Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 353, 28 October 1910 — Page 4
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THE BICmiOND PAIiLAOIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1910.
c;l I:3-Ttlrtni ubllah4 and ownd by th PALLADIUM PIUNTINO CO. Issued T day . weak, avantns ana . Mundny mornln. Offle Corner North ltd and A atrts. Horn Pnon 1131. KIC1IMOKD. INDIANA.
Rcrfola O. Uit B4ltr Lortsa Jm B ! Nuwtr Cart aWraharSt Awtrim Eliv W. M. rMMliiMt Im Kltr UBScnipnoN terms. ! Richmond 11.09 par year (In advanca) or 10 par week. MAIL SUBSCmPTlONfc. One vr. in advance ..... J' 01a montka. In advance On month. In advance RURAL ROUTE On year, M advance .......924 Bla month j. In advance ........ 1.55 One month. In advance Addr chanfod aa often aa dealred: botlt new and old addreaaea muat too aTlven. Hubaerlbar will plea remit with order, which should be riven for a pacified term: name will not be enter, od until payment la received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poat ffico aa aocond claaa mall matter. fmBHPKvj jua a . a mhmimm (flaw Ysrfc City) has Mi mntStA tat atrmlattM Only tM flews 1 to Its rayart Mil tWri a a n mi el RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Haa a population of 13,000 and la crowing. It la the county aeat of Wayne County, and the trading center of a rich arleultuaal community. It la located due eaat from Indianapnlla aillea and 4 mllea from tha tate lino. Richmond la a city of bomea and -of Induatry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It la alao th Jobbing canter of Eaatern Indiana and enjoys tha retail trade of tha populous community (or mil around. Richmond la proud of It aplendld atreeta, well kept yarda. It cement aldewalka and beautiful had tree. It haa t national bank a. a truat companlea and a building aaaoclatlona with combined roaourcea of over f 1.000,000, Number of factorlea IIS; capital Inveated 17.000.00. with an annual output of 117.000,000. and a pay roll of 9S.70O.OOC. Th total pay roll for the city amount to approximately 9I.S00.9O annually. There aro flv raProad companlea radlatlna In lht differ- . ent direction from the lty. Inenmlng freight hr.ndled dally, 1.TIO.000 Iba.; outgoing freight handled dally. 780.000 lb. Yard facllltle. - pr day. 1.700 car. Number of paaaenger train dally. . St. Number af frnlarht train dally, T7. Tha annual poat offlc receipt amount to 9 0.000. Total aaeoaad valuation of tbu city. . I1I.000.000. Richmond baa two Interurban railways. Throo newapaper with a combined circulation of 19.000. RlaMi4 la tha arroateat hardwar jobbing cenr In th stat and only recond In jreneraj lobblng lntereat. It haa a piano faetry paodwlnff a hlah trrad piano vrjr 19 minute, it fa the leader "In th manufacture of traction onirtnoa. - and produce mora threehtna- machine, lawn mower roller akate. n-raln drill and burial caakete than any othor eltjr In th world. , Tho city area I t.940 acre', baa a court houae coat In a 9S00,00t 10 publlo chool and ha tho flneat and moat complete hta-i chool In the middle wet under ronetrvctlon : t parochial achoola: Karlham rnlUa-e and tho Indiana' Rufilneae . Coll; fir aplendld . fir companlea In fine hoao how: u1n Miller park, tho tarreat and moat beautiful park In Indiana, tho tiemo or Richmond' annual chautaanuat v. ' on hotela: municipal electrle llarht p!nt, under aucooaaful operation, and a private alctrla I lent plant Inanrln rampetltlnni th oldeet publle library In th tata. .- eept on and tho aocond lanrmtt. ,a Tolume: pur, refroehlna water, unaurpaaaed; 49 mile of linnroved trt: 40 mile - of Mower : 9 mtla of cement curb and trotter combined: 4 mite of , cement walk, and many mile of brick walk. Tblrtr church. Includln? the ftold Memorial, built at a roat of SllO.eOt: Raid Momnrlal floapital. one of th moat modern In the etato T. M. C A. , bnttdtn-, erected at a coat of 914A.000. en of the flneat In the Mate. The mwamnt center of wajitarn Indiana and Western Ohio. No Htr nf th lo of Richmond bold a fin an- annual art Mbit. ' Tho Richmond Pall Pe. , trml held each Vohr la nnlquo, no otbr dtr hold" a almllar tif- , fair. It 1 alven In th Inter eat af th cltv and financed by th buetnea men. iicccaa awaiting; aneon with ontorprl In th Panlo Proof City. , . KSP'OLICAri TICKET WAYNI COUNTY ' For ContTrt--TILUA1X O. PARNARD For RoproaoBtatlTo . LBS J. REYNOLDS for Joint RopresenUUr (Ways and Fayett Countios) ELMER OLDAKER For Joint Senator (Wayno and Union Counties) WALTER S. COMMONS For Proaecutor CHARLE8 L. LADD For Auditor LET'I3 8. BOWMAN For Clerk GEORGE MATTHEWS. For SherlR ' ALBERT a STEEN For Treasurer ALBERT ALBERTSOH For Commlutoner (Mlddlo District) BARNEY LINDERMAN . (Woittm District) , RODmT BSS30N For Coroner ' DR. ROLLO J. PIERCE For Aaaeaaor WILLIAM MATHEWS ' . For Burreyor HOWARD liORTON
The Record
Listen to La Follette: - On (5 out of 127 tariff roll calls Beveridge voted against Aldricb and the Aldrlch schedules. 'He voted against the Aldrlch duty on Iron ore. He voted for, the DoIHver and Cummins amendments reducing the duties of the metal schedule, and against Aldrich's amendment Increasing the duty on wire nails. He voted for the McCumber amendments for free' lumber and against the Aldricb lumber schedule. ; y He voted for the Bristow amendment to eliminate from the tariff law the "Dutch standard" graft of the sugar trust. He voted against the Aldrlch Increases In the cotton schedule, against tariff increases by reclassifications and against the new cumulative duty for mercerized cloths. He voted against the Aldrlch Increases on wool wastes and shoddy, against the woolen schedule, and for the DoIHver and La Follette amendments to correct the frauds and reduce the duties of that schedule. He voted against the Aldrlch duty on hides. ' He voted for the La Follette tariff commission amendment and against the Aldrlch court of customs appeals. - He voted against the Aldrlch bill as a whole when it passed the senate. , - He was one of seven republican senators who voted against the final adoption of the Aldrich-Payne-Cannon conference bill.
Beverldge exposed the steal of the Tobacco Trust from the United States government amounting to $184,090,577.33. ' . , He compelled the trust to pay that money In the future Into the treasury. s - On the commerce bill he voted for amendments to require the approval of the Interstate commerce commission, upon hearing and investigating, before rate increase could become effective. He voted for provisions to empower the interstate commerce commission to suspend rate advances pending Investigation- to determine their reasonableness. He voted to strike out the system provisions of the Wickersham bill designed to legalise the fictitious railway capitalization of the country; for amendments to prevent railroads destroying water commodities In competition with the independent producers; for amendments placing telegraph and telephone companies under the Interstate commerce act; for prohibiting any person financially interested In railroads from serving aa judge of the commerce court; to provide for the selection of the commerce, court by the entire supreme court rather than by the chief Justice thereof; for the re-enactment of the long and short haul clause; for restricting the Jurisdiction of the commerce court 'to that held by circuit court 'in rate cases to give the- Interstate commerce commission land , nhippers the right to be represented in rate cases in the commerce court; to require railway traffic agreements to be approved by the Interstate commerce commission; and to provide for physical valuation of railroads In order that their rates might be regulated uppn the just and lawful basis of the true, fair,, value of the property used for the public convenience. In the postal bank legislation Beverldge supported and -voted for all amendments, designed to secure a comprehensive system of postal banks uniform throughout the United States and to "keep the funds in the communities where they were owned and from "the control of system finance. . He voted for the Cummins amendment to strike out the provision designed to enable the concentration of postal bank funds as a reserve. He voted for the amendment to prevent the Investment of postal bank deposits In government bonds, except in times of war; and to prevent the - Investment of postal savings In government bonds bearing less than 2 per cent interest, and for the passage of the MIL By his votes and by argument Beverldge showed that he was for a postal savings bank for tlie people, not a postal savings bank for Wall street He voted nally for the postal bank makeshift which was concocted In the house to subserve system finance because It was a recognition of the principle of the postal bank and the only bill that could be passed by a congress, controlled by Aldrlch and Cannon. That Is the record which you will find in the Congressional Record. Listen to La Follette, who has been fighting the bi-partisan machine for thirty years:' ''".''.'. "Because Beverldge has served the people In congress, because he haa made war on dishonest privilege In legislation, the system is out to prevent his re-eleciton. The system Is bi-partisan. It would prefer to beat Beverldge with a "republican amendable to party regularity and the influence of big business. "Unabt to control th republican party in Indiana, th system " la throwing Its weight of Influence and money Into a campaign to beat Bvridg by electing a democratic legislature. If there la anything the system loves to see elected to congress besides a Cannon-Aldrlch republican It is an innocuous democrat. "The country looks to the voters of Indiana to see to it that Albert J. Beverldge is returned to the senate to help in the ' great struggle to redeem the government for the people. La Follette. ' . Now, your first duty Is to drive' the crooks from public life, ' but you have only half done your -work then. It la equally necessary to teach the honest man to keep trained public servants of high character In public lif. and I ask you, my fllow-citizns her today, I ask you to remember that it i your duty to yourlv to sc that your representative understand that not only will you punish them if they do that which they ought not to do, but you will uphold them f they do that which they ought to do." Theodora Roosevelt
The Vampire is Alleged to Have Lived in Jay County Husband Unable to Endure the Spleen of Her Tongue Seeks Divorce and Novel Complaint Is Filed.
An unknown attorney practicing in tha Jay County circuit court possibly with more literary ability than legal knowledge, drew up the following divorce complaint In a case In which he represented the plaintiff: State of Indiana, Jay County, as: In the Jay Circuit Court, March term,' 1908. Clement Myers vs. Susie Myers. The plaintiff complains of the defendant Suaie D. Myers, and says: That on the 14th day of February. 1907, the plaintiff and the defendant were joined together, as husband and wife by the Holy bands of matrimony. The twain, thus becoming one under "THIS DA TE
OCTOBER 28. 1S85 Cornelius Jansen. founder, born. Died May 8, 1638. . 16S3 William Penn arrived at Newcastle on the Delaware, and took possession of the territory granted him. 1728 Captain James Cook, famous navigator, born. Died Feb. 14,1779. 1746 Earthquake destroyed Lima and the port of Callao, in Pent 1776 Washington defeated by Gen. Howe at White Plains. N. Y. 1791 Gen. Washington returned to Philadelphia from his trip to Carlisle. - . v. -;; - 1856 Simeon Borden, noted Inventor, died. Born Jan. 29. 1798v 1902 About 1,600 DoukbOuhors marched into.Yorktown, Northwest Territory and demanded food. 1909-Announcement was made that John D. Rockefeller had given II.000,000 to fight the hookwonndisease in tho southern states. -
took to live together under the same ropf and In the same building. This was too good to last long, and the bright sunshine of their wedding day soon gave way to clouds of domestic trouble which gathered in thickening gloom, shrouding the 'home with its discordant miasma, until the storm of pent fury broke forth, sweeping the ties of domestic felicity before it like a flood of angry waters, when on or about the 10th day of February, 1908, the plaintiff and the defendant separated and have not since lived or coinhabited together, as man and wife; and plaintiff says, that it would be Impossible to live in the same house, or the same square where the de-
IN HISTORY"
ifendant moves and breathes the vital air --',.V; '-wv , .-.r-i..-
Plaintiff says, be haa always been kind to his wife and loves her with a boundless contlnuety of effection. more tender than devotion bestowed upon Helen of Greece by Agememnoh of old, but this modern Zantlppe hurled back his proffers of love with chemence and scorn, the like of which hell hath no equal. Plaintiff further avers that the story of his wrongs; of his sufferings; of the cruel and inhuman treatment that he has received at the hands of his shrew of a wife, the human tongue would be withered with its own pity in trying to describe them. Plaintiff will not abuse the ear of the court nor dull his sense of justice by detailing all the wrongs that he has suffered, but only those will be mentioned of the mildest nature, such as will bo sufficient to lay the grounds of this action. Plaintiff says, that the defendant is a Kentucky vixen with a tongue tempered with vitriol and well oiled with the lubricant of vituperation, discharging corroding exhalations poisoning the very air with false and slanderous imprecations, throwing into plaintiff's face the inhuman charge of murdering the members of his own family; circulating and 'publishing among plaintiffs neighbors false and cruel story, t,hat plaintiff's grandchildren were nothing but hair lipped further avers that the defendant halls from that section of the Blue Grass State where "an eye for -an eye and a tooth for a tooth" Is still the highest expression of human rights and that. the defendant insists on enforcing this fragment of Mosaic Law at the slightest provocation. And oftimaa the defendant has attacked plaintiff with the ferocity of an enraged beast; with the smile of conciliation upon her lips and her brow frowning the thunder bolts of Jupiter, she has waded into the plaintiff, hurling at him, wth unerring aim a lamp filled with oil, and at another time striking plaintiff with a large lump of stone coal with great force, from the blow, of which the plaintiff suffered great bodily pain and supported for many days, to his dlscomforture, an eye wre&ther in ebony. The plaintiff's neighbors defendant gave utterance that she had married him for his money, and as soon aa the family exchequer was depleted she Intended to return to her nations land, and smilingly back in the southern sunshine, and there patiently wait the approach of another victim. , Plaintiff says, that he would be willing to make any sacrifice in order to live with the defendant if she would exercise only a slight control over her incorrigible temper, but since she will not, plaintiff Is constrained to make this complaint. , . Wherefore, plaintiff prays the court to cut in twain the legal thong that binds together this discordant union, and grant to the plaintiff a decree of divorce, absolving him forever from the society and fellowship of the defendant TMs Is My 66th Birthday 8IR MOSES EZEKIEL. ' Sir Moses Ezekiel, one of the best known American sculptors living abroad, was born in" Richmond, Va., October 28, 1944. During the civil war period he was a student at the Virginia Military institute and saw active service with the famous corps of cadets of that institution. Soon after the war he removed to Cincinnati and a year later went to - Berlin to pursue his art studies. . He was admitted to the society of artists of Berlin on the merits of his colossal bust of Washington, and he was' also the first foreigner to win the Michael Beer prize. , In 1874 be was commissioned by the Jewish Order, Sons of the Covenant to execute a marble group representing religious liberty, which group now- adorns Fairmount Park in Philadelphia. Since 1886 the work of Sir Moses has been chiefly ideal. Among his well known productions are busts of Liszt Cardinal Hohenlohe, the monument to Thomas Jefferson in Louisville, the Jefferson statue at the university of Virginia, the Stonewall Jackson statute just unveiled at Charleston, W. . Va.. the group "Virginia Mourning Her Dead" at Lexington. Va., and the memorial to the- confederate prisoners of war who died at Johnson's island, in Lake Erie. PERFECT CONFIDENCE Richmond People Have Good Reason -. For Complete Reliance. Do you know how To find quick relief from backache; To correct distressing urinary Ills ; To surely cure sick kidneys Just - one way your neighbors know Have used Doan's Kidney Pills; Have proved their worth in many tests. Here's Richmond testimony. David Hersbey, 316 South Thirteenthstreet .Richmond, Ind., says: "I was troubled, for some time by kidney-complaint and the remedies I tried did not help me. Often I was hardly able to straighten on account of sharp, cutting pains across the small of- my back and the least exertion or any cold ' I contracted caused the kidney secretions to pass too frequently. Doan's Kidney Pills, procured at "A. G. Luken & Co's Drug Store, cured me and at that -time, I publicly recommended them. I now gladly confirm all I then said, as I still firmly believe that Doan's Kidney Pills are a splendid remedy for kidney disorders. For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-MQburn Co.. Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United Staves., : ' - Remember th nameDoan' s and take as. ether....- w, . L.-..
NEWS FROM THE LABOR WORLD
All union men In Oklahoma City, Okla., are working the eight-hour day. . A campaign for an eight-hour day Is being made by the union men in Syracuse, N. Y. " The labor commissioner of Wisconsin aecommends an eight-hour day for children. The steam engineers at Toledo. O., recently formed a union, to be affiliated witi the International organization ' The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen has appropriated funds recently for the establishment of a c urse of scientific firing. A Building trades council is be ng contemplated by the trades affiliated with thecentrai organisation a Portsmouth, New Hampshire. For trying to form a rival orga jlzation the Winnipeg Bricklayers and Masons' Union recently sentenced six members to pay a fine of $100 each. . Is is estimated by the American Federation of Labor that 1,500,000 trade unionists were In line at the last Labor Day parades in this country. The unions of Kansas City, Mo., are now holding - their meetings in their new labor temple, which Is a four-s(ory structure and has twelve meeting halls. The Japanese laborers on the California fruit farms are forming organizations. They have a union ot two thousand in one county alone, and have fixed a minimum scale of 2 a day of nine hours. A meeting of labor leaders was held at Montreal. Can., recently for the purpose of organizing a purely Canadian Labor Federation, affiliated with the British Trades Union Congress. The first annual convention of the Trades and Workers' Association, an organization seeking to solve the labor question by peaceful methods, ended its sessions the other day at Battle Creek. Mich. At the recent annual convention of the National Master Horseshoers' Association at Grand Rapids, Mich.. William K. Murphy of Philadelphia was elected president and Atlantic City, N. J., was chosen as the next meeting place. Labor statistics compiled by the state labor commissioner and the state statistician, show that there are 150,000 laborers employed in Colorado, This is the first compilation of that kind ever made In the history of the state. . The British labor leaders are communicating with the Colonial leaders with a view to arranging a special conference of the representatives of the various labor parties of the empire to be held in London in 1911, about the time of the Colonial Conference. The Idea is to discuss the possibility of joint action between the parties in aH matters affecting the interests of the workers of the empire.
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