Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 322, 27 September 1909 — Page 3
THE BICIKIOND PALLADIUM AKD SUX-TE LEGRA 21, MONDAY, SEPTE3IBER 27, 1909.
PAGE TUCC3. THE POWER OF UI1ITY What Trades Unions Have Dons to Uplift Humanity. pDue.siIle
PAGEANT LIGHTS ON BROOKLYN BRIDGE
UIUIIUL IllltllUS JSSIST HOSPITAL City Fathers Are Much in Favor of Making $3,000 Appropriation. COMMITTEE IS TO MEET
FINANCE BOARD WILL. CONSIDER THE MATTER AT 8E38ION TO BE HELD THIS WEEK DEUKER IN STATEMENT. Members of the finance committee, as well as the other members of council, are in favor of the f 3,000 appro prlation from the city for Reid Memorial hospital. This appropriation will so doubt be placed in the budget of estimated expenses of the city for 1910, at the meeting of the finance committee Thursday or Friday evening;, when the report of city controller Webster Parry on appropriations is considered. At the meeting: of council last Monday, Mr. Parry made his report on the budget andt did not Include any appropriation for the hospital, which is ac cording to the democratic administration's policy. Councilman Deuker presented a resolution asking for an appropriation of $3,000 for the maintenance of the hospital, but both the resolution and the budget were turned over to the finance committee for consideration. Mr. Deuker, one of the members of the finance committee stated today that he believed the committee would recommend the appropriation. Whatever Is done with the budget toy the finance committee at its meeting will come before council next Monday evening for ratification. - Mr. Deuker stated today that besides including the appropriation for the hospital, the budget would be altered but slightly. There are always a few minor changes made by the finance committee, but which are of little importance. 44 m A BAD WAY Many a Richmond Reader Will Feel - Grateful for This Information. When your back gives out; Becomes lame, weak or aching; When urinary troubles set in, Your kidneys 'are "in a bad way." Doan's Kidney Pills will cure you. Here is local evidence to prove it: Enoch Cromer, "09 N. Fourteenth Street, Richmond, Ind., says: "I have had no need of Doan's Kidney Pills since they cured me of kidney trouble In 1906. : In . July that year I gave a statement for publication endorsing this remedy and at the present time, I do not wish to withdraw anything I then said. Railroading is very hard on the kidneys and my case was no exception to the rule, as I suffered from kidney complaint for some time. The passages of the kidney secretions were irregular and painful and I often 1 dizzy and weak. Being advised to I y Doan's Kidney Pills, I procured a box at A. O. Luken A Co.'s drug store and their use brought prompt relief. In a short time I was entirely free from the trouble and since then whenever I have heard anyone complaining of backache or disordered kidneys, I have advised him to give Doan's Kidney Pills a trial." , For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents.! Foster-Milburn : Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agants for the United States. Remember the rame Doan's and take no other. ' V,v: ; . Dragon Him. Dragon flies can catch Insect when flying at the rate of forty or fifty miles a hour.' ...
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ORGANIZATION OF BOTH COMMITTEES TO BE MADE SOON (Continued From Page One.) Several other candidates are likely to f get into this race, however, and Darby may not enter. Just who will take his place on the Btate committee is a question, as no one has been suggested as yet. Haas Not Candidate. Web Woodfill, of Greensburg, is to be the new member of the state committee from the sixth district to succeed E. M. Haas, of Richmond, if present indications wotk out into a reality. There is no other candidate, and it is said that Haas will not run again for the place. Woodfill is a rich man and is in the political game because he likes it. He has served two terms as a member of the house of representatives and has a wide acquaintance. It is said that it is generally taken as a settled fact that he will be elected district chairman. There will be a change, too, In the seventh district, which consist of Marion county. Oliver Ensley, the present member of the committee from the seventh, will not again be a candidate. There will be other changes, also, but there is not much talk about them thus far. It is pointed out that there will be no necessity for Senator Beveridge to seek to control the election of members of the state committee. This is based on the ground that he will not have any opposition as a candidate before the next legislature, and that therefore any .committee that can car ry the state next yea,r for the ticket wiH also carry the state for Beveridge. Therefore, it is pointed out, Beveridge could keep hands entirely off the reorganization of the committee without taking any chances, but this would be contrary to all political precedent. So it. may be assumed that he' will have something to say about the reorganization. LAST SESSION OF YEARLY MEETING WAS HELD TODAY (Continued From Page One.) - re-appointed William C. Biggs and Nathan Gilbert as members of the board of trustees. S. B. Harvey was appointed to fill a vacancy on the visiting committee. The routine business consisted of the appointing of several delegates to state and national conventions. To the convention of the W. C. T. U., to be held at Muncie, Ind., Emma Hedges
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Q was appointed delegate and Ora E. Winslow alternate. To the state convention of Charities and Corrections to be held at South Bend, Frank Morgan was appointed delegate and Daisy Barr alternate. The delegate to the National convention of the Anti-saloon league, to be held at Chicago in December, is Cornelius Small, with Truman C. Kenworthy as alternate. Epistles from the Nebraska Yearly Meeting and the Quarterly Meeting of Mexico were "read. Return minutes for Visiting ; ministers were read and epistles to the several Yearly Meetings were approved. MATTER OF HISTORY. The eighty-ninth annual Indiana Yearly Meeting Sunday is now a matter of history. - Fully three thousand people gathered at the East Main Street Friends' Meeting House yesterday afternoon and unconsciously recorded .the historic event. ; Approximately two-thirds of this number assembled in the East Main Street Friends Meeting House and listened to some excellent and eloquent addresses while the other third contented themselves listening to the preaching outside the meeting house ' or moving about through the crowd. In the Meeting House, there was Timothy Nicholson, presiding in his usual competent and exacting manner. Mr. Nicholson has presided over the Indiana Yearly Meeting for five years and been a faithful attendant for fortyfive years. He knows the old and the young Friends the moment they enter the Meeting House, and the ministers he invites to the platform and the visiting laymen are content with a smile from the presiding officer. Two Veteran Friends. Immediately behind Mr. Nicholson sits Robert Douglas and Luke Wood ard. Both of them ministers' in the Friends Meetings, have an air of . authority which comes to the older members of a church, whose advice is readily accepted by the laymen. Dr. Douglas has watched the Indiana Yearly Meeting for forty years and each year he sees a change in the, audience. Then Luke Woodard, a member of all the Important committees, in his re tiring manner "speaks as one having authority.", Mr. Woodard has attend' ed for sixty years and it is needless to say that he has watched with Interest the progress of the Friends Yearly Meeting. He attended the Meeting when it was held on North Tenth street and remembers distinctly the erection of the East Main Street Friends Meeting House in the year 1878. The treasurer, Charles Carpenter, "little and mighty," sits in front, and business like, handles the funds of the Yearly Meeting. Mr. Carpenter has attended the Yearly Meeting since 1854. He also remembers the erecI tion of the East Main Street Friends' church, and can recall the amount paid for the building and lot, which he did for a Palladium representative yes terday afternoon. The building cost $36,072 and the lot 5,O0O. Mr. Car penter has been attending since he was a small . boy. having been brought to the Yearly Meeting on North Tenth -
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street by his father. Walter Carpenter, now In his ninty-nlnth year. Waltr
Carpenter, however, has not attended for two years. Program Yesterday. The program yesterday .consisted of an address In the morning by John L Kitrell at 8 KM) a. m., and by Dr. Rob ert L. Kelly, president of Earlham Col lege, on "The Ladder of St. Augustine, and Esther Cook at 10:00 a. m. The addresses in the afternoon were delivered by John and Nettie Riley and Daisy Barr. During the afternoon an open air meeting was . held on the Meeting House grounds. Those who addresse-1 the people outside the Meeting House were the following: Mary Moon Meredith, Levi T. - Pennington, Mary McVickers, Elwood Hinschaw, Hiram Woolom, Aaron Napier, Ira C Johnson and Charles Hiatt. REAL EARTHQUAKE EARLY TODAY WAS QUITE SENSATION (Continued From Page One.) any indications that an earthquake had taken place, as no damage to the delicate instruments was noticed. However, Miss Bessie Burr, Mrs. L A. Mote, South Eleventh street, City Attorney T. J. Study and a score of others are confident that there was some seismic disturbance, all stating that they were awakened between three and four o'clock by their beds rocking. Mrs. Mote said that several residents on South Eleventh street also were awakened. All who were awakened stated that there was but one shock, so far as the? could ascertain. It lasted for several seconds. Following the quieting of the beds, the occupants ' who were awakened, say that they could hear distant rumblings it sounding like indistinct thunder, and many first thought that it was a violent storm approaching. City Statistics Deaths and Funerals. HENDERSON Joseph H. Henderson, aged 65 years, died last evening at his home 353 Richmond avenue. Besides his wife, six children survive, Walter, of East Oakland, Cal., formerly connected with the Second National bank of this city; Mrs. W. V. Russell of Wisconsin; Mrs. N. H. Brownlee of Detroit, Mich.; Elizabeth, Ethel and Ruth Henderson of this city. The funeral arrangements will be announced later. GOLDEN The funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth N. Golden, took place this morning at 10 o'clock from the home of Harry Simmons, 43 South Eighteenth street, the Rev. D. C. Huntington officiating. There were a number of beautiful floral offerings. The pall bearers were: A. L. Study, s Horace Iredell, Henry Burns, Frank Watt, W. P. Haughton and W. Simmons. The burial was in Earlham cemetery. Mrs. Golden formerly Resided in Richmond but of recent years has been making her home with her daughter. Mrs. J. C. Crockett at Evansville, Ind. Marriage License. Walter Lee Feffley, Vincennes, 22, cook; and Miss Pearl Lamberson, Richmond, 19, housework. Ernest Chavois, 26, laborer; and Reba Cottman, 19, both of Richmond. The Real Part. "1 suppose, doctor." Inquired a visitor, "a large proportion of the ills of your patients are imaginary." -Yes. sir, quite a large proportion." "And your treatment in such cases. I suppose, is by imaginary pills." -Well, 1 suppose you might call It that." "Then, of course, for treating imaginary ilia with imaginary- pills 70a send in imaginary bills." "Ob, my dear air. nothing of the kind. There's nothing imaginary about the bills. I bars to draw the line here." :-.'i Easily Explained. ' A Glasgow cabby once had as a fare aa Inverness Minister a ad bis wife. He bad to drive then through the poorer districts of the dty. and 00 reaching their destination the minister, st the same time handing cabby bis legal fare, asked: "Why are there mm la this city. cabssaarr Jehu looked bard at the parson for a minute before be replied: - "Well, sir, I'm do Terra sore; but, ye see, malst o the poor folk drive cabs. and tips sre scarce
TRIUMPHANT OVER GREED.
Beneficent Child Labor and Compulsory Education Laws Enacted at Behaat of Organised Workers United Action the Toiler's Only Hope. ' The $100,000 headquarters building of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America recently dedicated at Indianapolis ts the first owned by either a national or international anion la America. Frank Morrison, secretary of the American Fed ration of Labor, delivered . the dedicatory address, part of which was sa follows:.-. We are here today the 22d of July. 1909 to dedicate to the cause of organized labor this beautiful build ing, erected in response to the will of more than 200.000 carpenters, members of the second largest branch of the American Federation of Labor the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America. A building in which its officers will conduct their official business, a shrine which shall stand as a monument to the power and glory of the brotherhood, a temple that was erected In its entirety by members of organized labor, each of whom worked but eight hoars per dsy, thus complying with that shibboleth of the. trades onion sdopted ss a warcry la their straggle for a snorter workday: Slant hours for work. Slant boura for aloap, I Bight hours for wnat wo wflL It might not be amiss to point with pride to s few of the achievements of this organised labor which la praised 00 the one head by those who know what It Is doing to arouse the minds of the wsgeworker to a realization of what can be accomplished by united action and on the other hand la denounced and derided by those who fesr that each new success of the trades union may mean their undoing and for that reason, and that reason alone, are with relentless hatred endeavoring to destroy the onions and discourage their members. Let me now call your attention to some of the more tangible things that organized labor has done. Is doing and will continue to do as long as the necessity for organisation exists. Organized labor baa placed a child labor law on nearly every statute book of every state of this Union. Ono state and two territories have not a child labor law of some character Hawaii. Nevada and New Mexico the three states In which there are the least number of organised workers. Organised labor has compelled the enactment of compulsory education laws and placed free text books In the hands of the pupils; but. my friends, notwithstanding that fact there are today thousands of our little children of tender years wearing their lives swsy in mines, mills snd factories. In the states where labor onions are weak there yon find that the greed and avarice of owners of mines, mills and factories know no bounds. There the only hope for the salvation and protection of their youth Is that organised Isbor may soon be in s position to go to their rescue. In this city a few years sgo a man with hatred in his heart formed an organisation with the avowed purpose of destroying the wageworker's defense against the heartless and pitiless employer his union. This man sprang upon the horizon, heralded with glad acclaim by the representatives of every union hating corporation. His false snd malicious denunciations of organized labor were published broadcast In the press of the country. Branches of the organization were formed In every city where a man could be found who bad the slightest antipathy toward organized labor with the expectation that they would bo able to destroy Its strength and power and prevent Its members from securing Improved conditions. Attempt after attempt was made to make good their proud boast, but the efforts of these destroyers fell by the wayside. The force of their attacks was not sufficient to turn, let alone stem, the tide and growth of unionism among the workers. After several years of Impotent effort on the part of this organisation to destroy the unions we find that the unions still live, snd this union hater, this organiser of discord, this lost soul. , wbo raged over this land screaming out bis hate, is forgotten. Why? He Is forgotten because every organized body whose solo reason for existence Is for the purpose of destroying those organizations whoso efforts are for the uplift of humanity and which have brought happiness and contentment to countless thousands will not. must not and cannot long survive in this Christian land of ours. Unionism a Business Proposition. . Trades unionism Is something more than organlzstioa. It is education. One frequent cause for the failure of organised effort Is that there has been insufficient education. It la not enough to bo organised. Each member should know every reason why he is a member of s trsdes union. Trades unionism primarily Is the collective bargaining for the conditions under which labor win be sold. It Is a purely business proposition. Business of say kind to bo successful requires study, snd no tmhjaaa requires more study than the coUocttvo bargaining for labor. - Paid For It. Lawyer (to complaining dientt Well have you at last decided to take my advice asd pay this bill of mine? Client T-e-e. Lawyer Very weU. (To clerk) Williams, Just add 6a. Sd. to Mr. Smith's bill for further
CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank our friends snd neighbors for their help snd sympathy st the tlzse of the sicknees snd death of our child Roiaad. 22r. aad Mrs, IXssuy Eaaper.
The undersigned will offer at Public Sale.atthf) GLEN MILLER STOCK YARDS, Richmond, Ind, ov Saturday, October 2nd, 1009 100 IHIead oS Cade As FoMows: 25 Head of Fresh Cows and Springers. . These Cows were bought of the fanners of Wayne County especially for this Sale, and it will be a good opportunity for Dairymen and others looking for a good cow. - 75 Head of Stock Cattle, , Consisting of One- and Two-Tear Old Steers and Heifers, which have been carefully selected aa to quality and breeding. A - -good opportunity for farmers to get Cattle to feed. Will also have a few Jersey Heifers snd Choice Bulls. ; 50 Head of Stock Hogs Will be sold in lots to suit parties wanting pigs In small numbers. . 50 Head of Good Breeding Sheep of the Southdown breed. Also a few good Bucks. v Sale to Commence at 12:00 o'clock sharp. Take Glen Miller Cars, Corner Eighth snd Main Streets. Cars Leave on the Hour and Half Hour. Terms made known on day of sale. - StaMey Sl (Esisiip Glen MlUcr Stccti Yardc - - . ' D. C BrooZibanli, Auctioneer F. M Jones, Clerk.
MERCHANTS TAKE GREAT IIITEREST III THE FESTIVAL (Continued From Pago One.) of Incandescent lights for street and coliseum decorations. He expects the remainder to arrive within a day or so. By Sunday the public will have some general outline of how the city Is to appear. The searchlight will be in operation Saturday night and from then on until after the festival. The street decorations will all be up by Sunday morning. v The finances of the festival association Is not worrying the officials, although the sum today, is not ss large as expected. At 8 o'clock this morning the association's thermometer reg istered fi.100. It will be necessary to receive $8,000 la order to successfully finance the affair. CARD OF THANKS.
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tives and friends for their kind of fices snd many beautiful floral trib-4
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our son sad brother. George. ' Henrv Torbeck and Famrhvl Mkumi: The only flour I ever had any luck with Is Gold Medal Flour. Locnma. One-half more light giving, Peninsular Base Burner service for mere years than Ity stove. ecu CC0.C0 Ccs5 c?
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