Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 193, 21 June 1913 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1913

BOND PREPARES A DRASTIC CONTRACT FOR NATURAL GAS Almost Complete Authority Over Company Given to the City Government. (Continued from Page One.)

the right to make rules and regulations with the consent of the city. Section 9 The city shall have the Tight at any time to purchase all the physical property from the company at a price fixed, by the Indiana Public l Service Commission. ! Section 10 Specifies rates to be (charged. Company cannot charge in i excess of the following rates: ! .60 cents per thousand for the first 5,000 cubic feet. i 40 cents per thousand for the next ! 96,000 cubic feet. : 30 cents per thousand for all in exjcess of 100,000 cubic feet, all of the above rates subject to a 10 per cent discount if paid before the 10th of each month. This section also provides for a minimum charge of 50 cents per month. All gas to be by meter. Company to Install and furnish meters free of charge. Each cubic foot of gas shall contain t least 1000 B. T. U. In case it does not reach this standard a rebate is to be made to consumers. Limits Street Openings. Requires that the company cannot open more than two blocks of city streets at any one time without conBent of city. City must have 24 hours notice of excavation. Section 12. The city at all times shall have supervision over streets. City may order company to change pipes to suit grade without cost to city. Section 13 Company cannot disturb ony sewer, grade of street, or molest any property of any other public utility without written consent. Authority of Council. - Section 14 The city council has authority in the following matters: First To fix standard, quality and pressure of gas and determine manner of measurement. , Second To fix kind and character f service. Third Fix rules and secure stand girds of measurements of gas. Fourth To fix terms and conditions ,n which the company may occupy fthe streets, but not to conflict with !he provisions of this contract. Fifth Require extensions and additional equipment which will make better service, from time to time. Sixth Establish rules for efficient Service. Seventh Fix penalty for company or officers for ' violation of provisions Of this contract. Contract Expires In 1928. Section 15. Contract to ed August J, 1928, unless further extended. Section 16 All the provisions of this contract are subject to the "Shivelygpencer Utility Commission Act." Section 17 All the provisions of this contract shall be binding on all successors or assigns of the company. Section 18 Company agrees to commence work within 30 days after granting the franchise. The company roust give bond within 5 days after the signing of the contract, for $10,000.00, that it will carry out the provisions of the contract. Under the above contract the City council and the board of public works are given almost absolute power over the actions of the company. The committee will probably make a number of minor changes in the present draft of the franchise before submitting it to the representatives of the Company next week, y The city will also ask that the parent company, the Union Natural Gas Corporation, endorse or guarantee the contract There Is Nothing Better. Hunt the world over and you will Hot find a better remedy for diarrhoea . than Chahberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It always cures. For sale by all dealers. (Advertisement) $3.50 RECIPE FREE. FOR WEAK MEN Bend Name and Address Today You Can Have it Free and Bo i Strong and Vigorous. I have in my possession a prescription for nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened manhood, failing memory and lame back, brought on by excesses, unnatural drains, or the follies of youth, that has cured so many worn out and nervous men right in their own homes without any additional help or medicine that I think every xnan who wishes to regain his manly power and virility, quickly and quietly, should have a copy. So I have determined to send a copy of the prescription free of charge, in a plain, ordinary sealed envelope to any man who will write me for it. This prescription comes from a physician who has made a special study of men and I am convinced it is the surest-acting combination for the cure of deficient manhood and vigor failure ever put together. I think I owe it to my fellow man to send them a copy in confidence so that any man anywhere who is weak and discouraged with repeated failures may stop drugging himself with harmful patent medicines, secure what I Believe Is the quickest-acting restorative, upbuilding, SPOT-TOUCHING temedy ever devised, and so cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line like this: Dr. A. E. Robinson, 4295 Luck Building, Detroit, Mich., and I will send you a copy of this splendid recipe in a plain ordinary envelope free of charge. A great many doctors would charge 13.00 to $5.00 for merely writing out a prescription liko this but I send it entirely free.

Talks on the

LIBRARY HOURS The library 13 open on week days for the delivery of books from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m., and on Saturdays from 9 a. m. to 8 p. m., in the adults department. Reading room is open from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. on all days with the exception of holidays when it i3 closed and on Sundays from 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. Now, if ever, is the time for light reading. Here are some new novels: Churchill Inside the Cup. Parker Judgment House. Biggers Seven Keys to Baldpate. Harrison V. V's eyes. Ward Mating of Lydia. Grimshaw Guinea Gold. Allen Lovers of Skye. Margrath Parrot & Co. Miller Ambition of Mark Truitt. Wylie Daughter of Brahma. Itinehart Letilia Carberry. Putnam Impossible Boy. Sherman Upper Crust. June 3rd was the birthday of his royal highness, King George V of England. To mark the day he gave titles of honor to thirty-six of his loyel subjects. Two of the men thus honored seem very near to many in the United Making an BY LEO L. REDDING. One of the most important services an active development organization can render to its town is the compiling of information as to just what kinds of industrial establishments the town ought to have and can support. The collecting and analysis of this sort of information is termed "making an industrial survey." In some of the larger cities many thousands of dolIara are spent annually by commercial organizations in making industrial serveys and keeping the information contained in them up to date. For this purpose experts who have made a lifetime study of industrial conditions, are usually called in. Indeed, the making of an absolutely accurate and 'complete industrial survey is one of the things that can only be done satisfactorily by a trained expert, and for this reason it is a task which must ordinarily be financed by an organization rather than by an individual. The main essentials of an industrial survey the basic information from which correct conclusions must be drawn are not so easy to collect accurately as might appear at first glance, since there must be added to a complete knowledge of local conditions, the widest possible range of information regarding industrial development of all kinds in all parts of the country. I know of one large industry, with a capital running into the millions, which requires for the manufacture of its finished product three kinds of raw material, the products of three widelyseparated sections of the country. Let us call these three kinds of raw material "C," "L" and "O." This company built up a great business by establishing its plant at a point where the raw material "C" could be obtained almost without expense. It had to haul "L" 100 miles by rail and "O" 1,000 miles by water and 200 miles by rail. But competing manufacturing established plants at points where they could get both "C" and "L" at a minimum of expense, and "O" with a much shorter haul. The company I am telling about, thereupon moved its plant several hundred miles, added some more millions to its capital and began manufacturing at a point where it could obtain "L" at a minimum of expense without transportation, "C" by a 200-mile rail haul and "O" by a 1,000-mile water haul. In this new location the company prospered exceedingly until a rival concern employing an industrial engineer to make a study of its operations and industrial conditions in a score of communities, finally established a plant at a point where "O" was produced, to which "L" could be transported by a short haul and find that even with a 1,000 mile transportation charges added to the cost of "C" it can make the finished product much more cheaply than the first company I have referred to. This was a ease in which only an expert, thoroughly trained, would have dared to recommend the establishment of the plant of the rival company where it was actually located. And to go to the other extreme, I know of a town of 1,200 population, in the center of a great fruit growing territory, where the natural assumption was that factories making apple barrels, peach baskets and strawberry boxes ought to flourish. But these industries were established and failed because of conditions which the local people who backed them were ignorant of conditions that made it possible for manufacturers hundreds of miles away to make the same articles and deliver them at the railroad station in this town for less than the local shops could make them. Finally an expert was called in, some time spent in the study of local conditions, and then he pointed out what was needed there was a cannery. The planing mill and the basket factory were converted into a tannery and the prosperity of the town and the farming country surrounding it was materially increased. Getting factories is one thing getting the right kind of factories is another thing. No community wants to encourage failure. What -jour commercial organization can do for your town is to engage the right kind of an expert to make the right kind of an industrial survey and co-operate with him so that he obtains all the essential information. The right kind of an expert will discover resources of raw material, productive but unemployed labor, transportation possibilities that most of the pea&l m j-qur town never

Public Library

States: James M. Earrie, who was made a Baronet, and Forbes Robertson, the actor, who was knighted. What has been written in the last decade that is more delightful than "Sentimental Tommy" and "The Little White Bird." Aren't they worth another reading? And Peter Pan illustrated by Rackham! There are some little folks who have discovered It for themselves and each time they get into the library they pull their mothers' skirts and ask "Can't I get Peter Pan?" They certainly will approve of the honor bestowed by King George upon Mr. Barrie. The Irish Players, who by some strange turn of human events played in Richmond something more than a year ago, are now playing in London at The Court. They opened their season with Synge's "Playboy of the Western World." Miss Sara Allgood is still the leading lady. If you are interested in Panama here are three new books on the subject: John Barret's Panama Canal, What It Is, What It Means. H. A. Frauck's Zone Policeman 88, a Close Range Study of the Panama Canal and Its Workers. Gause and Carr's Story of Panama, the New Route to India.

Industrial Survey

knew existed. He will take into consideration your proximity to the markets for every kind of commodity, the freight classification in your particular territory, the capital available and required for different kinds of industries, the character of your town and the comparative desirability of different classes of manufacturing. And what is most important of all, he will look into he housing conditions of your community and find out whether or not your town offers a desirable place for the workers in the proposed industries to live in. Industrial development is becoming more and more dependent upon the surroundings under which the workers must live. Detroit has become the center of the automobile industry of the world largely because it offers to the wage worker more for his money in the way of home surroundings, public parks and entertainments and, in general, the things that make life worth while, than the other towns which have tried to build up automobile factories. Detroit manufacturers get their pick of the most skilled machine shop workers without paying any higher wages than are paid elsewhere, because It is a delightful town in which to live. You want new industries in this town. You can get them by joining with the rest of the business men of your town who want them, and as a community unit an organized group going after them intelligently and laying the foundation of their success by having an industrial survey made as a premiminary. Your chamber of commerce wants to do this. Are you helping? AUTO AND 2 COPS IS E (Continued from Page One.) cross. Twenty-three miles in twentytwo minutes is his boast in public of the record he made with his automobile. When we get the rest of them we'll clean him up too." Grosvenor stated at the meeting that according to law, the police commissioners could buy an automobile, put on as many policemen as the metropolitan police laws allow for a city this size and charge up the cost to the city. Has Fire Chief a Pull. The members of the association charged that the police commissioners are neglecting their duty towards the West Side, the chief of police has a pet, the police are not capable of discharging the duties assigned them and are lazy. They also charged that Fire Chief Miller has a "pull" with the mayor and city council and that in order to satisfy his demands, 'council neglects the police. By a vote of 3 to 2, it was finally decided to adopt the plan of President Grosvenor and order the cabinet officers of the association to attend the next meeting of the police commissioners and make the demands in person. A high power automobile and two additional policemen to run it will be demanded. A resolution by N. C. Heironimus will be presented to the board demanding that the state and city laws on automobiles be enforced. Suggests School Name. The West Side Improvement association will petition the school board to name the new school which is being built on South West Second street, the "Joseph Moore" school. The museum at Earlham college is called the Joseph Moore Museum. Joseph Moore, now deceased, was prominent at Earlham for years. Nominating Committee. Thoma3 Elleman, Frank Waidele and E. G. McMahan were appointed as a committee to make recommendations for nominations at the next meeting of the association in September. The annual election of officers will be held at that time. Liquid Poultry Remedy "SAVES THE SICK" F Ck-v Rw. Vli DianW limWrnKck ni ai! fatitrf ion. Price 35c and 50c THE REX CHEMICAL CO. Newport Kjtm

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AN EIGHT HOUR LAW IS GRAN N IS' SUBJECT Well Known Man to Speak Here Under Auspices of Post Office Employes.

Preparations are about completed for the lecture of the Rev. Mr. Gran- ( nis at the High . School auditorium j Monday evening, under the auspices ;of the post office employes. Rev. Grannis was instrumental in bringing about the Sunday closing law for postoffices, and is a strong advocate of one day of rest ia seven, a suitable disability retirement law and the eight-hour day. The musical numbers of the program will be furnished by Wesley Howard, violinist, and the Richmond quartet, compossed of Clifford Hutchins, Prof. Henri Kamp, Edgar Mote and Walter Luring. C. F. Hutchins will also render a solo. The expense of the meeting will be met by the postoffice employes. No admission will be charged. It is hoped that a large number of those who favor the eight-hour day and Sunday observance will be present. Sunday Services At the Churches St. Andrew's Catholic Fifth and South C streets. Mass at 7:30; High Mass at 9:45; Vespers, sernionette and benediction at 3 o'clock. Rev. Frank A. Roell, rector. St. Mary's Catholic Masses every Sunday ai 6:00, 8:00, 0:00 and 10:00. Vespers and Benediction every Sunday at 8:00 p. m. Rev. Father Cronin, rector. St. Paul's Episcopal Holv Communion every Sunday 7:30 a. m. Also on first Sunday of each month, 10:30 a. m. Sunday school 9:15 a. m. Morning prayer and sermon 10:30 a. m. Evening prayer and sermon 5 p. m. Saints' Davs. Holv Communion 9 a. m. Other days by appointment Rev. John S.( Lightbourn, rector. Universalist Church Services in the Masonic temple (second floor) Sunday evening at 7:30; sermon by the pastor, Rev. H. L. Haywood, on the subject, Main Influences of the Present Century and Their Influence on Religious Life and Thought. Entrance opposite . postoffice. You will be welcome. St. Paul's Ev. Lutheran C. Huber, pastor. Sunday school at 9; German sermon at 10:30; subject. Be Ye Merciful, as Our Father is Merciful; evening services in English at 7:30; subject, The One Greater Than Abraham. First Presbyterian Rev. Thomas J. Graham, pastor. Sabbath school at 9:15, Miss Ella W. Winchester, superintendent; morning worship 10:30, preaching by the pastor, theme The Cringe less Christian; music by quartet choir; vespers at 4:45, with sermon by Rev. B. Earl Parker, who kindly supplies to permit the minister to speak at the county infirmary; prayer -meeting Thursday evening at 7:30, in charge of H. S. Weed, secretary of the Y. M. C. A. This church welcomes visitors and strangers to worship and work. East Main Street Friends Truman C. Kenworthy, pastor. Bible school at 9:10, C. Newman, superintendent; meeting for worship at 10:30; Senior Endeavor at 6:30; evening service at 7:30. At this meeting the delegates who attended the Endeavor convention held recently at Portland, Ind., will present their reports, and it is hoped there will be a full attendance of members of the C. E., past and present, of all the societies of the city. The program will be interspersed with Free! Free! Here are 7 vacant circles. Place one figure in each circle around the 35 so that when they are added together the total will be 35, using no figure more than once. Solve this puzzle correctly and lay the foundation for your home in the most picturesque and beautiful section of Michigan. Every person sending in a correct solution of this puzzle before July 1st will be given absolutely free, a certificate entitling him to one summer resort lot, size 30x80 feet, at Lake Breeze Grove, Michigan's ideal Summer resort. Every lot is guaranteed to be high and dry and suitable to have summer cottage built on it. All taxes' paid guaranteed title. This unparalleled offer is made to advertise this beautiful Summer Resort. You do not have to build and there are no strings to this offer. Just solve the puzzle and we will mail certificate to you immediately! Send solution now (with full name and address) to MICHIGAN CENTRAL REALTY COMPANY 3429 Second Ave., ALPENA, MICH. DR. E. J. DYKEMAN DENTIST Hours: 8 a. m. to 5:20 p. m. Evening by Appointment. New Phone 2053. 10th ft Main Sts. Over Starr Piano Store.

convention and special music. Midweek meeting for worship Thursday morning at 10; Ladies Aid Society at 1:30; conference and prayer service in the evening at 6:30. Something special; come and enjoy the meeting with us. First Methodist Episcopal Main and Fourteenth streets, B. Earle Parker, minister. Sunday school at 9:15; public worship at 10:30; sermon by Rev. W. D. Parr. D. D., of Kokomo. This service is to be held in the Interest of the Preachers' Aid Society. Class meeting at 11:45; Epworth League devotional meeting at 6:30; public worship at 7:30; good music. A cordial invitation is extended to attend these services. First Baptist North Eleventh, near Main street. W. O. Stovall. pastor. Worship with preaching by the pastor Sunday; subject. 10:40 a. m.. Heart Religion;" 7:30 p. m.. Failing by Just a Little." Sunday school at 9:15; Young People's meeting at 6:45. The public is cordially Invited to all these meetings. Whitewater Friends A. Trueblood. pastor. North Tenth and G streets. Morning worship at 10:30; evening 7:30; preaching by the pastor; Sabbath school at 9; C. E. at 6:30; midweek prayer meeting Thursday evening. A cordial invitation to all. United Brethren Eleventh and N. B streets. H. S. James, pastor. Bible school at 9:30, A. D. Craig, superintendent; preaching by the pastor at 10:30. The children of the Bible school will render an interesting Children's day program at 7:30. You are cordially invited. Second Presbyterian North Nineteenth street. Thomas C. McNary, pastor. Preaching morning and evening. Choir will be led by Prof. Jesse L. Woods at both services. South Eighth Street Friends Francis C. Anscombe, pastor. Bible school at 9:10. John H. Johnson, superintendent; meeting for worship at 10:30; Christian Endeavor Society Sunday evening at 6.30, Miss Barbara Beckman, leader; prayer meeting Thursday evening at 7:30. A cordial w:elcome to all. Bethel A. M. E. George C. Sampson, pastor; preaching at 10:45 by the pastor; 8 p. m. by Rev. N. W. Wil

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liams, former pastor, now of Hoseville, Tenn. The Masonic sermon by Geo. W. Butler at 3; Sunday school at 2:30. All are welcome. First Church of Christ, ScientistNorth A. between Fourteenth and Fifteenth street. Subject, Is the Universe, Including Man. Evolved by Atomis Force? Sunday school at 9:30; services at 11: Wednesday evening testimony meeting at 7:45; public is cordially invited. Reading room. 1417 North A street, located in south end of church edifice, open daily except Sunday and legal holidays from 1 to 5 p. m. First English Lutheran Cor. Eleventh and South A street. R G. Howard, pastor. Morning worship 10:30, preceded by Sunday school at 9; Luther League at 6:45. topic. Vacation Reading Worth While; Miss Elizabeth Sudhoff. leader. No evening services. A cordial welcome to all. Fifth Street M. E. Arthur Cates. pastor, residence- 913 North A street. Sunday school at 9:15; Epworth League at 6:30; the pastor will preach at 7:30. Grace M. E. Arthur Cates, minis-

Cain of Marion, will speak at 10:30.' Dr. Cain is general secretary of the . Preachers' Aid Society, and will present the claims of this society in the campaign now on in this conference. Epworth League at 4:30. Reid Memorial Church S. R. Lyons, rastor. Sabbath school at 9:15. Ellis M. Learner, superintendent; hours of worship. 10:30 and 7:30; sermons by the pastor. First Christian Corner Tenth and South A streets. Samuel W. Traum. pastor. Bible school at 9:05, W. M. Tittle, superintendent. Preaching services at 10:30 and 7:30; morning 6ermon, Counting the Cost; evening.

Severe Cold? Co To Your Doctor You could not please us better than to ask your doctor about Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for coughs, colds, croup, bronchitis. Thousands of families always keep it in the house. The approval of their physician and the experience of many years have given them great confidence in this cough medicine. fc&.fHft'

10,000 Women Every Day of the Year Enjoy the Grace, Comfort and Beauty of RUSTLESS

The materials vary from Brocades to simple Batiste, the lines vary from those of the plumpest to those of the slimmest of women. But the quality the style the fit are always the same. For R & G corsets are built on no flimsy fad of a day. Years of making corsets for all women years of buying good boning years of buying good coutil and batiste years of building the corset that makes the figure that women want, are back of each R & G corset There is an R & G corset to fit every woman. There are corsets for the tall woman, and the little woman, and the medium-sized woman. There are corsets for the plump lady or the one frankly stout for the slim woman the rounded slender woman the woman who is just medium. Come in and try on the R AO built for you.

The Motor Truck has come into prominence so exten sively within the last year that it now stands the managers of commercial establishments to get in line with this new method of real economy. The experimental stage of the commercial truck is past, and

11-13 SOUTH 4TH STREET, RICHMOND, IND.

The Doctrine of the Open Door. Im the Bible school hour the Loyal Sisterhood mill have charge and observe the National Anti-cigarette day. Earlham College and West Richmond Friend Elbert Russell and Murray S. Kenworthy. pastors. Baccalaureate service at 10:30; sermoa by prof. Elbert RusselL class of "Si, pastor of the college; 7:30, public meeting of the Christian Associations, address by Dr. Rayner W. Kelsey. class of '00. professor of history, llarrrford college. Owing to the character of the services for the day, the Rible school is adjourned until next SundaO The Christian Endeavor, howeveytll meet at 2:15 p. m. The Ladies' vAld Society is to meet Tuesday afternoon; mid-week service at 7:30 p. ni, Thursday. Interested friends are cordially Invited to th special services of the day.

GAVE A SURPRISE IN HONOR OF SON iralladium Specll WHITEWATER. Ind.. June 21. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Klllen gave a surprise party in honor of their son. Mr. Fred Killen. it having been his fifteenth birthday anniversary, Wednesday evening. Music and games were the features of the evening. An elegant luncheon was served. The guests were as follows: Mr, and Mrs. Fred GausephoL cf Fountain City. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Killen and daughter of Hollansburg. Ohio; Misses' Nina Blose, Maryara Woods. Viola Rupe. Meredith Klrtley. Hilda Garrett. Grace Bennett. Ethel Killen. Helen Killen. Mary Gausephol; Messrs. Benj. Gausepohl, Eddie Gausephol. John Gausephol. Rex. Blose, Ronald Hunt, Forest Hill. Roy Rupe. 2