Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 341, 15 October 1911 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1911.
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Jlz Richmond Palladium
tzi Sai-Telegrara Published and owned by the . PALLADIUM TRINTINO CO. ' IMUed 7 days each week, evening and Sunday morning Office Corner North th and A atreett. Palladium and gun -Telegram Phonea Bualaesa Office, 2660; Editorial Rooms, RICHMOND. INDIANA Radelph G. Leeta Edlter
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New York ReDresentatlves Payne &
Younr. 30-34 West 33rd street, and 29 85 West 32nd street. New York. N. Y.
Chicago Representatives Payne & Young;. 747-748 Marquette Building,
Chicago, 111.
Tha Association of Ami
lean Advertisers baa ax-
a man ad a Del certified la tha aircalatioaaf this rat
licatloa. Tha figare of circalatioa aontaiaad la the Aaaaciatioa'a report only ara guaranteed. tssttiitica of America Advertisers
1M. Whitehall Blf. . T. City
I THE REPUBLICAN SITUATION.
The visit of the vice president to ! this district and the speeches made by him and his friends make plain the i Republican situation to even the most
' casual observer. They advocated the get-together
policy but it must be on a standpat
platform. They say in so many words 1 that they want none of Lafollette, none i of Cummins and their ilk, which Ini eludes Beveridge of Indiana. Wateon, Caitnon and the stand-pat t crowd have set' out to capture the par; i ty organization. In Indiana they have i already succeeded, as they have in Ohio and New York. In Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan, Kansas and some oth- : er states the prospects are not so bright. Mr. Taft will be nominated again for president because no other candidate Is available. Mr. Watson and ; Mr. Cannon do not like his policies, i but simply prefer him to LaFollette 1 or a Democrat. Ex-Senator Beveridge is to cut no i figure in next year's campaign, he being classed with the Insurgents. ExGovernor Hanly is to be kicked out unceremoniously if anybody can be found with a big enough boot Insurgency and county option are issues that will not be tolerated. This, In brief, is the stand-pat program. It Is a life or death struggle, for if they do not win they must remain permanently In the lame duck class, with Beveridge, Lafollette, Cummins, et al. in the ascendancy. To the observer of political events, it looks i like a pretty stiff fight ahead. The Insurgents are holding back and have .played no trump cards to this time. 'What will happen when it comes to the I show-down Is a problem. New Castle i Times.
HOBOES WARM FEET
AT CITY
BUILDING
Bince the nights have become dis-
greeable persons afflicted with wan
derlust and who find Richmond on Ithelr itinerary are beginning to appear jat police headquarters, asking for permission to sleep in the basement of kbe city hall.
11 tramps are required to affix their signatures to the "Bum Register," Night Police Sergeant Winters acting
rM "night clerk." Every apDlicant is
searched before he is allowed to sleep
I in the basement of the city building. I Occasionally Winters finds one who
Deeomes peeved when he starts to search the transient, but when threatened with refusal of sleeping quarters for the evening the applicant readily
acquieces to the sergeant's wishes.
If the addresses given are true the Icity building affords shelter to tramps Ifrom all parts of the country. As a rule most of the tramps are members kof the "Down and Out club," but occasionally one is found who is forced ;to appeal for shelter from the cold evenings, and who in former days belonged to a higher class than the average "hobo." Last night several "hobos" registered with the night police sergeant, 'but all promised they would leave Warty this morning for other cities.
EVERYONE CAN HAVE Beautiful Hair. i Raving a head of nice hair is a ; blessing within the reach of anyone who will use Newbro's Herpicide before the dandruff germ has denuded the scalp and left a condition of ' chronio baldness. , Herpicide imparts .that snap and luster to the hair which is so attractive. Having a subtle fragrance Herpicide appeals directly to persons of refinement. It has been sold for years, and boasts of more satisfied users than all other hair dressings combined. Newbro's Herpicide is recommended and used by the best barbers and hair dressers. -; - Bend 10c in postage or silver for r, sample and booklet to The Herpicide Co Dept. R., Detroit, Mich. . : . One dollar sive bottles are guaranteed by all druggists, v . 7:-: r A P Lokaft Co, 8pecll Agents.
The Reason Why
In these days in which there was still some doubt as to what M:. Taft was going to do about the tariff, the people all over the country Insisted that Mr. Taft was progressive, and that he would stick to his promises. A little later when the trouble arose in the Department of the Interior over the Morgan-Guggenheim-Cunningham claims and the question arose as to whether Mr. Ballinger or Mr. Pinchot would go, people still maintained Mr. Taft was a progressive. The reason the people were so insistent that Mr. Taft was a progressive was because they hoped so. They had been led to believe, as Mr. Roosevelt had been led to believe, that he was a progressive and no man ever came to office with a greater array of promises for progressive principles, nor had the people ever more confidence in any candidate for public office.
Within the last few days a very interesting document has come to light. People still remember the spring day in which Gifford Pinchot boarded the steamer for Europe to meet Theodore Roosevelt in the Black Forest. At that time there Was speculation. Tw questions were asked: "What will Pinchot tell Roosevelt?" The other question was: "What will Roosevelt do?" And this was because of a third question: "What sort of a man is Mr. Taft?" The document we have already spoken of is the letter which Gifford Pinchot wrote to his old friend Theodore Roosevelt in regard to Mr. Taft. In last week's Saturday evening Post Gifford Pinchot gives the reasons to Roosevelt of the break-down in the Taft administration. The letter is dated December 31st, 1909. Mr. Taft has been in office scarcely three quarters of a year and yet the friend of Roosevelt could sum up Mr. Taft's administration from the standpoint of the people in these words: 1. He has permitted himself, as soon as he was elected, to be surrounded by a circle of trust attorneys and other reactionaries, from which he has never broken away. 2. He has allowed the attacks upon yourself in congress during the last session of your term to continue unchecked, when a word from the incoming President would have ended them. 3. He has surrounded himself in his cabinet by corporation lawyers who were necessarily in opposition to the Roosevelt policies. 4. He surrendered to congress in its attack upon the executive's power to appoint advisory commissions, thereby abandoning the strong position taken in your memorandum upon the last sundry civil bill. Thus he allowed the work of the national conservation commission to be stopped, prevented the commission from formulating the specific measures on conservation which it would otherwise have laid before him, and seriously retarded the practical progress of the conservation movement. 5. He affiliated himself in congress with the leaders of the opposition to the Roosevelt policies and the makers of personal attacks upon himself. I refer to Cannon, Aldrich, Hale, Tawney, and others whom he has chosen as his advisers. 6. By the appointment of Secretary Ballinger he brought about the most dangerous attack yet made upon the conservation policies an attack now happily checked, at least for the time. 7. He established by his appointment and support of Hitchcock, a vicious political atmosphere in the administration, and revived the spoils system of political appointment in some of its worst forms. 8. He failed during the course of the tariff debate to support the insurgent Republicans in the house and senate who were honestly trying to fulfill the party pledges and reduce the tariff, and intervened before the conference committee only when it was practically too late. 9. He signed and now defends a tariff bill made by and for the special interests, following the passage of which the cost of living rose beyond all precedent. He indorsed, in his Boston speech, in the person of Senator Aldrich, the most conspicuous representative of reaction and special interests in the senate. 11. He indorsed in his Winona speech, in the person of Mr. Tawney, your bitterest enemy in the house of representatives, and next to the speaker himself perhaps the most conspicuous advocate of Cannonism and reaction. 12. In the same speech at Winona he tried to read out of the Republican party Senators Nelson, Beveridge, Cummins and other Republicans whose fight was made for equality of opportunity and a square deal, and the honest redemption of our party pledges. 13. He has repeatedly set party solidarity above the public welfare, and has yielded to political expediency of the lowest type, as in the case of the reported offer, first of a federal judgeship and later of a diplomatic post to former Senator Fulton and the appointment of R. C. Kerens as minister to Austria. 14. He has apparently impaired or abandoned, through a decision of his attorney general, the principle which you established of federal regulations and control, in the public interest, of water powers on navigable streams. 15. He is placing or has placed himself in a position such that the only alliance open to him is with the special interests. 16. He has allowed the great mass of the people to lose confidence in the President. Since that time there have not been very many things which have been very different from the course of Mr. Taft in the first eight months of his administration. In tr.e place of a Ballinger scandal, the attempted robbing the people of valuable coal lands in Alaska, we had a conspiracy in Mr. Taft's cabinet against Dr. Wiley who is trying to save the health of American citizens. In the place of the signing of the Payne-Aldrich tariff,, we have had a second refusal to reduce the tariff. Mr. Taft declared himself out of sympathy with the initiative, referendum and recall. By unusual efforts he really created a court of commerce, which has worked against progressive action of the interstate commerce commission. These are but illustrations: The first, of his indifference to solution of public questions in new ways, and the second his impatience with the good results of institutions already progressive. Within the next few days there will be a meeting at Chicago of men who are seriously interested in the Republican party and in progressive principles of government. They will come to discuss the breakdown of the Taft administration. Three years ago this would not have been thought possible. Today every one is wondering that it has not been done sooner, and if any one asks why this meeting is called, the reasons 6et forth in Mr. Pinchot's letter to Mr. Roosevelt and the many things like them which have come since, furnish the answer.
WASH ACQUITTED ON UNWRITTEN LAW PLEA (National News Association) CARLINSVILLE, 111., Oct. 14.Tohn W. Wash, on trial for the murder of Clarence Martin was acquitted this morning. The jury debated the case from 7 o'clock Friday night. Wash's defense was based on the unwritten law.
AVIATOR LEVEL DIES
FROM INJURIES
(National News Association) PARIS, Oct. 14. Aviator Level, who
was mortally injured at Rheims on Thursday while making a flight in his biplane, died today.
MASONIC CALENDAR
Monday, Oct. 16. 1911, Richmond Commandery, No. S, R. T. Special conclave. All members are requested to attend. Wednesday. Oct. IS, 1911. Webb Lodge, No. 24, F. and A. M. Stated meeting. Thursday, Oct. 17. 1911. Wayne Council, No. 10, R. and S. M. called Assembly work in the Royal Select Masters' Degree, after which the Cuer Excellent Degree will be conferred on all Select Masters present. Following the work a banquet will be served Saturday, Oct 21, 1911. Loyal Chapter No. 49, O. E. S. Stated meeting and work in Floral Degree.
FANS ANTICIPATE EXCELLENT BOUTS Interest in the prize fght that is to be staged at the Coliseum in this city next Tuesday evening is growing. Most of the men who have been training for the fray at athletic clubs in Indianapolis will arrive in the city some time Monday, and will spend the remaining time putting the finishing touches on their training so that they will be in the best trim on the seventeenth. The other fighters will come in either today or tomorrow, and all will be here long before the match starts. Hugh McGann, who is promoting the bouts, will come here from Indianapolis and will set to work at once making final arrangements. The card this time promises to be one of the liveliest ever offered in this city. Jimmy Watts and Kid Mitchell, who will meet in the principal contest of the evening, are both reported to
be in excellent condition and will make
matters exciting for the ten rounds
they are scheduled to ight. The contestants in the minor numbers are also said to be coming along well, and will furnish a good entertainment.
- i4 ,
We imported last year $17,643,000
worth of works of art, twenty years old and over, free of duty, besides $673,135 worth of art works produced
aDroad by Americans. We exported : $9SS.S21 woth of painticcs? crd sttn-i
ary. v
I VALID IS CARRIED FROM BURNING HOME Lelia Bass Carried by Neighbors from Residence Last EveXg. Neighbors on hearing the screams of Lelia Bass, aged about twenty-four years, daughter of Mrs. Sallie Jenkins, rushed into the restaurant at 612 North Fourteenth street last evening in time to carry her from the room, as the blazes from a fire, started by a gasoline stove in an adjoining room were burning the curtains between the kitchen and the room in which she lay an invalid. The young woman was carried to the heme of a neighbor and an alarm of fire was turned in Mrs. Bass, who has been married, but who is not living with her husband at the present, has been ill for some time and when she perceived the flames licking the curtains she' screamed for help, as she was not able to get out of the house. The timely arrival of neighbors probably saved her life. No one else was in the house at the time. Companies Nos. 1 and 3 and the hook and ladder truck responded to the alarm. The blaze was extinguished within a short time and little damage was done, j It is not known how the fire started.
INDIANA TOWNS TO HAVE POSTAL BANKS (National News Association) WASHINGTON, Oct. 14. Postal
j Savings banks will be established
November 9. at Carthage, Clovedale, and Roachdale, Indiana.
An electric flat iron with an automatic cut-off so that the current is used only when the iron is in operation, has been patented by two Cali-fornians.
Equally Divided. She 1 bear that you and Nellie are married sod happy. He Tes, that Is. she's happy and I'm married.
He Read K. Poet Has toe editor read tha
I left here yesterday? Office Boy I think so, sir. He's away ill tsflay.
nawnnn free
TRIAL
The heart of a Greenland whale is a muscle of enormous size. It is ofen three feet in diameter.
mm ih rmam. am aa . n w.
ECZEMA CAN BB CURED TO STAY, and when I nj cared. I bmi just wfcat I say C-TT-R-K-lXand not merely patched up for aw hi to. to return oim taaa before. Now, I do not care whatal I you hare used, nor how many doctors hare told yon that yon could not be eared -ail I ask is) use a chance toahnw you that I know what I am talking about. 1 f yon w.i Iwrtta ma TO-DAY. I wilisend you a KREB TRIAL, of my mild, soothlnc. guaranteed carethatwtl loon, vin.v toa moro In a day than I or anyone also could In a month's time. If yon ara dlarueted and discouraged. I da re you to rir me chance to prore my claims. By wrtttnc B to-day you H1 enjoy more rca 1 corn for! than you had erer thought t&Ja world hold for yon. J net try it, and you wilUee lam tailing you the truth. Dr. I. E. Cannaday. 1361 Park Square. adalta. Ma. TufuvscOT : Ti.b4 Vs3ol Could you do a better act than to aend this notice to some SwUUa, Vq. poor sufferer of Bcseana t
Supercedes Massage As Wrinkle Remover
(The Woman Beautiful.) Many women regularly visit the heauty specialist to have their wrinkles ironed out with the help of hot applications, cold creams and massage. Most of us realize that there comes a time when no amount of persausion of this sort will avail. This process of "wrinkle removing" is wrong in principle. Both the hot water and the massaging tend to expand and loosen the skin, besides softening the muscular foundation. The very opposite result should be aimed at. The tissue should be strengthened, the skin tightened, so there'll be no room for wrinkles. The best known preparation for the purpose can be made at home by dissolving 1 oz. saxolite in pint witch hazel. Use as a wash lotion. The effect is really marvelous. Tell the druggist you want the powdered saxolite, which dissolves immediately.
THE
RECOGNIZED BANK FOR SAVINGS
It is an accepted fact that while all Richmond Banks are paying interest on Savings Deposits, Dickinson Trust Go. is the recognized Home of the Savings Depositor. We were the FIRST BANK in Richmond to pay interest on deposits and to offer an interest bearing account to those desiring to lay aside a portion of their income, as well as to those also having larger amounts of idle money awaiting investment. It has been our constant aim to provide not only a SAFE BANK for savings, but a bank where our depositors may always feel at home and that anything we can do for them will be considered a pleasure.
LET US SERVE YOU. RESOURCES OVER $1,800,000.00
THE HOME FOR
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You doubtless will remember the sad experiences you may have had in the past with cheap promising cheap tailors, who neither made good nor stayed, long; who intimidated you to accept unsatisfactory garments when you complained atid who jumped the town over night with your deposit; with those who returned under different names; with ajl those of then and now to whom business ethics is transparently negative. Ask yourself whether it would not be better not to risk your money with unknown strangers, but to deal with institutions that are solidly established, that are financially responsible and that have honorable records for service and splendid records for values. At $20.00 to Order At $20.00 we give you far better value ,than you can possibly get anywhere else ready made or allegedly tailor-made. We give you fabrics that are honest in weight,' warp and filling and will give you really good service. The garments will be tailored strictly to measure and to order. We deliver promptly and we guarantee we know of no other tailor who guarantees as fully as we guarantee. x Most of you know that we were the first to make suits and overcoats to order as low as $20.00; that was years ago. Today we are imitated right and left, but not in values, not in service, not in sincerity.
Flo Shrink
The garments we make will not shrink
in wear. Our cloths are London shrunk by the cold water process, that makes them everlastingly dependable thereafter.
At $225 and $2500 to Ordor Better Suits or Overcoats, of course, at $22.50 and $25.00, better in so far as the fabrics cost as more per yard at the mills and "better" too in the larger variety afforded.
923 Main Street
Remember that whether you pay us $20.00, $22.50, $25.00 or $30.00 or more, you get garments tailored to yoor order, fabrics that enforce no risk of your investment and absolutely the best tailoring value obtainable a nywhere. Guaranteed Tailoring Value.
i lr.i'.i.iw
JUWUWW'MMa11'' ' '""n i Tlirfrn rTTi unr mlijiliiifn wiilm
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