Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 161, 19 April 1911 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE 'RICHMOND PALLADIUM AHD SUX-TELEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1911.

The Richmond Palladium csJ Son-Telegram Fubllahed and ewnil by tha PALLADIUM PR!NTINO CO. Issued 7 day a tach wttk. evenings u Sunday mornlnic. Office Corner North ttb and A atreete. I'alladtum n1 Bur.-TtUKrim Phonaa Kualnaaa Office. U; Editorial itooma, 1111. RICHMOND. INDIANA.

Raeelaaj O. Laete Rdltwr J. IT. Itlacer1 BiiImm Maaacer Carl BarakaMt Aeeoelate Kdllar V. R. Faaee'steae Wewa EeJter BUBSCRirTION TEHM3. la Hlehmond 1100 .-r yaer On'ad vmc) or 0c par week. MAIL BUBSCRIPTIONa One veer, in advanca '122 Is month. In advanoa - Gae month. In advanca RURAL ROUTES Ono year. In advanca '?? Hl nrentha. In advanca On Aonth. In advanca . . Add.-a ehanad a often aa dastred; botii new and old addressee muit ba Ivan. Bubecrlhare will please remit with erdar, wblrb ehuutd ba lven for a apaclflad tarm; nam a will not ba enterad until paymaut (a recalved. Entarad at Richmond. Indiana, poat efflca aa aacond claaa mall mattar. Naw York Hepraeentatlvee Payne A Tome;. 10-14 Waat 13rd atraet. and lilt Waat (2nd atraat. Naw York. N. T. Chlcaao Rpreantatlves Payne A Youn. 747-741 Marquette Uulldlnrf. Chlcaco. 111. !ajao:aTaw5B3rara rvrvaiT AaWtiaara (fUw York City) tea j aaaauaaa aaa carunea v w bjuw at this pabUeatioa. Qnlj tts Umtv oi atrralatlaa aaatal fl la Ita rtport an t tho Aaaocuaoa. , , RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Ilaa a population of 23,000 and fa crowing. It la tha county aeat of Wayne County, and tha trading canter of a rich agricultural community. It la located dua east from Indianapolis I mllaa and 4 miles from tha lata Una. Richmond la a city of homaa and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It la alao tha jobbing cantor of Eastern Indiana and anjoya tha ratall trad of tha populoua community for mllea around. Richmond la proud of Ita splendid afreets, wall kept yard. Ita cement aldewalka and baa ttlful hada tree. It baa S national Lanka, S truat companies and 4 building aaaoclatlona with combined raaourcea of over 8,000.000. Number of factorlea 126; capital Inveatad 17.000.000. with an annual output of 127.000,000, and a pay roll of 13.700,000. Tho total pay roll for tha city amount to (proximately M.JOO.OOO annuallyThar ara five railroad companlea radiating In eight different dlravtlona from the city. Incoming freight bandied daily, 1,710.000 lb.; outgoing freight handled dally. 70.000 lha. Yard facilities, per day 1.700 care. Number of paaaanger tralna dally It. Number of freight tralna daily 77. The annual post office receipt amount to ISO.OOO. Total aaeaed valuation of tUe city, tu.ooo.ooo. ? Richmond haa two Interurban lways. Three newspaper with a combined circulation of 13,000. Richmond la tha greatest hardwar Jobbing center In the atat and only aecond In aeneral Jobbing Intereata. It baa a, piano factory producing a high icrade ftlano every 11 minutes. It fa tha eader In th manufacture of traction engines, and producea more threshing machine, lawn mowera. roller akatea. grain drills and burial casketa than any other city tn th world. Th city are U 1.640 arree; na a court houae coating 1500.00: 10 public achoola and haa th fineat and moat complete high school In th middle west under construction: t parochial achoola: i Kar ham college and th Indiana. Rualnaaa College; five aplendld fir companlea In fin hos houaea; 1ien Miller par, th largest and moat beautiful park tnond a annual Chautauqua; seven In Indiana, tha home of Richhntela; municipal electrlo light plant, under successful operation and a private electrlo light plant. Insuring competition: th oldest publle library In the atJte. except on and th aecond largest. 40.000 volume: pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed : S mllea of Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers: 25 mllea of cement curb and gutter combined; 49 mllea of cement wa!k r.n,ny ml'e of brick wa,k.": SWZ. "hrrhe. Including the Reld Memorial, built at a CJt f, 1280.000: Raid Memorial Hospital, on of th most modern In th atat: T. M. C A. building, reefed at a cost of 1100.000. on of th fineat In th state, Th amusement renter of Raatern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of.the sis of Richmond nolda aa fine an annual art ex. Mbit. Th Richmond Fall Festival held each October la unique, no other ctty holda a similar affair. It la given In the interest of tha cttr and financed by th btistnaea men. Success awaiting anvon with enterprise la th Panlo Proof City. This Is My 33rd Birthday GARDINER Q. HUBBARD. Gardiner G. Hubbard, aviator, neroplane designer and manufacturer, was born In Boston. April 19. 1878. the von of Chirlca E. Hubbard, a Boston attorney. After graduating from Harvard university in 1900 he became a augar planter In the Hawaiian Islands and then spent a year in a trip around the world. After completing his travrla Mr. Hubbard apent three years in the atudy of architecture in Paris, and practised his profession in New York for two year until 1909. Becoming Interested In aviation he went to Baddeck. Nova Scotia, to study with Prof. Alexander Graham Bell, the telephone Inventor and exponent of tetrahedral kites. At Baddeck the young aviator designed and built an aeroplane with which he made successful flights. Later he took part In aviation exhibitions In various parts of the United States and Canada unci then entered upon the business of manufacturing aeroplanes for general use. The contests for the next national poiltlc.nl convention soon will be on In earnest, though the actual choice of locations will not bo made until spring. It is regarded as a foregone conclusion that one or the other of th big conventions will go to Chi

Our Fire Department

Mayor Zimmerman at a board meeting recently declared that fire insurance rat 68 should be lower in Richmond. One reason he assigned was the efficiency of the local fire department. The mayor's praise of Chief Miller's fire fighters Is justiled and timely. We doubt if any city the size of rtichmond in the United States has a better department. There has been an epidemic of small blazes In the city in the past few days, many in the business and factory districts. But all have been promptly and scientifically extinguished by Chief Miller's corps. Last year, as we recollect, the fire loss in Richmond was less than Ja.oiio. Richmond citizens may point with pride to this record. Tuesday evening in a business block at Ninth and Main streets a matting caught afire. It blazed fiercely and smoke ioured from the windows of the apartment. We saw the fire alarm turned in and in less than a minute we heard the clang of gongs on the speeding hose and ladder wagons. In two minutes Miller and his fighters were on the job and the dangerous little blaze was a matter of history. If ire insurance rates in Richmond are not reduced it is not the fault of the Richmond Fire Department.

Playing With Fire

No American citizens engaged in peaceful pursuits In their own country were shot by Mexican combatants until after the United States troops had been mobilized in Texas. In effect, the massing of this army corps near the frontier was an invitation to the insurgents to make tho border the scene of hostilities in order to force intervention. Their strategy is already bearing fruit, and the fact becomes more apparent every day that Mr. Taft could have protected American interests much better by strengthening the border patrols than by making a spectacular military demonstration. We learned much from the Spanish-American war, and we have been learning something from it every year since. We shall continue to learn from it as long as we have the Philippines on our hands and Cuba to look after. There is no popular sentiment in favor of Mexican intervention. The burnt child dreads the fire. This is something for Mr. Taft to remember, regardless of Wall street pressure and regardless of the counsel of jingoes who believe that military maneuvers can be turned into brilliant political maneuvers. It is much easier to get into trouble than to get out of trouble. We do not know the precise punosc of the resolution for an inquiry Introduced in the senate by Senator Stone of Missouri, but this much is certain: It is time the country had official information that would explain the administration's Mexican policy. The game has been played in the dark long enough. New York World.

Patience Is Needed

Those excitable Kast End people who, Councilman King states, are looking for a Grant or a Sherman to lead them to Glen Miller park to make war on the traction tracks, should be patient. Mayor Zimmerman about a year ago assured the public that he would see to the removal of these tracks.

Politics and Politicians Kentucky Republicans will meet in Louisville in July to name a State ticket. Women have ,had equal franchise rights with men in Colorado for eighteen years. The Balaiies of members of the Iowa legislature have been increased from $550 to $1,000. Judge William Reed, of Paducah, has withdrawn from the Democratic gubernatorial contest in Kentucky. Professor J. H. Aswell, who is well known in educational circles in the South, isr a candidate for the Demo cratic nomination for governor of Kentucky. Judge Edward C. O'Rear of the State Court of Appeals has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomi (nation for governor of Kentucgky. Congressman Choice II. Randall, who aspires to the seat of United . States Bailey of Texas, is a native of Georgia, but has lived in Texas for more than CO years. Not marry years ago George Frank lin Haley, who has just been appoint ed a Justice of the supreme judicial court of Maine, was employed at a small pay in a saw mill. James A. O'Gorman retires from a $17,500 position on the New York supreme bench to accept the seat in the United States senate, which pays only $7,500 a year. Only n few years ago the Indiana delegation in Congress was solidly Republican. In the present Congress the "THIS DATE

APRIL 19. 1773 Battle of Lexington, first engagement in the American revolutionary war. 1791 The Schuylkill and Susquehanna Canal company, the first in America, was chartered in Philadelphia. ' 1813 Benjamin Rush, physician-general in the American army, died in Philadelphia. Born in Byberry,t Pa., Dec. 24. 1745. 1824 Lord Byron, the poet, died in Greece. Born in London, Jan 22, 1788. 1S50 The Clayton-Bulwer treaty signed. 1853 Tho planet Atalanta discovered by H. Goldschmidt. 18tl The ports of the seceding states were proclaimed to be under blockade. 18S1 Benjamin Disraeli (Lord BeaconsSeld), English statesman and novelist! died. Born Dec. 21, 1904. 1SS2 Charles Darwin, author of "The Descent of Man," died. Born Feb. 12, 1809. 1S94 South Carolina supreme court declared the state dispensary law to be unconstitutional. 1903 Great massacre of Jews at Kiebeneff, Russia. 1910 United States Senators Aldrich of Rhode Island, and Hale of Maine announced that they would not be candidates for re-election.

The Original White Laundry Soap

only G. O. P. representative from the Hoosier State is Edgar D. Crumpacker

of the Tenth district. In the matter of having one house of Congress opposed to him politically President Taft is confronted by the same situation which faced Grant, Hayes, Arthur, Cleveland. Benjamin Harrison and then Cleveland again. Though James A. O'Gorman, the new United States senator from New York, has been a member of Tammany Hall ever since he reached the voting age, it Is said his affiliation with that organization has never affected the independence of his political attitude. , Hilary A. Herbert, who was secretary of the navy under President Cleveland, is a leader of a movement outside of legislative circles in Washington to see that tariff revision is accomplished at the present session of Congress. He -condemns the plan of waiting for reports from the tariff commission. Congressman Joseph E. Ransdell of the Fifth Douisiana district, has formally announced his candidacy for the United States senate, but has not yet determined whether he will enter for the term beginning 1913 or 1915. Both vacancies will be filled as tho result of primaries to be held in Louisiana next year. Senator Forter comes up for re-election, his being the earlier term. Senator Thornton will not be in the race, but Governor Sanders will be a candidate, along with Congressmen Pujo and Broussard, and possibly former Governor Blanchard. IN HISTORY1' OJL ajprocers

DONT EXPERIMENT

You Will Make No Mistake if You Follow This Richmond Citizen's Advice. Never neglect your kidneys. If you have pain in the back, urinary disorders, dizziness and nervousness, it's time to act and no time to experiment. These are all symptoms of kidney trouble, and you should seek a remedy which is known to act on the kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills is the remedy to use. No need to experiment. It has cured many stubborn cases in Richmond. Follow the example of a Richmond citizen and be cured yourself. David Hershey. 316 S. Thirteenth street. Richmond, lnd.. 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, obtained at A. G. 1-uken & Co's Drug Store, cured me and at that time, 1 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-Mulburn Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. WHAT OTHERS SAY COMMENT ON CONGRESS From the Boston- Transcript. A new broom sweeps clean for a time. The Democratic majority in the House of Representatives is sweeping a number of sinecures out of the Capitol. From the Milwaukee Wisconsin. President Taft is right. The question of reciprocity with Canada is not a political one it is purely economic. From the Columbus Dispatch. The house at Washington starts in as if it meant "to fight it out on this line, if it takes all summer." From the Detroit Free Press. . The Congressional Record now haa a few contributors. From the Atlanta Constitution. They will waste no time in memorial services for the lame ducks. From the Columbus Journal. One thing that really looks well in the present scant and abbreviated styles is the President's message. From the St. Louis Republic. Will the national house, having adopted the plan of electing its committeemen, also put the recall in effect? POLITICAL MENTION. From the Fall River News. In theory the insurgents ought to hate Senator Crane. But instead they like him and listen to him with respect. From the Philadelphia Enquirer. Champ Clark, monkeying with his new gavel, seems almost as tickled as a man who has won a pinochle bet troni his wife. From the Boston Transcript. Senator Hey burn wants to popularize the Congressional Record, but stops short of advising it's editor to hire a baseball reporter and start a society column. ! From the St. Louis Republic. Private Joe Cannon! From the Detroit News. If things keep going as they have been, there will soon be enough material to form a society of "The ExSecretaries to President Taft." From the Pittsburg Dispatch. T. R. is for arbitration, but he clings to the big stick through it all. From the Boston Globe. It was noted that when Uncle Joseph Cannon rose in his seat to make his maiden speech in the new congress he knew exactly how to catch the Speaker's eye. The Home Doctor Cure for Coughs and Colds One and one-half ounces Balm of Gilead buds, one pound bruised rnclc candy, one pint Duffy's pure mu.lt whiskey. (We recommend Duffy'a on account of ita purity. and known medicinal value.) Put asid with occasional stirring until the rock candy is dissolved, then strain. Pose: For adults, one tableppoonful every hour; if the condition Is acute, every half hour: for children over ten, a teaspoonful every hour; for children under ten. ten drops every fcour until decided relief is felt. Thesa simple ingredients, known to every druggist, can easily be secured and readily mixed by any one. Dr. George I. Ross. Canton, Mass.. says: "This is vastly superior to the stereotype Rock and Rye of Commerce and should be called 'Balm of Gilead'."

In fitting glasses we use no drugs for examination use the best crystal lens, modern spectacle frames and latest nose glass mountings. E. O. GROSVENOR, Kl.D. OCULIST OVER 713 MAIN ST. .

.4 tiempt to Unravel Sordid , Crime Was Commenced Today

(American News Service) Freehold. N. J., April 19. This sleepy little Jersey town is placed on the map today by Frank E. lleideman, the youthful German gardener and self confessed murderer of ten-year-old Marie Smith of Asbury Park, N. J., being placed on trial for his life. The sordid nature of the crime, the impenetrable mystery that surrounded it. and the ingenious method by which the murderer was captured have all combined to arouse public interest. On November 9, 1910. Marie Smith a pretty little school girl of the exclusive residential colony at Asbury Park, N. J. disappeared while returning from her studies. Every effort was made to discover her whereabouts, posses were formed, the surrounding territory was carefully searched, and the news spread bread cast through t he land. Five days elapsed and the child's parents were almost frantic with despair and grief, when William Benson, a florist of Bradley Beach, N. J., reported the finding of her lifeless body, horribly mutilated and showing signs of an outrageous attack in a lonely thicket near a little lake which borders Asbury Park. This news fanned the indignation of the colonists to fever heat; and two arrests were made one an ex-negro-pugilist called "Black Diamond" Wil liams and the other Frank E. lleideman, the youthful German gardener now on trial. So cool and collected, however, was lleideman, under examination that he was dismissed for lack of evidence. The burden of suspicion was directed against the negro, "and there was considerable talk of lynching. Owing to the threatening attitude of the pop ulace, the ' authorities smuggled the negro from the scene of the crime to the jail in this town, where he was held for several weeks, but finally dismissed for lack of evidence. The crime gradually dropped from public print and seemed destined to go down to posterity as another unfathomable mystery. And it no doubt would, had it not been for the untiring efforts of three wealthy residents of the community Sheriff Hetrick, Randolph H. Miller, employer of the murdered child's father, and E. J. Handley. These men secretly met and agreed to push the investigation till the last clue was run down, defraying the expenses out of their own pockets. To this end the best detectives in the country were hired and all suspected of any possible knowledge BJerwis Perhaps no modern remedy has sprung into favor so quickly, and retains its prestige so securely, as Wade's Golden Nervine, the great remedy for Nervous Debility, Insomnia, Weak or Palpitating Heart, or any weakened condition of the Nervous System, brotight on by Worry, Excess, or Overwork. This great Nervine is now handled by druggists everywhere, and costs $1. So many thousands of men and women the country over have used this remedy with success that it appears strange that anyone should continue to drag out a miserable nerve-wrecked existence when it is possible to feel again the joy and satisfaction of full and complete nerve strength and vitality. Nervous Debility has been called the curse of America. Hysteria. Neurasthenia Insomnia, Extreme Weakness, Trembling, Forebodings of Fear, Indecision, Dull Mentality, etc., are some of the symptoms of Nervous Debility, or Nerve Exhaustion. Wade's Golden Nervine acts so promptly and positively in all such cases that if it is desired to test it before buying of the druggist, a trial

Deposit these regularly once a week, or month, in our Savings department and they will soon grow into Dollars, and with the 3 COMPOUND INTEREST we pay, will start you on the road to wealth and independence.

of the crime were put under strict and

secret surveillance.

The weary months dragged by andjat onceall but the little knot of anxious! The strategy had the desired effect, friends and relatives of the murdered lleidenian's repose was completely child had forgotten the foul deed of shattered bv the crimes that seemed early November, when, on March 15. :to malk nis path through life with Sheriff Hetrick electrified the country bkx(1 A thousam1 ,hiuss no WH8 on by placing his heavy hand on the the point of confessing and it was onh shrinking shoulder of the cowering lit- by ,-epeated repulses that his friend, tie German gardener in the smoking. the (i0,eotive. was able to keep htm car of a train that was passing with- fronl confiding his guilt before witin siKht of the dreary little lake whore nossos v(luW bt. secured to swear to the body of the murdered child was its authenticity. This was soon noround and exc laimed: ' complished. however and under ptv"In the name of the law I arrest tlnse uf fuvlner hiding their identitv you for the murder of Marie Smith." the pair made their wav to Atlantic The prisoner was rushed to the ntv wnpro a stenographer and witcounty jail, hurriedly arraigned before ' nesses hidden in the murderer's room Justice William P. Voorhees in the at a linll, hou,, iistone(i to htm tell county court at Freehold, and after a the g0rdid details of his atrocious whispered colloquy between himself ! crimp against the innocent, flaxen and his counsel, during which he ap-'halredt iit,ie school girl, peared greatly agitated, turned to thej From Atlantic City the pair left for justice and in broken accents pleaded ; New York and tho iast dramatic imi-

guilty. Later the story of tho remark-;dent of this history of crime was enable detective work that load to the!aoteti on March 15. in the smoking car confession and arrest of the murder- or their train as it passed close to the er came to light. i scene of the murder, when lleideman Shortly after Heideman's release he 'was placed under arrest, pleaded illness, quit his job in As- j .

bury Park and traveled to New York i where the detective detailed to watch j him made his acquaintance in the Secnmi uvonno htannt whc.ro tho fru i 1 1 vr man sougni to arown me memories I . J . l of the past in wild debauch. The acquaintance ripened into friendship. The two men took a room together, and as their intimacy increased and the suspected gardener's funds ran low, he borrowed from his newly found friend. As weeks stretched into months with no sign of Heideman's weakening the detective determined on a desperate expedient. In a burst of confidence he told his friend that he too, was a fugitive from justice charged with the murder of two people in Chicago. The scent was growing hot and he was in momentary fear of arrest. He proposed that they leave the city and pointed significantly to a huge revolver and declared that he would never be taken alive. The pair took train for Rochester, N. Y., where the. detective had completed arrangements for the drama that aimed to shake the taciturnity of the murderer and wring from him a confession. The coup de grace took place in the woods where the detective and his friend had been accustomed to ramble. The detective proposed a little target practice and emptied his revolver at a mark some fifty feet away. Then the gardener opened fire, and while the Debility package and full particulars will be mailed to all who write, enclosing six cents postage to GEM MEDICINE CO., Dept. A., St. Louis, Mo. If vou have a Weak Heart you will find Wade's Golden Nervine just the remedy you need, as it acts as a gentle and permanent stimulant to that organ. If you are all run down, weak and despondent, lacking m vigor and vitality, you will be surprised and delighted with the wonderful restorative and vitalizing -action of this great tonic. If you feel that you need a good restorative tonic you will not be disappointed in Wade's Golden Nervine, as there is absolutely nothing like it to promote strength, vigor and vitality. Contains no alcohol or narcotics, and its effects are permanent. It is also the finest tonic in the world for restoring the shattered nerves in cases of excessive use of alcohol or other excesses. Wades Golden Nervine is always kept in stock by the following drug gists. Ask them about it, and try it now today. Sold by Quigley Drug Stores.

ipewktii-ibs

294!o(lD(IDo(0) The Second

Richmond,

reverberation of his pistol was yet echoing through the forest a man staggered from a thicket a few feet to the right of the mark and with a shriek, fell apparently dead at their feet. The detective seized his companion and

ithe men hurried from the fatal spot packed their clothes and left the town CHICHESTER S PILLS I "luCTw . T 'I E 11 A JtM MR AK D. l.allt Ab ior llrimUt fa . fill, in Hr4 .nd mMtllkV !fr!WM- AkfniiM-irk.TeBa OIAlI ltKA.NI PILLS. yca.i known u best. Safit. Aly KeluLM SOLD BV DRUGGISTS EVERYWHEfff Saturday Special at The Flower Shop. Carnations at 40c a dozen. Our own fancy grade flowers. We hand them to you wrapped in tissue paper, thereby saving us the expense of box and delivery, and making low price possible. Saturday only, at The Flower Shop, 1015 Main Street. Use Queen Ready Mixed PAINT, $1.75 per Gal. Old Reliable Paint Co. H. C. SHAW, Mgr. 4 10 & 12 S. 7th. Phone 2230 DON'T FORGET That NOW la the time to protect yourself against loss by WINDSTORMS. Costs but little. DOUG AN, JENKINS & CO. Room 1, I. O. O. P. Bldg. Phone 1330. BUY A WAVERLY Electric Harry Wood AGENT: :Pho9eSI44

NEVER DISAPPOINTS

cago. at