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FAGE FOUR THE RICHMOND PAUADIDJX ADD SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY MAY 12, 1910. Tt3 Qlct.7.c:d Palkilcn Pvalteaed aad owned toy the PALLADIUM nUMTIMO CO. ImM f oaea WHk, evening and Hunter morals. 5 Office Corner North tth and A atroott alladlam and un-Taloa-raai Fhenee ualaeM Office, IMf; Editorial Booma RICHMOND. INDIANA. KadolB O. Ln4t ....Kdltwr S. F. RteBM.......Baoteooa Manager Carl Boraaardt Aaooetntn Bdttor Mown Salter SUBSCRIPTION TERMS, la Klehmond per rear (la ad vane) or aoo par week. MAIL. SUBSCRI PTIONnV no roar, in advane Sis aontua In advanee Om month, la advanee .......... RURAL ROUTBS On roar, Is advance ' Sis mentha. In advanco ; On month. In advance . ......... Addro changed aa often a da!rd: Both bow aad old addroaaoa aiuat Ivea. Subaarlbora will ploaaa remit with rder. whleh ahwuld b given (or a ODoeinod urn; nama will not ha enter ad aatll parmeut la received. Bn tared at Richmond. Indiana. 90i efftce aa aocond elaaa mall mattor. Now Torfc Bepreaenta Uvea Payne Teen. !$ Woat llrd atreet. and II U Weet SInd atreet. Nw York. N. T. . Cbteago Repreeentatlvee Payne A Young. 747-741 Marquette BuUdlcg. Chicago, III. rrrwrr f (Maw York Cky) no Only the tlgwoa at 4 la its report an j - -. m RICHMOND, JNDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Has a population of 11.000 aad la growing, it la tho county aoat of Wayaa County, and th trading cntr of a rich agri cultural community. It Is lo cated duo eaat from Indlanapolla t mil and 4 mil from tho atato Una, Richmond Is a city of homos and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It la also th Jobbing cmttr of Kaatern In diana and enjoys tho retail trad af tha populous community for miles around. Richmond Is proud of Its splen did streets, well kept yard. Its cement sidewalks and boa ttlful shade trees. It haa S national kanks, I trust eompanlea and 4 building associations with com bined resource of over S.OOO.OOO. Number of factories 121; capital Invested $7,000,000. with an an nual output of 137.000.000. and a pay roll of 93,700.000. Tha total pay roll far tho cltv amount to proximately $0,100,000 annual There, are five ratlroaa com panics radlatlns In eight differ ent direction from th city. In coming freight handled dally. 1. 140.00 Ibe-t outgoing freight handled dally. 740.000 Ibe. Yard facllltUa, Pr- day 1.70 care, Number of paaocnger trains dallv I. Numbr of freight trali.s dally 77, Tha annual post offico receipt amount to $10,000. Total aaeeeeed valuation- of the city. 111.000.00. Richmond has two Inter urban railways. Thro newspapers with a combined circulation of 13.000. Richmond is tho greatest hard war Jobbing center In tho state and only acond In general Job bins; Interesta It has a piano factory produelng a high erode piano every Is mm Inutea. It la th leader la tha manufacture traction on sines, snd produces wr mrnnini macninea. laws taowjrs. .roller skates, grain drllla aad burial casketa than any oth er city In th world. w Tha eltya area Is t.4 aerees 5ff -eoUw,t. H" tins; 110": l1"?" aad Vu? the school In the middle wot under eenatractlon: t parochial achoolai 2",? the Indiana Rualaaas Collegei fiv splendid fire companies In fine hoso tioueees Olen Miller park, tho largest and moat beautiful park in Indiana, the homo of Rich mond's annual ohautauejua: seven boteloi municipal electric lllht plant. under oueoeeaful operation and a private eleetrle llsnt plant tnaurln eompetttlon: th old.Jt public library In th atate. except an and the second largeat. 40.000 volumes: pare, refreahln g water; "ISE!--." .mU-Iwprov-d streets: 41 miles of sewers: 21 mil of cement euro and gutter Hmbtaod: 4 miles ofeement . walks, and many mil of brick walk. Thlrtv churches. Includ tns th Rld Mamorlal. built at a rost of, 1310.00: Htd Memorial Kolta1. one of the most modern ' tn the statat T. M. C A. butldlns. erected at a coot of $100.00. one of tho finest In tho wtate. Th amueeiuent renter of Kaatera In diana and Western Ohio. No city of tho stse of Richmond .holds a fine an annual art os- 'Mbit Tho Richmond Fall Fes tival hld each October I unique. no other city hold a almllar af- fair. It I given In th Interest ' af th city and financed by tha bulness man. Ruca awalttns; anvoa with enterprise la tha Panto Proof ) City. This Is My 62nd Birthday IR WILLIAM Q. FALCONBRIDOE. Sir William G. Falconbridge, chief Justice of the court of the King's Bench for Ontario, was born in Drum mondville, Ont., Mary 13, 1846. His education was received principally at thV University of Toronto, where his course was one of unusual distinction Inasmuch as he received high honors la pearly every department of the cur riculum. After his graduation in 1S66 h Ailed for a year the chair of mod ern languages in Yarmouth college. Nova Scotia. He returned to Toronto oa being appointed lecturer on Italian and Spanish at University college. He studied law and was called to the bar la 1S71. In 1SS7 he was appointed judge of the Queen's Bench division of the suprem court of judicature of On tario, and later chief justice of the King's Bench division of the high court of justice of Ontario, which po sition he now fills. Thing equal to the same thing art) equal to each other," remarked a man aatod at a cafe table, by the way of proving what h had said. "Oh. well.' replied hi friend, "that true enough. albralcally. but did it ever occur to you that there' a whole lot of dif ference between being shot and half tdllUmiBUtattoa ni iMiiinlayUoi The May Festival During the months that hare passed since the last May with its musical festival there has not been much said about the activities which were then on everyone' lips. Do you remember how the whole town went into a burst of apprecia tion and enthusiasm over what was done here last year? Musical critics and journals of the highest standing spoke not only well of the work but classed it as a thing apart a native growth of unusual vigor unheard of In America. Those who are quietly working and who have been working for weeks and weeks not because they wished applause nor yet with the sole idea of service to the community but because the thing was in them will get their applause and do their service to the community. In the crowding in of other things this side of Richmond has not been forgotten. People here have shown that they are above the form of ap preciation that depends on foreign names and metropolitan reputations to receive support. The time has been and is not apt to return when Richmond could not understand that it was more valuable to have a stur dy growth of things here than to import orchestras of fame. It is a good town to live in when things like the May Festival are known and valued from the standard of the music produced, and when the standard of music can be maintained here by- men and women and children who live here. There is scarcely a fam ily in Richmond that has not been touched and benefited by the forces at work in the May Festival it is a part of Richmond. This Your Girl? "Young girls with trim tailored suits snd natty hats with snooded hair and fresh round faces; girls who ought to be home with mother and father, are to be seen upon the streets without escort, or in groups of two or three at hours long past curfew time, on any night in the week. There is, however, something in the round faces that grips a little at the heart, and there is too often a swagger to the light-footed walk that seems out of harmony with sweet girlhood. There is a quick retort, a flippant jest from their lips, a bold glance or a brazen stare from the eyes that should be veiled in maiden modesty. Poor little girls, not to know how much more precious than all things born they are, -when they properly estimate their own worth, and prize themselves at it? But they come to be unpriz ed by themselves, neglected by their proper protectors, and taken at their own estimate by the world. It Isn't their fault. Most of them have moth ers and fathers who can tell them of the pitfalls that lie in the path of vanity and disobedience. Most of them have homes that should be their shelter after the sun goes down, and most of them would listen to advice properly given and in time. The mother and father who think their duty done in sending their young daughter to school, dressed as well as the neighbor' girl, will have a lot to answer for some day." Bishop Mc TURFMEN TURN EYES TO KENTUCKY DERBY (American News Service) Louisville, Ky., May 12. The great est racing event on the Western turf win be decided tomorrow afternoon at Churchill Downs, when the thirty-seventh annual renewal of the classic Kentucky Derby will be decided. The event will mark the opening of the spring meeting of the New Louisville Jockey club. In view of the discour aging conditions surrounding the sport of king In most parts of the country the keen Interest that is manifested in the Louisville meeting this year and particularly in the Derby is regarded as somewhat remarkable. lit is esti mated that more than 30,000 people will be on hand to witness the great event tomorrow. From present indications it is not likely that more than . Ave or six horses will start in the Derby. What the leld lacks in quantity, however, will be made up in quality. Round the World, the sensational Ally from the south, . Governor Gray and Meridian are regarded as sure starters. Round the World continues a favorite in the bettftig. The Derby has never been won by a filly, though many have con tested for it, and some turfmen are of the opinion that Round the World will weaken under , the strain of the mile and a quarter route. When the bishop of Thetford was op ening a bazaar at Norwich he told a story of a man who was ordered to be bled by leeches, and whose wife on a subsequent visit of the medico, said: "Those little worm things were no good so I got a ferret and put it on him and it did him a power of good." "THIS DATE MAY 12. '1781 Fort Schuyler, N. Y., destroyed by fire. 1789 Tammany society founded n New York City. 1809 British army under Wellington forced the passage of the Douro af ter a desperate struggle "with the French. 1820 Florence Nightingale, famous Crimean war nurse, born in Florence, Italy. Died in London, August 13, 1910. , 1862 Commodore Farragut. with a flotilla, ascended the Mississippi. 1870 The province of Manitoba was formed with Adam A. Archibald as governor. 1879 Income tax defeated in the lower house of congress. 1885 Battle of Batoche, ending the rebellion In the Canadian North west. 1892 Bridge across the Mississippi river at Memphis opened. 1898 American fleet under Admiral Sampson bombarded San Juan de 1910 The battleship Florida was launched at the Brooklyn navy yard. Porto Rico. Food la Mora Easily Digested When Rumford is Used There are two reasons why Rumford Baking Powder makes food that digests first, leavens perfectly it raises at just the right time and in just the right manner second has a food value itself, adding to the food the nutritious element necessary to health. Does not contain Alum. If you would have palatable, light, delicious aad wholesome food, use KyBflFOKP IV COMPLETE ROYAL ROAD IN 3 YEARS (American News Service) Canon City, Col., May 12. The new roadway to the top of the Royal Gorge of the Arkansas River, representing three years of arduous labor by an army of workers under the direction of skilled engineers, was formally op ened today. The roadway is to form a link in the famous Santa Fe trail speedway, which is being constructed over the line of the early day freight ers from Kansas City to Canon City. The Royal Gorge driveway is eight miles long extending from Canon City to a point af the top of Royal Gorge, just above '. the famous Hanging Bridge, from which a magnificent view is to be had of Pike's Peak, Mount Pis- gah and the Arkansas River. The road was hewn from the solid rock of the moutains and was constructed entirely by convict labor from the state pen! tentiary in this city... Weill "You must not rock the baby at all." ays the grave physician. "But I think an old fashioned cradle is so cunning, and, besides, the gentle motion gets the baby to go to sleep without crying for an hour," says the young mother. "Yes, but that rocking motion is very Injurious upon the child's brain. The constant swaying really damages its mind." "Doctor!" " "Yes, madam?" "When you were a little baby they till used cradles, didn't they?" "Certainly. That was before science had determined so many of the" , "Wel-1-1-1!" Life. IN HISTORY" The Wholesome NATURE TELLS YOU As Many a Richmond Reader Knows Too Well. . When the kidneys are sick, Nature tells you all about it,1 The urine is nature's calendar. Infrequent or too frequent action; Any urinary trouble tells of kidney ills. Doan's Kidney Pills are for kidnev ills. x People in this vicinity testify to this. .W.'F. Stevenson. Church St. -Cam bridge City, Ind., says: "I gladly con firm all I said in praise of Doan's Kid ney Pills, when I publicly recommend ed them in 1907. Backache caused me much suffering and 1 also had pains through my loins. I felt tired and worn out all tne time and had but lit tle ambition. My kidneys were weak ana tne kidney secretions looked un natural. Doan's Kidney Pills relieved all my aches and pains and acted as a tonic, in fact, brought greater benefit than any other medicine I had ever tanen. I advise my friends and neigh bors suffering from kidney complaint to give Doan's Kidney Pills a trial." For sale by all dealers. Prlr Kn cents. Foster-Mulburn Co., Buffalo, rew York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. State Press Comment May 14 is to be . celebrated as mother's day. As usual "dad" can take up his stand in the rear. Wash ington Herald. It might be well to call a grand Jury and probe the weather man. Looks as if there is graft somewhere. Hammond Times. . The fashion plates continue to model women after a peg top, but the great majority' of sensible womanhood never gets far from the belt outline. Frankfort News. A Chicago paper remarks, "Our jury system needs fixing." The popu lar impression, however, has been that it sadly needs unfixing. Fountain Warren Democrat. Considering their extreme poverty at taxpaying time the railroads should welcome waterway competition as an excuse for getting out of business. South Bend News. The Texans no longer shoot the silk hat when it appears in that state. They now greet the wearer with pleasant smiles and proceed to sell them a ranch. New Castle Courier. President Taft was Introduced the other day to an Indiana man who wasn't after an office. The Taft greeting was hearty and the Taft laugh long and loud. The Indiana man already had an office. Rock ville Republican. The Harvard professor who accuses women of being in a nearly savage state probably made the discovery at the time his wife found, he , was still carrying the letters she had given him a week before to mail. Kokomo Tri bune. " They are debating whether a fami ly can live "decently" on $600 a year, but this is another case where the living depends on the liver. Some people can do it "decently" on $600 and some can't on six or sixty thou sand. Orleans Progress Examiner. uvuostt DDDs off Love come from errors in diet, from too little exercise or from the mis takes we commit without thinking of consequences. These sicknesses may be slight at first, but they , hinder work, prevent advancement or bring depression and spoil enjoyment What is worse, they lead to serious physical disorders if not checked in time ; but you CAN check them easily and quickly. They will ExIaiuiiraDDy VSeDdl such a safe, simple, reliable family remedy as Beecham's Pills. In every household where this famous and unequalled medicine is known, the whole aspect of life is changed for the better. Be ready to help yourself and your family to overcome trouble and to regain, and keep, good bodily conditions by having on hand for immediate use For fmala. Bxckni'i POk mrm apaciallr wiuUt. S Instruction with eh box. Sold vcrjrwher. Ja box 10c and 25c Pfiioemto 12th & Main ORANGES Strawberries ! Spinach Cucumbers Sweet Potatoes Asparagus New Beets Green Beans Lettuce IPIIFJE AIPIPILJES AND GRAPE FRUIT Ptta(2inm3s (Grocery Pfcone 1X35 ROUTiriE MATTERS Took Much Time at Board of Works Meeting. The board of works on Thursday morning ordered plans arid specifica tions prepared for a cement alley be tween South Twelfth and Fourteenth streets, being the first south of Main street. A petition for this Improve ment was presented. - On the report of City Engineer Charles, that the sewer between South Tenth and Eleventh street, running from South H and I street, was com pleted, the assessment roll was order ed prepared. At a cost of $50 lockers will be in stalled for the firemen at the No. 2 hose house. There are lockers in all other fire houses of the city. The contract for the improvement of South Eighteenth street, from A to B street, with cement sidewalk, curh and gutter on both sides of the street, and ma.cadam roadway, was let on Thursday morning to Schneider Brothers. A contract for constructing a sewer from South I to J street, be tween Ninth and Tenth street, wa8 let to Hipskind and Sons. Bids were submitted to N. H. John son, on 200s barrels of cement to be used in the construction of the base for the new engine at the light plant, but the contract has not yet been let. Harsh Coal and Supply company has the lowest bid it is believed although some features of the bids are yet to be investigated. The board of works approved the F. F. Corcoran plat, near West Fifth and Chestnut streets. There are six teen lote. LITTLE ROCK PRE PARES FOR VETERANS (American News Service) Little Rock, Ark., May 12. During the coming week the eyes of all Con federate veterans, their families and friends will be turned toward this city where the annual reunion of the Unit ed Confederate Veterans will hold forth with an attendance that prom ises to be the largest of recent years The United Sons of Confederate Vet erans and other affiliated organiza tions will also hold their annual meet ings In Little Rock during the week. For several months the local commit tee have been busy preparing for the welcome and entertainment of thou sands of visitors. The arrangements are now practically complete and are declared to be of the most perfect and elaborate character. Throughout the period of the reunion the city will be decorated and illuminated as never be fore in her history. Five thousand of the veterans will be accommodated in Camp Kavanaugh, the tented city that will be erected , in City Park. Probably twice that number will be cared for in the hotels and .boarding houses of the city. Many private homes will also be thrown open for the entertain ment of the visitors. WARNING Beware of opiates in. Quick Consump Hon; they may mean death In a hur ry. KUAZIL.1AN HALM contains no narcotics, minerals or poison. It kills the germs instantly, and never failod or lost a case in 33 years. Improve ment from 1st day. Has cured thou sands. Also Tvnhoid. Pneumonia, and all contagidus diseases. Druggists, or write Dr. B. F. Jackson, Arcade, N. T. Grocery 12th & Main 19c DOZ. Strawberries ! Cauliflower Tomatoes New Potatoes Spring Onions Radishes Rhubarb Squash Pboae 1335 OTIS IS CONFIDENT That the McNamaras Are the Guilty Ones. (American News Service) Chicago, May 12. Gen, Harrison Gray Otis, millionaire, owner of the Los Angeles Times which was de stroyed by an explosion, declared to day that the evidence against John J. McXamara and his brother James, who are accused of having plotted and executed the explosion was enough to convict them. '"The approaching trials likely will be the greatest in the history of the country, because of the great interest attached by labor unions. I never doubted that the justice of Almighty God would culminate in the detection and punishment of the human mur derers who were responsible for the explosion which ended the lives of 21 men." General Otis is on his way to New York. CANT STAND VERSE OF POETIC SPOUSE New York, May 11. Mrs. Ada Anna Ruddy, wife of Professor of Language Hans Christian Ruddy, of the college of the City of New York, has filed suit for divorce, charging cruel and inhum an treatment. Some of the inhuman treatment, according to Mrs. Ruddy, consists of reading poems, principally his own to her. "My husband," continued Mrs. Rud- ry, "is daft over poetry. Why, on the day we were married he was found in his home reading poetry, having for gotten about the ceremony. His affin ity in Boston is also poetic. She sent him the following quotation: "Oh, for a touch of a vanished hand. and the sound of a voice that is still, the tender grace of a day that is dead, can never come back to me.' He would recite Tennyson to me when I was try ing to sleep." , Halifax, Nova Scotia, will expend $232,000 this year in extending its docks and piers. The city proposes also expending $200,000 for a ship building plant. Ottowa, Canada, will construct . plaza to cost $225,000 Horj She Keeps Hec iaby KleajfihyTeott Firoo An easy way for any mother to raise sturdy children So far back as the memory of man peculiar ideas about how to keep her children healthy. But women are get ting to agree on the main point more and more, and that is that it is of first importance to keep the little one's bowels open. From the bowels comes health or elck-1 nes. Unless a child la born diseased it can be kept healthy, and made to grow to vigorous maturity, if the bowels are kept free and pure in infancy and child hood. It is the main point for the mother to look after. Th amount of romping and playing a child does keeps its bowels moving; naturally, but there comes a time when they overeat or eat something that does not agree, and then a laxative Is ab solutely necessary. Don't wait until matters Ret worse give a laxative at once. What laxative are you going to give? Stewed fruit and things of that kind? No, not when the child Is really constipated. Give a scien tific laxative, a formula based on forty years of experience with children. Such a laxative is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which thousands of mothers are already giving in these emergencies. It is the mainstay of the children of Mrs. J. R. Whiting of Lena. Wis.. Mrs. Chas. . H. U2 AMD ...CLOAK AND SUIT CO Correct Dress For Women An assemblage of late models from famous Paris de signers, together with exact adaptations and modifica tions of recent styles just brought over. WHITE SERGE SUITS at $15.00 to $22.50, of White French and Whipcord Serg es in clever French adapta tions in both plain tailored and novelty sailor collar ad braid trimmed models. COATS For Motor, Dress and Utility Wear at $6.50 to $18.50 DRESSES of Surah, Veiled Chiffon, Pongee, Foulard and Satin de Soie in beautiful models with clever touches of French Col or combinations at $10.50 to $20.50. Voile,' Marquisette a n d French Batiste Dresses at $6.50 to $18.50. French and Handkerchief Linen Dresses, $6 to $14.50. Attractive Morning and Street Dresses at $9.50 to $20. FOULARD CHIFFON WAISTS At $5.00 to $14.50 Pongee and Habutai Silk Waists, $4.00 to $8.50. Voile and Marquisette Lin gerie Waist at $2.00 to $10.00. Tail ored and semi-tailored Waists, $1.25 to $5.00. Ours is the Only Exclusive Ready-to-Wear Store in the City 533 Main St. : Phone 27C3 An unknown girl road horseback at midnight, rousing families and telling them of their danger from-a forest tire spreading in the lower Catskill range. - MEN: .. For tender face and neck after shav ing, for pimples, black beads, dan druff or any skin or scalp disease use ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP. ZEMO is guaranteed to relieve all soreness and itching. The soap is part of the treatment. best for all toilet purposes. Sold by druggists ev erywhere and in Richmond by Leo H. Fihe. Established 1 Years This establishment wishes to an nounce to its patrons and friends that it has awaiting their examina tion the most snlsndid showing it has ever made of Wedding & Grcductioa Gifts in Jewelry, Watches, Diamonds, Solid and Plated Silverware, Etc., Etc. it has displays that rival de scription and that will most effec tively solve the question of what to give. Inspection Is Solicited. 0. E. Bieliinson Diamond Mountings Watch Repair- ing. - .... goes every mother has had her own Relchert, Richmond Hill, X X and nu merous others. - . , Don't give plus, tablets or strong ca tharties for the child doesn't need it. Go to your druggist and buy a fifty cent or one dollar oottle of Syrup Pepsin. It is mild, gentle, free from griping- and ' exactly suited to the needs of Infants and children. If you want to try it be fore buying write Dr. Caldwell and he will send you a free sample bottle. He has sent thousands such bottles to moth ers. . Dr. Caldwell does not feet that th purchase of his remedy ends his obli gation. He has specialised in stomach, liver and bowel diseases for over forty years and will be pleased to give tbs reader any advice on the subject free of charge. All are welcome to write him. Whether for the medical advice or the free sample address him Dr. W. B. Caldwell, Ml Caldwell building, Monticello. I1L , -, . Important Reductions WOMEN'S TAILOR MADE SUITS At $13.50. Heretofore sold up to $20. Beau tiful, classy models of fine worsteds, sergesi novelties, etc., in plain colors and stripes. CLOTH COATS $8.50 Heretofore $12.50 FOULARD DRESSES At $6.50 and $10.50 Heretofore $10.50 and $18.00. Fashionable High and Round Neck Styles. 1 shot. tw!csrr'- ... - - . -