Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 61, 16 January 1912 — Page 4
PAGE FOUIl.
THE BICIDIOND PALLADIUM AND OUlf-TELEGIlAli, TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1912.
Its nict::d msaa
Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING X Issued Every Evening Except Sunday. Office Corner North th and Astr.ets. Palladium and Sun-Telaarram PhoaT" Business Of flea. SMC; News Department, 1131. RICHMOND. INDIANA tadelnfc O. Laada. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS In Richmond 16.00 par yaar tn advance) or 10a par week. RURAL ROUTS M One yaar. In anvanoa Six months. In advance..... Ona month. In advance , Addraaa chanced aa ottan aa desired, both naw and old addresses BUit ba van. ... Subacrlbara will plaaao rtmlt with order, which should ba given tot a pacified ttrra; nama will not ba eoterad until pay man t la received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS mK Ona yaar. In advanca Bis montha. In advanca Ona month. In advanca Entered at Richmond, Indlaaa, post office aa aecond claaa mall matter. Naw York Representatives Payne Voun, 20-14 Weat 13d street, and IIII Weat 12nd atreet, New York, N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payna S) Young. 747-741 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111. Tho Association of lean Advertiaers has w amoasd and certified to tkm sarealarlasiof this Mb. Hsati . Tm fignros el circulation sontaJnan1 in the Association's ra pert only ara gun rant oed. AsakSa f Aserka Aivertisers No. x. WbilaJufl IMf. M. T. City Heart to Heart ' Talks. By EJWIN A. fCYB. TIE MYSTERY. In ona of the ranges of the Rocky mountains is a certain sheer cliff. Halfway down the precipice Is grassy ledge where foot of man has never trod. Only the sunshine and the wind and the rains and the birds go there. And On that shelf of shale, Inaccessible to man and but dimly shown thougli a powerful glass, grow violets. Year by year they bloom there as do the violets down In the valley below. Year after year, through thousands of years perhaps, that shelving rock baa held Its banquet of blue. And for thousands. of yeara, perbaiw. May day will kiss the violets into bloom. NowfWk tm fnnov iYim rhttrm nf thnea ltn. mr-w . w. seen flowers la lacking, the coloring leas delicate, the stems less graceful Certainly not. - And why t Of what use are the pretty blooms? No human hind can pluck them: no human eye can feast on them. Why the violets? Why did Ood make them? If they can neither be seen nor, their frawanna kiuwn. imp nlnrlr1 r. nnt nvM the heart of woman nor to gladden the, heart of s Uttle child, what were they made for? What Is the mystery? Why la It that "full many a flower la born to Dinah unseen T For, mind you. there can be no doubt that an Increasing purpose runa through all. The bunch of violets on the perilous ledge la working at Its secret destiny Just as you and I are working sway st ours. The violate do not know. Wo do not know. If we only knew! If we knew the secret of that mass of blue on that abelvlng rock we should know the secret of our own lives and the riddle of the universe. . As Tennyson says: Uttle flower. If I could understand What yau ara. root and all. and all to an, t ahould know what Ood. and man. la. We do not know, nor do the violets, "where bis Islands lift their fronded palms In air." We only know, and the violets know, we "cannot drift beyond bis lovt and care." Spirited. "Doss your pastor take much Interest la politics r Doss ht? All ws need is s brass band sad fireworks to make the tervless like political meeting."-Brooklyn Life. Here Is a remedy that will cure your cold. Why waste time and money experimenting when you can get s preparation that has won s world wide reputation by Its cures of this disease and can always be depended upcn? It Is known everywhere aa Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, and la a medicine of real merit For sale by all dealers. MASONIC CALENDAR Tuesday. Jan. 16 Richmond lodge, No. 196, P. ft A. M, called meeting, work In Master Mason degree. Wednesday, Jan. 17 Webb Lodge No. 14, F. ft A. M. Stated meeting and installation of officers. Friday, Jan. 19. King Solomon's Chapter No. 4. R. A. M. Called Convocation. Work In Mark Master degree. Saturday. Jan. SO Loyal Chapter, No. 49, O. E. S. . Stated meeting. . OBSTACLES. Hie coosciou of to as from ccoquering obHaadraoces are. after as. isliswiil i God must re gard oar ssttge.' And that he has a treat purposs 'pa .it aO we ars lofted to beJkvo fcoss" tfco way he beats us and give at a, at some ane m ear lives, a bads to fight Roderkk Stebbma.
"Just Another Dago
Last week there was s fairly Interesting murder trial at the court bouse. The evidence of the state and defense was at variance only on some minor points. The man who was acquitted brought forth the fact that the dead man had threatened him and the instructions of the Jury were that if the man had threatened him and made motions to indicate that he was about to carry the threat Into execution that the accused man had a perfect right to shoot him. And so the court allowed the defendant to go bis way. It seems to have been a fairy lopsided case as it was considered by the Jury. There was nothing else for it to do. . The case Is Interesting just at present from two points of view. The criminal law is up and before us through the urgence of Collier's Weekly. The cases are reviewed in which on the slenderest of technicalities the omission for instance of the word "the" the absence of a comma, the misspelling of a word that murderers have gone free. This case does not fall under that category. It seems to us to fall tinder the head of fair cases of acquittal with the addition of the phrase: "Just a dago!" We fancy that had the accused man killed what is known as a "white man" that is to say one of your prominent citizens that the accused man would have had a much tougfcer time with it. As it was he killed a man who was his own racial and social equal and the procedure of the case was fairly speedy. There was scarcely an impediment in the meting out of justice and the accused got as fair a hearing as he could have gotten in any court in the land. Just suppose however, that this man and the man who was killed had been two prominent men on Main street. How the counsels for the two sides would have been gathered in. How great would the attorney fees and court charges have been; how many experts there would have been gathered. We might have han an ex-congressman; a highly paid expert on evidence and a special pleader; social circles would have been stirred. This case was just a dago. There was no particular stir about it. The case went on its way and will be forgotten tomorrow because tho man was "Just a Dago."
Please do not understand that we are criticising this case we are simply comparing it with a case like the Thaw case and the Beattie case.
Meantime, with murder going unpunished how long will it be before Judge "Lynch" presides over the administration, of Justice in Wayne county?
NATIONAL BOARD. (National News Association) WASHINGTON. D. C, an. 16. With a three-day program calling for the discussion of many of the important matters pending before congress, the Na tional Board of Trade began its fortysecond annual meeting at the New Willard hotel today. Nearly all commercial organizations scattered throughout the country were represented at the opening. The meeting has set aside tomorrow for the con sideration of the corporation problem. Other leading matters of discussion will include the subjects of banking ' and currency reform, the creation of ' a non-partisan tariff 4 commission and the question of making the Panama canal free to American coastwise ship ping. Browning a Great Talker. If Lord Houghton talked more than moat people be certainly was eclipsed by Mr. Browning, who spoke louder and with greater persistency than any one I have ever come across in my life. Although 1 bad known him as a girl, we did not renew our acquaintance until after my marriage, when I saw a great deal of him, as he constantly cams to our house. Be dined with us often and used to come and see me generally every Sunday afternoon. He was very agreeable and kind, and, although I was never one of his devoted followers sad often told him 1 bad never been able to read a line of his poetry, be still continued his friendship with me. I think most people feared rather than loved him certainly men did, but women adore poets, and tbey worshiped Mr. Browning. From Lady St Heller's "Memories." Forgot Hi Own Tongue. A traveler in arctic Siberia, Mr. Vanderllp, a gold hunter, told the following of his return to civilisation: "I found that half a dozen of the officers and men of the steamer which my employers bad sent for me had come to hunt me up. The captain dismounted, and I tried to address hlra in Russian, but bo said. 'You forget that I speak English.' Now,' It may seem scarcely credible, and yet It is true, that for a few moments 1 was totally unable to converse with him In my native tongue. I had not used a word of It In conversation for months, and my low physical condition acting on my nerves confused my mind, and I spoke a Jumble of English, Russian and Korak. It was a week before I could talk good, straight English again.' . Potato Scones. To bake potato scones sift a cupful and a half of flour with a half teaspoonful of salt and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and rub In three tablespoonfuls of shortening. Addons cupful of light, freshly mashed potstoes, sdd ons well beaten egg and enough milk to make a soft dough. Roll out half an Inch thick, cut and bake on a hot griddle or In a hot oven. Serve very hot, with plenty of butter. Suburbanite.
A Poor Weak Woman
As she is termed, will endure bravely and patiently agonies which a strong man wonld give way under. The fact is woman ara more patient than tbey ought to be under such troubles. Bvery woman ought to know that aba may obtain tho most experienced medical odvies fnt if ckart and in mktlml cenjSaVac and privacy by m iling to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. Pierce, M . D., President, Balalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce has been chief consulting' physician of Ike Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Ins tiro ta, of Buffalo, N. Y., for
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MURDER ON SEAS.
(National News Association) BOSTON, Mass., Jan. 16. The case of William DeGraff, accused of murder on the high seas, was called for trial today in the United States District Court in this city. The victim of the alleged murder was Captain Charles D. Wyman, who was killed while he lay asleep in his bunk on the barge Glendower, while the boat was on its way to this city from Philadelphia last June. The victim's head was beaten in with a hammer or some other blunt instrument and the statements of the crew are said to have indicated that DeGraff, who was cook on the barge, had committed the crime. A Trail of Twisted Trees. All manner of devices have been employed to mark a line of march, but it is thought that the most curious method of "blazing the trail" is that still to be seen in Africa. In the year 1889, after a fierce battle with the Abysslnlans, the dervishes pursued their foes as far as the lake district. The mahdi's men had small knowledge of geography and little topographical intelligence. So the advance party, in order to mark the route for those who came after and also to guide the force on their return Journey, twisted the saplings along the way into living knots. The war ended, but the tied up trees grew and flourished, although uncouthly twisted and distorted, and are now the only reminders of that uprising of the dervishes. John Bunyan'a Indictment. The bill of indictment preferred against John Bunyan ran thus: "John Bunyan bath devilishly and perniciously abstained from coming to church to hear divine service and is a common upholder of several unlawful meetings and conventicles, to the disturbance and distraction of the good subjects of this kingdom, contrary to the laws of our sovereign lord the king." He was convicted and Imprisoned twelve years and six months. Levity In Court. Judge You saw the prisoner steal the sheet of music. What happened next? Witness Then he walked out st the store with an abstracted air. your honor. Boston Transcript. A Diplomat. Little Wllle ay, pa, what is a diplomat? Pa A diplomat, my son, is a person who can prove a man a liar without calling him one. London TitBits. REST AXa EEALTH TO MOTHER AID CHILD. Mas. Wtirsxow's Soothimo Svarp h beea Mtd for crer SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHSKS for their CHILDREN WHIL8 TEETHING, with FEKFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD. SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS aU PAIN ; CUKES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for UIARRHCEA. it is ab olutely harmless. Be sure aad ask for "Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup." and take no otbet Twenty-nve cents a ootue. astonishing : eWriaod for Mistical Adviser flOtS aufea) aloth-hsMsnd. will be sent on receipt of 31
Read This Booklet
The Hsir and Its Care," Sent Free Upon Request The Herpicide Company want everyone to have a copy of their booklet telling how to take care of and possess nice hair. The booklet contains much valuable information on the subject of saving and cultivating the hair. If the present-day men and women would begin to live up to the teachings of this little booklet It is doubtful If the next generation would find a baldheaded man or lady wearing false hair. It is just as easy to have robust and beautiful hair as to have thin, scraggy hair or no hair at all. If the scalp is kept clean and free from dandruff the hair grows naturally and luxuriously. The booklet tells how this may be most effectively accomDlished bv th use of Newbro's Herpicide. Herpicide destroys the germ which causes dandruff, frees the head from dirt and scarf flakes. The hair becomes light, fluffy and beautiful. Newbro's Herpicide is the original remedy that kills the dandruff germ for which there are many imitations and substitutes said to be just as good. Buy nothing but the original. All reliable druggists sell and guarantee genuine Herpicide in one dollar size bottles. Send 10c in postage to The Herpicide Co., Dept. R., Detroit, Mich., and a nice sample will be sent with the booklet. Applications obtained at the better barber shops and hair dressing parlorB. A. G. Luken & Co., special agents. Expert Testimony. There was not much to be gained from the witness on the stand, who seemed to have a wonderful faculty for holding bis tongue, but the lawyer tried once more. "You say your boat picked up the accused at 0 o'clock 'or thereabouts,' " he said. "It has been stated that be Jumped overboard nearly an hour before that time. Tell me. Captain Sampson, how he appeared to you when yon picked him up. If you had been required to give an opinion of him theu what would you have said?" "Well, I'll tell ye honest." said the captain, when be bad disposed of n portentous yawn. "I sh'd 've said be was one of the wettest men, if not the wettest man, that ever I see!" Youth's Companion. A Tiger Flower. There have recently been exhibited in Paris some living specimens of a curious insect brought from Rangoon by a well known French naturalist. It is a species of mantis, and its body and legs are both shaped and colored to resemble a beautiful flower. Lying in wait for butterflies under a spray of leaves, it looks like an azure blossom, with a black spot in the center exactly resembling the tube of a corolla. The hinder part of the body is drawn out into a long preen stalk. Butterflies and other insects are readily deceived by this mimic, and the Instant they touch It its claws, seize them. St. Louis Republic. A Persian Cynicism. The Persians have a very cynica! proverb on matrimony that runs: "Hi that ventureth on matrimony Is like unto one who thrusteth his hand intc a sack containing many thousands ol serpents and only one eel. Yet if th prophet so will It he may draw forth the eel." I Like tho Moon. "He's a star after dinner speaker isn't he?" "A star? He's a moon." "How?" "The fuller the brlghter."-Toled Blade. The only failure a man ought to feai in failure in cleaving to the purpose b sees to be best. George Eliot. I nest a nft-ttnlr ef Fiit, EsMsttj. k fsiiistSiesMttaai cans' casts afflicted tiacs childhood. Wrtt for FREE TRIAL I par eisrttsics. Prompt ntitf tsrstooe. Stacki tf ttttsmritli as fits. SWe ME ass FULL rmicHuts. OR FJiARVtT B00F.222I D0WNIN8 BLONB .NEW YORK
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GOVT, OWNERSHIP - BAD SAYS MACKEY Postal Telegraph Official Denounces the Policy of Hitchcock.
(National News Association) NEW YORK, Jan. 16. Clarence W. Mackey of the Postal Telegraph-Cable company, today gave out the following statement regarding Postmaster Gen eral Hitchcock's plan for government ownership of the telegraph systems: "Such a policy would lead to taking over the telephone lines also. The British government found this to be so and two weeks ago it took over the telephone lines In England at an enormous expense. The telegraph and telephone lines in this country are worth from two billion to three billions. This would include the independent tele phone companies owning nearly $500,1 000,000 of property and having some 450,000 stock holders. I venture to say ; that they would be orperated by the government at great annual loss, just , as in Great Britain, where the losses on the. telegraphs alone up-to-date are figuring at $175,000,000. The government would even be employing hundreds of thousands of clerks, telephone girls, telegraph operators, managers, etc. It would be a gigantic poli tical machine. Phone Lines Also. "I have reason for saying that taking over the telegraph lines would mean also taking over the telephone j lines. Are you aware of what is going on at this very time, the Western Union offices are being closed by the Bell Telephone Co., and the telegraph service incorporated with the telephones. The auditor of the Western Union recently announced that 150 of the Wes tern Union offices have been treated in j this way. This includes such large citiies as Augusta, Maine, the capital of the state. If this keeps on the Western Union will disappear as a separate concern. "There is another thing. When governments buy large properties they generally pay exhorbitant prices, juBt as when a city buys land for a park. jThe English government paid enor mous sums for the telegraph lines and then found to its surprise that it had to settle with railroads, with which ithe telegraph companies had contracts. I happen to know that this disj turbed the move very much but the government was in for it and had to carry it through always at the expense of the tax payers. The Western Union has thousands of contracts with railroads in this countiy and if the government should take over the telegraph lines it would have to settle for those also. On the whole I guess the American government will not buy telegraph lines so long as the Postal keeps up competition. "The Postal lines are not for sale." They Married Widows. Five presidents married widowsWashington. Jefferson, Madison; Fillmore and Benjamin Harrison. Asthma ! Asthma! POPHAM'S ASTHMA REMEDY gives instant relief and an absolute cure in all cases of Asthma. Bronchitis, and Hay Fever. Sold by druggists ; mail on receipt of price Si.oo. Trial Packase by mall 10 cents. i WILLIAMS MFC. CO.. Props.. Cleveland. OUc For sale by T. F. McDonnell. PR. SffMaaes, Female TM jane oi
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He Was Not Laeenie. John Morley iu bis life of Gladstone tells the story of the statesman's examination for admission toOxford university when he was a youth. The examiner, having utterly failed to floor the candidate on some point of theology, said. "We will now leave that part of the subject." "No, air.- replied the candidate; "if you please, we will not leave it yet," and proceeded to pour forth a fresh stream. The dean In Mr. Gladstone's day was Gaiaford, famous among other things for his trenchant brevity. "This laconic gift." bierrts Mr. Morley slyly, "tb deac evidently bad not time to trauwnlt tt all of Ids flock."
A Tudor Gallant. A gallant's toilet was no easy business, aad a slow or clumsy servant no doubt got many an oath and blow if be failed to tie up the points of the hose, lace the doublet or arrange the stomacher and frilled shirt to bis master's satisfaction. A gentleman's dress had so many fastenings, with so much tying and lacing of his garments together, that it was Impossible that he should ever get costumed (sic) without assistance. The long hose had to be securely tied by a number of latchets to the doublet; the doublet Itself was laced up the front, and the sleeves, being slashed to show the shirt sleeves, had also to be laced sometimes. "History of English Dress." Thron Aaoy llio THUSS! Strumous Old Boa Cantata reals the Soetsra And Cares Himself. No man or woman who is ruptured no matter how severely or at what nsT need uvom w ucuif wavM Throw Away the Truss. The case of Capt. W. A. CoIUncs sTtvas an-courag-ement for all sufferers from rupture. Capt. Colling suffered a double rupture and was confined to his bed for years. No truss could hold such a rupture. Many physicians examined his case and pronounced nn operation necassary. Capt. Colllnss kept experimenting on himself and finally to the astonishment of all he cured his rupture. Be hns never had any return of the trouble. Capt. CoUlngs sends bis dlsoovery to all people who are ruptured. If you will send the coupon below, he will mall you entirely free a one week's trial treatment so you can test It on your own case. This costs you nothing and you are sure to be benefited. So mall the coupon now. FREE TREATMENT COUPON. Capt. W. A. Colllnss. Inc., Box sil , "Water-town. N. T.s Please send me One Week's Test Treat mentfor Rupture. This test to be FBEX. I will commence uslna It at once. Name Address yfown .State As A Classy Smoke I can oot think of anything better than an Ed-A-Fel 5c Cigar. Best yet. Ask for it. ED A. FELTMAN, 609 Main Street J- A. WALLS SPECIALIST
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Dandruff And Itching Scalp Yield To Zeno Treatment
Way ahould you continue to experiment with salves, greasy lotions and fancy hair dressings trying to rid your scalp of germ life, They can't do it because tbey "cannot penetrate to the seat of tho trouble and draw the germ life to the surface of the scalp and destroy it. Why not try a PROVEN REMEDY? One that will do this. We have a remedy that will rid the scalp of germ life and in this way will cure DANDRUFF and ITCHING SCALP. This remedy is ZEMO. a clean, refined, penetrating scalp tonic that goes right to the seat of the trouble and drives the germ life to the surface and destroys it. A shampoo with ZEMO (ANTISEPTIC) SOAP and one application of ZEMO will entirely rid the scalp of Dandruff and scurf. Do not hesitate. but get a bottle of ZEMO today. It acts on a new principle and will do exactly what we claim for it. Sold and endorsed in Richmond by the Fihe Drug Store. Political Announcements REPRESENTATIVE. LEE J. REYNOLDS, of Wayne County, Candidate for Representative, subject to the Republican nomination. PROSECUTING ATTORNEY WILL W. RELLER. Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject to tho Republican Nomination. RALPH H. HUSSON, Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. DENVER C. HARLAN, Candidate tor Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. GUS HOELSCHER, Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. OATH FREEMAN, Candidate tor Proa, ecuting Attorney, subject tc tho Re. publican NominaUon. COUNTY TREASURER. DANIEL B. MEDEARIS, Center Tot ship, Candidate for County Treasurer, subject to the Republican Nomination.
NIMROD H. JOHN80N. Wayne Township, Candidate for County Tressurer, subject to Republican v Nomination. 5 t THOMAS I. AHL. of Wayne Township, Candidate for Treasurer of Wayne County, subject to the Republican , nominaUon. . ,; . . ,153., HOMER SCHEPMAN, of Wayne Twp., Candidate for County Treasurer, Subject to the Republican nominaUon. ' ' am a awa n tvsatcrtaTMAav '
f naxjv a. jaiNtvmDUKi, m novwn Township, Candidate for County Treasurer, subject to the Republican Nomination. MONT TORRENCE, Candidate for County Treasurer, subject to Republican Nomination. COUNTY RECORDER. JOHN DARNELL, Candidate tor County Recorder, subject to the Republican Nomination. JOHN C. KINO, Candidate for County Recorder, subject to Republican nomination.' BENJ. P. PARSONS, Candidate , for County Recorder, subject to the Republican NominaUon. COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
THEO P. CRIST.' Western District Candidate for County Commissioner, , subject to the Republican Nomination. . ; . 4 t . ;. ,;,.J:;.t: J. F. GROVES, Candidate for Commissioner of Wayne County, (West. -ern District), subject; to Republican Nomination. ELIA8 M. HOOVER, Western District, Candidate for County Commissioner, subject to the Republican Nomination.
HOMER FaKlOW, Eastern District, Candidate ISr re-election, subject to the Republican Nomination. SHERIFF. ALBERT B. 8 TEEN. Candidate for reelection for County Sheriff, subject to the Republican Nomination. Special Price on CANDIDATE CARDS HO WELLS PRINT SHOP 15 So. 11th St Phone 1066 We Carry the Union Label If You Locli The Ready Money To clean up your little outstanding bills and start the New Year with but one place to pay, come to us;' we will loan you what amount you may need and you can pay us back in small weekly or monthly payments to suit your income. . All transactions strictly confidential. Call, write or 'phone and we will give your wants our immediate attention.
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