Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 222, 23 July 1912 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1915.

The Richmond Palladium and Snn-Telegram Published a,1 owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTIMO OCX oAV4 5.vepr Kvenlns: Except Sunday. 21 n2trCwrnlr North th udA Mm-i lum JaB1 Sun-Telerram Phone en"iL DepsrtRICHMOND. INDIANA

Radolph O. Umi. SUBSCRIPTION TKRM0 In Richmond (.0e par year to advance) or lOo par wee. 2S rar, in advanoe '? ? Six month, in advanoe kH a ,.month Jn advance lit, id" -Addr.M chanced a oft an aa draa. both new and old addraeaee 6 riven. . Subscriber will please remit ?Jdef:. whon should ba ifPeciflod t.rm; nam will not a er.tar until payment la recelvod. MAIL subscriptions One yar, Jn adv-n0. Sx month, in advance '5J wne month, In advanca " Entered at Richmond. Indiana, po.it office aa tacond class mull matter. New York Representatives Parne Young-. 10-34 Welt 3Sd street, and 193S West 32nd street. New York. N. T. C.lcagro Representatives- Payne & Younr. 77-741 Marquetta Building. Chicago, 111. The Aaaociation of Ame I lean Advertisers has ex amined and certified to tha ouxtiUtion of this pub lication. The fir ires of circulation contained in tha Association's report only are guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers No. J68- .Whitehall Blag. R. T. City This Js My 45 th Birlfiday SIMEON S. PENNEWILL Simeon S. Pennewill, governor of the State of Delaware, was born in Greenwood, Del., July 23, 1867. His education was received in the public schools of his native town and at the academy in Wilmington. Aside from politics, the interests of Governor Pennewill have been identified principally with the fruit-growing industry In Delaware. His public career dates from 1899, in which year he was elected to the State senate on the Republican ticket He served in the senate until 1907 and in 1909 he was elected to the governorship. He has served also as president of the State board of education and as a member of the State board of agriculture. A brother of Governor Pennewill, Judge James P. Pennewill, Is chief justice of the supreme court of Delaware. CONGRTULATION3 TO: Cardinal Gibbons, 78 years old today. Dr. Albert Shaw, the noted editor and publicist, 55 years old today. Alfred G. Allen, representative in Congress of the Second Ohio, district, 45 years old today. THE SQUAWS SHAWL It Must Ba Just So to Suit Her Fastidious Taste. The Indian wears his blanket on the hottest summer days. His theory Is that If It keeps out the cold in winter it will keep out the beat In summer, says Ben M. Myers of Oklahoma City. While he might not care to buy anything else expensive, the price of a suitable blanket Is never questioned, bat It would be difficult indeed to deceive him as to the texture of any robe. "A squaw will Imitate almost anything that pleases her fancy, but In the matter of her blanket or shawl she exhibits an ur usual amount of Individuality. With great care and patience she designs her blanket, and when she places tha order with the mill man he does not dare duplicate It until she has had an opportunity to wear it. "If she makes the request that It shall not be duplicated ber wishes are regarded, because it Is the one article she possesses In which excluslrencss is much coveted and also because what would please one squaw would not appear at all attractive to another. "The lightweight shawl or blanket Is thrown over the head of the squaw, and unless sbe is able to purchase a bright colored silk kerchief it will serve as her only bonnet an well. It Is Just as common h sight uow to see the pupoose securely bound on the back of Its mother by a portion of her blanket ns it used to be to see the wee head of the Indian babe peeping from the tekas. or frame cradle." Washington Herald. The . Masonic Calendar L Tuesday, July 23. Richmond lodge, No. 196, F. & A. M. Called meeting, work in Master Mason degree. Wednesday, July 24. Webb lodge, No. 24, F. & A. M., called meeting, work in Entered Apprentice degree. Friday, July 26. King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. Called Convocation, work in Most Excellent Master and Royal Arch Degrees, work comfencing promptly at 7 p. m. FEET FEEL FINE EZO is a Refined' Ointment that Drives Out Soreness, Pain and Misery. No matter how many toot remedies you have tried there's only one that's absolutely sure and certain. Get a 25 cent jar of EZO at Leo H. Flhe's today, just rub it on and youll be rid of all soreness, tenderness, burning, aching In a few hours. Money back if dissatisfied. Ob. my! but EZO will surprise you, and If you have corns or bunions that seem to be overloaded with agony you must set Ezo; it's fine for sunburn. &i3nMotxB& asaxna,

City Should Investigate.

The street car accident yesterday should be sufficient incentive for the city to majte a thorough investigation into the operation of both city and traction cars, within the city limits. The fact that the accident was the second one to happen in the same place and almost in the same manner within the last four months would indicate that there was carelessness shown either on the part of the company or some of its employes. The fact that there was oil on the car tracks does not excuse the company from negligence in operating freight cars off schedule without properly safeguarding the passengers on the city cars. If the freight cars cannot be run on schedule time, and the city ordinance permits them to be run during city traffic hours, then the company should provide proper block systems or other means of protecting the passengers. The Railroad Commission has supervision over the operation of freight cars and will no doubt make an investigation into the conditions in Richmond, but the city Bhould not wait for the Railroad Commission to act but take Immediate action to prevent other accidents by locating the carelessness and placing, the blame where it belongs.

Progress or "Deluge!

"The country will not permanently be a good place for any of us to live in unless we make It a reasonably good place for all of us to live in," wrote Mr. Roosevelt in his late article in the Outlook. Against the typically progressive condition of mind thus denoted t is instructive to place the typical reactionary attitude that Senator Bailey of Texas recently exemplified. The standpat Democrat said: I do not say the United States is facing a state of affairs (as that of the French Revolution), but I do maintain that if within the next thirty years the country should continue to change as it has in the last thirty, we will find ourselves face to face with such a condition at the end of that time. Note that Mr. Roosevelt demands such changes as shall eliminate on the one hand overpaid men of soft life and on the other hand the underpaid toilers of hard, unilluminated life. Note that Mr. Bailey fears changes. He would have the people believe that "evils have been grossly exaggerated." Now, whatever evils and dangers there are in this country are the product of a "Let-us-alone" policy of government. And if these evils do bring about such a condition of unrest and of well-founded resentment as Senator Bailey fears, then that result will flow from the criminal folly of ignoring the evils and still doing nothing to change the wrong social, industrial and political adjustments from which they spring. Mr. Roosevelt has his fears, too, but note his better warning: I most earnestly hope that in this movement for social and industrial justice and betterment the lead may be taken by those among us to whom Fate has been kind, who have themselves nothing material to gain from the movement, and not by those who are sullen with a sense of personal wrong. Those words are taken from the Outlook article quoted before. They denote no new doctrine with Mr. Roosevelt. They are the essence of fair play and the essence of political wisdom. Bourbonism practices its tyrannies and then says, "After me, the deluge." Roosevelt and the Progressive movement he leads would avert the deluge by stopping standpat imbecilities and standpat cruelties. The deepest service of the Progressive cause is its averting of class hatreds, of sullen resentments. Kansas City Times.

Prohibitive Expense of the Primary. William E. Borah, Senator from Idaho, has just filed with the state authorities a sworn statement of his expenses in the campaign which re- . nominated him. He swears that he didn't spend a cent; not one cent. From Penrose, Barnes, Crane, Lorimer, Stephenson, Taft, and the rest in the descending scale of reactionary leaders, we hear that the insuperable objection to primaries is that5 they cost so' much a poor man can't enter one. They do: for men of the Penrose- Barnes- Crane- Lorimer - Stepben-son-Taft sort. And even then they get beaten, usually. The man who represents the people need fear little from them at the primary. The essence of the expense objection to the primary is that it's awfully expensive to bribe the whole community. Properly viewed, it's an objection that doesn't object. Washington, D. C. Times.

Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. THE CIRCUS OF LIFE. Oh, the circus day parade! How the bugles played and played! The other day in Washington Barn urn's circus gave a special performance for Just one boy Vinson McLeanthe three-year-old son of E. B. McLean. The boy is heir to a fortune of $100,000,000. "Whoopee!" shouts your young son. "Wouldn't that be fun?" WellIf the spectacle were not so unAmerican it would be pathetic. There was that lone kid, barely old enough to know what was going on, with nobody to help him enjoy it but bis mother and nurse and the big private detective that always accompanies the child. And father paid the bill. No doubt the boy enjoyed the circus the kaleidoscopic glitter, and the caparisoned horses, and the goings on in the three rings, and the crashing music of the band. , They told the boy It was all for him, from elephants to trick ponies, from ringmaster to clown all for him. And be is being brought up expecting to receive whatever he wants. And you? Do you envy the scion of the McLeans and the Walshes, destined to live like a prince? There are so many things you . would, like to have and ' THIS DA Tb

JULY 23. 1785 Saxony. Brandenburg and Hanover formed the Germanic alliance. 1793 Roger Sherman, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, died in New Haven, Conn. Born in Newton, Mass., April 19, 1721. 1S01 Robert J. Walker, secretary of the treasury in Polk's cabinet, born in Northumberland, Pa. Died in Washington, D. C, Nov. 11, 1869. 1839 Ghuznee, one of the strongest fortresses in Asia, captured by a British force. 1840 Bill for the union of Upper and Lower Canada received the sanction of Queen Victoria. 1842 The cap-stone of the Bunker Hill monument was laid. 1857 First banking institution in San Francisco incorporated. 1880 Dr. Constatin Hering, who founded at Allentown, Pa., the first homeopathic school in the world, died in Philadelphia. Born in Germany Jan. 1. 1800. J' 1885 Gen. U. S. Grant, eighteenth President of the TJ. S died at ML Gregor, N. Y. Born in Clermont county. Ohio, April 37, 1822. 1811 Texas voted against State-wide Prohibition.

which "you are 'denied not "Circuses, perhaps, but other things. But When you come to analyze your highest enjoyments do you not find you are so built that to enlarge your pleasures yon must divide them with others? Would yon care to hng your pleasures to yourself, as a miser bugs his gold, finding, like blm, your enjoyment alone? There are such a lot of things money can never buy. And that Is where the McLean sort miss it. Some day this son and heir will find out that in getting everything money can buy he has lost half his life and the best half! Your boy thinks he Is nnlucky because be must stay away from the circus while this other boy buys a whole one for himself, but by bis deprivation and struggle to earn and to deny himself he gets something the multimillionaire boy never will get. Having had everything, the day will come when young McLean will tire of everything, and what he really wants he may never get. Because The circus of life never was Intended to be enjoyed by Just one boy. at II you are a housewife you cannot reasonably hope to be healthy or beautiful by washing dishes, sweeping and doing housework all day, and crawling into bed dead tired at night. You must uet out into the open air and sunlight. If you do this every day and keep your ttomach and bowels in good order by taking Chamberlain's Tablets when needed, you should become both healthy and beautiful. For sale by all deal ere. 1N HSTOR Y '

1 Summer Suggestions X for the Mother X J Seasonable Advice on the Health of Children In Hot 2 I Weather. Mothers should be careful not to overfeed children during the hot months. No one requires as much food in summer as they do in cold weather. Serve only the lighter and more easily digested foods, and see that the milk is kept cool and the fruit ripe. It Is quite natural to expect some disturbance, such as constipation, indigestion, or summer diarrhoea, often accompanied by a cold. A mild laxative at bed time will. In most cases, carry off the congested waste from the stomach next morning and by cleaning the bowels restore normal conditions.

Cathartic remedies and purgatives should never be used for children. They are harsh and violent in their action and tend to upset the entire system. The combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin, known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and sold by druggists for fifty cents a bottle, is now very generally used to correct stomach and bowel trouble. It Is mild and pleasant to the taste and contains no drastic drug, or narcotic, but acts naturally and easily, yet most effectively. A larger bottle, containing more than twice the quantity, is sold for one dollar. If you have never used Syrup Pepsin and would like a free trial bottle, postpaid, write to Dr. W. B. Caldwell. 406 Washington street, Monticello, Illinois. Politics and Politicians New Orleans will vote next month on a proposal to adopt the commission plan. Governor Fobs of Massachusetts has decided to become a candidate for renomination. Arkansas supporters of the Progressive party movement will meet in Little Rock, July 30, to select delegates to the Chicago convention. Mrs. Frances Beauchamp, the new secretary of the Prohibition National Committee, is president of the Kentucky Women's Christian Temperance Union. The widow of "Sockless Jerry" Simpson, the Kansas statesman, is a candidate for county superintendent of schools in Sedgwick County, Kansas. Leslie Combs, former United States minister to Peru, is leading in the work of organizing the national progressive movement in Kentucky. It is a fact not generally known that Charles D. Hilles, the new chairman of the farmer, lawyer, clergyman, college president and public lecturer. He is a native of Ohio and comes of Quaker stock. Miss Ellen Hayes, professor of as

tronomy and applied mathematics at Wo lie s ley College, has been selected as the Socialist candidate for secre

tary of State in Massachusetts. John R. Kendrlck, a millionaire cattleman, has announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for United States senator from Wyoming. He will oppose Senator Francis E. Warren, whose term will expire next March. Former Judge John W. Westcott, who made the nominating speech for Governor Wilson at the Baltimore convention, has announced that he is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for United States senator from New Jersey to succeed Senator Briggs. The neighbors and friends of Governor Thomas R. Marshall at Columbia City. Ind., are to celebrate the Governor's nomination for Vice President next month. Governor Marshall will return to his home town to deliver an address at the demonstration. "No politics" is the platform on which Mrs. Helen King Robinson, journalist, lecturer and sociological worker, will ask the voters, and especially the women voters of Colorado, to elect her to the state senate. Mrs. Robinson, if elected, will be the first woman ever sent to the Colorado senate. William F. McCombs of New York, the new chairman of the National Democratic committee. initiated Woodrow Wilson's campaign for nomination. After being graduated from Princeton and the Harvard Law school Mr. McCombs became a New York lawyer. He put aside his law practice in order to work for Governor Wilson. He is said to be the youngest man to manage a national campaign. Eugene W. Chafin, who has been WE PAY SI PER SET FOR OLD FALSE TEETH which are of- no value to you. Highest prices paid for old Gold, Silver. Old Watches, Broken Jewelry, Precious Stones. Money Sent by Return Mall Phila. Smelting & Refining Co. Established 20 Years 863 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. DR.

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Rtotl Star

A call has been issued to the voters of Wayne County to meet at the Pythian Temple, Saturday afternoon, July 27th, at 2 o'clock. The purpose of this meeting is to elect delegates to a state convention to be held in Indianapolis, August 1st, at which time a platform will be promulgated, a state ticket and electors will be nominated who will HONESTLY represent the wishes of the people. This is a movement of and in behalf of the whole people. There are no bosses in the Progressive party. Therefore it rests with those who believe in our free institutions to turn out and do their share toward making the movement a success. This meeting is open to all the voters. It makes no difference whether you are a Republican, Democrat, Socialist, Prohibitionist, or what not there is here an opportunity for you to actually make your voice heard in the affairs of your own government. Will you take it? Remember the Progressives of Wayne County will hold their first mass convention at the Pythian Temple, South 8th street, Saturday af ternoop, at 2 o'clock, July 27th.

'chosen as standard bearer of the I'ro-

hlbition party in the coming campaign, is an old campaigner and was tha nominee of the party for president in 190S. At that time his horse was in Chicago, but now he claims both Arizona and Illinois as places of residence. Mr. Chafin was born In Wisconsin and will be 60 years old next November. He is a lawyer by profession. MAKES PDIPLES GO Remarkable How Zemo Clears the Face of Pimples and All Other Blemishes. With the finger tips apply a little Zemo to the skin, then see the pimples and blackheads vanish. Zemo Is a liquid, not a smear, leaves no trace. Just simply sinks in and does the work. You will ba astonished to find how quickly eczema, rash, dandruff, itch, liver spots, salt rheum and all other skin diseases are cured. Zemo Is put up by the E. W. Rose Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., and is regularly sold by all druggists at $1 for the large size bottles, but you can get a liberal size trial bottle for only 25 cents. And this trial bottle Is guaranteed. You surely will find Zemo a wonder. Get a bottle now from Quigley Drug Stores. OLIVER VISIBLE TYPEWRITER For Sale Cheap. Fwrfeo condition and does splendid writing. Could ship on approval aad trial. Writ to Charles W. Rickart. RoeedaJe. Kane. BUY YOUR Cement & Plaster The Miller Kemper Co. Phone 3247 J. A. WALLS) SPECIALIST

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E A m E ! I ley Them ! I iy Tic 1 Pirp T..., These sr TexaaAIferta Peaches, an extra fine t and free stone. Do not V a a sV m fwaii i or jnicziigmpeacnes as there will be no crop. None to etrual this t lot of Texas Peaches, go ftrtv now.tlri s vrvlr h 5 Get These Peacbes at Your Grocer's He can supply you if X he can't we will tell you X of one who can. Z if. I MeLdmd 1 & Co. X Phone 1283.

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