Richmond Palladium (Daily), 10 October 1904 — Page 4
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 10, 1904. "
FOUB
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
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JONH S. FITZCIBBONS, Editor and Business Manager
MlKt U I I 3
son i o n saaa la be
Senator Fairbanks was always a friend, of the laboring man. In a speech at' Kansas City some two years ajro the senator said:" We want do slave labor. Two million men, with their blood, wiped away slavery forever. We want no labor, either white or black, in a virtual state of serfdom. Labor must be free, with nil the prerogatives which pertain to freedom." . . o On the 13th of last July, William Vawin-s liryan, who is to speak at OambrMge City soon, published his views on the Democratic platform in
'The Commoner." This is the wa? he put it: I shall not misrepresent the sit
luition, or appeal for votes for the
ticket upon false grounds. A Demo
era tic victory will mean very little,
if an v. prosrress on economic ques
lions so long as the party is under
the control of the Wall street element The labor plank as prepar
ed bv J mitre Parker's friends on the
subcommittee was a straddling, mean
in. .h. idnnk. The nomi
nation of Judge Parker virtually mil lifies the anti-trust plank."
The war between Japan and Rus-.-nis merrilv on. Skirmish after
skirmish is had, the results published
all over the world and still the war cues on. Day after day hundreds of
human lives are sacrificed and still the war goes on. The great powers
of the earth stand back as if awed
lu the awful conflict and. still the
' war goes on. Sunday after Sunday .millions of people assemble in the
churches scattered all over the world
and prav for peace between nations
and still the war goes on. There are no signs of a break in the present inactivity. Port Arthur is the pivotal battle ground. The two armies lie between Liao Yang and Mukden, watching each other and reinforcing. The Japanese are preparing for a turn in affairs, and are fixing up strong positions. .The most important war news of the week, though not vouched for, has come from Tokio. It is to the effect that the Russian fleet in the harbor has been severely damaged by the Japanese land
batteries. A possible confirmation of
the story may be found in Kamimura's blockade of Yladevostok. o JUDGE PARKER'S RECIPROCITY Judge Parker, in his letter of acceptance, tries to keep in harmony with his platform, and at the same time cite Republican authority for his position. It is a sort of two horse bare-back riding at which David B. Hill is an adept, and it must be surmised that the Democratic candidate for president is trying to follow the teachings of his preceptor, but he makes but a sad figure in the effort. Judge Parker is complex in his discussion of the tariff, but his utterances on reciprocity " are confusion worse confounded, especially' when he $lrags in the names of McKinley, 'Blaine aha"' Dingley as authority for -Jiis alleged views on that) subject. , t Does Judge Parker know that the Democrats repealed" the 'McKinley .lariff act and at the same time denounced all the reciprocity treaties negotiated under it by President Harrison? Does he know that the Democrats in congress opposed and ridi
culed the reciprocity section in the Dingley tariff law? Does he konw that Nelson Dingley was regarded by Democrats as the, high priest of protection bnljeven-yearaf flgoandthat
livedo ? Does he know what his party really means by reciprocity? If Judge Parker will turn back only two years and read the Democratic textbook for 1902, edited by Senator Carmack, lie will find the Democratic definition of reciprocity. That Democratic textbook declared that "reciprocity looks like free trade, but tastes like protection," that "in practice reciprocity is worse than protection," that "reciprocity is based upon the same, false theories as is protection, and like protection, is a sham and a humbug." lie will also find there the Democratic tariff
position in one short sentence, where the textbook declares that "Free trade would open our markets to benefit our own country." Instead of garbling McKinley 's last public speech and using the garbled extract as an illustration of his own position regarding reciprocity Judge Parker should have gone direct to the fountain of Democratic tariff inspiration and learned just why his party desires reciprocity with China. His party wants to open our markets to competitors from other countries, just as they have ever desired from the beginning of this government. Their doctrine is free trade now as it was when the Sputh rebelled and set up the Confederacy, placing in their constitution a prohibition against their congress ever enacting
a protective tariff law. It is the same as in 1892 when the party declared protection .-unconstitutional, but with the memory of the disasters which followed the Democratic tariff legislation then they are trying to bring in free trade in the form of reciprocity in competing products.. It may be "a harmless form of discussion for Judge Parker to tell' the people that he favors reciprocity just as did Blaine, McKinley and Dingley, but the people who believe in protection to American labor and American enterprises should see to it that there is a Republican congress to legislate in favor of reciprocity sue has was favored by Blaine, McKinley and Dingley, for a Democratic congress will surely follow the old Democratic doctrine and legislate in favor of free trade or whatever name they may give to their legislation.
- : Logic of Recent Cure
M..H in-l-M-I-H-M-H-I- I I 1 1 I ! I V 1.1 M H H-I-
The World's Greatest Newspaper
Last Sunday week the Palladium published exclusively the account of the miraculous restoration to health of Sister Clementine (Nellie Luken). Since that time the article has been copied all over the state. The Tribune Gazette of Saturday had the following editorial upon the subject: The case of Miss Nellie Luken presents an interesting study. She is the young woman of Richmond Ind.,who claims to have been a confirmed invalid, pronounced incuruable by eminent physicians, and cured by answer to prayer. The inexorable logic of the event may be postulated thus: Her statements are true, or they are not true. They cannot be both. If her premises are right, and her reasoning correct, her conclusion is rightThat is to say, if she was an incurable, and if she used only prayer as the means, and was restored to health in one hour, a genuine miracle was performed. It was as much a miracle as the rising of Jairus' daughter. Indeed, one newspaper pronounced the occurrence as "miraculous as any rf the occurrences recorded in the New Testament." If her premises are not right, and
her reasoning is correct, her conclusion is bound to be false. That is to say, if her allegation that a diagnosis showed every organ impaired is not true, then no miracle was performed. The controversy resolves itself into a question of a priori facts. Was every organ impaired? Did she have, as alleged, tuberculosis of the spine? Was she incurable by the regular process of nature? Who shall presume to be so knowledeous as to say yes to this last question? We leave the discussion to the materialistic physicians and the spiritual religionists. Doubtless some of the former will be quick to admit that the diagnosis was incorrect, while some" of the latter Avill assert the diagnosis was correct and the miracle occurred. Both cannot be true. The father of the once afflicted sister is a physician and has examined the condition of his daughter time and again, and no one knew it better than he. The fact that the cure took place, and in a short space of time, through the efficacy of prayer is no more strange than Avas the raisins of Jairus' daughter.
TilBG
hicago mm.
ADOPTED
RICHMOND PARTIES Entertained at Hamilton, Ohio, by Mrs. Ratz. (Hamilton Republican News.) Mrs. Charles Ratz, at her pretty home in the Gordon flats, entertained at a fancy costume party in honor of Mrs. Dick Grotendick and Richmond guests whom she has been entertaining at a jolly house party this
week and in whose honor there has kittens lasted until Mr. Fisher caught been a perfect round of festivities the hen and placed it behind closed
in me way or dox parties at tne iair, uoors.
dinners, teas and card parties. The
An Old Hen Beats a Mother Cat ont
of Her Kittens.
A cat gave birth to four kittens
in a hen's nest on the farm of J. J Fisher, near Crawfordsville, ind.
i i . i i . .
some uavs ago, ami tiie litter was
adopted by an old hen despite the
strenuous efforts of the mother cat
The fight for the possession of the
guests last
costume
in fancy familiar
Robbed the Grave. A startling incident is narrated by
John Oliver of Philadelphia, as follows: "I was in an awful condition My skin was almost yellow, eyes sunken, tongue coated, pain continually in back and sides, no appetite, growing weaker day by day. Three physicians had given me up. Then I was
advised to use.Electric Bitters, to my great joy, the first bottle made a decided improvement. I continued their use for three weeks, and am now a
well man. I know they robbed the grave of another victim." No one should fail to try them. Only 50 cents
guaranteed at A. G. Luken & Co.'s
and represented
and well known characters and the impersonations of them were exceedingly clever. The early part of the evening Avas de-oted to a game of progressive euchre. Mrs. Clarence Burnett Avon a "china hair receiver; Mrs. Dick Grotendick the second
prize; Mrs. Josephine Hum a pair of silk hose and Mrs.; Ratz, a fancy belt buckle. A feast of good things was served at the conclusion of the game. Those that spent the evening at the hospitable home were Mesdames Herman Weirhake, George Sud hoff, Edward Opeeil, Mary 'Clingenpeel, Misses Ruth Weirhake and Margaret Clingenpeel, of Richmond, Ind., Mesdames Frank Heck, Jacob Milder?, Clarence Burnett,Josephine Hurn Will Eiby, Dick Grotendick, Elizabeth Krebs, Fred Bosch and sister of Eaton, Ohio. Mrs. Clingenpeel Avon the prize for the most striking costume of the evening and her favor was an elegant belt buckle.
There are 15,000 Japanese in San Francisco. All the children attend the public schools, side by side with the whites. As the schools will, not hold all the white children that seek admission a movement is on foot, for that and other reasons, to provide a separate school for the Japs. The Japs object to being put on the same plane as the Chinese.
Looks Jes' Like His Mother Did.
(From: the Metropolitan Magazine.)
Sometimes I think I'll thrash him good, . He needs it bad, I'm sure, An' sometimes well, I b'lieve I would ; i ' Ki fN then I can't endure : T' tech th'-musin'; little id, , . For. when lie:smilesj :y? see, t He looks jes' like his mother did, ' i An' that's, enough for me4 .,. ... ; I guess a hundred times or more I've taken him insider; . TV bedroom there, an' closed 4th door An' tried, an' tried, an' tried
T bring myself to strike him onct
Jes' onct an' then I see
His mother's smile on his Avet face,
An' that's enough for me. 4
First thing I know I'm sit tin' there
Pettin' th' little chap, An' strokin of his curly hair, Holdin' him in my lap, An' dreamin, of her seein' her Jes' as she used to be.
An' somethin' makes my eves t' blur
An'
me cry silently.
In the village of Altenburg, on whose borders three countries .meet, there are no soldiers, no police, no
taxes, and its people are reuled byi monarchs. The inhabitants speak a I
queer jargon of French and German combined, and spend their time cultivating the land or working the valuable calamine mine, which is the boast of the Aillasre. ,:i
drug store.. 1
Beans, army , style, : cooked by an
armv cook, Oetober 10th, G. A. R. Hall. , ....
. . Through? to World's Fair
Richmond to St. Louis
In ; The World's Fair SpeciaL'
Via Pennsylvania'' Lines. 'Leave Richmond, Ind., 10:03 p. m. daily, arrive
St. Louis 7:22 a. m., in good time for
locating at hotels or boarding houses
and still hae the day to see the World's Fair. Only a few weeks more of the World's Fair. Fifteen-day tickets on sale daily at very low fare for the round trin. Aspprtain rarii-
m9JtSVkR9: re-! ular from C. W. Elmer, .Ticket
garded by Democrats so lonjas they Agent, Richmond, Ind.
An expert statistician figures that
there are today some 5,000,000 of adult males (that is, one out of eery three) in this country who cany life insurance, outside of the fraternal orders and the like. There were, at the end of last year, nearly 19,000,000 polices in force. There are only a little more than tAvice as many adult males today as there were fortv vears ago. The World's Work.
He's got the same brown eves she
had An' the same silky hair, Looks so like her, th' little lad, That well, I jes' don' dare T'd almos' seem as though I Avas a bein' harsh to her, An' so I let him go. He ain't a bad boy no, he ain't, Jes' michevious, that's all, In all his make-up, th' ain't a taint O' meanness an' I call T' mind when things she used to do
Exactly like he does, I thought was jes' th' cutest an' Th' dearest ever was. Folks say I'm spoilin' him may be I am, but I don't dare T' tech him rough he looks like she . ' . Did. an so T don't cafe 'M He puts Jiis little arms aroun' : My neck, an' I can see Her in his, eyes, so big an' brown, , An's that's enough for me.
Up-to-date Farmers Read "Practical Farming" The best Agriculture Department in the West.
The Vienna newspapers tell the story of afire which broke ont at Hermansijuith1, ah Austrian village near the Bavarian frontier. A Bavarian fire brurade' which was stationed
" All sailors in the British navy
are obliged to buy a black silk hand-,
kerchief. They get it from the gov-not more 4han three miles away'hasternment stores, and the price, about ened to the rescue, but the Austrian $1.00 is deducted from their pay. Custom House authorities refused to This year the admirality has ordered allow the fire engines to pass the fron 160.000 handkerchiefs from the larg- tier be fore the usual tax on imported est silk manufacturers in the world, machinery was paid. The Bavarian This number is 40,000 more than has firemen naturally turned back, and eA-er been required before. Each J half the village was burned down be, handkerchief is thirtv-five inches fore the nearest Austrian brigade
square.- : was "on me scene.'- - .--
For Women Fashions, Beanly Hints Household -Talks, Book Reviews For Men Market Reports Sporting News, Fair Politics For Children - Cut-Outs, Comics, Stories I : t McCutcheon's Cartoons $4.00 a Year Daily $6.50 Daily and Sunday
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