Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 246, 13 July 1909 — Page 4
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGHAM, TUESDAY, JULY 13, 1909.
PAGE FOTTIL
Tt3 QicL-nond Palllcci
tt Se-TefraGi ' Published and owned by the , ; PA1XADIUM miNTINO CO. - T 4aya cn week, evening and Sunday mornlnav Off! ee Corner North tth and A streets. Koaie Phone 1181. RICHMOND, INDIANA.
Rweelpfc 6. Tbeeaa. . . .Maaaeiaa- Editor. M. Meraea.,,......-Manager. AV, ft. fiajastoae New. Editor.
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. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post 'Office as second class mall matter.
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MUSCA DOMESTICA
The Merchants' Association of New
York Is responsible for a very interesting; pamphlet on flies. The pamph
let contains forty-eight pages in the case of the people against the Common
House Fly. Op page 31 there is this
little paragraph which is a sample of
what the booklet contain.
"Hitherto the fly has been regarded complacently as a harmless nuisance and considered to be an annoying
creature with great persistence and ex
cessfve familiarity. Regarded in the light of recent knowledge the fly is more dangerous than the tiger or the
cobra. Worse than that, he is, at
least in pur climate, much, more to be
feared iin the mosquito and may eas
lly be classed, the world over, as the
most dangerous animal on earth."
Now the average citizen will no i doubt seof f at this, but when the act- j usJ facts are presented he cannot get away from the facts. , Bulletin 51 of the Agricultural Expertmentv fetation located at Storrs, Connecticut, shows that one common house fly can carry 6,600,000 bacteria. The method of obtaining these figures was exactly the method of dropping a fly into some milk. .You have sometimes seen flies drop Into uncovered milk. V Think where you have seen flies and then ask yourself whether you want flies touching the food that you buy and the food prepared in your own home. ' Typhoid fever is caused more from the carrying power of flies than by any. other agency.
been played by the people of Hind.
Usually in some back passage a
room In the wall of a city sits a wom
an she has crimson lips and very
black eyebrows and she is the ruler
of many men. Then the time comes.
Anon there is a little revolution in
the land. As it was in '57 so it was in '71 and it occasions some little difficulty to the Powers that be. i
That very effective detective organ
ization the Indian Ethnological Survey
has stamped out all outward signs of revolution in India. . ,
Hence the revolutionists go to Lon
don and carry on their work under the surveilliance of the London Bob
by. That is the safest place in the world to plot against the British government. r So it is that at the behest of some woman with bright eyes who sits behind a ecreen just off the bazaar at Benares -Madarla shot and killed an English official. That is for effect India now knows that English officers can be killed.
Thereupon the rumor and the whole
story goes out through India from bazaar to bazaar. There will be a little revolution soon.
be sure to get plenty of fresh air and Sunshine.
"That should be easy." "Yes. But he forgot his first pre
scription and told me to shun all possible drafts and keep in the shade."
"Some men," said I Uncle Eben,
can't lay by a little money for a rainy
day wifout bein' fooled by de rust sprinklin' cart dat turns de corner."
In the meanwhile the London Times discourses sweetly, smuggly, on the
Meadowbrook polo victory "by meth
ods which they evolved for themsel
ves."
Madarla Dhingari is a hero by a method which he evolved for himself
and the London Times will - doubtless
pass the same comment on the revolu
tion which Is carefully being plotted
within a stonesthrow of its sanctum while the Bobby is given no authority to break it up and the Ethnological
Survey chafes at the bit.
Items Gathered In From Far and Near
Bingham's Removal. From the New York Sun,
The people of the city are satisfied
that Theodore A. Bingham was remov
ed for political reasons. The vicious.
the criminal and the unclean elements
of the city population have accepted
the removal as the proclamation not merely of pardon but of permission of license to return to all the older
and hateful conditions. They have al
ready begun to act upon this assump
tion. The same suspicion is manifest among the mass of respectable citizens. Both may be wrong. If they are a regrettable incident may be closed 1 A . . ....
wiinoui ultimate political consequences. If they are not, it is out of
such stuff poltical campaigns and popu
lar uprisings spring to success.
If there is no dirt and filth there will be no flies. There will be fewer dead babies if there are no flies.
THE WHITE MAN'S BURDENS , Madarla Dhingari shot and killed Lieutenant Colonel Sir William Hutt Curson Wyllie. Madarla Dhingari is an-Indian student, possessed of eyeglasses, patent leather shoes and up to the date when he shot and killed Sir William he was absorbing knowledge of the benevcleat government at the expense of the aforesaii benevolent government. (Sounds like Kipling, doesn't it?) When in court Madarla Dhingari emitted the following statements: "I do not wish to say anything in defease of myself, but simply to prove the justice of my deed. As for myself, I do not think that an English law court has the power to arrest and detain me or to pass, on me the sentence of death." Thereupon Madarla Dhingari becomes a hero a patriot and his name is holy in all the bazaars of India. At : about the same period in the world's events the Meadow Brook club shipped their ponies oyer, to England and cleaned wp the "crack polo team of Uttlo Britain." Thereupon the London Times said: "There is no longer any, doubt that the Americans would beat any team in England. They have beaten us at a game which
we used to consider our own, and by tactics which they have evolved for
themselves."
Nov of course there Is a serious mo
tive in dragging in the Meadowbrook club with their polo ponies which "can
turn f n tun gaiiop on ue rim or a quarter." Bui father it is that sentenet in the Times, "By tactics which
they have evolved for themselves!"
Fancy! Only fancy, says the Times variety of Englishman "by tactics
which they have evolved for them-
selves."
t Madarla Dhingari shot and killed
Lieutenant Co). Sir William Hutt Cur son Wyllie.
The game of Madarla Dhingari lg an
old one.
. r m tfea eve has
From the New York Tribune.
Police Commissioner Baker takes pains to inform the public that he is
not a friend of Senator McCarren. But
what earthly difference does it make whose friend Mr. Baker is? He has
carried out the orders which is gener
ally agreed would have reduced Gen
Bingham to a figurehead, and it is cer
tain that Baker is no more important
than Bingham would have been if he
had obeyed those orders. Mr. Baker
is a cipher. He may represent the Ah
koond of Swat in the police department for all the public cares. Let him save his breath. There is a man "higher
up" in the department, with headquar
ters at the city hall. Mr. Baker is aim
ply the man who was ready to be the figurehead that Gen. Bingham would
not be.
From the New York World.
New York's police force is now com pletely in the hands of a weak and un
6table mayor and at the mercy of all
the political influences to which he is
susceptible. Every man in the depart
ment knows it. If Mr. Baker were the
most competent policeman in the
world he could not command the re
spect and confidence of the men, for they all understand clearly that the
thing which counts is "pull" with the
politial bosses that sway the mayor
If these bosses had enough influence
with Mr. McClellan to "break" Bing
sam they have enough influence to
"break" any other man on the force
who tries to do his duty. All that has been accomplished during the last three years in the way of divorcing the
police from politics is now undone The mayor, like a peevish, irresponsi
ble' boy, has wantonly destroyed the most creditable achievement of his
term.
GREAT APPLAUSE .
WAS. WELCOME SEN. BEVEfllOGE (Continued From Page One.)
MARSHALL SORE ABOUT ATTACKS
MADE OPOtl HIM
Dislikes Statements of Some Papers That He Should Make Clear His Motive in
Whittaker Case.
the rate goes beyond what honest protection requires It ceases to be protection and becomes excess, and excess throughout the history of the
world and in the life of individuals is the only thing .that ever destroyed a man or destroyed a policy.
I have found in ten years' experi
ence that whenever any great and
wrongful business organization Is at
tacked and made to do justice to the people, some person rise to defend it; never in its name, but alwars in
the name of the farmer or the cattle
raiser or the poor laboring man, or somebody else.
Now, we said, "while you have a tar
iff on the steer itself (that is one), you have a tariff upon the meat (that is two), and you have a tariff on the
hair of the hide (that is three), and
you have a tariff on the beef's blood
(that is four); that is enough. Why
put a tariff on the hide also?" They said. "Because it will add more to
what the farmer gets for it."
Great Controversy.
We said; "How can that be, in view
of the fact that the Beef Trust fixes the price of the beef and pays the
farmer as little as it can? Why don't you put a tariff on the horns also? If you make shoes out of the hides,
you make buttons out of the horns.
And so there was a great contro
versy, in the senate we were peaten
not on the merits of the case: but
because four votes for this schedule there, and four votes for the other schedule yonder, and six votes for that other schedule in tho distance all stood together for each schedule, and, as I said in debate with Senator Aid-
rich, there wasn't one of them that could have stood upon their own feet and fought the thing out that way.
Could Not Foresee End. I did not know how this fight was
going to turn out in the public mind when I began it. I have been in pub
lic life long enough to know that the man who takes his stand (especially a man who is known as a conservative man, as I think I have always been) against the powers that prey,
against, for example, the American Tobaeco Company, with its $400,000,000 capital; the American Woollen
Company, the Beef Trust and others,
it is not certain that he will have the
people's applause at once, but whether
had it or whether I didn't have it.
and I speak for all of the ten that
stood and fought and voted and went
down together I knew that we be
lieved that we had served you and all the American people beneath the flag.
And now, to know that you think so too gives me the deepest satisfaction of my life. It confirms me in the be
lief, in which I sometimes grow fainthearted, in popular government, that
the people are smarter than the poli
ticians and interests and that they know what is best for them.
HE DENIES POLITICS
ENTERS INTO AFFAIR
Governor Says That Only Report Reaching Him Which
He Investigated Was the
Charge Placed on Paper.
CLEARS THE COMPLEXION OVERNIGHT
Pimples, Rash, Eruptions, Etc., Quick ly Eradicated by New Skin Remedy.
TWINKLES
BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. More Evidence. "So you are convinced that Bacon
wrote the Shakespearean plays?"
"I am " answered the British drama
tist.
"But Bacon was a politician, rather than a poet." "That's just the point. Only a man with a political pull could have produced some of those plays without
trouble with government censorship."
Climatic Luxury. The man who goes to sail the polar sea la sure a hero, brave as he can be; And yet he seems, with summer at its height, A lucky tourist and a sybarite. , An Unexpected Result. "I understand you tried to work the third degree on a Chinaman. "Yes," answered the New York detective. "It was a fearful ordeal. "Did the prisoner weaken?" "Nfjk But the police are on the verge of insomnia and nervous pros-
Doctors' Disagreements. "My doctor ban me pawled," said the hypochrondriae. "He said I ust
Since its discovery one year ago, poslam, the new skin remedy, has, in its extraordinary accomplishments, exceeded the most sanguine expectations of the eminent specialist who gave it to the world. It has cured thousands of eases of ecsema and eradicated facial and other disfigurements of years' standing. The terrible itching attending eczema is stopped with the first application, giving proof of its curative properties at the very outset. In less serious skin affections, such as pimples, rash, herpes, blackheads, acne, barber's itch, etc., results show after an overnight application, only a small quantity being required to effect a cure. Those who use poslam for these minor skin troubles can now avail themselves of the special 50-cent package, recently adopted to meet such needs. Both the 50-cent package and the regular $2 jar may now be obtained in Richmond at W. H. Sudhoff's and other le&dlng drug stores. Samples for experimental purposes may be had free of charge by writing direct to the Emergency Laboratories, 32 West Twenty-fifth gtreet, New York City.
Indianapolis, Ind., July 13. Gover
nor Marshall has been considerably nettled br a few republican papers of the state that have been "shooting it into him" in connection with the case
of W. H. Whittaker. former superintendent of the reformatory at Jeffer
sonville. Not many, but a few, of the
papers in the state, have been insist
ing that if there is anything back of
the whole business that has not been made public Governor Marshall should do so at once. They have intimated
that the governor has been playing
f politics in the case and that the real
cause for Whittaker's resignation has
not been made public. They have
said that there was something below
the surface that had not been told.
Was on a Farm.
The governor heard some of these
things while he was out on the farm
last week, and when he arrived home
he was pretty sore over some of the things said about him in connection
with the cause. He denies that poll
tics had anything to do with the res
ignation of Whittaker or the investigation of the reformatory rumors.
The fact is that many rumors reached the governor from many sources and only one or two of them were
used in the investigation. It is known
too, that Whittaker learned that these
rumors had reached the governor.
governor Marshall did not act on
anything he heard except the one mat
ter that was put in writing by a man
representing a company which alleged that it had not been fairly treated
in the award of a heating contract at
the reformatory. These charges were
reduced to writing and it was on these that the public hearing was held at the governor's office a week ago last Saturday. It is known, too, that after this public hearing had been set and
before it was held Whittaker offered
his resignation to Governor Marshall and that the governor said it was a
matter exclusively for the board of trustees and not for him to handle. It is a fact, too, that when the public
hearing was held the testimony did not show anything wrong with the award of the contract for the heating
plant.
Governor Silent.
Nothing else was considered at the
time of the investigation." All of the
unsupported rumors were disregarded
Just what these were the governor
does not say, but it is said in his
office that if the republican newspa
pers that have been digging at him in the matter keep it up he will be
forced to make the whole story pub
lic.
"Some of Whittaker's fool friends
who are roasting the governor through
their newspapers had better talk with
Whittaker before they print so much about the case," it was 6aid at the
governor's office. 'Then if they wish
to print these things let them do it.
They are printing stuff now about
things they know nothing about, and
they ought to find out the truth before
they rush to the defense of Whittak
er.
Very Irritating.
The most irritating instance of this
kind of newspaper criticism, it is said
is that that has been carried on in the Marion Chronicle, of which Col. Geo.
B. Lockwood, is the editor. Whittaker
was appointed by Governor Durbin as
superintendent of the reformatory and
Lockwood was private secretary to Governor Durbin at the time. This,
it is pointed out. may account for
Lockwood's interest in the case.
The governor says he regards the Whittaker case as a closed incident
unless Whittaker's friends choose to
re-open it. Only one chapter remains,
so far as the governor is concerned
and that is that the public accounting
board will make a thorough inspection
of the books and accounts of the in
stitution within a short time.
It you want to learn, or it you know how to fish, you need good fishing tackle. GET THE BEST.
THE --SWOT EF srars. It is Restful It is Fascinating It is Scientific
Some of Our Greatest Hen Were Fishermen See our Elegant Line Newest, Up-to-Date Rods, Reels, Halts EverytMcn for Angling Ask About the 010.00 Prize.
JONES CO.
Heart to Heart
Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copy.ight, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye
the perstiu unjustly.In "seeing the elephant" do not decide until you have seen more than his ears, bis trunk or bis tail.
the .1 a.-.u His Hire. At a conference in New York of
foreign missions boards reference was
made to the Increased cost of living of missionaries home on leave, which made it bander for tbem to get along than If they stayed to their foreign field of labor. "Why," said the speaker, "a missionary must travel decently, and that reminds me of a story of Mr. Spurgeon and a fellow clergyman. The two were jus starting on a railway journey and Mr. Spurgeon's friend showed him a second class ticket
" 'See, said he. wnt good care I
take of the Lord's money.'
" 'See, said Mr. Spurgeon, bringing out a first class ticket, "what good care I take of the Lord's servant.
Youth's Companion.
MASONIC CALENDAR.
Tuesday,. July 13. Called meeting Richmond lodge No. 196 F. & A. M.
Work in the Entered Apprentice de
gree. "
Saturday. July 17. Loyal Chapter
No. 9 O. Jf5, Sv stated meeting.
r.Cop':ight19&. by Atn.rlcan Preca 'Asso
ciation. J SEEING THE ELEFHANT. Do you remember the story of the
three blind men who went to "see" the
elephant?
One of tbe blind men took the ele
phant by the ears nud. passing bis hand over tbem. said. "Tbe elephant is
wide and fiat like a pancake.
Another put bis hand on the crea
ture's trunk and said: "You are mistaken, brother, Tbe elephant is large and round and tapers to a point."
The third blind man seized the ele
phant as to his tail and said: "You are
both mistaken. Tbe elephant is round, indeed, but be is small and long like a hoe handle."
And they went away, each convinced
be bad seen the elephant and dlsput
ing with tbe others as to what tbe
elephant might be like.
We are all more or less blind.
Eacb of us sees ouly a part of tbe
truth. Aud. seeing in part, we dispute with our fellows concerning tbe shape
of the elephant. I
It is because we have different an
gles of vision.
We see men and things from our
own individual standpoint, and then
we think we are right and the others
wrong.
And we are thus warped In oar be
liefs and prejudices.
A few years ago tbe writer made a
visit to a relative who lived on bis
'farm" of twenty-four acres a few
miles north of New York city. While
there be told of wbeatfields in the northwest thousands of acres in ex
tent.
It was evident tbe New York rela
tive, who bad never been outside bis
state, believed bis cousin to be stretching tbe truth out of all proportion.
And. on the other hand, a western
farmer, being told this New York man
had become fairly wealthy on bis
twenty-four acres, laugbed heartily at
the "Joke."
It depends on how you see the ele
phant.
And tbe moral? Cultivate tbe broad vision, tbe wide
horizon, else you may become not
only narrow minded, but opinionated and uncharitable.
For instance You see a single phase of some per
son's character a one sided view. It
mav be you see tbe weaknesses and
overlook, the good points. Yon judge
Disinterested. Lord Monboddo. an eminent member of tbe Scotch judiclsry and one of the tfloar cut figures in Boswell's Immortal "Life of Johnson." was a great bean
in bis youth and In bis later years a brilliant and learned if whimsical man. He was a friend of the Garrlcks and
one day was their guest at their villa
at Hampton Court when Hannah Mors was also visiting there. They were walking together In tbe garden when
his lordship astonished tbe fair and sprightly Hannah by a declaration of love and an offer of his heart and band. Meeting with a positive refusal.
be soon returned to tbe house and made a clean breast of It to Mrs. Gar-
rick. "I am very sorry for this refusal.'
be said In conclusion. I should have
liked so much to teach that nice girl
Greek." , Our Languages.
What a lot of languages we talk, even If we talk only English! I was
assailed by a man across tbe lunch eon table with a language about i
cup tie final and confessed that ft was quite unintelligible. Then another
man talked about golf, which Is an
other , language. And then tne wo
man's language elbows these columna
"The Countess wore a sea green
cloth skirt with a bolero of tbe same color and a white marabou stole, and a blsck taffeta bow garnished her huge
hat of burnt tagcl straw." It is a fine
exsmple of women's slang. But to tbe man ft means nothing but expense. London Outlook.
e Henry V. Deulier M
FANCY GROCER
Coflees and Teas
Cor. CUiSI. as rt, Wi
EataMlafccd 1HI
Paiimtts
CI ratal
time of
elate p
vsistt
Pfiumfts
eV
ewest smel m
eTAtta. negmlaur
Homemade Ink. A good Ink is made In this way: Bruise half a pound of outgalls and stand In one quart of water, shaking It now and then, for about four hoars. Then add three ounces and a balf of gum arable and when it Is quite dissolved three ounces of copperas. To prevent tbe Ink from becoming moldy when kept add three or four drops of creosote. This gives a pteasaat-lfke smell to the ink and does not corrode the pens as ch'oride of mercury wonid do. Preparing Far a ftiefle. Wife The last time I asked yon to give me some money you said you couldn't because tbe cashier was sick. Now you say it's the treasurer. Husband I know It He caught It from the cashier, and now I'm afraid tbe secretary will get It Life.
A Queer Attack. "Some people can stand on the top .of a high building and look down." said Mrs. Lapsing, "but I can't. It alwsys gives me an attack of vtrdlgria." Chicago Tribune.
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t FOR GALE Small tract ollaael sicar Oe dry saltaMe aael eqalpraael foe aardealag aael calckaa . ralalaa - f W. O. C3ADSUBY 8Cf 1 aael S.Weatcott Back
"Ruh-ruu-run: Rah-rah: Zip!" veiled
xommy.
"Why did you do that, sir?" asked
his father sternly.
"That fellow started It," said Tom
my, abashed, pointing to tbe trainman.
who had Just called ont the name of
a station. Buffalo Express.
RHEUMATISM and All Nervous and Blood Diseases
The popularity of Mt. Clemens as a HEALTH A3CD PLSAST7SB RESORT tnerceeee with each sueeeedinr year. Mt- Clemen offer, every requisite for rest, health and aratiaement. The merit of Xt- Clemens Mineral Water Bat ha are attested by prominent phyalmaa. everywhere. Mt. Clemen, ia delightfully eitnatad 20 smile from Detroit. Tbrcmirh train, from alt direction. Detroit suburban rieetrie ear. every kalf bonr. Hlnxtrated book of Mt. CJemene mailed free. Address F. R. EASTMAN, Chamber of Com mere., Mt. Claen.na, Mia.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There i only one' way to cure deaf
ness, and that is by constitutional
remedies. Deafness is caused by an
inflamed condition of the mucous liningof the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing-, and when It is entirely closed. Deafness ia the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hearing-
will be destroyed forever: nine cj
out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed con
dition 01 tne mucous surfaces.
"We will rive On Hundred Dol
lars for any case of Deafness
(caused by catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, Send for circulars free. I. J. CHENEY &. CO.. Toledo. Ot
DR. G. A MOTTIER Will be at tbe Residence of Will Geler. 509 South 11 ta Street, Every Friday of Eaek Week.
EeaHCaDMilD Clab Grade roaltry Feed. Seneca Gcrcicfis
Liquid U
it
Fly
RIcfcczd Feed Store.
ne.UNetta.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.
Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills naUoa.
for coasti-
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Even though you ehould offer us 50c per quart, instead of our regular price of 25c, ye would not produce for you a purer, more wholesome article than our ee.pia'arel Ice Cream.
CO&fttONS DAISY CO. 9 SOUTH FIFTH STREET, PHONV 11SS. 4
