Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 355, 28 October 1909 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICII3IOND PAIjIjADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1909.
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Kadolah O. Leees .....Miter Ckarlea M. Morgan. ..Manacles- Editor Carl Merabardf Aaaaelala Editor W. R. puadatte ..Sm Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. Xa Richmond $5 00 per year (In advance) or lOz per week. MAII SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year. In advance ...... $5.00 St month;". In advance Z.0 One month. In advance 46 RURAL ROUTES. One year. In advance $2.80 S'x months. In advance 1.50 One month. In advanco .25 Address changed as often as desired: both new and old addresses must be riven. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term: name will not ba enterAd until payment Is received.
Entered at Richmond. Inulana, post office as second class mall matter.
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REPUBLICAN CITY TICKET. Mayor DR. V. W. ZIMMERMAN
Clerk BALTZ A. BESCMER
Councilnien-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 WA1DELE
Councilman, Eighth Ward JOHN T. BURDSALL
FORUMOFTHE PEOPLE Articles Contributed for This Column Must Not Be in Excess of 400 Words. The Identity of All Contributors Must Be Known to the Editor. Articles Will Be Printed in the Order Received.
and then by your vote expos them ro Influences the most evil of all? What use is It to spend our energies In building up a Greater Richmond if our municipal life is to be rotten at the core? The danger is not for the moment nor to the individual; It concerns the whole community and the generations that will come after us. In matters of party politics or in a choice between respectable men we have no wish to Interfere; but we cannot see our life work made useless and our most precious possessions menaced without appealing to you. We have no ballot with which to defend our homes. Can you not sink all differences and by your vote on Tuesday save your sons from such an example and your daughters from such danger? THE WOMANTS LEAGUE. Mrs. James W. foorrisson. Pre? Mrs. W. K. Bradbury, See'y. Mrs. George H. Knollenberg, Vice Pres. and Treasurer. (Editor's Note) This petition has been circulated generally over the city for signatures and up to the present time, we are Informed, there are about five hundred and sixty names attached.
Items Gathered in From Far and Near
Victim of the Flareback. (Pittsburg Dispatch.) The declaration of Garber, the Ohio Democratic machine leader, against Governor Harmon is under grave suspicion of being an artful scheme to boom Harmon. But perhaps Garber doesn't know it.
Rough on the Party. (Chicago Record-Herald.) "Uncle Joe" Cannon is doing his worst to bring the republican party Into disrepute by claiming to be about the only Simon-pure republican left in the land.
Was Same With the Trusts. (Kansas City Journal) Mr. Roosevelt confesses that he misses many of his shots. Even when he shoots a bull elephant he does not always hit the bull's eye.
a cure, "that I can't try your remedy for two or three weeks." It run in some families for the girls to make unfortunate marriages. When people hear of a violent kin quarrel they look as though they never did anything of the kind themselves.
When a man marries a woman older than himself the couple is never mentioned without some comment on their difference in ages.
It is hard to convince a high school student he will later encounter a lot of problems more difficult than those of algebra or geometry.
Subject of discussion at Saturday night's meeting of the Lancaster Literary society, "If a Woman Has 'Em, Should She Wear Em. or Shave?"
Plan Worldwide Union. The lithographers' unions of Europe hare had three representatives in this country for some time studying the conditions of the trade here with a view to arranging a working agreement so that mutual aid might be rendered in case of trouble on either hemisphere. They are Heron Muller of Berlin, Carl Buhlberger of Vienna and Otto Sillier of Berlin. A plan of co-operation is expected to be the outcome of the delegates' visit.
LABOR NOTES.
PRAISE IS GIVEN
TO THE
GOVERNOR
Marshall Being Congratulated for Criticisms Made of the Church.
IS GLAD OF PUBLICITY THE GOVERNOR SAYS REMONSTRANCE MADE BY METHODIST MINISTERS WILL ATTRACT ATTENTION OF ENTIRE STATE.
His Third Term Boom, for Instance. (Memphis News-Scimitar.) It's up to Teddy to discover something and nail a flag to It or bury a brass tube by it.
That Is, Ever Since Teddy Left. (Atlanta Constitution.) Dr. Eliot says there Is no hell, which is exactly what the big trusts have been thinking all along.
The Greatest Talker on Earth. (Chicago Tribune.) Obviously Mr. Jeffries would not do for the post of Minister to China.
Ought to Make a Hit in the 8outh. (Nashville American.) Harmon, harmony and hominy are beginning to shape themselves in the democratic mind for 1912.
Better Stay a Little Longer, Too. (Pittsburg Gazette-Times.) Peary should take something for it -another trip to the north pole, say.
Noise, Smoke and Smell? (Milwaukee Sentinel.) Cannon's living up to his name, eh?
TO THE VOTERS OF RICHMOND. We, the undersigned, women of Richmond, earnestly desire to call your attention to what we believe to be the vital issue in the present campaign You remember the Grand Jury invest!gatlon four years ago. That jury found that Dr. Zimmerman while mayor of the city, had been in the habit
of Issuing certificates of good health to the inmates of a disreputable house In this city which were, of course, used by them as a guarantee against police Interference. The report further says: "The Jury cannot understand the action ofc Dr. Zimmerman in this - matter, for until the recent municipal code was enacted, as mayor of the city, Dr. Zimmerman likewise had judicial powers and presided at police court, and his position as such mayor and police judge certainly required him
to use every effort to stamp out , misdemeanor and to cause the arrest of any person committing any misdemeanor and to cause the arrest of any person committing any misdemeanor within his observation, which every Inmate examined by him was doing, as he well knew. The dual position in .: which he has stood has extended over a period of several years and , certainly no defense can be given on the ground that it was purely a professional matter." If elected, he will again be police judge. He will have what he did not have before power to appoint the police board, control the police force and permit every form of vice to go unpunished. Do you think that a man with such standards of official dut v can be trusted to safeguard the city from vice and crime and what proof Is given by his life that the rebuke of four years ago has changed his standu)i4 Hi JA.t IV.. i.
uwa. iia ucricat. lurn vn merely a check In his career. If elected now, he will be justified in the eyes of his fellow-citizens. Our highest duty and privilege, as women, is so to rear our children that they shall become good men and women. But children are influenced not so much by what they an? taught as by what they see succeed. .Will you say to your son: I approve of this man's life, public and private; pattern after him? Yet this is exactly what your vote for him will mean. In our churches and schools we spare no labor to teach our boys and girls honesty and morality, to inspire them with high Ideals. Will you deliberately give the He to all their teachings by exalting to your highest office a man who will disregard the obligations of his oath of office? Can you labor for years for a Y. M. C. A. to protect your boys from evil Influences
TWINKLES
A Bitter Blow. (Pittsburg Post.)
"Why are you so bitter against
Uncle Nebuchadnezzar?" "He lost his money shortly after we named the baby for him."
What It Doesn't Do. i (Success.) Though money talks, 'tis safe to bet, Whate'er It has to say, It never has been known, as yet, To give itself away. A Silent Process. (Detroit Free Press.) It makes no noise Nor shakes the floor, When wifie bangs Her pompadour.
Cause of Discord. (Puck.)
She They do not live happily to
gether?
He No. It's the eternal struggle
between Religion and Society. He fs
as straight-backed as she is straight front.
The ballet girls of Paris bare formed a union that started with a membership of 150. A Boston trade council of cabinetmakers' finishers, wood carvers an 4 upholsterers' unions is projected. The Printers' League of America has provided for a council of adjustment for labor disputes, composed of employers and workmen. Delegates representing 2,500 local unions attended the thirteenth annual convention of the New York state worklngmen's federations. According to the reports of the officers, the membership of the Amalgamated Association of Meat Cutters and Butchers in New York state has reached 17,000 against 8,000 last year, a gain of 14.000. In New York city alone the membership of the organization was increased by ll.OOC. The treasury contains the neat balance of $28,000.
Mr. F. G. Fritz, Oneonta, N. Y.,
writes: "My little girl was greatly benefitted by taking Foley's Orino Laxative, and I thick It is the best remedy for constipation and liver
trouble." Foley's Orino Laxative is mild, pleasant and effective, and cures habitual constipation. A. G.
Luken & Co.
MASONIC CALENDAR. Thursday, Oct 2S Richmond Lodee.
No. 196, F. & A. M., called meeting, master mason degree. Refreshments.
(Palladium Special)
Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 2S. Governor
Marshall has been receiving congratulations from all over the state for the speech he made at the state charities convention at Columbus, last Sunday, in which he made the charge that the churches were shifting onto the shoulders of the state the burden of maintaining the charitable and benevolent institutions and the care of dependent children, when the churches themselves should bear their share of the burden. The governor also declared that there ought to be more old time religion In the churches of today, and that it depended on the style of a woman's drees and the size of her hat whether she would be welcome in some of the churches. The Indianapolis Methodist Ministers' Association, the following day, adopted resolutions - denouncing the governor's statements. They jumped on the governor good and hard. Since then the governor has had many call ers, who told him they agreed with him. Is Glad and Sorry. "I am sorry, in one sense, that the association of ministers found it necessary to take any action on the qupstion," said the governor. "But I am glad, on the other hand, that they did. since it will assure more agitation and publicity of the subject than would have been accorded what I alone had to say. I spoke ;off hand and perhaps did not couch my words as carefully as if I had had them written down beforehand, but I have no modification to make in what I said. "The field is open for discussion on the question of church and state charities is a wide one, and a search through it will lead to a closer scrutiny of conditions by all the people. "I was talking a few days ago to a young man, a youth of excellent character, who said he was a church member before he came to Indianapolis. I asked him about his church affiliations here and he told me he had none. I asked him why, and he told me that he was not making much money at this time, and that he could not afford to buy a seat in the church, with which
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he was affiliated when at home, and that further, he did not propose to Identify himself with a church whicn had pauper pews. I do not know that his complaint is applicable to any considerable dumber of churches in this city, but am convinced from what I know of the man that he was telling me the truth as to his reasons for not attending divine services. A Church Weakness. "It is just such instances as this that are losing the church many of our young men who ought to and would be glad to become church workers, if they felt deep down in their hearts that they were welcome, whether they were able to buy a seat or not." It is said now that the action of the ministers in adopting the resolutions denouncing the governor, was based on an incomplete report of what he 6aid in his speech at Columbus, and that if the full text of his remarks bad been at hand the resolutions might not have been adopted. The Rev. Z. T. Sweeney, of Columbus, a minister of the Christian church, and several other ministers who attended the charities conference, have declared that the governor told the truth when he said what
Anty Drudge Advises a Bride. Mrs. Bride 'Tm going to have all the latest conveniences in my kitchen: rotary washing machine, copper washboiler " Anty Drudge "Stop, my dear! Leave out that 'washboiler. ' The first thing to get is a box of Fels-Napth soap. It's the greatest of modern conveniences. It'll save you more labor and trouble than anything else. Makes boiling clothes unnecessary, for it cleans 'em in cool or lukewarm water.' By using Fels-Naptha any woman can save hours on her day's washing. She can be through with it in half the time required by the old-fashioned, washboiler, hard-rubbing, back-breaking way. And instead of being worn out, she is fresh and ready for other work, or play. Any woman can end washday drudgery for all time by using Fels-Naptha in the Fels-Naptha way, in cool or lukewarm water. Never use hot water or boil the clothes. You can tell the genuine Fels-Naptha by the red and green wrapper. Follow directions on the back. . . .
he did about the failure of the churches to do their part in the maintenance of the charitable institutions.
Wonderful Power f Suggestion. Howard Did you ever know of your own knowledge any one who was cured by suggestion? Coward Yes; I cured the old duke's Infatuation for my daughter by suggesting that he lend me $5. Judge's Library.
Mart Rllbv: Gold Medal Flour Is the ins everything
for mak-sUBanra.
DR. PARK DENTIST 12 Ncrtb Testa St.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
Sunflower Philosophy. (Atchison (Kan.) Globe.) "So many abead of you," a sick man said to a neighbor, who recommended
HOME CURE FOR CATARRH SUFFERERS A Simple Remedy That Gives Relief From a Common Ailment. (From the Guttenberg Press.) While there are a great many people who suffer from catarrh of the nose and throat all the time, this common ailment is more prevalent in Fall and Winter than at any other season of the year. Catarrh is an inflammation of the delicate membranes and is brought on by sudden changes In the weather, breathing very cold after dust, getting the feet wet, etc. Prof. Von Sternberg, a German specialist who has had unusual success in the treatment of nasal and throat diseases, recommends a solution of water and vintor. Get from vour
druggist an original package (2
ounces) of vintox and dissolve it in a pint of water. This should be snuffed up the nose once or twice daily when suffering from "cold in the head." or from chronic catarrh. When the throat or larynx is affected It
should be used as a gargle. Vintox
soothes and heals the inflammation
and clears tie passages.
FREE
With every pair of shoes you buy Friday and Saturday we will give a regular 10c. bottle of Shoe Polish Free.
TDlKB IHIdDdDSficElP SttdDIPCB The Great Cash Store Sells Cheapest There's no room for doubt these prices Indisputably prove It's true. Friday and Saturday's underselling the greatest yet.
The Nctcble Feature Of this 8tores Bargains 1 s that the ' merchandise is dependable and seasonable.
Special Two Days' Effort to Eclipse All Records In up MJSY SEdDE SECTOR!
Friday and Saturday
Need Shoes Want to Buy Them For Less ?
Attend this big two day Sale and you'll be surprised how cheap good shoes really can be bought. Read over the entire list. You'll find bargains for every one in the family.
Ladles'
$1.50 SHOES FOR $1.19. Ladies regular $1.50 value Box Calf shoeh.
Special 2 day price, pair. .
t$1.19
Sloes
$1.75 VALUES FOR $1.48. Ladies' heavy Calf shoes, good solid sole and uppers, worth $1.75. Special 2 day price $1.48 $1.25 VALUES 98c. Ladies' regular $1.25 fleece lined shoes, with heavy cloth top. Special 98c. LADIES' SHOES 98c. Good Dongola Kid, patent tip, extension sole, all sizes. $1.39 values. Special. .. .98c $1.75 VALUES $1.39. Ladies' fine Kid Shoes. All styles and sizes; exceptional values. Special $1.39 $2.50 VALUES $1.98. Shoes as good as you can buy anywhere at $2.50 in any style, lace, Blucher, patent leather, vici, etc, also button style. Special price .. .. $1.98 $3.00 VALUES $2.25. Lace or button, Kid, patent leather, gun metal, all the very newest styles. Our special price $2.25
lei's Sites
fr tm
HEAVY WORK SHOES $1.48. Men's "Finch" Work Shoes, sold every, where and always at $1.79 and mere. Our price .. .. ..$1.48 $25 AND $20 SHOES $1.9. Extra grade work shoes in black or tan, with or without tips, really $28 and $250 values. Special price $1.98 MEN'S HIGH TOPS $2.48. Equal in every respect to shoes at $3. Very well made of strictly high grade leathers. Special price $2.48 MEN'S $2.00 SHOES $1.48. Satin calf Blucher style; light, work or dress shoes. Special $1.48 MEN'S $2.50 VALUES $1.98. All styles snd all leathers, vici, box calf or gun metal. WM? er narrow tee. Exceptionally good values. Special price $1.93 $3 TO $30 VALUES AT 9225 ANO $2.50. Men ef critical teste end those who have been paying mere for dress shoes should see this big line. All the newest lasts, the newest and best leathers, lace er button style. Every kind that is desirable at a positive saving of from 75c te $1. See this special lot. $25 te $230
Special Prices on All Shoes For title Children
Boys' Calf Shoes sizes 10 to 2. $1.25 values. Special price 98c. Boys' vici and box calf shoes, sizes 10 to 2. $1.75 and $2X0 values. Special .. ... 1i48 Boys' shoes, sizes 2'z to 5. All $1.75 and $2 values. Special price $1.48
Callds Shoes. 2 to , In black or too, lace or button, vainest np to 85c Special price - - 48c
INNI
"Hoosier Store" prices on all Rubber G
Felts, etc. Get our prices before you buy.
, " ; ALWAYS MORE FOR YOUR MONEY AT
Girl's shoes in Dongola Kid with patent tip, lace er button etyle else $ to 11 . Girl's, 12 to 2 sizes in Kid, with patent tip, worth $130. Special price.. $1.23 Girl's finer Kid shoes in the newest lasts, sizes 12 to 2. $1.75 and $243 values. Now t1-
ON THE BARGAIN SHOE TABLE.
Odds and ends of shoes of every kind, probably 200 pairs end every one marked at about HALF PCICE.
TOE
sea. m
