Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 49, 27 December 1908 — Page 4
THE KICH3IOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2T, 1908.
PAGE POUR.
The Richmond Palladium -and Sun-Telegram Published snd owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued 7 days each week, eveningand Sunday morning. Office Corner North 9th and A streets. Home Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.
Radolph fi. Leeda Charles Bf. MersasO. Owen Knha
-M ! Bdltsr. BmIim Must i Xem . Editor.
SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond $5.00 per year (in advance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year. In advance .....15.00 Six months, in advance -60 One month, in advance RURAL ROUTES. One year, in advance .$ 2.00 Six months, in advance 1-25 One month, in advance ........... Address changed as often as desired; tioth new and old addresses must be g-lven. Subscribers will pleaae remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment is received.
which have been the mainstay of Republican success. They elected Roosevelt and Taft. The reform of the Civil Service Is very near to the heart of both of them. ' It Is not a creditable thing for Mr. Crumpacker to be the author of a bill which has for Its sole purpose the Bengthening of political machines, Instead of the service of the people.
Kntered at Richmond, Indiana, postoffice as second class mall matter.
RICHMOND'S NEW YEARS. Richmond is facing a new year. The last year saw the awakening of the town from a slumber which many thought was a tign of decay. But after the lnvigoration of the cold plunge of the Young Men's Business Club at the time of the Good Roads Congress, in the late summer, the town then refreshed, took on new activities at the time of the Fall Festival. What a success that was is a matter of common knowledge and congratulation.
But this town (and no other town for that matter) can afford to rest on past
achievements.
The town may not realize that the
new year is one which will decide the
fate of Richmond. You can make or break the town yourselves. For it Is
not a selfish proposition as was evi
denced at the success of the Fall Festivalthat was one thing. And that one thins is co-operation. Nothing
else. "The devil take the hindmost"
is an exploded theory. It may have
worked once, but it is out of date now
The new year is starting off encouragingly. The investigation of the
business of the city by business men is sthe most hopeful and satisfying, thing that has happened hereabouts for many a day. It is not that there is thought to be a great amount of graft,
or anv Kraft for that matter. This is
r.ot a muck-raking . party. ' This is
merely a movement on the part of capable citizens to take care that their
and everybody's business Is handled
in the most economical and businesslike, wav. It is a sism that there is
much of the salt of the earth in a bus
Iness community which recognizes
that the city business is just as necessary to the business good of the town
as are their own enterprises. Richmond asleep! Far from it.
Last year this town did not suffer much from the effect of the panic. Lots
of business was done here. And the
wind-up of the year tmogg both mer
chants and manufacturers was more
than gratifying. With such a start and such, a spirit of re-invigoration as has been shown, Richmond men have certainly a pleasant prospect confronting them. The next year will be a building year . teaching far up in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. That means a healthy condition of growth. When Richmond does build it is not a mushjoom growth. The thing which is most Imperative for the coming years is as it always ; has been co-operation in making the town better from all points of view. Business, private and public; this all
depends upon co-operation. Whatever
the problem, co-operation will solve it
A bout Washington Society.
ROOSEVELT AND THE SLEEPING SICKNESS. Yes. you can fined it in the Century dictionary: "Sleeping Sickness; a disease prevailing on the West Coast of Africa. It is characterized by fas of somno
lence, increasing in intensity."
And, oh the horror of it! It is a
form of lethargy!
It was Mr. McCutcheou of the Chi
cago Tribune who first saw the possi
bilities of what might happen to Mr. Roosevelt if he carried out his tour in the wilds of Africa.
No more terrible death could await
the author of the strenuous life than
to be attacked by lethargy. Lo, all
these many years he has been attach
ing alarm clocks to the ears of all
sorts and conditions of men. High and low, he has aroused the whole conutry. But to waste away by a sleep
ing sickness, that, Indeed, would be the irony of fate when he has set the pace for all succeeding presidents.
Still better be a victim of the sleep
ing sickness and die with one's boots on In the heart of the jungle than to
be attacked by the germ of drowsiness that pertains to the editorial de
partment of the Outlook. Even if
there be letlflcation among the "vested Interests" in the event of such a
dreadful fate, is it worse than being president of Harvard? Here is chance to rival the twenty years of sleep of Rip Van Winkle.
But there will always be some of us who will wait for the awakening of Teddy with much the same confidence that the inhabitants of the Thuringlan valleys await the coming of Barbarossa from out of the Kyffthauserberg.
Well may the title of Africanus be
Theodore's if he shows that the stren
uous but simple life Is the cure for
sleeping sickness of the jungle.
ni 1.- Ik. th.r ar DO Xaines
and all that rubbish. Such a man is JJfS. Jolin A . LOgCM Talks . i . twvnt i-ntn this life 1 1 O
Uaet5 LMJI Li. ouu nu wut - at the age of a thousand and ten.' Me-
thusaleh himself could charm a little
girl on the front row with his youth Wa6hIgton, D. C, Dec. 20. Wash
far auicker than the Antl-Xmas-San-1 ington society is a theme which has
ta Claus-toy-and-children man. And 1 been dwelt upon by persons In all con
Methuselah lived to an advanced age. I ditlons of life. Apparently no one re-
Bernard Shaw says that .the Irish I members that the capital Is unavoid-
are not peculiar nor abnormal because ably one of the most cosmopolitan
tbey believe in fairies. On the contra ry, he asks if all sane men do not real
expect nothing but the pleasure they i give by their presence and, what they ! contribute intellectually to the company they have been invited to meet. As at all capitals. Washington has what is known as official and diplo-
Heart to Heart Talks. By ED WIS. A. XYE.
Copy.isM. 1908, by Edwin A. Nye
matic society, for which there are ac-
citiey of the union, and that beyond cepted regulations fixing the status of the few regulations established by each individual according to rank. .TffrKin ns tr nffirlal ottmietta th! Th nrfcclrtpnt ths ln1v nf the. white
ly believe in fairies. And he Is right. arg QO Jawg gng socIal inter-' house, the vice-president., the speaker There .js nothing real in this world ex- course except those which are sug- of the house, the cabinet, the supreme cept the ideal. The material itself is gested by civilization and proper de- court, senators, representatives in con-
nf1iT nspf,,! when it comes under the corum. Though one hears much about gress, the army, the navy ana neaas
touch of the Imagination. No great
made without the
what they are pleased to call fashion- of bureaus in each department of the
able society, or rather exclusive so-! government know exactly what is ex-
lortune. nas Deen maae -wunuui. -ietv. it means that little coterie of
imagination. Nay, even the buying wealthy idle born people who are wont power of money and the circulation of to make pretensions to leadership, or the same depends on the very qualities at least membership in the society of . , . , . . . their particular set. Of themselves
our matter or iaci menus aespibe. . ,Ka ,i da
No. Keep the House of Pretend vancement of civilization or the edi
fresh and inviolate and in it you will fication of intelligent people, but they
find an asylum for lost Hope which affect to be patrons of art, literature
and science, and are often useful in
raising a fund for the education, men-
sprang from that very place long years
ago, when yoa were saying still: "When I grow up." HANDS OFF IS
HIS NEW POLICY
pected of them from a social standpoint. With the natural tendency to hospitality very few are remiss in the discharge of their duties In this respect.
The diplomats are great sticklers for rank and some amusing incidents have followed mistakes made by hosts in seating these representatives of the persons of the rulers of the countries from which they hail and the length of
tal or artistic training of some one their service at Washington. There who has been born with more talents, is, of course, much interchange of civbrains and ambition than money. They . illties among the official, civilian and originate, nothing and as thejr aspir-1 diplomatic society. Officials and pri-
atlons do not carry them beyond the vate citizens are very attentive to the
CRUMPACKER AND THE SPOILS SYSTEM.
It was not a gratifying thing to have an Indiana congressman the
father of a bill to put the spoils sys
tem into the census e department. It was not a gratifying thing to have
that bill introduced by Mr. Crumpack
er, a republican, the only one retained of the old regime. If it had to be,
would that it had been some one else; It may be urged that the appoint
ment of people to places in the census
bureau will be 'just as good' as by civ il service. It may be urged that non
competitive examinations are as ef
ficient as competitive examinations.
If they are it will be by the element of chance. None "just as good" will
do.
The higher minded men in the Republican party have always believed that the spoils system inaugurated by Andrew Jackson is bad policy for all
concerned. , It Is not in accord with efficient service. The business of the people should be carried on by those who are appointed for demonstrated Utness as exhibited in their answers
to suitable Questlcms. The service of the people should not be tampered
with at the desire of congressmen to
perfect their own political machines.
A movement is going on now to down that bill' of Mr. Crumpacker's
and it is to be hoped that it will succeed. If the bill goes through it will
mean that the congress has taken an
other backward step not in accord
snce with the fine political ideals
confines of the set In which they claim membership they are really harmless. They enjoy wining, dining. and enter
taining each other.
In Washington they endeavor to cul-
foreigners, who always accept invita
tions if honors are easy, but they do not trouble themselves by overmuch
hospitality in return
embassies and legations are very hos
tivate official and diplomatic circles pltable and do as much for society as and are inductrious in having their society does for them, but others are
President Roosevelt Gives In
structions in Trust .Prosecution.
EXECUTIVE STARTS FIGHT
DENIALS HAVE BEEN ISSUED
FROM WASHINGTON BUT THESE
ARE NOT COUNTENANCED
HOW GOVERNMENT ACTS.
Washington, D. C, Dec. 26. President Roosevelt will not interfere in
the Gompers-Mitchell-Morrlson case at present. In a statement given out at
attentions to prominent personages
noticed in the daily press, and if tho recipients of these attentions in any way recognize them, they hasten to have the fact announced in the society columns. These strictures apply only
to those so much In print. They are
comparatively few in number and are of no importance. The real repre
sentatives of the best of what, for
want of a better term is called society
at the nation's capital, is composed of people who have done something
in the world; persons who have traveled much, who have made good use of the wealth they have inherited or accumulated by their own efforts; of
persons who are educated and refined in every sense of these words; persons who have retired but who are active in philanthropic, educational or relig
ious movements for the advancement
of civilization. Social functions given
by these people and they give many
are dignified, hospitable, delighful
THE HOUSE OF PRETEND.
Christmas has indeed come and gone.
Most hearts in this community have been gladdened in some way or other, and perhaps, more than any others, the children's. A few of the older peo
ple have had their pleasure in watch
ing the children with bulging eyes
look at a blazing Christmas tree and
gasp at the pretty baubles and tinsel
and .the heap of tissue paper parcels
done up In ribbons with the sprig of
holly on the top. What delight is
that to hear the laughter of a small
boy who has tried to put on his stock
ing with the discovery later on that
there was one more thing in the toe!
Yes, we are all growing older and it Is easy to be cynical. We are indeed
nearing (most of us) the period of life
which Kenneth Grahame calls "Olym
pian" in his "Golden Age." How many a grown up the following description hits. '
They treated us, indeed, with a
kindness enough as to the needs of the
flesh, but after that with indifference
(an indifference, as I now recognize, the result of a certain stupidity,) and
therewith the commonplace conviction that your child is merely animal. At a very early age I remember realizing in a quite impersonal and kindly way
the existence of that stupidity and its tremendous influence in the world; while there grew up in me, as in the
parallel case of Caliban upon Setebos, a vague sense of ruling power, wilful, and freakish practice of vagaries just
choosing so" as for instance the giving of authority over us to these hopeless and incapable creatures, when it might far more reasonably have been given
to ourselves over them. These elders, our betters by a trick of chance, com
manded no respect, but only by a certain blend of envy of their own good
luck and pity for their own ability to
make use of it."
"Their own inability to make use of
it."
That hits the most of us. Listen to
a group of children.
"When grow up" that is the way
that formula begins. But alas, when we do grow up, most of us do not
grasp the opportunity. And the few
who do they are the ones the small boys and girls clamber about, and
nestle close to.
How nearly do you come to the
beau ideal, that glistening dream of youth? Where now are the Houses of Pretend, where are those countries on the map that you firmly intended to
explore? Why they have changed the map so that Africa is no longer pink how will you recognize it when you
get there? How can you find a buried city in a land which has suddenly changed its color at the bidding of a
State Board of Education, x
And so having come to an oasis in
some child's life about Christmas
time a dastard in the "name of sci
ence' comes along . with theories that
there is so Santa Claus; that Teddy
bears destroy the maternal instinct of
the white house through Secretary
Loeb it is stated that the president They extend courtesies to persons en
can not properly consider the ques- titled to consideration, and if they are tion of whether the sentences of financially so situated, that they can twelve, nine and six months, resoect- not return the compliment they need
ively, were excessive. When the final feel no embarrassment, as their hosts
decision, if the defendants carry out their appeal, comes, it will be a dif
ferent matter. The president will
then be in a positon to consider a par
don. The statement says that the president, through the department of
justice, will keep informed upon the
progress of the case so that he may
act at once if action becomes neces
sary. The statement follows:
Appeals Register.
less liberal and more Indifferent about cancelling such social obligations. It is to be hoped that the Incoming administration will establish in the white house some of the customs that began in the early days of the re
public and were kept up until within
a few years. The white house strikes the keynote for social affairs, which the denizens of the capital are ready to follow. What is required is consistency in extending to every one the consideration due. There Is no excuse for cordially welcoming a boor or a person who would not be received in
private homes, and neglecting those who are entitled to courtesies from the executive mansion. Let all functions be characterized by genuine cordiality and dignity if tbey must be simple in the matter of appointment. Washington is without doubt the most delightful residential city In the world, and there is no reason why its society should not be the best that ever existed any where. John C. Calhoun said: "Society and government are intimately connected with and dependent on each other; of the two, society Is the greater."
SCARING BUM) LHS. The other day in Chicago a business man committed suicide, leaving a note behind him saying: . "I am tired of carrying burdens." What a mistake! All of ns must carry burdens. We re built that way. Some of us are weary and heavy laden. Tasks that are onerous bend the back and grave the wrinkles and whiten the bair. Well, what of it?
If the burdens be not of conscience if tbey are the common burdens of life, of business, of family, of citizen-
Snip. VI IBUVt IUI UICUM Happy we!
Did you ever watch a woman of the
orient bear a heavy Jar of water tai a need on her head?
How well poised she is! With chin
high In air and unstumbling feet she moves easily and rapidly on her way.
What grace and strength! How does
she do it?
It Is the load! Gravity does not
hinder; It helps the woman.
When you carry your load you are careful of your footing. You hold up
Some of the your head as becomes a burden bear
er. Your eyes are in front, wnerc
they should be. Too are too busy to look backward. Fancy what you would be without burdens personal responsibility and labor! What fantastic tricks your feet might play! What dangerous side paths might allure you! No, no; burdens do not kill. Worry about the burdens may kill. The Chicago man was mistaken. Shakespeare says care killed a cat. It will kill a man. Yes: sometimes the harness galls ns and the task Irks us. We need to discover the joy of working. Because Greater than the common hire of
wages, more than the jingling of the metal we call money, Is the satisfaction we ought to find in work well done, a burden well carried the expression of the best that Is in us. In our work. That is the real reward. It is our common mistake to complain of burdens. They are the making of us. Without them manhood and womanhood cannot be. x As the Jar on the bead of the woman brings to her both poise and purpose, so our burdens bring to us the balance of character, the fiber of courage.
acts gently jet promptly onthe bou els, cleanses he system effectually
assists one in overcoming
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Various appeals have been made to President ROOSCVelt Will Not
the president to interfere by pardon
in the case of Mr. Gomners and his ',
associates. Those making the ap
peals are unaware of the fact that the
matter is still before the courts. It is
a civil suit between private parties and there has been no way by which
the government could have intervened, even had it desired to do so. Whether the president does or does
not think the sentences of Mr. Gom-
pers and his associates excessive, if
not at present of consequence, because he cannot take any action or express
any opinion while the case is pending j
before the courts. Final decision will
have to be made before the president can properly consider whether the terms of Imprisonment are excessive
Interfere in Labor Leaders' Case.
A STATEMENT IS ISSUED
COURTS MUST FIRST FINALLY SETTLE THE FIGHT BEFORE EXECUTIVE WILL PASS ON APPEALS REGISTERED.
Chicago, Ills., Dec. 2t. United States
WIERD RITES OF
SUN WORSHIPPERS
Strange Prayers Mumbled by
Sect Which Is Now Fasting.
HEALING DONE TODAY.
ALL SORTS OF DISEASES WILL BE
CONQUERED ACCORDING TO ' THE BELIEFS OF THE STRANGE CULT.
Chicago, Dec. 20. All catechumen at-
District Attorney Edwin W. Sims, has j tending the Gahnabar of the Maza-
fnn KaM to have originated with Pres- That was me reauy lmporiani ue-
, v. ..cu,J velopment in the Sun Worshippers
I:- . w fithm ! convention, as announced at the Lake
. . , , i0 front temple in Lake Park avenue,! California Beef : Trust .and if .here is P the slightest indication that antl- trust GrahWr or and anti-rebate regulation laws have "v" ' . ' i,
or improper. But It is, of course, im- received orders directly from Washing- danzan went on fast today.
possible for the president to act while
an appeal Is pending, for he has noth
ing whatever to act about. The courts
must finish with the case first and
the defendants are at present at liberty on bail. If the defendants see fit to abandon their appeal the matter
will then, of course, be brought before the executive, in which case it will
receive immediate aftd most careful consideration. But the defendants have a perfect right to prosecute their
appeal, and, if unsucessful in the final court, then to ask for a pardon or commutation. But as long as they are prosecuting an. appeal the presi
dent has nothing to do with the mat
ter. The president has already In
structed the department of justiec to keep hm fully informed as to the
progress of the case so that In the
anyway this was stated to be the important news fact of the day. Once again Otoman Zar-Adusht Hanish, founder and chief of Mazadaznan
instigated the investigation. The investigation was given a sensational tinge at the very outset The government officials summoned fifty witnesses fo the special grand jury from Morris and Company and some of the railroads. Finally, when it was dls-
event of its becoming proper for him covered by Morris and Company, that
been violated by the backers, to seek a conviction that the offenders may be sent to the penitentiary. This information came today from w.a, titcvVt fn faorot rlrploc definite the
deniaU that Ve to from Jt. was absent from sunrise service. Tint t?it His followers, however, prostrated
at 7:1G o'clock and sent their prayers out over the troubled .waters of Lake
to act he may already have at his disposal all of the facts which will ena
ble him to 'decide whether there was
justification for some punishment, or whether or not the sentence is alto
gether too severe. But at present the president has no more to do with the case than with the case of the $29,000,000 fine imposed by Judge Landis on the Standard Oil Company, which
is also on appeal and concerning which the president has been repeatedly asked to interfere by well-meaning persons, who did not know that he could not interfere while the matter was still before the courts on appeal.
Marked For Death. "Three years ago I was marked for death. A grave-yard cough wu tearing my lungs to pieces. Doctors failed to help me, and hope had fled, when my husband got Dr. King's New Discovery." says Mrs. A. C. Williams,
of Bac. Ky. "The first dose helped me and improvement kept on until I had gained 58 pounds in weight and my health was fully restored." This
medicine holds the world's healing
record for coughs and colds and lung
and throat diseases. It prevents pneu
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A good horse, according to an Arab test, is one that can stand perfectly erect upon his legs when drinking from a shallow poaL
more than a rebate charge was being investigated they refused the records. Contempt charges were preferred unless the books were" forthcoming, and they are now locked up in a govern
ment office awaiting the special grand jury sitting next Monday.
Government's Proceedings, The government is proceeding under the two laws anti-rebatlng and antitrust. There has always been an imprisonment provision in the anti-trust act. More recently an amendment was added to the interstate commerce act providing an imprisonment feature thereabout. The amendment to
this act will be an important factor in the present Investigation. The fine referred to In the amendment is from $1,000 to $20,000 in each offense, the maximum fine being the one used by Judge K. M. Landis in punishing the oil trust. This amendment is said to be a pet of President Roosevelt's. It provides a way of getting at the big business interests that created and maintained gigantic trusts by the merging system.
tuuklNG UK THRASnXKS. Ever help thrash 7 The farmers wives moll at the task of feeding the thrasher man and his helpers all the day long. And now at
last in one of the counties of a middle
western state tha farmers' wives have struck. They refuse to cook three big meals a day. ,. vJood!
Tho thrnaher mwa. lolnlnar issue, have
boycotted the county. They declare for '
three full banquets a day, else the farmers' wheat, .they say, may rot. And there you are. . Now The farmer's wife, if she conforms to the old custom, must begin weeks ahead of time to plan for the feeds.
The bounteous menu must Include all the substantia: and all the delicacies of cookery.' Perhaps a beef Is killed. Dozens of chickens are slaughtered. There must be six kinds of pie and other things in proportion. And all day Ipng the wife must stew over the hot range Excepting when she washes dishes. Through it all the "man with the red machine Is monarch of all he surveys. He tells the household what time It must arise in the morning. In the evening no man dares knock off until he gives the signal. Let the cook wait and keep the supper piping hot. People and premises farm, barn, house, help, cook, even the dog .rs subject slave to the masterful man with the "separator." And. it may bs added, much authority has made him
as dictatorial as much good feeding has made him critical of cuisine. Therefore tbe long meditated revolt of the Independent women of the farm and to them all hall! Let the presumptuous thrasher man modify bis voracious demands or put
np with a cold luncheon. What with her common tasks of cooking, mending, washing, buttermaking arid the other thousand and one errands of the farm wife, she has enough to do without asking her to boil her brains over a hot cook stove to feed a small army. They do it differently In the far west. There the thrasher gang carries a cooking outfit, and the squad cook prepares the meals. Xo extra demand is made of the rancher's wife. Instead
of tolling in her kitchen listen! tbe farmer's wife is often a gnest at the thrasher's table. It is quite a picnic. Never was there juster grievance than that of these striking farm wives.
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Michigan. The sun was nowhere In sight, but the almanac stated it was sunrise time. Julius Schalch of Chicago, led the service, which ended In gladsome dancing, band holding and the, exchange of kisses. The catchumen then began their fast and Hanlsh began his preparatory healing lessons. Sunday is the really big healing day and at high noon all sorts of diseases are to be conquered. It developed that Ottoman Zar Aduscht Hanish has evolved a prayer. With the body in perfect repose this prayer must be repeated nine times with one breath to a prayer and one minute between each prayer. Then it is to be repeated eight times, then seven times and cn nn nil tho wav down to once. Tfl
those of the faithful who persevere, it PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.
is guaranteed that their prayer will
Henry W. Deuker
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Disinterested Effort. It is a law of life that all great and
shining success Is the result of disinterested effort. That law may seem a paradox to those who aim only at material success, but In tbe long run. and in the history of nations, if not of individuals, it proves itself. The country which aims only at riches is sure to become poor, as the country
which aims only at conquest la sure to
be abased. London "H -"
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