Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 107, 1 June 1908 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE KIUHJIUAIJ JTALLAUIU3I AND SCX-TEIjEUKAJI, 3IU5DA1, J LK 1, 11IU8.

TBE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM.

P.- iium Printing Co., Publishers, o.'.'icc North 9th and A Streets.

IliCHMOND, INDIANA. PRICE Per Copy, Dally 2c Per Copy, Sunday 3c Per Week, Daily and Sunday 10c IN ADVANCE One Year Entered at Richmond, Ind.. Postofflce A3 Second Class Mail Matter.

CAND DATES

MBUED

WITH DETERMINA

Young Women Fighting for Place in Niagara Falls Party Entering Upon Most Strenuous Part of Their CampaignMiss Jennie Wine Holds First Place.

REPUBLICAN TICKET.

STATE. Goveinor JAMES E. WATSON. Lieutenant Governor FREMONT C. GOODWINS. Secretary of State FRED A. SIMS. Auditor of State JOHN C. BILLHEIMER. Treasurer of State OSCAR HADLEY. Attorney General JAMES BINGHAM. State Superintendent LAWRENCE McTURNAN. State Statistician J. L. PEETZ. Judge of Supreme Court QUINCY A. MYERS. -Judge of Appellate Court DAVID MYERS. 'Reporter of Supreme CourtGEORGE W. SELF.

DISTRICT. Congress WILLIAM O. BARNARD.

COUNTY. Jolnt Representative ALONZO M. GARDNER. Representative WALTER S. RATLIFF. Circuit Judge HENRY C. FOX. Prosecuting Attorney CHAS L. LADD. Treasurer ALBERT ALBERTSON. Sheriff LINUS P. MEREDITH. Coroner DR. A. L. BRAMKAMP. Surveyor ROBERT A. HOWARD. Recorder WILL J. ROBBINS. Commissioner Eastern DistHOMER FARLOW. Commissioner Middle Dist.BARNEY H. LINDERMAN. Commissioner Western Dist.ROBERT N. BEESON. WAYNE TOWNSHIP. Trustee , JAMES H. HOWARTH. Assessor CHARLES E. POTTER.

4

There was somewhat of a lull in the voting in the Palladium's Niagara Falls contest today due to the fact that yesterday was Sunday and the candidates were unable to solicit votes. However, it is predicted that tomorrow, hundreds of votes will be cast by the young women participating in the battle of ballots. The various candidates have within the past week become imbued with the spirit of "do or die" and are now entering into one of the most, strenuous parts of their campaign. People all over the county are being approached by the candidates in the quest of votes and hundreds are being secured. Miss Jennie Wine still retains her position at the head of the list, but four other candidates, Miss Goldie Dadisman, Miss Goldie Myers, Miss Ida Beeson and Maude Pettibone decreased the lap between themselves and the leader today. The enthusiasm of the various candidates has communicated itself to the people watching the races and as was stated some time ago, hundreds of votes are reaching the Palladium office which are unsolicited. There are however, more votes of this character being polled at the present time than ever before. The regular ballots will appear In each issue, entitling the lady voted for to one vote. Remember you can enter the contest any time you wish to, so "get busy and keep busy." The conditions of the contest are as follows: CONDITIONS. One year's subscription, paid In advance entitles the lady voted for to 2,500 votes Oneix months subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 1,000 votes One fifteen weeks' subscription, paid In advance entitles the lady voted for to 500 votes One month's subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to k 100 votes

FGUR BOYS HELD UP PASSENGER TRAIN

All of Them Are Now Under Arrest.

Groat Falls, Mont., June 1. The hold-up last night of the north-bound Great Northern train at the stock yards, was the work of three boys, now In Jail. A fourth youth, who admits he assisted them, is also a prisoner. The boys are Albert Hatch, aged 15; William Randall, aged IT; Harry Reams, aged 15. and George Creswell, aged 19. It Is alleged that Hatch turned the switch, ordered the engineer to back up and went through the coaches with the conductor, forcing the latter at tho point of a gun to collect money from the passengers. He is said to have shot William Dempsey, a passenger.

Jennie Wine, 1117 N. G street 73,672 Lucie Benton, Fountain City 62,667 Goldie Dadisman, 402 S. 12th street 60,989 Goldie Myers, Centerville R. 11 53,955 Ida Beeson, Greensfork R. R. 11 52,841 Maude Pettibone, 409 N. 16th street 34,595 Elsie Wyatt, 1114 N. G street 24,303 Rosa Kuehn, 17 South 8th street 20,379 Hattie Lashiey, Centerville 16,106 Marie Hodskin, Cambridge City 15,610 Lena Cornthwaite, Cambridge City 10,701 Ethel Wysong, Lynn, Ind 8,619 Ruby Hodgin, 25 South 7th street 6,101 Estella Coates, 201 N. 8th street 5,773 Adda Study, Williamsburg, Ind 4,119

SOUS OF VETERANS

IN

ENCAMPMENT

State Event to Be Held in Lafayette.

Lafayette, Ind., June 1. Indiana Sons of Veterans will flock to Lafayette this week to the annual state encampment, which will be held Tuesday and Wednesday. The local committers have all the arrangements made to accompany the visitors. In connetion with the encampment will be held the annual convention of the (adies auxiliary. Tho convention will open with a reception In the Circuit court room Tuestiay morning, and will end with the business meeting on Wednesday afternoon. Every camp in Indiana will have delegates at the encampment. On Tuesday evening a big campfire will be held at the Court House. Many men prominent in S. of V. and G. A. R, circles will make addresses.

This Ballot Not Good After 5 p. m. June 14 Palladium and Sun-Telegram Niagara Falls and Canada Voting Contest.

ONE VOTE COUPON

NAME

ADDRESS

Carrier Boys are not permitted to receive Ballots from patrons; put the Dame of the lady of your choice on this Coupon and bring or send to this office before the expiration of the above date or it will not. be considered a legal vote.

t LL DQH'T KN0WTALKS ON ADVERTISING NO. 17

Outcome of Edna GoodrichHarry McMillan Engagement Not Known.

STATEMENTS WERE ISSUED

San Francisco, June 1. "We won't be married on June 10th, but we will be married in about four months." Harry J. McMillan. "The marriage has been indefinitely postponed." Edna Goodrich. "They may be married some day, but the time 'may be a Ion- way off." Mrs. Goodrich said. And there you are. .ruvly knows wht will be the outcome of the Edna Gondrich-Harry McMillan engagement. They don't know themselves. Their mothers do not know. Certainly they rue all the best of friends.

LRUS FOR BIG

E

Celebration Will Begin Saturday.

Next

Lafayette, Ind.. June 1. Already the

advance crowd of those who will attend the commencement exercises at purdue, is reaching the city. The commencement exercises will begin Saturday, June , and will continue practically all the week. On Wednesday, June lO, 2fiO graduates will receive their diplomas and sixty others will be given advanced degrees. The senior class has made elaborate preparations to entertain the visitors and the largest attendance of relatives and friends and alumni in the history of the university is expected. Practically all the theses of the seniors have been completed and are in the hands of the faculty. The board of trustees will meet this week to give official sanction to the awarding of the diplomas. Seventy-seven civil, seventysix mechanical and seventy-seven electrical engineers will receive degrees.

PRETTY ACTRESS TO WED MULTIMILLIONAIRE

R. M. Gulick of Pittsburg Soon To Be Benedict.

Chicago, June 1. Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Bidele Rafter, now playing the leading part in "The Lady from Lane's" at the Bush Temple, to R. M. Gulick, a multimillionaire of Pittsburg, who was recently divorced. Mr. Gulick owns the Alvin and the Bijou theaters in Pittsburg. When it was built the Alvin theater was said to be the finest playhouse in the United States. It's proprietor met Miss Rafter when she was playing there. Tho marriage will take place in Chicago the third week in June. Miss Rafter will finish her engagement with the Will J. Block musical comedy company.

TWELVE YEAR OLD BOY COUNTERFEITER

Harry Hare Is in a Peck Trouble Now.

of

Denver. Col., June 1. "The youngest counterfeiter" is Harry Hare, of Rollinsville, who has just turned twelve years and who was arrested on a charge of making and passing spurious coins. His case has been given to the federal grand jury. This is not the first time that Master Hare has been in the limelight. When he was but eight he aided his sister, Minnie, to elope with a Dr. A. D. Farber of St. Louis.

Tiie Neighborhood of Your Advertising By Herbert Kaufman Circulation is a commodity which must be bought with the same common sense used in selecting potatoes, cloth and real estate. IT CAN BE MEASURED AND WEIGHED it is MERCHANDISE with a PROVABLE value. It varies just as much as the grocer's green stuff, the tailor's fabrics and the lots of the real estate man. Your cook refuses to accept green and rotten tomatoes at the price of perfect ones. She does not count the number of vegetables that are DELIVERED to her, but those that she CAN USE. When your wife selects a piece of cloth she first makes sure that it will serve the purr :he has in view. When you buy a piece of property you consider "HE NEIGHBORHOOD as well as the GROUND. Just so when you buy ADVERTISING, you must find out how much of the circulation you CAN USE. You must consider the NEIGHBORHOODS where your copy will be read with the same thoughtfulness that you devoted to selecting the spot where your goods are sold. A dealer in precious stones would be foolish to open up in a tenement district, and equally short-sighted to tell about his jewelry in a newspaper largely distributed there. Out of ten thousand men and women who might SEE what he had to say not ten of them could AFFORD TO BUY HIS GOODS. These ten thousand readers would be mass without muscle. He could make them WILLING to do business with him, but THEIR INCOMES WOULDN'T LET THEM BECOME CUSTOMERS. One of the greatest mistakes in publicity is TO DROP YOUR LINES WHERE THE FISH CANT TAKE YOUR BAIT. Circulation is, as you see, a very interesting subject, but very few people know anything about it. It would surprise you to know that this ignorance often extends to the business offices of newspapers. I have known publishers to continually mistake the CLASS of their readers and have met hundreds of them who had the most fantastic ideas upon the figures of their circulation. While I would not be so harsh as to accuse them of anything more than beina MISTAKEN, none the less their tendency to infect OTHERS with this misinformation renders it extremely advisable for YOU TO become a member of the Missouri society and "BE SHOWN." You don't want a circulation statement. You don't understand the tricks in their making. Circulation statements, usually sworn to, are dust to blind the eyes of the advertiser to a newspaper's delinquencies in producing results. Make the newspaper which carries your advertisement show you the list of its advertisers. The supreme test of the advertising value of a newspaper is does it carry the bulk of the advertising? A newspaper which prints the most advertising, month after month, year after year, is always the best medium. (Copyright, 190S.)

WASHINGTON AND HER LAWMAKERS IN WOMAN'S EYES Interesting Incidents In the Routine of Dally Life at the Nation! Capital.

Ballots Deposited Today Will Appear In Tomorrow's Count.

SLASHES WIFE TO PIECES WITH RAZOR

Ohio Man

Commits Deed.

Awful

razor and attacked his wife, inflicting eighteen wounds. He was well to do, owning 400 acres of fine farm land.

Geld Medal Flour make perfect bread.

Rough, Red Hands. A great embarrassment to many women are thir rough, red hands. This men are their rough, red hands. This work. A very simple remedy is to cease using yellow rosin soaps, substitute Easy Task soap, the white

1-ind. You will notice the difference Washington Court House, O., June . jn the aDnearanee of vour hands in a

; 1. Crosby Porter. aged 35. Sunday Week. ; morning cut his wife to pieces and ; ' then slashed his own throat with a "But why do you look on Brown razor. Porter survived his wound a j with bo much suspicion? He's rated ; few hours and wrote a note to his ! honest." j father, in which he explained the j "Yes; I know. But I always see him S double tragedy. The contents cf the j eoming home under an umbrella rainy note have not been made public. The j nlgbta. and I don't remember erer seej couple quarreled at breakfast and lag him leave horns with oa" an Porter in a frenzied rage seized a J Francisco ntH

FIRST DIVISION JOIHS SQUADRON Drops Anchor at Frisco After Returning From Tacoma.

San Francisco. Cal.. June 1. The first division of the Atlantic fleet under Rear Admiral Spcrry. consisting of the Connecticut. Kansas. Vermont and Louisville, returned here Sunday from Tacoma and dropped anchors in Man O'War row by the side of the Maine. The ships were accompanied by the hospital ship Relief. The Minnesota also came in later from Bremerton.

By Mrs. John A. Logan. Washington, May 30. The American people are drifting into a disposition to centralize power. During tho year 1908 there has been a continuous succession of conventions and conferences held in the city of Washington. It is curious to note the fruitfulness of men's minds for bringing persons

of importance together, ostensibly to i confer on great national affairs but which, when properly analyzed, are a i sort of preliminary conference on po-1 litical affairs. They seem to feel that j they cannot; commit themselves to the j candidacy of any person for the var-j ious elective officers which involves , in t'.ie coming campaign until they j have met in Washington and conferred ; together. No president in the past has been so importuned to address ' all kinds of organizations of men and ; women on subjects that surely the , president of the United States has no time to consider. ! One would think that President Roosevelt, would be supremely wearied with the effort to force upon him the consideration of all these various schemes that are really the outgrowth of the ambitions of some individual, and with the development of which the President should not be asked to interest himself, as there are greater

and more important problems that should occupy the time and streneth of the president of th-? United States.

would not like to be considered disloyal because of suggesting that the probabilities are there can be but few new euggestions made by the present mem-

cent times may be the beginning of a movement that will eventually result in great benefit to the nation. If the governors of all the states assemble at

bers of this conference and that, in j least once every four years, there may

summing up the results, more will have been accomplished from a political standpoint than from providing ways and means for inaugurating the economy which is set forth in the call for the conference.

Perhaps this is a wrong impression in regard to the conference, but one cannot fail to discover the gigantic political acumen behind the movement. All should hope that some wise man

i may suggest something new and valu

able that may be utilized in the next congress, but I cannot help feeling that if the conference had been postponed until after the election, very much more would have been accomplished and fewer distractions would have interrupted the deliberations of this body. I have in mind a great conference of governors that did very much during the civil war toward solving the momentous questions of what to do to bring about peace, and trust that the

recent conference may achieve an im- j perishable place in history by their creditor-I 8ay. old man. why don't wise recommendations. TOU Ret out of deU, Debtor Haven't time. It keeps m However, this first conference of re- busy getting in!

result a gradual centralizing of effort and an aim In a general direction which would mean much. While states in different parts of the country require individual regulation by reason of individual necessity, the important national questions are of paramount interest to all. Uniform laws are needed to solve many important questions and when the governora have the opportunity of talking over these questions, they nave taken a step in the right direction. There will, of course, always be more or less of politics connected with such a gathering. There are politics in every assembly of statesmen. With politics relegated to secondary po&ltion and the questions previously agreed upon for consideration of primary importance, the conference cf governors will be a success. It will stir up an interest in every state of the Union and that Interest will live, until results are obtained.

The recent conference to discuss plans for tho conservation of the naural resources of the United States, brought together probably t he ab'est mind in the nation, bur the question arises as to whether politics was not uppc'tTiost In the minds of the majority of them.

ODDITIES IN THE NEWS ALL OVER THE WORLD

PAWNSHOPS ARE

Congress is not always wi?e. but we muft admit that there are prerogatives that belong exclusively to congrecs. and I should he sorry ti f that t.hre were not. able men in congress who appreciate the extravagances ar.-i wastc-f ulr.ess of the na;icn. and that they are conscientious enough to take such steps as practical to carry out such measures as would tend to greater economy and wiser use of our agricultural, mineral and other resources. Every congress has had before it important legislation in the interest of river, harbor and canal improvements, and many millions have been expended through appropriation by congress for the protection and improvement of our waterways. Congressional committees on mines

Pekin, May 30. Municipal pawn-1 ana mining, on agriculture ana tne va-

shops have been, opened in Pekin for j rious sources of wealth, have, from the relief of the residents who have j time to time, seriously considered been heretofore the victims of extor- j these interests, and while they may tionate private establishments. The not always have acted with the wiscity charges are 15 per cent while j dom and farsightedness that probably

When he sufrt and the case was explained, .litio Shoemaker decided in favor of Miss Ice.

Art

CITY

Chirkpn ste"3M.2T bt- scientific meth-1 pf! has ber-n in' rod'.cc 1 on the farm of Abraham (irirn near York, Pa..

whTo fifty chickens were s'olen with- j our a squawk. (Suggests Whipping Girls Who

In the pockets of 'Martin Upp and! Fond of Dancing. Henry Hr.mmer. who wne arrf-sted. j Alderman Donohue, of Wilkesbarre, were fo iTirl searchlights and small s2ys girls who attend dances and re-h--avy rubb r bands. The chickens main 'jntil early Sunday morning were dazzled by searchlights and gag- should be horsewhipped, ged wirh ?he elastics. He discharged George Garabo, a church organift, who, when sent to a Undertakers Con-piain That Business dance hall to send girls home Sunday Is Dull. i was arrested by the proprietor. OamThe undertakers' business is suffer-'. ho, the Alderman said, should have ir.g as much as any from the hard j whipped the giris all the way home.

times in Connecticut, say medical in-1

Pekin Goes Into Business for Her People.

' vestigatiors ail over the State. It is said that workingmen. forced to more economical living, haven't the money for excess that causes fatal i diseases and violent deaths.

tfctf hT bMB paying 50.

they should, at the same time one

Wouldn't Pay for Teeth That Made Her Whistle. Four new false teeth caused her to whistle when she talked, declared Miss Emma Virginia Ice, at Kansas City, and she refused to pay the dentist his ?46.

Boy Identified Wrong Body as That of Father. Two months after the supposed body of William H. Sharp was burled at Laconia. X. H.. with fraternity honors, a body positively identified aa his was found in the Wlnnepesaukee river and will be placed in the grave occupied by the unknown. A son had identified the body of a man found In a Portland. Me, hotel as that of his tather. whq disappeared March 1. aiid buried It as such.