Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 345, 18 October 1908 — Page 4
PA.GK FOtTR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1908.
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. PuMsn-d And owned by the PALIaAD.i XJM PRINTING CO. leeued 7 das each week, evening and Sunday morning-. Office Corner North 9th and A street Home Phone 1121. Bell 21. RICHMOND. INDIANA.
Radoiph O. leda Manama Editor. Caarlea M. Morsaa Basloeaa Maaaer. O. Owt Krt Stifi Editor.
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REPUBLICAN TICKET.
NATIONAL TICKET. -For President .WILLIAM HOWARD TAPT of OhioFor Vlce-Preld3nt JAMBS S. SHERMAN of New York. m . , STATE. r,t GoYernor ' JAMES E. WATSON. Lieutenant Governor FREMONT C. GOODWINE. Secretary of State FRED A. SIMS. Auditor of State JOHN & BILLHEIMER. Treasurer of State OSCAR HADLEY. Attorney General JAMES BINGHAM. State Suparintendent LAWRENCE McTURNAN. State Statistician J. L. 5'EETZ. Judge of Supreme Court QUINCT A. MYERS. -Judge of Appellate Court DAVID MYERS. -Reporter of Supreme Court GEORGE W. SELF. ?. . . ' " r ISTRICT. Congress WILLIAM O. BARNARD. v COUNTY. - Joint 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 Disk HOMER FARLOW. Commissioner Middle Dlst. BARNEY H. LINDERMAN. Commissioner Western DlsLROBERT N. BEESON. J WAYNE TOWNSHIP. jj Trustee
JAMES H. HOWARTH.
Assessor
CHARLES E. POTTER.
-
6ses a considerable proportion of evil has ever existed and was partlcuthe business interests of the country larly marked in English universities, were on Cleveland's side. In those Even granted the fact that these young days the 'majority of the solid, sub- men do adopt that attltud? toward instantlal, well-balanced and public- stitutions of learning which, "fixes the spirited citizens voted the republican gentleman's mark at C "what harm ticket. But Cleveland obtained enough does it do?
of that element to give him the victory in two canvasses, by the aid of the solid south. Even Cleveland, however, was to a large degree the creature of a series of accidents. The Blaine-Arthur-Conkling feud gave him
chance to carry the state of New
York for. governor in 1883 by a larger majority than had ever been rolled
up for that office in any state along to that time. That made him the logical candidate for president in 1SS4,
and the continuance of the feud, with the intervention of several other ad
verse factors gave him the election. If Edmunds, Sherman or any one of half a dozen other prominent republicans who could be named had been selected for the candidacy in 1884 instead of Blaine the republicans
would probably have carried thecounytr and "the democratic Interregnum of
18S5-SD and of 1803-97 would never
have taken place.
The people have no confidence
either in the ability or the sincerity
of the present democratic party. The
men who are at the head of that party in these days are as hostile to all
the things for which Cleveland stood as they are to the' republican policy,
If Cleveland were alive today, and
was urging the election of Taft as, he would be if he were here, Bryan would assail him more fiercely than he assails the president or the presi
dential candidate. In life Cleveland waa denounced by Bryan as a bunco
steere. Bryan has no more love for
Clevelandlsm, or Tildenism, or Jef-
fersonism now than he had when he
was denouncing Cleveland on the stump in 1896, or than he had when he was attacking JefTersonian doc
trines in that canvass and in 1900.
Even many of the democrats who like Bryan, and who favor his poli
cies, would have no confidence In
Bryan's sincerity in pushing them if
h should be elected. Bryan's personal popularity seems to be as great
as it was In 1896 and 1900. His meet
ings now, as in those campaigns, attract large numbers of persons. But
it Is evident that they go to hear him
out of curiosity. Most of his auditors,
It Is safe to say, will vote against
him as they did In his previous cam
paigns. As a presidential possibility Bryan is out of the reckoning. The
country will never intrust power into
the hands of any such visionary and
Impracticable. Not one of his de
structive policies in 1908 his bank
Ing blind pool, his patent device for trust regulation, his scheme to revise
the tariff by annihilating It, and his
other absurd propositions have been
thought out carefully by him. He seized them because he imagined they
would have a superficial attraction for thoughtless or dishonest persons. Just
as he proposed in 1896 and 1900 to cut the wages and the debts of the people in two. Hundreds of thou
sands of the persons who vote for him on November 3 would vote against him if they thought he had the faintest chance of victory. The democrats have as much Interest as the republicans in having their country prosperous at home and respected abroad.but under the regime of the Bryanite reactionaries and destructlonists it could neither be prosperous nor respected.
The reply is that these fellows demoralize the college, that they instill a spirit of discontent, low ideals, and laziness. I this true? In the college community as a matter of fact, like attracts like, and these fellows only demoralize themselves. They have nothing to do with the seekers after learning as any one can learn by staying in a college community for twenty-four hours. Those who prize
knowledge more look down on them. Those who are of the same type with less money may be . jealous of them. But as a matter of fact the more money which a man has has nothing to do with the way that man's estimate is taken in that college. If there be a real democracy it is the college. Since these "loafers" corrupt none but themselves and are already corrupted to start with, is it not better to try to make these fellows see that there is something besides money and a
"good time" in the world Is that not the mission of the college?
The Evening Post does not make allowance for the fact that the son of a rich man is just aB apt to be stupid as the next one. The ratio of stupidity in all walks of life is a rather invar
iable quantity. Why should the stupid
rich man be railed at, any more than the stupid poor man. The chances are that unless the income Is derived from good Investments made by papa, that cannot be altered that the son will lose it any way. If the Post is making a crusade agains stupidity, very well. If it is making it against low scolarship, very well. The mark that a man receives in college Is not a true index to his character. Not all the scholarship men win the prizes outside of college by threequarters of a jugfull. Raise the standards of the colleges if It Is necessary to make them effective, but at the same time it is well to remember that college is not the "end of all desire." There is a hereafter in the outside world which reckons with incompetents, rich or poor. The job which the Post has taken
might be safely entrusted to that here
after.
pickling job." And they smoked their pipes and agreed some more.
DEMOCRACY IN DISCREDIT.
The American people will never trust the democratic party under the
present leadership. This is the over
shadowing fact In contemporary poll
tics. It renders all of Mr. Bryan's contortions and all of Chairman Mack's boasts vain. It may be said that the 5,000,000 or 6,000,000 democratic voters are part of the American
people, but it Is entirely safe to pre
dict that If, under its present aus
pices the democratic party ever gets
fromidable enough to have a chance to carry the presidency enough sane intelligent, conservative democrats will come over to the republicans to avert the calamity of a democratic victory. We have seen in the past lour years democrats in congress often drift to the republican side when important measures seemed to be In danger from indifference or
from hostility. It would be the same, ecale if the national democracy should at any time develop enough Republican supremacy in the presidency and in congress. Inertia, apathy or the claims of regularity keep men in the democratic party who have no confidence in the present democratic leaders, and who are opposed, to the democratic policy, but let a crisis come, when victory would seem to be within reach of those leaders, and then there would bo such a swing of patriotic
democrats to the democratic side as would prevent the disaster of democratic supremacy. A. third of a century ago and later on the situation was different. Millions of intelligent, level headed, patriotic men voted for TilJeu and for Cleveland. In each of his three caa-
COLLEGE UNDESIRABLES. The New York Evening Post has taken occasion to make the Inauguration of President Garfield, of Williams College, the outbreak against what It is pleased to call "the elegant young gentlemen without intellectual ambition or moral purpose." "For two decades at least," It says, "the Philistines have been invading our eastern colleges. The general increase in wealth and spread of luxurious habits, during that time have been a species of hangers-on they cannot properly be called members of our educational institutions, who are a dis
grace to themselves and the colleges that harbor them. We do not mean the openly vicious. With them it is usually easy to deal sternly." Much of what the Post has said is true and perhaps even the indictment
against the college that the requirements are not high .enough. The charges against the "idle rich" are as pertinent in college as out for the college fails if it be not a miniature world in itself. And j et there is another side to that shield. One would suppose from the indictment that the colleges were full
THE RURAL POPULATION. A short time ago the state of Iowa
was much concerned when It found 1 through the medium of its bureau of statistics that although the material ' wealth of the state had increased in j
the country districts, that the population was decreasing at a rapid rate. Those who took stock in the "race suicide" theory commenced writing monographs on the subject until the state authorities began to look into the situation. It was found that unlike the states of New England, where there are many hundreds of abandoned farms, that the fault lay in prosperity. The owners of smaller farms had left the state to seek for new homesteads and larger farms because, they had been bought out by owners of larger farms who were on that account more prosperous.
By investing the proceeds from the sale
of these farms in the newly opened lands of the farther west and removing to the newer regions, the state of Iowa had been noticeably depopulated.
Addison Harris in a speech of some
time ago before the Commercial club, pointed out that in Wayne county the rural population was no larger than it
was fifty years or so ago.
This is a condition not only prevail
ing but advancing all over the country except, perhaps, in the south in the cotton regions, where field labor is much used. In a great degree this has been brought about by the manufacture
and Invention of more efficient agricul
tural implements.
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i
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agent from an international diplomatic banquet, was seized on by the Bulgarians much as the affair of the Maine
The days when thirty men or more ln this country at the time of the sPan"
thrashing" have j i8a war- Tbe Bulgarians arose and
Bulgarians independence was proclaimed with Prince Ferdinand and the czar.
of that sort of thing a thing which a
public which looks cynically on the j and made better in their later days.
APPRECIATE EDUCATION.
Three-fifths of the Indiana students have earned or are earning the money which supports them at school. This statement Is a beacon light of hope to
the young man who wants a good col
lege education, and whose parents
cannot pay his way. Merit counts above money. It won't take long for a boy with the brainB and heart for it requires heart to find out that the
real men who make the university atmosphere recognize and live that
phrase.
The 'half-a-chance man is the one
who should note the fact that many of
the students at the State University
are paying for their own bread and butter day by day. It 'takes willing
ness to stoke a furnace, sweep out
buildings, carry newspapers, milk
cows, play hostler, live simply, cheap
ly, and without false ostentation or,
t make it still plainer, "sew on your
own buttons." If a man has the hand and the soul he can do it If his eyes can look on things that he cannot have and the sorrel taste does not come into his mouth, he will make good at the Job of "making his own way through school." Money nor family gives a man the right to hold his shoulders erect. It Is the blood from a pure, brave, big heart, driving life and love and gentleness into a clean brain. A boy who sets his face toward a college sheepskin, which he must earn with his own money, must keep but one thing in mind, and it will steer him past the blue devils. His work today, the lawn he mowed, the horse he curried, the furnace he stoked, the newspapers he carried, are but the means to the end.
The "end" is a college education, and an education, Judged from its personal side alone, stripped of all its power to
earn money In after years, bare of its
commercial attributes, is "a happy de light." Two mldle-aged men, both successful, were smoking their pipes recently,
They had worked their way through school, one as a night watchman in a downtown building, and the other as a janitor in the "stiff" room of the medi
cal college in connection with the uni
versitv which they attended. "Not
overacceptable Jobs, either one, you
would say. No, they were not. But both "fellows" made good in school,
were needed at a
gone, and now very few are employed on account of the perfection of threshing machinery.
However there Is one section of the
country in which this condition does not hold good. That is in Maryland and Delaware.
Farming such as has been conducted
up to this time almost exclusively in
the United States is on the extensive
plan. The intensive or "truck garden" methods which have been in force in the old countries are Just beginning
to be used now in the low coastal plain
of the Atlantic coast.
There is a problem which will have to be answered, can machinery and implements be Invented which will take the place of the man in intensive farm
ing. It will not be long until the man
ufacturers will wake up to the solution
of this problem. For It is certain that ultimately at the rate of growth of population intensive farming will be on the increase in this country. Will men have to be employed to make this machinery for intensive farming or will man still have to be the machine? That will determine whether the country population will grow or decrease.
Thus a railway strike made a czar, a kingdom and it may be war.
Roosevelt May Leave Legacy of Ideas to the United States
(By Ralph Whitesides.) Washington, D. C, Oct. 17. The legacy of ideas which Theodore Roosevelt will leave to the public to consider and to congress to wrestle with will be Becond only to that which George AVashington and Alexander Hamilton aggregated together into the farewell address. President Roosevelt may decide to bequeath some such ut
terance, setting forth in general his ideas of the demands which present economic and social conditions force
Somebody got the weird idea that the Washington monument would
upon the consideration of the legisla-1 make a splendid place for a wireless
output of the college is only too willing to believe. It is not true that the re-
"Was it worth that long, hard Job of nlekline stiffs." asked Tom of Joe, "to
i
quiremenis lor admission to colleges- your education?" Worth it?" reare growing easier-nor Is it true that pjei the other. "You bet it was. And the standard of scholarship is being if I hadn't made an extra dollar from lower. As a matter of fact they have my education. It still would be somebeen raised and tightened in the last thing that money can't buy. It's a fact.
twenty years to a great degree. If the evil were, indeed, a new one, It would Indeed be serious. But the
Tom, that simply to be able to sit down and read a good book and understand it whr. it's worth all at thai
THE STRIKE AND THE CZAR. The Balkan situation is as yet far
from being settled. The headlines proclaiming trouble in the Balkans has been so frequent that crisis 40,819 has failed to create the stir which an imminent war does as a rule. The war pounced down with such suddenness that no chance was given to the quiet citizen to know exactly
what it is about. It is not often that
organized labor creates a war and still
less frequent that a strike makes a czar but in the Balkans, all things are
possible.
There Is running across Europe from
Paris to the near orient (which Is the scene of such romances as Anthony Hope and George Barr McCutchen are
pleased to write) a railroad known as
the Oriental railway. This piece of
track runs east and west through the once Turkish provinces. The railway is
undoubtedly Turkish property, in as
much as it is operated under a conces
sion granted by the sultan which does
not expire until 1958. The company which holds the concession is under Austrian protection and to further complicate matters is largely financed by
German capital. Like all railroads, this one is in par
tlcular, had a strike. During the strike the operatives were replaced by Bulgarian soldiers. At the conclusion of
the strike the Bulgarians refused to retire from their point of vantage. Thereupon the Turkish diplomatic corps got to work and stated that Inasmuch as it had come to their knowl
edge that no orders had been issued to the Burgarian troops to retire, "As this step constitutes an infringement of the proprietory rights of the imperial government with regard to the rail-, way rights guaranteed by the Berlin treaty." Thereupon the Bulgarian diplomats also got busy and replied that inasmuch as the company -which owned the railroad had asked for their taking charge of the railroad, that the small t matter of giving it up was no concern of the Turkish government, but a matter to be decided between the officers of
the Oriental railway and the ministers of the Bulgarian principality. The railroad line was not restored to the Turkish government and a slight accident in Constantinople, such as the rtmiBaJnn of that Bnir. rt.n diolomatiQ
THE THIRD LEGION. Just after the treaty of Portsmouth the newspapermen who had been in Manchuria watching the armies of Japan and Russia fight their great battles, held a dinner .the dinner of the "Third Legion." Then they scattered to the four heavens and the seven seas.
Somewhere under diverse skies the Third Legion is mustering, awaiting the final gathering of the war clouds
in the Balkans.
What tales they could tell which
have not appeared ln print tales of romance, tales of narrow escapes, of
strange tribes and feverships. They are the men who know who blundered, who watch the unseen and unrecorded springs which control world politics. Theirs is a life of hardship, famine and fever of service unrequitted save by the love of the game. Wanderers on the face of the earth who know not
the next place to which they will be , ly discuss these Issues, and present
called. some ideas as to the progress other Romance Is not yet dead in this day I na"ns have made along these lines, , , , : he would leave a legacy of working of humdrum routine. The brothers in opportunltyf whlch 8tatesmen would arms, the soldiers of fortune and the not soon forget.
Third Legion are the last of a great There is especially good excuse fori
race in other days men proclaimed
these heroes and the children of the
of raising revenue and also of checking the aggregation of wealth, the treasury was showing an annual surplus which a couple of generations ago would have been ample to meet the annual budget of the public There was mighty ItUle apparent ex cuse for levying new taxea. But to-' day it is different. Not only is there a troublesome deficit, but there i prospect that it will continue for some time.
tive branch of government. It is reas
onably plain that if he does this, he will provide all the program that the government will need for some time to come; vastly more than it will consider if under the new order of things it decides to be less pushing about its progressiveness. With the assurance that his successor will look after the tariff, President Roosevelt will be at liberty to present his views about a vast array of other questions. There are, for example, the questions of inheritance and income tax. The president has declared himself as favoring both these methods of siphoning off some of the substance of swollen fortunes.
If, in his message, he should serious-
telegraph station. Lieutenant Commander Cleland Davis, U. S. N.. sent the suggestion to the war department officials, who referred It to the president, who quickly put his foot down on it. When it was first suggested that the great monolith be transformed Into a telegraph office considerable opposition was expressed on the
ground that such an act would be a ; slur on American patriotism. It was 1 also argued that wires on the top 1 would disfigure the shaft. Adherents of the plan declared that the only external evidence of the ' wireless apparatus would be a band of i some sort of material with antennae j
near the apex of the shaft This, it was said, would not be visible from the ground, as the band would be painted white. Members of the signal corps, U. S. A., with whom Commander Davis discussed his project, declined to consider the proposition until it had been laid before the president. Many em-
such a pronouncement at this time, i lnent officials approved the plan, and because the government is going to Elliott Woods, superintendent of the
gods today these are merely outcasts and wanderers men without a country. At any rate in event of a war in the Balkans "Here's to the Third Legion."
need the money.
The Allegheny Mountains. Not more than five of our presidents down to Lincoln's time ever crossed the Allegheny mountains, and four of these were western men who had to cross the mountains to reach WashingtonPresidents Jackson. Polk. General W. H. Harrison and Taylor. President Monroe crossed the mountains on his return trip from west to east in 1817. Van Buren came west in 1842, two years after the expiration of his presidential term, and saw the mountains then for the first time. It was on this trip that he got upset and dumped In the mud near Plalnfield, Hendricks county. Exchange.
capitol, who has made extensive per-
It will be recalled that when the sonal experiments, declared the moouPresident first suggested these means ment would make an ideal station.
The Original Almack'a. The original Almack's club in London, afterward known as Willis rooms, had a curious origin. It began as a tavern, started by Lord Bute's butler, McCall, who proposed to give it his own name, McCall's, but judicious friends warned him that the tremendous unpopularity of Scots in London at that time, for which McCall's master was largely responsible, would spell ruin to an establishment so called. "Very well." said McCall. "I will call it Almack's." The present Almack's club is a more fashionable organization wbleh chose to adopt the old name.
Literal Thirst For Work. The lawyer who made a Muff at a big practice turned tastily to part from his companions. "1 am sorry, but I must go." he said hurriedly. "I have a case at home which I must absorb to the last detail." "I guess." said one of the party, "it's a case of beer." Baltimore American.
SOUTH AWAKENS TO OPPORTUNITIES Conditions Among Farmers of The Dixie Land Change For the Better. MILLIONS IN THE CROPS.
DAY OF OLD FASHIONED FARMER
IN SOUTH HAS PASSED AND!
THEY ARE NOW WIDE AWAKE AND ENERGETIC.
Nowhere with more quiet or with more freedom does a man retire than Into his ow fwvul. Marru Aurelius.
Teacher So you can't do a simple sum ln arithmetic? Now let me explain to you. Suppose eight of you have together forty-eight apples, thirty-two peaches and sixteen melons. What would each one of yon get? "Cholera morbus," replied Johnny. Pathfinder.
People love a public spirited man. Get a tag next Wednesday and show you still have the interests of others
stead of buying his side meat in Chicago and his hams iu Cincinnati, the southern farmer now "lives at home and boards at th Barre place." The farmer who raises fine cattle, sheep, milk, butter, chickens, eggs, fruit, vegetables, hogs, wheat, and corn on his own plantation has solved the problem of profitable farming and is boyond the reach of panics and above financial depression. ' The increase ln the velue of farm property in the laet eight years is estimated 3t $.n:n.f ", or nearly nlns times the capital of the country's national banks. A writer in The Manufacturers Record states that the farms of the south alone will this year yield a production valued at nearly ?2..ocM .. This is more than the total production of the country ln 1880 and about the came amount thzt all the Mate, produced in only eighteen years ago. In 1 the 8,5i.i.Otx pcr-
. - Tl. ' v. j,.
citmiUlc, .u, uvu total of r-.-lJW)-f287 per' capita. industrial growth of the south in the The total production in 1007 was $7.last two decades has diverted attention 412.0'mX C18 per capita, from the remarkable increase in its j Every oue who has kept a c!os agricultural production. The erection vatch upon events has noticed the of cotton mills, furniture factories, steady increase In the valuation of and steel plants has not been at the farming lands in the south, and It Is expense of the farms. On the contrary, plain that this is justified by the con the farmer has improved his methods stantly increasing production and conof cultivation and extended the tilled sequent Increase in profit., area until be has added another agri-; With Improvement in ni"thods of cultu'ral empire. j culture, the growth of population and Not only has the cotton crop con- ever-Increasing demand for food the f utinuaily increased in value until the ture prosperity of the farmer seems 'to past year it brought over $700,WO,000, be assured. Whatever political, social, but the cotton-eeed products now bring or industrial changes may come, our
$06,134,859 a year, wnlle the produc- very existence is based on the farm, for
tion of corn, wheat, rice, sugar cane, "the farmer feeds us alL" hay, alfalfa, etc, has largely increased, j The telephone, the telegraph, rural A few years ago cotton was almost free delivery, good roads, and the exthe sole crop of many farmers in the tension of electric car lines are bring-
south. Now they are diversifying, and fruit growing, cattle raising, dairying, and the raising of vegetables and poultry fcr the city markets have brought large profits to the farms. The raising of strawberries, grapes, potatoes, lettuce, tomatoes, and "truck growing" generally have brought prosperity to entire sections that once lived from hand to mouth. The growing of
Ing the fanner into close touch with his neighbors and his markets. Farm life is becoming more and more attractive year by year, and the farmer !s coming to realize that he is not only an important factor In the country's life, but tho most Independent man la thm world.
People love a public spirited man. t
melons, peaches, and apples in Georgia Get a tag next Wednesday and show
and the Carolinas has made these; you still have the interests of othars
states great fruit producers, while the
apples grown in certain belts of Virginia and West Virginia are sought for everywhere at profitable prices. Br ralnine more of Tola suonlies. iA-
at heart.
VPUU1 Relieres soar stomach, B&loitaiiaa of th lwtart. Digests wh
