Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 346, 21 October 1909 — Page 4

TIIE RICHMOND FAIXADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1909.

PAGE FOUR

TU f:UA D4ll4ftlfflfti P"ud that it can be counted amongjwe wouldn't get anything .better.

IllV HIvlllllUIIU I UlluUIUIII these up-to-date cities. The recent

and Sun-Telegram Publish and owned tr tn PAXJJUHUM PRINTING CO.

f Oars each wck. evenings and

Sunday morning".

OfficeCorner North th and A street, Hon Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.

RaJolpk G. Leeda Editor Clarice M. Mri . . . Managias Editor Carl Bmhardt Aaaoclate Editor W. R. Pooadatoae Xewa Editor.

SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. Ia Richmond $5.00 per year (In advance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONa Ono year. In advance '5-22 Pl months. In advance 2.60 On month. In advance RURAL. ROUTES. On year. In advance '?-2 Six months. In advance l o One month. In advance 25 Address changed as often as desired; both new and old addresses must b -iven.

Subscribers will please remit with

rrir. which should be Riven for

specified term; name will not b enter

ed until payment Is received.

Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post

office as second class mall matter.

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REPUBLICAN CITY TICKET. Mayor DR. W. W. ZIMMERMAN

Clerk BALTZ A. BESCHER

Councilmen-at-Large OSCAR C. WILLIAMS GEORGE J. KNOLLENBERG HARRY C. WESSEL ED. THATCHER

Councilman, First Ward aLPH'ONS WEISHAUPT

Councilman, Second Ward JESSE J. EVANS

Councilman, Third Ward H. H. ENGLEBERT

Councilman, Fourth Ward WILLIAM H. BARTEL, JR.

Councilman, Fifth Ward E. E. KING

Councilman. Sixth Ward HENRY C. KAUFFMAN

Councilman, Seventh Ward FRANK WAIDELE

Councilman, Eighth Ward JOHN T. BURDSALL

Fall Festival Is to Richmond what the Mardi Graa celebration is to New Orleans. Printers Ink "a Journal for Advertisers" has the following to say

on this subject:

From one view-point the Hudson-

Fulton celebration in New York was

success even from a strictly mer

chandising viewpoint. No event which

brought 2,000,000 people to town could

fail to be a good thins for retail business.

This Is a pretty dull old America,

anyway, when compared wttn tne springhtly village fetes, etc., which

are so plentiful and popular abroad. Sociologists have repeatedly asserted that life here would be made far more enjoyable for our foreign population

(If not for us) if more fetes and cele

brations were arranged. It is also probable that more money that is now hoarded by foreigners would be spent

here at such events, for foreigners dearly love "occasions" and are liberal spenders on such an excuse.

Every city and town should have

plenty of "occasions." Besides hav-1

Ing its strong educational value if his

torically timed, and giving a most welcome respite to the deadly tension of American business routine, it affords

the surrounding country, which suf-, fers from even greater desuetude, a chance to come in and get better

acquainted with local merchants. It stimulates trolleys and railways; it creates a local sense of unity and civic

pride, and loosens up the purse-

strings in general.

Sometimes trade Is dull in a city

simply because the populace is so intent upon its work that it is ignoring

necessities and comforts which it

would be glad to buy if somebody got

up an excuse for a holiday so that attention from work would be diverted to play and the purchase of luxuries, ornaments and comforts."

Even greater than the direct moni-

tary returns from such events is the

benefit received, as Printers Ink sug

gests, from the creating of civic pride

and a local sense of unity. In the case

of the Fall Festival it causes all the

citizens of Richmond to pull together

at least once each year and to forget

petty differences in the common good to the community.

All

moving would mean would be $47 to

a lot of furniture breakers to come in here and smash all our bric-a-brac and make dents in the top of the piano, to say nothing of our having to break ia the new janitor and tip a lot of new elevator boys. We stay where we are." "I've taken It. too." said Polly, apparently paying not the least attention to my observations, "on a long lease." "What?" I cried, indignantly. "Tak

en a flat on a long lease without con

sulting me?" "You asked me to, dear," said Polly, demurely. "I?" I roared. "Yes, and I told you that In spite of all your faults I loved you still," said

Polly, "and so I took you for life just

the dearest old flat there ever was!"

Life.

Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE.

BACK SHANK WITH

THEIR GOOD MONEY

FREE PILE CURE

Republicans Confident That

Their Candidate Will Win Race for Mayor.

CHURCH PEOPLE FOR HIM

Sent to Demonstrate the Merits of Pyramid Pile Cure.

Copy.isht, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye

TWINKLES

The Witching Kind.

"Those that the women wear, my

son, after their hair has been mar

celled." Cleveland Leader.

No Obstacle.

"What's to prevent me from kissing

you?" demanded the man.

"My goodness!", exclaimed the girl. But it didn't. Kansas City Journal.

ROAD SIGNS

Ia the immense amount of literary

effort being expended in the interest

good roads, very little Is said about the

utility of sign posts that would guide

the traveler on his way. The guid

board is much more common on the

roads of New England than in this part of the country. In the rural regions surrounding Washington, especially to the south and along both banks of the Potomac, little provision is made for the stranger. The people of tha locality take it for granted that everybody knows where every road leads to and from, and knows how far he must travel to reach his objective point, or that the stranger, not knowing these things, may come across or hunt up a native who will supply the information. Guide posts would serve the purpose better. If the county authorities did

the work well, information given by

the road signs would be reliable. A

man by making inquiries may find his way along a country road, but every experienced roadway traveler knows

how' little credence can be given to lo

cal estimates of distance. It often

seems that the nearer a traveler ap

proaches his destination the farther off it is, according to wayside inform

ants. Country roads are becoming mor and more to be public ways. The In

creasing use of the automobile each

year enables a growing number of persons to use country roads, and to penetrate farther and farther into the land. The rural mail routes traverse nearly every country road in these parts, and as these are really post

roads, it might not be a bad idea, if the

postal authorities should promote some ample and uniform guide post system. The cost of construction and maintenance of guide posts would be trivial when compared to their usefulness. They would not alone be helpful to the stranger, but their legends would be Instructive in many cases to the natives. Washington Star.

Proving an Alibi.

"Why do you always go out on the balcony when I be?,ln to sing, John?

Can't you bear to listen to me?"

"It isn't that, but I don't want the neighbors to think that I'm a wife-

beater." Kansas City Journal.

The Right Place.

The Tramp "Ah, mister, what

would you do if you felt like you

didn't have a friend in the world?"

The Rich Man "What would I do?

Why. I'd apply for a job as baseball

umpire, of course." Chicago News.

A Wail From Africa.

There was a wild African gnu

Who was feeling exceedingly gblu.

"If Teddy spots me And shoots off my g,"

He observed. "What the gdeuce will

gdu?" The Commoner.

No Escape Via Temperament.

"Mabel is getting past the marriage

able age, isn't she?"

"Yes, and it's too bad she hasn't any

talents."

"Why?"

"She won't be able to tell her

friends that temperament prompts her to give up matrimony and devote

herself to art." St. Louis Star.

She Finds a Flat.

"Well," said Polly, smiling sweetly

as she poured the tea, "I saw a per

fectly lovely flat this morning "

"Oh. nonsense. Polly, ' said I, we re

not going to move this year. I admit this place isn't any too comfortable, and the wall paper in the parlor is the limit, but if we moved the chances are

ENTRANCE OF TAGGART AND THE BEER INTERESTS INTO GAUSS RANKS HAVE DONE DEMOCRATS MUCH DAMAGE-

WW. 4 V- " i. iV Geneva. tLt city of his activities. It

beeu celebrating tbe four huuiiri'O anniversary of the birth of Joliu i';.

vln.

"Why. John Calvin lurtifd Serveiv

at the stake, says some one. "ya n should anybody make a fuss oyer li

memory?"

Which indictment is good. Nevertheless the hard headed the.

loglan of tbe reformation was a coi siderable force for righteousness i

his day. He bad a great brain and : will like hardened steel.

Bigoted? Intolerant? Yes. he was both, but he lived in th

age of bigotry and Intolerance, as we'

ns superstition and wide Igiuirant-i

He lived a number of years befd our fathers burned the witches I Massachusetts.

Calvin literally crushed tbe peopl

of GeneTa Into a decency to wbicl

they had been unaccustomed. H

went too far in his crushing, but s

did Savonarola in Florence, ho an

Cromwell In crushing the mobs

London. There Is one great redeemiug lea

ture In John Calvin

Behind his couvictions was his life: Call him narrow minded, even cruel

You must coucede he had always tin

courage of his convictions. It was thi

robust intensity of his beliefs linked to the power of his life that caused him to be great. Most of us moderns are weak in this very thing. We do not more than half believe what we believe, and many of us are not quite sure that we really believe anything worth while. We believe, or affect to believe. In the beliefs that are most current. Calvin stakpd h!s whole life on his beliefs. Running counter to the doctrines of his time, he put himself back

of his creed and powerfully compelled his world to accept his thinking. And thousands after 400 years still accept that teaching. It Is easy to criticise. Persons who have no abiding faith in much of anything and who. If they did profess n creed, would scarce en dure tbe sacrifice of an hour's pleasurefor the sake of it point to Calvin as a narrow bigot. WellTbe stern old Genevan certainly did lack sweetness in what Mr. Arnold eulogized as the doctrine of sweetness and light. But it does not He In the mouth of religious mugwumps to ridicule a man of power and right motive who. whai ever his failings, was no insipid critic.

(Palladium Special) Indianapolis, 'Oct 21. It looks like the Republicans will sweep Indianap

olis at the city election next month and that Lew Shank, Republican candidate for Mayor, will be elected by at least $3,000. The betting boards re-

! fleet the confidence of the Republi

cans that they are going to win. Eets are offered at even money that Shank

will be elected by 1.500, and two to

one is offered that he will be elected.

The Democrats are not taking any of these bets, and it is likely that before

many more 5ays the odds will be lengthened in the hepe cf drawing out some democratic mcney. Shank is making a whirlwind campaign, speaking from three to seven times a day and night, and the city organization is the best that the Republicans have had

in years. Shank has announced that if he is elected he will appoint Captain Martin Hyland as chief of police and Chief Coots as chief of the fire department. Capt. Hyland is the most popular member of the police force by far and is regarded as the real strength of the force. He has been a member of the force for twenty-five years and enjoys the esteem of everybody. Chief Coots is the present chief of the fire iepartment and his reappointment will be approved by the business men who own large properties In the down town district. These two announcements have made Shank many friends, and will get many votes for him. The appearance cf Tom Taggart In the city campaign in the interest of Charles A. Gauss, the Democratic

candidate for mayor, coupled with the report that all of the brewers have lined un for Gauss, has done Gauss

some harm among the church people, and it remains to be seen whether Taggart and the brewers will be able to gain as many votes for Gauss as he will lose in the other direction.

What It Has Done For Others, It Can Do For You. We have testimonials by the hun

dreds showing all stages, kinds and d-1-! grees of piles which have been cured j by Pyramid Pile Cure. I If you could read these unsolicited

letters you would no doubt go to the j

Pyramid Pile Cure at once, price fifty cents.

'f do not ask vou to do this. Send t

us your name and address and we will j

send you a trial package vy man iree We know what the trial package will do. In many cases it has cured piles without further treatment. If it proves

! its value to you order more from your i drusreist. at ."c a box. This is fair.

is It not? Simply fill out free coupon below and mail today.

FREE PACKAGE COUPON. Fill out the blank lines below with your name and address, cut out coupon and mail to the PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. If Pyramid Bldg., Marshall . Mich. A trial package of the great Pyramid PU: Cure will then be sent you at once by mail, FREE, in plain wrauyer.

Name

Street

City and State

10 USE BILLBOARDS

Church Will Use This Form of Advertising to Promote Certain Remedies.

AN A0I0 CAMPAIGN

IS A TALENTED

MAN

Dr. Roller, Wrestling Expert,

Formerly a Professor Of Medicine.

HE MAY VISIT EARLHAM

MORE "OCCASIONS" NEEDED Tbe trend in progressive America seemB to be toward more celebrations. All over the country the citizens of wide awake communities are co-operating in promoting events that attract strangers. The Hudson-Fulton celebration in New York recently was a noted example. San Francisco . this week Is holding a festival in commem

oration of the Discovery of San Francisco Bay. Richmond may rightly be

RESTORATIVE TREATMENT FOR NERVOUS MEN Comine from a source of un

questioned authority on the ail

ments or men it ts presumed u be infallible, while the profes sion generally endorse the in

Kredients and prescribe them in many different forms of various diseases, the following formula is highly efficient in quickly restoring in nervous exhaustion, melan'c-holia. anxiety, timidity in venturing, dizziness, heart palpitation. trembling limbs, insomnia, thinness, cold extremities, tired-all-in feeling and general inability to do those natural and rational acts upon which depends a man's success and happiness in social and every-day life. The instructions for mixing at home secretly so that no embarrassment may be felt, are as follows: First get three ounces of syrup sarsaparilla compound and one ounce compound fluid balm wort; mix and let stand two hours. Then add one ounce compound essence cardiol and one ounce tincture c adorn one compound (not cardamom), and mix all together. The directions are to take one teaspoonful after each meal and one when retiring until bounding health and full strength are restored. Even a few weeks will witness most wonderful results. Astonishing nervous force and equilibrium follow , the treatment, no matter how serious the case. This contatns no opiates whatever and may also be used by women who suffer with their nerves with absolute cer

tainty of prompt and lasting

Each New York Mayoralty

Nominee Is Very Active Now.

WANT REACH EVERY VOTER

(American News Service) New York, Oct. 21. Never before

has such an attempt to reach the ears of every voter in the city been made

as that which marks the present campaign for the mayoralty. Every part of the greater city is the scene of cart-

tail meetings at which the candidates

on the municipal tickets appear.

Automobiles are the favorite stands

now. A dozen meetings a day are held by each ticket at which the auto plays a leading part. At an announced time a machine speeds up to the corner selected. The car stops, the speaker

rises, delivers his address, sits down, away the car goes.

The betting on the outcome is still

light.

New York, Oct. 24. A campaign of newspaper, magazine, and billboard ad

vertising to call the attention of the

American public to the importance of

remedying certain pressing social, eco

nomlc and religious problems is to be

conducted, beginning with the new

vear. bv the combined Protestant

churches of the United States. The work is in charge of the Re.'

Charles Steizel. superintendent of the Presbvterian church department of

church and labor, and Is sponsored by

the Home Mission Council, represent

ing Protestant churches, with a combined membership of about 1$.ooo.h0

persons.

WHY NOT STOP THAT ITCH?

The Druaaists of Richmond Assure

Relief with Every 25 Cent Bottle.

Fall colds are quickly cured by Foley's Honey and Tar, the great throat and lung remedy. The genuine contains no harmful drugs. A. G. Luken & Co.

The druggists of Richmond say

that they have found indisputable

nroof that eczema can be cured not

in one or two cases, but in scores c cases which they have studied.

We would, of course, not think of making such a recommendation to our

neighbors and patrons were it not that years and years of success with D. D. D. Prescription enable us to speak of this remedy with confidence. It is a gentle, soothing wash with the mild oil of wintergreen as a base. All the

cures seem to be permanent, at any rate, a trial bottle at 23 cents will take away the itch at once instantly. We are sure cf this. Ask any druggist in Richmond.

Miss Ivy E. Woodward, M. D., has been admitted to ful membership In the Royal college of physicians, of London. It is the first time In Its history that this body has conferred the coveted M. R. C. P. on a woman, although some women have obtained the L. R. C. P., which latter indicates that the holder has been licensed to practice the medical profession.

Dr. Roller, who wrestles Alfred Medino at the Coliseum next WedcAday

Is a man of versatile talents. B.ides

being a man of brawn, he is deep

student of science.

Roller might have been a professor of

biology had he not taken to the less academic paths of activity. He has served as a professor in the University of Washington Medical school. His specialty in the pedagogic side of medicine was gynecology, and his text book on gynecology, for medical college students, is said to be a book of merit. Roller still likes the college life and the college traditions. It is not impossible that while he Is in Richmond, Dr. Roller will visit Earlham college for he is deeply interested in chemistry and biology and nothing suits him better than to loaf about university laboratories. In bis potgraduate work at Pennsy. Roller's work was of the best ever done In the Quaker institution.

Thin? Pale? Consult your doctor freely about medical mat' ten. He nouu. Trust him. Do as he says. Follow his adcice at all times, welf M;

All run down, easily tired, thin, pale, nervous? And do not know what to take ? Then go direct to your doctor. Ask his opinion of Ayer's non-alcoholic Sarsaparilla. No alcohol, no stimulation. A blood purifier, a nerve tonic, a strong alterative, an aid to digestion.

IE

t benefits.

Miss Kate Barnard state commissioner of charities and correction for Oklahoma, is making a tour of the eastern states for the purpose of studying social conditions. She first came into prominence during the statehood campaign in Oklahoma. Three of th3 planks In the state Constitution relating to child labor, compulsory education and the department of charities, were drafted by her. After being made commissioner of charities she exposed the way in which the state of Kansas

cared for the prisoners entrusted to it by Oklahoma, with the result that the contract was broken and Oklahoma now has a model penitentiary with a night school and a baseball team.

2 Automatic EtEE MlE 2 ntoml,Ie Phones Phones 1198-1199 GROCERY 1198-1199

New Sorghum Molasses Genuine Maple Syrup New Buckwheat Flour (Old Fashion Kind) New Pancake Flour Ol AU Kinds New Opal Codfish Backmeyer Kraut New Can Colorado Peas Finest on Earth. Try Them. Bee Hive Coffee, the King of 25c Coffee

Freddie Knows, Too. Anty Drudge "Freddie you have mud all over your new linen suit. What will mama say?" Freddie ' Oh she'll be hoppin' angry at first. Then she'll take it off. wash it with Fels-Naptha soap, and it'll be brand new again." Are you the wife of a machinist, railroad man, painter or butcher? Or is your husband in some such trade that means getting his clothes full of oil, grease, paint, bloodstains or dirt of other kinds? If so, you will appreciate the experience of these women: Mrs. Charles Slater, 7401 Alaska Avenue, St. Louis, writes: ' 'My husband is a fireman on a locomotive and I had the greatest trouble in getting his clothes clean until I learned that Fels-Naptha would take out all the dirt and grease in cold or lukewarm water. Now it is easy." Mrs. Charles L. Moore, of 8701 Nevada Avenue, Cleveland, writes: 'My husband is a machinist in an iron works. I find that Fels-Naptha easily removes the dirt and grease from his clothing in cold or lukewarm water. Before I learned that, washday was drudgery. Now it ia a snap." Another woman, whose husband is a painter, writes us that she never could get his white suits clean until sh tried Fels-Naptha. Still another, who is married to a butcher, says she has tried nearly all soaps and finds that Fels-Naptha is the only one that will take out all bloodstains and dirt from her husband's white aprons. Whether you have some special problem in cleaning, or have just the ordinary weekly basket of soiled clothes, you will find that Fels-Naptha in cold or lukewarm water means a great saving in time, labor and clothes. Follow directions on the red and green wrapper.

Flour is going to be scanda- J

t

lous high this winter, and you really cannot afford to bake

bread, even if you have got a

fire built. You will save money If you will send to the grocery o and get a loaf of Victor.

j NEW JEWELRY

f Our new goods are arriving

now. They embrace tne very latest and best patterns the market affords. Call and select your presents early. Haner, The Jeweler 810 Main St

Time For Hardy Shrubs Fred H. Lemon & Co. Florists and Decorators.

SPECIALTY IN HAMS. We slice them and they are strictly mild and sweet. We handle Butterine. 22c lb. e H. C HADLEY.

COLD WEATHER NEEDS

Hot Water Bottles. Cold and Kolf Cares. Caest Protectors. Mastard and Poroas Plasters, aad all Iek room, toata room, aorsery and toUet needs. See oar Flanaelette Covered Water Bottle. Toy oar Flaxseed. Wild Cherry aad Meataol Kofi Syra. CONKEY DRUG CO., Corner Ninth and Main "II It's filled at Coekey's It's rlo"

en Suirosr

SHANK

EXTENSION HEE'.

RIVETED

LONS V

THE NATURAL CURE For falling arch, flat foot, and weak ankles is the Feltman Arch Support Shoe. The extension heel, the long counter and the riveted shank provide aid and support for the feet where they art naturally the weakett. Men who find it impossible to do much walking, who can not -stand on their feet," who are constantly troubled with their feet will find a welcome relief in the wearing of the Arch Support Shoe. It sells for S5.00. Made over the Tramp Last. Chas. n. Feltanan - Two Stores