Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 350, 23 October 1908 — Page 4

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TEUSGRAM, FItID AY, OCTOBER 23, 1008.

TOE RICIEIOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. PyMlsnod and owned by the FAIXA D1W. PRINTINO CO. , Issued 7 day each week, evening" and Sunday morelnf. Office Corner North 9th and A streets. Home Phone 1121. Ball SL : RICHMOND. INDIANA. Badolph G. Leeda Maaatlaa- Edits. Oarlea H. Mr- Bwslaeaa Maaace. O Own Kuh Mewe Emit or. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS, la Richmond $5.00 per year (In advance) oi, lOo per week. MAI Ii SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year, In advance ...1500 Six months, in advance 2.00 One month. In advance ... RURAL. ROUTES. One year. In advance... .......... J-00 Btx months. In advance. ........ One month. In advance...... Address changed as eften as desired; both new and old addresses must to liven. t Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be riven for a specified term; name will not toe enterel totll payment is received.

Entered at Richmond. Indiana, pestoffice as second class mall matter. REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL TICKET. For President WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT of Ohio. -For Vice-President - I AMES S. SHERMAN of New York. STATE. Governor JAMES B. WATSON.. Lieutenant Governor FREMONT C. GOODWINS. Secretary of State FRED A. SIMS. Auditor of State JOHN 0. BILLHEIMER. Treasurer of State OSCAR HADLEY. Attorney General JAMES BINGHAM. Stat Superintendent ' LAWRENCE McTURNAN. State Statistician J. L. PEETZ. -Jadge of Supreme Court QUINCY A. MYERS. as-Jndge of Appellate Court DAVID MYERS, i Heporter of Supreme Court QEORGB W. SELF. DISTRICT. Congress WILLIAM O. BARNARD. COUNTY. Joint Representative ALONZO M. GARDNER. Representative WALTER S. RATLIFF. Circuit Judge HENRY C. FOX. to-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 Dist HOMER FARLOW. Commissioner Middle Dist. BARNEY H. LINDERMAN. Commissioner Western Dist ROBERT N. BEESON. WAYNE TOWNSHIP. Trustee JAMES H. HOWARTH. Assessor , CHARLES E. POTTER. WHOSE FAULT? Who stirred up all this row about county local option anyway? Who made the passage of the law a necessity? The worst element of the saloon men and certain men engaged in the manufacture of liquors and; also engaged in politics. In most cases the worst element of saloonlaU were (and still are) cot only in league, hut the tools of these men. The worst element got Immunity and the big guns got the plunder. Naturally the brewers who were in for the plunder wanted to be let alone The sentiment of communities was outraged and owing to popular feeling on the subject the republican party took up the matter In the only sane way. That is to fix things so that In the locality where lawless saloon keep ers made themselves obnoxious the people might put a stop to it. And by the very existence of county local option iu a community it practically forces good behavior on the part of salon keepers lest they be driven out. The fault of all this is the crooked saloon keeper. If county local option had not come when It did there might have been prohibition legislation passed. But what do these men In the brewery councils do. Do they trust the people for a square deal? No, they are afraid of leaving It to people appar ently. They have guilty consciences. If the brewery people had shown more confidence In the people the peo ple would have shown more for them But why Is It that the brewers have been fighting so assiduously against Watson? Do they fear that he will not clve them special privileges. Do they

fear that he will not hand out fat jobs for their lieutenants. It look that

way. It looks as If they were afraid of a man who thinks the people of Indiana are perfectly competent to settle the liquor question for themselves in their own localities as local bad conditions brought on by these same men may demand. If Marshall is as many people think a straight sort of man, why Is it that he shows no better control over his party than to allow It to bo exploited by crooks. The rank and file of democracy are quite as law abiding and respectable as any other, but to have Taggart and Crawford Fairbanks dictating from behind the throne and using the worst element of the saloon forces to see to it that their ticket is elected is incongruous, to say the least. The fault of all this disturbance lies in the efforts of Crawford Fairbanks and Thomas Taggart to dictate the government of Indiana. That has caused county local option, and it will cause the defeat of Marshall. Once .Taggart and Fairbanks are thrust out of political life things will go on more smoothly and there will be better government TAMPERING WITH JUDICIARY. '!Mr. Bryan simply confines himself to the anti-injunction plankof his own platform and tell us publicly, definitely and clearly whether he accepts or rejects the statement of Mr. Goropers that this plank pledges him to the principles of the bill for which Mr. Gompers stands; and whether if elected, he will endeavor to have this proposal enacted into law. This is asked honestly in the interest of that large voting population which believes sinlegitimate right and interest of labor, but which believes also that from the standpoint of the best interest of labor it neither requires nor is entitled to more than Justice, and that the right formally recognised in the law or the land." Theodore Roosevelt. Bryan wrote his own platform and the injunction plank contained there is meaningless. That plank reads as rollows: "Questions of judicial practice have arisen, especially in connection with industrial disputes. We deem that the parties to all judicial proceedings should be treated with rigid impartiality, and that injunctions should not be issued in any cases in which injunctions would not issue if no industrial dispute were involved." That is a slip sod evasion. Its only color comes from the statements which Gompers has read into it Bryan himself has said nothing. Does he mean to make the business man an outlaw? Does he mean that the secondary boycott is an inalienable right of either employer or employe? Judge Taft's decisions said that under the law the secondary boycott could not be employed by either capital or labor. It is the one safeguard the American people have, for not beingembroiled every time a labor dispute comes up. The truth is that not only the parties to a labor dinspute must be treated impartially, but bo, must the public Any attempt to promote the secondary boycott either of capital or labor by the suspending of the laws either for capital or labor is dangerous. The Injunction and restraining order are necessary to good government That the judiciary should be assailed by either labor or capital for being impartial la a most dangerous tendency In modern life. Judge Taft was impartial in his decisions. Shall he be assailed for his impartiality because labor demands a partial treatment? Are we "to make an outlaw of the business man because nls right to carry on a lawful business under the peace of the law has been protected by the process of injunction, because in a word, one of the most vital and most fundamental rights of a business man to carry on his business, has been sustained and not denied by the processes of tho courts of equity, this sweeping attack of Mr. Gompers upon the judiciary has been made in a frank and open effort to secure votes for Mr. Bryan r A QUIETUS. The Balkan situation is quieting down Russia has put a damper on the warlike Bulgarians by threatening to send their troops In that territory. Simply boiled down to its final essence it means that as long as the Bulgarians are quiet there will be no attempt to force them back Into Turkish rule. What power would do it? Certainly no Christian power would force the Christian Bulgarian back. No other Christian province, which has escaped from Turkish rule, has been forced back. But you say the government win not be recognized. What of it? For eight years Prince Ferdinand himself was unrecognized all the affairs being taken care of by the Bulgarian "government" This government was lodged in the minister of affairs vir tually the tool of the Turkish government Of what manner of man Ferdinand Is, one may Imagine from the fact

The Party is

that this minister died a violent death from "unknown reasons." Ferdinand will be able to wait. But will he be able to still the passionate heart beats of courage with which his ; subject seems a little over charged. It is a waiting game with England sitting on Turkey and Russia, holding down Bulgaria, there won't be so much news coming from the Balkans unless the under parties do considerable kicking. FILIPINOS SHOULD HAVE INDEPENDENCE Senor Ocampo Speaks at Lake Mohonk. Lake Mohonk, N. Y., Oct. 23. "The Philippines'' was the general subject of discussion at the Lake Mohonk con ference. The education and welfare of the Filipinos were takenup in ad dresses by W. Comcron Forbes, vice governor of the island; Major General J. Franklin Bell, Senor Pablo Ocampo, resident commissioner of the Phil ippines at Washington; Miss Mary Coleman, of Indiana, formerly dean of the women at the Insular Normal School in Manila and others. Senor Ocampo talked briefly, first in English and then in Spanish. He favored the Independence of the Filipinos, saying that while the Philip pine Islands, due to their geographical configuration, were a dispersed, sep arate and scattered country, in the latest aspiration of the people they have a cohesive whole. You May Enjoy Your Meals If You Will But Equip Your Stomach With The Right Means To Handle The Food. If you go Into a restaurant, cafe or hotel, where all your environments, the lights, dazzling linen, silver, cut glass, music, chatting and laughing women, seem to foretell of a pleasant meal, your stomach should not revolt when you read the menu card. Heavy steaks, soups, oysters, en trees, salads, etc.. should hold no ter rors for the healthy stomach and they do not A small box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets placed In your vest pocket will be sufficient guard against the mad revels of a worn-out stomach. A tablet taken a few moments after a copious meal will remove any ill effects of food from your stomach and you may eat as generously as those about you. One of these little tablets will of itself settle all questions of indigestion for that meal and will place your stomach and digestive organs in a better condition for the next Tour blood will be enriched, and the depleted gastric fluids will be rebuilt Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are natural, active, digestive agents who give to the gastric juices the elements they lack, which ease the stomach, remove irritation and enrich and stimulate the blood. All of these statements may be verified if you will take but a little of your time to prove them. Every druggist carries Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets in stock and will tell you of their merit These tablets sell for 60c per box or send us your name and address and we will send you at once by mall a trial package free. Address F. A. Stuart Co.. ISO Stuart Bid., Maran, Kit.

Afraid to Cross the

"GED-AP." HOWARD

WM

The Unitarian Belief is Explained

The fact that Hon. W. H. Taft is a Unitarian in his religious belief and church membership is being made the basis of much attack. In the interest of fair play, the full facts should be stated. It has been charged that Mr. Taft is not a Christian. Without discussing the Question as to whether joining! any church proves that a man is real-; ly a Christian, it may be stated that the Unitarians are believers in the Christian faith. In a national conference, a common basis of belief was found in the statement that "We accept the religion of Jesus, holding, in accordance with his teaching, that practical religion is summed up in love to God and love to man." Unitarian belief has further been expressed in the five principles, adopted by practically all the churches, "We believe in the Fatherhood of God, the brotherhood of man, the leadership of Jesus, salvation by character, the progress of mankind onward and upward forever." It has also been charged that Mr. Taft 'denies the divinity of Jesus Christ. As a matter of fact, the Unitarian church does not stand for any particular theory of the nature of Jesus. It maintains that the real religious and Christian duty is to follow him as a great leader in spiritual life. The particular conception as to what Jesus was, is entirely a personal matter, with which the church has noth ing to do. The distinctive characteristic of the Unitarian church is its frank adoption of the rational principle in religion. It insists that religion shall be treated in the scientific spirit of free investigation. It asserts the authority of the individual reason and holds that no statement should be accepted that does not approve itself to one's intellect as being worthy of belief. The Unitarian church offers a free fellowship. It holds that freedom is absolutely essential to religious development. Every member is at liberty to form his own conception of the truth, and is expected to be true to it. however much it may differ from the belief of others. There is no hint of conformity or compulsion. The com mon basis of union is a desire to know the truth and to do the good. ' .There is the fullest acceptance of the principle of progress in religion It affirms a God of modern life, an enlarging revelation of His will and truth, and an ever-progressing faith. keeping pace with the advancement of human thought and evolution. Unl tarlanlsm simply insists upon having in religion the same liberty that alt Americans claim in all other realms of thought and action. Othar Unitarians. In being a Unitarian. Hon. William H. Taft Is in excellent company. Many of the greatest men and women that this country has produced have been Unitarians. There have already been four avowedly Unitarian presidents of this republic. Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, John Qulncy Adams and Millard Fillmore. Jefferson wrote. "I trust there is not a young man now In the United States who will not die a Unitarian." Abraham Lincoln once defined his religious belief in exactly the same words as those adopted by the Unitarian national conference, while Washington's biographer declares that he was srtmply a deist In his religious belief. Daniel Webster, Charles Sumner, John C Calhoun, John A. Andrew, and Senator George F. Hoar were Unitarians. It Is an Interesting fact that

f tka twenty-eight persons in

Bryan Bridge -

TAFT'S RELIGION cluded in the "American Statesmen Series," of Houghton Mifflin & Co. were Unitarians. Among Unitarian jurists of national renown were Joseph Story, Theophilus Parsons, Lemuel Shaw, Samuel F. Miller and John Marshall. The reform of our civil service was largely due to Unitarian effort. Representative Jenckes of Rhode Island, who started it. Dr. James Freeman Clarke, Dr. Henry , Wr i. Bellows, George - William Curtis, Dorman B. Eaton and Carl Schurz, who were leaders in the movement, were all Unitarians. 1 In literature, the poets Bryant, Longfellow, Lowell and Holmes, the hlstorions Bancroft, Motley, Prescott, Parkman, Sparks Palfrey and Hlldreth with many such writers as Emerson. Thoreau, Dickens, Hawthorne, Bayard Taylor, Bret Harte, Margaret Fuller and Helen Hunt Jackson were Uni tarians. Among other Unitarians might be mentioned Agassiz, Ricardo, Wedgewood, Horace Mann and Sir Isaac Newton. Mazzinl was a Unitarian theist. Louis Kossuth, of Hungary, declared "The Unitarian faith is the only faith that has a future." Among Unitarian women are to be found Susan B. Anthony, Mary A. Llvermore, Frances Willard, Florence Nightingale and Dorothea Dix. It is significant that of the forty names that have been chosen for inscription on the walls of the Temnle of Fame in New York, sixteen are those of avowedly Unitarians. Among living Unitarians are Presi dent Eliot, of Harvard, Edward Everett Hale, John D. Lonsr, Carroll D. Wright, Julia Ward Howe and Gov. Curtis Guild. It will therefore be seen that Mr. Taft, has at least no occasion to fell ashamed of the religious fellowship of which he is a member.

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