Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 144, 31 March 1910 — Page 4

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the nicnnoim palladium aud guw-teixgdaii, xnunoDAY, ziAncn 31, 1010.

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; FttbUsaed and owned by the - ftlXbAEIUM PRINTING CO. llHWi T4ri each week, evenings and Sunday morn Inc. Office Corner North ttb and A streets. Una Pbone llll. RICHMOND. INDIANA. .

Btit)I O, Lm4i ;,MHM Cfeaste M. Merge .aaas1a WUtnr Cevt Berafcaras. ,,.t,..lniHiH Mm W. B. ea4aeae. . '. .... .News SMUtee. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. . la Richmond fl.to -per , year ln v advance) or 10c per week, - MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year. In advance ............ f.o ;Mx months. In advance .......... S.SS One month, la advance ........... . .4$ RURAL ROUTBJ& One rear, in advance . .......... .ft.Bt 81 months. In advance 1.19 die month. In advance .......... M - Address changed as often as desired; both new and old addresses must be riven. Subscribers will nlra.se remit with rdei. w to,cn should be given for a specified term; name will not be enter e until payment la received. -: Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office as, second class mall matter.

' The Association of American Advertisers (New York City) hat ; siasrtnsd sad oarttSsd to the etossisttsa at tkis publication. Only tbs Gsns of ' SmmSmi jTitJriiirtiart ' utMtlHMimM

items Gathered m From Far and Near Baths for the 8snate. From the Chicago Post. . - ; Rome's fall began when the great baths were built. It was Maecenas, friend of Augustus, who constructed the first swimming pool, and Agrippa, another coteraporary, was the first to : build "thermae." on an elaborate and systematic plan. When Roman decadence was most gorgeous there were over 800 public baths in the city. We h wonder: whether the senators of the United States realize the grim warn log, which the experience of civilization's first senators would convey. We . wonder whether they are doing wisely In Installing marble - baths and sala ried bathkeepers in the new senate building at Washington. It is never well to turn a necessity into at luxory. We would bid the senators beware. Chicago at least knows full wll the civic injury that may develop' ffom a "bathhouse." J ' i. v t ' . 'J I " Guard the Girls. From the New York Tribune. .The murder of Ruth Wheeler, the young girl who was sent in search of employment from a business school by her teacher to the room of a man of Whose character nothing was known, K&tsht profitably direct the attention of such institutions to the response bility which, they assume in making is themselves avenues of communication between innocent young women and , villains who seek their destruction Perhaps a requirement of references cad ' an Investigation of prospective 4: employers and their places pf business i would be salutary adjuncts of such - schools. Especially should caution be J observed about sending girls to flats cad other places not well known as calces, where legitimate employment I customarily offered. v v .The General Delivery. From the Chicago Journal. ) A, young girl in Massillon, Ohio, is charged with slaying her older sister order' to: obtain possession of her new clothes and hat. For more than as year she had been receiving mail at the general delivery , wicket. ' More tan one girl's road to a bad life has &en by, way of the general delivery. Hatty the divorce that has grown from the same source. . Some regulation of the general delivery of letters to girls and young women, and, in fact, to any one who possesses a house address, is highly desirable. Protection for Automobiles. From the Brooklyn Eagle. ' The Joy rider will not be a perma sent feature of automobtling risk. The Inventor will find a way to lock some vital part of the machine in the safety deposit vault of the garage office sub ject to the owner's call only. An au temobile ought to be as safe from tres pass as a private mug In a barber shop,. Harsh Words. From the Buffalo News. .-- Uncle Joe has no monopoly of harsh language..' His opponents are, as ban dy at it as he is and it is no credit to either side. TWINKLES (By Philander Johnson.) v A Hard-Luck Story. ' -"Politeness always pays." "I don't know about that" replied r. Hunting Work, "I had a pretty rod position as a bill collector. But t xnade myself so agreeable that peo

':.;;"X held out on payments for fear I'd V.'tsjp calling on them." . , t

' In the Game. ' -. '"''I am in the hands of my friends."

sd the political sidestepper. . "v:: Yes,', replied the harsh . criUc. .;3Mi very time , your friends look :'ttsr their hands they seem impatient ?'J - Jf now. deat'V - ' -

1: - ' A- Passing Fear. T5 L Kna. jwi uro any anvenrares wane ? rinj in th Wettr. . ' 3ly one." repM Mr. Chugginsv 7-'rl. ra. ttrl out trow the

EXCEPT INDIVIDUALLY. Sim Watson labored long and hard yesterday over in Davies County "confining his attention almost exclusively to the tariff. The obvious reason for his efforts on this, as on all other similar occasions, was to embarrass Beveridge by trying to persuade the 'convention at Washington, Indiana, to say nice things about the Payne-AIdrlch tariff, bill. As we were saying, Jim' Watson labored wag and hard (and he needed to) to defend the tariff bilL But after Our Jim finished there was no men- . tion of his labor in the resolutions. The Davies county men stood upon their bind legs and said that they "commended the course of Senator Albert J. Beveridge, the senior United States Senator from Indiana, and fin ; lshed by pledging their representatives In the legislature to vote for bis reelection. s- s ' , - And the Payne tariff went by unmentioned. , Of course, Mr. James E. Watson was merely at Washington, Indiana, by the merest chance, just as he was down at Rushville.? ; He was still laboring in the interests of the Republican party "with no interest in this matter except individually as a Republican. -

MERELY AN INQUIRY. "There are always some fellows that want to disturb the existing order of things. There ara always fellows Who don't make any money that get mad because you do.' James Eli Watson, at Washington, Ind. '.

Perhaps Mr. Watson will now come out with a certified accounting and explain that statement more fury- Mr, Watson Is quite correct if he means that there are some people wh do not approve of the tariff just be- . cause a few men (in comparison with the rest of us) have capable representatives in Washington, D. C, who have made a good thing out of the tariff. Mr. Watson helped to make ths tariff, but he was not representing ' the people when he did it. He Is now defending the tariff who is he representing? s .... .. .

SAM BLYTHE'S ARTICLE. : Sam Blythe hit the gong in the center and made it ring true in that, little estimate of "Insurgent Indiana" in this week's Saturday Evening Post. It not only ought to be read but it will be read. ' And those wh have been following Blythe's work in the Saturday Evening Post will not accuse him of being a prejudiced writer. He has been following reactionary lines pretty strenuously. He has sized up things about right in this part of the state and all the others that we know much about. There are a whole ; lot of things that Blythe says Indiana people think and think hard about, that we have not been reticent in saying ever since this fight began. That Blythe should find that condition is not surprising, but nevertheless pleasing.

bushes in a lonely spot and robbed us of all our jewelry." - "Weren't you terribly frightened?" 3 "Only ; for a moment. We thought at first we were being held up by some village sheriff for violating speed laws." - The American Tourists. A hundred thousand, more or less, Toward Europe will be on their way: , No wonder mid the storm and stress, We hear that Paris still Is gay! "Very often," said Uncle Eben, "de man dat keeps talkin 'bout hard luck is tryin' to make conversation take de place of hard work." ' The Merry Spring. Bring the camphor liniment And pass the pills along; Let me smell some pungent scent With flavor strangely strong. Tie a bandage 'round my neck And give me drinks severe. Feed me capsules by the'peck r The merry spring is here! Place me In an easy chair In helplessness complete; Have water boiled with cruel care And in it place my feet. And let the gargle and the spray Be waiting ever near To celebrate the gladsome day " The merry spring Is near. Ye seekers of the fragile prize . Of pleasure as it flees Can never hope to realize Life's true intensities. The reveler in the gilded shows 1 Moves on in thoughtless cheer 'Tis he that grieves . at home who knows ' The merry spring is here! When improvements now under way on the Trans-Siberian railroad are completed the distance from Paris to Pekin will be 0,300 miles, instead of 7 S00 miles, over .. the present line through Harbin and Mukden .

The nickel merely J j0: measures the, price J mf not the quality! h Gts7 cent cigars 4 if aren't better looking or ( better made. The Y A i f l aMmy Beoi?jiel T Vl rre ihMwI cigarwith aloe; Qer fj Jl . j and an imported wrapper mirci rk;Jf ' .therefore, b thsjf rrf rank. IncvtzjtmtjY , . II I V jn town and zllcad in tverj Qs&.jSr

RUSSIAN AIDS POOR eBBissssBBsnsm '' Bachelor Bequeaths Fortune ' to Aid Peasants in Entering Wedlock.

HE PROVIDES GOOD HOMES (American News Service) ; St. Petersburg, March 31. M. Vassalieff, a millionaire bachelor of this city, has bequeathed his entire for tune to provide the poor with the means of getting married, and setting up in comfortable homes. . He explained that he did not wish to leave anything to his relatives, as they are rich enough already, but he wished to enable poor girls to marry. He asks: "What is the reason that so many beautiful women never get a husband? Solely that the young men of the present day have no self-respect They dd not look for beauty, but for money, when they seek a wife. "It Is not surprising that so many of the loveliest creatures remain spinsters. No one will marry them because they have no dowry. I love all women, especially those who have to work for their living, and that is why I want to help them to get married, for I consider that a single life is the saddest thing on earth." ' ' The disappointed heirs are endeav. oring to invalidate the will, but it ap pears that it has been drawn up in the prescribed form, and that it is quite legal. In France a spinster ts not allowed to put money in the bank or have a check book, However, once married or a widow she can do business with bankers as far as her means and mind sov p FA,

Indiana Politics as Viewed By Sam Blythe Clever Writer in Sato-day Everting Post Cbtees licna as Insurgent end Sounds Ttnely VVcming to James E. Watscn. , '

, Samuel Q. Blythe. special writer for the Saturday Evening Post, in this week's : issae, deals with the political situation in Indiana. He classes this state as Insurgent -and warns Jim Watson not to play with fire. His article In part is as follows: Beveridge Is in accord with the majority of his own party in Indiana. He opposed the passage of the Payne-Al-drich tariff bill and voted against it, in company with other progressives in the senate. There are in Indiana those mostly affiliated with the old-line leaders or what is left of them who declare that Beveridge, after opposing the bill to the extreme limit, should have retained his party regularity by voting for the bill on the ground that it was a party measure and that he was thus bound to support it In the final showdown. You do not bear the great bulk of the. party men saying this. If Beveridge had . not voted against the bill which they consider to be iniquitous, not in consonance with party pledges and not in stride with the spirit of the state, he would have been dropped like a hot potato. As It Is, he is the most popular, and the most powerful man in the state today, in full control of the organization, and will be the unopposed candidate of his party for senator. - He has elected the majority of the state committee, will undoubtedly be indorsed by the state convention, which bad not been held when this was written, and will go into the campaign as the choice of most of his party and, nominally, of his entire party. : ' . - No man acquainted with Indiana politics but will say to you. If he talks candidly, that without Beveridge the party would not have a ghost of a show. Many men with whom I have talked said if there is any criticism of Beveridgt it is not because he is too radical, but because he Isn't,: radical WHY YOU ARE THIN; HOW TO GET FLESHY. Caeieee ef Thlaaesa Gives ICew NflM ol lacreeelea Wela-M aa HeaaSlaar Omt the Perse. Preeerltes) Aecesasllshes - Weadere. A treatment which anyone can prepare cheaply at home, has been found to increase the weight. Improve the health, round out scrawny figures. Improve the bust, brighten the eyes and put new color Into the cheeks and lips of -anyone who Is too thin and bloodless. It puts flesh on those who have been always thin whether from disease or natural tendency on those who by heavy eating and diet have In vain tried to increase; on those who feel well but can't get fat; and on those who have tried every known method in vain. - It is a powerful aid to digestion, nutrition and assimilation. It assists the blood and nerves to distribute all over the body the flesh elements contained in - food, and gives the thin person the same absorbing qualities possessed by the naturally fleshy. livery body Is about the same, but certain elements and organs of blood and nerves are deficient and until this is corrected, thin people will stay thin. The nutrition stays in the body after separation by the digestive functions instead of passing through unused, when this valuable-treatment of blended medicines is used. Practically no one can remain thin who uses it. for it supplies the long felt need. Mix In .- a half pint bottle, . three ounces of essence of pepsin and three ounces of syrup of rhubarb. Then add one ounce compound essence card lot. Shake and let stand two hours. Then add one ounce of tincture cadomene compound (not cardamom). Shake well and take a teapoonful before and after meals. Drink plenty of water between meals and when retiring. Weigh before beginning. : .

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enough. All admit that he is the Issue in the state of Indiana, v

OM Organisations Fightlns '. When" Beveridge completes his pres ent term on March 3. 1011, he will have served his state for twelve years as senator. In that twelve years the Falrbanks-Hemenway machine has disintegrated. Formerly all powerful. Fairbanks has gone out and Hemenway has been retired. Others in the machine, notably Watson, who was defeated for governor in 1906. have also been retired. Many republican representatives were defeated In 1008. Beveridge remains, by virtue of his position in the senate, the leader. This does not mean that the old machine, which always looked with disfavor on Beveridge, is now for him. The remnants of that machine have been fighting him ceaselessly. They tried to influence the mind of President Taft against him and deprive him of -the patronage that was his by right. They failed in that, and it Is unlikely that they will stop trying to defeat him during this campaign. The leaders of the opposition to Beveridge are Hemenway, who was defeated for senator after having been promoted from the house when Fairbanks became vice president, and Watson, who was in congress, was named for Governor and was beaten, although Taft carried the state at the same election. These men ' never have liked Beveridge and they never will like him. Watson Open Enemy. . The principal danger to Beveridge lies in the attitude of these men and their followers. They are politicians and they play the game. If the defeat of Beveridge can be accomplished by James Hemenway and James Watson it will be accomplished. That much at least seems certain. It seems improbable that the antipathy of these two beaten politicians should accomplish the defeat of Beveridge, for a great many men who formerly belonged to that machine are now honestly and avowedly for Beveridge. Ninety-nine per cent of the men who were prominent in politics in the old days are for Beveridge. Here and there are men who will not be reconciled. Combined with these men sre high protectionists who are opposed to Beveridge because of his course on the tariff bill, and, also there will be an effective and vigilant Democratic opposition. Thus, it can be seen, that the fight that is coming in Indiana will be more than a local one. It will be a fight for the progressive policies of the Republican party in a state where these progressive policies are held to be the only right ones, typing the whole progressive movement and entailing a last and desperate struggle of men of the old school of politics to hold the progressive movement in Indiana in check. . No man who knows Beveridge is insensible to his faults, but no man who knows him will honestly contend that hla faults are not largely temperamental: He is something of an egotist, given to vain-glorious conversation and declamation, and has an extreme faculty for Irritating many with whom he comes In contact. However, when you consider the intrinsic worth of the man, his splendid mind, his large grasp of public questions, his faculty for looking out for his people, his great skill as an orator and debat

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er, and know, that after the froth and fulmlnatlon he can get to the bottom of a proposition quicker and more sanely than almost any other senator. and that after a certain amount of byplay, he is sound as a nut on public questions, his dime-tight-seeking can be overlooked as temperamental, as I

have already said, and his other fine qualities freely acknowledged. There has never been any question of Beveridge's courage,' nor of his In-tegrit)-. He could have made things very comfortable for hlmseir in the Senate by voting for the tariff bill, even after he had opposed it up to the last ditch. He might have secured the aid of powerful influence toward his re-election. Instead, he voted against the bill and now goes to his state for justification and indorsement. So far as being the unanimous choice of his party for senator and so far as being the issue in the campaign are concerned, he will have that measure of justification and indorsement that comes before the supreme event of the election. I'-.. Consider the situation and its diffi will goat Chae. w .Jordan. ? Daniel F.

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culties: There Is a LegfrUfrrje i to elect. : It Is sow TDsawetatis a t ballot. More than ht of the twestr five hold-over senators are Democrat!. The Democrata will make' - a hard

fight, for Thomas Taggart, Democratic leader In Indiana. senatorial aspirations. ' The burden ts on the Republicans, and the tnsurseat Republicans at that. It Is said that it Is the intention of Watson, a man of great personal magnetism and of much power as an orator, to go Into the state daring the campaign and speak from the stump, with the argument that any man who voted against the Payne-Aldrich tariff bill is not a Republican, that the vote for or against that bill, which was a party measure, was the teat of party loyalty, and that the Republican party can not elect any man who la not a Republican, u Is stated that he intends to say that opposition to that bill was opposition to Taft and that Taft la the leader of the party, the titular head, as Taft put It himself, and that nonsupport or Taft predicates treason to the Republican party. I hardly think Mr. Watson will attempt to enunciate this fine old Bourbon doctrine on the stump In Indiana. He is a smart man. not a chump. , It he Is chump enough to do It I am of -the opinion that he will get a response from the Republicans of Indiana that , will make his head ache. ' nzz c:

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