Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 109, 12 March 1912 — Page 2
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXD SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1912
BLOODTHIRSTY ARE FRtllZIEDJCHiHESE Within the Past Twenty-four Hours, 100 Chinese Have Been Killed.
(National News Association) l'EKIN, March 12. Scenes unapproached for bloodthirsty brutality sine the French revolution are daily being enacted in tbia city. The headsman's iword has taken the place of the guillotine, but the lust for human blood rule predominant. In the past twenty-four hours more than 100 Chinese were killed either publicly or In prorate by detached bands of mutineers or brigands. The first serious anti-republican outbreak since the abdication of the royal family has followed the inauguration of Yuan Shi Kai. Thousands of prisoners, liberated from jails through the clemency of the new president. Joined the rabble today. As the foreign embassies entertain grave fears that Yuan's native troops will be unable to handle the situation foreign troops are being kept in the legation quarter. This quarter is now an armed camp, with soldiers on duty night -and day, with artillery mounted upon - the walls, which surround the district. Republican flags were torn down and trampled under foot today, and a frenzied mob surged through the crooked streets, waving the ' dragon flag and crying, "death to tho i Republicans." CALLED TO MARION Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Thorn have been called to Marlon to attend the funeral of Mr. Thorn's father, George W. Thorn, who died at the Marion Soldiers' Home with apoplexy. He was 86 years of age. Mr. Thorn was sergeant of Company H, Twelfth Indiana Infantry and first lieutenant of Com- , pany K, 163rd Indiana Infantry. - Many sufferers from rheumatism have been surprised and delighted with the prompt relief afforded by applying Chamberlain's Liniment. Not one case of rheumatism in ten requires any internal treatment whatever. This liniment Is for. salo by all dealers. City Statistics Deaths and Funerals. THOMPSON Thomas G. Thompson died this morning at ten o'clock at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Layton Myrlck. 400 North 11th street, his death coming Just one month after 'the death of his wife. The funeral ar rangements will be announced later. ' KNAPP Rebecca A. Knapp. aged sixty-seven, died Monday afternoon at ' 5 o'clock at her home, 40 North Third street. She leaves one son, Thomas Dobbin's of Dayton. The funeral will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the residence. Interment will be at Earlham. Friends may call Wednesday afternoon and evening. 8HOWALTKR John H. Showalter, aged 38, who died at Newport, Kentucky, Sunday evening will be brought to thla city Wednesday morning and taken to the Doan and Klute undertaking parlors, the funeral to be held from the parlors Wednesday afternoon. Showalter leaves a wife and three children. . KOPSKI The funeral of Fred Kofskl will be held Wednesday afternoon from the home at 806 South Eighth street at t o'clock. The Rev. Huber will have charge of the ceremonies. 1 Interment will be at the Lutheran cemetery. Friends may call at any time. - WEBER The body .of Phillip Weber was taken to Ft. Wayne today from the Jordan, McManus and Hunt undertaking parlors by Anthony Weber, a; brother of the deceased, to be taken from that city to Huntington where the remains will be laid to rest Wednesday afternoon at 1:30. The funeral will be held from the Lutheran church. Polfer P. Wilson Hanry J. Pohlmeyer Harry C. Downing Harvey T. Wilson , FUNERAL DIRECTORS ' Phone 1335. 15 N. 10th St. Automobiles, Coaches, and Ambulance Service.
CULBERTSOII WAIITS UllCLEJAM TO ACT
'Appeals to President to Take ! a Hand in the Mexican Situation. (National New Association) WASHINGTON, March 12. President Taft was asked today by Senator Culbertson of Texas to take a hand in the Mexican situation. The depredations of Mexican marauders, who continue to harrass the American towns along the border have aggravated the I seriousness of the situation. Senator Culbertson was unable to obtain a satisfactory audience today and another will be arranged for tomorrow. Senator Guggenheim of Colorado, has requested the government to seize consignments of arms and ammunition along the Mexican border. In a letter which Senator Guggenheim has transmitted to secretaries Wilson and McVeagh, and which supposedly comes from an American consul in Mexico, the statement Is made that unless the rebellion is shortly quelled riot and revolution will continue in Mexico and American capital will be in danger of confiscation. BIG CAT SLAUGHTER ON IN DUBLIN NOW Pied Pipers and hydrophobia do not seem to be similar terms or to mean anything in common, but the services of the former may be required soon if the latter does not abate. The epidemic of hydrophobia sweeping over the county recently resulted in a mad cat biting Walter Marshall, aged eight, who was Immediately sent to Indianapolls for Pasteur treatment. The cause of the condition of the lad became known and a slaughter of the feline population of Dublin resulted. Repeating shotguns were secured which were guaranteed to kill every one of the individual nine lives of each separate and distinct cat in Dublin, until now hardly a midnight fence performer remains to preserve order in Dublin catdom. The rats are increasing at an alarming rate. Any Pied Pipers out of jobs please observe. J. RUNGE ARRESTED ON STATE WARRANT John Runge, member of the firm of John Runge and company, who was arrested Saturday night by Deputy Sheriff Mote on the charge of selling and exposing for sale adulterated stock food, has filed his bond of $100 for bis appearance when the case is called. Otis Roberts, state food inspector, who filed the affidavit was at Indianapolis, following examination of the ingredients of the stock food which is sold by Runge. The affidavit was brought to this city by Inspector Roberts Saturday and placed in the hands of the prosecuting attorney, Charles L. Ladd. According to Prosecutor Ladd, the stock food contained ground flax straw, molasses and cotton seed oil and it was otherwise adulterated. WILL GREET BRYAN WITH LARGE CROWD That a large crowd will greet Wni. Jennings Bryan tomorrow afternoon when he speaks at the Gennett theater is the opinion of Herbert S. Weed, secretary of the Young Men's Christian association. Mr. Bryan who will deliver an address on the "Prince of Peace" is' brought to this city under the auspices of the Y. M. C. A. He will speak at 3 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. The officers of the association believe that a packed house will hear hs address. TRAFFIC RESUMED Traffic on the north track of the Pennsylvania railroad bridge over the Whitewater river was resumed last night at five o'clock. The remains of the near wreck have not been cleared up yet, many repairs being necessary to the bridge from effects' of the accident, which occurred yesterday, nearly causing the loss of a dozen lives. Official inquiry will be taken up later to find out why the train was not stopped before it got across the bridge. Cinnamon is a species of laurel that thlves In Ceylon.
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If It's Proper to Have One Kind of Activity Annihilated in the Glen, Why Net Another? Teachers' Institutes Relics of the Dark Age.
BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. "I see," said Sarah, "that they are going to take the tracks out of the Glen." "That is to say you saw it in the paper," grinned the cynic. "Well I guess It said the Board of Public Works decided that it bad to be done," said Sal resentfully. "I read the papers carefully," she added. "My dear child." soothingly murmured the cynic, "don't take things so to heart. I was not reflecting on your integrity but merely making some light commentary on the sources of alleged authority from whence your information sprung." "Take a long breath after that," jeered Sal. "If you'll not report me I believe I'll smoke." said the cynic striking a light. "I confess to you strictly on the side, such mental efforts are exhausting." "Don't mind me," said Sal, "I don't belong to the W. C. T. U." "I wonder," idly maundered on the cynic, "why the W. C. T. Uers' are so down on the cigarette. Its not half as deleterious to the physical system as the moral debauches they go on at their conventions." "I know a Wuer once who was appointed on so many committees and whooped it up so for prohibition that she had to go to a rest cure to recuperate. She was a complete nervous wreck. And look at me!" . "O, look who's here!" cried Sal. "Certainly the cigarette manufacturers ought to use your picture for an advertisement." " 'Twas ever thus from childhood's hour,' " murmured the cyme. "I used to smoke out behind the barn where the folks wouldn't see me. And I was never sick in my life." "All the same," said Sal severely, "you should frown on it I am going to invite you to my school some day to speak to the children on the evils of smoking." "And I'll take good care not to mention the time you " "Pooh! I never smoked a cigarette in my life!" deployed Sal. "If you keep on you'll meet the fate of Sapphira," replied the cynic. "It grieves me, Sarah, to see thee four flushing thus." "Well, anyway," continued Sarah, "the tracks are going to be taken out of the Glen." "Your simple, child-like faith intrigues me," murmured the cynic. "Would Children Cry
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that I had this trusting spirit. Life's pathway would be denuded of many of its thorns." "You make fun of everything," cried Sarah. "And I don't care what you say I believe they really mean it this time." "This is that faith that removes mountains!" exclaimed the cynic. "You must remember, Sal, dear," he added, "that it has to run the gauntlet of our honorable city council." "I never could understand councilmen." said Sal. "Councilman are presumably elected to their distinguished positions to represent the people of
their wards. To superintend the city I that after all their flt-throwing about house-keeping. And yet they never do th awfulness of having the cars go up anything anybody wants 'em to. They j and down Main street' they never seem to think they're put in to amuse . knew it when the cars were running themselves and to be fanned out to ! right under their noses for a month the highest bidder." J while North E street was being repalr"Nonsense, Sal," said the cynic, d hut summer." "councllmen mean well when it don't i "That illustrates what we were talkconflict with their private Interests, j lng about the other day," said the cynBut there's not enough in it to attract : ic. "The lack of accurate observa-
a first class man." i "That's just where I despise you j men," cried Sal. "You aren't moved by patriotic or civic motives. You won't i be councllmen because it takeB too much time and you don't get enough money out of it. Councllmen ought to serve for nothing. They should be animated by a higher consideration than whether there's something or not in it for them." "Well, that's what animates most everybody," said the cynic. "There are mighty few disinterested peofte in this world." "Well, I'll pin my faith to Councilman Weishaupt," said Sal. "I don't know him and never saw him in my IJfe. But he seems to tike bis position seriously. He seems towant to clean up things r the citizens of this town and shed light in dark places. "He seems to think he owes his local constituency something besides sitting in back alleys in the dark of the moon matching up delegations for ward meetings." "I am shocked, Sarah," said the cynic, "at your seemingly intimate i i m a j a i i i i j Knowledge oi me intricacies oi local I nnllttos." "Just wait 'til we get to voting," cried Sal. "We'll make the men sit up and take notice. We'll string up a few of these ward bosses that maunder round town with their hats 'pulled down over their noses thinking their own mighty thoughts and telling us whether we shall or shall not have cefor Fletcher's Signature of a MUWWAT TWCtT. St, Swriaafiald,
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ment sidewalks. Well reduce those rake-offs from the cement people and the side-walk contractors. "That's just about as near as you get to it," replied the cynic. "But its
; useless to try to 'show women." "They don't have to be shown." said Sal. "They know a thing or two on their own account. There's some of "em knew Weishaupt was on the right tack in that school matter even if he didnt land the right ash. As the kids say in some of their games 'he was getting warm."' "You alarm, me, Sarah," murmured the cynic. "Is no one safe? Must we all be exposed to the light of day?" "Another councilman told me," added Sal triumphantly, "that Weishaupt had been trying to get somebody interested in that street-car business for months but no one would pay any attention to him." "Well, somebody's paying attention to him now," grinned the cynic. "One of the funny things about this freight car business," said Sal, "was tlon on the part of the average. Ninetenths of the people will never notice a thing right in their road 'til their attention's called to it." "Well the next thing I wish they'd take up," said Sal, "is making 'em Btop speeding automobiles in the Glen, j wag walking out there yesterday and one aiong going like mad at a rate or about one hundred and.nfty miles an hour. Everybody was sidestepping and dancing about fore and
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aft. Pedestrians took to the offing and one boy climbed a tree." "Why dont they enforce the ordinance in the Glen?" asked the cynic mildly. "Why don't people observe it?" cried Sal. "Why does the public have to be tracked down and watched and arrested and fined? "Why isn't there more general consideration for each other's rights? "Why can't the individual look to the larger good instead of selfishly considering only his own convenience
and comfort?" "You sound like a Chautauqua lecture.' exclaimed the cynic "And that makes me think what right have you school teachers to fence off part of the public domain every summer, demolish trees, kill the grass, generally make that part of the city park hideous, and levy an entrance tee on the i public. Its like charging a man admittance to his own house or barring him out if he hasn't the price. j "Don't glare at me," said Sal, "I'd be glad enough to side-step it. The reason the teachers go is because they're paid. They never hear anything that's' going on. They sleep peacefully and regularly through the program from Monday to Friday." "And you admit it," murmured the cynic. "Without shame," said Sal.. "Teachers' Institutes are carried over from ; the stone age. They have no excuse for being." I "Well," said the cynic taking out his watch, "rude as it is I must be going, What, other reforms have you to sug gest? If you'll let me know I'll take the matter up with the authorities." "Ask 'em." said Sal, "why if they vote one hundred dollars to the Art Association they don't vote twice that amount to the May Festival." "That's easy. The May Festival can sell their tickets," deployed the cynic. at Druitt Brothers' Bed, Spring and Mattress Only $12.98 IUhd ooo
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