Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 113, 2 March 1911 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE niCimOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1911.

Itz Richmond Palladium tsi Sin-Telegram Publlahad and owu4 by" tha PALLADIUM riUNTINO CO. Xsautd 7 daya each wk. voatng and Sunday mornln. Offica Cornar North ttb and A etraatfc Palladium and Buri-TaUa:ram Phonaa )lulnaa Office. Sill; Keillor 11 tioomi, niCIIMOND. INDIANA.

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8UD8CKIPTION TERMS, ta Itlcbmend It.OO ."ar yaar (lit advanca) or iOo par waak. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. Ona raar. la advanea If J' la montha. In advanea Ona month. In advanea RURAL ROUTE Ona yaar. tn advanea 5 22 Bis mo t ha. tn advanea '; Ona month. In advanea .......... Addana chansad as eftan aa daalrad; both aaw and old addraaaaa mutt aa Ivan. Sabacrlbara will plats ratntt with rear, which should ba slvan for a spaclftad tarm: nama will not ba antarad until payment la received.

Entarad at Richmond. Indiana, poat offlco aa aaeond class snail mattsr.

New Tark 1prasnttlvas Payne A Toms;. 10-H Wast tSrd straat. and SISI WeM SSnd straat. Naw York. N. T. Chirac Rnrasantatlvas Payna Touna;. T41-74I Marquette Uulldln. Chloaao. 111.

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RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY"

Has a population of 53.000 and la crowing. It la tha county aaat of Wayne County, and tha tradlna canter of a rich agrlcultural community. It is located due aaat from Indianapolis mllaa and 4 mllaa from tha atafa Una. lllchniond Is a city of noma and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It is also tha jobbing renter of Kaatarn InUlana and enjoys tha ratall trad of tha populous community fur mil around. Richmond Is proud of Its fplfndld atraet. wall kept yards. H cement aidawalks and beautiful ahada I raws. It has 3 national banks, i trust companies and 4 building associations with com blned resources of over S. 000,00"). Number of factories 12&; capital Invested 17.000,000. with an an nual output nf 17.000.000, and a pay roll of $3,700,000. Tha total pay roll for tha city amounts to approximately .UO,000 annual )y. There ara flva rallrosd compsnlea radiating In eight differ ant directions from tha city, in coming freight handled dally, 1. 740.000 lbs.; outgoing freight handled dally. YtO.oOO Tt. Yard facilities, per day 1.700 cars. Number of passenger trains dally . Number of freight trains dally 77. Tha annual post office receipts amount to f dO.qoo. Total assessed valuation of tha city, 115,000,000. Richmond lias two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with ft combined circulation of 13.000. Richmond Is tha greatest hardware Jobbing renter In the stato and only second In general Jolt btntr Interests, it has a piano factory producing a high grada tlam every IS minutes. It la tha leader In tha manufacture of traction anginas, and produces mora threshing machines, lawn mowers, roller skates, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city In tha world. Tha city's area Is 2.440 acres; baa a court house costing 4500.000: 10 public schools and has tha finest and most complete high school In tha middle west under construction: S parochial schools; Harthani college and tha Indiana Huslncsa College; flva splendid flra companies In fine hosa houses; Glen Miller park, tha largest and most beautiful park wiond's annual Chautauqua; seven In Indiana, tha home of Rich hotels; municipal electric light plant, under auccessful operation and a private elect rlo light plant. Insuring competition; tha oldest public library in tha state, except ona and tha second largest, 40.000 volumes: pure, refreshing water, tinaurpassad: 43 miles of Improvad streets: 40 miles of sewers; ; J miles of cement curb and gutter combined: 40 miles of cement wslks. and many miles .of brick walka. Thlrtv churches. Including tha Reld Memorial, built at a cost of I240.000; Raid Memorial Hospital, ona of tha moat modern In tha atata; Y. M. C. A. building, erected at a coat of 4100.000. ona f tha finest In tha state. Tha amusement canter of Eastern Indiana and Western Ohio. Na city of tha alaa of Richmond holds as fine an annual art as Mbit. Tha Richmond Fall Pas tlval held each October la unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It la given In tha Interest of tha city and financed by tha business man. Success awaiting anyone with enterprlsa la the Panto Proof City.

A Crooked Senate

The Senate of the United States is convicted 46 to 40.

GUNNESS CASE IS RECALLED BY SUITS New York. March . The effort of Mr a. Cora llccran, of Indianapolis, to Jury that sho and her mother arc tntitled to $30,000 each aa damages from tho New York Central railroad, for alleged false arrest, recalls to the minds of many tho world-v, Ida search for Mrs. Belle Gunm-ss, the La port e (Ind.) murderess, three years ago. On suspicion that sho or her mother, Mrs. Laura Norton, might be the much sought murderess, detectives boarded tho train at Utiot on the night of Mar 9, 1908, and forced both of them to get up, dress and go to the police station at Syracuse, where they apvnt fifteen hours before they could prove, their identity. Tho plaintiffs contended that, as yassenger. their rights were violated, while the defense of the railroad, it is said, will be that the detectives were armed with authority to make a search of the train and that it was not the company's fault that Mrs. Heercn was arrested and detained.

An enormous peary of perfect shape and valued at $30,000. has been found In the western Australian pearl fisheries and brought Into Groome, from where It baa been shipped to England.

If I believed that Mammotism with its adjuncts was to continue henceforth the one aeriota principle of our existence, I should reckon it Idle to solicit lemedial measures from any government, the disease being insusceptible of remedy. Past and Present, Thomas Carlyle.

For thrw mouths the senate of the United States has allowed the session to lapse into a coma without doing any work of importance. It has been considering" the Lorimer cate. First there was the attempt to "whitewash" Lorimer. Jleveridge saved the Senate that perridy which it later wallowed in. lie gave it the chance to appear before the American people in its own vindication on the charge of being in the majority the possessors of seats bought and controlled in varying degrees by the same lorty principles as guided the "Blonde boss of the stockyards" to his bought seat as the representatrve of the meat trust, the lumber trust and the real representative of Hinky Dink s First Ward of Chicago dance halls. It is to Ilc-veridge that the credit is due for the chance that the people have had to realize that a majority of the senate are what they have been loathe to believe them. Senator Root understated the case in his speech in saying: "If we would preserve the government of the fathers, If wo would preserve the honor and dignity of the senate, if we would do our full dyty to our country under our oaths; we are not at liberty to reject the testimony in this case, which shows this seat to be filled here as the result of corruption. Hard it is; but as we have had fathers who have made sacrifices for our land, as we have children to whom we hope to hand down u government of peace and justice and liberty, it rests with the senate of the United States to do its duty now; and, hard and unpleasant as it may be, purge itself of tho results of this foul conspiracy against the integrity and purity of our government."

Senator Reveridge Ktood out in high relief throughout this whole three months as the real type of American manhood in contrast to the vicious greed which Is sapping the republic in contrast to Lorimer. And his was the moving spirit that 6aw to it that the snatchers of American liberty did not do so without announcing in plain terras that they were part and parcel of a bought and ktpt senate. So that is the history of the latt three months of the senate.

D&kes IIor3 Caking Easy

Senator Reveridge summed up Lorimer and his case and none has done It better: "Yet praiseworthy as it is, such conduct is not peculiar to the sitting member, for there are senators here, and thousands of private citizens everywhere who have done much the same thing. The sitting member's generosity, which all of us admire and approve. Is not pertinent to the case, for no one doubts his benevolence. "While my sympathy and approval as a man were aroused by this picturesque and praiseworthy Incident In the sitting member's life, my judgment as a member of this court was not affected, for my judgment was not appealed to. The issue we must determine is that of the validity of the election, challenged here on the ground of bribery. On that grave charge no light was thrown. "Hut while I was affected as a man by that appeal, I was curious as a judge that the sitting member did not recite these things before the senate committee if he or his attorneys thought them material or relevant. His account of his popularity is interesting and explains much of his political strength, but it i3 not relevant to the question of bribery which we are now considering. ' "His newsboy experience and the devoted friendship between himself and Hinky Dink resulting therefrom is engaging; but it is not material as to the corruption of Holtslaw, White, Beckemeyer, Link and others. Hinky Dink, according to Mr. Lorimer. delivered Griffin's vote, but Griffin swore he had not been asked by any ono to vote for Mr. Lorimer, and Henry Tirrell swore Griffin suggested that he vote for Lorimer. and said there was $1,000 in it anyway. Yet In reciting this phase of his life, the sitting member without knowing it has thrown light upon one portion of the testimony." When on birthday of Washington, the founder of the America of today, the apostle of honor and the soul of decency and human liberty Lorimer arose and gave his "sob story" In which he recited how it was that he stood as the inspiration of the poor boys in America whereby prostitution to special interests one may have his Eeat bought even In the senate of the United States self eulogy did not wipe out the smirch of thousands of dollars paid for entrance into the senate he disgraces with the other forty-six or more. He merely reflected tho question in the United States which Thomas Carlyle asked of England in his terrible Past and Present: If England cannot get her knaves and dastards "arrested" In some degree, but can only get them "elected," what is to become of England? That is the question. What Is to become of America? When men like Lorimer with their seats bought and paid for can sit in the senate without even a coating of "whitewash" when a senate stands convicted of a lie and what Theodore Roosevelt called "the foulest corruption to the institutions of the United States?"

The same Thomas Carlyle gives answer for the American people: "A parliament, one would say, which proclaims itself elected and eleible by bribery, tells the nation that it is governed by it a piece of singular news. Bribery: have we reflected what Bribery Is? Bribery means not only length of purse, which is neither qualilcation nor the contrary for legislating well; but It means dishonesty, and even impudent dishonesty; brazen insensibility to lying and to making others lie; total oblivion, and flinging overboard for the nonce, of any real thing you can call veracity, morality; dextrous putting on the cast-clothes of that real thing and strutting about in them.

The United States senate is crooked. It stands self-convicted. And the American people ought to be ready to say with Carlyle: On the whole a parliament working, with a lie In its mouth will have to take itself away. To no parliament or things that one has heard of, did this universe ever yield long harbor on that footing. At all hours of the day and night, some Chartism is advancing, to apprise Buch Parliament: "Ye are no Parliament. In the name of God go!"

1200 PERSONS DAILY VISIT GRANT GRAVE New York. March 2. Although the number has decreased of late years there is still a pilgrtmage averaging about 1,200 persons a day to the tomb of General Grant. Figures for yearly attendance were announced at the annual meeting of the trustees of the monument, show lug that 3,076.469 had visited the General's sarcophagus in the last six years. General Horace Porter was elected iTcsldcnt of the association.

GRAND JURY DEFENDS DEAD WOMAN Kvansville, Ind.. March 2 Establishing a precedent in southern Indiana, the Vanderburg grand jury made official subject matter of the reputation of a woman who is now dead. Miss Olive Inkenbrandt, a store clerk, died two weeks ago. Rumor assigned a criminal cause for her death. "We wish, not only individually but as grandjurers sworn to investigate violations of the criminal law impartially, to condemn and brand as absolutely false all rumors attacking the chastity and good name of Olive Inkenbrandt." says the report.

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LAW DROVE RICH TO CHAUFFEURSHIP

Chicago, March 2. Just why Henry J. Furber, Chicago millionaire attorney, is in the city on a flying trip, interrupting his winter vacation in Rome, became known when he appear

ed at his offices and announced that

he had become a chauffeur. Furber explained that there were curious laws in Italy regarding the licensing of drivers. It became necessary for him to hire a new chauffeur for his imported car about every two clays. As he had other thing to do in Italy he decided to become a chauffeur himself. To do this it was necessary that he get a Chicago license. This morning he saw Mayor Busse, took the driver's examination and was given a little number all of his own. Furber will leave again for Rome in a fortnight.

RELIEF FOR THE LAUNDRESS. Under old-fashioned methods laundry work was a severe burden. Rub, rub, rub and scrub, scrub, scrub on a wash-board till the back ached, the limbs were weary and the hands became red and rough. There is no need of suing through this ordeal today, because Hewitt's Easy Task soap lightens this work fully one-half and makes it much less disagreeable. Just buy two cakes for ten centf. and if the first is not satisfactory return the other and get your full money back.

PAWNED WOODEN LEG COULDN'T LEAVE

Indianapolis, March 2. When Judge Collins, of the police court, sought to have his orders obeyed for John' Simpson to leave town it was found that John had pawned his wooden leg and that he was in no condition to travel. Sam Gaddis, a probation officer, called the turn on Simpson when the latter hopped into court on a crutch. Simpson said he had left the leg at a 6hop for repair. Gaddis reported that he had trailed Simpson and found that he had pawned the leg for $2. The company was willing to give up the leg for $2. Simpson had $1.80. The remainder was appropriated out of the court missionary box so that Simpson was able to recover the leg and depart.

ELOPE JUST TO SURPRISE FRIENDS

Charles Seitz and Miss Ella Strothaus were secretly married on last Saturday evening at Fremont, O., according to announcement made on Wednesday by friends of the two. No other motive than to surprise their friends is assigned for their elopement. Mr. and Mrs. Seitz are living with her mother at 613 South C street. He is employed at the piano factory, but formerly lived in Fremont.

THE SEVENTH DAY. "Let it go tiil Sunday and I'll fix it." That was the frequent word of a farmer for whom the writer worked for a time when a bey. He employed

his Sundays in the mending of bar- j nesses and in such odd jobs. I It was his day for the solution of

the week's farm problems. Drudin thi? six clays, he piled up the leftovers! for the seventh. For a time this farmer prospered, but gradually wore himself out trying to get rich and died in middle life. As the strings of a violin cannot always be put upon a strain, so a man cannot forever put his faculties on the stretch without losing bis buoyancy and vitality. For, look you The institution of Sunday Is more than a day of rest set apart by civil and religious authority. It is a weeu end vacation established by the experience of the race for the benefit of the race. Civilized man has discovered the fact that periodical rest and relaxation is vital to the health and sanity of Luman beings. My Illinois farmer wore out his body by his incessant demands upon it. And he wore out his mind by monotonous employment, refusing relaxation or change of occupation. The mind is no cnged creature. It craves freedom. While his neighbors took their families to church on Sunday morning this farmer made no difference in days, driving himself and his family to incessant labors. For him and his there was no change of the deadly even tenor, no refreshment of soul, no spiritual vision. He became like his Norman horses and died like one of them. Do not spoil your Sunday. It is part of your sacred heritage and the oldest institution of civilization save one the family. It Is a holy day not only In the sense of being sacred as a religious observance, but holy in the old AngloSaxon sense of holy wholesome. Give yonr soul a chance. Let It rise one day in seven on the wings of faith and trust to the spiritual hills, whence all its strength must come. Do not spoil your Sunday.

Tha Prima Donna. "You look particularly happy today," snjd CItimnn. "I am," replied Subbubs. "I've just succeeded In getting our leading lady to sign for another season." "I didn't know you were In the theatrical business." "I'm not. I refer to our cook." Catholic Standard and Times.

REFUSED EARTHLY AID FORJILOREII Fanatical Father Said Lord Would Provide Children Hungered.

Columbus, O., March 2. While Jathan Foster prayed, his little children hungered. Day by day he called on the Lord to provide and daily as he called three little pairs of crooked legs wobbled more feebly and plain

tive mouths called for bread for the '

body. In their hovel at the west end of

Goodale street Jathan's wife joined in j the prayer to the Lord, and as their j faith in his providence waxed stronger j

the little limbs grew weaker. So strong grew the faith that milk from the diet kitchen, sent to relieve the pangs of hunger lay untouched. The Lord Would Provide. "Thte Lord will provide," gravely said Foster to those who would help his children to sustenance. "The Lord will provide," echoed his wife, who looked askance at the gentle hand

that carried earthly food, when spiritual consolation filled their home. Yesterday Probate Judge Rlack committed Foster, his reason dethroned with religious fanaticism, to the State hospital for the insane. A few days previous, the three little children Jathen. jr., aged 4; Sylvester, aged 3, and Dorothy, aged 14 months, were taken from their mother's hands and consigned to the Children's Home. Court Thoroughly Aroused. It required the authority of a deputy sheriff, backed by his chief, and the threats of a thoroughly aroused court to force ajar that haven for the crooked little legs that mutely told of the zealot's prayer and cruel faith. "We are not taking cripples here," said Mrs. Mary White, the superintendent of the home. So Deputy Sheriff Cashner returned without his receipt but also without the children. "They are not beyond the pale of the law," rejoins Judge Black, and at the Children's Home they're going to stick." Disobedience with this order means that the institution's head will go to jail," he said. So there they stick. Children Will Recover. They will be well treated, too, said the assistant superintendent of the

home last night. Dr. Wr. D. Deuschle, who was called upon to examine the tots, says they are suffering from rickets, which is merely the result of lack of nutrition. With the help of braces provided in such cases they will round out nicely, he declared, and become normal.

If I Had Eczema I'd wash it away with that mild, soothing liquid, D. D. D. Trial botte. 25c. Relieves all kinds of skin trouble, cleansing away the impurities and clearing up the complexion as nothing else can. Yes. If I had any kind of skin trouble I'D VSE D. D. D. Conkey Drug Co. CONGRESS APPROVES MILITIA PAY BILL

(American News Service) Washington, March 1. The house today passed the Steenerson appropriations bill known as the militia pay bill. It provides that militia' officers shall receive from 5 to 25 per cent of pay accorded the similar rank of officers in the regular army. Privates will receive $48 a year, providing they attend the required number of drills.

KILL MAGAZINE POSTAGE INCREASE

(American News Service) Washington. March 2. Tho magazine postage increase bill was practically ended yesterday. A compromise has been reached between Pres. Taft and Senator Penrose, chairman of the Senate post office committee. The agreement eliminates the proposed increase of rates. A commission will be appointed to investigate the entire subject and report to the next Congress.

Two of a Kind. "I hope you liked that pudding, Mr. S.," said the stern mother-in-law. 'Toor, dear Clara took great pains with it." "Did she?" exclaimed the son-in-law, with an expressive movement of hii hand on his stomach. "So did I."

Wrould You Gain a Pound I A Week fur Three Montha? 4 Then bfjrin taking: regularly throe grain hypo-nuciane tablets, which are made from a health-germ of ordinary yeast and combined with hypophosphites and an absorptive phosphorus. Physicians and chemists assert that this tablet is very largely used for increasing the weigrlit and improving the nervous system because of its aid to digestion!! assimilation and absorption. The food elements which go to make blood and solid tissue is retained when this treatment is regularly used for several months. Most physicians and apothecary shops supply them in sealed packages.

Pain-Away-Pills relieve headache and periodical pains. All druggists sell them.

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1 Are IiwMei

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in Pecos county, Texas, where surprising profits are realized from the cultivation of the soil. This is your opportunity. Do not miss it. EXCURSION March 21st. For details, call on ifraimik: g. white 532 Main Street, Richmond, Indiana.

NO INDIGESTION OR STOMACH DISORDER

The census returns showed that in Nevada there was only seven-tenths of a man to the skuare mile.

REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syk p has been used for ovr SIXTY YEARS bv MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WH1LB TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD. SOFTENS the CUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIARRHfflA. It is absolutely harmless. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other kind. Twenty-live cents a bottle.

Why not get some now this moment, and forever rid yourself of Stomach troublo and Indigestion? A dieted stomach gets the blues and grumbles. Give it a good eat, then take Pape's Diapepsin to start the digestive juicos working. There will be no dyspepsia or belching of Gas or eructations of undigested food; no feeling like a lump of lead In the stomach or heartburn, sick headache and Dizziness, and your food will not ferment and poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Diapepsin costs only DO cents for a large case at any drug etore here, and will relieve the most obstinate case of Indigestion and Upset Stomach In five minutes. There Is nothing else better to take Gas from Stomach and cleanse the stomach and intestines, and, besides, one single dose will digest and prepare for assimilation into the blood all your food the same as a sound, healthy stomach would do it. When Diapepsin works, your stomach rests gets Itself in order, cleans up and then you feel like eating when you come to the table, and what you eat will do you good. Absolute relief from all Stomach Misery is waiting for you as soon as you decide to take a little Diapepsin. Tell your druggist that you want Fape's Diapepsin, because you want to become thoroughly cured this time. Remember, If your stomach feels out-of-order and uncomfortable now you can get relief in five minutes.

A Child Will a Mmt

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Savings Accounts AND Certificates

RESOURCES OVER: $2,000,000

ON I

Second National Mmh RICHMOND, INDIANA