Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 6, 15 November 1910 — Page 4

PAOE roun ,

THE DICZmOZTD PAIXADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, NOVEMBEK 15, 1910.

tzi Ssa-Telerea Publlshe and owned by tha PALLADIUM PRINTINO CO. !aau4 7 4aya aac week, avaniaga and Sunday tnarntnK. Office Corner North ttb and A streata. Palladium and Sun-Telearam Phones Ilualneaa Office, 2t6; Editorial 1 looms. 1111. RICHMOND. INDIANA.

Fulfilling A Promise

ft4alh O. Leaa Bdltar J. Y. Rlagkalf Baalaaaa Maaager Carl Baraaardt Aaaaalata Ed Mat W. K. PaaadataM ...... Mewa Edltaa

BUBBCRX PTION TKIIM3. la Richmond ft.OO par year (In advance) or 10c par week. MAIL BUBSCUIPTIONa Ona yaar. In advanca f -?2 BIX montlia. In advanca Una month. In advanca .......... RURAL ROUTKji On a yaar, in advanca IJJJ RIs months. In advanca - Ona month, tn advanca Address changed aa often aa daalrad; bath now and old addreaaaa muat toe given. Mubaerlbara will please remit with order. wblch should ba given for a opacified term: name aylll not ba entered until payment la received.

Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post

afflca aa aecond claaa mall matter.

New York nnresentatlvee Payne U To una;. 30-14 West ISrrt atreet. and 29II Weet Itnd atreet. New York. N. Y. Chicago ItrpraaantatlveaPayne & Younc. 747-744 Maruuetta Uulldlnrf. Chicago. Ilk

t ttanfcSMttaa.

(Maw Yark Cfcy) aaa

0aJy la tlgaraa at

la tta vnan an

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RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" ' Haa a population f 13.000 and la growing. It la tha county eat of Wavne County, and tha trading canter of a rich agricultural community. It la located dua oaat from Indianapolis I mllea and 4 mllea from tha atata Una. Hlebmend la a , city af homea and of Industry. Primarily a , manufacturing city. It la also tha lobblna renter of Eastern Indiana and enioya tha retail trade of tha popufoua community lor mllea around. Richmond la proud of Ita aplen- , did atraata. wall kept yards. Ita cement aldewalka and beautiful I ahada treea. It haa national , banka. I trust com pan lea and 4 - building aaaoclatlona with com blned reaourcea af over l,000.00. i Number af factorlaa 111; capital tnreeted I7.MM, with an annual output of IST.aoo.eoA. and a pay roll of $S.700.0c. Tha total , pay roll for tha city amounta to approximately 14.100.000 annualTbera ara flva raWroad com panlea radlatlna- In elcht dlf far-

ant dlractlana from tha city. In

faming freight hrnd!ad dally. 1.-

rlO.OOO lb.; outgoing freight

handled dally. 7 1 0,000 fba. Yard facllltlea. -per day. 1.70 care. numbr of passenger tralna daily. 00. Number af frelarht trafna ally. TT. Tha annual peat office receipts amount to f 10.000. Total "wMui rajuatlon of tb aity. 9ia.e0e.eee. Richmond hae two Inter urban rallwaya. Thraa newapapara with combined circulation of 11.004. Richmond la tha greatest hard wara Jobbing center In tha atata and only vernnd In general Jobbin Interest It haa a piano fartry producing a high grade plana ovary II mlnutaa. It 10 the leader In tha manufacture of traction enainee, and .producea mora threehlhg machlnea. lawn mowera. roller abates, grain drllla and burial caaketa thaa any other city In tha world. Tha elty'a area la 1140 areat haa a court house costing tieo, 10 public aehoola and haa tha flneat and moat rmUt high ' arhaol In tha middle weat tinder rnnatraetlan; S ttarnchlel whnoin

Rarlham rnllega and the Indiana lluilneaa College: mo aplendld

ira rommnitP in rine base

aueee: Glen Millar narlr tk

largest and moat beautiful park In Indiana, tha home af Richmond's annual chautanqua: aeven hotels: municipal electrlo light ptant. under auccrssfut operation, and a private electrlo Itarht plant. Inanrlnar rompatttlnn: the oldest publlo library In tha atata. ,-. r-apt ona and tha aacand larrest. 40.000 volumaa: pure, refraehtnar water, unsurpassed; CI mllea of Improved streets; 40 mllea of aewers: ta mllea af cement curb and gutter combined: 40 mllea of emnt walka. and manv mllea of brick walke. Tblrtv rhurchea. In eluding the Tteld Memorial, built at a ct of ttie.OOO; Vteld Memorial HospitaL ana of the moat modem In the atata T. M- C A. building, erected at a cost of Ilea 000 ona of tho finest In tha atata. Tha amusement renter of wtern Indiana and Westara Ohio. N city f tha elaa of Richmond boMa a fine an annual art eihlbH. The Richmond pall Fea Ival held each October la unique, no other eltr holds a similar uffr It ta given In the Intereat of tha city and financed by th buMneea man. gueeeaa awaiting anvone with enterprlaa In the Panlo Proof

This Is My 53rd Birthday

BISHOP OF TORONTO.

Rot. Jamea Fielding Sweeney, An-

KUcag blahop of Toronto, waa bora In

London. England, November IS, J857 a ton of CoL Jamea F. Sweeney, an ot

Cetr of tbe British army. He edu-

Cfttad tn the public aehoola ot Hon

traaj god at McGJU univeraltr, cradov atlas from tbe unlreralty In U1S. Ho

atndJed theology at the Montrv! Dio-

ceaan Theological college and was

ordained a prteat In 1881. On bla or

tUaatlon he became rector of 8t.

Lakg'a church, Montreal, and two years later was called to the pulpit of CL Phillip's church, Toronto. In 1889 kg waa appointed on the honorary canon, of St. Alban's cathedral, Toronto, and In 1909 ho was elected bishop ot the Toronto diocese In suo

caaeloa to the late Archbishop Swet

Robert Smith, a-brother of 8ydney Caltm, an ex-adTOCate-general, once

CCs4 tn an argument with a physlctxn over the relatlTa meriu of their rgepac.ive profeaslons. "I dont say that all lawyers are crooks," aald the doctor, bat you'll have to admit that your profeeeloa doesn't make angels of mb." "No," retorted -Smith; roa ttsctora certainly have tbe best of

Ambition, when directed towarda the attainment of something that la of universal benefit, unselfish as against self-seeking, should be encouraged. If for no other and better reason than for our own sakes. Mayor Zimmerman, when he took office leas than a year ago, expressed as his ambition the desire to give Richmond the best administration. It bad ever experienced. He has been as good as bis word. To the best of bis ability be Is' giving this city a clean, business like administration. Tbe latest evidence ot this was furnished on Monday, when he fined a city employe for Intoxication and issued the order, "City employes must pay their debts and not became intoxicated." City employes, drawing an assured and ateady income, show neither managerial capacity nor a proper sense of responsibility when they allow personal obligations to remain unpaid. Just as , In any other business, the city employe who drinks to excess is inviting personal inefficiency which Is bound to show In the class of work he is doing. ' ' Mayor Zimmerman, In thus putting bis foot down on personal irresponsibility and practices leading to inefficiency, offers additional proof of his determination to live up to his ante-election promise. Such a policy can not fall to add more citisens to bis well-wishers for "the best administration Richmond ever had."

Tbe Palladium feels it expresses the' desires of a majority ot Richmond's citisens when it advises council and the mayor to thoroughly investigate the, proposed building ordinance before acting upon it favorably or unfavorably. It not only adds an expensive office but must be studied from the standpoint of whether or not too many restrictions governing building operations will not, considering Richmond realty values, cause more barm than good.

Eliminating Roosevelt

Of course they have eliminate 1 Roosevelt. Surely, just as they have eliminated the things he stands for. Do you remember when the early campaign opened that we said that if the bosslets In the Republican party In New York did not defeat Roosevelt and the things that he stands for, in the convention that they .would do their utmost to do It in the election. And they did. The men who Bit around the clubs in New York and, Indianapolis will tell you that Roosevelt and Bevferidge have both been defeated. In Philadelphia you ran find men In the Bellevue Stratford who will assure you that Tener scored a glorious victory over Berry. And so it la all through. Big Business and corruption won in all ot these Instances. '

But to return to Roosevelt. It Roosevelt had not entered the New York campaign and Indeed until he did. the papers whach later vilified him were busy traducing him . because he did not enter the campaign and support Taft. Behold he enters, and, answering tbe appeal of the people for someone to prosecute grafters and straighten out such affairs, as the Ballinger episode, the New York papers become suddenly eloquent with the phrase "Roosevelt wants to be King." His New Nationalism was simply a preaching of the Ten Commandmentshis old moralities behold they are held up to the people as the program of a map who wants to seize the government for his own uses a Napoleon returned from Elba. You may know Roosevelt by tbe men who fight for him. It was not the people but the trinity of Wall street, the Republican "organization," and Tammany, which defeated him and the things he stands for. And yet we are told that Roosevelt is a reactionary. If Roosevelt were a reactionary he would be heralded to the skies by the press that Wall street controls, ' Not even Roosevelt In New York, nor Beveridge in Indiana, could stay the tide of discontent against the standpat machine of the Republicans, together with the aid that the bi-partisan machine furnished tbe Tammany Halls of both states. Murphy in New York and Taggart in Indiana-flourished on .the same money from the same sources. And that, we suppose, constitutes the elimination of both them and the men who voted for them. '

Listen to the Philadelphia North American: "For the sake of New York we regret the result In Hew York. But because the country needs, more than almost all else, the elimination from the nature of Theodore Roosevelt of his Innate tendency toward partlsianahlp and "regularity" and the enforced thrusting of him Into the exclusive comradeship of real Americans like himself, the higher the islanders pile the Dix plurality, wrought by the dulterous marriage of Wall street, Tammany and corrupt bossism, the better for Roosevelt and bis country. "Roosevelt Is a man who makes mistakes. . "But be never made a blunder comparable to that of his enemies who think that he is dead and done for simply because on Tuesday, everywhere outside of New York, every party organization that had become progressive was victorious and every one that clung to the old wrongs and fallacies that Roosevelt fights was beaten In spite ot any label. "The New Yorkers spent a good deal of money and enthusiasm on Tuesday for the knowledge that will come to them later. They did not mean to buy a letter of credit for Theodore Roosevelt to all the millions of Americana west of the Palisades when they bought the defeat of Stlmson. Those New Yorkers will be the most surprised of men when they discover that they merely wrote a preface when they thought they were Inditing an expensive epitaph."

Follow that through. Roosevelt has alwaya been a party man a Republican through and through. Early in his career he made up bis mind ' to stay with bla party and to work within his party. - Roosevelt was not In this country during' the days of the Payne-Aldrich tariff controversy when interest-owned Democrats lined up with Interest-owned Republicans In the most remarkable demonstration that this country has ever seen of the bl-partlsian machine in action. He made the mistake of thinking that tbe organization of the Republican party would stand for progress when It waa owned body and soul by Wall street. Roosevelt is no fool and his mistake was one of faith In his fellow man. He has made many such mistakes. , , Roosevelt will not need to be taught that lesson again. The New York papera and several obscure college professors dependent on .men whose names do not stand for the very best In American citizenship, though they endow a million colleges, like Syracuse, have been shrieking at the top of their lungs "Teach Roosevelt a lesson." We think that .Roosevelt In common with the everyday American has received his lesson and that neither one of them are going to be taken In nor extinguished. . Roosevelt has had bla taste of the treachery of the bi-partisian machine and so have the people. Thia has nothing to do with the presidency but this much is certain that if the Wall street men really fear Roosevelt aa tbe next president they have not done well by "repudiating him as Cleveland waa repudiatedby Tammany Hall and the Republican "organization." The more illustrations that are furnished the people of the bl-par-tlatan machine In action the more we shall see the people, and the men who represent them, playing the bi-partisian game also. That means electing men without regard to the party so long as theywill accomplish results. ' It's a mighty, poor rule that won't worl both ways. The interests cannot use two parties without driving the people to throw oft partisan ship. ' " ... Many a good Republican that had never voted the mixed ticket did so in this campaign or refused to vote. , He was up against tbe same proposition that Roosevelt was up against. And Roosevelt now,, as always, will be found just about where the average man is to be found. ' i " , As always Roosevelt haa voiced the common man's fight; has undergone the' common man's experience. If the common, every day citizen and his fight was extinguished Then Roosevelt was defeated in New York and we make our guess that neither j one of them were entirely put out of the business by the bl-par-' tisian machine and its lord and master. And this applies as well In Indiana as It does In Pennsylvania and New York. . , :.-.. - a . - -

INSTINCTS PRIMAL CHILDREN SAVAGES

Chicago Lecturer Talks on Biology of Child Biogenetic Law Important.

Chicago, Nov. 15. J. Howard Moore told membera of the Socialist league a lot about babies last evening. Mr. Moore discussed "Tbe Biology of the Child" at a meeting which was held at 160 Washington street. "There is a law in biology called the biogenetic law. It was discovered by Haeckel. It is one of tbe most important laws of tbe organic world. It is this: Each organism in its individual development re pea fa the life history of tbe race to which it belongs.' Kay to Absurd Instincts. "No being comes rnto the world full grown. Every being goes through the performance of what is called growing before it Is a complete organism. Every being commenced as a small, simple and rather shapeless bit of protoplasm. The gulf between this condition and maturity la bridged by. a longer or shorter series of changes in size, form and architecture. The remarkable thing about these changes Is that they are strikingly parallel to the changes which the race has undergone in its evolution from the beginning ot the earth. "The biogenetic law applies to mental phenomena as well as to physical. Only in tbe light of this law is it pos

sible to understand the many strange and absurd instincts that come and go during human infancy, childhood and adolescence. "It has been said that the child is born savage. This is not quite true.. It is worse than that. Only after a rather long and inglorious preliminary as a quadruped is it able to walk with its front feet in the air and rightfully lay claim to the title of savage." Mental Stata of a Savage. Mr. Moore said the general ideas of the child, Its conception of itself, and its outlook on the world are essentially the same as those of the savage narrow, mystical, and naive. The child believes in ghosts, fairy tales, magic

and miracles, much as the savage does. '

Among the points brought out by

the lecture were the following:

The human baby antedates the sav

age by several hundred thousand

years. - The child, is a born ape. Tbe instinct of the baby to cling to everything within reach is the instinct of the monkey.

A stick in the hands of a baby be

comes a club. A baby's attack on the cat is a relic Ol the club stage in . man's development.

A child's love of a camp fire, the

forming of gangs among boys, the desire to stone dogs and snowball ped

dlers, and the strong love for a bow and arrow are remnants of the earlier

man.

DISSOLVETOWIISHIP Political Feud Ends in a Petition and This Action.

Bedford. Ind.. Nov. 15. After investigating the petition signed by twothirds of the voters of Flinn township, presented to them by Reed Ellison, W. H- Martin and others, f6klng for the dissolution of that township, the board of commissioners have made an order

by which Flinn township goes off the map. A two-mile atrip on the western side was annexed to Siiamawick township and the north and south portions of the east end were given to Guthrie and Pleasant Run townships. The order becomes effective Jan. 1. There has been a political feud In Flinn township for many years. The township is the smallest in Lawrence county, having a vote of only two hundred, of which 150 are Democrats and 50 are Republicans. The climax of the feud waa reached when Dr. Butler, the

township trustee, resigned and left the t country.

It is estimated that the world's total production of cocoa tor this year will amount to about 220,000 tons.

All traveling in Honduras is done on tbe back of horses or mules. The Honduran horse Is much smaller than the American horse and much less rounded.

HE CURED HIS

f t

HAIR SOFT AS SILK.

New Scientific Treatment Kills Dandruff Germs, and Makes Hair Soft. It is an accepted fact, a proven fact, that dandruff is a germ disease; and it Is also a demonstrated fact that Newbro'a Herpicide kills the dandruff germ. Without dandruff falling hair would stop, and thin hair will thicken. Herpieide not only kills the dandruff germ, but it also makes hair as soft as silk. It is the most delightful hair dressing made. It cleanses the scalp from dandruff and keeps it clean and healthy. Itching and irritation are instantly', relieved, and permanently cured. There's nothing "just as good." Take no substitute. Ask for "Herpicide." Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c in stamps for sample to The Herpicide' Co., Detroit Mich. A. G. Luken and Company, Special Agents. , One dollar bottles guaranteed.

The German locomotive engineer who runs bis engine for 10 years without accident, gets a government reward.

' Mrs. Gordon Green is a licensed pilot on the Mississippi. She is the wife of tbe owner of a line of steamers and began her study of the river 20 years ago.

Try This Homm-XIad

Cough Remedy Costa Little, But Does the Work Quickly, or Money Refunded.

Mix one pint of granulated sugar with pint of warm water, and stir for 2 minutes. Put 2 ounces of Pinex (fifty cents' worth) in a pint bottle; then add the Sugar Syrup. Take a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours. You will find that this simple remedy taken hold ot a cough more quickly than anything else you ever used. Usually enda a deep-seated cough inside of 24 hours. 8plendid. too, for whooping cough, chest pains, bronchitis and other throat -troubles. It stimulates tbe appetite and te alightly laxative, which helps end a cough. This recipe makes more and better cough syrup than you could buy ready-made for 2.50. It keeps perfectly and tastes pleasanL Pinear la that mnar valna! MmMn.

t rated compound of Norway white j

iua eiuaci, uq is nea in guiaiooi and all the natural pine elements which are so healing to tbe membranes. Other preparations will not work In this formula. This plan ot making cough syrup with Plnex and Sugar Syrup (or at rained honey) has proven so popular throughout the United States and Canada, that it is often Imitated. But tbe old. successful formula has never been equalled. - A guarantee of absotate satisfaction, or money promptly refunded, goes with this recipe. Your druggist has

nnex or wiu get it xor yon. u not.

"THIS DATE IN HISTORY"

NOVEMBER 15. 1763 Messrs. Mason and Dixon arrived from England to survey the Pennsylvania and Maryland boundary. 1"77 Articles of confederation adopted by congress. 1814 Edward L. Davenport, famous actor, born in Boston. Died at Canton, Pa., Sept. .1, 1877. 1S32 Philadelphia and Harrisburg connected, b railroad. 1850 Saturn's dusky ring discovered. 1860 The Prince of Wales (Kin,; Edward VII) reached Plymouth and his return home from his first American visit. 1861- rFirst message sent over the transcontinental telegraph line. 1864 Columbia College school tf Mines was organized. 1900 Lord Strathcona presented with an eulogistic address on behalf of the citizens of Montreal. 1902 Attempted assassination of King Leopold of Belgium.

How g Strenuous Old Captain dot

1 on His Feet. His Remarkable Discovery v So Elated Ha Saada It Praa ta All Whs Ate

Ruptured. With two huge rur-turas, one on acn ctda, bedridden lor yeax. prieoUy hlpltss. aa old pioneer caputu ol JoOeraou County atade a rmuarS. abla dtcuverv by which ba actually cured btm. tlf. Kot oq bis fort and twrer aitvr bad to awo -war a truss. And now h wants every ruptured man, wo mail aud child to be eunxl by tlit same discovery. IIo studs It far trial absolutely ires to all. No matter how or bere or bow long you have bfiu ruptttred, send your name ana address at ouoa to i'apt. Colling and ba will send tha discovery free by mall. Do not neglect to write at once. Kill t this coupon. -

RUPTU3E C.3E D1SC3YCIY CAPT. W. A. COLUNQS Bos sT Wktertooa, S. T, rimue mttA me reU, from, your tMacorer for the Cure uf. Kuiituxe. Kama.. Address

f

.0

Notion Department Wednesday. Thursday. Friday and Saturday 400 dozen Ladies' Handkerchiefs, fine quajity, with neat, hemstitched edge, regular price 5c each, Sale price, 6 for 20c. 40 dozen white embroidered Handkerchiefs, come 2 in neat box, worth 50c per box, Sale price 25c per box. 100 pes. Ribbon, new Persian effects, plaids, stripes, florals and plain taffetas, No. 100, worth 25c to 50c per yard; Sale price 20c per yd. One lot Neck Scarfs, beautiful Persian and floral borders, worth from $1 to $1.50; during this sale 88c each. One counter Colored Laces, fancy all overs and bands, worth from 50c to $10.00 yd., during this sale y2 price. 1 LOT GENUINE COWHIDE TRAVELING BAGS Leather lined with pocket, French seams, drop lock with name tag to match:

0

14 inch, worth $6.00, ' Sale; price $5.00 16 inch, worth $7.50, Sale price S5s00

15 inch, worth $7.00, Sale price ..... $5.00 17 inch, worth $8.00, Sale price $5a00

18 inch, worth $9.C9, sde price $3.9 Our line of Christmas Smoking Jackets is now complete and ready for your inspection. Never have we had such splendid values for so little money. See the large window. Prices $5.00 to $12.00. Notion Deportment

Tic to. E . Em&i fei C