Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 361, 3 November 1908 — Page 20
PAGK FOtTIt.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, NOVE3IBER 3, 1908
THE RICIHIOPiD PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. Fuldisnod and owned by the PALLADIUM FRINTINO CO. Ieaued 1 days each week. " reninand Sunday moraine. Office Corner North 9th and A streets. Bom Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA. Radelph G. Lee4a UmicIdc Editor. Ckarlra M. Morgan BmUeii Maaaser. O. Owes Kaaa Newe Kdlte. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond 15.00 per year (tn advance) or 10c per week. MAIL, SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year, In advance 5 2 Six month. In advance 3.60 One month, in advance RURALt ROUTES. One year, tn advance ...... I' Six month, tn advance.... 1One month. In advance.. ......... Addrea ehaog-ed as ften as desired; both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be arlven for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment Is received.
Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post Office as second class mall matter. REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL TICKET. For President WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT Of Ohio. 'For Vice-Presldant JAMES 8. SHERMAN Of New York. STATE. r, . Governor--JAMES E. WATSON. Lieutenant Governor FREMONT C. GOODWINS. -Secretary of State FRED A. SIMS. Auditor of State JOHN O. BILLHEIMER. Treasurer of StateOS CAR HADLEY. Attorney General JAMES BINGHAM. State Suparlntendent LAWRENCE McTURNAN. State Statistician J. L. PEETZ. -Judge of Supreme Court QUINCT 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. - Representative WALTER S. RATLIFF. Circuit Judge , HENRY C. FOX. Prosecuting Attorney" CHAS. L. LADD. Treasurer ALBERT ALBERTSON. Sheriff LINUS P. MEREDITH. 1 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 Dlst ROBERT N. BEESON. WAYNE TOWNSHIP. Trustee JAMES H. HOWARTH. Assessor CHARLES E. POTTER. THE GREAT NATIONAL GAME "The game is never over until the game is played." The football team of Yale college has a maxim which applies to political ballotting and elections. "The Yale team is never beaten until time Is called." And. too, as that Immortal character : of Indiana politics said in George Ade's "County Chairman," 'Claim everything you haven't got, and concede nothln.' " The time Is not so far in the past as to be forgotten when the election of Tllden and Hayes was undecided for days and the whole country seethed with unrest. The tensity of the situation grew as' the conflicting bulletins of the press came out, until the riots and nervous excitement threw business to the four winds and in the city of New York the Tapers stopped publishing bulletins at the request of the mayor of New York. And so on the eve of election the whole country stops Its worry about the petty round of affairs and pauses to await the answer with bated breath. Great interests are at stake. Two of the most Interesting figures in American lite today are pitted for conflict, the like of which no country has as a parallel. . r In Wall street, in the shops. In the farmhouse all Is expectancy. Never before has there been such a - campaign. The ominous silence of the people, ; the apparent apathy have not meant , what even . the , keenest political observers have been wont to ascribe to them. It is the silence of people who have made up their minds and who are not changed on the spur of the moment. All signs fall in dry weather, and all
sign are worthless In a quiet campaign. "
And yet there is " a very splendid spectacle in a presidential election. Every four years, the people come to a realization of the things which have been done in the last administration and they look ahead to the fate of the country for the next period. It was the optimism of the founders of our United States which led to this sys tem and that optimism la still our heritage. A famous English essayist said that there are only two romantic things in life that of getting married ' and posting a letter. 'He declared that these were romantic because they were Irrevocable he might have added that the casting of a ballot holds in it more romance than either, for here a man's irrevocable vote is cast and by that action the man stops for a moment to be a part of the great game of the nations he is making history. There is something about this very aspect of an election which makes it so very terrible, which gives It the excitement of a far greater gambling Interest than a horse race. "Watch, gentlemen, the wheel is spinning where will It stop?" "But the game is never over until the game Is played." How many a man has done Doc SIfer's stunt "Doc's public sperlt when the eick's not takin' all his time. And he's got some for politics is simple, yet sublime He'll talk his principles and they air honest, but the sly Friend strikes him first, election day, he'd commodate or die." lead to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Cofrrtg-nt. MOS, T Edwin A. Nye. LITTLE BOY BLUE. "Were is dls yer country youse want la send me? I ain't got notbln' to wear but dese." The slum kid put one hand on a ragged undershirt and the other on one leg of a pair of trousers fastened with a safety pin and each leg silt from the bottom to the knee his Sunday best The New York Fresh Air fund peo ple were sending fifty poor boys to Vermont for a two weeks' outing. This boy's mother, who "had seen better days," wanted him to go. but"Gee. de odder boys '11 have rags witch is better dan dese, an" The poor lad flushed and turned away The medical director solved that prob lem, He took the boy to a Hudson street shop, and the latter selected a pair of blue jeans trousers and a blue ging ham blouse. His eyes shone. "But I ain't got any money," be bad said when entering the store. He was astonished when told the clothes were gift He said his cap belonged to bis brother. A blue serge cap was added to the outfit The cost of Little Boy Blue's uni form was 75 cents. He walked home with a strange look on his shrewd little face, clutching his bundle with the grip of absolute own ership. The next morning he left with the party of fifty. He would not talk. His boy soul , was so full of new gladness he was afraid It would leak. TV titles, 4h rtj-hflav iinsh haftara - .k'T;, vm,: ZZZZT, There was a poet somewhere Inside of him that dreamed dreams' of the wonderland where he was going. Well, the Vermont folk hsd fitted up an old farmhouse of seventeen rooms. "Gee," said Little Boy Blue, "white beds! And three windows In my bedroom !" , And there were baseball and football and swings and chicken fixings and popcorn and lee cream and the woods and the river and wild berries and real milk! Why, all the dreams of Little Boy Blue had come true. And this two weeks of heaven for fifty boys cost $82546.60 per boy. "Gee!" said Little Boy Blue. "Dere are bad uns In de world, but dere are good uns too." And the moral? Why, If your heart has not already found It A Rush of Comprehension. He thought it would be a good Idea to get up a sociable for the benefit of the church, so. he called on an energetic young woman whom he had visited forabout a decade to see If they could arrange It "I called to propose" be calmly began. "At last!" she cried hysterically and fainted In his arms. Baltimore American, If you suffer from constipation and liver trouble Foley's Orino Laxative will cure you permanently by stimulating the digestive organs so they will act naturally. Foley's Orino Laxative does not gripe, is pleasant, to take and. you do not have to take laxatives continually after taking Orino. Why continue to be the slave of pills and tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. MASONIC CALENDAR, Tuesday Evenong, Nov. 3 Richmond Lodge No. 196, F. & A. JH., Stated Meeting. " : Thursday . Evening, Nov. 5 Wayne Council No. 10 R. & S. M., Stated Assembly.' i , Saturday Evening, Nov. 7. Loyal Chapter No. 49, o. E. S., Stated Meet ing.
ENDS CAMPAIGN Oil BIRTHDAY
James E. Watson Closes Battle for Governor at Shelbyville. A GREAT DEMONSTRATION. THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE GREET REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE CAMPAIGN THE MOST STRENUOUS HE HAS EVER MADE. Shelbyville, Ind., Nov. 3. James E. Watson, formerly ended his cam paign for governor here last night his 44th birthday falling on the day the political fight was ended. He spoke to 2,000 persons, and half as many more, who were unable to enter the opera house, were addressed later in the evening from the assembly rooms of the Republican Voters' Club. In his principal speech Mr. Watson ironically sketched the career of W. J, Bryan, saying the country needed something more than a poet and a dreamer as its guide, and then sum' med up the state issues and the stand he had taken with his party on county unit local option. No meeting addressed by the nomi nee during his speaking tour was more enthusiastic and his closing speech was frequently broken with cheers and cries of "Jim; our Jim." and "We'll win with Watson." Mr. Watson's address here was the last of many delivered yesterday. He spoke previously to big crowds at Brookville and then traveled by auto mobile to Lawrenceburg. He left the latter place late In the afternoon by train and arrived here shortly before 6 o'clock. A crowd of several hundred persons was awaiting at the station. Marchers Parade Streets. Preceded by a band the committee and speakers rode In automobiles to the Ray hotel, where supper was served. The crowds that had arrived in Shelbyville during the afternoon were augmented early in the evening by I scores from nearby towns, and shortly before 7 o'clock the republican county ' and district organizations, several bands and a number of Taft and Watson clubs formed Into line In front of the hotel. They were joined by Mr. Watson and his party and the marchers paraded1 the principal streets for half an hour to the accompaniment of cheers. Red Are was burned at regular intervals along the line of march. The parade ended at the opera house, which already was comfortably filled and those who had participated In the parade were unable to find standlng room. County Chairman Sezton presided and introduced Mr. Watson. The Old Shady Quartet sang several selections, the audience Joining in "America." When Mr. Watson stepped to the platform he was greeted by three young girls bearing bouauets of red carnations. They were
given to the nominee by Miss Grace truder. The ant Is the terrible guardMontgomery. 1 t that the tree has retained to pro-
The sneaker briefly itHni the camnafsi. riHfinc it t th mrmt strenuous ho ever experienced. He has' anoken to l.flOO .000 oeonle In the er. gate since the first began. Since July 20, he has been In every county In the state and found the situation peculiar because of local conditions, where, in some respects, party lines had been abandonedw The presence of veterans on the stage was acknowledged by the speak-, er, who asked, tnem it they would ...... . . Principle, mine republican platform. They answered as with one voice "No." Church Calendar Tuesday. The monthly official board meeting of Grace M. E. church will be held in the evening. Wednesday. The League Bible class of Grace M. E. church will meet In the office in the evening at 7:30 o'clock. Dr. G. H. Hill, teacher. A joint meeting of the Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary socleties of the First M. E. church will be held In the afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. The monthly meeting of the Woman's Foreign Missionary society will be held at the home of Mrs. Lockwood, 214 North Fourteenth street, at 2:30 o'clock. Thursday. Midweek service will be held at all the churches in the evening. - A meeting of the officers and teachers of the First English Lutheran Sunday school will be held in the evening. Friday. , The Ladles' Aid society of Grace M
E. church will meet in the afternoon : sponge cakes, two sandwiches, one Jelfor the purpose of quilting. Choir j lJ. Ave tarts and Uncle Good
practice will be at 7:30 o'clock. John M. Warden, a layman of Pennsylvania will conduct a 10 days' service at the First English Lutheran church starting Friday evening. Mr. Crtmaoabeak The doctor aaai X must give up coff Mrs. Crimsonbeak What are you oing to use now cloves? Yonkers f esman. - RAW LUNGS. When the lungs are sore and inflamed, the germs of pneumonlla and consumption find lodgement and multiply. Foley's Honey and -Tar kills the cough germs, cures the most obstinate racking cough, heals the lungs, and prevents serious results. The genuine is in the yellow package. A. G. Luken it Oo. '"
ECZEMA 30 YEARS;
SIMPLE OIL CURES Wlntergreen Compound Stopped Itch At Once Disease Soon Disappeared After dosing the stomach for years and trying all kinds of alleged cures for eczema, Mr. M. T. Firmin, of Wichita, Kansas, reports a perfect cure. He simply washed the skin with an oil of wlntergreen compound, mixed with thymol, glycerine, etc. Mr. M. T. Firmin, for the last 20 years in the employ of the C. S. Daniels Furniture Co., of Wichita, Kans., in the presence of Mr. Higginson of the Higginson Drug Co. made the following statement: "Eczema first appeared on my body when I was a child 8 years of age. For over thirty years I scratched and scratched and doctored. About the only relief I got was from scratching. The itching was so intense it simply drove me wild. "About one year ago, the disease covered my entire body from my scalp to my toes. My doctor and my friends all gave me up as Incurable. "Then I commenced using the D. D. D. Remedy for eczema. The first application stopped the horrible ltichlng and gave me a night's sleep. It gave me strength and new hope. I continued growing better every day. My whole body being affected, I would sometimes use the contents of one whole bottle in a day. "I kept up the treatment for months, the eczema gradually leaving my body and am now entirely cured excepting a little roughness of the skin on my left ankle." For sale by all druggists. NEW PAPER FOR OLD KNIGHTSTOWN Republicans to Establish Organ There. Knightstown, Ind., Nov. 3. In order to provide Knightstown with a republican newspaper, a stock company has been organized. The Knightstown Banner published by Wallace Deem has posed as a republican paper, but has been so antagonistic to the interests of several republican nominees as the result of the personal dislike of Deem as to be repudiated by many republican subscribers. The new paper is expected to make Its bow to the public in a short time Although a republican plant no selfish purposes will be subserved. TREE DWELLING ANTS. South American Insect That Acts as Plant Guardian. Ant defenders of plants and trees are some of nature's pretty marvels. The CtecroDia adenoous Is a remarkaDle or goutn Brazil, widely dlstrlbuted through the tropics. Its slenjer trunk Is crowned with long leaves at the ends of the branches. A few active ants run continually along the branches and the leaves, but If the tree Is shaken slightly an army of ants rushes out by small apertures ready for a savage assault on the intect It from Its most formidable enemy. the leaf cutter ant Tne rarely leave their retreat where they live on small whitish egg shaped bodies about one-twelfth of an inch long, known as Mueller's corpuscles. These are formed of deli cate tissue, rich In protelds and all, as rations for the garrison of defender ants to feed. upon. The curious arrangement by which entrance Is made to the hollow stem has been studied by W. Sebimper. Just above the point of insertion of .acn ieaf extends nearly to the superlor node a superficial groove, at whose end Is a rounded depression. There the tissue Is thin. like a diaphragm In a tube, and it also Is soft. The hole by which the ant enters Is always pierced at this spot. The ants seem to have made their entrance through the groove originally because it was at the top. In the course of this plant's further development natural selection augmented these natural advantages, so that finally the thin, frail diaphragm as It exists today was developed. Chicago Tribune. Married the Day They Met. Horace Greeley and Mary Young Cheney were married the first day they met They had corresponded for some time, a common friend who was something of a matchmaker having brought this about. She was all his fancy painted her, but she was much disappointed in his sppearance, so much so that when be appeared before her, having proposed and been accepted by letter, she frankly tola him that, although she married him, she was not in love with him. Their married life was long and happy, and die loss of his wife was a blow which Greeley did not long survive. Tommy's Lunch. Uncle (who left his nephew "refreshing") Well. Tommy, you see I'm back. Are you ready? What have I to pay, miss? Waitress Three buns, four gracious, boy! Are you not ill? TommyNo, uncle, but I'm very thirsty. London Tlt-Blts. British Pride. British hypocrisy is gradually disappearing. Until a few years ago most Englishmen fancied that to be born in the United Kingdom was to be a paragon of all the virtues. Brussels Solr. Envy. "Don't be covetous,- said Uncle Chen. "Envyin what yoh neighbor has Is mighty apt to put de opportunity in yob neighbor's way f oh handm yoh a gold brick." Washington Star. Cora Doesat It make you feel nice tor people to remark how well you are getting on? Merrttt Tees unless they
It"
Oar Holiday Smoking Jackets pat in their appearance yesterday. Make your selection early
In the Notion Department oi Knollenberg's THURSDAY
This time it's Leather Goods Ladies and Gents' Oxford Bags and Suit Cases. We herewith give you a description of the kind of leather goods you may expect to find. Ladies' and Gents' Traveling Bags, Oxford shape, made of a beautiful shade of brown cow-hide, hand sewed edge, large leather tips on bottom corners, good brass lock with hold-fast catches, hand made handle, leather covered frame, leather lined with large pocket on inside and a neat leather name tag to match, regular price
14 inch $6 Thursday you can take your
We will not go into a detailed description of the suit case: we expect to put out during Thursday's sale. All we will say is, it's a genuine cow-hide case easily worth $7.50. Thursday it will cost you but $5.00. UNDERSTAND US we want it strictly understood that when we have our Thursday specials, the merchandise offered during these sales is not only open for comparison from any source in this city, but take the train to Dayton, Cincinnati, Indianapolis or Chicago and If you can under any circumstances get better values than we offer, we say, PASS UP THE OLD RELIABLE STAND. Notion Department The Geo. H. Knollenberg Co.
LOAII IS HELD UP City of Richmond Cannot Secure Needed Money Until Later. VON PEIN BLOCKS MOVE. The passage of an ordinance authorizing a loan of $25,000 by a bond issue was held up from passage last evening by the action of Councilman Von Peln, who objected to the passage of an appropriation ordinance under suspension of the rules. City Controller Parry advised council to take immediate action on the ordinance. He said that it was not absolutely necessary to pass It at once, but that bond dealers In Indiana had informed him that the best market for bonds would be found early In December. He said that to take advantage of this market the ordinance would have to be passed without delay as it was necessary to advertise it for three weeks. It will be remembered that council recently favored the floating of a $25,000 bond Issue In preference to raising the tax rate. Foley's Honey and Tar clears the air passages, stops the irritation in the throat, soothes the inflamed membranes, and the most obstinate cough . disappears. Sore and inflamed lungs , are healed and strengthened, and the ' cold is expelled from the system. Re fuse any but the genuine in the yellow package. A. G. Luken & Co. KICKS ON STREET. Englebert Says North Eighth ' is In Bad Condition. Councilman Englebert last evening again called the attention of the board of publio works to the miserable condition of North Eighth street. Mayor Schilllnger stated the Improvement of this street had been delayed until the walk in front of the Y. M. C. A. building bad been completed. Mr. i Englebert stated that work on lmprovI ing the street could have been started walk or no walk. One of the Eriferrticil of the happy homes of to-day is a vast fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness and right living and knowledge of the world's best products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to world-wide j acceptance through the approval of the Well-informed of the World; not of individuals only, but of the many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtaining the best the world affords. One of the products of that class, of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and commended by the Well-informed of the World as a valuable and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, aad for sale by all leading druggists.
EEAL PROSPERITY
ssi 15 inch $7 16 inch $8 choice of any size fot
So)(D)
THE PUBLIC IS INVITED TO CALL
NOS. 1022 AND 1212 FOR ELECTION RETURNS The telephone companies are making elaborate preparations in an endeavor to deliver the national, state and county returns more promptly than the telegraph. The Home Telephone Company has placed spe- " , clal phones in the Court House, City Building, Coliseum. Palladium, Item and Morning News offices so as to deliver the information to these points with the least possible delay. Telephones Nos. 1022 and 1212 are being arranged so that twenty (20) subscribers can call In and receive Information at one time. , The Bell and Independent Long Distance and ' the Richmond Home Telephone Company are all . combining In an effort to demonstrate the promptness and rapidity with which this Information can be gathered and dispersed to the public. The re? turns will also be given and received from all of the towns and precincts In the county. Do not call Information, Court House or any of the Headquarters for information, as their phones will be extremely busy. Call 1022 and 1212.
1,000-COROO 1,000 WOOD
HACKMAN, KLEHFOTH & CO.
Early
Morning Comfort Open your sleeping-room windows let in the crisp, iresh air but your room need not be cold while dressing a touch of a match and the welcome heat is radiating from the
(Equipped with Smokeless Device) For heating the bath-room quickly it's a great convenience, and wul make the morning dip as glorious as in the summer. Now it's breakiast time make the room coxy and cheerful your breakfast more enjoyable and start the day without a shiver. The Automatic Smokeless Device prevents all smoke and smell mm and makes it impossible to turn the wick too high or II
ioo tow. weaned in a minute one filling. Finished in Nickel heater guaranteed. !.- m j . I kjb st Msafl cmL AUI.iJ i m few. ScU abtai, m am Rq Lasn m PofcdNe caicr. wnki t mat sarast airr far i
STANDARD OOL CCiSPANY
V5
Palladium Wont Ads Go Into All noses.
Dny hln a Smoking Jacket for Christmas. Yon can not please him more or find anything more useful
I IS inch $10 fteem te Reem iiluyULWt ourns 9 nours wm and Japan, Every i n I -,i - mid ami Sol Wl nml lilalliMii ill imktliimk mk. AlfMbeWr Exrr hnnmki Oi hW ktm ymm
f a -
CI
