Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 179, 10 July 1915 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHONP rAiiLAmUM ANQ SUN-TELKGBAM. SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1915

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Sts. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.

Ia Richmond. 10 cents a week. By mail, in advance one year, $5.00; six 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.

Modem Methods on Farm. Ten thousand Illinois farmers, capitalists and business men journeyed to the 25,000-acre farm left for demonstration purposes by Isaac Funk; federal and state officials joined in the pilgrimage to this farm, which is rated one of the

most modern in the nation, and where the most modern methods of agriculture are put to practice. The visitors saw a farm that is the last word in efficiency. They saw tenant houses lighted by electricity and furnished with running water. They saw how tractor engines had supplanted horses and how steam and 'gasoline were furnishing the motive power for much of the hard work on the place. 5

The funk farm was left as a legacy on which to demonstrate practical methods of farming: It

has succeeded in its purpose. New ideas in agri

culture are slowly driving out methods that meant hard work and little return. A modern

farm is a business proposition. Its administra

tion reauires as much business acumen as the

management of a store .or a shop. The prosper

ous farmer today is the man who leaves the path!

of yesterday and adopts business practices wher

ever they can be applied.

ADVOCATES GOVERNMENT BUILDING OF HIGHWAY

Addison C. Harris Believes U. S. Ought to Expend Money to Rehabilitate Old National Road. Note This concludes the address of Addison C. Harris at the Centervlll Good Roads meeting. Now one other thing Shall the government help build a national road and other roads of like importance In this country? How much mondy do the people of the United States pay out every year that is raised by burdens upon the people to build dams on the Ohio river so steamboats can float down in August or to build a wharf up here at Michigan City or Chicago or improve harbors of a nation? Millions and millions of money

every year. What is more important to you good people is that the National road shall be improved and made a great highway from ocean to ocean. You call it the Old Trails road. I like the name National road. Shall it be a national road and shall it be built at least in part by the nation? Why shall not the nation contribute out of Its treasury a sum to build a road as well as to build a dam for something down on the Ohio river for a few steamboats. Tell me that now, if you think as I do. You say that the time must come when not only the legislature of Indiana but the congress of the United States shall unite in a great effort to establish for the people of this nation great national highways for this new vehicle. It has come and come to stay. Not only will it be on the road but It will be In the cornfield. Changes in Farming. I saw a man plowins corn not long ago with a tractor engine in front of his plow. Why, you go up here in the wheat region in this country or Canada next month in mid-harvest and you won't sec ony horses pulling reapers any mors. There is a tractor enplne. This great power is koing to be a wonderful impetus to the development, of the agricultural wealth of this great country and nowhere more than in this great Ohio and Mississippi valley and I say, therefore, that the time must come and is here now when every American without regard to party or without regard to church or anything else ought, to join with this society here, with the societies elsowhere throughout the state and nation that are organized and that have one great movement for improvement and betterment of the great highways of this Republic and make them as good as the roads of Germany and France or England or Rome. Some of you have traveled on tho roads in France and in Germany. Why they are indescribably good and built as our roads are, largely of grav

el but with a foundation and a drain

age and a skill and repairs after every day or every week that keep them in perfect condition. European Roads.

I remember some years ago after

my little wife and had been abroad and riding not in automobiles because

they did not have them then we came

to New York and I said let's go up In the great park and drive around and see. And when we came back my wife said why there are better common roads in France and Germany than the roads in the park and how are they maintained? By the government. Every five miles In the country where I was they were under the care and keep of a road master. Ordinarily he was an old soldier who needed government support. Whenever there was a chuck hole or any defect In the road it was not allowed to go by until the next storm and the next storm until it made a great hole. It was filled up at once. I remember being up in the mountains In southern Germany where there was a road that Napoleon built in his day, over the mountains, and there was the daugh

ter of the roadmaster with a Case knife on her knee in the road picking up the little grass that had grown up between 'the stone blocks now and then. That is the way they keep the road. They keep it like you keep your walks in front of your house because it Is beautiful, because it is useful, because it pleases you, because it pleases me when I come to visit you at your own house and let us all aeree

that all the roads in Indiana beginning at Richmond and going to Terre Haute and elsewhere shall be as well kept as they can be kept and think how much it will add to the pleasure and comfort of all our three millions of people. Patriotic Service. Now,' friends, I think this is a patriotic day and while we are doing this' we tWH do other, good things. We will help all we can by teaching the law of neutrality and of Christianity to suppresr as -far as we might this savagery that has turned loose like a wild lion in Europe today between nations, and next let us make this republic and our flag stand as an emblem of Christian peace and noble intelligent fellowship. All the nations of the world look to America. No republic has been established since Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence and our forefathers wrote our constitution. No republic has been established on this continent or in Europe that has not been modeled after our form of government. the American republic where all men have an equal voice in the management of the public affairs, where all children have an equal right to attend the public school, where every man cari worship God according to his own conscience or not worship at all, if he don't want to;- where men are free, where no man can be deprived of his property or his liberty until he has been tried in a court of justice and before a jury of his own people. These things are what make this republic. These are the things that Jefferson and our fathers established for this country. I mean this Indiana country. These are the things that make America great. These are the things that fill our hearts with patriotic love for the republic and Old Glory on these anniversaries. These things let us keep alive. A man from Wayne county than which there is no better county anywhere that, will stand for the princi-

I pies, Mr. Chairman, that you and yo.u'! are working for today, state roads,

"Reds" Plant Bomb

At Police Station

government aid, everybody up and do

ing his part, and then, after we do that, then it will be done, and we will

be done.

Now, good people, I thank you with all my heart for the pleasure In seeing you once more. You do not know how well I love Wayne county. I told

a little story over at Richmond once,

May be you were not all there and I want, to tell it again. Quite a time ago, when my good father was alive, I was at home one Sunday and it rained as it did yesterday, and we could not go out and see our kindred, and I Baid, "Father, how many people

do you think there are in Wayne county?" There are of our blood two families, the Harris family and the Lewis family, because the Lewis family came from North Carolina, too, and old man Lewis went from Richmond through the woods and settled in the beautiful Bugar tree forests just south of Williamsburg. Recalls Early Days. Some of you know where he lived. I went in their camp one night and got tip the next morning and looked up to see this beautiful forest of sugar maples and the rich land. He said to his wife, "Let's live here, let's die here, let's be buried here." And so he made his home there, and I heard my father say that old John Lewis said when he settled there that day in that camp, he was the farthest west of any man in this part of Indiana, and he died and his wife died, and they are buried asleep there in that forest. "Now, father," I said, "how many of these people are there?" and we counted Harrises and Lewises and Lambs

and Starbrooks and what not fifteen hundred so that if the census could be taken from those two families that came more than a hundred years ago there are in this country night on to two thousand people by blood and marriage, who came from those old pioneers that came here that they might leave a land of slavery and make homes for themselves and theirs on this rich land in Indiana. Think you not I should not love this land? Go where I will, far or near,wherever I think of that which I love most it is my boyhood home on the Greensfork

creek, than which there is no prettleij

stream ever ran than than when l was a boy. Great oak forests, good swimming and a dog, and so I learned in that day playing by myself, as 1 had no brothers to play with them I learned to love the sky and the clouds and the old oaks and the trees and the fence; and I love them still, because the oaks and the fields and the trees of Wayne county were like they are today, as pretty and engaging to us all as any land the sun shines upon in its circle around the globe. So good people, God bless you all in

your movement. Let us make this state better and thousands of people

better than they are, so that when we pass away and your children and

grandchildren come they will look

back to us with the same devotion

and love as we look to the pioneers of

Wayne county a hundred years ago. GOES TO ROCHESTER

CAMBRIDGE CITY, July 10 Miss Helen Garvin, supervisor of music in

the public schools of Duluth, Minn.,

the past few years, has resigned her

position in that city and has accepted

that of supervisor in the schools of

Rochester, N. Y.

Miss Garvin is spending a few

weeks with her aunt, Mrs. Viola

Roth.

Liberty Bell off on Trip to Coast

1 1.51. 7v TT

The picture shows the famous old. liberty bell, the most precious relic of American history, leaving Independence hall in Philadelphia on an auto truck to be loaded on on a specially constructed flat car for its trip to the Panama-Pacific exposition, where it will be on exhibition for four months. Elaborate arrangements had been made for the transportation of the bell. The flat car on which the bell " is now traveling through the country is so constructed-that" the bell suffers" nO shocks orjars. rA .system of -lighting the bell at night will enable thousands to see it as it rolls on through the nigh to its destination.

NW)fDntCPOUC H4O0CWi7Ef?S At-JhR BOWS EXPLQVO'V

Scene of the bomb explosion at New York police headquarters. The Insert shows Inspector Faurot, beneath whose office the bomb exploded. NEW YORK, July 8. Inspector Faurot of the New York police Insists that the bomb, which exploded in the disused entrance to headquarters, was not meant to kill any member of the police force, but was placed there as a warning from the anarchists. The bomb which demolished the door, smashed in part of the walls and shook up several of the offices in the building did little damage. Inspector Faurot says the bomb was of typical anarchistic manufacture. Threats to blow up the police headquarters have been made in anarchistic meetings.

SUFFRAGISTS FIGHT

RECRUITING WORK LONDON, July 10. Anyone who attends the Sunday afternoon recruiting meetings in Hyde Park must come away with the idea that England surely is a kind and tolerant nation to her people. On a recent SundAy these meetings had to be "staged with the opposition not only of a number of religious '.outdoor orators, biit of the suffragists as well. Miss Sylvia Pankhurst was the leader of the latter. The suffragist meeting was held just across a short stretch of the common from a stand on which wounded soldiers from the front, together with women and statesmen, were pleading for recruits. And while the group led by Miss Pankhurst did not actually tell the men not to answer the call to the flag they advanced arguments in which it was quite easy for any man to find an excuse from donning a uniform.

AUSTRIA MASSES GUNS

ROME, July 10. Heavy reinforcements are being sent by the Austrians to the operations around Tolmino and Idria. Most of the fresh troops in the southwestern theatre previously

campaigned against the Russians, al

though some have been withdrawn from the Servian field. The Austrians are massing much artillery for use along the Isonzo front. A dispatch from headquarters at Bologna states that two companies of Salvonians surrendered to the Italians.

VlliG FAN GUIDES

GUT EATON COUPLE

EATON. Q.. July 10. When a large

oscillating fan dropped from Its fastenings Thursday evening in the Star motion picture theatre Deputy Treasurer Albert Campbell and his wife suffered severe injuries. The fan fell between them and struck Mr. Campbell on the arm. tearing loose the ligaments in his left elbow. His hand was caught in the blades of the fan and the thumb of the left hand was torn nearly off. Campbell's heart action became bad and be fainted. His wife was struck upon the head and

suffered a painful scalp wound. Both

were removed to their home In an auto.

RAIN RUINS WHEAT.

NEW PARIS, Ohio. July 10. The

storm which occurred Wednesday evening did much damage to oats, wheat and corn. The field of wheat belonging to Richard Danily was almost half swept down the creek by

the water breaking through the banks.

Over three Inches of rain fell and streams were high.

Traveling Man's Experience. "In the summer of 1888 I had a very

severe attack of cholera morbus. Two

physicians worked over me from four

a. m. to 6 p. m. without giving me any

relief and then told me they did not

expect me to live; that I had best tele

graph for my family. Instead of doing 60, I gave the hotel porter fifty cents and told him to buy me a bottle of Chamberlain's Cholic, Cholera and

Diarrhoea Remedy, and take no substitute. I took a double dose accord

ing to the directions and went to sleep

after the second dose. At five o clock the next morning I was called by my order and took a train for my next stopping point, a well man but feeling rather shaky from the severity of the

attack," writes H. W. Ireland, Louisville, Ky. Obtainable everywhere. Adv.

1

UNES

11

(or particular apply to LOCiU, T1CKKT AGENTS or ddras INDIANAPOLIS, JJVZX

Diarrhoea Quickly Cured. "About two years ago I had a severe attack of diarrhoea which lasted for over a week," writes W. C. Jones, Bu-

Mord, N. D. "I became so weak that 1

could not stand upright. A druggist recommended Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. The first dose relieved me and within two days I was as well as ever." Obtainable everywhere. Adv. t

CARRANZISTAS WIN.

GALVESTON, July 10 A cablegram received here today stated that Gen. Gonzales and his Carranzistas have forced their way to Escalera a suburb of Mexico City and were advancing steadily. Gen. Gonzales according to the message has 15 trains with 7,000 tons of provisions ready to be run into the capital on short notices and other supplies well guarded a short distance from the city.

For ; the Roof of Your Home you want a roofing that will last and one that will keep your home warm in winter and cool in summer an attractive roofing that cannot break, rust or leak. You get all this in

f" mm 15nouncd "RU- as In RUBY - m

COSTS MORE -WEARS LONGER

We recommend tU-BER-0IQ because we know that it will give you lasting satisfaction. It costs more than ordinary prepared roofings, but it is cheaper by the year. Our customers who have used it know its worth and long life. HU-BIR-OIQ is solid through and through. It is permanently waterproofed with a compound of highgrade animal and vegetable substances. It contains no coal-tar or asphaltic oils that might crack in cold weather or rnn i-1 Viot weather.

than 20 years ago are still giving perfect service without repairs. You end roof troubles when you use it. ' The U. S. Court of Appeals has enjoined imitators from using the word "Rubberoid or any similar name as the trade name or brand" of their roofing. There are many imitations of Rll-MR-OID. We sell the genuine. which has the "Ru-ber-oid Man" (shown above) on every roll. Come in r-d examine it.

Miller, Kemper Co., RICHMOND, IND.

MODERN DENTISTRY

Good Teeth are an at solute necessity and we make their possession possible. AH our work Is practically painless. Highest Grade Plates $5.00 to $8.00 Best Gold Crowns.. $3.00 to $4-00 Best Bridge Work.. $3.00 to $4.00 Best Gold Fillings $1.00 up Best Silver Fillings.., 50 cents up We Extract Teeth Painlessly New York Dental Parlor. , Over Union National Bank. 8th and Main streets. Elevator entrance on South 8th street Stair entrance on Main streets . -

Benefited by Chamberlain's Liniment. "Last winter I used Chamberlain's

Liniment for rheumatic pains, stiffness

and soreness of the knees, and can conscientiously say that I never used any.

thing that did me so much good." Edward Craft, Elba, N. Y. Obtainable

everywhere. Adv.

Beauty More Than Skin Deep.

A beautiful woman always has good digestion. If your digestion is faulty, Chamberlain's Tablets will do you

good. Obtainable everywhere. Adv.

LYNN, FOUNTAIN CITY, and

RICHMOND AUTO LINE

headquarters Knollenberg's Annex.

Owned and Operated by J. H. Oeniton Two Regular Trips Are Made Dally Between the Above Points. Leave Richmond at 10:30 and 4:30 p. m. Leave Fountain City at 11:30 and 5:00 p. m. Arrive Lynn at 12 noon and 6:00 p. m. Leave Lynn at 7 a. m. and 1 p. m. Leave Fountain City at 7:30 a. m. and 1:30 p. m. Arrive Richmond at 8:30 a. ou and 2:30 p. m.

The Talk of the Town Our New Big Line of TIES New patterns arrive dally not an old one in the line.' Lichtenfels In the Westcott.

If you do not know the location of our office, look for the ELECTRIC SIGN at the corner ot EIGHTH AND MAIN STREETS that reada Dougan, Jenkins & Co. Insurance and Surety Bonds. Then Phone 1330.

Postal Card Given Prompt Attention. Landscape Designs a Specialty. Geo. L. Von Carlezon Landscape Architect Gardentr, Nurseryman, Forester & Florist 25 Years Experience. We do sodding, grading, grass sowing, rolling, spraying and fertilizing. We plant, trim, or remove any size tree, shrubs, roses, grapevines, etc. Orders taken for trees, shrubs, roses and all kinds ot plants, flowers, bulbs, etc. We Make a Specialty of Taking Care of Private Residences by the Week or Month at Reasonable Prices. Hedges of All Kinds Planted and . Trimmed. 18 North 12th St. Richmond. Ind.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.

Watch for Our Advertisement In our advertisements we shall endeavor to portray in an interests ing manner many reasons why you should do business with some bank and particularly with this bank. Very few people are acquainted with the real mission of banks. Our advertising will therefore be more or less of an educational nature in the way of showing you the many ways in which WE can, serve YOU. We feel that if you will give two minutes each week to the reading of our ADS you will get many ideas to your advantage. Will you do this? OUR DEPARTMENTS Checking Accounts .Real Estate Loans Savings Accounts Trusts and Wills Safety Deposit Boxes Administratorship! Bonds and Investments Guardianships By the way, this bank is open on Saturday evenings from 6:30 P. M. to 8:30 P. M. for your convenience. The German-American Trust and Savings Bank "The Bank of Courteous and Efficient Service"

IXfUV Do we "see stars" when we are bit on WO I the head? tlfUITDl? IS THE LARGEST CLOCK IK WnI!IE THE WORLD? WHAT CAUSES NIGHTMARE?

HOW

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