Richmond Palladium (Daily), 28 June 1904 — Page 4
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EIOHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 1804.
ITfiE RIGHMOND PAliLADIlJ,M ! , .h- v". r ' UyfeMBER ASSOCIATE! PRESS - wJH&.JJ
; PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY; EXCEPT SUNDAY. f. 'V..:if-. -?xT Q22 MAN STREET.1; 1 " :'Vv,iJ ,JU 'Tl
21'
CENTRAL UNlbf
a mt .
KNTBRRD AT RICHMOND POSTOFMOK AS SKCOND-CLASS MATTER
.$1 R 25 3 00
.ally delivered by carrier to any par of the city for six cents a week. '" SUBSCKIl'TION BATES S DAII.T om'H( cly. six months, in advance O i?stle city, one month, in advance OiUilcttv,oue year, In advance ;
; VVISKKLY By mail one year. fl.OO In advance. TX7 VP T T P A IT Rt anv time to get your paner f rora your carrier, you will conV. VJU PVlJ-f fer a faor by at once notifying the office by telepbor
.! . . ... . .. ... . James R. Hart. Editor. s M Rutherford. Business Manager John S. Fltzglhbons. City Editor.
UNION!
U N I O N-ffiSj) LA 6EL
The facility with which a man may displace himself from the list of available candidates is illustrated by the experience of Mayor McClellan, of New York City. When he was elected he immediately became one of those mentioned for the Democratic presidential nomination. But that was before he had an opportunity to do anything for or against himself. At the beginning of his administration he still commanded the approval of many of those who are supposed to have the St. Louis convention under their control, but the other day he was called upon to affix his signature to the Lemson light bill, and he did so. That moment he lost a considerable part of his following. Whether it was right or wrong to do this is not the question under consideration. The fact is simply an illustration of the danger of doing anything or saying anything when one is a receptive or an active candidate for honors at the hands of the Democratic party. This is doubtless rone of the reasons why the New York judge leaves so many columns unuttered.
"The earth has yielded her fruits abundantly and has bountifully rewarded. the toil of the husbandman." wrote President Buchanan on the 8th of December, 1857. "Plenteous crops," said Grover Cleveland on the 8th of August, 1893. The crops seem to have been all right in each case. Said President Buchanan: "We have possessed all the elements of material wealth in riuh abundance.'' President Cleveland speaks of "abundant promise of remunerative production and manufacture." Nevertheless President Buchanan was compelled to say, "Our country in its monetary interests is at the present time in a deplorable state;" and President Cleveland declared that "suddenly financial fear and distrust have sprung up on every side." Why? Tinkering with the tariff and lowering duties in opposition to protection.
Commenting upon the return of Alexander Dowie to the United States, the Lafayette Courier says: "Unfortunately for the- United States, old Doc. Dowie, the fat little self-appointed, self-anointed "prophet, "'has returned to it. He was stoned out of the capitals of Europe and he deserves no better treatment here or anywhere. He is simply a blasphemous old fool, living off the credulity of his no 1??? foolish followers, and his proper place is in an idiot asylum." The Courier is most emphatically right but the Palladium suggests that lie be put at hard labor in another kind of State institution. Others who o-ot monev under false pretenses are deprived of their liberty and why discriminate in case of Dowie.
Warren G. Sayre, of Wabash, is a funny man and consequently a most excellent entertainer. To hear him on the platform, one would think that he is never very serious. But the aspirants for rtie United States senate to succeed Senator Fairbanks think that he was just a little, serious when he suggested that the successor of the senior senator might be elected from the ranks of the Indiana legislature. What has added just a little to the unrest of these senatorial aspirants is the fact that the Hon. Warren G. Sayre himself is to be amember of the next legislature.
THE TRIUMPHS OF'LABOR
The Wage-Earner Has Not Yet Attained the Limit of His Privileges. (From a Labor Day address delivered J I by the Hon. J. Frank Hanly at La- : ; fayette, Sept. 1, 1900.) "In v hundred, years ; labor has changed the face of a continent; builded cities and peopled them with countless millions; bridged the streams, felled the forests and reclaimed the prairies of half the world. This it has done for others," yet it has not been unmindful of its own needs. It has accomplished equally as much for itself.
"It is today better fed. better clothed and better housed, and better able to defend itself than ever before. Its
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Sune joople are wondering why Mr. Cleveland wrote that article on the Chicago strike for McClures Magazine. It will surely not make him more popular with labor, nor bring him any nearer to the hearts of the States' rights people of the South.
Mayor McClellan, of New York City, will be in the race for the Democratic nomination for president. In considering the entire situation, he has a better chance than any other candidate that has been mentioned 60 far.
There is no doubt of Senator Fairbanks 's popularity at home. His reception last Saturday evening is enough to convince any one that he is loved and honored by those who know him best.
HON. J. FRANK HANLY. children have greater opportunities, and hope with greater certainty of fulfillment than in any previous age. Shorter hours and increased wages have been conceded and in this free land participation in governmental affairs is yours by birth right. Liberal exemption from execution and from taxation of mortgaged homes are guaranteed by law, together with immunity from oppressive attachment
and garnishment. Whether you shall
succeed in obtaining shorter hours and
a higher wage and a more liberal exemption law than you now have will depend largely upon yourselves.
"If the shorter hour enables you to bring to your employment stronger brawn, defter fingers and a keener intellect; if out of the higher wage received you build and own a home and " 'Make a household, clime For weans and wife'; If the wholesome laws you already have are not abused and do not become the refuge of the unworthy, the dishonest and the dissolute you have not reached the minimum hour, the maximum wage, nor the limit of protecting law."
THE PARTY PRESS
PAVING BRICK
The Very Finest are Made in Indiana Nothing is so important to a citv, large or small, as good, substantial, well-paved streets, and it is claimed that the finest paving brick in the world for the making of streets is produced in Indiana. Years ago, when the French occupied Western Indiana, along the Wabash river, a French potter war, captured by i wanderirg band of Kicclapoo Indians near Vineennes. The Indians decided to kill him. He was nppraised of this and consequently was greatly terrified There s emcd no way out of the predicament, though he did not give np hope and continually worked out plans whereby he could escape the fate in store for him. The Indians traveled northward and finally pitched camp in Otter creek, near what is now the Vogo and Clay county line. The captive observed that there was an abundince of fire clay of excel lent quality along the banks of the creek, and he made signs to the Indians to let them know that he coi h. make cooking utensils out of the clay if they would give him an opportunity The Indian curiosity was immediately aroused. The captive's hans were untied, and a rough kiln was made of itone and clay furnished him Soon he had fashioned out several
vessels and had them burning in the kiln. The Indians were sopleased with the csscls that they allowed him his liberty. The pottery made oy the Frenchman was'the first made in Indiana by a white m.n, and in rinding t lie clay he discovered a product which is bring utilized now with croat profit by brick and drain tile industries in western Indiana Creates"; among the clay products of this section of the state is that of vitrified pavir.g brick, which, afrer several tests, I as been prono.inccd by engineers from Paris and Berin to be the finest that is made in the world. The largest industry of this kind in located ju?t across the Wabash river, west of "JWre Haute, and over 100,000 tons of clay are used each year in the manufacture of brick and drain tile by the several industries around Terre Haute. A party of Chicago city officials, including the city engineer, members of the board of public works and ihe city council, recently visited Terre Haute and inspected some of the streets paved with vitrified brick. Thty decided to adopt the brick for streets of the "windy city" which are to be paved with brick this year. Tli? grejt point of advantage about the brick, according to the claim of the manufacturers, is that the longer it is in u-;e the smoother it wears and the harder it becomes.
It Must Carry the Burden of the Local Campaign. The burden of the campaigns must be carried by the local party "press. The metropolitan papers become mere manufacturing concerns whose busir ntess is to collect and sell news. They are bound to no set principles. They are answerable to no platform. They are guided solely by whatever is of benefit to them. We do not blame them for this. It is the trait of human nature in them. But they should not arrogate to themselves superior virtues and superior wisdom. The honest paper of the land is the partisan paper. It stands for something. It is no better and claims to be no better than the party for which it stands. It is fair, is manly, is patriotic. And the county paper is - the most sincere of all papers because its editor is always in the "great white light." He must be honest and, be it said to the honor of the fraternity, he wishes to be honest. In the campaign at hand the work of presenting argument and principles will fall to the local party press. Orators will address their thousands, but each issue of a paper reaches far more people than any orator can address in a single meeting, while the orator's facts and figures have already, been gathered from some paper. The orator simply clothes them in the beauties of speech. It Is the duty of every citizen in this land to be partisan. Likewise it is his duty to stand by the partisan press. Danville Republican.
Just watch nnd see if the New Faultless Soda package don't" create a sensation in the biscuit world.
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets Better than a Doctor's Prescription. Mr. J. W. Turner, of Truhart, Va., says that Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets have done him more good than anything he could get from the doctor. If any physician in this country was able to compound a medicine that would produce such gratifying results incases of stomach roubles, biliousness or constipation, his whole time would be used in preparing this one medicine. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co., W. IL Sudhoff, 5th and Main St.
Crisp and crackery and it will stay that way in the new "Aertite package:" Ask your grocer for a 10c package ,f the 'Faultless."
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If vou ktiew absolutely bevond the f&intRt Kfidw at a dnuH
held out to you by a friendly ha nJ--woaUl rortore you to health and happiness, you would take it wouldn't you, and thank us lor the Offer . -T T
wen, ii wji,i ao jusi mai. . serious your present condition ma; vou accept our mere word for thU
a simple statement of the truth. The responsibility will not rest upon U. then, if you neirleSthc mranti of certain cure offered vou in our trrMt mii ..w.,... : - -
0 o "v.vava .W.J
, MtAtTM
casMoacn e.
V care 00 matter how long; you have been sick, or how Z provided it Is not such as to require surgical treatment. "WiU ? - PO&aiblv lint Hilt nrm nv. it trt irnil .ml Mjj.ru miU- a
' 77ie New Way id Health '
This wonderful prescription it is not a mere patent medicine has been used with marvellous i tuocess in hundreds of cases by a physician in his prirate practice. It contain a Mcret intrredient discovered bv a German chemist, from whom we have purchasM th Amerimn rights ThJ-i-ji
acts directly on the blood, cleansing it of all impurities, destroying tke germs and thereby restoring health to all the vital oraus which depend upon the condition of the blocxL ' .. " Vitona is the only medicinal agent which will protect the I.iver, Stomach and Kidneys from the ravasres of disease. When these organs are deranged it is always a sign of some disorder in the blood. Thousands of people have blood disease and don't know it. They think the. ailment is local to the organs affected and treat theia instead of getting at the real seat of the disease and eradicating it completely by means of Vitona, Here are symptoms of blood trouble : Somo Dangerous Symptoms s
Headache,Inditrestion.Coated Ton erne. Backache. Exhaustion. Poor Appetite. Sallow Complexion. Biliousness. Constinatinn
or Sleeplessness. ,
Sni DfiBsm 1 H W If 'ou ha,ve a snKe, one ? these symptom. lt sign that your blood needs treatBJtJMM m0mmIMJS m trmmm ment, and you should not delay an hour, but begin usiug "Vitona" at once. You ran
. You can be saved and restored to oerfect health
not a 11 or a to take anv chances of lettine vour condition terminate tatall v,
means of this great remedy and you owe it to yourself, your family and friends to take prompt steps to put yourself at once in
uic way 10 recovery, rncc 01 v nuiia is i.uu, wiuicu guiuaaKC given wiw com uvluc
THE VITONA COMPANY,
Coshocton, Ohio
FOR SALE BY
ALFORD DRUG CO.
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The
Emm
Cor. Sixth and Main
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A man owes it to himself to get all the comfort he can out of life, and one of the best ways to do this is to wear comfortable clothes. The Hoosier Store is fixed to aid you. We can give better clothing for the money than any other store in Richmond. Why? Because it does not cost us so much to hancleit. This means a saving to ycu of 10 to 15 per cent. If ycu will pay this department a visit you will be convinced at once.
Summer Coat, fine lustre, $1.00 to. . . Summer Coat, fine blue serge, at ....
$1.50 $3.50
Summer Coats and Vests at
$4.00
A fine line Summer tfc A A A
Pants from $1.50 to
The Hsir Stir
Cor, Sixth and Main, Richmond.
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"Glad to meet you Miss Foultless Soda Cracker."
"The Way to Go." Every Sunday, excursions via the Dayton & Western to Soldiers' home and Daylton, $1.00. Trains every hour. Go any time you wish. A clean and cool Sunday outing. No smoke, no cinders, no dust. 7-tf
The
I'iilliiiliiini For JOB WORK
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Garden Plows.
Beats all ther Garden Tools. & One person can do Work of Three.
Plow pays forItself. J $2.50, It Cultivates, Hoes, and Rakes.
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Jones Hardware Co.
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