Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 333, 8 October 1910 — Page 4

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THE ZtlCnMOND FAIJjADltm JLHU 8UJI-TELEGRA3I, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1910.

Published and owned by the ' PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. issued T days each week, evening e and Sunday morning. Office Corner North tth And A street!. Home Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.

Kaflala O. Lesa Editor Laftae Janes iMlatM Manager Carl aWrahardl Aeaerlele Editor W. R. reaasaleae ewe Editor

SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond l.4 per year (la adranee) or lOo per week. MAIL BUBSCRIPTIONa One year. In advance M 8? Is months. In advance ,2 One month. In advance

RURAL ROUTES One year, in advance If0 Sis month. In advance .......... One month. In advance Addreae changed aa often aa desired: both bow and old addreaaea muat'be Ivan. v Subeerlbera will v please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term: name will not be enter ed until payment la received.

Entered at Richmond, -Indiana, post Office as second claas mall matter.

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RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Has a population of 13.000 and Is growing. It. Is the county seat of Wayne County, and the trading- center of a rich agrlenltural community. It Is located due eaat from Indianapolis miles and 4 miles from the state Una. Richmond Is a city of homes nd of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city, It Is also the Jobbing center of Eastern Indiana and enloya the retail trade of the populous community for miles around. - . Richmond la proud of Ita splendid atreeta. well kept yard a, Its cement sidewalks and beautiful shade treea. It hae I national banks. I trust companies and 4 building aaaoelations with combined resources of over 11,000.000. Number of factories 125; capital Invested 17,004.444, with an annual output of 117.000.000. and a pay roll of lt.700.OOC. The total pay roll for the city amounts to approximately 11,200.900 annualThere are five railroad companleo radiating In eight different dlrertlona front the city. Incoming freight hr.ndled dally. 1.f 44.444 lbs.; outgoing freight handled dally. T B0. 000 lbs. Yard facilities, per lay. 1.700 care. Number of passenger trains dally, 14. Number of freight trains dally, 7T. Tha annual poat office receipts amount to 110,000. Total Jsseaee.1 valuation of thJ city. 14.440.a04. Richmond has two Interurban , rail way a. Three newapapera with a combined circulation of 12.004. Richmond ta the greatest hardware Jobbing center In the state and only second In general Jobbing Interests. It has a piano factry producing a high grade J lano every II minutes. It Is the eader In the manufacture of traction englnee, and producea mora threehlng machines, lawn mowers, roller skatea. grain drills and burial caskets than any other city In the world. . Tha city's area Is 2.C40 acres; has a court house costing $800.. no; la publle schools andliaa tha finest and moat complete high school In tha middle weat under construction: t parochial schools: Karlham college and the Indiana , Runlneae College; fire splendid flra companies i In fine bnae houses; Glen Miller park, the largest and meet beautiful park In Indiana, tha homo af rtlehmond'a annual rhanteun.ua; Br. en hotels; municipal electric light plant, under successful operation, and a private electric llarht plant ' Insuring competition: the oldeat public library In the state. cept one and the second largeat. 40.004 volumes; pure, refreahlng , water, unaurpasaed; I mllea of Improved atreeta; 40 miles of sewers: 3 miles of cement curb and gutter combined: 4 mllea of cement walks-end many nines of hrlek walks. Thlrtv churches. In. eluding the Reld Memorial, built at a coat of 4384.004: Held Memorlal Hospital, one of tha moat modern In the state1' T. M. C A. nlldlng. erected at a cost of 4100.000 one of the finest In the state. The amusement center of Waftern Indiana and Western Ohio, No city of the else of Richmond holds as fine an annual art exhibit. The Richmond Pall Festival held each October Is unique, no other city holds a simitar affair. It Is given In the Interest of the cltv and financed by the bualneea than. uceeaa awaiting anyone with enterprise 4n the Panto Proof City.

REPUBLICAN TICKET WAYNE COUNTY For Congress . WILLIAM O. BARNARD For Representative LEE J. REYNOLDS For. Joint Representative (Wayne and Fayette Counties) ELMER OLDAKER For Joint Senator (Wayne and Union Counties) WALTER 8. COMMONS For Prosecutor CHARLES L. LADD For Auditor LEWIS 8. BOWMAN For Clsrlt OEORQE MATTHEWS For Sheriff ALBERT B. 8TEEN For Treaaurer ALBERT ALBERTSON For Commissioner (Middle District) BARNEY LINDERMAN (Western District) ROBERT BEESON For Coroner DR. ROLLO J. PIERCE e-Por Asessor ' WILLIAM MATHEWS

The Beginning

"This has been considered Cincinnati and Dayton territory." said Mr. McClure. "But the Cincinnati boosters never showed up with more than 150 marchers, while Indianapolis came almost 100 strong to Richmond. The people treated us splendidly. They seemed to appreciate our coming and we certainly appreciated the good treatment received. It has been a great day for the Indianapolis Commercial Club."

' There is no reason that we know of why the trade which goes out of this community to larger cities should not go to Indianapolis. A right understanding of the fact that no community can furnish all commodities to itself is no reflection on the resources of the community. There is a new realisation springing up of a sense of loyalty to Indiana this is growing right out of the movements of all . Indiana cities snd their communities to work together. " , ' Of course It is impossible to head off logical currents of trade by purely imaginative lines but one thing is certain the people of this community are willing that their trade which they cannot handle should go to Indianapolis. This is one-way of helping along 'what is bound to come the or- . gsnisatlon of a Greater Indiana club to boost the whole state to help ourselves we have to help the other cities of Indiana and their communities.

Honor to Herself

The Palladium has many times before urged the recognition of the men of Wayne county who have served their country in times of stress and who have made their impress on the history of this country. The Palladium therefore wjshes to congratulate Mr. William Dudley Foulke in bringing to the foreground at a most appropriate time the question of erecting memorials, even though they be of the simplest character to the names and acts of Morton, Mendenball and Julian. In doing this Wayne county does honor to herself. In the formative period the work of these three men may be taken as indicative of the whole citizenship of this county. They were men who saw the issue of the day and who had the courage to do what they knew was right Not enough ia known of any of these men. In this the centennial year of. this county the time has come for concerted action. , Morton may be honored by the erection of the statue next year in the Court House the movement is already on foot. But tablets to Julian and to Mendenhall should and their place also in some appropriate place for they are an integral part of the same forces which led Morton to honor his state and this county as the War Governor.

The Palladium wishes to call attention to the fact that there are two buildings in Richmond the old high school and the new which are without names. Surely the names of Morton, Julian and Mendenhall ought to merit more consideration in this community than that ot GarHeld. ' It la a thing altogether in the hands of the city of Richmond 'this naming of the schools and tablets to the memory of all three of these men might suitably be placed in them a reminder to the children of the city of Richmond that these men have gone before. That ia the real memorial. e

The Dancer-A Short Story

By EDMOND JALOUX

It was Quite an event to the inhabi

tants of the little town of Solisanne when Marquis de Tetyglense arrived there in person. He had just bought

an old mansion, half ruined and flanked by towers, situated on a bill-Bide and generally called the chateau. But their surprise grew when they saw the extensive . improvements the marquis ordered made, and noticed the costly furniture, paintings, carpets,' curtains and bric-a-brac which were carried into the recently emptied rooms. But the marquis did not only bring with

them these dead things; all Solisanne waa scandalised at a rumor which said that the old white-haired man of seventy or more had. also brought with, him a young and exceedingly

beautiful dancer with a cold and cruel

expression in her classical face.

As soon as he had settled down in his new home, the marquis began a

search for musicians and finally two

violinists and a flute player were found. He bought their services but not their silence and through their indiscretion the town learned how the old marquis spent his evenings. Every night at nine o'clock the three musicians went to the chateau, where they sat down in an immense empty hall, illuminated by a chandelier of dull silver. Monsieur de Tetyglense sat down far from them at a small Inlaid table on which stood a Venetian glass and a bottle of Rhine wine, and then the dancer, Lina Corfadinl appeared. Dressed in the traditional ballet costume, very low necked, with a string of magnificent pearls around her beautiful neck she danced at the end of the hall. She danced lightly, gracefully with (a smile on her beautiful, though cold face. Now she bounded as if trying to catch a butterfly, then she drew Imaginary garlands in the air with her slender hands, then again raising her arms above her head she played about like the water in a fountain. Monsieur Tetyglense looked at her as it in a trance and occasionally he wiped a tear from his eye and at midnight he sent away the musicians who understood nothing ot this strange festival Una Corradlni understood no more. She waa dancing-at Naples when the marquis met her. She was a poor child and had until then known little but poverty and hunger and cruel blows.

so when tha old man suggested that in the future she should dance to him alone, she accepted his offer with enthusiasm, the more so as he offered her more money than she had ever seen. She thought he would make further propositions later, but in this she was disappointed, for the marquis remained politely respectful to her and was satisfied to kiss her forehead every night after she had danced to him. This was very galling to Corradinl who had ambitious plans and wanted to marry the old man, but did hot know how to succeed. By spying on M. de Tetyglense, Una Corradinl at last discovered that every afternoon he locked himself tip in a certain room and remained there for hours.' By means of a false key she got into the room herself but stopped on the threshold. Everywhere on the walls she saw her own portrait in dresses she had never worn and with her hair dressed in a strange manner. A name that was once famous was at the bottom of each painting and Lina understood that the marquis had been in love With Sasia, the wold-renowned Russian dancer of thirty years ago and that by a stronge accident she, Una, had the features, the smile, the eyes and the figure of this woman who had died long ago. It was a beloved spirit, and not a young living flesh, that the marquis saw in her. Una soon found out all about the marquis' love affair, for a little desk was full of old letters from Sasia, and when she had finished reading all these letters the Neapolitan girl already saw herself ' as Marquise de Tetyglense, for If the old fool did not love her enough, she thought it was because she did not resemble Sasia enough, and all she had to do was to make her resemblance still more striking. In the last letter Sasia had written were the words: "Soon, very soon I am to dance before you for the very last time and on that day I will wear a skirt of black crepe. When the dance is over, I will say to you: Good night, dear .old friend, our beautiful day is gone and we must now prepare to say good-bye for the long sleep " These words Corradinl learned by heart and put the letter back in its place, that the marquis should not discover anything. When the dances appeared in the hall a week later Marquis de Tety-

"THIS DATE IN HISTORY"

OCTOBER 8TH. 1793 John Hancock, first signer of the Declaration of Independence, died in Boston. Born in Qulncy, Mass., Jan. 12, 1737. 1794 Caroline Oilman, author, born in Boston. Died In Washington, D. C Sept. 15, 1S88. 1S11 Simon Snyder elected governor of Pennsylvania for a second term. 1861 Fort Pickets, anta Rosa Island, Florida, attacked by the Confederates. . 1869 Franklin pierce, fourteenth President of the U. S died at Concord, N. H. Bora in Hillsboro, N. H- Nov.23, 1804. 1871 Start or the great Chicago fire which lasted three days and destroyed property amounting to nearly $200,000,000. 1875 The Supreme Court of Canada organised with the Hon. William , Buell Richards as Chief Justice. 18T7 Mr. Wilfred Laurier entered the Dominion Government as Minister of Inland Revenue. 1894 The Supreme Court of South Carolina held the liquor dispensary law to b constitutional.

glense turned as pale as a ghost. Instead of her usual elaborate coiffure, Una wore her hair low and tied with ribbons as she had seen It on the paintings of Sasia. Over her usual ballet she wore crepe and she danced as she had never danced before. - The 'Id marquis followed with eager eyes, the graceful movements of the beautiful girl dressed in black and white, until she dropped to the floor with the grace of a dying butterfly. The music suddenly ceased, Una arose.

went over to the marquis and threw

herself at his feet. There were tears in her eyes and her white bosom was palpitating as she breathed the words she had read in Sasia's last letter. - Suddenly she stopped with a cry of horror, for the old marquis rose to his feet, deadly pale, gesticulated wildly with his arms, a rattling sound came from his throat and he fell backward upsetting the table and breaking the Venetian glass. The musicians rushed . to his aid, but it was too late, for the Marquis de Tetyglense had died from the shock when he thought he recognized In the living dancer the dead woman he had never been able to forget. .

News Forecast For Coming Week

Heart to Heart Talks.

By EDWIN A. NYE.

Copyright. 1908, by Edwin A. Nye

IN THE ROCKIES. The call of the mountains' Do you knot that call? The mountains are such stanch friends! If you will let them they will rock your troubled spirit Into peace even as your mother cradled your babyhood. The mountains! Almost sheer upward towers a height of some 500 feet. But there is a trail. Stout boots, stout stick, stout heart if you are expert will take you up in fifteen minutes to the place where the real mountains begin. Up, up, up! If you feel it is impossible to take another step a minute's rest In this tonic air will restore you. Up, on, up! As you stop betimes the' kingdoms of earth lie beneath you and the kingdom of heaven is within you. Ton are on the top. How the petty, sordid things dwindle! About are only the rock, the sky, the air, you and God. Tou have found jour lost soul. Believe me, 'tis something to be cast Face to face with yourself at last. Down at the bottom of the canyon the Big Thompson dashes through thirty miles of rugged, primeval beauty, flinging here and there the lacy drapery of its cascades, and the roar of it Is seldom out of your ears. The wild waterfall literally "leaps in glory." And "Honk; honk, honk!" ?" -. h ': A pest on . civilization, but stand aside. The tourists, male and female, sway and loll In the big steamer autos on the canyon road. Tonight they will dance at one of the resort hotels up in the park, and tomorrow they will spoil some other solitude with, the stench of their burning oil. Seeing the mountains? What do these get-beauty-quick tourists see of this wondrous mountain stream, beside which one must spend days of apreciatidn, or of the grandeur of crag and pine and the mountain fastnesses, or . of the aisles of stately forest, or of purple shadows falling on eternal snows? The mountains! How their majestic and mystic charm steals into the heart and soothes and satisfies and purifies! And how the memory of them lingers! There they stand, pile and terrace and crag, higher and higher and yet higher until they blend their snowy horizon against tha cobalt blue of the heavens. In their mighty presence what soul of man could be mean? -

This Is My 73rd Birthday

GEN. JOHN M. WILSON. Brig. Gen. John M. Wilson, U. S. A., retired, was born In Washington, D. C, Oct. 8," 1837, and graduated from the West Point academy in 1860. He served as an artillery officer during the first year of the civil war. in 1862 he was transferred to the engineering corps. He remained In this branch of the service until his retirement nine, years ago, rising to the position of chief of engineers. After the close of the civil war he spent many years in. the government engineering works "on rivers, harbors and canals. He also superintended the building of the army medical museum and library in the national capital and the completion of the . Washington Monument.

V His Favorite. - - "Which is your fjjrorite Wagnerian opera T' asked the musician. "Lemme see J" said Mr Cumrox. aopeaiing to his wife. ;Tbere are sev-. era I that 1 never heard yet. aren't there?" . "Yes." . - " : - ' "Well. I reckon It's one of them." Washington Star. ..

Poor Little Goose! "Seems as if 1 can never find a decent quill in the house." growled the eighteenth century author. . "I think It would pay you to keep a goose.' sharply retorted his wife. "Ton mean one that would bo of some help to me. don't yon?" chortled the brute. Detroit Free Press. . ' Vulgar Ostentation. Little Willie Say. pa," what is vulgar ostanatloa? Pa Vulgar catenation, my am. Is the display made by people who have more money to make

it with taaa we nave. -nicago xvews.

Washington, D. C, Oct. 8. Ex-President Roosevelt will begin , the week with a speech at the Arkansas state fair in Hot Springs. On Tuesday he wilt visit St. Louis as the guest of Gov. Hadley of Missouri and the following day he will proceed to Peoria, where he is to Speak at a banquet of the Knights ot Columbus. Wednesday he will conclude his present tour with speeches In Indiana In behalf of the candidacy ot United States Senator Beveridge. ' , The supreme court of the United States will convene Monday foe its winter term. Owing to the lack of a full bench It is believed that few cases of importance are likely to be argued or decided before late tn the year. - v President Taft's summer vacation will probably end the last of the week, when the cottage at Beverly will be closed and the president and his family will return to Washington for the winter. Columbus Day, the anniversary of the discovery ot America by Christopher Columbus, will be observed as a legal holiday Wednesday by fourteen states, several of them observing the day for the firsrtime. Representatives of the various provinces of the Dominion will meet In conference with the Commission on Conservation in Ottawa Wednesday to discuss matters relating to the public health. Representatives of patriotic and historical societies of several states will meet in Harrisburg. Pa., Thursday to discuss preliminary arrangements for the great celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the battle of Gettysburg which It is proposed to hold in 1913. On Saturday the cornerstone Is to be laid for the Iroquois Memorial Emergency Hospital which is to be erected in Chicago in memory of the 600 victims of the Iroquois Theater fire December 30. 1903. Events of the week abroad that will interest readers on this side of the water will include the departure of the Duke of Connaught for South Africa to open the first union parliament, the opening in London of an International Conference on Town Planning, and the celebration in the German capital of the one hundredth anniversary of the University of Berlin. Among the Important conventions of the week will be the American International Humane Conference in Washington, the meeting of the National Council of Congregational Churches and its affiliated societies in Boston, and the international . convention of Christian churches in To-

Hipolite Egg company, the latter being the irst to come up to the , supreme court under the pure food law.

THE JAILJIIDITIOIIS State Charities Board Issues its Annual County Reports in Bulletin. WAYNE IS NOT MENTIONED

Supreme Court Facing Heavy Docket for Term Just Beginning

(American News Servlco.) Washington. Oct. 8. An unusual situation will face the supreme court of the United States when it convenes Monday for the term of 1910-11. With the docket literally overburdened with important cases awaiting argument and decision, the supreme tribunal will probably be obliged to mark time for two months or more before it will be able to take up the important work that is before it. The necessity for delay arises from the lack of a full bench. At the present time the court is without a chief justice and without that dignitary it will be found almost Impossible to proceed with the Important business at hand. It is pointed out that the chief justice in addition to being the balance wheel between the other members of the court, Is required to pass individually upon many delicate and important motions, requiring deep knowledge of the procedure of the court. The successor of the late Chief Justice Fuller, whoever may be the man chosen for that high honor, cannot take his seat until after he has been confirmed by the senate, which will not be until December. As a consequence the great cases now on the docket must . neecssarily be further postponed until late in 'December or more probably In January. By that time the new chief justice will have been confirmed and either Justice Moody will have sufficiently recovered his health to enable him to resume his place on the bench, or he will have passed by congress and have retired ahd his successor will have been named and confirmed. Then there will be a full bench and the most important cases in the last half century can be heard. Thirty cases heard at the term of the supreme court which ended last June must be reargued at the term about to begin, owing largely to the fact that there were but seven members on the bench at the last term. Many of the cases will be heard at the same time in January. The fifteen involving the constitutionality of the corporation tax were heard as one case and doubtless will be so presented at the next hearing. Two Involve the question whether the penalties for violating the twenty-eight hour law for the transportation of live atock

shall be determined by the individual shipments or by the train. Two suits on the ddeket bring up the dissolution ot the tobacco corporation. Two more cases involve the validity of indictments for. gracing sheep on forest reservations without permission of the government; two others, the use of the waters of Walker river in California and Nevada, and two more the enforcement ot the prohibition laws ot Oklahoma in interstate shipments. Other cases to be reargued are the dissolution suit against the Standard Oil company; the case involving the constitutionality of the hours of service law for railroad employes, and that arising out of the use of the water of the Upper Gila river in Arizona for irrlgatioii. Six cases argued remained without action when the court adjourned for the summer vacation. Of these, the only one of general interest waa that involving the rights of forwarding agencies to demand carload rates from railroads. One of the first questions on which the court will probably pass will be the application for a review of litigatio n in the federal courts in Kansas over the constitutionality of the Kansas ' bank depositary guarantee law. The United States circuit court for the district of Kansas, in an opinion handed down by Judge Pollock, ruled that' the law was unconstitutional, as being in violation ot the fourteenth amendment and : as unlawfully discriminating against national banks, and destroying their efficiency. However, the United States circuit court ot appeals reversed the lower court and held the law constitutional. The United States will figure largely In the business before the supreme court at its coming term. Many of the cases in which its representatives appear are of general public interest In addition to the corporation tax cases and the Standard Oil and tobacco corporation issues, there are the controversy involving alleged contempt by Samuel Gompers and boycotts by the American Federation of Labor; a case under the railway rate law in which la brought up the question of the liability of the original carrier for loss in transit; the so-called government Panama libel suit against the Press Publishing company of New York, and the suit against the

Indianapolis, Oct. 8. In view ot the recent visit to this state ot the delegates to the international prison congress in Washington, D. C, and the fact that one of the delegates. Sir Evelyn Rugglea Brise, of England, gave the Indiana jail system a thorough going over, pointing out its weak places, the current bulletin of the board ot state charities, now being sent out, will undoubtedly attract unusual attention. : , In the bulletin the state board refers to the report made laat February by the Marion county board of chartties and correction on visits made In January to the county jail and to the

various other correctional and benevolent institutions in the county. In which a number of conditions were severely condemned. v ' Following are some of the comments made on jail conditions throughout the state in the state board's bulletin from 'reports of county boards ot charity: Conditions in Various Counties. "Benton county, excellent reading matter supplied from the Moody Institutet in Chicago; no inmates. Clark county, one insane inmate; jail a diegrace to the county and can not be kept in a sanitary condition; cellar practically full of water when visited by official board. Decatur county, one insane Inmate; unitary conditions bad and can be made no better in the damp, dark disease reeking cells. Delaware county, thirty-nine prisoners, many of whom were boya, and many hardened criminals; jail baa not been worked over to meet increased population of the county. Elkhart county, no work provided; opinion ot official visitors that If work were provided there would be fewer prisoners for ' the county to feed. Franglln county, only inmate an epileptic. Gibson county, jail not in good condition and can not be made so; new Jail to be built ; present sanitary conditions mlaerable. Hamilton county, ' jail In good condition; tramps cared for If taken by Nobelsville marshal. Clinton cvounty, on Insane Inmate; prisoners not employed; twenty-six present at time of visit Grant county, one insane woman reported to have injured herself when confined in ordinary cell because no other kind was to be had.

IID MORE LEIIIEIICY

New York, Oct 8. M. L. Morganthan, millionaire candy manufacturer, was today fined $5,000 for attempting to smuggle through the New York customs jewelry and clothing bought on his summer's trip to Europe. With .

toe imposing oi ia una which ib iu maximum, Judge Hand announced it was the last time that a penitentiary v sentence would be withheld In similar cases. Morganthan wth hia wife and two daughters returned on the Mauretania September 1 15. Over $6,000 worth tawt vwaar nJeVtaW.M aMlrl si! J.

mond pendants were found on the women, besides $2,000 worth of undeclared clothing In their trunks. Morganthau took the, full, blame for the attemnted smuggling, declaring that the

three women had concealed the valu

ables at his suggestion. . '

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MleliUQD UCiifioCiOy Beware of So-called

Ones-r-tmitationo Unscrupulous dealers, mindful only of

their profit and caring nothing for the health of their patrons, are offering for sale low grade mixtures, , which they tell you are "as good as" Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey.

Some to so far as to try to make you be-'

lieve it is Dufft Pure Malt Whiskey. These cheap concoctions are foisted on the people with the intent to deceive.

When a remedy has been before the public for more than half a century, has been pre.

scribed and Used by the best doctors 'and in prominent hospitals, and has carried the blessing of health into so many thousands of homes as Duffy's Pure Malt -Whiskey has,

imitations are bound to arise, i hey may imitate the bottle and label only -Ho one can imitate the contents. " is an absolutely pure distillation of malted grain. Its palatability and its freedom front injurious substances render it so that it can be retained by the most sensitive stomach. It has been used with remarkable results in the treatment of consumption, pneumonia, grip, coughs, colds, malaria, fevers, stomach troubles and all Wasting arid diseased conditions. t It is sold in scaled bottles only. The Old Chemist's Head is on the labels and over, the cork is an engraved seal Be certain the seal is unbroken. Sold by druggists, grocers, dealers, or direct, $1.00 a large bottle. Write Medical Department, The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. Y for doctor's advke and valuable medical booklet containing testimonials and common sens' rules for health, both sent free. : -