Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 331, 3 October 1908 — Page 8
FAtiK EIGHT.
TILE lilUlLUONJD 1'ALXAlULil owVuU., uftUAl, OCAUiiZli is, i'JiM.
Attfoeiiatoini
L(0)dl(QT(g M(Sim Prepare to be represented with your lodge Tuesday night in the Fantastic Parade. Ewrylbocily in Costanme $100.00 in Cash given to the Lodge having the biggest per cent of costumed members in line. $10.00 in Cash given the individual in or out of a lodge wearing the most grotesque costume. PoMic Invittedl Any individual asked to join in. the parade provided they costume. PARADE ASSEMBLES 7:30 TUESDAY NIGHT . . at . . COURT HOUSE. " " PARADE MOVES 8:00 O'CLOCK. We want everybody to join in and make the first night of the Festival a Mardi Gras night. GET ON A COSTUME BUY A TICKLER FOLLOW THE BAND. LET'S START IT WITH A NIGHT OF FUN. AttttcMnonn AgaSe Lodge Menu This is a grand opportunity for some lodge to make $100 very easily, all having an equal show on the per cent, attendance basis. Call a Special meeting and get our your full roster. : WATCH THE PAPERS MONDAY. GET YOUR PARADE POSITIONS THEN. Free masks to the public from distributing points to be announced in Monday evening papers. Help Start the Festival Right By Appearing in Costume
SWEETHEARTS AMD TARIFF DISCUSSED
Republican Candidate for Vice
President Is Now Illinois.
in
BRYAN FOR FREE SILVER.
SHERMAN COMPARES PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND BRYAN, DECLAR
ING BRYAN DESIRES SUPPORT OF FORCES OPPOSING LINCOLN.
3 How to man-
FIRE INSURANCE JOURNAL REPLIES TO PROTESTS (Continued From Page One.)
COMMERCIAL CLUBS MEET IN NOVEMBER
to look into the reliability of the mutual!. Should he find them satisfactory and willing to take the bad business of the city at less than advisory
rates, the agents will simply lose their
lines. This will be the reward for their efforts to help their customers
save money in the wrong way. If all of them had secured the makeup of the rates on those risks on their books to, which heavy penalties have been attached for deficiencies,' taken
them to the assured and used their powers of argument to induce the owners of these risks to make improvements, get their rates reduced, decrease the hazard on the part of the
values not insured and do Justice to
the owner of the exposed good risks. It is probably most of the trouble at Richmond would be past history by this time and the city would have been less exposed to heavy loss. hey, or part of them did not see fit to do so. They insisted that the man with the poor risk, who refused to improve it, should be placed more nearly on a par with the owners of the good risk. Now their erstwhile friends appear likely to desert them if they can save money by doing so. "Insurance is a tax. If one man pays less than he should, some one will have to pay more than his share to make up the deficiency. The question is whether the owners of the certain bad risks at Richmond should be permitted to dodge part of-their insurance tax."
The State Organization Will Be Perfected at That Time.
THIRTY CLUBS EXPECTED.
ALREADY MANY COMMERCIAL ORGANIZATIONS HAVE CONSENTED TO SEND REPRESENTATIVES COMMITTEE HAS SECRET.
BAD BREATH AND SOUR STOMACH
RESTRAINING ORDER AGAINST STARR COMPANY (Continued from Page One)
tially for seven years. The counsel for the Starr claims that even if the use of the brand "Chase" had been abandoned temporarily, the A. B. Chase
company would be at fault, if it had permitted the Starr to enlarge its factory and put out sales without making any protest The assertion is made further by the local counsel for the Starr that the Musical Trade Journal has misrepresented the facts of the case and In its presentation has been in error. The preliminary ruling on the injunction petition is no indication of what the ultimate ruling may be. "
It was definitely decided, at a meeting held last evening by the program committee, to hold the organization
meeting of the State Federation of Commercial Clubs in this city during the week of November 15. It is pos
sible to secure a certain man of national prominence, whose name the committee withholds, the meeting will be held on Tuesday and Wednesday. If his services cannot be secured, the meeting will be held on Wednesday
iail Thursday. The committee desires
him to deliver an address before the delegates on the evening of the first It has also been decided by the committee to hold the first session on the afternoon of the) first day. In the evening there will be a short session followed by a banquet and an address by a prominent man. On the second day a morning session will be held and at noon the meeting will adjourn. In the afternoon the out of town delegates will be taken for an automobile ride about the city. It is expected that commercial organizations in at least thirty Indiana cities and towns will be represented at, the meeting by one or more delegates. Already twenty commercial organizations have accepted the invitation to meet here and effect a permanent state organization.
DIES AT AGE OF 106. owell. Mass, Oct. 3 John J. Morgan died at his home in this city, aged 100 years. He was born in County Leitrim, Ireland, in 1802, but did not come to America until he was 46 years of age. He never wore glasses, and
was a. reader until within a few days
of his death.
EDUCATOR OF HALF CENTURY CALLED TO DEATH (Continued From Page One.)
Stopped At Once With Pure Willow Charcoal, the Greatest Gas Absorber Known. There is no necessity to suffer the humiliation, chagrin and discomfort of bad breath, billiousness, sour stomach, gastritis, sluggish liver, etc., when a little lozenge of charcoal will cleanse the stomach and make it pure and sweet. Do not drug yourself when a simple little natural' charcoal made from fragrant willow branches, sweetened with honey, will add tone to your stomach, liver and intestines, rapidly absorb gases and stop foul odors of all kinds. Charcoal will absorb one hundred
times Its own volume in gas. A box full of charcoal placed in a bed room will keep the air of such room pure
and sweet.
A little charcoal lozenge dissolved
on the tongue after meals will also
keep the stomach fresh and clean.
Charcoal is justly called the scrubbing brush for the stomach. The old
monks of medieval times cured bad
cases of stomach trouble, cast out dev
ils from the system of man by feeding
such a man charcoal.
Scientific men of today believe in
the great strength of charcoal for the
cure of human ills. Too much of it
cannot harm one. The system craves it just like an animal needs and craves
salt every so often. Charcoal goes in
to the stomach gently and is welcome,
it settles down through the action of
the stomach, and filters through all
the food, absorbing gas, aiding diges
tlon and giving tone to the juices, so
that when the food goes into the intestines, -and there meets other digestive fluids, the charcoal holds the im
purities and thus keeps them from the
blood.
aiuaris jnarcoai Lozenges are made from pure willow. They are prepared fragrant by the use of honey
and sweetened so they please the
taste and are easily dissolved.
They have an enormous sale, thus
stamping them with the approval of
the public. Every druggist sells
them. 25 cents per box. Go to your druggist today and buy a box; then
after your next meal take two or three of them and judge for yourself of their
merit.
Several taken at bed time will prove to you In the morning that they have been at work all night, for your bad
breath will not be so bad after all.
Send us your name and address
and we will send you a trial package
by mall free. Address F. A. Stuart
Co., 200 Stuart Bldg, Marshall, Mich.
Burial at Earlham cemetery. Friends may call at any time after today. Besides his daughter, ' Mrs. Laura Fleming, who made her home with him Prof. Hodgin leaves two brothers, Joseph Hodgln of this city, and Charles Hodgin of Albunquerque,"K. M-, and one sister, Mrs. Stevens of Pasadena, Cal.
Ophelia: Gold yed&l Flour is nourishing.
Kkmah.
FIRST ACCIDENT.
The first accident In connection with
the fall festival occurred yesterday aft
ernoon when one of the signs attached to a pole in front of the Muth saloon
blew through the plate glass window,
JOAK&.: Gold Modal Flow la
economy.
Rod ol For Indigestion.
galpitatianof the heart Digests wbatoa ML
Sterling, 111.. Oct
age a sweetheart.
How to manage the tariff. These two subjects and many inter
vening ones were explained by aJmes
Sherman, vice Presidential candidate
of the Republican party, during the
second day of his "whirl wind campaign." During his trip he visited eight towns and upward of twenty
thousand persons listened to his ad
dresses.
To the girl students at the public
schools of Princeville he told the fine
points of handling a love affair. Just how the beau should act and how the
girl should act was explained minute
ly, while the girls giggled, blushed and murmured, "Isn't he the dear? Where did he learn it all?" j He supplemented his instructions on love with a strict Injunction to the girls to make their sweethearts vote right for the Republican ticket. The protective tariff in its effect on labor he discussed before the employes of the great plow works at Moline. Mr. Sherman and his party started out early today fom Peoria. At Wyoming, Toulon, Galva, and Cambridge the population turned out to hear the candidate discuss the issues from the car platform. At Cambridge Mr. Sherman took occasion to reply to a speech made by William J. Bryan in Philadelphia in which the Nebraskan declared that Judge Taft had accused him of abandoning issues. "If that statement isn't true," said K Sherman, "Mr. Bryan is still for free silver." At Rock Island he addressed an audience at the state fair. In addition.
the gathering was addressed by Congressmen William B. McKinley and Frank O. Lowden, both of Illinois, and
Congressman Nicholas Longworth of
Ohio. In his address Mr. Sherman
made a comparison of President Lin
coin and Mr. Bryan, declaring that the Democratic leader relies for support
on the forces which opposed Lincoln,
In his address at Rock Island, Mr.
Shern an said:
I am told that this is a Republican
day, and my theme shall be something of a comparison of the early leader of
Republican thought and action with
the preoent dictator of so-called Dem
ocratic declarations and professed in tentions.
The present canvass shows again the
fool of the ass that put on a lion's
skin.
The managers of Mr. Bryan's press
bureau are attempting to conjure votes for him by the use of the sacred name of Lincoln. Aesop declared that when the ass lifted up his voice and brayed every one knew him, and his owner
came up and gave him a sound cudgel
ing. The warning falls on deaf ears. The partisan who tries the same tricks
invites like shame and punishment. The
audacity of the device may capture some of the unwary.
In so far as he has a party behind
him, Mr. Bryan is the candidate of
those who maligned and ridiculed the
first and greatest president the Re
publican party has given to the na
tion. Mr. Bryan relies for support on the forces which at every step opposed
Lincoln, which obstructed the measures of war and peace of that saviour of the union, and pronounced the Pro
clamation of Emancipation a monstrous crime.
In his earlier campaigns he counted
most of the states which elected Lin
coln "the enemy's country." He has
never accepted the principles and pol
icies which glorified the administration of that martyred patriot. What
proofs can he offer that he is a disciple of the president who struck down slavery, who signed the Morrill tariff, who stood steadfastly for protec
tion and made possible the present
grandeur of the united republic? Lin
coln was elected in 1860 by the elec
toral votes of all the free states ex
cept three from New Jersey, which were cast for Douglas. It was against him that the mischief and threat of the solid South came to terrorize our politics.
Lincoln States Oppose Bryan. He has had slight favor from those
who learned their faith from that wise statesman, and the states which broke down the slave power have with rare exception refused to accept the vagaries of the modern apostle of Democ
racy. It is true that in 1896 the sil
ver issue was responsible for the loss
of one elector in California. . Where else in the Lincoln column of '60 was there a ballot in the electoral college faithless to the party of the great em
ancipator? In 1900 the states which elected Lincoln cast all their influence
against the candidate who now reaches for the strength of that hallowed
name?
Why should any citizen who ad
mires Lincoln, believes In his teach
ings, wishes bis principles and pol
Icles perpetuated, tolerate for a moment the preposterlous claims of this self-assertive candidate? Could two men be more different than are these? Could a contrast be imagined more
striking and more edifying? We know Mr. Bryan as a fluent talk
er. He may be called a Mississippi of
oratory. The stream of his words is full and free; so is the overflow of the
SoaUiarn rlvara which have lately car
ried ruin and death to the valleys and cities of Georgia and the Carol inas. His speches have a certain brilliancy; hare not the baleful fires which have raged In so many forests thrown their red light into the sky in widely scattered regions, yet hosts of lives and millions of property and the hope of families and of enterprise have turned to ashes before them. Mr. Lincoln was the champion of unity. He declared the Union could
not Vve half free and half slavery. His
great achievement was to fuse the warring states into a nation, one in freedom. His great heart took in all men, all creeds, all races, rich and
poor, high and low. In every part of
the land. His generous soul had char ity for all, malice for none. Prophet of Discord.
Mr. Bryan, on the contrary, preaches
the crusade of dissension; he aims to create divisions where there are none; his appeals are to prejudice and to hate, to envy and malice. Discontent
and suspicion are his constant com
pany. Despair seems in his train. The appeal for Bryan in the glamour of
Lincoln is as wicked as.it is absurd
Were Lincoln today charged with the
grave affairs in which he rendered such glorious service, where would he look for help? Surely not to the crowd
gathered at Denver, not to the sachems
of Tammany Hall, with whom Mr,
Bryan has patched up a peace. Can any Imagination be so wild as to pic
ture Lincoln trusting the judgment of
Bryan a judgment so frequently and
so emphatically proved erroneous?
Mr. Lincoln would accept President
Roosevelt's assurance that when in
doubt over serious problems he always
asked what Lincoln would do under
the circumstances. To that rule the
present administration owes much of
its success. That has been the spirit, too, In which Mr. Taft has trained
himself to be a most efficient and most
successful administrator; trained himself until today he approaches the
presidency better fitted to meet and
discharge Its varied and weighty duties
and responsibilities than ever did a
candidate before first approach that
lofty position.
Had Judge Taft lived in Lincoln's
time that great man would have found
in him, as his great successor has
found, a man worthy of his confidence,
one mentally fitted to be an ideal suc
cessor to embody in the clearer light
of his hew generation the aims and
purposes, the convictions and aspira
tions which Lincoln and Roosevelt
would have the republic possess and
enjoy.
If there be doubt upon this point, let us turn to the proof. No one now
living who had the privilege of casting his vote for Abraham Lincoln can be Induced to betray his record by a
ballot for Bryan. Such veterans there
a Automatic 13 EE MIfOZ a Automatic Phones Fnones 1198-1199 GROG BZR V 119S-U99
You can get at our store for your Sunday Dinner Pressed! CMckems Lima Beans, Jersey Sweet Potatoes, Lettuce, Turnips, Cucumbers. Malaga Grapes, Tokay Grapes, Concord Grapes, Fancy Peaches, Sweet Oranges, Blue Plums, Large Red Plums, Snow Apples, Bananas, Cranberries, Pears, Etc. Rodman's Whole Wheat Pancake Flour and Genuine Maple Syrup. Give us your order if you want the best. . USE BEE HIVE COFFEE.
and by a tariff revenue only he will order an injunction against the em
ployment of labor or the payment of wages at the present scale. It is
high time that Mr. Bryan's case for injunction against wages by the over
throw of protection should be set clear before the jury of the American people.
Mr. Bryan's- partisan crime is not
committed In ignorance. He knows
the meaning of his acts and the evil fruit which alone they can bear. The one legislative act of moment, with which the name of the gentleman from Nebraska Is connected is this as
sault on wages through the tariff. His strategy may be adroit, but It can not deluge the wage earners. The paramount issue of this election is the
tariff, as in it are involved the Interests of labor and the betterment of all who live by the sweat of their brows. The party which abolished slavery will always seek the elevation of the free laborer.
JAIL TO BE HEATED
be, and they will go to the polls with County Commissioners to Re-
the enthusiasm of youth to insure the
WARM WORDS Of praise from our customers are heard from all sides laudation of our coal quality, careful screening, prompt delivery and lowest rates, of highest grade fuel. Naturally we are pleased, just as naturally we'll work all the harder to maintain first rank as coal dealers. H. C. BULLERDICK ZL SON 829 South 5 til Street Phone 1235
ceive Bids for Heating ; Plant.
election of Taft to occupy the seat of
Lincoln and wear the mantle of his
wisdom and patriotism.
And if there remain anywhere Tirrtllo'Hilt Ail T" V vr a A j4-kmafn nnrfh
or south, or east or west, those who PRESENT SYSTEM IS BAD.
were hostile tc Lincoln in his days of
stress and trial, you will find them seeking a congenial retreat under the
Bryan banner. Appeals to Veterans.
The supporters of Mr. Bryan, by at
tempting to discredit the fame and
merits of the first martyred President, challenge those to whom that memory is precious, to assert the truth and to
act upon it It is fair to consider in
what manner the ballot should be cast to most faithfully maintain the purposes and principles of this great man who deserved so well of all his fellow countrymen. The Republican party is the party in whose creation Lincoln
helped, whose existence Lincoln pre
served, the sole heir of his estate, the
When the county commissioners meet in regular session Monday they will receive bids for the construction of a new heating system at the county Jail. It is expected the cost of the improvement will be about $600. At present the jail is heated by the plant at theTSourt house. Last winter the tile through which the steam is conducted became filled with water and the jail was made uncomfortable as the steam was cooled before reaching there. The commissioners believe the installation of a plant at the Jail would be paid for by the saving In fuel. Last winter it was necessary to keep up the
Area at the court house all nieht in
trustee bound to administer his be- order to heat the jail. This would not
quests, the guardian of his guts to nu-
manity.
In 1904 no state whose electoral vote
was given to Lincoln failed to bear j aloft the Republican banner. New j states had joined the sisterhood and J
HOME MADE BREAD Baked by Mrs. Burke. Telephone for a Trial Loaf. HADLEY BROS. .
: INSURANCE, REM. ESTATE:: X LOANS, RENTS
W. H. Bradbury & Son f Rooms 1 and 3, Wsstoott Blk
have been necessary, if it had not been for the condition of the tile. In laying the line of tiling a spring was encountered beneath the surface and it has been impossible to keep the water out The tiling could not be
they too took position in the same hon- changed because of a sanitary sewer
or roll. These precedents should in- in the alley.
spire effort to repeat the achievement.
The spirit of Lincoln still directs Republican councils. Lincoln brought back the erring states into the Union; they will be welcome to share In the
triumph for Taft in November.
In his speech in New York, Mr. Bry
an denounces the Republican party for alleged tendency to centralization. His
words are the echoes of the assaults upon the efforts of Lincoln to defend the Union and maintain the Constitution, the spirit which made difficult
POSTOFFICE RECEIPTS
SHOW BIG GAIN
The receipts for September at the
Richmond postofQce show a marked
gain over the same month of last year.
The difference amounts to about $oOO.
The total receipts for the month were
L.m r tho tri ralnRt 4,722.41. The surplus sent to Indi-
the armed hosts of the confederacy.
Such utterances prove that Bryan Is hostile to all that Lincoln stood for and still represents. Every Lincoln ReDubllcan should be and I believe
will be a supporter of Taft.
Those out of sympathy with Lin
coln's faith and achievements are naturally found among Mr. Bryan's sup
porters.
Mr. Sherman's address on labor to
the emnloves . of the Mollne Plow
Works was as follows, in part:
The Republican party has always
expressed diligent care for American
labor. In fifteen years since 1893,
laws for the benefit of labor to the number of over 100 have been enacted by Republican Legislatures, signed by
Republican Governors and enforced by Republican officers. In no state under
Republican control have the reasona
ble demands of labor for legislation
been refused. The contrast asserts it
self. In no state where the Democrats are in political control has a system
of labor laws been enacted.
In the solid South, where Bryanism
boasts ( mastery, not a single statute has been jpassed for labor. Bryan and his echoes insult the wage earners by efforts to array them in his support on grounds of prejudice and of hate
toward employers.
Mr. Bryan seeks to have an Injunc
tion set in operation to cripple industry, to check the wheels of transportation, to close markets, to destroy
prosperity, to impoverish schools and
churches and hospitals, to forbid hope to the young and to make despair the
companion of age. Give him his way
anapolis after the employes were paid
was $370.72.
MEATS! MEATS! We are prepared to take care of any and all your orders for Choice Fresh and Cured Meats, Sausage and Lard. We have both quality and quantity. SCHWEGMAiVS MEAT MARKETS Phones 2204-1084.
Moore & Ogborn
Insurance. Bonds and Loans. Real Es
tate and Rentals. Both phones Bell 53R. Hom T389. Room 16 I. O. O. F. Bido.
Tti Snrtto OfUA, Infants and children are conataatty lmoillnr a -atlT. It la important to uow what to Kir them. Their at -macb and bowels are not ttrmg cnougU for a alts, ptxrratf re water or catbamc pllla. povrtera or Uieta. Ohre thorn a tnOd, pleaaaai. gentle. tozsthro tonic Ilka Or. Caldsreil'a Srrup Papain, which acOa at tho araatl am of SO centa or SI at Crag atoree. It to tb one great remedy (or yon to have to the bonae to w children wben tber need U
Dr. A. O.Martin, Dentist
For satisfactory plate work. Special service on repair work. Colonial Blc New phone 1627.
COAL : COAL ; COAL ; COAL A Trial Order will convince you HACKMAN, KLEHFOTH & CO.
MnnoiuincGFsniemit
(South imoimo DaSiry Gompainiy Successors to Richmond Cream Go
