Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 167, 25 April 1911 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE niCIHtOND PALLADIUM! AUD SUN-TELEGUA2X. TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1911;

e3 a-Tckcrt:n Pabllsaed u4 m4 by the taxjulxxwu nuirrxMO oa fssnsl ff dare Mk weak, evealaae aa attBdey SSOrnles?. Offlee Corner North tth an A etreets. PetlaoluM o4 Bun-Telegram Phone guehieee Ofnee. SMS; Editorial Koonss. RICHMOND, INDIANA. '

UHm

J. r. SUawfcoM aetaeee Manas

carl eraaaawt ...... Aaaseiato scans

Mown Mites

UBwCRXPTION TERM' la Richmond ft.SS jer Tear la advance) or iSe par week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTION On tear, la advance ! mm months, la advance ......... One month. In advance nURAl. ROUTE On a rear, la advance .'.... Bis months. In advanea .......... ; Oaa uaenta. In advanea .......... Address changed aa often as daalrad; both bew and aid addreues must be ftivea. aaaertbera will pleeeo ramtt with arder. wbleh should ba given for a epooined tarm: nana will not bo an tarad until anrntat.t lo received.

Snferod at Richmond. Indiana, post afrteo aa aacond elaaa mall matter.

New York RaproawntatUaa Payne A Tovng. 4 Waat Srd atreet, and IS- ( Waat ISnd atreet. New York. N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne as Taunt. T47-74I Marquette Bulldlatf. Chleaga. UL

ctCliUUatiea.

He wi

(Maw Yet Ory) ha

Caly ta figares of

ta Bi.ftstn an i

RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY"

Has a population of 23.000 and la crowing-. It Is tho county aeat of Wayne County, and the trading canter of a rich agricultural community. It la located duo oast from Indianapolis t mllea and 4 miles from tho state lino. . . Richmond la a city of homes and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It Is also tho Jobbing center of Kastern In dlana and enjoys tho retail trade of tho populous community for miles around. Richmond la proud of Its splendid streets, well kept yard. Its cement sidewalks and bes itlful shade trees. It has t national Lanka, a trust companies and 4 bulldlan associations with com- . pined resources of over ts.000.00o. . Number of factorlsa Hit capital invested f7.000.000. with an annual outpnt of S17'000.000. and a pay roll of fi.T00.i0. Tho total pay roll for the city amounts to approximately 10.100.000. annualThere aro five ', rail roaa compaalea radiating la eight differ--t oat directions from tho city. Incoming freight handled dally. 1,UO.tO v lbs.; outfolng freight handled dally. 100000 lbs. Yard facilities, par Cay 1.700 cars. Number of paaeongor trains dally IS. Numbr of .freight trains tally TT. The annual post of flea receipts amount ta 00.000. Total aaeeaaed valaatloa of tUo city.

rail

Mehmond has two Interurban

nways. Taroo aowoi

ananara with '

a combined, circulation of 11.000, .

nranmsna im lam groatOSC aardware Jobbing center la tho state and anly second la general jobblag Interests. It has a piano factory producing a high grade plana every 10 mtnutea It Is tho leader ta tho manufacture of traction engines, and produces more threshing machines, lawn towers, roller skates, grain drills and burial caskets, than any other city In tho world. Tho slty's area la . acrest has a court house costing line . rineet and most complete hfrh school In the middle wait undo construction: t parochial schools: Kartham college and tho Indiana Ruslaooa College: fire splendid flro ompanlee In fine SSio houses: dlen Miller park, the largest and moot beautiful park mend's annual ohautauQua: seven In Indiana, tho home of ' Rich- , hotels; municipal electrlo light plant, under suoeeesfai operation and a private electrlo light plant Insuring competitions tho oldest publlo library la tho state, except one and tho second largest. 40.000 volumes: pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed: 01 miles of Improved streets: 4 snlleo of sewTroYtl mlles of comeat curb and gutter combined: 40 mllea. of cement 2L5. ml, of brick. J""!? J'i chorchea. Including tho Held Memorial, bttllt t n,Bt af. !.: Bold Memorial Hosaltal. one of the most modern In the state: Y. M. C A. building, erected at a cost of fl 00.000. one , of tho finest In tho Mate, Tho omusoment center of Kastern Indiana and Western Ohio. , No city of tho else of Richmond holds as fine an annual art exhibit. Tho Richmond Fall Peatlval held each October is unique. ' no other city holds a similar affair. It Is given In the Interest of tho city and flnancad by tho business men. Pueeess awaiting anvono with enterprise In the Paolo Proof City.

This Is My 5 1st Birthday

ACMILIU8 JARVIft Aemllius Jarvla, who has had a prominent part In the development o! thV flnanclul and Industrial enterprises In Ontario, was born in Toronto, April 23, 1S60, the great-grandson of William Jarvls, who was the first Provincial Secretary of Upper Canada. Ha attended Upper Canada College and soon after graduating he started his 'career as a clerk In the Hank of Hamilton. . In 1892 he established a banking firm of his own in Toronto.

During recent years he has taken a leading purt in the building of street

railways power plants, larse hotels

and other enterprises throughout pntarto. Mr. Jarvls. Is well . known

throughout Canada as a yachtsman,

and in 1M6 he was chosen by the

North American Yacht Pacing association to reprent them at a confer

ence with thw Yacht Racing associa

tion In Orent Hrltnln.

. Tho rr riorte 6new. In the mouth Sinlai. lu.the second

yaar of Klug Urln. a mau riding a red iiors stood among the myrtle trees, and behind lilui wire bumv red. sorrel and white. Vnu't ibnt the earliest

home show of whkb any authentic

Ncord aUU abides? . v

The Future in America

There are still courts In America. - ; Tha evidence in the case of McNamara Is for (he courts. It la not for as or any other newspaper to aay who Is guilty of the atrocious crime which was committed on the Los Angeles Times nor of the ghastly record of structural Iron cases. r. Already those men and those newspapers who are unfriendly to the cause of organized labor have fastened this crime and set of crimes on organized labor. Already the statement has been made by members of the Federation that these arrests are set up against the labor leaders of the Structural Iron Workers ttfat dynamite was secreted In the places where It was found that certain men might be the scapegoats. And it is in the fact that both of these statements seem to hold the germ of truth that Americans are most, concerned though they know it or are blind to It. The struggle has become acute.

When the Los Angeles Times was blown up by whatsoever cause it happened in the early fall the Palladium was loathe to fasten this crime on organised labor. We did not like to believe,, nor will we yet believe that the time has come in America or that it ever will come when the cause of the worklngmen in this country will sanction the settlement of Its disputes in this fashion. It is what the individual man believes about this case that is more Important than the fact as to who did it. . - If Americans believe that the two million members of the Federation or even the majority of the workers in the structural iron organization are aiding and abetting crimes of this sort as far as they are concerned it is a fact and it will be for America to reckon with.

Conditions are becoming acute in this country. The Supreme Court Is said to be ready to hand down the decision as to whether Gompers Is to go to Jail. . He on trial for contempt of court is standing for the principles which be declares are the only ones which will keep the cause of organized laboring men from being desperate: ''Freedom from prosecution under these effete conspiracy laws coined under the conditions of other centuries and totally inapplicable to the present time. In the second place it asks for the establishment of the principle . once for all that no man shall be prosecuted for conspiracy in a labor dispute, when the act for which he Is prosecuted Is not unlawful when committed by an individual." The Palladium would call the attention of ' Its readers to these sentences from an Interview with George KIbbe Turner of the staff of McClure's Magazine in 1908. ' " Today a crime, a pure and simple criminal act Is laid at the doors of organised labor. The courts are to decide as to the fact. It is the business of the American citizen to ask If this. crime has been committed by organized labor, their agents either instructed or unlnstructed why , the Idea can be entertained that simple crime has been resorted to. If this qrime , sprang up In the mind t a member of organized labor how came he to resort to violence and destruction?

r , Are all hands In the struggle clean? They are not. Neither on the side of labor nor on the side of the employer. ' , But that any such crime can be thought to be attached to any branch of the American Federation is undoubtedly because the condition of the unions of America has been rendered desperate. , , That Samuel Gompers .In 1908 should be able to make this statement Is of far greater Import at the present moment that the fact that J. J. McNamara has been arrested In Indianapolis.. For Gompers said: . "I say that organised laborers have been . deprived of Inalienable ' rights of free citizens by this process (imprisonment, by injunction) for twenty years. This Is literally and exactly true. They have been forbidden' to organise, they have been forbidden to strike, they have been forbidden the right to assemble In tho open street,' they have been forbidden the rights of the free press and free . speech continually. Men hare been Imprisoned for contempt of court for exercising these rights, for doing both the most innocent and trivial acts."' ' ' ' " , ' , When the head of two million American citizens can aay that In one of the most carefully edited publications in America,' and when he can prove Its substantiated truth may not the Palladium remark that this is a bad condition for all America in conjunction with the decision of the Supreme Court about to be banded down and the arrest of McNamara? Again allow us to quote from Gompers: ' . "Who suffers most from a strike? Certainly the laborers out of work. And the boycott comes only as a part of the strike. Labor's weapons are In no sense weapons of aggression;, they are nothing more than purely passive resistance Labor cannot attack; the worst it can do Is to refuse to deal with Its enemies to refuse to sell Its labor or to buy their goods from them. The very use of these weapons is a desperate resort for the laborer; they are employed only under great provocation as the history of every really strong union will show. But they are abso- . lutely the only weapons labor has and they must be preserved intact, if the laborer is to hope for any of, the fair share of the wealth he. produces; It he Is to hope for any economic freedom at all. A labor union Is worthless If you take Its only weapons away from It it may as . well disband at once. But without active labor organisations, the laboring class, would be absolutely-helpless against the present aggregation of capital which employ it With all their weapons, organized laborers are none too strong in this fight." We have taken pains to give thla setting to the present crisis In the conflict between labor and capital in America. The words as 'ours would be unimportant, the words of Gompers set forth accurately, no doubt, the feeling of the two million men who have elected him to their leadership.

There Is a greater question than the fact of the author of the atrocious crime In this, case. It Is the question: Has the time come in America when despairing of the ordinary course of justice any man or any set of men, hopeless of the legislatures of the land, of the tribunals of soclty, thinks the conditions of life and livelihood so intolerable that force, destruction and crime are the resort? ' .; . If so, how came this about? Who Is responsible? . . .. . , ... Is it the men themselves ? Is It their passion? Is it their ignorance? - If so who Implanted that passion In their hearts? What were the forces that brought them up in ignorance? . Society is apt to pay dear for the crime In some fashionis the present and past organisation responsible? ' -

Those are the questions which are larger than the fact. Two millionmen are today accused pn every hand by men who are regarded and who regard themselves as their enemies, as thinking that . force, destruction and violence are the way out? " " Long after McNamara Is found guilty or acquitted we shall hear that this crime was committed by organised labor. - It Is easy to stand up and say the most obvious thing; that the unions will suffer from this that the friends of labor should see to it that their hands are clean or cleansed. But that does not suffice. This Is a larger question than whether the Federation of Labor perishes or flourishes It involves the future of America. In the attitude that the average nun takes toward the problem here set. forth will the future of America be settled. It Is not. what Is the fact but what you think. The Individuals who are the criminals may or may not be found, but your ideas about this or even your ignorance and lack of conviction will settle the greater the greatest problem in America or start It on Its way.

r T7 v . We publish sn the teare&snts of

- . c&a inus quscKiy sskkss say iuur question. He can see at once it cannot color the hair.

Ash hhn about fzSini hair, dandruff, thin hair.

J.aAyarOsw.

. THIS DATE IN HISTORY

V. : - t. APRIL 25. ' 1694 Bank of England Incorporated. 1775 Eight thousand persons attended a meeting In Philadelphia and voted to resist Great Britain with force of arms. 1800 William Cowper, English poet. died. Born Nov. 26, 1731. 1825 Charles Ferdinand Dowd, originator ot the Bystem of standard time, born In Madison. Conn. " 1846 Beginning of hostilities between the United States and Mexico ' 1849 Political riots in Toronto and Montreal over the rebellion losses bill. " 'v. 1861 Gen. Van Dora captured 450 Federal troops at Salurla. Texas. ' 1S62 Commodore Farragut arrived In New Orleans and took, possession of the city. 1902 More than 1,000 immigrants passed through Montreal enroute to the West. r 1907 Dr. Robert A. Falconer appointed president of the University of Toronto. -' 1910 Governor Hughes of New York appointed an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. . ,

She Knew Him. "My dear," said a repentant husband to his wife, "If I hare ever used any unkind words to you. I take them all back." "No. you wont. I know you only too well. Tou want to use them all over again."

SHAKE MT0 YCtM OIIQEG AUea's Foot Base, the aatUootte f cm aw. Itretipwa pinfal,mriing,t0r.t i Lttifet.a4 wuallr take the suns oat of cores and baaiena. It's toe tr tales contort discovery of the age. Alice's rootEase attkes tight or sew shoes feet easy. It is a cartels relief for sweatee, emiloaa, swollen, tired, ehiac feet. Always mil to Break la Saw shoce. Try it ta ooy. Sold Tjrwhis W cents. Dont eerns . ettlffwwl. FVr FRKB trial uackac. address AUsa S Quested. Ia Hot. N. V. ,

HEALTHY SCALP AND

SKIN COSTS 10c a Pandruff, ctnni, Cuban itch, or any

other skin trouble quickly disappear

wh-Ti you sro after It with Plex. "the

quick healing naive." Stops the itching

In a hurry. A big box of Flex costs

only 10 cents, but if you want quick and positive result forget the low price and try It. Plex does the work

where costly alcoholic remedies nave failed.

Flex is a wonder-working, penetrat-

Insr ointment. It destroys germs.

cleans and heals quicker than anything

else you ever heard ot. a nunareu

uses in 'every home. (nn annlimtion cures itchine Diles.

Instant relief and inexpensive cure for

Catarrh. A few applications cure ach-

Incr. sweatv feet and remove corns.

Kine for croup or sore throat. Un

equalled for burns, cuts, etc. Plex (10c) is tho biggest household hararoJn van were ever offered. Your

druggist has It or can. easily get it for

you. sent prepaid on receipt 01 iim

price by the O. C. Co., Terro Haute, Ind.'

MASONIC CALENDAR Tuesday, April 25, 1911. Richmond

fxdge No. 196, F. & A. M. Called.

meeting, work In Master Mason degree. Refreshments.

Wednesday. April 26, 1911. Webb

Lodge No. 24. F. & A. M. Called

meeting, work In Entered Apprentice

degree.

Friday, April 28. King Solomon's

Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Special convocation. Work in Mark Master degree.

A Inrm Qerii.a,. Hamburg carts some of its garbu; and bouse refuse into the outlying d tricts. where the stuff la plowed nnd the fields as fertilizing material. TIi rest of it is incinerated. The prodm of the incinerating fnrnaces goes upoi the market The iron is sold at publit auction, and the slag is disposed of The fine cinders go as a top dressing on the promenades, other sixes as a top dressing on roads, the largest into road foundations. It Is also used In concrete. Another use is for filling material between floors and ceilings.

REST 4X0 HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD. ' Mas. WtirsLow's Booth ino Svacr baa bees ed for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WH1LB TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD. SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN ; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the beat remedy for DIARRHOEA. It ia absolutely harmless. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winalow's Soothing Syrup," asd take no otltcr kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle.

A Ctocdcr Gotog His GonstipotioiH-Try H Frco " SaBwawBSBsasBwwws .' Simple vray for any family to retaia the good health of all its members

The editors of "Health Hints- and "Questions and Answers' have one question that Is put to them more often tha any "other, and' which, strangely enough, they find the most difficult to answer. That Is "How can X euro my constlpationr Dr. Caldwell, an eminent specialist in diseases of the stomach, liver and bowels has looked the whole neld over, has practised the specialty for forty years and Is convinced that the Ingredients contained in what Is called Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin has the best claim to attention from constipated people. Its success In the cure of stubborn constipation has done much to displace the use of salts, waters, strong cathartics and such things. Syrup Pepsin, by t mining the stomach and bowel muscles to again do their work naturally, and with

its tonlo Ingredients strengthening tha nerves, brings about a lasting euro. Among Its strongest supporters are Mr. John Oraveline of S Milwaukee Ave. Detroit. Mich., Mr. J. A. Vernon of Okla-

nuina. vuy ana inousanas or otners, it . can be obtained of any druggist at fifty cents and one dollar m bottle, or If you ? want to try It first a free sample bottle ' can be obtained by writing tha doctor.

Dr. Caldwell does not feel that the ' purchase of his remedy ends his obli- ' f;ation. He has specialised la stomach, i. Iver and bowel diseases for over forty years and will be pleased to give tho -!' any advice on tho subject free pf charge. All are welcome to writ . him. whether for the medical advlee or th free sample address him Dr. VT. B. Caldwell, Ml Caldwell building. . Montlcello. I1L.

!

POSTS!

Cedar and

We have Just received TWO CAR-LOADS of White

Locust Posts on which we can give you low prices. We are also putting In a complete line of Cement, Hard Plaster, Sewer Pipe, Flue Lining, Etc., In addition to our big steek of Lumber. It will pay you to come and see us.

LOUCK & Phcces: 1412-1010

MILL

to 211 RtrCi 'fa St

m.l ,..ai m a. m mm

. Not a Banquet. Che But George, you could never support two. He Well. I'm only looking for one. Newark Star.

"I vao Crippled, could . hardly walk and had to Crawl down stairs at times on my hands -and knees. My doctor told me I had an acute attack of inflammatory rheumatism. I was in the hospital for weeks, but was scarcely able to walk when I left it. I read about Dr. Miles9 Nervine bought a bottle and began to get better from the start, and for the past six months I have had scarcely any pain and am able to walk as well as ever." J.H. Sanders, J. O. box 5, Rockaway, N. J. Few medicines are of any benefit for rheumatism, but Mr. Sanders tells plainly what Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine did for it. One ounce of salicylate of soda added to one bottle of Nervine makes an excellent remedy for- rheumatism.

' which is now known to be a nerv

ous disease and therefore subject to the influence of a medicine that acts through the nerves, as does - Dr. Miles' Nervine Sufferers from rheumatism seldom fail to find relief in the use of Or. Miles' Nervine, with salicylate of soda. ' Sold under a guarantee) ftn at assure tha return of th:riee off the first bottle If It falls to benefit. At all Druggists. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart. Ind.

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It puts the things you want the most where you can get them quickest Saves steps, gives contentment and adds years to overworked lives. The most convenient practical and durable Kitchen Cabinet made.

'Complete line to select from at any

- pnee you want to pay.

$LCD D;;yd, $1X3 a Ueefc ; Pisces Cc ia Yesr E.r ALLEN & DD).

Richmond's Leading Home Furnisher!

JJsmesville Cra Fkitos Machines That Come Mighty Near Thinking

aa.es

CHtCMO II

Mr. Farmer: If you never saw a Janesvllle No 5 Cora Planter in action, you've to witness one of the most wonderful tools that human Ingenuity ever devised to help the farmer secure better results. ' It does what no other planter today can do drops 2, 3, or 4 kernels to the hill, Just as the. soil appears to call for It " f Think what this one exclusive Janesvllle feature means In the way of a more even growth and bet tor nrnnii. ' ' .-'--,.'.'.'.-,'.-.. ;-;.-''

And this quick change from 2 to 3 or 4 kernels is made simply by touching a small hand lever

nililUUb BWypaUb was" uiacusuf wiiuvut sv?svar3 ;vui oven, vsa vuhuqwo , mv , And besides this, It will do all that any other planter wi',1 do. It wilt hill or drill. It Is furnished with convertable drop, (edge or flat). Three plates for checking and 18 variations providing for every possible condition of seed and soil. And there are other features In the Janesvllle choice of shoe, stub, or disk runners on the same machine; automatic distribution of the wire on reel while winding up: fertilizer attachment, etc. Isn't this the corn planter you've been looking for. You can't afford not to investigate this machine. -.--'! :'V1'--'. " . 1 " ' v THE VARIABLE DROP DEVICE This quick change of the number of kernels to the hill Z. 3, or 4 la effected very simply by operating a small hand lever within easy reach, the operator sets the

clutch so as to turn the seed shaft one-sixth, one-fourth or one-third of a revolution, giving 2, 3, or 4-

kernelB to the hill. - ' 1 This last great Improvement In Janesvllle Corn Planters ensures greater uniformity of crops, besides economy in seeds, because it provides absolute control of distribution according to the character "of the soil.' Ot course, greater uniformity means a larger yield per acre. , : Unlike most of the machines . that are now being, offered to the trade, the Variable Drop device on the Janesvllle Corn Planters is not an experiment. We are among the very first to develop anything of this kind and our device has been thoroughly tested and found practicable for two reasons. , : ; QUICK CHANGE FROM HILLING TO DRILLING 'Through our, Improved construction it is possible for the operator to change from a hill to a drill drop without leaving his seat or even without stopping the team. We place a combined foot drop and drill drop attachment to the rocker shaft which enables the operator, by simply pressing this lever by the center, to lock the valves In the planter open and throw the clutch, into gear bo it will run continuously and, of course, drill. ' NO MIXING THE HILLS The valves on the Janesvllle Planter are so placed that there Is no possibility of mixing the hills. The upper valve is located so close to the seed, plate that It cannot get out of time, and the lower valve is so constructed that it can. free itself readily from dirt or trash that may get into It, The valve movement ensures your being always in check whether you drive fast or slow, and the rows will be straight. The force feed takes care of the increased : momentum In fast driving. V - ' - THE JANESVILLE EDGE DROP PLATE Is so perfect in construction as to permit of the plantr lng of round kernels and to prevent their accumulating in the bottom of the seed can. In all other styles of edge drop planters these round kernels accumulate and interfere with the accuracy of the drop. In the Janesvllle by enlarging the opening where the seed Is discharged from the plate, we enable the round kernels ta lodge in the cells and when they come around to the opening, to drop through. In other edge drops they prevent the cells filling but cannot themselves pass through. FROM EDGE TO FLAT DROP Shelled corn bought for seed is usually high priced and the waste of even a kernel is naturally avoided. The sorting of It Is a very difficult and tedious operation and the farmer frequently does not care to spend time on it. To meet these and other conditions, the Janesville Corn Planter may be used with a flat drop plate for unselected seed.. The kernels of corn are placed flatways in readiness to pass through the seed cells, and, as the plates are thin, usually one kernel is held at a time in a cell, and for unsorted or mixed corn a high degree of accuracy Is obtain ed. ' , . - Thus by a mere chatfge of plates the Janesvllle Corn Planter is converted from an edge drop to a flat drop machine. You have in one machine two devices to meet varying conditions.. The Janesvllle is virtually two machines.. ' , ACCURATE CHECKING The hill drop Is executed with the highest degree of accuracy. Uneven travel of the team has no effect in producing imperfect checking. Oo slow, go fast It makes no difference, as it Is an absolute impossibility, with our sliding plunger valves, to mix the bills or dribble the corn between them. " " REMOVE PLATES AT BOTTOM The seed cans are removable and the plates are put on or taken off at the bottom ot them. This simple method of exchanging the plates does away with the necessity of emptying the aeed cans. The cans also cannot be put on the machine out of time. This Is a patented feature of our' own. - - 1 WIDTH ADJUSTABLE The regular planter is adjustable in width and will plant the rows from 3 feet 4 inches. 3 feet 6 inches to 3 feet S inches. However, on special orders we can make the planter ' any width between 3 feet and 4 feet ' - ' "''lf"'-Y:;s-" ' . '''- .'''- ' l" Every Planter Folly Gaaranteed to Do Just Vhat Ve aaim and to Give Satisfaction

n

1

J)(0)i