Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 269, 5 August 1910 — Page 4

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TnE RICHMOND PALI-ADJUai AXD SUX TELEGBA3I, FRIDAY AUGUST 3t 1910.

tzi Sta-Tc!s;ran PvMlslMd u4 wae4 br th , PALLADIUM PRUtTINO CO. ' f days each week, veal ul unday morning-. Ofrt Corr NertH tb u A atr. Uss Hmm lilt. RICHMOND. INDIANA. . K4alB) O. Utto., MUM lfta Jnm IhImm Maaaaer Cast awn karat .imiiilt Baita

Xewa Milan UBSCRIPTION TERMS, la Richmond Si.a per ear (In advance) or lOe par week. MAIL SUUSCKlPTIONa On yur, advance IS O Bis Month, In advfene MO On month, tn advent RURAL ROUTES. On roar, la advance J His montha. In advaneo .......... 10 Ouo naooth. la advanoa .S Addree changed aa of tan aa dee I red: both new a&d old aadrcasa nuat r-e von. HuhaerlUor will plena remit wttn order, which should bo aMven for a eperlriad term: name will not bo enter od until payment ie received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poat fflc aa aoeond claaa mall matter. ta..JL. jjp.o Now York City) ha j aad wrttlted to th elnoUtloa 3 Only ta Harare of 4 I ta It report an 1 s fas RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" . Haa a population of fi.Sand I arrowing-. It la the county eaat of Wayne County. and th trading center of a rich agricultural community. It I located due from Indlanapo He s mllea and 4 mllee from the atate line. ttrhmond la a city of homeo and of tnduatry. Primarily a. manufarturln- city. It la alao the Jobbing center of Kaatern Indiana and enjoy the retail trade of the populous community tor mile around. Richmond la proud of It aplemllj atreeta. well kept tarda. Ha cement aldewalsa and eautlrut ahade treee. It baa I national banka. I truat comf an lee and 4 building aaaoclalona with combined reaouroe ft over M.000,000. Number of fnctorl Hi; capital Invoated T.OOO.eeo, with an annual output of SI7.000.000, and a pay roll of 13.700.000. The total pay roll for the city amounta to approximately M.S00.O0O annually. There are five railroad comnan tee radlatin In elaht dif ferent dlrectlona from the city. Jnromlng freight handle dally. I. m.000 lb.: outsolnir fright handled dally, 710,000 lb. Yard faellltl, per day 1.700 oar. Number of paaaanaer train dally. a. Number of freight tralna dally 77. The annual peat office recelpto amount to OtO.eOO. Total aeaeaaed valuation of th city, $11,000,000. Rlehmond ha two Interurban railway. Thre newspaper with a combined circulation of II, 000. Rlehmond la th p reateat hardware Jobbing- center In the atate. and only aerend tn a-eneral jobbing Intereata. It haa a piano factory producing a hljrh grade piano every 11 minute. It la the leader In th manufacture of traction enfrlnea. an4 produce mor hrshlr uiaehfn, lawn mowre. roller akatee. grain drill and burial eaaketa than any Other cltv tn th world. The clty'e area ta t.40 aerea: haa a eurt heuM con tin a 0600.- ' 000; 10. publlo echoola and haa the ftneat and moat complete high school In the middle weat under contrr.rtlon; s parochial echoolo? Earlham colter and ' th Indiana Bualnesa Colt ere: five aplendld fire ctnpanl- in flr.e hoee hnueee: Olen Miller nark, the lervat end nrnit beautiful prH In Indiana, the home of Rlrhmond'a annual rhiiutauoiia: eevn hotela: municipal electrfo light plant tine'er eticceaaful oneratlon. and a private electric light plant Injuring competition: the oldeat puMIr library In the etate, excoo n. and the eecond laraeet. 4 aft TAlnmMi pure. refrnln-r water. unairnaeeed: B mllee of tmnrovert etroete; 40 mllee of . eewera; !R mllee of cement curb and rtitter comMncd: 40 mllea of eemnt walk a, and many rnUea of brick walk. Thirty ehurehea . Including th Raid tmr-tl. hutlt at a coat of 0M : R"'d Memortal Hon. Tlte1. on of the mnat mMl-rn tn the etete: T. M. C. A. hulM. tner. errd t a coit of OtOO.000. n of the flneet tn the etate. The ewMoement center of Keetem Tntane and Weatem Ohio. . No rltr of the alt of Richmond hold ee fin an annual art ethlblt. The Richmond Fall t-e-Jttval held each October la tin Inn. ether city holda a pmller affair. It ta riven tn the 1ntrt of the city and financed by th- buelneaa men. m-ceea awaltln anyone with enterprla tn th Panto Proof nty. This Is My 66th Birthday ADMIRAL JEWELL. Rear Admiral Theodora) F. Jewell. U. 8. retired, was born In Georgetown, D. C Aug. 5. 1844, and was graduated from the United States Naval Academy at the ago of twenty. He participated In several naval engagements of the civil war and commandad a naval battery of field howitzers la lbs defense of Washington, After the closa of the war he saw service on all the foreign naval stations, com manded the naval torpedo station and served on various -naval boards. In th war with 8pala he was In command of the cruiser Minneapolis, and at the time of his retirement for age la 1904 be was commander-in-chief of .the European squadron. Admiral Jewell la well known as a writer on naval subjects. Since his retirement from active service he haa spent much of his time In foreign travel. Itzns Gathered In From Far and Near A NatrSfial Health Department Trcrx ta Baltimore) Evening gun. KJ long argument Is needed to show ttst eao4 sense la la the campaign for t ectxttishmsnt of a national depsftatxt of public health, with an off.9tr ef cabinet rank at its head. Un cr tba present absurd system of lord tatKa 4!epartmats very little Is t'Hz cceoe?Ushd. Aa efficient aad

A Final Appeal

Victor Murdock, progressive leader, In closing the campaign in Kansas the other da, said. In part, as follows: "Back of all the efforts of Insurgency Is the desire to meet and correct evils growing out of complex industrial conditions with legislation that ball be completely adequate. Insurgency means a determination to define these evils and having defined them to correct them with courage. "The standpatter first of all attempts to blind himself to the fact that there are any evils growing out of Industrial conditions, and under Cannon's regime it has been the unvarying practice of standpatters in congress, following the Cannon idea, first, to deny that there was anything to correct, and then when the evil was Identified snd defined by the people so unmistakably, that the Cannon machine could no longer deny the necessity of action, then the machine would pass some law which was wholly Inadequate in remedy. ' "I call attention of the people of Kansas to the fact that federal railroad rate legislation was denied so long that public sentiment was lashed into fury before the machine at Washington would consent to move. The Eerh-Townsend bill was introduced, put through the house and throttled In the senate. This was done for the purpose of delay. Thereafter the Hepburn bill was put through the house. It was wholly inadequate as it passed the house and most of its vigor wss added to It in the senate. Still however, it was an Inadequate law, made so by the standpatters of both parties. That it was Inadequate is shown by the fact that within a few years sfter its passage the machine in congress, by reason of popular pressure, voiced by the president, was again under the necessity of -offering another railroad rate measure to the country. By this time Insurgency was awake and active, and it was the militant attitude of the Insurgents which gave the railroad rate bill law passed this year a degree of effectiveness not equalled by any other rate bill ever passed by congress in tbis country. . "Down in Washington the machine teaches the lesson to Its followers .that the people must be held in check, that it is the first business of the congressman or a senator to lead his people with extreme conservatism and not to permit his people to rush him off his feet and into progressive legislation. The legislative device of the pigeonhole, postponement, delay and the practice of inadequacy of legislation are common instruments of the machine which is run by the standpatters. Insurgency on the other hand Is a movement In the republican party which frankly admits the newer problems in the nation and desire to approach them with an open mind and to apply such remedies that the whole country may move with dispatch into the higher forms of a more perfect democracy. The tariff ought to be revised, for Instance, a schedule at a time to the end that the revision may take place with full knowledge by all congress of every schedule and without trading between different sections of the country on different schedules. "The standpatters will not approve of any such progressive step, and the Insurgents will. There ought to be a complete simplification of procedure in the federal courts to avoid the technical delays which amount tp a denial of Justice. Left to the standpatters for relief, the people can finally force a correction along this line, but when the standpatters grant It they will make it Inadequate and ineffective. Those wuo have been progressive would attempt to make it complete and effective."

NOTES FROM THE LABOR WORLD

The British trade union congress this year will ppen in Sheffield on September 12. Philadelphia street car men now have a woman's auxiliary which haa a membership of six thousand. A' permanent arbitration board has been appointed for five years ta deal with longshoremen's disputes at Montreal, Can. Birmingham, Ala., is making great preparations to entertain the convention of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, which meets there In October. The Japanese laborers on the California fruit farms are organizing. They have a union of 2.000 in one county alone, and fixed a , minimum wage scale of f 2 a day of nine hours. ; The founder of the Window Glass Workers' association, I Michaels, died recently. He called together the first labor union convention in the United States in Pittsburg sixty-four years ago. The Arkansas State Federation of Labor is active In urging upon the people of that state an amendment to the constitution providing for the ' Initiative and referendum. It la forming cluba for the purpose throughout the state. The trade unionists of Los Angeles, Cal., have organized a union labor party and are preparing to enter the field of politics. It is expected by the leaders of the movement to exercise labor's power in the city and county elections. Protests from all parts of the state are pouring into Jefferson City, Mo., against the signing of the proposed contract for the sale of 2.100 Missouri convicts for four years at the rate of 70 cents a day to a combination of prlBon labor contractors. The attempt to amalgamate the two principal unions of railway workers In Great Britain has failed. The General Railway Workers' unton definitely refused the proposal that it should combine with the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants. The Associated Blacksmiths of Great Britain have made a request of the federated employers for an advance In wages, which means the registration of a reduction enforced last year. The blacksmiths are negotiating for an amalgamation of other kindred societies, so as to have one united association. . An agreement haa been made between the United Brewery Workers'

union of Boston and the United States

employers will submit to the union for consideration's plan of liability Insurance for the workmen. It is the first plan of the kind between an employers' association and the union of employes. Recent Investigations In Egyptian history discloses the details of labor difficulties at Thebes In the year 1400 B. C. The strike was very similar to those going on today. It was In the building trades, atad the strikera were masons. They were paid in rations at the end of every month, and they claimed that these were insufficient to sustain them and their families until the following pay day.

diligent health officer in one town sees his good work destroyed by the neg lect of an Ignorant or corrupt health officer In the next town. There is no concentration of effort, no intelligent co-operation, and, as a result, the war upon typhoid fever, tuberculosis and the other great infectious diseases makes but slow headway. In Baltimore, for example, the absolute steri lization of the water supply would not obliterate typhoid, for cases would still continue to be Imported from the nearby counties, just as cases of malaria and smallpox are now Imported. What is needed Is a strong central organiza tion, with authority to trace Infection to its sources and to stamp it out completely, without regard for the feelings of Ignorant communities and the dignity of local Dogberries. , ' Talk Well and Do Nothing. From the New York Times. Excellent as were the speeches made and the papers read at the third annual convention In Niagara Falls of the National Good Roads Congress, one cannot help feeling a little dis couraged at the present necessity for repeating pleas and arguments that were unanswerable when first uttered and have ever since remained so. Nobody denies that bad roads are frightfully expensive for all who use them, or that good roads are worth much mor than they cost, and yet we go on year after year doing nothing at all for the Improvement of most of our highways, and when we do build a stretch of road worthy of th name. In about nine cases out of ten we allow It to go promptly to ruin for want of the constant repairing which even th beat of roads require.

Brewers association by which the

Two Tablets and Stomach Misery Gone L. H. Fihe sells the best prescription the world has ever known for disturbed and upset stomachs, gas, belching, heaviness, heartburn, acid stomach and biliousness. It Is , called Mi-o-na, remember the name, and it banishes distress from over eating, or fermentation of food in five minutes. - It is guaranteed to cure Indigestion, sick headache, nervousness and dizziness or money back. No matter how long you have suffered you will find a certain cure in Mi-o-na stomach tablets. "About six weeks ago I purchased a box of Mio-na tablets for an aggravated form of stomach trouble. I had been troubled for four or five years, had tried different physicians and a great many patent remedies, but of no use, until I used Mi-o-na tablets. They entirely relieved me from pain, and ' I can now eat most any kind of food and relish it." A. J. Fish, West Carthage, N. Y. Mi-o-na stomach tablets cost 50 cents a large box at druggists everywhere and at L. H. Fihe's. Booth's Pills are best for constipation. 25c a box. an J ll uaie catarrh or bbobot bark. Just aveatbeitin. Complete outfit, inclndina

Names Sherman in Land

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The above cut shows Vice Pres ident Sherman, his three sons and his home at TJtlca, N. Y. Today Sherman vigorously denied Senator Gore's statement that he was implicated in the alleged "steal", of Indian lands.

"THIS DATE

AUGUST 5TH. 1583 Sir Humphrey Gilbert took possession of Newfoundland for Great Britain. 1763 Indian battle at Bushy Run, Michigan. 1772 First partition of Poland. 1804 Coach route established between Philadelphia and Pittsburg. 1816 First State election held in Indiana. 1831 Sebastian Erard, inventor of the French piano, died. Born April 5, 1752. - 1862 The Federals were defeated In battle of Cedar Mountain, Va. 1864 Admiral Farragut's fleet entered Mobile Bay.1896 George T. Anthony, governor of Kansas 1876-78, died in Topeka. Born in Matfield, N. Y., June 19, 1824 1898 Guayama, Porto Rico, captured by Americans. 1903 Andrew Carnegie gave 12,500,000 to his native town of Dunfermline, Scotland. 1909 The Payne-Aldrich Tariff bill passed the senate and was signed by the President.

Young French Nobleman in a Tight Fix at San Antonio

(American News Service.) San Antonio, Tex., Aug. 5. Marquis Alfred Henry Schwab de Casanova, a French noble is In a tight fix. Al though he recently inherited the sum of $200,000 from his mother, and his father, the Marquis Paul Edward Schwab de Herincourt, is worth something like $13,000.00, he may have difficulties during the next five years to meet his board bills. The marquis' troubles are all due to his having .married against the wish of his fath er a young Cuban girl, now the Mar quise Carmen Junco, and having after a short period of married bliss deserted her in New York city. The mother of the marquis did not blame her son to any extent for having married the pretty Cuban and prior to her death she provided the young couple with an Inheritance of S20O.0OO, stipulating however that the marquise should have certain authority in the disposi tion of the money. On this wise provision the plans of the marquis were wrecked. According to the marquis, when interviewed In this city, he left his raven haired Cuban belle, "because our tempairs could nevair agree, conderean?" This being the case the marquise went to Mexico City to live with her brothers. Thither followed her noble husband after he had discovered that she had no inclination to release her hold on the fortune. By means of letters. Marquis Alfred Henri had already tried his best to per suade her to surrender her claims but profound silence was the only thing be met. Growing desperate he decided to go to Mexico City and plead with the marquise in person, but this, too, has proven, to be in vain. The only av. enue now ppen to the marquis Is to bring suit lor divorce in th French courts. Befor he has succeeded In getting his liberty in this manner he will not b aple to separate the claim of the xxiarquise from his inheritance.

IN HISTORY"

Lawyers whom the marquis has consulted, say that it will take at least five years to bring the case to a conclusion and that a great deal of money will go to cover the cost of the suit, the marquise having, according to the French and Mexican law, the privilege of paying all costs from the Inheritance of Alfred Henri. To make matters worse his father, the Marquis de Herincourt, has taken unto himself another wife, a girl of some twenty summers. Carelessness with Jewels. From the Philadelphia Press. - ' Another diamond and pearl necklace which bad been "lost" has been found again where it was mislaid. This time at Newport Nothing, perhaps, s more amazing than the easy fashion - in which women used to it will wear thousands of dollars In gems and tuck the jewels away when traveling in one place or another. What does "gold-filled" mean! Probably most people who buy gold-filled watches fancy that they are myster iously impregnated with gold. The term is misleading. Gold filling consists in taking two sheets of gold, between which is placed a section of solder coated base metaL This metallic sandwich is heated and pressed so that the three parts are welded together with the gold outside. . It is not to be assumed that, by reason of the smallness of matches, the makers thereof ever utilize scraps or bits of wood left over. The contrary is the case. Matches are not by-products. Any wood rejected by the match machine goes to the by-product estab lishment, and of these by-products of tne match business may be mentioned some, such as doors and sashes, that in some instances form an industry as" important as the match fndastry UaeVtf. 4TJ - -0-.l..

Steal Plot

The Southern Pacific railway, build ing along the Mexican west coast, la expected to reach Guadalajara in about eighteen monthB. It has reached the Santiago river and the line from Acaponeta to the river Is being opened to traffic.

1 I )

That Stands Fop Purity Many have become ill and many have died from eating and drinking impure foods. The name of Commons stands for purity and clean-; liness. The cream used in making our products is procured from the best farms in the country. After being received here it is pasteurized, which gives you that perfect protection from disease impossible to secure elsewhere. The creamerry itself is spotless, while the churn and all utensils are sterilized before being used. '. Commons' Butter is wrapped in parchment pspcr which protects it from the time is leaves the plant, f Order Commons9 and Be

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TWINKLES

BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. An , Objection. , "What is your objection to the tar- ; iff T asked one atatesman. "Well," replied tlio other, "to be frank, my principal objection is that it was madefy men who don't agree with me in politlca, .... , . ... :.' ; y Changeful. Has Bligglns a pleasant dispose ' tion?" It all depends on whether he Is selling , you something or coming around to collect for It." . . Fortitude. The man who tries a motor car to run Must bravely face the crowd and never shirk The taunts of those who have all kimls of fun While he presplres and tries to make It work. ' Not Miad. "There are some French IdiomsT said the linguist, "that are very dlf itcult to translate Into English." "Yes." replied the adapter of plays; "but they are rarely so shocking that you can't get on Just as well without them." - . Retribution. "Do you believe that nit offense car rles it own retribution?" "I do. I once tried to cheat the government by buying a box of cigars the man said he had smuggled. Then I tried to smoke them." A High Old Tim. Hi wife's 'gone to the country. He sings in accenta lUcht Of pastimes gay throughout th day And social games at night. But 'spite of all his Joking, Inspect him close enough. And you will see. 'twlxt you and me. His gayety's a bluff. He simply goes on working Like any other man. When day Is zone he stts out on The front step with a fan. . His hosiery needs mending: His buttons, too. are lost The morning meal Is an ordal And dinner is a frost. He goes out every pay day. And malls his earning hard. And without fail each morning's mail Brings tilm a picture card. .. . And yet the playful neighbors Come 'round to him snd say: "Enjoy yourself, you giddy elf; Your wife has gone away!" PENNSYLVANIA r. unco Chicago $3 Escoraion ounoAY August 7th. X.V. RICBtnoB 3 A. U Sure of Purity DAIRY PRODUCTS

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