Richmond Palladium (Daily), 19 August 1904 — Page 6

RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 1904.

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Better Than Gold.

"I was troubled for several years with chronic indigestion and nervous debility, " writes F. J. Green, of Lancaster, NV H., "No remedy helped me until I began using Elictric Fitters which did me more good than all the medicines I ever used. They have also kept my wife in excellent health for years. She says Electric Bitters are just splendid for female troubles; that they are a grand tonic and invigorator for weak, run down women. No other medictoe can take its place in our family. ,; Try them. Only 50c. Satisfaction guaranteed by A. G. Luken & Co. Mysterious Circumstance. One was pale and sallow and the other fresh and rosy. Whence the difference! She who is blushing with health uses Dr. King's New Life Pills to maintain it. By gently arousing the lazy organs they compel good digestion and head off constipation. Try them. Only 25c at A. G. Luken & Co.'s, druggists. Quickens the blood, rounds the form lifts the brain and body from weakness to power. That's what Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea does. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. Nearly Forfeits Life. A runaway almost ending fatally, started a horible ulcer on the leg of J. B. Orner, Franklin Grove, 111. For four years it defied all doctors and all remedies. But Bucklen's Arnica Salve had no trouble to cure him. Equally good for burns, bruises, skin eruptions and piles. 25c at A. G. Luken & Co's. Nasal Catarrh quickly yields to treatment by Ely's Cream Balm, which is agreeably aromatic. It is received through the nostrils, cleanses and heals the whole surface over which it diffuses itself. A remedy for Nasal Catarrh which is drying or exciting to the diseased membrane should not be used. Cream Balm is recognized as a specific. Price 50 cents at druggists or by mail. A cold in the head immediately disappears when Cream Balm is used, Ely Brothers, 56 Warren street, New York. Through Car Service via Hamilton to Cincinnati The C, C. & L. have arranged for through car service from Richmond via Cottage Grove and C, II. & D. to Cincinnati this in addition to their own through service via C, C. & L. direct. Through car leaves Richmond 4:05 p. m. daily except Sunday running via College Corner, Oxford and Hamilton arriving Cincinnati 6:10 p. m. This service greatly reduces the present running time into Cincinnati, the run now being made in two hours and five minutes. Labor Day Fares, Pennsyvania Lines. September 5th excursion tickets will be sold from all ticket stations on the Pennsylvania lines to any station on hose lines fifty miles or less from selling point. Return coupons good until September 6th. Inquire of Pennsylvania lines ticket agents for further information. YOUR TRIP to Los Angeles or San Francisco will not be perfect unless you use the CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY e&her on going or returning jour either on the going or returning journey. It has the grandest and most wonderful scenery in the world, which is in full view fro mthe train for 600 miles, or can be viewed from the many mountain resorts along the line. Stopovers Allowed. Free Observation Cars. Trip Through Puget Sound between Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle without extra charge. . Write for illustrated literature. A. C. SHAW, Gen. Agt., Passgr. Dept. Chicago, HI. Our Salt Rising Bread is easily di gested. Beautiful women everywhere owe their matchless loveliness to the use of Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Plain women made attractive by this great remedy. 35 cents, Tea or Tab lets. A. G. Luken & Co. A free ticket to the Chautauqua will be given to the buyer of 'a good fiveroom cottage, all in eood order and nearly new. Lot 40x150 feet, two blocks from car line. A bargain. $100 in cash, balance $10.00 per month. "It's that man Morgan, at Eighth and North E streets. 10-17

A WEIRD PLATFORM Promulgated by Second Section of the Reorgantzers State Convention.

NATIONAL ISSUES ARE IGNORED The Framer of Phrases About Extravagance and Waste Has Something of a Record Himself as a Tax Consumer Platform is Characterized by Some Planks of Incomprehensible Littleness. The platform adopted at the second eection of the Hon. Thomas Taggart's personally conducted convention Is a remarkable document. It is silent on national issues, except for one paragraph endorsing the work of the national convention and another eulogizing Mr. Taggart, the newly elected national chairman. Never before in the history of Indiana has a Democratic state convention so completely ignored national issues. It is apparent from a reading of the remainder of the platform that this was not because of a uesire to accentuate state issues, for it is doubtful if there was ever injected into the state platform of any political party such a collection of trivialities as are presented in this declaration of "principles." Conspicuous for its absence is any declaration relative to the refusal of two Indiana governors to honor requisitions for the return of Governor Taylor of aventucky to the packed juries and prostituted courts which have been employed in furthering the purposes of Goebelism. The Indiana Democracy thus confesses that In this, as in other essential matters, its judgment has been hopelessly at fault. Concerning the State Debt. The discussion of state issues, and particularly of state finance in this document, is characterized either by an unusual degree of misinformation, or a persistent desire to misrepresent. With respect to the state debt, that monument to Democratic extravagance and mismanagement which is being so rapidly reduced toward the vanishing point under a Republican state administration, the statement is made that under Democratic officials, since the enactment of the tax law of 1891, the reduction of the debt was more rapidly effected than it has been during the ensuing period of Republican fiscal and legislative control, and this statement Is supported by "statistics" manufactured out of whole cloth. The state debt in 1891 was $8,830,615.12. During the four years following a reduction of $1,310,000 was effected, and, of this amount $723,000 was received from the government in re-payment of the direct war tax. In other words the av erage annual reduction of the debt, Instead of beng $243,206.17 "from current revenues" as declared in the Democratic state platform, was con siderably less than $100,000. In the nine years which have succeeded the retirement of Democratic leadership from control of the legislative and fis cal affairs of the state, the debt has been reduced $5,608,000. Of this amount between $600,000 and $700,000 came from the general government as reimbursement for expenditures made by the state of Indiana for the equipment of troops during the civil war. Deducting this amount, it will be seen that under Republican control the state debt has been disappearing at the rate of a half million dollars per year. The Question of Extravagance. "In reality," the Democratic state platform goes on to say, "the Republican administration of state affairs has been extravagant and wasteful." The sincerity of that assertion from this particular source is illustrated by the fact that the presiding officer of the convention and one of the framers of this platform was the Hon. Alonzo Greene Smith. Mr. Smith was attorney general of the state of Indiana from November 22, 1890, to November 22, 1894. Under a Democratic fee and salary law which he helped to pass, Mr. Smith drew from the state treasury, according to his own reports, fees as follows in addition to his salary: For fiscal year ending Oct. 31, 1891 $ 7,783.76 For fiscal year ending Oct. 31, 1892 12,001.30 For fiscal year ending Oct. 31, 1893 15,811.77 For fiscal year ending Oct. 31, 1894 31,679.79 From Oct. 31, .1894 to Nov. 22, 1894 17,630.17 Total $84,906.79 The addition of the salary for the four years brings the sum total of salary and perquisites drawn by the presiding officer of this convention from the state of Indiana in a period of four years to $99,906.79. The framer of these phrases about extravagance and waste has the distinction of having averaged fn perquisites drawn from the pockets of the tax-payers of this state during the dark days of 1894, when thousands of Hooslers were fighting to keep the wolf from the door, $801.36 per day for a period of twenty two days, and seventy dollars per working day for a period of four years. Under this same Democratic fee and salary law the last Democratic state auditor drew in fees from th? insurance department alone, in addition to his salary. $51,583.31, all of which went out of the state treasury into the pockets of that official, and this gentleman himself was one of the prominent figures In the convention from

which has emanated this eleventh hour declaration in behalf o? the downtrodden tax-payer. The Republican legislature of 1895 wiped out the fee system as a private perquisite. If the Democratic fee and salary law of 1891 bad not been displaced by such a measure. State Auditor Sherrick would have drawn In fees frcm the insurance department alone during the fiscal years ending Oct. 31, 1903, in addition to his salary, $30,906.43 10 per cent of the collections in that department, which the Democratic fee and salary law provided should go to the state auditor. In his four years of service Auditor Sherrick would have derived personally from this department in fees, but for the Republican fee and salary law of 1893, $120,000. Secretary of State Storms would have derived under the law of 1891 last year in personal fees $13,759.88, or more than $50,000 in his four years of service. Instead of this, however, every dollar of these fees goes into the treasury of the state of Indiana. Some Other "Issues." It was the Republican party which wrote into the statutes of Indiana the principle of non-partisan control of the state's penal and benevolent institutions, and two Republican state administrations have established and maintained these institutions on sound business and humanitarian principles.

Nearly half of these institutions today have Democratic superintendents. Three of the four superintendents of Indiana hospitals for the insane are the same men found in charge of these institutions when the Republican party came into power in the state nearly ten years ago. The law provides bipartisan boards for every state institution in Indiana except one, and that board has been made bi-partisan by the voluntary act of Governor Durbln. Within the past three months a Democrat of established efficiency has been chosen superintendent of the Indiana Institution for Feeble-Minded Youth at Fort Wayne, and although this action was taken by a Republican board it was so much a matter of course that the incident attracted no special attention or comment. Within the same period Governor Durbin has appointed to a Republican vacancy on the board of trustees of the Institution for the Education of the Deaf a prominent Democrat of demonstrated business and educational ability, making that board Democratic, and this has surprised no one. Yet Democratic leadership in Indiana is as active in denouncing a Republican administration for "prostituting these institutions to partisan ends" as it was a few years ago in making party spoils of the hospitals for the insane, a course in which some of the men now dominant in Indiana Demacrocy persisted until they raised a cry of righteous protest even from the Democratic state organ. The wide variance between the facts and the allegations makes no difference either to these partisans or their allies of the mugwump press, which seeks to discredit every official it cannot control. Republican leadership in Indiana courts investigation for every state institution within the confines of the commonwealth. The insincerity of the framers of the platform under consideration is shown by the declaration they make elsewhere to the effect that the board of state charities "has de monstrated its value by making our penal and benevolent system a model that has attracted approval and imitation from other states." Every member of that board is an appointee of the present state administration. Its service has been of great value to the atate, but its function is purely an advisory one, so that the declaration of the Democratic platform to the effect that our penal and benevolent system has become a model is an unintentional tribute to those who have exercised the legislative and executive power necessary to effect such a consummation. The Peanut Planks. This weird platform contains some planks of Incomprehensible littleness. For instance, there is the declaration that Governor Durbin is , responsible for the smallpox epidemic of 1903, and he is denounced for employing the "cheese-paring" methods which are so unpopular with gentlemen seized with an uncontroi.able desire to follow the example of the presiding officer of this state convention and ram their arms up to the elbows in the public treasury. Three hundred bound copies of a railroad map of Indiana, provided for the governor as a member of the state tax board in accordance with long standing custom are considered of suf ficient Importance to receive attention in this platform, the price of these documents being multiplied by a hundred in an effort to dignify this specimen of peanut politics. The Indianapolis Sun, an independent newspaper, is moved by this "plank" to remark that it is a pretty high compliment to an administration when nothing bigger than this can be singled out for denun elation in a state platform. There are some other features of this weird platform which will receive attention as the campaign progresses The Republicans of Indiana are entirely willing to accept the challenge ofered in this platform by accentuating state issues, knowing as they do that the more thorough the examination of the comparative records of Democratic and Republican leadership in the man agement of state affairs, the more apparent it will become that in this cam paign a vote for Republican state and legislative candidates is a vote against the state debt. The St. Louis Globe-Democrat gets a good deal into the proverbial nutshell when it says that back of Parker is Hill; back of Hill is Belmont, and back of Belmont are the Rothschilds, which Is as far as the chain need be followed.

A prominent club woman. Mrs. Danforth, of St. Joseph, Mich., tells how she was cured of falling of the womb and its accompanying pains and misery byLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. 4 Dear Mrs. Pixehui: Life looks dark indeed when a woman feels that her strength is fading away and she has no hopes of ever being restored. Such was my feeling a few months ago when I was advised that my poor health waa caused by prolapsus or falling' of the womb. The words sounded like a knell to me, I felt that my sun had set ; but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegretable Compound came to me as an elixir of life ; it restored the lost forces and built me up until my good health returned to me. For four months I took the medicine daily, and each dose added health and strength. I am so thankful for the help I obtained through its use." Mrs. Florence Danforth, 1007 Miles Ave., St. Joseph, Mich. J 5000 forfeit if original of about letter progtna genuineness eannot be produced. "FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMEN." Women would save time and much sickness if they -would write to Mrs. Pinkham for advice as soon as any distressing symptoms appear. It is free, and has put thousands of women on the risht road to recovery. "I have naed your valuable Caarareta and And them perfect. Couldn't do without them. I have naed tti e in for aouie time for iiidia;eKtion and blllouaneaa and aio now completely cored. Kecommend tliein to everyone. Once tried, yoa will never be without them in the family." Edward A. Man, Albany, N.T. Best For The Bowels Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tanfn Good. DoOood. Never Sicken, Weaken or Urii, 19c. 25c, 50c. Never old in bulk. The frennine tablet ataniped CCU. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 60s ANNUAL SALE. TEN MILLION BOXES Weak Men MadeVigor ous nmr . wa7 rs?txr zrzmr What PEFFER'S NERVIGOR Did! It acts powerfully and quickly Corn when all others fall. Young men regain lost manhood: old men recover youthful vigor. Absolutely Onaranteed to Corn Nervoninwi, Lost Vitality, lua potency. Nightly Km luilon. Lout ro wer, either mi, Failing Memory. WMtins LMaeaaea, and allefecUnf itlf-abute or exttft and indUerrtion. Wards off IneaDlty and consumption. Don't let druggist impose a worthless substitute on f ou because It yields a greater profit. Insist on bavng FKKFKK'S M KRVltiOK, or send for it Can ne carriea in vrei povaew rirpaiu. pmiu mimvici, SI per box, or O for $5, with A Written Onarante to Cvire or Refund Money Pamphlet free tJjrarjtt. aiX.UlJAL, AEu XHi i;MCgO, ill, Bold by A. Q. Luken & Co. Ksw Fee! C3tric-Ll3litcd Trc!.i through solid without change between Chicago, Superior and Doluth, with all modern devices for the safety and comfort of patrons. Buffet smoking and library car, Booklovers Library. Pullman drawing-room sleeping cars, free reclining chair cars and day coaches and excellent a la carte dining car service. Electric lighted throughout, with individual reading lamps in every berth. Leaves Chicago 10.00 p. m. daily. Pullman sleeping cars and free reclining chair cars to St Paul and Minneapolis also on this train. Th9 Tie at of Everything. A. H. WAGGENER. Traveling Aent. 22 Fifth Avenue. Chicago, 111. HWaSs IP Do you know that the C, C: & L. is quoting a rate of $14.05 to Mountain Lake Park, Maryland and return on account Mountain Chautauqua f Selling dates, August 1st to 29th inclusive.

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GCNTEEL. HOo ZKCEPER EACH issue CONTAINS SEAimFUU.Y ILLXJSTRATCO DISHES, DECORATIONS FOtt THI TA3L.C. DAINTY MENUS POP) AU. OCCATIONS, ETC rr 13 THE AMIRIC n AUTHORITY ON SiHiNA!T TCPICC . O FASHIONS. CuancNi vs js IOC. GO Pta Ytt Phila. 1 Do You Want to Know about the most delightful places In this country to spend Summer? A region ensy to get to, beautiful scenery, pure bracing cool air, plenty of attractive resort,good hotela.good fishing, golf, something to do ali the time economical living, rest, health and comfort. Then write today, (enclosing twocent stamp to pay postage) mention this paper and we will send you our 1904 edition of 44 Mic igan in Sumnier,M containing 64 pages 200 pictures, maps hotel rates, etc., and Interesting information about this famous resort re glon reached via the Grand Rmplds & Indiana R y mi nsHiy usi." S?!,0,? WEQUETONSINQ BAY VIEW M AcK IN AC I'D NOKTHPORT WAI I.OON LAKE HARBOR r"T TRAVERSE CITY CROOKED LAKE A fine train service, fast time, excellent olnlng cars, etc, from Ht. Louis, Louisville, Indianapolis, ChicagoC. L. LOCKWOOD, GEN. PASSENGER TICKET AGT Grand Rapids, Uleh. MONEY LOANED From 5 to 6 per cent. Thompson's Loan and Real Estate coney, Main and seventh streets. Dayton and Western Time Table. (In effect July 21, 1904.) Leave Richmond for Eaton. West Alexandria, Dayton, Troy, Piqua, Sidney, Lima, Xenia, Springfield, Colum bus, Hamilton and Cincinnati, every hour G a. m., to 9 p. m., and 11 p. m, TWO HOURS TO DAYTON. New Paris Schedule, Last through car east of West Al exandria,, 9:00 p. m. Throught rates and through tickets to all points. All entirely new cars; clean, comfortable and swift. For further information call Home phone 2G9. C. O. BAKER, Agent. TIME TABLE. Dayton & Western Traction Co. In Effect August 18, 1904. Subject to change Without Notice. ' Trains between Richmond, Cedar Springs and New Paris will be oderated on the following schedule: Klcnmond Leave 5:00 a. m., 6:20 a. m. New Westville Leave 5:20 a. m., 0:40 a. ro. Cedar Springs Leave 5:25 a. m., C :4o a. m. New Paris Arrive 5:30 a. m., 6:50. An every hour thereafter until 10:20 p. m., 10:40 p. m., 10:45 p. m. 10:50 p. m. New Paris Leave 5:30 a. m., 6:50 a. m. Cedar Springs Leave 5:35 a. m., 6:55 I a. m. New Westville Leave 5:40 a. m. 7:00 a. m. Richmond Arrive 6:00 a! m., 7:20 a. m. And every hour thereafter until 10:50 p. m., 10:55 p. m., 11:00 p. m. 11 :20 p. m. j Last train leaves New "Paris for Dayton and points east at 8 :50 p. ra. I Last train leaves New Paris for ! Richmond, Eaton and West AlexanI dria at 10 :50 p. m. All trains operated on above schedule between Richmond and New Pari3 are through without charge. Yours truly, E. II. Morritt, G. P. X TTT.fr. CAED Richmond Street & Internrban Railway Company; " ' Cars leave hourly for Centerville, East Germantown, Cambridge City, Dublin and Milton from 5 a. m. to 11 p. m., returning same hours. Sunday, same hours, ezeept first car leaves at 6 a. m. Local cars leave Richmond for In dianapolb and Indianapolis for Rich mond at 5, 7, 9 and 11 a. m. and 1 3, 5 and 7 p. m. First ear Sunday at 7 o'clock a. m.

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