Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 351, 24 October 1908 — Page 8
)TAG EIGHT.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SU3C-TLEGItAMt SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1908.
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BIHGHAMATTACKED Brewery Interest Sends Copies of Old Indictments Over the State.
NO EXPLANATIONS MADE.
Indianapolis. Ind., Oct. 24. In their fight against Attorney General James Bingham the allied brewery interests are sending broadcast over the state, especially to the ministers of all denominations, a paper, unsigned, and containing photographic cuts of indictments against Attorney General Bingham returned by the Federal Grand Jury during the November term of the Federal Court in 1888. No explanation is given other than the caption, "A Page From the Life History of Attorney General James Bingham, of Indiana." Nothing is said relative to a conviction or as to what became of the indictments. No mention is made that no further action was brought against Mr. Bingham. No mention- is made of the fact that the charges against him were found to be groundless and the indictments were afterward nolled: The indictments two in number charge the attorney general, who was then Republican county chairman in Fountain County, with conspiracy and bribery in connection with the election at the time Benjamin Harrison made his race for the presidency. The charges, it is contended by Mr. Bingham's friends, were brought by democrats for political purposes. Immediately after the indictments were returned, Mr. Bingham asked for an immediate hearing. This was denied. He had pleaded not guilty. John E. Lamb, now the vice chairman of the Democratic national committee, was the district attorne aty the time. The indictments were signed by Solomon Claypool, his assistant. The Indictments were signed by Solomon Claypool, his assistant. The indictments were nolled in July, 1899.
FIRST TO ACT UNDtll NEW LAW Petition to Bar Claims Against Williams Estate.
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The first proceeding of the kind, was filed in the Wayne circuit court today, when a petition of Olinda Hinchman and others was entered in the probate court. It is a petition in the matter of the estate of Olive Williams, deceased, for an order barring claims not filed within twelve months of the time of death. The legislature of 1907 passed an act which provides that in case a person owning real estate dies and no testator is appointed, claims presented later than twelve months after death are not valid. No opportunity had been presented heretofore to take advantage of this law in this state.
NO REDUCED RATES AFTERJANUABY 1 Genuine Alarm Felt by the Railroads.
SCHOOL TO BE , HELD !N HOME Pupils of Greenbrier to Be Cared For.
School in district No. 15, Wayne township will be opened next week at the Tepe home in Wayne township. The Greenbriar school building, which burned this week will be rebuilt as soon as possible. The new building will be an improvement over that burned.
MILLER IMPROVES. H. H. Miller, who was recently operated on at the Reid Memorial Hospital for gall stones has improved to such an extent that he has been removed to his home. His physicians state that he is rapidly improving and that there is no danger of complication. He is a linotype operator at the Palladium.
Local passenger officials have received notice from the Western Passenger association that nearly every railroad in that association has agreed to abolish all low or reduced rates after Jan. 1, 1909. This determination has been reached because of the anxiety caused by the reductions in the net passenger revenues of the western roads. These reductions are laid at the door of the reduced rates," and genuine alarm is felt for the future. Railroad officials declare that, with a twocent rate generally, there can be no reduced rates without passing the margin of profit. ;
Dr. Day, the medical officer for the Dorchester rural district, has reported to the district council that the average age of death in the aera of which he has charge is fifty-eight. The age is steadily rising, and people now on the average live fourteen yeors longer than they did in X901, , wheal the average age at death was only fortyfour. , ,;
Germany is taking steps to supply Itself with eels. The other day the liner Kaiser Wilhelm II called at Ply
mouth and took on board for Bremen
twelve cases, each containing 10,000
live eeis,for stocking ' German rivers.
They will first be placed in the lab
oratory at Cuxhaven and on attaining maturity will be turned into various
The Comparative Method. Theodore had twice been sent to wash his hands and was now returning" for the second inspection. "My child," said his mother, comparing the two hands critically, "your right is just as dirty as your left What have you been doing all this time?" "Why, mamma," explained the youth, "last time you said that my left hand was cleaner than my right, so I tried to make them even. I'll go again." Youth's Companion. .
WHAT IS THERE TO GAIN BY CASTING A VOTE FOR BRYAN? (Continued from Page One)'
Hsr Rsgr.t. The Nobleman You bought me bought me as you would buy a hat. The Heiress Yes, and what I'm sore about now is that I neglected to -wait for my change. Cleveland Leader.
porations and the railroads. It is hard to state and more difficult to believe all that has been accomplished in that short period. Taft Real Successor. "Our friends, the enemy, proclaim that because they foretold all these evils they and not the republican party are the legal successors to Roosevelt. It is a wise father that knows his own son and recent developments of an epistolary character show that Roosevelt has some ideas as to his legal heirs. - The question is, after what has been done in the way to give the county a government, which it acknowledges with pride, and the time has com for a change in the administration, will you change to a party, and gentleman at its head, who has been everything in turn and nothing long and to whom an issue appeals not for its- real characteras much as for its usefulness on the platform? Advocating as it did, free silver in 1896, and again in 1900, 1904, in spite of the demonstration of its sophistical and useless character, how can you trust the political judgment of the man who leads it on other issues? Is there a man in ail this great crowd, who is in favor of the free coinage of silver today? It is a, dead issue and what killed it but the republican party, and because of its honesty and true business integrity. The Tariff Question. "But we have some issues that this town and county are interested in. The tariff is one of them. The republican party is pledged to give tariff revision and has specialized the plan it will act upon. It takes the difference between the cost of production here and abroad and imposes a custom that la equal to the difference in the cost of production counting these three elements: The cost of material, the cost of labor and a fair profit to the producer or his interest on the capital invested. Taking that difference we have the measure to which the republican party is pledged. It protects every individual and gives every individual the same measure. The democrats say they would have the tariff reorganized upon a gradual adaptation. This would disregard the protection promises under which the industries of the country live. It would cut off an arm at a time from one year to the next leaving the industries, helpless and others would have to take their places. The workmen, who now are skilled in some particular line would have to learn a new industry. "That is all in theory. No one would deny, unless he is a democrat put to it by the exigencies of argument, that in the transition, protected industries would have to go down and the working man would have to get along with less wages. Cause of Panic. "Bryan says this panic which we have had It was a panic only in one sense, was due to the republicans, because it occurred during a republican administration. Alright, we will let it go at that, as we are very willing to compare it to the panic of 1893. That Was remembered for four years and we will not make this one that long unless we do so by the election of the democrats. It all came about through an excess of prosperity. There had been over production and too much confidence. Whoever heard of a democratic panic being caused in that way? The country had stretched out too far in, the hope there might be more capital made, plants were extended too far and the people became frightened at the revelations of the infidelity of trusts. It came finally through a lack of confidence. The railroads wanted to borrow more money but could not. "But this panic only visited the country in spots. You didn't hear much about it here. West of the Mississippi there was no such thing and when I talked about it out there I found they didn't know what I was talking of, so I quit. The farming communities knew of no such thing as a panic. The farmer is the most prosperous element in the country. There has been a gradual resumption of business. Things are getting better all the time and contracts now are being made contingent upon the success of the republican party. Although Bryan seems to think so, there is no cause for political argument in this. The business men know their business and they believe the November election will determine whether the country is going back to prosperity of a year ago or going down to the limit of a democratic panic about four years of depression. Bryan to be Feared. "What is there in the record of the democratic candidate to assure the business men that he would not, after his election, take advantage of his position to Institute a change in our financial system? He could do so by an executive order. Sound economic theory leads the business men to fear Bryan. They are afraid he might attempt to put this country on a silver basis. ' "Now I wish to submit to you this proposition. Could anything happen
LOSS 1SMILLI0MS Night Rider Depredations Have Been Costly, Says Governor Willson.
PEOPLE FLEE FROM STATE.
Frankfort, Ky., Oct 24. Advertised to address the voters of Franklin county in the interest of the national republican ticket, Governor Willson spoke to a big audience at the opera house here last, night. For two hours he explained various statements he had been quoted with making about the tobacco growers, and denouncing the night riders. His remarks at times were sensational, for he said that "every night rider in the dark tobacco district, democrat or republican, like Lebus, are supporting Stanley, James and Thomas for congress." He added that for eight months there have been 5.000 homes in Kentucky in which the occupants have been afraid to go to sleep, and that the value of property has fallen $10,000,000 as a result of night rider raids. He reiterated his statement that there have been thousands of res!-, dents driven from the state because they were not permitted to till their lands as they saw fit He said that he knew the general of the night riders, and that he lived in the hope that the time would come before the end of his administration that could put him in the penitentiary. His most sensational statement was that it had been recently revealed to him that a night rider lodge voted to rob a bank because they needed money to carry on their cowardly warfare.
to render the business of the country in the future so uncertain as the election of Bryan to the presidency? "I thank you."
A tailors' Christening. "The late Bishop Potter once in his early days had occasion to officiate at christening in a small fishing village on the Massachusetts coast," says a writer in Harper's Weekly. "The proud father, a young fisherman, awkwardly holding his firstborn daughter, was visibly embarrassed under the scrutiny of the many eyes in the congregation, and his nervousness was not decreased by the sudden wailing of the Infant as they stood at the front "When the time for the baptism oi the babe arrived the bishop noticed that the father was holding the child so that its fat little legs pointed toward "the font " 'Turn her this way, he whimpered, but the father was too disconcerted to hear or understand. "'Turn bet feet around,' the bishop whispered again, but still there was no response. The situation was fast becoming critical, when an ancient mariner in the back of the church came to the rescue. Putting his weather beaten hand to his mouth, he roared across the room, "Head her up to the wind, Jack!'" Throw 'Em Down Babies. "I wonder, " mused the young father, "what there is in a baby's makeup that prompts him to drop things. It isn't really ' dropping, ' though It's throwing. My baby is good about sleeping and behaving when there is company, but everything be can snatch he Immediately flings to the floor. I've noticed and known a lot of others, too, who do the same thing. It's not only the joy of throwing, but the delight In seeing somebody pick the stuff up. Babies certainly seem to take a fiendish delight is watching their fathers and mothers or nurses pick up the toys and other things which they throw out of their' beds, carriages and chairs. My boy used to be quite pleas
ed with a rubber toy attached by ay
string to his carriage so that it Just escaped the ground. He would grin and dangle it for hours. Now he yells as soon as he discovers it is fastened, and the minute we give it to him loose,
bang, it goes on to the ground, while
he laughs aloud in his joy. There's probably a reason, and the psychologists will discover it some day." Exchange. The Holy Grail. From a book reviewed a passage is
quoted in which mention is made of "the holy grail, the sang-real or true blood of God." .This used to be a com
mon mistake,, and so learned a man as Thomas Warton In his "Remarks
on Spenser's Imitations From Old Romances" writes, "The holy grale, that Is the real blood of our Blessed Saviour."'. But this is wrong. It is
the holy grale, or vessel, and does not
mean real blood, though it contained the real blood, collected by Joseph of
Arimathea. It was made from a diamond and emerald which fell from the crown of Satan when he fought with
Michael. M. de Tlllemarque, who has written about Armoric legends, says that this jewel was a diamond. The word great is old French, as I understand, for I have no knowledge myself that it is so. In the legend of Percival It is shown that the grail is a vessel. "'The holy grail r Percival heard whispered by one voice after
another. Then from the shining vessel streamed an endless supply of the
costliest dishes and wines." London
Notes and Queries.
( Money-Making Ways of Using Want Ak
To Get a Correspondent or
a Position as Correspondent
One of the roost important of all positions in any house is that of Correspondent. The letters from a firm speak its character, and either bring or lose it business. Ask for a Correspondent the business way thru a Classified ad inserted on our Classified page under the heading "Help Wanted" Miscellaneous," or "Correspondents. If you are experienced as a Correspondent, the very quickest and surest way to get the attention of first class employers is to use a Situation Wanted" ad under "Correspondents" or else watch the "Help Wanted Miscellaneous" column for several days. In either case, what you as an employer or employe want, may be waiting for you in today's paper. Look and see. First, note the examples below. EXAMPLES
CORRESPONDENT
WAITED fiT Ia&GB
mail order boo. Moat be wllUnc to take or
den till mil on to Job. Bright futmre. Addreaa. ' l Mating full spertaaw mad rafareocea, U S 48, ,
SITUATION WAITED AS CMfcA6IJtN'(t
ana oam maoager. by sua or a 7
nee. alarrtad. good babfta. bast at rrtm
AHirea i. u ax. tata
The selecting of MEN means success or faflare to every employer."" It is just as important for every employe to take care that he selects the right business or concern in which to train. The BRAIN Clearing- House for the EMPLOYERS and EMPLOYES of this city is the Classified page of THIS paper. Visit it today . . -a m.T" W T ,
oy turning xo re imv- w.
(Copyright MPS, by Qqorr. Matthew Adani . .
THE CITY IN BRIEF
Richmond House Cleaning Co., Phone 1916. 24-2t George Kizer, of St Louis, was in
the city yesterday.
Miss Katherine Chipman has return
ed to her home in Anderson.
Miss Ella Corwin, of Elkhart, is the
guest of Mrs. Ada L. Bernhardt.
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Schatzcl, of Chi
cago, were guests here yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Muskesell, of New Madison, O., are guests in this city. Mrs. Arthur King, of Greenville, O., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Rush. Misses Pearl and. Grace Clark, of Anderson, are guests here for a few days. Miss Anna Symons has returned
from Splceland, where sno was called
by the illness and death of her mother. Attend Sale given by Agnes Gaar Estate Wednesday. Oct. 28th, consisting of household goods, implements, hogs,
fresh cows, baled hay and
straw.
23-4t
A Poor Defons. "Speaking of a poor defense," said a lawyer, "reminds me of the valet who was accused of drinking his master's wine. Te this valet the master said: " 'Look here, you! I believe that you have been at this decanter of claret and then filled it up with water. " 'Oh, no, sir,' said the valet in an aggrieved tone. "Well, it tastes like it,', said the master, and he set down his glass with a wry face. - 'Oh, no, sir, said the valet excitedly. In . the first place, sir, I never drink wine; in the second place, when I do drink it I never think of filling the bottle np with water, and, in the third place, when I do pat water in 1 always am very careful to add a little brandy so that the wine may not lose its strength.' " Two Groat Orators. As an orator Demosthenes was head and shoulders above Cicero the Roman. The great Athenian stands in a class all by himself, if we are to believe the consensus of learned opinion Cicero, it is said, prided himself on his faculty of extemporizing at need, but probably trusted little to it on great occasions, while with Demosthenes it was the rule never to speak without the most careful preparation. The speeches of both were spoken without manuscript. They would never have made the reputation they did if they had been tied down to their notes. New York American.
Their Only Job. "Why, Mrs. White." began the summer visitor newly returned to Saymouth, "how those maples of yours have grown since last year! It's perfectly amazing!" "Oh, I don't know's it's anything to wonder at," said Mrs. White easily. They ain't got anything else to do." Youth's Companion.
Erudite. "Oh, baby," exclaimed the- Boston mother, "what does'make yon cry so?" "I really cannot say," was the unexpected answer. "I have never Indulged In introspection." -
The costliness of - keeping friends does not lie in what one does for them, but in what one out of. consideration for them refrains from doing.- Henrik Ibsen.
this convert? -ou, rwul csrVnllr. in klwell's Syrup Papain W cosltieiy nuno U to car indisesHoa. constipation, ik k head e. offensive breath, malaria, aaa all diaeasei ;-aff from stomacH trouble-
WATSON BOLTERS RAPIDLY FALL BACK INTO FOLD (Continued From Page One.)
praises Mr. Watson in the following words: "Our candidate has had twelv
years' experience in congress. He hr risen by force of peculiar Qualities t
be the 'whip' of the house, and when we remember that the house has nearly 400 members, of whom nearly 300 are republicans, we see how great that distinction is. He is able; he is highly trained, and is one of the most brilliant orators that Indiana has produced. The republican party has chosen him as our standard bearer and now let every republican , rally
around that standard and by an over
whelming majority elect as the next governor of Indiana that eloquent man and skilled legislator, James E. Wat-son."
Indiana Business College A Successful Graduate
Male servants in the Argentine capital get 66 cents to $2.20 gold a day and the female help 40 cents to $1.10 -
The Londoner uses the means of locomotion within the city on an average 148 times a year, the Parsian 217 times.
The TwllUht Of lAre. The muscles of the stomach n old are are aot as strong: or active as in youth and In coueeonence old people are very subject to constipation and indigestion. MT seldom bars a bowel movement without artificial aid. Many, also, have unpleasant eructations of sas from the stomach after eatlnir. All thls'can be avoided by tin. use of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Fepem. which permanently regrulates the bowels so- that passages come naturally, and so strengthens the stomach that food is digested without discomfort. Druggists sell it at SO cents or SI iargre botUe.
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MISS MARIE PEELE, Asst. Cashier, First National Bank, New Paris, O. OPENIXrf WEEK OF WINTER TERM at the INDIANA BUSINESS COLLEGE, with schools at Lafayette, Logansport, Indianapolis, Muncle, Anderson. Columbus, Marion, Kokomo and Richmond, with J. D. Brunner, Pres., and Charles C. Cring, Gen. Mgr. will be from OCTOBER 28 TO NOVEMBER 2. You should make your arrangements to attend either DAY or NIGHT during this opening week. We invite your careful Investigation of the advantages obtained by attending the INDIANA. For detail Information phone or address: Richmond Business College Phone 2040. L. B. Campbell, Res. Mgr.
Among the laboring classes In Germany meat once a week is the rule.
In the United States last year 103.000,000 railway ties were used, which denunded 600,000 acres of forest to supply. ; , .
GENUINE JACKSON GENUINE A Trial Order Will Convince You HACKMAN, KLEHFOTH & CO.
2 Automatic SEE HIfE 2 Automatic Pbones Phones 1198-1199 t PSO OaST? V 1198-1199
DRESSED CHICKENS Mangoes. Cauliflower. Green Beans, Cucumbers. Oyster Plant, Egg Plant, Tomatoes, Parsley, Head Lettuce. Radishes. Green Onions. Turnips. Jersey Sweet Potatoes, Home Grown Celery. Spinach. Tokay Grapes, Malaga Grapes, Catawba Grapes, Niagara Grapes, Peaches, Jonathan Apples, Sickle Pears. Our GOLD BOND Maple Syrup Is in. This is the finest syrup that comes to the city. NEW SORGHUM.
LITTLE SMOKE NO CLINKER
KIT
LITTLE SOOT ALL HEAT
Burns to a white ash and holds fire over night Positively the best coal ever offered in Richmond for the money, and sold on a positive guarantee, and will in all cases do as represented - -
UNITED (CO AIL- YARDS CO;
CITY OFFICE, 922 MAIN STREET
TELEPHONES 1633-3165
YARDS. SECOND and CHESTNUT
streams.
