Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 142, 29 March 1910 — Page 4

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THE RICinXOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGHAII, TUESDAY, XIARCH CO, 1010.

V--f fal rTce?sa - Published and owned br the . : , PAUUADIUlf PRINTINO CO. " Issued 7 day emcU wesk. evenings sad Sunday morning;. Of flee Corner North tb and A streets. Home Phone 113V RICHMOND. INDIANA.

adafph G, Leeds.. Bdlte Ckttlee M. Mrsaa...MaMsia EI1IM Cart Bernhardt.,....,. Aetat Kdltav : W. St. Peaadntoa ... . . . News Miter. ... SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. Ia Richmond f S.oO per year (la ad . vance) or 10c per week. ' MAIL, SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year. In advance ............ fB.Of : Six month, In advance f.CO r Una month, la advance : RURAL. ROUTES. One year. In advance ......... ...S2.S0 1 months. In advance .......... LM one month. In advance .if . Addreaa cbang-ed as often as. desired: both new and old addresses must be driven. , Subscribers wHI lAse remit with 2L.i. which should be given for a specified term; name will not be enter ; ed until payment Is received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office as second class malt matter. U ' V'"... 1 - TV ' AumI.iU. - - JMvertisers (New York City) has 4 as tais BUDueanon. vaij the nsures of otrtaiation oontained la iu report an ay the Association. aW Jins Gathered in From Far and Near Playgrounds. . ' From the Kansas City Star. One of the most important developmeats to be undertaken by the park board, if, the improvement bonds carry at the coming election, will -be the making of a number of playgrounds and the utilization of the two north end sites recently acquired for playground purposes. This prospect v should appeal to everybody in Kansas '. City to those whose children will Utilize the recreation resorts and to the general public' . Kansas City has Invested heavily in parks and boulevards, and it is proud of the investment.' But it must, in every way possible, make these properties still more useful to the city, and it is especially desirable to expand those facilities that contribute to the health and comfort and character of the poor. - Long-Hat Pin Ordinance. -From the Chicago Record-Herald. The long hat pin ordinance is not : directed against a style of dress, but against a public nuisance. It has Jbeen shown that painful wounds and even toes of sight have resulted from the maintenance of this nuisance. The ; style' might : be harmless if , each of it devotees could be consigned to a tea acre lot and duly . surrounded by ' a barbed-wire fence, but when they throng the streets and street cars, of a great city it is dangerous. It is to . be honed that women will have the i good sense to realize that the ordinance, with its fifty dollar fine, is not va. piece of freak legislation; that there were excellent reasons why an effort ' should have been made to abolish the nuisance, and that it is their duty to put the long hat pin out of business. Democracy 8peechless. From the Baltimore Sun. Astonishment is too mild a word to express the surprise of the country at the spectacle of a democratic gathering in which speeches were dispensed with- .The democrats have subsided so long on a diet of oratory and disappointment that when the minority members of congress come down to business, hold a caucus iat gets to work at once, elects , Its. members of the- new rulffe committee and -ad journs, the event is as gratifying as it is - unexpected. ''There seems to be practical leadership at last, which will be able to accomplish - results if the democrats should carry the house of representatives this fall. TWINKLES (By Philander Johnson) t A 8ure Sign. "I see you had a perfectly lovely time at the matinee," said the unfeeling:' person. , "How do you know?" asked his wife. ."Because you have cried until your nose is red." ' ' . '"Some of that music sounds very , familiar," said the musical comedy manager.- ' "Yes." replied the composer, "it's fortunate for my business that melo- ' dies are : not as easily recognized as epigrams." Uplifted. The farmer now hunts up the banks With lofty, placid brow. He leaves his coin and murmurs, "Thanks, , I need no uplift now."

Going Up. The gentle elevator man, . - Who scorns the dull ' earth-clinging ' ',' plan, Lovea to exclaim - whene'er he can, 1 - ; "Going upT ? lle saw the sunshine in the sky. , On the thermometer his eye Paused, and he gave a joyous cry: . K "Going up!" And when he heard the price of meat, And various other things to eat,

He said It still in grief complete, y. . "Going up!" , . .

A Sartorial 8uccesa. . A?Ct? BHcstn get hJ new v " ' ' " i .. X ' " -

THE STATE CONVENTION. It is assumed that conventions are, or of right ought to be. the means of expression of the voters who must support the ticket at the elections. But whether the convention is a true representation of the men in the ranks or not, the fact remains that the men who furnish the votes will test the sincerity of the party by the platform and the resolutions. The whole State of Indiana is waiting for the outcome of the Republican State convention to see if sincerity will win out. : And the. success of the Republican party next November is being decided right now in these preliminary days of casting up accounts before April 5.' By the platform it shall be known what will be the fate of the Republican party.

Two congressional districts have already told their tale.' They are: the. Sixth Missouri and the Fourteenth Massachusetts, i In. those districts reactionarism held sway in the platforms and resolutions. ' The policy was dictated from the same sources as the tariff bill and it was glossed over with all the evasion and equivocation which it is possible to put on. Into the Sixth Missouri they sent speakers and the mails were loaded down with the damning praise of the tariff bill. In Lodge's own stronghold it was apparent that all the jokers for the textile manufacturers could do was to turn away the votes from the Republican ticket dominated by standpatism. Fos8, the man who won out in Massachusetts; was .practically read, 'out of the Republican party by the overlords, because he was the tariff revisionist. The standpat agents of the textile manufacturers read him out of the party and Into congress. - . -- And so It will be in those places where the Republican party-is in the - hands of the reactionaries. The people know what that means they want a sincere statement and not evasion. So when the news dispatches bring tidings like this, what are we to believe? . ' . . v ? "The impression is spreading ampng republican - politicians here that the Indiana republican state convention, to be held in April, will endorse the Payne-Aldrich tariff law, in spite of the fact that Senator Beveridge 'voted' against it. The senator says' it is up to the convention to , draft the plank as it deems best. Before he left" for Indiana, Saturday, Jim .Watson said significantly, 'Senator Beveridge is go- ; ing to write that platform. It is up to him to say whether the tariff law shall be indorsed. If it is not Indorsed' here ? a dangerous glitter shone from Watson's steady blue eyes; ? his jaws clamped together. Of course, the only. Inference to be drawn was that something serious would happen to the senator in his campaign." -.,. If the Republican platform can be dictated by a man of sudden wealth, a corporation lobbyist, the little brother of the trusts rewarded for his services in making this same tariff, with its open and confessed iniquitous schedules, it is about time to acknowledge it and to serve notice-if he has his way about it that that was the case. And in that situation it need not be thought that this will be hushed up and kept secret; It' need not be thought that an' evasive and halfhearted treatment of the tariff is going to fool the people. They will know that it is Watson and his co-adjutors and not themselves who dominated the convention.

Here is the open and patent notice served again that if the Republican party does not carry out the Instructions of the clients of James E. Watson that they will come into the state with all the trickery of political warfare and fight the ticket from legislative candidate to state officer, .di It is a threat from a mahogany desk and a director's room this anxiety "that the party shall not be dragged into the dust by lies and deceit" this "blue-eyed dangerous glitter." f ; Boldly stated it remains to be seen whether the employers of Jim Watson and Jim Hemenway win out or whether You win out.

As it was in Missouri, as it was in Massachusetts, 'Indiana if Unseen Government has its way.

It is just possible that Jim Watson and Jim Hemenway see more in it for them if Beveridge can be defeated at the expense of the future of the Republican party in the next ten years. In that case the issue is plainer than ever. In that case it will mean that the control of the Republican party in Indiana has moved from the rank and file and is seated in a directors room with Jim Watson as the general manager. .

clothes he looks like a fashion plate." "Yes," : replied Miss Cayenne ; "especially 'In the matter of facial expression." A Restless Profession. "You make it a rule to keep your constituents interested as much as possible." 'Yes," replied Senator Sorghum. "In politics there is no use of trying to let well enough alone. If you don't give people something to think about they'll be giving you something to think about." Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A..NYE ' A MODERN ST. FRANCIS. i Some of t be ne wspa pers take occasion to gibe at James Eads Howe and his "hobo convention." - Howe is one of the remarkable men of this generation. He is the grandson of James Etids. the great engineer who devised and built the Eads bridge at St. Louis and the Mississippi river jetties. James Eads Howe inherited the fortune his famous grandfather won, a fortune of several millions. ' He gave away every cent of it. Though be was comparatively poor at the time of his inheritance, be refused to touch auy part of the money, assigning ' it over to trustees for the benefit of humanity. That was several years ago. Meantime he works as a common laborer, carryiug bis dinner bucket to and fro. associating coustantly with workingwen and seeking to aid them in every way. - Once a year be calls a convention. , Some who attend are "hoboes," attracted by the free banquet which is a part of Howe's program. But many others are self respecting men out of employment. Howe's motto is, "The manless job for the jobless man." He is trying to induce the government to establish employment agencies In the large cities, afterthe manner of Germany and France; also, in so far as possible, to colonise poor families on cheap lands. Wbo can deny the worthiness of such aims? , Like Tolstoy, who labored at the peasant's task in peasant garb that he might teach and guide, so James Eads Howe ' lives . the workingznan'a life, does the daily task of the common la borer, that he may be in touch with J tzsae t yearns to help.

so will it be in

ne Is a man of culture. Is modest, and there is about him no mark of the crank. " For years Mr. Eads has lived up to bis Ideals. It may not be your way of doing things or mine, but it is Christlike. SL Francis threw bis wealth on the altar of St. Peter's and took upon himself the vow of poverty. James Eads Howe has laid his fortune on the altar of humanity and lives a life of poverty that be may help his toiling brethren. If all of us lived up to our Ideals as sincerely as this man. heaven would gome down to earth in a day. . Some Bad Farm Conditions. Two hundred dairy farms in a dozen states were investigated aud inspected and rated according to modern 'standards of dairy sanitation. Out of the 200 places inspected the highest scoring dairy was entitled to 99.8 points out of the possible 100. The lowest scoring dairy was entitled to only 9.58 points. The average score of the 200 Inspected was 39.04 out of the possible 100 points. Some of the stables were found to be badly ventilated, badly built and too small for the number of cows kept. An examination of the milk pails and the strainers used on these 200 farms made clear the fact that these things are often not so clean as they might be and as clean as people using them imagine. Trace of old milk were found in many seams and covers, and In only fifty-eight places could ail the milk utensils be pronounced superficially clean that is. thoroughly washed and scalded and given a full .score for that condition. ; Ml'k coolers were found in use on forty-eight farms. Not over ten thermometers were found in use on the 200 farms, and In at least 195 instances positive knowledge regarding the temperature of the milk could not be obtained except by the use of the Investigator's own thermometer. . Aa Ever. "When Cholly Tan Rox proposed to me he was too rattled to say a word." Then bow did you. know be was proposing? "Oh. my dear. hla. money did all the talking r Cleveland Leader. Fooled. "De -man dat t'tnks nobody cast fool him." said TJncle Eben "staht to by foolln hrse'f right there Wash ington Star. They that stand high have many blasts to shake them.---ahskfspsere. GOLD COIN Flour The Standard of Excelence. Ask your Grocer .

John D. Junior,

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John D. Rockefeller Jr., who has In many ways shown the active spirit of his father, and no more so than In fighting a fire in the Tarrytown woods near the family- home recently. The woods are in the Rockefeller estate, and when the local fire company started to the scene they were promptly followed by young Mr. Rockefeller, who directed the H quenching of the flames from his carriage. Several of his guests also , hurried to the spot In an automobile, but no one exceeded Mr. Rockefeller in activity.

Hagopian Lifts Sympathy of Zoology Teacher Place in Classrooms fo .Wellesley, Mass., March 29. Wellesley college, heretofore sacred to the women students, has overthrown its ancient traditions, forsaken its hallowed custom and admitted a man to membership in good standing. ' Diran Hiagopian is the cause of it all. His advent is the talk of the college world, and his admission is looked upon by many as a daring Innovation. This new college "co-ed" goes to and from his classes, as does his fair classmates. His encroachment upon the t hitherto inviolate college girls' sphere was made possible by the intercession of Dr. Mary Alice Willcox, head of the department of zoology, and has received the sanction of the college faculty. Hagopian is an Armenian refugee. He is said to be of noble family, and was taking a post-graduate course at his alma mater near Constantinople when the recent Turkish massacres broke out His family wiped out In a night, their property confiscated, his own life spared by a miracle, the refugee made his- way to the coast and emA File Can't loucn it Axle flint on the slides over the

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would over smooth glass. But the

inside is soft, or

bend or break under 6,000 pounds pressure.

The hardened outside is wear through in twenty years' use. and the box with -its sleeve of

smoother and harder with use, show no peceptible wear after thousands of miles of running. They will never heat or cut OHCLDOM

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. The first long distance axle in fifteen years. Suitable for any ' grade of work. You should learn more about this marvelous axle . if you wish to have the supreme satisfaction of driving a perfect vehicle under the lightest draft . y Consumers, if you want the best on the market write us today. For no vehicle can give complete satisfaction unless equipped with ' Ton-Don Axles. Ask your dealer to show it to you. ' . Also made in Concord Express Style for delivery wagons. Sheldon Asfe Co., WiHDcrre, Pa.

For this purpose you can obtain nothing betterthan "Sapolin products. They are ready to use and so easily applied that anyone can get good results with them. Use Sapolin Floor Stain, a combined stain and varnish, on your ' floors, rug edgings and furniture. It comes In several beautiful wood colors. . For' iron beds, odd chairs, etc, use Sapolin Enamel, which comes in many delicate shades of color. Ask for sample of White EnamelIt is free. Sapolin Gold Enamel stands washing and gives a beautiful finish to picture frames, statuary, etc. eta cd Ka ais erus stc itz cacn ztzz

Good Fire Fighter

We lies ley Ban in Women's College Wins a r a Bashful Armenian. barked for this country . He finally landed In Wellesley and got a position in the Wellesley Inn. v Dr. Willcox met him and became impressed with his earnestness, and sympathized with him in his difficulties with the English tongue. At her request he was admitted as a special student during the lectures in literature and modern language. Dean Tufts says there is no movement to admit men to the college, but the bars were lowered for Hagopian because he was a worthy young foreigner desirous of thoroughly mastering English. He already speaks six languages. Hagopian is mum on the subject of American girls, has no matrimonial ambitions and studiously avoids the acquaintanceship of his colleagues. : ' . There will be an ocean motorboat race from Havana to Atlantic City this summer. The contests will bring the craft home after the Philadelphia to Havana race ends. The Seaside Yacht club of Atlantic City has offer ed a $900 cup as a trophy. THE Ton-Don is as hard as outside. A file spindle like it natural, and will not so thick that it will not Yet the file-proof spindle Phosphor Bronze, which grows

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CASE 0017 AT ISSUE

Contest Over tha 7i!l of the Late Mrs. W. H. Harris Is Progressing. RECEIVER IS ASKED FOR The case of Lizzie Harvey against Louisa Wtggs and several others, for partition of real estate, which Mrs. Sarah Jane Kerlin Harris bequeathed to her husband. William H. Harris, an inmate of Michigan City penitentiary. just before her death, two weeks ago. is being placed at issue very rapidly in the Wayne circuit court. The plain tiff asks that a receiver be appointed by the court to take charge of the farm that it may be exploited this summer. Practically every defendant in the case filed answer to the complaint in the circuit court Each and every one of the defendants state in their ans wers that William H. Harris. John T. Alexander and Rrchael Hart have no Interest in the estate. The last two are heirs to property given Mrs. Alexander by Elijah Kerlin. her father. Those who filed answer further stat ed that only the grandchildren of Eli jah Kerlin have claims on the estates of Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Alexander. The will of Mr. Kerlin provided for these two daughters during their life time, and also stated that the proper ty was to be given to his grandchildren after the death of his daughters. The answers of the defendants, concurring with the complaint as they do. practically makes these defendants, plaintiffs in the partition proceedings and petitioners for the appointment of a receiver for the property. , Did as He Was Told. An Impecunious constituent of a Chicago alderman called upon the latter at his office one day and requested the loan of a dollar. A two dollar bill was the smallest the alderman bad. - This be banded to the culler, saying: "Go to the cigar stand downstairs, gefa fifteen cent cigar, keep a dollar and bring me the change. In a few minutes the visitor reappeared, puffing contentedly at a cigar, and hsnded the alderman 85 cents. Noticing s peculiar expression on the alderman's face, be withdrew the cigar from bis lips long enough to inquire: "Did yon mean that the cigar was for you or me?" "Get out of herer was all the dis gusted politician could say. Water Bills due April L 27-10t Public Sols. We, the undersigned, will offer at public sale at the canning factory, 529 South, 5th street, Richmond, Ind., Saturday, April 2. 1910, commencing . at 10 o'clock, the following described property: 14 head of horses, farm Implements, harness, wagons, buckets, - tomato crates, empty barrels, tanks iron kettles, split fence posts, hoi bed sash, tomato setters, lot of tables and household goods, scales, about 400 gallons cider vinegar, to be sold In any quantity. Canned goods and lota of other goods too numerous to mention. Terms made known on day of sale. t In case of bad weather, sale to be held under shelter. Vanderbeck A Sons. Auctioneers n. C. Bc2rC& fi Sea Scu&y City Cbtsrrr solves the smoke oakence on Wall Paper, Fresco, Calcimine, Window Shades and Gilt Frames. r. ADAL2Q D2UG QTOUE ffTH AND MAIN. "THE REXALL TORfcV

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fqainJclm mulls ENTTinE WEnEA PEttJD The Health Flour, all the wheat that's good to eat. STQAl7n7.nn77.S STOA wTCTlHO Home grown Cauliflower, Green Beans. Cucumbers. Spinach. 'Asparagus, Green Onions. Radishes. ' Fancy Cluster Table Raisins, Shelled Pecans, Ec3ei Wal

nuts, Shelled Almonds, Shelled Dates, "Cresco- Preserved Figs

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At several off cur brca factories, end to &ow the employes of Richmond that it is to their interest to trcdo at cur store whsthcr it bs Clothing, Dry Goods, Carpets, Shoes, cr cny of the hundreds of ctlt er lines we carry in cur 10 big departments. We especteSy invite your inspection off thess lines. In addition to already having the lowest prices cn h?i crads merchandise in tho city we have arranged to make the balance off this week a record breaker, riff values count, and we know that is what every man is locking ffcr. ST0HE OPEN TONIGHT to accommodate thoes who cannot c-t here in the day time

Tcmerrow, Ucdncs day, UzrCi SO, is Red Letter day. 10 S. Ct H. Green Trading Stamps . to ' everyeno entcrfc cur store. sea: : in We ere cut off tea fcli rent district 7 Filberts. Nuts in the CheS ia glass, extra fine. a mm mm m mm .. m lissa

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