Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 250, 24 August 1912 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXD SUNTEIEGIIA31, SATURDAY AUGUST 24, 1912.

The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telegram Published kkd ewn4 by tne PALLADIUM PRINTINU O. Issued Ev.ry Kvenlnar ESxeapt bunaay. Of tlce Corner North t and A atro Palladium and Bun-Tele; ram Phones Uiuineaa Office !; Maws Ieert tnent. UIL RICHMOND. INDIANA

Hadolah G. Ln 8UB0CHIPT1OM Ta,RJat la Richmond fi.OS par yaar l vance) or I0o par wee. I.URAL HOUTKS A On year, in aavanoa '5; ix months. In advanoe ...... uno month, in aavaaoa i'l.-ZX-Addraaa chna a often aa daalro. both now and old aadroese siven. tfc Subscribers will plaaaa resalt wiw apaclfled term; nam will not a d until pdteat la raoalTad. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS One year. In adraaoa) . "!"SS six moot ha, in adraaoa .......... One month. In advance Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office aa second claea mall matter. New Tork Representatives Payne A Tounjr. 30-S West Sid atreat. and 25 WeafMnd etreet. Now Tork, N. T. Cl.lcaajo Repreaentatlvee Payne 6 Teunr. HI -lit Marquette Building. Chicago, lit The Association af Aau i lean Advertieers baa ex amined bad certified te the eircelatloa of ihla pblUari . Hi figures of ckealatiaa aoatalned la the Assecietion'e rsfpert only ara-gwaranteed. r Aflriifea af Amrrirasi Iflverhsers. ) No. 1C9- , WWteball bMb, N. T. City kState Ticket Nominated by Indiana Progressives Governor, Albert J, Beveridge, Indianapolis. ' Lieutenant Governor. Frederick Landls, Logansport. . Secretary of State, LawsonN..Mace, Scottsburg. ( Auditor, ' H. E. Cushman, Washington. Treasurer, ' B. B. Baker, Monticello. Attorney General, Clifford F. Jackman, Huntington. State Supt of Publio Instruction, , Charles E. Spalding, Wlnamac. ' Statistician, Thaddeus M. Moore, Anderson. Reporter Supreme Court, Frank R. Miller, Clinton. Judge Supreme Court, First Division, James B. Wilson, Bloomlngton. Judge Supreme Court, Fourth Division, William A. Bond, Richmond. . Judge Appellate Court, First Division, Minor F. Pate, Bloomf ield. Electors at Large: Aaron Jones, Lucius B. Swift Contingent Electors at Large: John Overmeyer, W. L. Stahl. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. TAKUM FAOTUMU. Put the name of Lieutenant Takum Faotumu of Japan high up In the list of heroes. Do you remember bow the world was shocked a few months ago by the appalling loss of all the lives of the officers and men on a submarine vessel of the Japanese nary? Mow a writer in one of the scientific Journals gives the details. . The submarine, commanded by Lieutenant Faotumu, failed to rise, as was shown by the records when the vessel afterward was raised, on account of erne failure la the apparatus. The discovery was made about 10 o'clock In the forenoon. Down under fathoms of sea water, face to face with approaching death, the lieutenant calmly undertook to write the story of the last hours. He wrote the full account up to 12:30, and his last words were: "Respiration Is becoming extraordi narily difficult I am breathing gaso line." He told about the efforts to raise the vessel, of the despair that settled down upon officers and men, of - how the lights went out, how they sat la gloom and how he was writing his final words In the darknessdetails of Interest to the world from which they were eternally shut out But the finest words of all, words which evidence the gallant spirit ot the heroic lieutenant, were these: "I respectfully request that none of the families of my subordinates shall suffer. The only thins I am anxious about Is this. ' Mark you: In all the writing there was no trace of any walling of regret because of cruel fate, no mourning over the untimely end of a brilliant career, no ex pression of fear, no appeal and no prayer. Simply, there In the darkness of his death prison, with the fumes of the gasoline In his nostrils and with Death reaching for him at dose quarters and with certain grip, he was only "anxious" about the families of those who were to die with him. Can bravery further go? Surely Japan will be basely recreant to the memory of one of the bravest men In the annate of the Japanese annals noted for their stories of intrepid soldiers and seamen if it shall have failed properly to provide for those : families.' And the world's history of gallant souls has been enriched by the story of this Japanese officer who, dying, thought not of himself, but only of the wives and children that would be bereft - -

The County Ticket.

If the Wayne county Progressive central committee at its next meeting decides to pass up the question of a complete county ticket during this campaign, it should never make the mistake of passing a resolution endorsing the present candidates on the Republican county ticket There has been some wild talk of this action being taken. It should not. any more than that a resolution should be passed endorsing the Democratic county ticket. Progressives are Progressives. They are no longer members of either of the two old parties. To endorse the candidates of on party would be placing a very serious affront on the members of the other party whom the Progressives seek to bring within their fold. As to whether or not the Progressives should have a complete county ticket the Palladium believes they should. There is no political reason that the party in so strongly a Progressive county as Wayne should be a skim milk party and do without the cream. Yet that is what some people are trying to pursuade the Progressive county central committee to do. The difficulty arises from the fact that many Progressives last spring as Progressive Republicans participated in the Republican county primary at which the candidates on the present Republican ticket were nominated. Because of this they feel obligated to the men they helped nominate. This is a proper spirit for Progressives to possess. But it should not prevent their paying heed to their obligation in this respect and at the same time advancing the interests of their own party. The way out In honor for the Progressives to take is to nominate on the Progressive county ticket the present candidates on the Republican ticket. If these candidates are Progressives they will gladly accept such a nomination as it will relieve them of being in the position of asking the Progressives to support them while on the Republican ticket. The only reason that could be assigned for a candidate staying on the Republican ticket at this time is that feeling sure of the Progressive support, the attempt would also be made to obtain the support of the standpat Republicans. Why should not. these candidates come over on the Progressive ticket and ask their standpat friends to support them there? As everyone knows, the candidates for county office are liberally assessed for campaign and election expenses. The present Republican Btate machine the Keallng, Watson and Fairbanks gang is using every means possible to prevent Progressive county tickets being brought out. Naturally. The county candidates' money will be useful in the county campaigns over the state and the various Republican county machines want to direct the spending of that money. It might be suggested that the candidates in Wayne county should not pay any assessment to the local Republican machine. Would that be honorable if they were running on the Republican ticket? And if they did pay their assessment to the local Republican machine, do you Progressives realize that that money would be UBed against you? That just that much more money would have to be raised by the Progressives to finance their own campaign? And this in the face of the fact that Progressives are expected by the candidates to support the Republican candidates? What are the great principles in this campaign? Are they simply the success of the various candidates on the Republican county ticket? Or are they to put an end to big business domination through boss rule by means of the initiative, referendum and recall, direct primaries, etc? Is It simply a question of making this man prosecutor, and that one a county commissioner, or are we more interested in the vital questions of abolishing child labor slavery, eliminating the chief cause of the degradation of our women by means "of a minimum wage law that will place those women who work by the sweat of their brows on a higher plane than that of the starvation line? The statement has been made that in case the present nominees should leave the Republican ticket and make their campaign on the Progressive ticket the standpat Republicans all that is left of the G. O. P. would not place another set of Republican nominees in the field for county offices, but would support the Democrat ticket. What of it? Are we today as Progressives interested in Republicans as against Democrats? However, that is an old maid's dream. If the standpat Republicans did not nominate a new Republican county ticket it would be such an admission of weakness that . the Republican party as far as Wayne county was concerned, would have ceased to have existed in this campaign. It would not be necessary to wait until the votes were cast to settle this point in the minds of the people. Now that is just what the Republican bosses want to avoid. If they can keep their county tickets Intact, not only will that strengthen them in the present campaign, but it will also leave them in better condition when the election Is past. No matter if Roosevelt and Beveridge do poll a far larger vote than Taft and Durbin if Republican county tickets are elected In many counties of the state, thanks to the votes of the Progressives who feel bound on account of participation in last spring's primaries, there will be the nucleus of a rehabilitation of the old party under the same control. , The right way out of a problem Is the easiest way out. Would that not be for the Progressive central committee to recommend to a Progressive county convention that the present nominees on the Republican county ticket with the exception of Mr. Reynolds who has eliminated himself by his statement the other day be made the county nominees of the Progressive party? Let the county convention do this. Then give these candidates one week to accept or decline. Let the Progressive central committee have the power to fill any vacancies arising from a nonacceptance. Then the Progressives will have a complete county ticket and they will have obtained it in all ways that are honorable as far as any feeling of obligation on account of the spring primaries Is concerned.

A Fruitless Effort

Yesterday before the senate committee Investigating "campaign expenses in 1904 and 1908 the hand of Big Business, in the conspiracy to attempt the ruin of Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive movement, was clearly shown by John D. Archbold, one of the unscrupulous members of the most powerful business organization in the world, The Standard Oil company. Theodore Roosevelt is as great a menace to' the oil trust and its kindred "combinations in restraint of trade" as those sinister organizations are a menace to the American people. From 26 Broadway the order has gone forth, "spare no effort to crush Roosevelt," and Archbold, Cold, cunning, treacherous and desperate, has taken personal command of those forces, who have for years betrayed the people of this country, to repeal the attack of the doughty Colonel. In the army that Archbold leads are the most dangerous, malevolent enemies of this nation men who will stoop to anything to perpetuate the power they now enjoy, and to defeat that great popular movement to wrest from the privileged few the government of this country. Archbold's chief lieutenant is Senator Penrose, of Pennsylvania, the grafting personal representative of the oil trust in the United States senate. His other lieutenants include Smoot, the sugar trust hireling; Crane, the leather trust representative in the senate; Root, the trustbuilder, and numerous other Big Business mercenaries who disgrace the upper house of congress by their presence. The attack upon Roosevelt, planned by Archbold. is to create discord in that great army Roosevelt leads. Archbold, arch enemy of popular government, seeks to impugn. the honesty and sincerity of Col. Roosevelt by charging that the Colonel sought and accepted the tainted money of the oil trust in the 1904 campaign. This attack on the champion of the people has been carefully planned and is being astutely executed. A few years back it might have been crowned with success, but now it is doomed to failure. The "Invisible Government" in its blind hatred of Theodore Roosevelt has permitted the public to gaze behind the scenes, and what they have seen has horrified them. Unsupported by evidence Archbold and his tariff barons, frenried and desperate, cry out to the people, "Beware of Roosevelt He has betrayed you and will again. He is our friend." "If that be the case, why do you hate him so? Why do you fear to have him in the White House again?" comes back the grim reply, and there Is no answer to it for there is none to give. Roosevelt is one of the few men in public life who can correct the evils which those who are a part of the Invisible Government thrive on. Can you; Mr. Citixen, viewing the situation from" a " selfish - standpoint;'

blame them much for the fight they are waging on the Progressive leader? Victory for them means uninterrupted enjoyment of special privilege. Victory for Roosevelt means the restoration of the square deal in business and government, a thing too horrible for the Archbolds, Penroses, Smoots, Aldriches and Cranes to contemplate. When the Standard Oil company fights in the open with falsehood and slander for its weapons and discredited political bosses for its allies, that cruel, grasping corporation and the lesser monopolies must be in desperate straights. The American people will not believe the unsupported charges of O'Dell, Penrose and Archbold. The citizenship of this great republic has suffered too long under the yoke of the interests these men represent to heed their false counsel. The time has come for the people to throw off their yoke and they cannot be deterred from doing so by lies and malicious libels. "They have asked for the sword and they shall have it" grimly announces Roosevelt as the solid ranks of the warriors for reform, grim of face like Cromwell's troopers, form behind him. The storming of the citidal of privilege has been delayed too long. The parleys of the besieged will not be heeded and the assault will now proceed. There can be only one result triumph for the army of the people, which has asked for no quarter and will give none.

A Plea From Marion. Marion, Ind., August 21. Editor of Palladium: In our city we have no paper with us in this Progressive movement and we understand that you will support this good cause. Will you kindly send us two copies of your paper so we can place them in our reading rooms and help the cause along this way. Thanking you in advance for tho same, Yours truly, M. G. Callahan, County Chairman. The above letter was received today. It was written on the stationery of the Grant County Roosevelt Club. Inasmuch as we have been and still are supporting, in our feeble way, the cause of Progressive government, the Palladium will comply with the request, of the Grant county Progressives. But where is Col. Lockwocd, editor of the Marion Chronicle and stalwart champion of the people, in this fight for business and governmental reforms which is being waged by the people? We are led to believe from the above letter that Col. Lockwood has been insincere in his loud protestations of undying affection for the people. Can it be that while shouting for the suppression of the liquor traffic, the Colonel has been defending the greater evils, which threaten the destruction of popular government? Practical Religionist. Gen. William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army, who at the age of eighty-three is dead in London, was a strange combination of fanatic and practical, of crusader and great business organizer. Out of the most unpromising material, he organized an army of salvation of the most literal sort of salvation that spread to all the world and accomplished untold good for those who most needed its ministrations. General Booth began with the conception that those who most needed religious faith and moral monition, would not come for it -to any of the then established agencies. It must be carried to them. He found as a Methodist evangelist that he could not bring the slums to the church, but he devised ways to bring the church to the slums. The submerged tenth, the desperately struggling five-tenths of London's myriad population, fascinated him with the thought of the vast social service that would be accomplished if he could but lift them to a plane of self-respect and efficiency. So he sought to make religion practical, useful, helpful. He fought savagely against drunkenness and other vices. He cared no whit for the ridicule and reproach that were heaped upon him; and it is one of the striking evidences of the insight and woman's understanding of Queen Victoria, that at the very time when his expanding vork was being most bitterly persecuted, she gave her hearty indorsement and support to it. General Booth thereafter suddenly became something like a popular hero. It grew fashionable to take an academic interest in parlor evangelization. But the Aids Nature

The great success of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery in curing weak stomachs, wasted bodies, wesk lungs, and obstinate and lingering coughs, is based on the recognition of the fundamental truth that "Golden Medical Discovery" supplies Nature wjth body-building, tissue-repairing, muscle-making materials, in condensed and concentrated form. With this help Nature supplies the necessary strength to the stomach to digest food, build up the body and thereby throw off lingering obstinate coughs. The "Discovery" re-establishes the digestive and nutritive organs in sound health, purifies and enriches the blood, and nourishes the nerves in

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Bran $1.25 per 100 lbs.; $25 ton Middlings $1.35 per 100; $27 ton Oil Meal $2.00 per 100 lbs.

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leader was not to be misled. His head was never turned for a single hour. He went steadily on. using every means and instrument to build his work broader and stronger. Intolerant he was at times, even to the point of rending his organization and driving his son and daughter to establish the Volunteers of America, which in its own sphere has done a most useful work. It is not exaggeration to say that no other man of his time has contributed more than William Booth to the world's work of practical moral uplift for the unfortunates of society. Washington Times.

The Times Misapprehends. The New Castle Times labors under a mi&apprehension in believing that the Wayne county Progressive central committee has decided not to place a separate county ticket in the field and to support the Republican county ticket. Our Progressive central committee at its meeting on Tuesday authorized the count j-chairman to issue a call for the election of delegates to county and joint county conventions to nominate Progressive candidates for representative and joint representative. The committee then decided to leave the question of calling a convention to nominate candidates on a Progressive ticket for county offices in abeyance. Furthermore it did not endorse the present Republican county candidates nor do we believe it ever will. We call the attention of the Times to the fact that its editorial was given a prominent position in the Palladium yesterday. We believe therein lies the fact that Wayne county has no Democratic newspaper. The Palladium endeavors always to carry all important political news regardless of what camp it originates in. May we ask the Times to be as fair to its readers and give them the benefit of the statement above as to the present status of the question of a Progressive county ticket in Wayne? One of the most common ailments that hard working people are afflicted with is lame back. Apply Chamberlain's liniment twice a day and massage the parts thoroughly at each application, and you will get quick reHef. For sale by all dealers. This Date in History AUGUST 24TH. 1797 Thomas Chittenden, first governor of Vermont, died in Williston. Vt. Born in East Guilford, Conn., Jan. 6, 1730. 18J4 City of Washington taken by the British. 1818 Center foundation of the Capitol at Washington laid. 1852 Joseph Vance, governor of Ohio 1836-8, died near Urbana, Ohio. Born in Pennsylvania, March 21, 1781. 1882 Gen. Bragg began his march into Kentucky from Tennessee. 1867 Incorporation of Johns Hopkins university at Baltimore. 1904 Beginning of the great battle of Liaoyang, between the Russians and Japanese. Phone 2662

News Forecast For Coming Week

WASHINGTON. D. C, Aug. 24. Colonel Roosevelt plans to devote several days of the coming week to tpeech-making in Vermont, where the ' state election is to be held September S. Governor Wilson is to go to Williams Grove, Pa., on Thursday, to speak

before a gathering of farmers. Upon ' didates for governor and other state his return to Sea Girt he will receive officers. United States senator, represeveral delegations of visitors and pro- i sedatives in congress and four preslbably will make one or more porch j dential electors, speeches. President Taft has a pro- j At a special election to be held visional engagement to attend the ' Wednesday the voters of New Orleans

! Ohio centennial celebration at Colum bus., but he has made it known that any address he might deliver there will be of a non-political character. The general primaries in South Car-

olina and Michigan will be the leading ,ed Thursday with a reunion ot federal events of the week in the domain of and confederate veterans near the batstate politics. The serious charges re-1 tlcfleld. ctntly made against Governor Blease j Beginning Monday and continuing of South Carolina have attracted wide t for nearly two weeks, the centennial attention to his contest for renomina-' of the selection of Columbus as Ohio's

jtion against Judge Ira B Jones. The

South Carolina primaries also will de-iin that city. cide whether Senator Tillman is t6 j Important conventions of the meek have another term. In the Michigan j will Include the annual meeting of the primaries the Republicans. Democrats j American Bar Association In Milwaufnd Progressives will select candi- j kee, the annual meeting of the Trans-

dates for governor, lieutenant governor. United States senator, representatives in congress and minor officers. ! Under the new Kansas primary law jthe Republicans and Democrats of that , state will hold their party "councils" 'in Topeka on Tuesday to formulate j platforms. In Oklahoma the Demoicrats will hold a state convention to I ratify the nominees of the recent priThis Js My 68th Birthday EDWARD CARPENTER. Edward Carpenter, known to readers on both sides of the Atlantic as an author and sociologist was born In Brighton, England, August 24, 1844. For some years he was a lecturer at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, but in 1874 he relinquished his fellowship and left Cambridge. He lectured on science, music, etc., in connection with the university extension movement until 1831. Two years later he settled on a small farm near Sheffield, where he engaged In literary work, market gardening and sandal making. He also took part in the Socialist movement and street-corner propaganda. In 1884 he visited the United States as the guest of Walt Whitman. Mr. Carpenter is the author of a number of well known books on sociology. Congratulations to ' Duke of Abercorn, the premier peer of Ireland, 74 years old today. Charles W. Fulton, former United

A New Remedy for Indigestion Gets Country Wide Endorsement

The new remedy for Indigestion called "Digestif has been found a certain quick relief and permanent remedy for stomach disorders. Letters from thousands who had suffered the tortures of indigestion and got relief from the use of Digestit are evidence of Its merit. The enormous Increase in demand from every part of the country is proof of its popularity. But you do not have to take anybody's Mayo's Medical and 715 N. Alabama St.,

CANCERS AND TUMORS TREATED WITHOUT PAIN OR THE KNIFE

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We Want to Cure

We are particularly interested In seelns; afflicted men and women who have been treated without success, for we know that our services will be appreciated more if we succeed in curing a msa or woman who tells us his or her last resort Is to place himself or herself under our care. We have treated such men and women and received their praise and gratitude, and our professional reputation is backed by statements from them, which we have to convince the many skeptical sufferers of our ability to CURE. PILES, FISTULA, ETC- Cured without detention from business. BLOOD POISON We use only the most advanced methods In the treatment of Blood Poison and kindred diseases. .PROSTATIC ENLARGEMENT Results from Inflammation. We reduce the enlargement and have been able to cure about 90 per cent cfall cases. VARICOCELE We cure Varicocele In a few days' or weeks' time without the use of the knife. REMEMBER That In treating with

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case elsewhere. After an examination we will tall yoa just what we can-do for. you. If we can not benefit or cure you, we win frankly tell you so. Wrlte-for question blanks. Call on or address V. R. Mayo, M. p., President, 7IS N. Als&sma St Indiana txHls,lnL :

mary and adopt a platform. A similar gathering of Georgia Democrats will be held at Macon. The contest for the teat of United States Senator Francis E. Warren is the chief feature of the state primaries to be held In Wyoming Friday. Montana Democrats will meet :n Great Falls Thursday to select can-

will decide whether or not the commission plan of government shall be adopted for the city. The Iftieth anniversary of the second battle of Bull Run will be observj permanent capital will be celebrated Mississippi Commercial Congress In Salt Lake City, the national encampment of the Sons of Veterans In St. Louis, the biennial convention of the i United Garment Workers of America in Indianapolis, the annual meeting of the Union of Canadian Municipalities in Windsor, Ont, and the nineteenth International Peace Congress In Geneva. Switzerland. States senator from Oregon, 59 years old today. John Wesley Gaines, former Tennessee congressman, 51 years old today. Dr. Samuel A. Eliot, president of the American .Unitarian association. 50 years old today. Attention Democrats. There will be meetings at the Jefferson Club Rooms, August 26th, at 1:30 p. m. and 7:30 p. m. at which Thos. M. Honan, Attorney General, and other speakers will be present It is very Important that all committeemen and registration clerks be present All Democrats are welcome. C. P. Doney, Chairman, Webster Parry, Secretary. aug23-23 - Abeentmlnded. One of the most brilliant of all Eton's masters some years ago was a very absentminded man. lie was reported to have been seen one day chasing a ben down Windsor bill In the fond belief that she was his bat! word for It try It yourself on an absolute guarantee, get a package and If you don't get relief you can get your money back for the asking. Brown's Digestit is a little tablet easy to swallow and absolutely harmless. It digests all the food, prevents fermentation, stops gas formation, prevents stomach distress after eating, aids assimilation, and relieves Indigestion Instantly. Conkey Drug Co. Surgical Institute Indianapolis, Ind. dr. w. r. mayo; Specialist WILL BE AT Arlington Hotel Richmond Wednesday, Aug. 25 and Every Tour Weeks . Thereofler USE OF D ISCOUSAGED Men ISCASEO lSAPTOlNTED me you cannot lose anything, because I do not charge for failures, but only for permanent cures. Therefore, you should certainly, la duty to yourself. I N VEST1 Q ATE MY METHODS, which are totally different from those of any - other specialist before you place your