Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 338, 19 January 1908 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXD SUX-TELEGRA3I, SUNDAY, J A NIT ART 19. 1908.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. Palladium Printing Co., Publisher. Office North 9th and A Streets. RICHMOND, INDIANA.
PRICEPer Copy, Daily Per Copy, Sunday Per Week, Dally and Sunday... .. 2c i 3c ,.10c IN ADVANCE Dne Year $0 00 Entered at Richmond, Intl., Postoffice As Second Class Wail Matter. WALSH'S FINALE. It is not with a feeling of elation that we read of the decision against lohn R. Walsh, the wealthy Chicago banker. Rather do we feel regret that t man starting as Walsh did should bave come to sueh a pitiable end. fears ago he started out as a news oy selling newspapers for a living. He was ambitious and possessed an indomitable will, two qualities that wrc.ed him rapidly up the ladder to luccess and riehes. And yet either on Jhe way up the ladder or after he ar'ived at the top, he chose the easiest md wrong way in this country to iniass further riehes. As president tud absolute master of one of Chicaros largest hanks he appropriated the unds of the institution the people's leposits for use in his own various uslnespes. In regard to the enteririses in whieh lie invested the mony thus gained, Indiana has more than i passing interest, for it was mainly i o finance his Southern Indiana raiload that Walsh took money from his 1 tank. Of course his being detected j n these operations by some slip of ; ate, his subsequent trial and now the !ecision rendered against him are no nore than justice. Hut the pity of it b that possessing the admirable qualHes of ambition and perseverance, wo grent attributes of success, he ould not have possessed the third ;uality of absolutue honesty and thus, tarting from an humble position as poor "newsie" iu a large city and ittaining a large fortune and a great eputation as a financier, he could iave rounded out his days standing ilgh in the estimation of all his felw men rather than in the shadow of he penitentiary. Will the public benefit from the reItal of Evelyn Thaw's story? District attorney Jerome thinks not, but the ublic well, have you ever been down o the city court room when some parIcularly spicy trial was on? If you iave, you have noticed that the 'Standing Room Only" sign was .anging out early. So the republican editors at indanapolis heartily condemn the civil lervice law because "it places a prenium on the political molly-coddle." Vhat's the matter is the newspaper nislness in Indiana so tmprofitable hat editors need political offices to ielp out? The mayor of Hartford City is going o have women arrested who play wrds for money. Evidently he has icver attended a bridge whist game r he would never think of turning a loor. lorn and unprotected policeman nose in such a maelstrom to carry out he law. In his New Haven speech. Senator teverldge said that only demagogues Bid ignorant, men object to those comdnations of industry known as trusts" which are conducted honestr. There nurst be a lot of demaogues and ignorant men' doing busiss down in Wall street, then. So Richmond school boys are putIng too much of their energy into oiling "coffin nails" and not enough lto study. Why not try a liberal dose f moral suasion and if that doesn't fork, a still more liberal dose of strap oil?" From the large number of generals rho are being reported killed in the itest Haitian revolution the armies iown there must number about ten enerals to every one private. On again, off agaiu, gone again, uess again the Ohio League. A wax from the rafla palm of Madaascar is expected to prove a substitute jr beeswax. The leaves of the ralm re beaten to small fragments on a iat and then boiled, the wax so obtined being collected and kneaded in malt cakes. The new material i cing tested for bottling purposes. 1'onograph cylinder;?, etc. Have you not iced the lmpruvt.fr servse to Chicago vu the , C. fc L.? 'b rough sleeper leaves Richmond at 1:15 P. M. daily, arrives iu Chicago I 7:00 A. M. Try it. aprGtf The first library in Connecticut was tunded at Branford by clergymen In 700. This little library finally became e beginning of Tale university.
Just Smiles
ALWAYS UNFORTUNATE. Here I stand within the hall, For the elevator bawl With a frown. "Going up?" I loudly cry. And the urchin makes reply: "Going down." When old Charon I shall meet. Looking mystical, but neat. In his gown "Going up?" I'll murmur low, And he'll doubtless answer, "No, Going down." I A) u i s v i 1 1 e Courier-Journal. TWO OPINIONS. "Well," said the Duggin, as he sat on the sid-e of the bed and considered the sunshine brightening the' frostywindow, "It's glad I am of the fine morniii' it is; I'll put on my shoes an' go to town." "No ye won't," said Mrs. D. "Ye'll stay home the day; I have your shoes locked up, an' the key in me pocket." "Rut I say I WilK" "I say, NO:" , "Again I say, I will!" "Again I say, NO!" "I wish," said Duggin, as he resigned himself to the inevitable, "that ye had said 'NO' when I asked ye to marry me!" Atlanta Constitution. HIS ADVANTAGE. The heir's never sure That he's loved for himself, Hut fears that he merely Is loved for his pelf: And the fellow who earns Only twelve plunks a week Can't be certain at. all It is him the girls seek. It may be to his income Love is love you may know When it comes to the man Out of work, out of dough. Houston Post. SPORT NOTE. Before the opening of the next season there is still time for some genius to make a fortune by inventing a rubpop b()tl ,or Si. at ball gajnes. Washington Post. A TOO STRENUOUS DESCENT. The housewife was showing her new chambermaid through the upstairs when finaiiy they came to a staircase leading down into the rear yard. "Mary," said she, " stepping out on the landing, "Whenever you wish to pass down to the back yard go down this way." Just then the speaker slipped and was precipitated with a. great, clattering to the bottom. "Are you hurt, mum?" cried the affrighted chambermaid, starting down from above. "No: it's nothing." came the return as the disheveled mistress rose to her feet in proof. "Thin ye've got it down foine, mum; but th job's too strenuous for me." udge. A FEMININE NOTE. A person of considerable experience says that when a lot of women get together the first thing they do is to abuse the men, and that when a lot of me get together the first thing they do is to give the women reason for such opinions. Atchison Globe. THE ACTOR'S SONG. How dear to this heart are the scenes of my acting. When press agent praises present them to view: The drop scenes, the wings, and, atar off. the gall'ry, And the calcium light which my vanity knew. The footlights, the flies, representing treetops. The painted-on fountain, where ne'er water fell; The orchestra pit, and the eagle-eyed drummer. And e'en the old slapstick that bruised me so well The old oaken slapstick, the loudsounding slapstick. The laugh-saving slapstick that served me so well. Denver Republican. MEDICAL. When the mighty city doctor Finds his lotions and his drugs Do not cure your aching body Of bacilli and of bugs. He advises rural yiiet To upbuild your system slumped So the country doctor gets you When the city man is stumped. New York Sun. THE CHOICE THINGS. When a woman doesn't know what to do next she has a choice of two things comb her back hair or see if the back of her skirt is hooked. But a man can do one or all of many things look at his watch, scratch his head, spit at something, put his hands in and out of his pocket, button and unbutton his coat, whittle or take a fresh chew of tobacco. Atchison Globe. THE WAY OF IT. If you will fight, you'll win yourself. Hut if you don't you won't. The Lord helps him who helps himself. The Ixml helps those who don't. Philadelphia Press, Fit and Fought. One would have thought this an Americanism, but I find it in Garrick's "Miss In Her Teens," where Tag says to Flash: "Oh pray let me see you fight! There were two gentlemen fit yesterday," etc. (act 2h Notes and Queries. And rhf-vrfnllr Too. "Ninety per ceut of the men In this world maLe fool of lherue1ves for money." "Worse than that. Ninety per cent of them make foo's of themselves for nothing." Cleveht ad Fress. If is of tea better not to see aa insult than to avenge it Seneca. Nimrod Are you fond of hutting? Gyer It all depends. Nimrod Depends on what? Gyer Foxes or collar tuds. Illustrated Bits.
AFFAIRS IN THE NATIONAL CAPITAL By Palladium's Special Correspondent, Ralph M. Whiteside.
Washington, Jan. IS. Jeff Davis, senator from Arkansas, is Clinging to his biled shirt, notwithstanding reports from home that, the hill Billies of Arkansas are not overly pleased with bis new fangled idea. Senator Davis did not wear a collar when he was campaigning through the backwoods districts of Arkansas, much to the delight of his audiences. When word went back that he is dazzling Washington with the whitest hard-fronted shirt he could procure, the backwoodsmen sighed for their traditions and - expressed sorrow that the "favorite son" should so quickly for get the institutions of his state. Out Arkansas way, the impression prevails that a man who can learn to wear a biled shirt with ease is liable to adopt a silk hat, dictate his letters in a phonograph, quit chewing tobacco, and in other ways become foreign to the manners of his neighbors. One. thing Jeff Davis clings to closely, however, is his daily menu. He makes no exception, even on Christmas day, in satisfying his appetite. A clerk asked him if lie enjoyed his Christmas dinner. "Tolerably." said the big senator. "Turkey was raised by one of your admirers, I suppose?" said the clerk. "Didn't have any turkey," said Jeff. "What? No turkey ou Christmas day I" "Nope," replied Jeff. "I had hamfried ham." "Ham and plum pudding are a queer combination. I must, say." remarked the clerk. "Didn't have any plum pudding," said Jeff. "Had a chew of tobacco afterward." Hop Taylor of Tennessee has inform Riches Await You The man that remains poor in this country has only himself to blame. It might not have been so .V) years ago, but now that we have had so many shining examples of how to do it there is no excuse for any one being worth less than a million. Get up a corner on something, no matter whether its turnips or coffins. Dig a hole in the ground and advertise it as an oil well. No oil needed to catch the suckers. Take a map of the west, select a certain spot, mark it with red ink and advertise a gold or silver mine. It's all in the advertising not in the mine. Announce that you have formed a company and started a cocoanut grove in Mexico. If the announcement is lurid enough there needn't be any cocoanuts. Great thing for ministers to invest in. By a barrel of old mining stock at ten cents a barrel and advertise that the pay streak has at last been struck. Widows will rush to invest at 25 cents on the dollar. Advertise a position paying $4,000 a year for a young and ambitious young man who can invest $3,000 cash. Pay him his first week's salary and skip with the balance. Favorite old game and never fails to work. Go into the green gooas business. It attracts country grocers and postmasters all over the country and is just as honorable as stock broking. Blossom out as a gold brick man. This used to be considered a low-down business until rebating came into practice, but now it is looked up to and honored. Get up a merger. Merge anything you've got with anything else and dauble the price of both. The public is so used to being swindled that one more doesn't count. For the yearly profit in burglary, highway robbery and bargain sales, see small bills and take a hand in. Sunflower Philosophy (Atchison (Kan.i Globe, i Who will protect the poor farmer after election day. A foolish woman with lots of money is the merchant's salvation. An Atchison man calls his wife "Experience." she costs him so dear. You never learn what church some men belong to until their funerals occur. A man can excuse meanness in himself, but how he despises it in others. Any one who thinks that truth is stranger than fiction should read a ten cent detective story. It is almost as bad to support a friend for office as it is to run yourself. The greatest man on earth is the man who gets there, and makes no noise about it. The average man will quit the society of a pretty woman any time to see a $10 election bet put up. No one will admit to being superstitious, but did you ever know of a couple courageous enough to marry on Friday ': Irrelevant. At a term of the circuit coort in Ohio a "horse case" was on trial, and a well known horseman was called as a witness. "Well. sir. ou saw this horse V" asked counsei for thy defendant. "Yes, sir, I"-- ' What did yoa do'.-" "1 just opened his moutii 10 nd oat how oM he was. an' I says to him. I say. 'OUi isport. I cuess you're pretty good yet." " At this joncture counsel for the oy-pot-ius side entered a violent objection. "Stop!" he cried. "Your honor, I object to any conversation carried on between the witness and the horse when the plaintiff was not pre?eut:" TTar-
ed his friends that he keeps close to home these winter evenings because he has a most difficult task to accomplish. Bob is a fiddler and is a master of a!I the old classics which have done duty at square dances in this country since people, had enough time to spare from Indian fighting to enjoy themselves. Hob is now intent, on learning rag time and. although he has been advised that rag-time on a fiddle is impossible, he says there is no truth in such an assertion. "You can play anything ou a fiddie tnat can be played on any other instrument," he: says, and he snorted with iudignation and dignifiedly refused to answer when some one asked him how about the piccolo, mouth organ or jew's harp. When Taylor hasn't the responsibility of holding down a seat in the Senate or running Tennessee from the governor's chair, he bustles about from town to town, lecturing and fiddling for his daily bread. The senator from the Indian state of Oklahoma, looking a striking imitation of the statue of an Indian dressed in creased trousers and boiled shirt, is attracting unusual attention. When the Senate is in session, he sits hour after hour, his face barren of expression of any sort and his steecly eyes fixed upon the object of his attention. Robert Latham Owens is expected to become an interesting member of the upper house as soon as he gets his bearings. His hobby is the welfare of the Indians. In Senator Latham's veins flows the blood of an admixture of the fighting races-Cherokee, Scotch and Irish. There is not a solon in Washington who is not now planning his individual
HIS NATIVE STATE Speech Wherein Southern Senator Grew Eloquent in Self-Praise.
"Gentlemen," said the southern senator as he got his handkerchief roady for instant use, "the very name of my state is sacred to me. I cannot hear it spoken of without feeling a swelling in my throat and when I think of the undulating hills, the verdant valleys, the sublime slopes and the terrestrial traditions of the grand old commonwealth that gave me birth I am submerged beneath a flood of tender memories that flow across my being like the tinking of a prismatic rill through one of hor own reverberating glens. The man who lifts his voice against the honor of my state or who questions the integrity or the intelligence of her people I brand with the calumniating torch of her own advanced enlightenment that, moving like a finger of scorn upon the pale horizion of his shameful effrontery, leaves upon it the trace of outraged honor and tsear.'j as with the breath of the all-devouring sirocco. I am proud to say that
WOMEN SHOULD TAKE DAYOFF AND GAD AND THERE WILL BE NO DIVORCES
New York, Jan. IS. "Women, take a day off once a week. Don't drudge seven days a week. Have one day to rest and gad, and by u doing benefit your children, yourself and your friends." This is the advice of Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blateh, a New York club woi man, to other women, and she has j started a crusade to spread her ideas. ! "Divorce and inaritnl infeliHtv nro caused, in almost every instance by the ignorance of American- women," she says. "They are vastly more re sponsible for unhappines in the home than men. If women only would rse common sense and take a day off from ; their household drudgery once a week I a great part of the domestic trouble-j ! would be obviated. ! Woman Becomes Drudge. "Why. the average woman won't let herself be intelligent. She becomes a "Household drudge as soon as she is married: her disposition is soared and ; no self-made pessimist is capable, of ' bringing up a family of healthy-minded children. This in time will stunt ' the race mentally and it will be a race ; of ignoramuses. "Why should a woman become a LOCKED IN CELL MAN GROWS HAIR Entered Bald as an Egg and Now Has Good Growth. Indianapolis. Jan. IS. Ed Lathrop, from somewhere out in Illinois, went by request into a police cell this morning, bald as an egg and emerged this afternoon with a crop of hair that was the envy and admiration of every officer at headquarters. Just In s;oi uavbirak Lf.thron. hairjlesi. hatioss. coat lees and shoeless, wa jiom.tj tnskiiu: aoout tr.e streets near! jthc Thioii station. I j He .-oukin't stay in bed. The diinksj j R'o'o.;,'; let l.ir.i. He was sent to I Headquarters. This afternoon a friend called to give bail. The door of the cell house opened for a man whose costume was complete In every detail. He carried a hat in his hand and, most remarkabie, his bead was tedecked wfta a lux-
! campaign of preparation for luxt I.June's conventions. At the s-ame tiir.i . I they are looking into the future, trying j to pierce the curtain of time, and wonikriug what the program v ill read like. At the satn time, every one is confident . - Speaker Cannon is having t-'reat trouble with his bottle of cough medicine, "t'nele Joe" always carries hi-, pint- tar mixture with him. mi that he will not forget to take it. He has had j bad lurk with the mixture this session I for it has dropped out of his pocl.ei. ! three times and the bottle u- broken
ou every occasion. Vncle Joe alwas drafted' the stuff and commented that if he left it home he forgot to take it. and if he carried the bottle with him. it always was broken. Btiwen the two grievances his cough progressed fairly well. The Speaker was in the cloak room a few days aito and. ;:fu r a thorough search of his pockets, he wore a. perplexed expression. "Gone again," he remarked. "If every one wasted as much pine-tar cough syrup as 1 do, more attention would have to be paid to the pine forests." The next day a Congressman from the South handed a small package to Speaker Cannon. Upon opening it. Uncle Joe found it to be his cough medicine three bottles of it. "You have mistaken my overcoat for yours three times." said the Congressman. "I intended bringing the bottles back, but I forgot them. That's how they accumulated." Mr. Cannon was delighted at the recovery but he could not help expressing a regret that he had not found the missing cough syrup sooner, for he had just ordered a half dozen new bottles. the blood of her sons and daughters courses through my veins. They -ire my brothers and whoever censures them must answer to me. In the unnumbered ages to come the glorious state that has bestowed upon mo the right to stand here as her representative shall glow among the brightest constellations, shall stand in the very forefront of advancement and glimmer like the sunlight, falling upon her fruitful fields and illuminating the wooded aisles of her umbrageous d?clivities as the last rays of the glorious orb day sinks into the opalescence of an unknown ea and so bus fall upon the circumambient scene tho mantle that shuts out the firmam?nt and goes not like the quarry slave scourged to his bed, but gently lies down to pleasant dreams." Overcome by his emotion the great man was compelled to apply for lea c to print the rest of his speech in the congressional record and the questiu.i of dredging Mud Creek. Arkansas, was taken up for consideration. slave as soon as she marries? The lack of recreation is the cause of soured, scolding wiv.;s. What if a woman is called a gadabout? Why shouldn't she gad? When a man vs his day of rest, he does as he likes. The woman never has a day off; it's work all the time for her. "And, besides, a woman who stays all the time in tier home helps the community to stagnate. Her mental ity is undeveloped and crude and she is ncit. one to whom her husband or son can go for advice. She may know how to boil potatoes and ham to ncrfecticm, but she does nor know enough to advise her children whether to become plumbers or bootblacks or aeronauts. Her judgment is valueless. And yet, the woman, who is a good ham boiler thinks she knows evcrvthing. "So, women; if you want to be happy, go out. Take a day off evtvweek. If you can get no one to do your work while you are away, make your husband help you on his day off. By working together ;ou can accomplish the task in half the time one of you could alone, and then you can enjoy the rest of the day together." uriant growth of hair, carefully combed and everything in just the right place, except the price mark. The miracle of the hair had been accomplished by his warm-hearted landlady, who. hearing of his misfortune, collected his articles of wearing apparel and brought them to police headquarters. She did not forget his toupee. I Was Mistaken. A lively writer has said " 'I was mistaken' are the three hardest words to pronounce In the English lanssruage." Y'et it seems but acknowledging that we are wiser than w were before to see our rror and humbler than we were Ix-fore to own it. But m it i., and Goldsmith observes tLat Frederick the Great did himself uiorp honor by his letter to his snete Plating that he had just lost a great battle It Lis own faulr. than by all th victories he bad woti. rerbnps our greatest perfection here is not to escape imperfections, but to see and acknowledge and lament and correct them. Jay. Have jon trouble of any ktod anatca- from disordered stomach? Go to your drntrnt aed ret S)c or SI bottle of Dr. Catdweii'a Syrop Papem. which ie poftivety nar eaaeed te ?ar rm mad keep rv wcii.
Views ol Our Contemporaries
Why Fairbanks Don't Use Tobacco. i Washington Htraid.i Vice Proidout Fairbanks does not rtiioke or m-e tobacco in any form. He t'.ovs not i are for it. and relates a boy hood r.vperieuce a hi rcas-oii fr i;s'il.inii t'ibaccu. ' At the time." he telis. hit. tritnd "hi-ti there wt ie ;i lot of little . hap--attendir.g a country school, id' vI'mm l ivii? one, the most common way of lining tobacco wa in a pipe or to chew '. A cigar wa a tdgu of aff'ut nee in frequently affeited by the inhabitant of that community. One day u young man came to Me our teacher, who was a young woman, and he won- in his fare a 'ong black cinar. that meant he had much monev in his potket, was president of a bar.k .'i' si'itiethiug equally important. When he ean.e in he 1,-ft that cigar o:i the out.-ide, carefully put ;iny on a iu dow ledge. Some spirit of dcviltrv or pervt-rscness induced me to filch that cigar, and I divided it up in piA es among my companions. Kach of us took a bite, and in about live minutes ail of us Mere wildly groping about for something to hold on to so we would not fall i ff the- earth. That's the way we fc't. and that experience made me so si k ! have iuer been tempted to repent it."' Among These Not -''resent. i Boston Glohe.i The president shook r. " t." hands at his New Year's reception, not including those of Kev. William .1. Iong, Mr. Henry M. Whitney. Hon. William K. Chandler. Mr. K. H. Hairitnan ;-ud oth er distinguished members-of the Ana nitis club. o Worse Than the CocktaM. i New York Post. I As if fatally to handicap the Fairbanks boom, it is now announced that a professional humorist wants to be a Fairbanks delegate, and that a group of abnormally tall persona have organized the Ixng Men's Fairbanks club. Easy Money for Them. (Atlanta Journal.) However, as long as the magazines are willing to ay fiifteen cents a word for hunting and fishing anecdotes, there will be no trouble about, our present and prospective ex-presidents making a living. Suggestion for Bryan. (I.os Angeles Times.) Scientists: assert, that toads live 11.Kt years in a state of suspended animation. Why, then, does not the democratic party take the toad as an emblem, instead of the donkey V Both Corpse and Lead in Kentucky. (Louisville Courier-Journal.) The Druce coffin contained a human body instead of a lot of lead. Fp In Breathett county the coffin of any esteemed anti-Hargis citizen might contain both. 6 Favorite Sons Galore. Boston Journal.) And now .there's a boom for Judson Harmon, of Ohio, for the Democratic nomination for president. It's hard to keep Ohio men out of presidential candidacies. Not a Popular Word. (Washington Post.) Mr. Taft should not plate too much reliance on the fact that he is now being called "Bill." Lots of men have learned to hate the very sound of that word. Didn't Close Him Up. tAnaconda Standard. i Nineteen seven may be a closed incident, but Brother Bryan givey the republicans fair warning that some of the incidents incidental the :. are not. n Wall Street Knows He Did. (Philadelphia Public L-deer. ) New York's superintendent of banks in his report takes th" unique vjfw that the president did not cause the panic all by himself. Gixssira'' ihc Climate ( New York Sun.j Old Sid Smith wus the biessedest one For cujin' the clima'o; 'Pcttrcd that his onlv idee of fun Was cussin' the climate. No matter where old Sid would go, Whether 'twould rain or whether 'twould &now, Shinin' or storniin', ca'm or blow. He was cu-:sin" the c imate. Lived in Mizzouty for ;:iite a spoil. A-euHsin" the clima-e: Said it was hotter thyn 1 won't !-!!. Then, cus.-in' the clima'o, Sid moved down 'nto Arkansas, Where he continued to work his jaw Seemed obeyin' a sort o' law In cussin' t'.i c!im;-.-. Then old Sid inofiocd ia-t, Still cussin' the climate; Frothed at tb-; mouth like u .-agin' beast, A-cussin' the ciimate; Massachusetts, Connecticut and Maine Fcch one goin' ag in his grain, Old Sid's mission was always plain Just ei:ccn' te clirrate. Af'cr a whiv he w-i.t s West. Still cussin' the clii:it. Swearin' ha- somewhere else was btcf ; So. oust-in' the clitrn.'e Clean from Oregon down the coast. Finally Sid give up the rtost. Now he's gone where th grumblers roast Still cussin' the climate. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR REPRESENTATIVE. LEE J. REYNOLDS Candidate fjr Ui'-j'iTft'ii'aino from Wa i;e Cun -y. sulo.-et to the Keput'iican Nor.,;ti.it -on, WALTER S. RATLIFF Candidate for State Itepri senta-i e. subject to t he Republican Nomiuu'.Ion. JOINT REPRESENTATIVE. ALONZO M. GARDNER, cun'lieute for Joint Uepu-sentatixe. Waya ami F.i.ietle iuntics. vjhjivt to the Ki publican nomination. JUDGE CIRCUIT COURT. HENRY C. FOX Candidate for re election for Judue of the Wayr t'ireuit Court, subject ;, the Republican Nomination. CHARLES E. SHIVELEY. candidate for Judge of the Wayne Circuit Court, subject to i he Republican Nomination. PROSECUTING ATTORNEY. CHARLES L. LADD of t'e-ntervil !e. candidate for Prosecuting Attorney of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination. COUNTY "TREASURER.""ALBERT R. ALBERTSON of Ciav township, candidate for Treasurer of Wayne County, subject to Republi can Nomination. COUNTY RECORDER. WILL ROBBINS of Abington Township, candidate for County Recorder, subject to tht Republlcatt Nomination. BENJAMIN F. PARSONS, of Wayne township is a candidate for County Recorder, subject to the Republican Nomination. JOHN C. KING of Center Township, is a candidate for County Recorder, subject to th Republican Nomination. FRANK C. MOSBAUGH. or Jackson township, is a candidate for County Recorder, subject to the Republican nomination. COUNTY CORONER. DR. A. L. BRAMKAMP Candidate for Coroner Wayne County, nubject to tho Republican Nomination. COUNTY COMMISSIONERS. ROBERT N. BEESON. of Harrison township, is a. candidate for County Commissioner to represent th! Western District, subject to the Republican nominating election to be held in February. BARNEY H. LIN DER MAN Candidal for Commissioner of the Middle District, Clay Township, Warne County, subject to the Republican nomination. RICHARD A. DAVENPORT of Wayne township, is a candidate for county commissioner of Wayne county. Eastern District, subject to the Republican nomination. WILLIAM T. BLAIR of Green town, ship, candidate for County Commissioner, Middle District, subject to the Republican Nomination. DE WITT C. JAY of Webster Township, candidate for County Commissioner of Middle District, subject to Republican Nomination. JOSEPH F. GROVES of Jackson township is a candidate for Commissioner Vayn County, Western District. subject to Republican Nomination. HOMER FARLOW of Boston Township. candidTte for County Commissioner, Fastcm District, subject to Republican Nomination. TOWNSHIP ASSESSOR. TOM J. GOLDING Candidate for Township Assessor. Wayne Township, Wayne County. Subject to the Republican Nomination. CHARLES E. POTTER Candidate or Township Assessor cf Wayne Township. Wayne County, subject to the Republican Nomination. CHARLES H. BULLA Candidate for Township Assessor of Wayne Town ship. Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination. TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE. CHARLES L. WETTIG Candidate foi office of Township Trustee, Wayn Township. Wayne County, subject to Republican nomination. THOMAS B. MARTIN Candidate fot Township Trustee of Wayne Town ship, Wayne County, subject to tb Republican Nomination. JAMES H. HOWARTH-Candidtte for Township Trustee. Wayn Townsh-p subjeel to the Republican Nomina tioti. ; JOHN E. MOFFITT. candidal for of fico of Towm-hip Trustee, Wrtji Township. Wajno County, subject to Republican Nomination. BEN H. NORRIS Candidate for Trtia tee of Wayne Township; subject tc the Republican Nomination. GEORGE W. COOK Candidate for Townsh'i Trust.. Wayne Townshin. Warr" Couufy. Indiana, tubject to th R'-i.ub'icaT Nomination GEORGE E. McCOY Candidate foi Township Trustee of Wayne Town ship, Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination. Throw away pilU and itron? cathartics which ire vioieot in actwa. and aiways have ea hut Jr. CaidweU'e f-yrap PT' .. the uru1 cure tor coearipattoe aa'J ati diseases anaica rem stomach ireabte.
