Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 186, 19 August 1908 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR,
THE ETCiniOXB PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 190S.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued 7 days each week, evenings and Sunday morning. Office Corner North 9th and A streets. Home Phone 1121. Bell 21. KICHMOND. INDIANA. Radolph a. I.edn Managing Editor. Charles M. Morgan nunlaeaa Manager. O. Owen Kohn Xmi Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond $5.00 per year (In advance) or 10c per week. MAIL. SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year. In advance $5.00 Six months. In advance 2.60 One month, In advance 45 RURAL ROUTES. One year, in advance. $2.00 filx months, In advance 1.25 One month. In advance 25 Address changed as often as desired; both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment is received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, postoffice as second class mail matter.
REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL TICKET. For President WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT of Ohio. For Vice-President TAMES S. SHERMAN of New York. STATE. Governor JAMES E. WATSON. Lieutenant Governor FREMONT C. GOODWINE. Secretary of State FRED A. SIMS. Auditor of State TOHN 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 Court GEORGE W. SELF. DISTRICT. Congress WILLIAM O. BARNARD. COUNTY. .Joint Representative ALONZO M. GARDNER. Repre sentati ve WALTER S. RATLIFF. Circuit Judge HENRY C, FOX. Prosecuting Attorney CIIAS. L. LADD. Treasurer ALBERT ALBERTSON. " Sheriff LINUS P. MEREDITH. Coroner DR. A. L. BRAMKAMP. Surveyor ROBERT A. HOWARD. Recorder WILL J. ROBBINS. -Commissioner Eastern Dlst. HOMER FARLOW. Commissioner Middle Dlst. BARNEY H. LINDERMAN. -Commissioner Western DistROBERT N, BEESON. WAYNE TOWNSHIP. Trustee JAMES H. HOWARTH. Assessor CHARLES E. POTTER. A REAL REPUBLICAN. The speech of James Schoolcraft Sherman should be satisfactory not only to the republican party, but to the people of the country. In its brief length he emphasized the two main points of the present campaign: that the real issue is whether or not Theodore Roosevelt's policies are to be carried out by the man he selected or whether the country is to be left to the mejrcy of a demagogue. Mr. Bryan keeps shouting "Shall the people rule" when as Sherman rightly answers: "It is no issue. Surely the people shall rule, surely the people have ruled, surely the people do rule. No party rules. The party, commissioned by the people, is simply the Instrument to execute the people's will and from that party which does not obey their expressed, will, or which lacks the wisdom to lead successfully, the people will withdraw their commission. For half a century, with but two exceptions the people have commissioned the republican party to administer the national government; commissioned it because its declared principles appealed to their best judgment; commissioned it, because the common sense of the American people scented danger In democratic policies." The people of the country also receive insurance from Mr. Sherman that in event of his taking the presidential chair (as has so often been the case in American history) that they will find him in entire accord with the policies of Theodore Roosevelt In his views as a tariff revisionist with a clinging to protection where necessary; In his reiteration of the principle of justice for all in its application to labor and capital and black and white, Mr. Sherman has shown hlirself to be thoroughly In accSrd not
only with the republican platform, but with Mr. Taft. The speech may not be as emotional as Mr. Bryan's (we hope not) nor as profoundly judicial as Mr. Taft's, but it has the merit of letting the country see that Sherman is a really progressive republican, who is in thorough accord apparently with the platform and that he is a thinking man of much native shrewdness. His remarks on the repugnance of the stirring up of class lines for political uses and stigmatizing Bryan's efforts in that direction should be read by every citizen. They are the strongest in the speech. "I emphasize as my party's creed and my faith, that in legislation and administration, favor should be extended to no class, no sect, no race, no section as opposed to another. To foster class hatred, to foster discontent Is un-republican and un-American."
POLITICS AND RELIGION. The much mooted question as to how much religion should enter into politics will go on unchanged, whether, like it or not as one may. In a country which was peopled from the first by men and women who fled from religious persecution in Europe to gain liberty to believe what they chose on religious matters, religious toleration should be and is the dominant note. And yet on two accounts a man who is the candidate for president of the United States is being criticised and assailed on religious matters. The first matter is that he is a Unitarian. Most people in these regions are not much troubled by that, but down in Kentucky a certain denomination has attacked him bitterly in its church paper which is reaping a fortune in printing extra copies. The truth is simply that William Howard Taft goes regularly to church and is censured for It. The second count s that William H. Taft gave a certain denomination a square deal once in the Philippine Islands. Naturally they are not fighting him. And the other denominations would fight Taft for carrying out his principle of "justice for all without prejudice and without fear or favor." When the people of these United States reach the point where they condemn a man for having one creed rather than another and for fearlessly de fending the faith of his fathers; when they can condemn a man for attendingthe church of his faith on the Sabbath so that he may worship his Creator in the way that he deems right; when the people of this country can condemn a man for giving a square deal to any religious organization without nreiudice thev nr ing violence to the finest thing in America religious toleration. Many of the ancestors of the founders of this republic were persecuted and tor tured for toleration and they be queathed it to their heritors and em bodied in the Constitution of the land as the greatest blessing of their bestowal. Are we going back three hundred years? THE FALL FESTIVAL. The Young Men's Business Club is living up to its reputation for action and the city is assured from its success in the Good Road3 Congress that the proposed Fall Festival will be a go. Too much enthusiasm on the part of all the citizens can not be displayed, even though the summer languor of August be a seemingly paramount issue. Richmond must wake up if it is to hold its place in the trade of eastern Indiana and western Ohio. The city has good things it needs advertising and a reputation for push and go. Yet at the same time it can not be a complete success on a purely commercial basis. The Fall Festival can be as large as Richmond cares to make it. If this year the lack of time an d facilities make some things Impossible let them go. But the town has a fine individuality which can be added to and impressed on the whole project. It is an illusive thing, but it will pay. That it will pay to catch this thing is seen constantly, in the advertisements all over the world. Some catch it others which cost just as much or more fail utterly from the mere commonplaceness of the idea. The Young Men's Business club should aim at the expression of the whole town in their project for in no other way will they interest all the town and country. It is to be hoped that this Fall Festival will not merely be a feature of one year and then dropped. It should be a permanent institution for the awakening of town and country and for the binding together of the agricultural and business interests. That the men in charge will catch this note and make it a unique and original thing there is already enough evidence. Richmond Is waking up or rather it has waked up. The Fall Festival will be a success. THE MAN FROM HOME. Without a word of slang the "Man from Home," Booth Tarkington, achieved the impossible in making
Broadway sit up and like his play. Broadway the hardened the bloated on George M. Cohan voracious for the "Zippy Show" of George Ade, has been taken by storm. We of Indiana ought really to be a little puffed up, especially as some of it is written about us (why praise the artist when he had the good stuff before his nose?) The play seems to point a healthy moral the battle against snobbery by a gentleman from Indiana. The play indicates that Indiana is no longer provincial, which must be encouraging to all of us who can spare enough time to quit trying to make money and accumulate culture. At any rate if there is anything in advertising Indiana has a great debt to pay to Mr. Tarklngton who certainly "patronizes home industries." Indiana will be as pleased to know that when placed on exhibition on Broadway she takes the first placejust as pleased as when out pet calf gets the blue ribbon at the State Fair. Indianians are getting used to it.
WARSHIP WAS NOT ALLOWED TO LAND Dutch Cruiser Steamed to Caracas With Decks in Fighting Trim. FAILED TO GIVE SALUTE. SO WAS NOT PERMITTED TO DISCLOSE MISSION CONSULS FUME AT PRESENT STATE OF AFFAIRS. Caracas, Aug. 19. When the Dutch cruiser Geiderland, after taking away Minister De Reus, came back to La Guaira without saluting and with decks in fighting trim, the greatest excitement reigned here in Caracas, as it was known that Castro's new French coast defense guns mounted on the mountainside above La Guaira and on the beach had been made ready to meet any emergency. Speculation was rife as to whether the warship would bring an apology for the De Reus letter and the stoning of Consul Lopez in Curacao, a demand for the immediate release of Carlos Gentil, a Dutch merchant of La Guaira recently Imprisoned on a contraband charge, or an ultimatum of some kind. The curious were doomed to disappointment, however, as the unexpected happened, as it usually does here. The cruiser was not allowed to communicate with the shore or deliver any of the documents which it brought, presumably because its failure to salute on this and a recent occasion has been considered an offense by President Castro. So the Geiderland had to return to Curacao with its mission unfulfilled. Meanwhile the German minister, Baron von Seckendorff, was fuming in Caracas because he could not obtain permission from the Government for the German consul to go alongside of the cruiser to see if there were not some expected dispatches for him. Minister De Reus had left him in charge of the Dutch interests, and he was at his wits end to know what to do because of the absolute impossibility of communicating with his Government. The baron is almost the only diplomat in Caracas. A sensation has been caused in diplomatic circles by the refusal of President Castro to permit the Brazilian minister to take charge of French interests in Venezuela, although Dr. Jose Paul, the Venezuelan minister of foreign affairs, originally agreed to this arrangement. NIGHT BLOOMING ' CEREOS BLOOMS Rare Plants Now Are Showing Their Beauty. Mrs. Alda Crampton is the possessor of a night blooming cereus with thirty buds, fifteen of which will bloom tonight. This is a very rare flower aud it is probable there are only about half a dozen in Richmond. Mrs. Crampton states that any one wishing to see the flower may call any time ! at her home, 231 North 20th street. Mrs. Fred Knollenberg of South Third street, has a cereus plant. Treat Your Flannels Right. If your woolens and flannels mat down after washing, it's because you are using the wrong kind of soap. You can expect nothing else if you use the common yellow sort, which is mostly rosin and offal fats. For perfect cleanliness and to keep woolens soft and fluffy, always use Easy Task soap. It's white and pure and will keep woolen fabrics like new. Two Pcints of View. The country school mistress sent word to the school that, owing to an attack of illness, she woukl be compelled to dismiss the classes for the day. Toward evening she was pleased to receive a large bouquet of wild flowers from the class and was giving vent to graceful speech for this thoughtful manifestation of sympathy while she undid the wrapper, when this note fell from It: "Teacher, stay ill tomorrow, too, and we'll send you another bunch."
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Copyright. 1906. by CHAPTER, XXVI. m HEN Jane brought Bansemer back to Manila, wounded almost to death, Colonel Harbin had her installed resrularly as a nurse for Bansemer, a con cession not willingly granted. Those days were like years to her. She was thin and worn when she came down from the north, but she was haggard with anxiety and despair when the two days of suspense were ended. Ethel Harbin was her ablest ally. This rather lawless young parson laid aside the hearts with which she was toying and bent her every endeavor to the cause of romance. It was not long before every young officer In the city was more or less interested In the welfare of Graydon Bansemer. She threw a fine cloak of mystery about the "millionaire's son" and the great devotion of her cousin. The youth of the army followed Ethel to and from the hospital for days and days. Without Ethel It Is quite doubtful if anybody could have known what a monstrous Important personage Private Bansemer really was. At the end of a fortnight he was able to sit up and converse with his nurse and the occasional Ethel. Dr. G., chief of the ward, remarked to Colonel Harbin: "He'll get well, of course. He can't help it. I never knew before what society could do for a fellow. He's got a society nurse, and he is visited by a society despot." "Do you think he will be able to do any more fighting? Will be be strong enough ?" "I don't see why. The government won't let him do it, that s all. He can claim a pension and get out of service with an honorable discharge and maybe a medal. He'll be strong enough, however. That fellow could go on a hike inside of a month." "I suppose we'll all be going home before long. This war is about over," growled Harbin. "No slrree! We'll be fighting these fellows for ten years. Ah, there's your daughter, colonel. Good day." With the first returning strength, freed from lassitude and stupor, Graydon began whispering joyous words of love to Jane. His eyes were bright with the gladness that his pain had brought She checked his weak outbursts at first, but before many days had passed she was obliged to resort to a firmness that shocked him into a resentful silence. She -was even harsh in her command. It cut her to the quick to hurt him, but she was steeling herself against the future. When he was able to walk out in the grounds she withdrew farther Into the background of their daily life. He hungered for her, but she began to avoid him with a strange aloofness that brought starvation to his heart While she was ever attentive to his wants, her smile lacked the tenderness he had known in the days of danger, and her face was strangely somber and white. "Jane," he , said to her one day as he came la from his walk and laid down his crutches, "this can't go on any longer. What is the matter? Don't you love me not at all?" She stood straight and serious before him, white to the lips, her heart as cold as ice. "I love you, Graydon, with all my soul. I Bhall always love you. Please, please, don't ask any more of me. You understand, don't you? We cannot be as we once were never. That is ended. But yon you must know that I love you." "It is sheer madness, dearest, to take that attitude. What else in the world matters so long as we love one another?. I fel.t.st firt.tfc-t L. could
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Oopyrlfftit 1906, by Gorv Matthew Adama) , able Dodd. Mead S31 Company not hskI'ou to De" my "wwaticr wnit my father did that night That was as silly of me as this is of you. I did not contend long against my love. You have never been out of my mind night or day. I was tempted more than once to desert, but that was Impossible, you know. It was the terrible eagerness to go back to you and compel you to be mine. My father did you a grave wrong, ne" "But my father did me a graver wrong, Graydon. I have thought it all out." "Nonsense, dearest You have saved my life. You must save my love. These last few weeks have knit our lives together so completely that neither of us has the right to change God's evident purpose. I love you for yourself, Jane. That is enough. There has not been an instant in which I have felt that any circumstance could alter my hope to marry you. You say you have no name. You forget that you may have mine, dearest, and it is not much to be proud of, I fear, In the light of certain things. You must be my wife. Jane." "I cannot, Graydon. That is final. Don't don't plead, dear. It will not avaiL Look into my eyes. Don't you see that I mean it, Graydon?" "By heaven, Jane, your eyes are lying to me! You can't mean what is back of them. It's cruel; it's wrong." "Hush! You must not become excited. You are far from strong, and I am still your nurse. Be" "You are my life; you are everything. I can't give you up. It's ridiculous to take this stand. Be sensible. Look at it from my point of view." "There is ouly one point of view, and love has nothing to do with it Come, let us talk of something else. Have you beard from yonr your father? Does he know you've been Injured?" He looked long Into her tense face and t,hen muttered, with the sullen despair of the sick: "I don't know. I've had no word from any one." "The dispatches have doubtless given your name. One of the Chicago correspondents was talking about you recently. Your father will surely write to you now." "Are you eager to have him do so? I should think you'd hate his name. I can't help caring for dad, Jane. I tried to curse him, but he really has been good to me. I don't see how he can have done the things they say he's done." "There may be a mistake." "That's good of you, dear, but you forget your mother's statements and all that Rigby says alMhat Oh. I've gone over all of It and I am convinced, i wonder what has become of him. He was afraid of of well, there was talk of an arrest before I left I have not looked at a newspaper since I saw the headlines that awful morning. God. how they must have hurt you!" "I, too. have not looked at a newspaper since then, Graydon," she said simply. He smiled wearily, and there was response in her eyes. He took her hand in his, and they sat silently side by side on the bench for half an hour, their thoughts far away, but of one another. "Graydon," she said at last "are you going to remain in the army?" "No; I am through with it My discharge is to be recommended. I'm disabled." "You will be as strong as ever, dear." "Do you want me to stick to the army? I am only a private." "You can do greater things out In the world. I know. You will be a great man if you don't lose heart Graydou." "I can't be a soldier, dear, and support a wife on the pay I get" he said with a smile. "Yoh shouldn't marry." "But I am going to marry," he said. "I have decided to become a nurse. It is my intention to give my whole life to" "The Bed Cross?" "No. The hospitals at home the boGDiiala. for. the Door ajd homeless.!
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3.K George B&fr McCirtcheon Author of "Beverly of Graust&rK" Etc Lthel uarfcm was coni7ng THrougn i the grounds toward them. Her face wa3 clouded by a dark frown, and she was visibly excited. "It's all off," she announced as she came up. "Where is the usual hero?" asked Graydou. . "I'm through with the real army. They've dismissed me. That is, father and mother have. They are driving me to the Salvation Army," she exclaimed, seating herself beside Graydon. "I wish I were Jane and my own mistress." "Dear me, Ethel, what an ambition!" said Jane. "What has happened tupset you so?" "Father has." "I should hare asked who, not what" "I suppose they expect me to marry a Salvation Army man. They say Harry Isn't good enough. I think he Is a very moral young man." ' "Harry? Who is Harry?" ' "Why, haven't you heard? Harry Roper. I'm engaged to him." "The lieutenant?" "Certainly. lie's going to be promoted, though. If he ever gets on the firing line. It's not bis fault that he has to do duty in the walled city. He's aching to get out and fight But father" Here she paused, her lips coming together with a firmness that boded ill. . "Colonel Harbin doesn't approve?" j "No. He says narry is a 'little pup.' It's outrageous, Jane." "Don't cry, dear. The world is full of men." 1 "Not for me." said Ethel dolefully. Tve picked Harry out of a hundred or more, and I think my discrimination ought to be considered. I'm the one to be satisfied. Father has no" "But how about that young fellow back in New York? You used to say he was the only one." "He is the only one in New York. But look how far off he Is! It takes weeks for his letters to get to me." "But he writes every day." "Harry telephones every day. I tell you, Jane, the voice has a good deal to do with it You like to hear a fellow say nice things. It beats Ink all to pieces. It will go hard with him perhaps, but he's young. He'll get over It." "You are young too. That is why you have got over George." "I'm not as young as I was. But I've decided on Harry. If father doesn't let us get married right away I'm liable to pet over him too. It's silly doing that all the time. One might never get married, you know. But father is firm. He says I can't end he says he'll kick Harry Into the middle of next summer. Father says I shall not marry Into the regular army. He says they don't make good husbands. I've C"t the joke oa him. though, ne appealed to mother, and she forgot herself and said the same thlasr. They were quarreling about it wl:eu I left the hotel It was nn awful jar to father. For two cents I'd elope with Harry." "It would be pretty difficult for an officer on duty to elope, don't you think?" asked Graydon, am-sei. "Not if he loved the girl. He doe too. But I haven't told you the worst. Mother says I am being absolutely spoiled out here in Manila, and she says flatly that she's going to take me back to the States. Isn't It awful?" "Back to the fellow in New York?" smiled Jane encouragingly. Ethel thought for a moment nd a dear little smile came into her troubled eyes. "I hope he hasn't gone and fallen in love with some other girl." she said. It was true, as Jane soon learned, that Mrs. Harbin had concluded to return to the United States with Ethel. Jane's aunt had grown Immeasurably tired of Manila and perhaps a little more tired of the colonel. It was she who aroused the colonel's antipathy to little Lieutenant Boper. She dwelt upon the dire misfortune that was possible if Ethel continued to bask. ts. the
society n yvo-r -iiaihSs." The colonel developed a towering rage and a great fear that Ethel might become fatally contaminated before she could be whisked off of the Island. It was decided that Mrs. Harbin and Ethel should return to the Untted States soon after the first of March to take up their residence in New York city. "Mother wants to be a soldier's widow oa parole," sniffed Ethel, almost audibly enough for her father's ears. Mrs. Harbin at ouce Informed Jane that she was expected to return with thorn. he demurred at first purely for the sake of appearances, but ia the end agreed to tender her resignation to the IJed Cross society. The knowledge that Graydon Bansemer's discharge was soon forthcoming and that he intended , to return to America In the spring had more to do with this decision than she was witling to admit She therefore announced her ambition to become a trained nurse and gave no heed to Mrs. Harbin's insinuating smile. Letters of late from Mrs. Cable bad beeu ur.Icjj her to return to Chicago. DaWd Cable was far from well, breaking fast, and he was wearing out his heart in silent lop.sir.g for her return, lie wrote to her himself that he expected to retire from active business early in the year and that his time and fortune from that day on would be devoted to his family. lie bold out attractive visions of travel, of residence abroad, of endless pleasure v!ilcb they could enjoy together. Jane had written to them that she would not live In Chicago any place else lu the world, she said and they understood. 'There was no word of James Bansemer in ail these letters. She was always daughter to them, aud they were father aud mother. Graydon Bansemer one day received three letters, all from Chicago. He knew the handwriting on the envelope of each. Three men had written t him his fatner. Ellas Drooni and Rl;pby. A dark scowl came over his face as he looked nt the Il'.gby envelope. It was the firtt letter that he opened aud read. Jane was sitting near by watch lag the expression ou his face. "It's from Itigby." he said as b finished. "What does he say?" she asked anxiously. "He says he Is my devoted friend for life." replied Graydon bitteriy. l cannot forget though. Jane, lie Is not the sort of friend I want." ' "He thought it was for the best Graydou." "Ye.?, and he may have thought h warj my friend too. This letter says as much. But I like an enemy better, dear. You know what to expect of an enemy at all times. Here's one from Ellas Drsoia old Ellas." Dromii Bcrawled a few words of cheer td t young soh'Jcr. urging him not to reenlist, hut to come home et the end rf To" Twu "years."" lTe TuT. jmnT a " fJiir? from Mr. Clegg, in which that c?'Jt-'-man promised t pv.t Graydca it charge of their Nerr Ycr o.'hce If l.e would take fa p'.;:ce. 'ft Is ;:ev.s z?l his spirits bounding. Te:: f a y.-ntrt-fulness fcs never expected t fori sprang to h!"? rye. J.tne's happlcesj was a re3f clloa rf iiis own. Ja:?i Hun!ru:e:-'s letter was not rea l nloud to Jsae. Y.'fceu iie biJ li::lh?l the pen:.-! of t!:? Is::;; rplstte l.e folded it cd st.ui it nwsy 1:1 hi pjckrt. Ills eyes spea:id rt l it v.Htft.l n:.d I;'. t face drawn, lu;t th?:e wm ho word i t let her know v.-hat had hern written by the man v. ho h?d denounced her. "He is well," was ell he said. Ko did not tall her that b father had urged him to into bnsincsi In thu Philippines, sayhis thrt he woul4 pro. vide ample moan? wit!) which to bcjln and carry on any enterprise be careJ to exploit One paragraph cut Graydon to the quick: "I'd advise you to steer clear of Chicago. If they don't kill you in the Philippines you're better off there. T" hate us here."
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