Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 100, 7 March 1914 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY; MARCH 7, 1914

The Richmond Palladium AND 8UN-TBLBQRAM. Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Masonic Budding. Ninth and North A Streets. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.

la Richmond. If outs a weak. By Mall. In advance ne yoar, )5.0; afx months, fMO; oaa month. 46 cents. Itural Routes. In advance year, atx months, 91.36 ; one month Sf oants.

ntcraa at tfc PMt Of no at Btehmoaa. Indiana, mm Seob4 CtaM Mall Matter.

Have You Seen the Sun? If you were to start toward the sun traveling on an express train going sixty miles an hour and you continued your journey night and day without rest, it would take you one hundred and eighty years to reach it. The vast distance which separates is from this source of all our light and warmth is altogether beyond the stretch of our imagination to conceive. Sensations travel pretty rapidly but if a man had an arm 95,000,000 miles long and he burned his finger on the surface of the sun, the feeling would not reach his brain for 167 years. If a man were to lay an apple on a street in

London and another were to place an apple-seed on a street in Philadelphia, the distance between these two would represent the distance between the sun and the earth; the difference in size would represent the difference between the magnitude of the sun and of this planet. One million, two hundred and eigthy thousand such earths as this would have to be thrown together into a heap to compose a mass the size of the sun. Its diameter is more than one hundred times the diameter of the earth. If all the planets and moons in our solar system were melted down into one body, it would then be only l-7.")0 of the size of the sun. The earth turns around once on its exis in twenty-four hours, but the sun is so big he gets around only once in twenty-five days. What is this vast mass of matter doing? So far as we can see, nothing but throwing out limitless quantities of light and energy. Conservative astronomers believe the temperature of the sun is about 1,000,000 degrees Centegrade on its

siiriace. And so much heat is thrown off by it that t!i: energy coming from a single square foot of its surface is equivalent to about 7,000 horse power. How is this great source of heat maintained? One would suppose the sun would burn out like a lump of coal and grow cold. Some astronomers believe that the mere contraction of its substance is sufficient to generate a great part of its heat. Others believe that enough of meteoric particles which are flying in every direction through space falls on its surface to generate a vast amount of heat through friction. Others believe there must be a great amount of radio-active matter in its make-up. Radium is a familiar example of this kind of substance and it is easy to understand how, if there is much contained in the sun, it would keep burning and shining for a long time before being exhausted. In comparison with the sun, the earth is a very tiny mite of a thing, and it fills one with awe to look out across the great stretches of space

r.iul see it shining in the sky. It makes one realize that life itself on such a planet as this is very mysterious and very wonderful. When once a man has fully realized that the light which falls on his kitchen step has come from such a thing as the sun and has traveled 95,000,000 miles to get there, he never again can feel that living on the earth in the full view of such a body as the pun can be a tame or uninteresting affair. In a few weeks, when the earth turns its northern end toward the great luminarv. we in

those climes will receive that share of 'its light and heat which those on the southern end of the planet have been receiving. Then its energy will be taken up by plants and animals and transformed into chlorophyll and tissue and we will eat those plants and animals and transform the energy wo get from them into human thought pnd human dreams. It seems a far cry from the vast and flaming furnace of the sun to the roses in a baby's cheek and the eloquence in a poet's brain but the scientists tell us that the !a in. niav directly be traced to the former. Storming the System Headed by an unkempt youth of twenty-one formerly a restaurant waiter, several hundred johletw men have been storming the churches in 2s.ew York City demanding shelter and food In some cases they bluffed the pastor into supplying their wants and got leave to sleep on i warm church floor and were given a hand-out beside. But when they went after Father J n fechneider, the priest in charge of St. Alphonsus Roman Catholic church, they ran into a snaoBe ore they knew what had happened, that reverend gentleman had two hundred of them staring into the cold gray eyes of a judge. This extraordinary method of labor agitation has furnished much pabulum to those reactionary papers over the country which delight in reviling the working class. "See what a lot of devils these laborers are," they exclaim. "They storm churches and break up religious meetings and compel preachers to feed and shelter them." Such antics as are now being pulled off by these jobless men, under the leadership of the I. W. W., do no good for the cause of labor. They do nothing except to stir up dust as blinding to the workers themselves as to their "enemies." The I. W. W. is a "nondescript organization,"

largely made up of foreigners, drifters, bums and red-eyed agitators who haven't the slightest notion in the world as to what it is all about. Ostensibly, its leaders, of whom W. D. Haywood is most notorious, are "champions" of the working class, but the great' majority of that class would feel far more comfortable without such patronage. But even the I. W. W's. are not one whit more fanatical than the gentlemen of the opposite camps who look upon the man out of a job as a scoundrel, and upon every worker as a member of a sub-human race. As a matter of fact, there are multitudes out of work in the United States who put in a day's labor every day looking for a job. And also there are hundreds of manufacturers running full force merely to avoid throwing their employeson the . streets. Workers are not to blame for the present condition. Employers are not to blame. Calling laborers dumb-heads, stupids, booze fighters, calling employers plutes, thieves or robbers won't get either side anything. Storming churches and forcing half -dazed preachers into granting their demands is a stupid and useless piece of business.

Mobbing a picket line with a company of mounted police and beating women and children over!

the head with clubs is equally stupid. Such measures as this are never going to settle the problem. The cause for all the unemployment in this

country lies beneath both sides of the controversy and is imbedded in the economic system on which the laboring class and the employing class both- stand. If the employers would use the energy now wasted in reviling labor leaders in order to attempt to try to understand our economic system, and if the workers would stop calling names long enough to try to discover the cause of their un

employment, we might get somewhere. Storm

ing the churches will do nobody any good. Storming the injustices built into our economic system

will do everybody a great deal of good.

YANKEES ENTER BIG AERO RACE

I J

Flyology The fly has so many enemies in the fall of the year not very many of them are able to survive

until spring, but those few which do hang on to existence are quite sufficient for all purposes. They crawl into attics, cellars, closets, cracks or any dark warm place and there hibernate through the winter.

During the first warm days of March, they limber up and start in on the summer's business. The mother fly lays, on an average, 120 eggs at a time. In order to have something for her babies to live on, she deposits these eggs in manure or other filth. In ten days from the time she covers them up, the eggs have developed into full fledged flies ready to go into business for themselves. The average number of eggs is 120, but they often run up to almost 1,000. If all' the progeny from one female were to survive and propagate their kind for only forty days, the total number of children and grand-children and all the heirs would weigh 1620 pounds. It is because of their wonderfully prolific breeding that a few sleepy, half-frozen flies in

March can fill the whole town full of buzzing, swarming, filth-carrying, disease-dealing, deadly flies in six or eight weeks. This is the time to begin swatting the fly. Every female killed now prevents thousands of

them later on. Go after every one that you see. Sweep them out of the closets and attics and have no mercy. If you have a horse on the premises, be sure to keep the manure so screened that no fly can get at it. Twelve hundred flies or even more will issue from one pound of manure. Allow no garbage or other filth of any kind to remain on the premises uncovered. If the fly cannot find some refuse, some rotting, decaying material, she cannot lay any eggs, consequently she will have no progeny. To prevent the fly is better than to swat her but if you are going to do any swatting, now is the time to do it.

CHARLES T. WEYMAN. NEW YORK, March 5 Charles T. Weyman, the American aviator, who has done moat of his flying Europe, skimming the mighty peaks of the Alps, among other things, has sent In his entry blank as a member of the United States team in this year's international trophy aero race. Weyman won the trophy for American in 1911. Orover C. Bergdoll, a wealthy young Philadelphian, has also offered to represent the stars and stripes in this race.

INCREAS

E SAURIES

More Money For Carriers With Big Parcels Business

UNSPOKEN KINDNESS

The kindly words that rise within the heart, And thrill it with their sympathetic tone, But die ere spoken, fail to play their part, And claim a merit that is not their own. The kindly word unspoken, is a sin A sin that wraps itself in purest guise, And tolls the heart that, doubting looks within, That not in speech, but thought, the virtue lies. But 'tis not so; another heart may thirst For that kind word, as Ilagar, in the wildPoor, banished Hagar prayed a well might burst From out the sand, to save the parching child; And loving eyes, that cannot see the mind, Wm watch th expected movement of the lip, Ah! Can ye let its cutting silence wind Around that heart and scathe it like a whip? John Boyle O'Reilly.

NEW PARrS Ohio, March 7. Local rural route carriers are rejoicing over the increase of their salaries to $100 per month, though they feel they are entitled to same, because of the narcel

post business making more work.

Miss Mabel Barney was honor guest Tuesday evening at a "taffy pull" at the home of Mrs. Charles Freed. A

number of high school friends were

the guests. Miss Ethel Coens was recently suc

cessfully surprised by a party of "fortyfour guests, the occasion bpintr hr

eighteenth birtrday. The evening was spent with music and a delicious luncheon was served. Miss Etlmi re

ceived a number ,r , . --iiv -;'(-. Uf.: whic was a handsome gold watch.

Scott Pfctersoi:. ul .;.,,).!, spent Tuesday here. W. C. Reinheimer. of Rushville. Ind..

spentFrlday here, having just returned from 1l m:'r-r,nnH Minn

Mesdames Minnie Brinkley and Grace j ;-...,. ' i i -jiyvoa, .Mr. and Mrs.

i . ..! . ft V.vincton. Mrs. Marv

White of Eaton and Marcus McCord of Indianapolis who were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Day, have all returned home.

James Horrigan, of Camden, is spending part of his mid-winter varelatives. Tuesday club met in regular session Tuesday evening at the home of Miss Nellie McNeill, with fiften members present. Three papers on "South America" were read and piano numbers given by Misses Gertrude Hawley and Carrie Whittaker and Mrs. Grace B. Hahn. The next meting, March 17, will be held at the home of Mrs. Arthur Davis, Eaton, Ohio. Is 82 Years Old. Mrs. Martha Bulla celebrated her eighty-second birthday anniversary at the home of her daughter, Miss Nora, Tuesday, who entertained the following guests in her honor. Mrs. Clem Burke and daughter Mabel of Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Wats, Mrs. Homer Campbell and Mrs. Venoman Reid. Mrs. Bulla is in fair health, but has lost the use of her eyesight. J. E. barker. Eaton. Ohio, and E. Martindale, of Greensfork, Ind., spent Tuesday here with the local manager of the Harris Parker Co., George

Lehman. The year's business nroved

very satisfactory to the owners and George was congratulated and r.romot-

ly employed for the coming rear. The

company dns a big business in the poultry and egg line, and Lehman has ueen manager lor several years. ' Mrs. J. O. McPherson is the guest of ; Indianapolis relatives. ! Charles W. Baker returned Thursday from Piqua.

Mr. and Mrs. Wililam Wrenn, of Ansonia, spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Wrenn. Mrs. Delia Bourjmyno left Tuesday for an extended visit with relatives at Cincinnati. Mrs. Adam ITouck returned from

a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ul-j rich, north of Richmond, Tuesday, i

where she was marodned for several days on account of the storm. Mrs. Anna Tucker, of Omaha, Neb.. Is the guest of her mother, Mira. Virginia McDonald. Dewey Bowers, of Richmond, was a recent guest of Herman Wittman. Mrs. Joseph Day and daughter Theresia, and Mrs. , Susan McKee spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Benner. Mrs. Ella L. Bloom made a business trip to New Madison Wednesday. Mrs. Alioe McLear, of Richmond. Is the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Arch R. Raney. Miss Clara Cook of Richmond, spent Wednesday with her mother, Mrs. Martha Cook. Miss Ida Warder has returned from the spring millinery openings at Columbus and Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tapey removed Wednesday to their farm near Chester. Miss Bertha Burbage, of Eaton, spent Thursday with her aunt, Mrs. George Thurston. She reports the family or Earl Irvin all recovered from the recent diphtheria scourge. George W. Miller attended the funeral of Harmon Shofer at Richmond, Wednesday.

Mrs. H. E. Williams and daughter of West Alexandria, spent Thursday and Friday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Kemp. The regular meeting of the Commercial club will be held Monday evening at the township building, and it is urged that all members be present as matters of importance will be discussed. The local grange has an interesting program for its regular meeting Saturday night, which is as follows: "Leaks on the Farm". .Thomas Bice "Wastes About the Farm" Mrs. Mary R. Reid "Benefits of Orange Buying and Selling Center" C. E. Jones "Two-Legged Dictionary Continued. "Most Practical Way to Assist the Young Farmer" Adam Reid The program will be Interspersed with musical numbers. Church Notes. Christian Sunday school at 9:30 a. ra. Methodist Rev. E. Kneisley, pastor. Sunday school at 9:15 a. m. Preaching at 10:30. Sermon for the children. Epworth league at 6:15 p. m. Presbyterian Rev. J. P. Hearst, pa6tor. Sunday school at 9:15 a. m. Preaching at 10:30. Junior Christian Endeavor, 2:30 p. m. Preaching at 7:30 p. m. Herbert Barton, of Whittier, Cal., arrived Thursday night for a visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Barton. George W. Miller spent Thursday with his mother at New Madison.

Don't Let Fly Get Action

The first bright spring days bring with them solemn warnings against the fly pest. The man with terrifying bundles of statistics and formidable rows of figures is on the job early this year and his arguments are unanswerable. Three months In advance he Issues the following tableso that the one fly with which his speculations start may not be on hand when the summer breeding season sets in: FLIES. EGGS. June 1 One fly lays Uf June 10 60 flies lay .. .. 7,200 June 203,600 flies lay 432,000 June 30 216,000 flies lay 25.920,000 July 1012,960.000 flies lay W55.200.000 July 20 777,600.000 files lay 93.312.000,000 July 30 46.656.000,000 flies lay 5,598.720.000,000 Aug. 92,799,360.000.000 flies lay 335.92S.200.000.000 Aug. 19167.961.600.000,000 flies lay 20.165.392.000.000.000 Aug. 2910,077,696,000.000000 flies lay 1.209.323,620.000,000.000 Sept. 8604,661,760,000.000.000 flies lay 72.559.411.200,000.000,000 Sept. 1836,279,705,600,000,000.000 flies lay .. 4.353.564.672.0OO.00O.000.00O Sept. 28 1.353,564.672,000,000.000,000 flies.

THREE CORNERED DEAL IS MADE IN ARBA FARM LAND FOUNTAIN CITY. Ind, March 7. A three-cornered real estate deal took place on the Arba nik WoH

I In the transaction Horace M. Miller 'acquires the Lawton Hunt fArm Mr

Hunt purchases the farm of Morris Burt and Mr. Burt buys the Miller place. The three farms are auit val

uable, and the three deals aggregate a considerable amount of money. Mr. Miller plans to move to the Miller , home place in Jackson township with1 in the next two weeks.

A local option meeting for men and women at tabernacle Sunday afternoon at 2:30. Rv. Tilman Hobson speaker. Fine music. Everybody come.

Toiredl Blood That which is lacking in vitality, debilitated, weak and thin, cannot possibly give proper nourishment and strength it must bo purified, built up and vitalized by HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA.

SPECIAL Cream to whip. Try ou.' Coffee roasted today. H. G. HADLEY Phone 2292

CLOGGED NOSTRILS OPEN AT ONCE TRY MY CATARRH BALM

To the Housewife. Madam, if your husband is like most men he expects you to look after the health of yourself and children. Coughs and colds are the most common of the minor ailments and are most likely to lead to serious diseases. A child is much more likely to contract diphtheria or scarlet fever when it has a cold. If you will inquire Into the merits of the various remedies that are recommended for coughs and colds, you will find that Chamberlain's Coujrh Remedy stands high in the estimation of people who use it. It is prompt and effectual, pleasant and safe to take, which are qualities especially to be desired when a medicine is intended for children. Por sale by all dealers. (AdvertiseBiect)

The most wonlerful clock in the world is at St. Petersburg, it has ninety-five faces, facesthirty different points on the horizon, furnishes daily almanac information, and tells the

date according to four different cal

endars.

Instant Relief When Nose and Head Are Clogged from a Cold. 8tops Nasty Catarrhal Discharges, Dull Headache Vanishes. Try "Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, just to try it Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh cold-in-head or catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at any drug store. This sweet, fragrant balm dissolves by the heat of the nos

trils; penetrates and heals the inflamed, swollen membrane which lines the nose and throat; stops nasty discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes immediately. Don't lay awake to-night, struggling for breath, with head stuffed; nostril closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but trulv needless. Put your faith just once in "Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear. Advertisement)

A SMILE OR TWO

Kicking Back. Hon. Alex Appleby, editor of the Leesville (Colo.) Light, is tired of being criticised. "Many people kick because the papers never tell the truth," he says. "Let the man or woman in Leesville who wants us to tell the truth about him or her stand up and we'll try to be accommodating." New York Telegraph.

Going Nowhere "What sort of platform is this candidate running on?" "I think it's a treadmill." Birmingham Age-Herald.

Willing to Help. Percy Noodles says that when he told the capitalist's daughter If she didn't name their wedding-day at once he would go out West and sow wild

cats, she said she guessed her father would be glad to lend him some bulletins from the Agricultural Experiment Station. Dallas News.

$100 Reward, $100

The readers of this paper will be i

pleased to learn that there is at least

I one dreaded disease that science has

'been able to cure in all its stages, and j that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure i is the only positive cure new known to I the medical fraternity. Catarrh being;

a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment Kail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer Oii3 Hundred Dollars for ar.y case that It fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address P. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75 c. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-patios.

JT? 4 r -' fc - K H Cares Golds

Bronchitis, Asthma, all throat and lung troubles No alcohol or Uangerous drugs. Guaranteed. f

There are two things no office should be without: A Boston Pencil Sharpener and a Sengbusch Self-Closing Ink Stand We put them out on 30 Days' free trial. WRITE OR PHONE US

iartel &

921 MAIN

Mayo's Medical and Surgical Institute 843 N. Delaware St. ' Indianapolis, Ind.

DR. W. R. MAYO, Specialist WILL BE AT Richmond Wednesday, March 11th Arlington Hotel end Every four Weeks Thereafter

CANCERS AND TUMORS TREATED without daim -d ,..-

THE KNIFE

He has treated successfully all forms of Chronic Diseases that are curablo

such as Diseases of the Brain. Heart. Lungs. Throat, Eye and Ear. Stomach. Liver, Kidneys, Lung Trouble. Bladder. Rectum. Female nisPas v.r,.

Diseases. Catarrh. Rupture. Piles, Eczema. Epilepsy. Dropsy. Varicocele Hydrocele, etc. Diseases of Women given special attention

I V 1

We Want to Cure D

ISCOURAGED ISEASED

IS APPOINTED

Men

We are particularly interested in seeing afflicted men and women hA ,-r-

been treated without success, for we know that our services will be appreciated more if we succeed in curing a man or woman who tells us bis or her last resort is to place himself or herself under our rnr w- .a

such men and women and received their praise and gratitude, and our professional reputation is backed by statements from thm. whirh ,..- t

convince the many skeptical sufferers of our ability to CURE.

PILES, FISTULA, ETC. Cured without detention from business. BLOOD POISON We use only tho most advanced methnd. in t

ment of Blood Poison and kindred diseases.

VARICOCELE We cure Varicocele in a few days or weok' tim wiv,

the use of the knife.

REMEMBER That In treattnc with me you cannot lose anything, because I do not charge for fallurea. but only for permanent cures. Therefore, you shoui-l certainly. In duty to yourself. INVESTIGATE MY METHODS, which are totally different from those of any other specialist, before you place your case elsewhere.

After an examination we will tell you just what we can do for you. If we can

not benefit or cure you, wo will frankly tell you so. Write for question blank.

Call on or address

Kidney and Bladder

Diseases, causing pain, burn

ing. Cystitis, pain in the back,

cured or it costs you nothing.

W. R. Mayo, M. D.f President, 843 N. Delaware SU IndianamE Ind -wt&j :