Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 184, 13 June 1914 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3L SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 1914
The Richmond Palladium AND SUN-TELEGRAM.
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Masonic Building. Ninth and North A Streets. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.
In Richmond. 10 cents a week. By Mall, In advanceone year, 5.00; aix months, 2.60; one month. 45 cents. Rural Routes, In advance one year, $2.00; six months, $1.25; one month 25 cents.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second Class Mall Matter.
That Boy
We were visited recently by a kind and genial friend who has achieved a remarkable success in the noble and exacting business of being a father. After a bit of quiet coaching, we succeeded in getting him to tell how he does it. Believing many of our readers will be quite as much interested in hot weather hints on how to take care of boys as in the health officer's advice for keeping healthy in summer, we share herewith a little of the bright wisdom so modestly imparted to us. "I don't believe boys are born bad," he remarked. "A boy is the human in the activity plus stage. Me is active by instinct and necessity. If he can't find the right thing to do, he will find the wrong. I am old-fashioned enough to believe that it is one of the father's duties to see that he finds the right." After some parleying, we encouraged him to tell us how he had managed to keep his own boys healthfully occupied. "You might suppose my first effort was to get the necessary apparatus, but it wasn't. I began by gaining my boys' confidence. Some fathers have never become acquainted with their own sons. I imagine each father must use a different method, but mine was to become a boy myself. I tried to break into the boys' world and see things from their point of view. This, I am happy to say, has been possible and it is now a great joy to think my youngsters will come to me with their little confidences and confessions, before going to outsiders. That has given me a
hold on them so that I don't have to scold threaten."
lot and helped them put in a garden. I haven't a very large back yard, but I managed to get in a croquet ground and a few pieces of outdoor gymnasium apparatus. For rainy day use, I rigged up a little work-shop in the basement and encouraged them to tinker with electrical things. Most of our Sunday afternoons are spent in the country. One of my lads has developed into quite a nature lover. It is surprising how he picks up bits of information about birds and flowers. I had to invest about ten dollars in a field glass, magnifying glass and a few little books on the subject, but it was money well spent. As my wife says, it is better to lose a few dollars than to lose hours of sleep worrying. And it goes without saying," he added, "that my boys are in the Y. M. C. A."
"Do you believe boys ever become incorrigibly bad?" we queried.
"Some may be, due to physical defect, but my notion is that no boy is hopelessly bad. We have learned how to tame lions and tigers; why can't we tame boys?" "You mean with whips?" we asked smilingly. "O no, not whips: patience and good sense and a willingness to devote as much time to looking after a boy as to breaking in a colt."
FORUMOFTHE PEOPLE Articles Contributed for This Column Must Not Be in Excess of 400 Words. The Identity of All Contributors Must Be Known to the Editor. Articles Will Be Printed in the Order Received.
The Richmond Palladium, Richmond, Ind. I see by the papers that they are trying to fasten the Abington well poisoning on William Holler. Now I am personally acquainted with him and a personal friend of his.
News Snapshots From Many Nearby Towns
ASSOCIATION MEETS. LYNN About 150 members of the Lynn Horse Thief Detective association attended the last meeting and heard with pleasure the report of C. F. Hiatt, treasurer, which $130 in the treasury. Members of the association made speeches, reviewing the ideals of the organization and the work accomplished. Refreshments were serv
ant I rln nnt hplievfi that he is sniiltv i ed. The meeting was held in tne K.
of this, "nor crazy." He has more j '
guou common sense man uan me peu-
hall.
Obsolete Methods We hear much talk from radicals about "the coming social revolution." Why don't these have something to say about our recent social revolution? We have just had one. Indeed, we are but now emerging from it. In 1800 only four per cent of the people lived in cities of eight thousand or more. Even by 1880, this had only increased to twenty-two and one-half per cent. This means that on an average, during the first half of the nineteenth century, nine-tenths of the nation's population lived in the country. Consider how different country conditions are from city conditions and how methods for carrying on public business in the country must differ from those which the city finds necessary! Yet the general system of conducting public affairs in these days in Indiana, when everything is changed and more than half of us live in cities, is practically the same as that used when only one-tenth of us lived in town. The Wayne County Board of Review members recently complained of the inefficiency of our
or j system of tax assessing. This is a good example i of political machinery held over into times for
"Of course, I have tried to secure the right j which it is woefully inadequate. When almost things for them to do with. They like to read to ' all property consisted of land or household goods
pie of Abington, "The hell hole of Wayne county." And because he was declared insane before to get him out of the way and to cover up suspicion on some one else, they are claiming he done it. I think that it would be an injustice to suspicion this innocent man. He is a good worker and attends to his own business and perfectly saue and should be let alone. He has suffered enough for the sins of others. By a personal friend, Omar Beall. Route 2, Binghampton, N. Y.
some extent. Instead of leaving them to stumble on books by accident, I have bought the best juvenile literature I can find. It isn't "goodygoody" but it is healthy and that's the main thing. Stevenson's "Treasure Island," Kipling's "Kim" and Howard Pyle's "Men of Iron" are good examples of stories I have in mind. My boys have thoroughly enjoyed two or three magazines, such as "Popular Mechanics," "The American Boy" and one or two physical culture monthlies." "For more active occupation, I rented a vacant
will be the first of a series of sermons on this subject. Grace Methodist, corner Noith Tenth and A streets, Ulysses S. A. Bridge, minister. Sunday school at 9:15, C. H. Kramer, superintendent. Children's day services and baptism of infants at 10; evening worship at 7:30, subject, "The Man Who Was Promoted to High Position." This will be the first of a series of Sunday evening sermons on
"Victorious Youth." The others aro as follows: June 21, "The Young Man Who Redeemed Himself"; June 28, "The Lover, Who, at Great Prive, Won a Wife"; July 5, "The Woman Who Saved a Nation"; July 12. "The Man Who Was a Successful Successor"; July 19, "The Youth Who Restored the Church." Second English Lutheran, corner of North West Third and Pearl streets, C. Raymond Isley, pastor. Sunday school at 9:15; morning worship at 10:30; Children's Mission Btnd at 2; at 7:30 the Children's day program will be given by the Sunday school. Midweek prayer service Thursday at 7:30 p. m.; Ladies' Aid sooiety all-day quilting Friday at the home of Mrs. Mary Ward, National road, west. County Infirmary Services will be conducted Sunday afternoon by the Rev. E. Mlnter.
NEW BUTTON RECORD. CAMBRIDGE CITY Miss Iottie Marshall, employed at the Bartel gar
ment factory, established a record that is expected to stand for many years. Last Tuesday she marked and sewed buttons on sixty-one dozen overalls. There are 132 buttons to the dozen, making a total of 8,052 buttons in nine hours' work.
ONE OF MANY. LAMAR, Mo.. June 13. Mrs. Elizabeth Isenhower, 97. who died here, left more than one hundred descendants.
FREE MOVIE SHOW. ELDORADO Free reel at thejnotion picture house here on Saturday nights has attracted many persons to
town. C. C. Koons owns and operates the machine. LITERARY SOCIETY MEETS. DODDRIDGE CHAPEL The Liter
ary society or Doddridge Chapel met Tuesday evening at the home of Walter and Charles Clevenger. with more than fifty members present. The study of Elizabeth Barrett Browning and her writings was taken up. Several humorous readings and songs were enjoyed. Refreshments were served. The next meeting will be at the home of Miss Cora Garrett. June 23. The works of James Whitcomb Riley will be discussed.
BOSTON, IND.
and when a man's possessions were an open secret, almost anybody who could read or write was
fitted to make assessments. But today so much j
property is intangible, so much wealth has become invisible, business is so complicated and financial usages so perplexing, the attempt to assess under such conditions by the methods that once worked is like trying to make ox teams do the work of automobiles. We need a new constitution that will permit us to devise a system adapted to the needs of our own day.
Indigestion and Constipation. "About live years ago I began taking Chamberlain's Tablets after suffering from indigestion and constipation for years without finding anything to relieve me. Chamberlain's Tablets helped me at once and by using them for several weeks I was cured of the complaint," writes Mrs.
Mary E. McMullen, Phelps, N. Y. sale by all dealers. (Advertisement)
Morris Ambrose was pleasantly surprised Tuesday evening. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Ambrose, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Achey, Mrs. Ida Powell, Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Young of Cincinnati, Misses Gladys Parks, Ruth and Madge Druley, Grace Pottenger, Marie Achey, Marie Brattain, Fanny Grimm and Maude Phillips, Messrs. Morris Ambrose, Claire Connell, Earl and Ernest Ambrose, Earl and Raymond Druley, Walter Benner, Lester Phenis, Elmer Farnsworth, Ray Davis, and W. A. Rinehart. Miss Loretta Brocking of Peru, Ind., i6 the guest of Miss Grace Parks. William and Mildred Jenkinson were in Richmond Thursday and Friday. Mrs. K. H. Knox was in Richmond Thursday. Miss Elvira Piper has gone to Peru, lnd., for two weeks' visit with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kennedy. The concert given Thursday evening by the Philip Gates orchestra was largely attended. The M. E. Aid society met Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. E. W. Roberts. Mr. and Mrs. John Long will soon move into their new house, which is constructed on wheels. It is an up-to-date arrangement and seems very con
venient. Mr. Long is an employe of the C. and O. railroad. Mrs. Elmer Shumate and daughter or Cincinnati, and Mrs. G. W. Shu mate and daughter spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Shandon Carter at Cottage Grove. Mrs. Sam Ketron 1b sick. H. A. Johnson has purchased a new player-piano. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kerr of Connersville were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Druley Thursday. They made the trip in an automobile. Miss Franka Keys of Winchester, lnd., has been the guest of friends here the past week. Mrs. Elmer Shumate and Miss Dorothy Shumate of Cincinnati have returned home after visiting Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Shumate and family. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Anderson and children visited in Richmond Thurs day. Miss Helen Anderson has returned home after visiting Mrs. G. W. Ringley and Mrs. Adam Eby. Mrs. A. H. Piper and son Ixren were in Richmond Friday.
LABOR DIRECTORY
7
SUNDAY International Alliance of Stage Employes of American, SI 8 Main street.
MRS. LYON'S ACHES AND PAINS Have All Gone Since Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Terre Hill, Pa. "Kindly permit ma to give you my testimonial in favor of
Lydia tu. Pink ham Vegetable Compound. When I first began taking it I was Buffering from female troubles for some time and had almost all kinds of aches pains in lower part of back and in Bides, and pressing down pains. I could not sleep and
had no appetite. Since I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound the aches and pains are all gone and I feel like a new woman. I cannot praise your medicine too highly. "Mrs. Augustus Lyon, Terre Hill, Pa. It is true that nature and a woman's work has produced the grandest remedy for woman's ills that the world has ever known. From the roots and herbs of the fiejd, Lydia E. Pinkham, forty years ago, gave to womankind a remedy for their peculiar ills which has proved more efficacious than any other combination of drugs ever compounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is recognized from coast to coast as the standard remedy for woman's ills. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn. Mass., are files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seeking health many of them openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; and in some cases that it has saved them from surgical operations.
For
Sunday Services At the Churches
St. Andrew's Catholic South Fifth atui C. Low mass and holy communion at 5::!0 a. in. Mass with singing by children's choir at 7:30. High mass and sermon at 10 o'clock. Vespers, Sfrmonette and benediction at 3 p. m. Frank A. Roeh, rector. Rev. Charles L. Kabev, assistant. St. Mary's Catholic Masses every Sunday at G, 8 and 10. Christian doctrine instruction at 2:30; veepers and benediction every Sunday at 3. Rev. Father Cronin, rector; Rev. A. Duffy, assistant rector. St. Paul's Episcopal Holy communion every Sunday at 7:30; also on the first Sunday of each month at 10:30 a. m. Sunday school at 9:15; morning prayer and sermon at 10:30. Evening prayer and sermon at 5 p. m. Saints days. Holy communion at 9; other days by appointment. Rev. J.
S. Liahtbourn, rector. j Whitewater Friends, A Trueblood.j pastor, .North Tenth and G streets.! Morning worship and sermon at 10:30; I Bible school at 9. Mr. Ungerfer will j lad tlit- Christian Endeavor at 6:20. i Evening gospel service at 7 :10; mid-j wepk prayer meeting Thursday evening, j Kirst Church of Christ, Scientist North A, between Fourteenth and Fif-j teenth streets. Subject, "God the Pre- i server of Man." Sunday school at 9; i services at 10:30; Wednesday evening j testimony meeting at 7:45. Public is cordially invited. i Earlhom Heights The church will, observe Children's day tomorrow at . both services. Sunday school with ! program by the children at 9:15; ev-1
ening servise at .:30 with special message to children by II. S. Weed. All
APPLY FOR PARDON
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ent; meeting for worship at 10:30; C. E. society at t:30; monthly meeting and player service Thursday evening at 7:30. First Presbyterian Sunday school at !:15, .7. H. McAfee, superintendent. Children's day will be appropriately observed; morning worship at 10:30, sermon by the Rev. Addison Parker. Vespers at 4:45 p. m. Sermon by Rev. E. E. Davis of the Second Presbyterian church. Central Christian Tabernacle, North Twelfth and B streets, R. C. Leonard, pastor. Bible school and Children's day program at 9:05; morning worship at 10:45; evening service at 7:45. Subejct of morning sermon will be, "Burden Bearing"; evening. "Saving the Lost." Workers' conference Wed
nesday evening at 209 West
V. P. S. C. E. Thursday evening. Bethel A. M. E., George C. Sampson,
pastor. Preaching at 10:45 by the pas- j tor; preaching at 8 by Rev. F. M. i Ovelton ; Sunday school at 2. Allen I Christian Endeavor at 7. ' Earlham College and West Rich- ! mond, Elbert Russell and Murray S. I
Kenworthy, pastors. Baccalaureate service for the Earlham college senior ! class at 10:30. Address by President j Robert L. Kelly. On account of this i
service there will be no session of the ' ! Bible school. Intermediate C. E. at ! ; 2:15; Junior C. E. at 2:15; public I meeting of the Christian associations 1 1 at 7:3u, address by Horace E. Cole-1 ' man, Tokyo, Japan. Ladies' Aid soci- ! ety Tuesday afternoon; mid-week! ' meeting for worship Thursday at 7:30 j ' o'clock. I I Reid Memorial S. R. Lyons, pastor, i Sabbath school at 9:15, Mrs. D. W. j Scott, superintendent. Hours of wor- ; ship at 10:30 and 7:30; sermons by the i
i pastor. Christian Union at 6 30; prayer meeting Thursday at 7:30 p. m. First Methodist, Fourteenth and I Main street, B. Earle Parker, minister.
INDIANAPOLIS .June 13. Application was made to Governor Ralston today for a full pardon for Mrs. Rae Krause confessed slayer of her step daughter, Chrystal Krause, at Hartlord City, Ind. The state board of pardons will give the application a hearing on June 26. Along with the plea for her liberty Franklin McCray. attorney for Mrs. Krause, presented the governor with her record in the woman's prison, where she has been a model prisoner. She was sentenced to a life term from Blackford county in October, 1904.
Banish the "Blues!" If you have that depressed feeling it's more than likely that your blood is out of order impoverished or poisoned. There is only one thing that will alter your present condition that's to restore your stomach to normal health and strength. For a weak or diseased stomach cannot make good blood. If your dicrestion ia bad vour food will not make the good blood which
nourishes body, brain, heart and nerve.
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SPECIAL Try Our Coffee, Roasted Today. H. G. HADLEY Phone 2292
DR. A. O. MARTIN DENTIST Colonial Building Suite 212-213
CO.NTAOIOUS
!iT
SET BY JOKERS
ent; morning worship at 10:30, subject, "Jesus and the Child": evening: at
6:30, young people's meeting. Kenneth i RUN OVER DUMMY
uavis, leader. This will be followed by a Children's day program at 7:30 under the direction of the Sunday school. Elmer K. Davis, pastor, 212 North Twenty-first street. St. Paul's Lutheran, Rev. C. Huber pastor. Sunday school at 9, George C. Barrel, superintendent; German
preaching servises at 10:30. subject.
HAMMOND, Ind., June 13. The au- j thortties here and at Gary, Ind., today . started a search for practical jokers whose acts have caused many women j auto drivers to become ill. According . to the police, the jokers have placed ,
"The Blessedness." Evening services ' dummies on secluded roadways, when
in English at 7, subject, "The Kind J an automobile driven by a woman was of Deacons that are Still Needed." You ; approaching. When the automobile
are cordially invited. First Christian, South Tenth and A streets, L. E. Murray, pastor. Sunday school at 9:05, V. M. Tittle, superintendent; morning warship 10:30,
Main; i sermon, "Hidden Manna;" evening ser
vice 7:30, subject, "When and How Will the Kingdom of God Come?" This
j would strike the dummy a man hidden i in the bushes at the roadside would scream that a man had been killed. I Several women have been made seri- ! ously ill by the shock.
The Netherlands last year exported goods valued at $3,299,984.
3W
parents and teachers are urged to take DU"ua scnooi ai i nuaren s aay the deepest interest in the srvice be-! Pr?ram at 10:3: Epworth League at cause of the Importance. !6::?0; Dubllc worship at 7:30. Special
"To obtain the best result, we we and recommend for use Royal Baking Powder. We find it superior to all others. "INTERNATIONAL PASTRY COOKS ASSOCIATION ADOLPH MAYER, Secy."
First Baptist, North Eleventh, near Main street. V. O. Stovall, pastor. J. Will Ferguson, superintendent. Sunday morning at 10:40 children's worship with exercises by the primary department and short sermon for children by the pastor. At 7:30 the usual service with sermon by the pastor on "The Marriage," the first of a series of four Sunday evening sermons on the home. Sunday school at 9:15; young people's meeting at 6:45. First English Lutheran, corner South Eleventh and A streets. Children's day services with occupy the morning hours at the church. Sunday school will meet at the usual time, 9 o'ch-cU. for opening evercises. At 9: IB lie special program will be given in te church and be combined with the morning church service. Members and friends will note the special hour. On Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock Dr. Leander S. Keyser of Wittenberg college, will give an illustrated lecture on native birds. Dr. Keyser is the author of several books on this theme, and has an interesting story to tell of life in Birdland. Soath Eighth Street Friends, Francis C. Anscombe, pastor. Bible school at 9:10, John H. Johnson, superintend-
music by the choir and a brief sermon
by the pastor on "The Symbol of the Shepherd as Illustrative of Christ's Relation to the Individual." You are cordially invited to these services. Third M. E., Hunt and Charles street, Sylvester Billheimer. pastor. Sunday school at 9:15, S. A. McDonald, superintendent. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30. Children's day will be observed with a program by the children at 7:30. The public is invited. Prayer meeting Thursday ecening. Subject, "Consecration." Second Presbyterian - Sunday school at 9:15, A. A. Mumbower, superintend-
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257 Ft. Wayne Avenue.
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HOW TO GET IT ALMOST FREE Clip out and pre ent six coupon like the above, bearing conaecutiTO date, together with our special price of either 68c or 98c for whiabover stylo of binding you prefer. Both book are on diaplay at tha Richmond Palladium 6 C2NS 98C STthe $2.50 Volume Beautifully bound in rich Maroon cover stamped in gold, artistic inlay design, with 16 full-psge portraits of the world's most famous singers, and complete dictionary of musical terms. 6 CiSNS 68C Seciire the $1.50 Volume Well bound in plain green English Cloth, but without the portrait gallery of famous singers. OUT-OF-TOWN READERS WILL ADD 24c EXTRA FOR POSTAGE ADT QM The on book with oul ' 400 of the ong-treaora lll--J-.l 1 kJVllUJ 0f the world In one voluma of 500 ree"- Choern by M.00O muiic lovers. Poor years to eomplete the book Every senc a gem of melody.
Cincinnati Excursion
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Train leaves Richmond 8:32 a. m. Returning leaves Cincinnati 7:00 p. m. Home Tel. 20S2. Ticket Agent. C. A. BLAIR.
Anton Stolle & Sons Richmond Hose Brands Meat and Lard Phone 1316
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Loains At Legal Rate 2 Per Cent Per Month on Household Goods, Pianos, Livestock, Etc., from $10 to $250. Home Loan Go. 220 Colonial Bldg. Phone 1509, Richmond. Indiana.
