarded tomorrow. The bridges are the Dan Clevengr bridge, soutu of Centerville, the Klrlia bridge three miles south of the National road in Washington township, the Old Wooden bridge south of Fountain City and the Greensfork bridft? over the National road. Rheumatic Sufferers Astonished RHEUMA Acts on Kidneys. Liver ans Blood the First Day and Out Gees Uric Add Poison. Anybody can afford to pay 50 cents to get rid of terrible Rheumatism. Sciatica or Gout, and that's all RHEUM A costs at Leo H. Fihe's and ha says If it doesnt do all that is claimed for it. money back. It's wonderful how speedily this eimple remedy takes hold and how the sore muscles limber up and the swollen Joints come down to normal. Make no mistake RHEUM A coats bat little, hat it's the best remedy yoa can find to drive Rheomatlo poiaon from the system and bring back heaHk to misery-racked bodies. "I bad Rheumatism for a sons while, and tried many tnedtcmea, bat wwa not! eared antn I used RHSTJMA, I cannot praise RHETJMA, too highly. My advtca to those suffering from Rnen-f mat ism la to use this great remedy aa1 I believe Ct will effect pannmnaot care In any caae,, Q, JR. Sattea. W. Ta, April K. JWL (AdverttsemeatO The Easte tttaf jewste? that Tuts Baa Lfcdm, Gall sad GOver Bar, tfea, ate. eta, Xotftt ww jbo -1 Fred Kennedy Jeweter Phone-1999 8SS PEC&WILI1AMSON UNDERFEED famaoe stands today omaL The clafnca of tbo factarera as found In the tisemesta of leadings Is backed trp by thooeandf ef users all over the Pilgrim FnracceCo. 529 Main St. 714 to 720 8. 9th St. Phena 1390 Phone 16SS 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. DO YOU NEED MONEY? We will advance you money on your household goods, piano, team & etc, without removing them from your possession, you can pay us back In weekly or monthly or quarterly payments. In case of sickness or loss of work, time win be extended without extra charge. Get our terms before borrowing. Private Reliable THE STATE INVESTMENT AND LOAN COMPANY 40 Colonial Bldg. -Phone 2550. Take elevater' te Third Floor. Richmond, Indiana.