Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 91, 6 February 1910 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1910.
Tho Dirhmnnri Palladium
V 1IVIIIIIUIIU UIIUUIHIII
mil CHii.Tiliinni
Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PKINTINO CO. taauod 7 day each week, evenings and Sunday morning. Office Corner North 9th and A street. Home Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.
Rudolph O. Leeda Editor Cfcarlea M. Morsaa. . .Managing Edltnr Carl Bernhardt Aaaoelate Editor W. R. Pouadatone Newa Editor.
SUBSCRIPTION TERMS
in nicnmona a,uy per jcai vi" vance) or 10c per week MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year, !h advance $5.)0 Six months. In advance 2.60 One month, in advance 45 ItURAL ROUTES. One year. In advance $2.50 Six months, in advance 1.G0 One month, in advance 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 be entered until payment is received.
Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mall matter.
4
Hi Association of American j
Advertiser (New York City) has
examined and certilied to the circulation 1 ot this publication. Only the figures of 4 circulation contained in its report we i
gwirantsjei fey the Association.
mm. xjw x
Secretary. J
lie ms Gathered in From Far and Near
Railroaods on the Water Wagon . . New York World. The Nebraska railroads are on the water wagon. They have been placed there by the supreme court acting on the application of the state railway commission, which the anti-saloon league induced t move in the matter. Last winter the legislature passed a law which was approved by Governor Shallenberger, providing that whenever liquor was sold on trains the road should pay a county license of $1,000 on every dining and buffet car in which liquor was sold. Till n fpw rtavs aern this law rp-
malned a dead letter. Then Attorney-General Thompson got busy and went into the supreme court where on behalf of the state rairoadi comission he secured an injunction restraining the sale of liquor in any and all cars unless the railroads paid the county licenses. . None of the companies have paid In any of the counties. There was no oral testimony introduced, the dining car wine lists telling the whole story. Railroad officials say the companies will not pay the licenses' to the several counties. They declare that the annual sales would not amount to as much as the license. The Burlington lines pass through 57 counties in the state and would have to pay over $37,000. The Union Pacific passes through 24 counties and the Northwestern through 32. The result is a great increase in private flasks.
THE INNOCENCE OF MR. WA TSON Mr. James E. Watson denies that he had anything to do with the Rushville convention. 1. He had a sick headache the night before when someone called him up over the telephone to ask him to go to the caucus bn resolutions. 2. Someone told him on Tuesday morning that he had been picked for permanent chairman to which he objected strenuously. 3. He suggests that someone write to every delegate and ask him if he had anything to do with his selection, either as delegate or on the committee on resolutions. 4. He clinches this by saying that "the Palladium's own man approved the resolutions." 5. He even told Mr. Bassett, when he learned that there was a ' division" in the resolutions committee, that he was willing that Taft, Barnard and Beveridge be endorsed "and he so reported to the committee." 6. Moreover, if a speech "defending" the tariff is to be considered an attack on Beveridge, "there will be many attacks on him." Therefore Mr. Watson is innocent.
He was attacking no one. He had nothing to do with the convention or the resolutions; he did not know that he was to be chairman until someone told him. It was no fault of his that Mr. Morgan signed the resolutions nor that the resolutions were adopted on the floor of the convention without debate. No one can expect a more satisfactory answer from Mr. Watson. It is no fault of his that having left his law practice in Washington, he should unsuspectingly have happened into his old home town just when the convention was coming on. He was made chairman against his will, though still suffering from the effects of a headache of the night before which kept him away from the caucus on resolutions held by several gentlemen who just happened in. He simply made a speech on the tariff just an ordinary citizen who did not like to see the party dragged in the dust by lies and deceit. He was not attacking anyone. He was not attacking Senator Beveridge. It was clearly not his fault that his personal friend Moffett threatened to leave the committee room if the resolutions made in the caucus were not adopted. It was not his fault or that of his friends that the resolutions of the committee were adopted by the convention without debate. He would like to make speeches all over the state, but is afraid that they might be misinterpreted Into an attack on the senior senator.
Meanwhile Mr. Watson is neglecting his practice in Washington. The Hon. Jim Watson is the victim of coincidences "mere shreds of suspicion?" as Mr. Taft said ofMr. Ballingcr. By another coincidence the same thing happened in the district of the Hon. Jim Hemenway.
only part of the machin? he can exercise without its costing him a lot of money."
Superstitious Dread. Oh, what's the use of hoping When times like these draw nigh? The groundhog saw his shadow And a comet's in tho sky.
"What I arlmirp nhnut a hnss " said
Uncle Eben, "Is de way he roes ahead havin' hoss sense, 'stid o' bein' influenced by some of da sporty folks dat drives "im."
Can't Hollingsworth Say Something? Raleigh News and Observer. The Idaho senator must have become suddenly dumb. The wife of Stonewall Jackson dined at the white house last week and the senator has not once called out the troops to suppress the Secessionists!
Should be Named Dr. Cook. Chicago Record Herald. "Comet A1910" is not expected to ever again appear to inhabitants of the earth. In other words, it is expected to drop as far out of sight as Rudyard Kipling or Anthony Hope is.
Will Need Another Vindication. Galveston News. Mr. Glavis's testimony may not establish the charge of venality against Secretary Ballinger, but it seems likely to dim the luster of the halo handed to the Secretary by Mr. Taft.
Has Nothing on Jack. Denver Republican. It is said James J. Jeffries is a direct descendant of "Hanging" Jeffries, the famous English Judge. But maybe Jack Johnson is a descendant of the Ahkoond of Swat
Fell Easy Victim to It. Jxniisville Courier-Journal. Charles W. Morse, who is said to show only the most languid interest In his new work at Atlanta, might be examined by the hookworm experts.
The Figurer. This world contains a lot of folks Who fret us more or less By poor or misdirected jokes Or ill-timed seriousness. But he who brings the deepest doubt Is that unfaltering one Who gets a lot of figures out To prove "it can't be done!" The proudest schemes of progress fall And shattered hopes lie thick, When calmly he proceeds to call On his arithmetic. More hideous than the vandal shout, His voice spoils all our fun, When he brings rows of figures out To prove "it can't be done!" Your plans of glory, though they be Both lofty and immense. Will shrivel like a leaf when he Says "think of the expense!" He's Disappointment s special scout And Hardluck's favorite son, This man who get3 his figures out To prove "it can't be done!"
ACT IN GRAFT CASE
(American News Service! Chicago, Feb. 5. Fifteen indictments in the two Lawrence avenue intercepting sewer graft scandals were returned by the grand jury today. Four indictments were returned as expected in the Shale Rock scandal, for M. H. McGovern, contractor, John E. Ericson, city engineer, Ralph Bonnell, former assistant city engineer, and Paul Redieske, former assistant commissioner of public works. The charge is conspiracy to cheat and defraud the city and to obtain money by false pretenses. The eleven defendants indicted previously in the section "N" concrete graft charges were reindicted, the former true bills having been found weak.
FREE TO THE
BENNETT GORLON SHOOIS A SHAFT AT "CANNONIS (Continued From Page One.)
non in the caucus. How utterly insufficient is this request! Note the pledge made by Congressman Nelson of Wisconsin, as reported on Page 23 of this week's Collier's. That is the kind of a pledge Mr. Barnard should be made to give, plus one thing. That one thing is: He should be made to promise he will not support any candidate, either in the caucus or after it, who stands for Cannonism. Cannon is only a mouthpiece, a creation. Any other man under the system would be as bad as for example, Mann, Tawney, Dalzell, Payne or others mention
ed for Cannon's place. It is Cannon
ism the people are against and they should compel Congressman Barnard to go on record against it, The System,
or they should defeat him by a candi
date who is against The System, even
though that candidate be a democrat. It's Time to Wake Up. It is time the American people were getting awake to the fact that so long as they let the Privileged Interests and The System disregard party lines and symbols while they themselves divide their forces the result will be just what we have been having tariff upward, high prices, inferior goods, land stealing, Alaskan scandals, sugar trust robbery of the custom houses, rebates, impure food, central banks (now proposed) while they, the people, continue to pay the freight and vote the party ticket. J. BENNETT GORDON.
ANTI-TRUST LAW AMENDMENT ASKEt
Samuel Gompers Sounded the Call Today, for a General Union Demand.
RESULT OF HATTERS' FINE
POINTS OUT THAT LABOR ORGANIZATIONS ARE NOT FORMED FOR PROFIT, BUT TO PROTECT THE MEMBERS.
(American News Service) Washington, Feb. .". Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor toda,' soiiu. ft the call for a general demand throughout the nation for an amendment to the Sherman anti-monopoly law, under which L'o Union hat makers were yesterday fined at Hartford, Conn., i:i the famous Dan bury hatters case. They were prosecuted under the Sherman law. Mr. Gompers said: "Labor organizations have been brought under the Sherman anti-trust law by the interpretation of the United States supreme court, the voluntary organization of the workers governing their personal rights. A labor organization is not organized for profit or to deal in the products of labor. What the Purpose Is. It simply undertakes to aid the men in the protection of their personal rights. The court has decided that such an association, organized not for profit, but for the benefits of their personal rights and interests, comes under the operations of the Sherman antitrust law. It is repugnant to the very purposes of the Sherman anti-trust law. I hope and expect an appeal will be taken, but after all, the injury involved is in the decision of the supreme court of the United States, under which the labor organizations are brought under the Sherman anti-trust and which will have to be rectified by an act of congress. "The thing for which the hatters' union is now mulcted is damages and for which any labor organization may be mulcted is distinctly legal in Germany and was so decided by its highest judicial court and by the trades dispute act passed by the British parliament in 10O. It is also true in nearly every European continental country. Surely what is legal for the working people under monarchies and empires, should not be illegal in the republic of the United States."
HIS BAIL IS FIXED
(American News Service) Webster, Mass., Feb. 5. Two hundred thousand dollars was fixed as the bail today for John A. Hall, former treasurer of the Southbridge Savings bank by Judge Clark in the Webster District court. Hall was unable to raise the increased amount of bail today and was taken to the Summer street jail in Worcester later and locked in a cell. The amount alleged to have been stolen is half a million but it is expected that the figures named today will be allowed to stand until Hall comes up for trial. Hall waived examination and pleaded not guilty. The
! entire proceedings did not take more
than half an hour.
Anonymous. "Now, Johnny," said the teacher of the juvenile class to a pupil, "anonymous means without a name. Can you give me an example?" "Yes, ma'am," answered Johnny. "The baby that arrived at our house yesterday is anonymous." Exchange.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Ought to Suit Peary. New York World. Returning to active service in the navy, Mr. Peary will find a feud in progress so much like a north pole dispute as to be real homey.
BBFTIBEl
7 WINKLES
(By Philander Johnson.) A Form of Popularity. "My husband is one of the most popular men in his club," said young Mrs. Torkins, proudly. "I'm sorry to hear that," replied Miss Cayenne. "It indicates that ho n3er wins."
Futile Dissension. "So you and your husband are always quarreling?" said the family lawyer. "Yes,1 answered the young woman. "I forget the subject of the first quarrel. But we have been quarreling ever sinc over who was to blame for it."
A New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Operation, Pain, Danger or Loss of Time. T hsre a new Method that cures rupture and I want you to use it at my expense. I am not trying to sell you a Truss, but offer you a cure that stays cured and ends all truss-wearing and Can iter of strangulation forever. No matter whetner you have a single, double er navel rupture or one folio wine an operation, my Method is an absolute cure. No matter what your a tre nor how hard your work, my Method will certainly cure you. I especially want to end it free to those apparently hopeless cases where all forms of trusses, treatments and operations have failed. I want to show everyone at my own expense, that mv Method will end all rupture suffering and truss-wearing for all tune. This means better health, increased physical ability and Ion err life. Mv free offer is too important to neglect a single day. Write now and begin your cure at once. :Send no money, bunply mail coupon below. Do it to-day.
Another Economist. , "What makes Bligglns keep tooting his automobile horn?" "He's economizing. The horn is the
IroCHT fl LEFT
l ii i
1 II Same AddrtMt
FREE COUPON
Mark location of Rupture on Diagram aod mail to
OR. W. $. RICE TOOMain St., Adam. V. V
Ag Tune Ruptured
Cau-M of Rupture
Wm. W. Jones to Elizabeth J. Wallace, lots 1 and 2 Dublin, .270. Rost. Marshall, Bartel Co., to Henry C. Starr, trustee, part S. E. quarter section 32. township 14, range 1, $4.30O. Oliver Test to Oliver W. Test, lot 44, A. W. Bliss addition city, $175. Oliver Test to Oliver Test, lot 43, A. W. Bliss addition city, ?;s,XH. Clayton Nicodemus to Florence M. Smith, part S. E. quarter section :;i. township 14, range 1, Wayne township. ?2.2o. Dickinson Trust Co. to Stella Eadler. lot 253 Earlham Heights, addition city. Dickinson Trust Co. to Stella Eadier, lot 254 Earlham Heights addition city. Almyrtle Boswell to Emaline H. Elleman, lot 47, Wm. F. Manley's Addition city, $2,500. Dickinson Trust Co.. to Isom Elleman, lot 34 Earlha mlleights addition city. $120. Anna E. P. Fletcher to Joseph P. Iliff, lots 57 and 58, Sarah Sanders addition city, $2.3o. Chas. I. Stotelmyer, et al to Mable Ulrich, part X. E. quarter section 22. township 17. range 12, Jefferson township, 2,200. Fred Shock to Howard F. Burk et al. part X. E. and X". W. quarter section 21, township 17, range 12. Jefferson township, $11S,030.50. Angeline McDivitt to Alexander Paxton, et al, lots 2S and 2t, O. Kinsey's addition to city. $700. Isaac P. Chenoweth to Humphrey Mikesell. et al., part S. E. quarter section 21, township 15, range 1, and part X. E. quarter section 20, township 13, range 1, Boston township, $7,000. Dickinson Trust Co.. guardian, to Rufus Raper, part X. E. quarter section 20. township 13, range 1 and part N. W. quarter section 21, township 13, range 1, Boston township, $4,750.13.
TEZ-For Sore Feet
Tired, Aching, Swollen, Smelly, Sweaty Feet? Corns, Callouses or Bunions? Use T!Z. It's Sure, Quick And Certain.
You Will Enjcy Usir.3 TIZ. The Most Pleasant Remedy You Ever Tried and Moreover It Works. At last here is instant relief and a lasting permanent remedy for sere ft-et. Xo more tired feet. Xo more aching feet. Xo more swollen, bad smelling, sweaty feet. Xo more corns. Xo more bunions. Xo more callouses, no matter what ails your feet or what under the sun you've tried without getting relief, just use TIZ. TIZ is totally unlike anything else for the purpose you ever heard of. It's the only foot remedy ever made which acts on the principle of drawing out all the poisonous exudations which cause sore feet. Powders and other remedies merely clog up the pores. TIZ cleanses them out and keeps them clean. It works right off. You will feel better the very first time it's used. Use it a week and you can forget you ever had sore feet. There is nothing on earth that can compare with it. TIZ is for sale at all druggists, 25 cents per box or direct if you wish from Walter Luther Dodge i Co., Dodge Bldg.. Chicago, In.
TO THE REPUBLICANS OF WAYNE CO. I am asking the Republicans of Wayne County for the nom.nation Jot Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court, at the primary to be held Monday, February 7. I feel that I am justified in asking this honor at the hands of the Republicans of Wayne County, having been for thirty years an active party worker. I have made a thorough canvass of the County, and while it of course, been impass.ble to see personally every voter, the cordial reception accorded my cand:dacy is a matter of great satisfaction to me. I ask your careful consideration at the primary, Monday. Very respectfully, THOMAS R. JESSUP
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
the Republican nomination.
JOINT SENATOR.
WALTER S. COMMONS Candidate for Joint Senator from Wayne and Union counties, subject to Republican nomination.
CHARLES W. STIVERS, of Union county, is a candidate for joint senator from Wayne and Union counties, subject to the Republican primary election.
WILLIAM MATHEWS Candidate for Assessor of Wayne County, subject to the Republican Xomination.
COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
ROBERT X. BEESOX Candidate for Commissioner of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination for the second term from the Western District.
B. II. UNDERMAX Candidate for
Commissioner of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination from the Middle District.
THEODORE P. CRIST Is a candidate for County Commissioner (Western District). Subject to the Republican Xomination.
Lecture and pictures on the Panama Canal at the Palace Theater. Very instructive to school children. Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday.
52t
REPRESENTATIVE
ELMER S. LAYMOX Candidate for Representative of Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination.
LEE J. REYXOLDS, ot Hagerstown. candidate for Representative of Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination.
FILLMORE F. RIGGS (Bookkeeper For C. & IV. Kraccr Co.) Candidate For COUNTY CLERK Subject to Republican Nomination, Monday. Feb. 7. 1911.
WALTER S. RATLIFF Candidate for Representative of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination.
JOINT REPRESENTATIVE.
JOHN C. HARVEY Candidate fc Joint Representative, from Wayn and Fayette counties, subject to th Republican Xomination.
A Carload of Indiana Horses CONSISTING OF Good Mares, 3 and 4-Year-Old Colts, and Checks Will arrive Sunday Morning HARM. SHOFEll'S LIVERY DARN Sixth and South A Sts.
TREASURER.
ALBERT R. ALBERTSON Candidate for Treasurer of Wayne County, subject to Republican nomination.
COUNTY SHERIFF JESSE A. BAILEY Candidate for sheriff of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination.
EZRA X. THOMPSON Candidate for sheriff of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination.
LAFAYETTE LARSH Candidate for sheriff of Wayne county subject to the Republican nomination. One term of two years only.
L
DR. J. A. WALLS, THE SPECIALIST 21 South Tenth SU, Richmond. lad. Office days Monday. Tuesday. Friday and Saturday ol each week. Consultation and on month's Treatment Fro. TREiTS DI8EAPE8 OP THE THROAT, IA7NOS.
KIDNEYS. UVER and HLAPDER. RHEUMATISM.
DYSPEPSIA Bd DISEASES OF THE BUKJD. Eplinv t or f&lUnr flta. Cancer. Privat and Nervous
ni.paM Female Diseases. Lobs or vitality trora ini rn tuna, i nc. r iiuu! Figure in" eratlona of th Reotum. without detention from bu.lne-a. RUPTURE POSITIVELY CUKEU AI GUARANTEED.
OSCAR E. MASHMEYER Candidate for sheriff of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination.
COUNTY CLERK.
FRAXK M. WHITESELL Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination.
GEO. MATTHEWS Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination.
WM. K. CHEE3MAX Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination.
F. F. RIGGS Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination.
W. E. EIKEXBERRY Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination.
THOMAS R, JESSUP Candidate for Clerk of Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination.
COUNTY CORONER. DR. R. J. PIERCE Candidate for Coroner of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination.
DR. MORA S. BULLA Candidate for Coroner of Wayne county, subject to tbe Republican nomination-
COUNTY AUDITOR.
I S. BOWMAN Of HagerstowB. candidate for Auditor of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination.
ALBERT E MOREL Candidate for Auditor of Wayne County, subjectto the Republican nomination.
COUNTY ASSESSOR.
ALBERT OLER Candidate for Assessor of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination.
THOS. F. SWAIN Candidate for As- " sessor of Yrayne county, subject to
"PLUMS." The Standard Smoke! Standard, like the clothes you wear and the food you eat. A cigar ot Imported Tobacco that talks QUALITY to your taste and SURPRISE to your appreciation. That's why the smokers of good cigars smoke
HAVANA
PLUMS
99
Life is just one thing after anotherthe last thing in a cigar has created a sensation. So forget the last "lemon" you smoked. Try a
PLUM
99
9 Smooth, Mellow Cigars for
Ceimlls
For Sale by oil Dealers
ED. A. FELTMAN 609 Hain Distributor Phone 2039
