Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 258, 3 September 1912 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THIS RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM. TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 3, 1912.

The Richmond Palladium and Son-Telegram Published J owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued Every JCytMni Except ttunaay. Of tee Corner North 1th and A street Palladium and Sun-Telea-ram Phone Uuolness OXrice, ISM; Mews Pepsrlnaent, 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA, Kudolnh O. Locals ...... tta!i 8UB0CKIFTION TaJRM In Richmond is.o per year (In advance) or lo par wealt, -.. - . rural itotrrna A. VP in aavanoe i. f' onths. advance ki?4'' n;ed a often as dw Jnw and old addroses mu order, whlon should be flvw tor t 2S?WlT? t'; nam will not M tra until payment a received. MAIL. SUBSCRIPTIONS One year, In advance S8 Six months, in advanoa -6J una month, la advance ..... Entered at Richmond. Indian. po;ii office a second cla man matter. New York Representatives Payne A Tountr, 80-14 West 83d street, and 2986 Went 82nd street. New York. N. Y. Clcago Representatives Payne h Young;, 747-749 Marquette Building Chicago, la.

f"lV The Association of Amaf- I Mian Advertisers has ex ?

the) circulation of this pab-

Uealiaa. T.Ha f igares of circulation ontalned in tho Association' report only are guaranteed. . Associatioa of American Advertisers ' - Jt

No. .Whitehall Bldg. N. T. City I

State Ticket Nominated by Indiana Progressives

Fop President, Theodore Roosevelt. Fop Vice President. Hiram W. Johnson. Governor, Albert J. Beveridge, Indianapolis. Lieutenant Governor, Frederick Landis, Logansport. Secretary of State, Lawson N. Mace, Scottsburg. Auditor, H. E. Cushman. Washington. Treasurer, B. B. Baker, Monticello. Attorney General, Clifford F. Jackman. Huntington. State Supt. of Public Instruction, Charles E. Spalding, Wlnamac. Statistician, Thaddeus M. Moore, Anderson. Reporter Supreme Court, Frank JR. Miller, Clinton. Judge Supreme Court, First Division, James B. Wilson, Bloomington. Judge Supreme Court, Fourth Division, William A. Bond, Richmond. Judge Appellate Court, First Division, Minor F. Pate, Bloomfield.

FORUMOFTHE PEOPLE Articles Contributed for This Column Must Not Be in Excess of -400 Words. The Identity of All Contributors Must Be Known to the Editor. Articles Will Be Printed in the Order Received.

Editor Palladium: Mr. Oliver H. Bogue. under the caption, "Lest We Forget," relates a story of the "Man who was such a voluble liar that he repeated his stories so many times that he convinced himself of their truthfulness." The story is very apt and applicable to more than the one man of Mr. Bogue's recollections. Mr. Bogue then goes on to relate that the cost of living, is no higher now than forty and twenty years ago. If Mr. . Bogue had been satisfied by saying forty years ago, and left the twenty years out of the question, this contradiction would have been unnecessary and the costs of the necessaries of life at that period could have been explained as the natural consequences of non-productiveness attributable to the Civil war from which we had not yet recovered. Twenty years ago, however, the writer was raising a family and has every reason to know the prices then prevailing. Butter 12 cents per pound; eggs, 8 cents per dozen; potatoes, 30 cents per bushel; lard, 10 cents, 3 pounds for 25 cents; coffee (Lion or Arbuckle) 12 cents per pound, and all other necessaries in proportion. When you make the statement, Mr. "Bogue, that prices are no higher now than twenty years ago, you will pardon me If 1 ask, do you actually believe the story? If so, how many times you must have repeated It to become convinced of Its truthfulness. If your power of discriminating creates no distinction between the saloon and the Y. M. C. A., that both should be placed in the same category, and classified as "loafers," your power of discernment is indeed limited. The Y. M. C. A. inspires to a cheerful optimism which is the natural sequence of a healthy body, clean mind and strength of soul. "Kickers" are not necessary to disprove your facts (?) Mr. Bogue. All reliable statistics can be successfully referred to, and a denial established that, will make you doubt, after all, whether you have repeated the story a sufficient number of times to believe it yourself. ALPH.

An article that has real merit should in time become popular. That such is the case with Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has been attested by many dealers. Here is one of them. H. W. Hendrickson. Ohio Falls, Ind., writes, "Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is the best for coughs, colds and croup and is my best seller," For sale by all dealers.

Judicial Torture. Torture was abolished in Scotland in 1600, fifty years later-than in England. ,..:..''.

Senator Warren.

The progressives of the United States will watch with keen interest the efforts of the Wyoming Progressives to drive Francis E. Warren out of the United States Senate. Senator Warren is one of the principal causes for the formation of a Progressive party; one of the powerful and unscrupulous coterie of men In the upper house of congress whose acts have called forth the greatest popular uprising in this country since the Civil War. Because of Warren and other senators and congressmen of his type three conventions of the Party of the People are being held in Richmond today to organize this county and the sixth district as fighting units of the great national host which has taken the field to wage a campaign for political and economic reforms. Warren's story is an Interesting one. His career is a typical American political romance; a tale of graft and betrayal of public trust. When Warren entered the United States senate he was not possessed of much wealth. Today he is a millionaire and the recognized leader of the bipartisan crew of senatorial agents for Big Business. He succeeded to that post on the retirement from public life of Nelson A. Aldrich. Collier's Weekly, that fearless journal which has for years fought for the restoration of popular government, the publication which saved Alaska and drove Ballinger from the cabinet, has trained its game on Warren now. Collier's has undertaken to drive Warren from public life. It will be a hard fight, but if the progressive press and public stand behind Collier's Warren's doom is sealed and he will step out of the senate next March. C. P. Connolly in last week's issue of Collier's fires the opening broadside on Warren. Every American should read his article. It would open wide millions of eyes. Warren, Connolly says, represents the great railroad interests in the senate. He aided the Union Pacific in the great loot of the Wyoming coal lands. Warren, whom the late Senator Dolliver described as the "greatest shepherd since Abraham," has, to quote Collier's "through his influence at Washington driven settlers off the public domain that he might drive his sheep, of which he owns 100,000, onto it. Some years ago the Warren Live Stock company claimed to own and control 285,000 acres of 'the finest land in Wyoming.' " Speaking of the organization of the wonderful Warren machine Collier's says: "From the inception of his political career in Wyoming Warren has had the lieutenants of his ring in Wyoming nominated to the highest places on the judicial bench at the national capital, while his colleague, Senator Clark, as chairman of the Judiciary Committee, has looked to their confirmation. One of his lieutenants, Willis Van Devanter, now sits on the Supreme Court of the United States; another, Josiah A. Van Orsdel, is one of the judges of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia. Van Devanter has the reputation in Wyoming of being one of the most unscrupulous politicians Wyoming ever had. He was for years chairman of the Republican State Committee. Van Orsdel in one case permitted his law partner, C. W. Burdick, now chairman of the Republican State Committee, to represent the defense in a case which, as Attorney General of the State, Van Orsdel was prosecuting. This is contrary to the ethics of the profession and to the law of many States." Recently the war department sought to reorganize the army by having congress pass an act abandoning useless posts and concentrating the troops In large commands at stragetic centers. Warren, as chairman of the senate military committee, defeated this because it would affect a fort near Cheyenne, which is absolutely useless because of its distance from principal railroad centers, but on which the government has spent $5,000,000. The fort has been one of the most useful articles in the senator's "pork barrel." Collier's charges that Warren owned 99 percent of stock in a Cheyenne corporation which furnished the lighting for Fort Russell. The Palladium would like to reprint the entire Connolly article but as this Is impossible we will reprint two of the most striking paragraphs: "When the Territory of Wyoming was admitted to the Union in 1890 Warren was the candidate of the Reiublican party for Governor and was elected. The charge was made by his opponent that Warren's candidacy was a blind; that he did not intend to serve out his term if elected, and that he would be a candidate for the office of United States Senator. Warren publicly and categorically denied these charges. Yet within sixty days after he was elected Governor he was a candidate for, and was elected to, the office of Senator, notwithstanding an express provision of Wyoming's Constitution, just adopted, which provided that the Governor of the State should not be eligible to any other office during the term for which he was elected; and he drew a salary from the State as Governor for several months while drawing a salary from the Federal Government as a Senator. I cite this last not as an important bit of evidence but as corroborative proof of Warren's habit. Other members of his ring had like habits. One Governor of Wyoming a member of the ring, charged up to the State, and was paid out of the treasury, his expenses, amounting to $18 a day, as a delegate to a Republican National Convention. The same Governor had hundreds of dollars' worth of photographs of himself taken, for which the State paid. "There Is a military reserve of maneuver ground, consisting of some seventy thousand acres, on Pole Mountain, 'near Cheyene, which is used semioccasionally-by the troops stationed at Fort D. A. RusseT Target and Maneuver Reserve. It was originally a forest reserve. Warren applied to the Forestry Department to he allowed to graze his sheep on this forest, reserve. There were several homestead settlers on this reserve who had leased from the Government grazing privileges for their cattle, and cattle will not graze where sheep have grazed. The Forestry Department refused Warren the requested privilege. Whereupon Warren, through his influence as chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs of the Senate, had the Pole Mountain Reserve turned over to the Military Department as a target and maneuver ground. When the change occurred the Government immediately notified the settlers on the reserve that their leases were canceled, that the Government would refund tbem the money tb.ey had paid, and that no more leases of the reserve would be given. "Many of the settlers suffered heavy losses. The following season Warren's sheep herders drove 50,000 sheep on to the reserve. Even the officers of the War Department have referred to these maneuver grounds, unofficially, as Warren's sheep pasture."

Heart to Heart Talks. Fry EDWIN A.NYE.

SEEN FROM A CAR. WINDOW. The lnterurban stopped at the "Poor Farm station," and the car window framed this picture: Sitting In front of the main building in the evening sun were the old men and women infirm, done for, twisted. Expressionless they sat. Down and out, they were without hope in the world. With nothing to look forward to but the slim dole of niggard charity, they are without ambitiou save for food and a bed. For them the path has aruptly ended. They can no farther go, and they seek to go no farther. The men read no newspapers, and the women have no knitting. The train slides on into the suburbs where live the well to do. On the porches aud lawns, here and there, are the old men and women, and as the low July un gilds the tops of the trees they, too, sit in the sunshine. But how different! These old men smoke their cigars, and the old women chat with others over embroidery frames. Some read the evening papers. All have In their aped cheeks the tint of the good blood that conies from plenty of good food. Their roof trees are serure. They sleep In soft beds and keep some money In the bank. The train glides on into the tenement district near by to the business section, and here also are sitters in the sun. Here and there they sit, old men and women that have been tossed aside in the industrial world as things foredone. They sit listless, silent, the battered old men smoking their clay pipes and the Kr old women holding their hands. Their hged eyes must be dim from the salt toirs they have shed over what might have lir-ori. Asred sitters i:i the .sun! All of them have '.!--.t their share in the world's big work, and some have done more than a sli.-'.rc. Some have prospered and look toward n long, serene day ere the shadows of eternity shall close in; others have failed and look to children or charity regretful, hopeless, dependent. is that n fair deal? Maybe so. And yet it would seem these aged folk, Whether prosperous Or failed, when limbs are stiffened and the blood runs slow, have earned the right to sit in the suu free from worry, hale and respected. It seems so from a car window.

ALASKAN MOSQUITOES. They Are Small and Silent, but War With Fire Tipped Stings. Mosquitoes In this Icebound northern country, Alaska, are a plague beyond relief. They come to life about the middle of May, before the ground is thawed out and while many feet of ice still cover the lakes and nil but the swiftest rivers. Stagnant snn heated water is not in the least necessary. They breed in the glaciers wuerever a bit of earth or manure has melted a little pool. TBeir wrigglers are seen in running ice water. By the 1st of June it is uncomfortable to sleep with out protection, and from that time on until September, when the first frosts have benumbed them, especially during the warm, rainy season of July and August, they become a never ceasing scourge, swarming iu thousands. The Alaskan mosquito is small, brown, silent and very much in earnest. He never sings a warning nor fools about Helecting a spot to his taste, but comes in a bee lit" with b probe and gets into action. Every inch of your clothing is Industriously bored, so that you look like an nni mated brown cocoon, and the slightest exposed spot on wrist or neck is promptly set on Cre. I experimented with a small hole in my glove. , After the first mosquito had found the open ing others came in quick succession to the spot. He left ome microscopic "kind lady and nn dog" sign there, if I killed the first and left bis carcass it served as a warning not at nil. The others came the faster, and the more I killed the more eager the survivors became, perching quite unmoved on the remains of their confreres. World Today. EUGENIE'S ESCAPE.

This Date in History

SEPTEMBER 3RD. 1721 Sir Guy Carleton. who was commander-in-chief of the British forces in America, born in Ireland. Died in England. November 10. 180?. 17S3 United States and Great Britain agreed on a treaty of peace. 1S02 Gen. Edward Hand, who was adjutant-general on the staff of Gen. Washington, died in Rockford. Pa, Born in Ireland. December 31. 1744. 1833 John Sleeper Clarke, noted actor, born in Baltimore. Died in London. Sept. 24. 1S99. 145 First Minnesota legislature met in St. Paul. 1SS3 Rachel, the great French actress, made her American debut in

New York. . 1S63 Gen. Burnside. with the army

of the Ohio, occupied Knoxville.

1876 Fire at Si Hyacinths. Quebec, destroyed five hundred houses. 188 North and South Dakota proclaimed States by President Harrison. 1911 Dr. David J. Hill retired as United States Ambassador to Germany.

Wanted Apprentice girl at Tinney's Millinery Store, 10 North 8th St. Mt

Energy. Strong impulses are but another name for energy. Energy may be turned to bad uses, but more good may always be made of an energetic nature thsn of an Indolent and lupaaslve one. John Stuart Mill.

asier and CleanpWay

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All tho dust and dirt is carried away on the cloth when you dust with

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Reason. "How long have you been married?" "Nearly seven months." "And do you admire your husband as much as ever?" "Oh. yes, more. He managed to get his salary raised last week." Chicago Itecord-IIerald.

Not Sentimental. "Ah." a sentimental spinster said, with a sigh, "are there any sweeter words in the English language than i love you?'" "Weil." replied her bachelor friend unsympathctlcally, "I prefer to hear 'Dinner is ready!' "

How the Empress Gat Out of France After Sedan. As soon ns the hot head?d citizens of Faris learned in September. 1870. that their emperor. Napoleon III., bad surrendered to the Prussians fit Sedan these Parisians rose in a riotous mob and made posthaste for the Tuilerles. They were armed and after royal blood and plunder. The empress had to flee for her life. Assisted by the Austrian and Italian ministers, she made a hurried flight from the palace, but found the mob ahead of her in the garden; back again and then out by a secret way into a side street, where they entered a carriage. A street gamin recognized the emprpss here, but the shouting of the mob was so great that the boy's cry of warning was not heeded. Once the carriage was stopped by a mob. but the party alighted and managed to escape. Finding themselves near the residence of Df. Evans, the American dentist, they took refuge there, and the doctor took upon himself the responsibility of Empress Engenie's safety. The empress put on a dress belonging to Mrs. Evans and. with Mme. Breton, her friend, was driven by Dr. Evans to the suburbs. Dr. Evans explained that the women were a patient and her attendant whom he was taking to a sanitarium. Two days later the fugitives reached a coast town, whence they escaped to England.

Sowrd Logic. Don't go into debt with yourself Just to get square with somebody else. Detroit Free Press.

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This Is My 65th Birthday

GEORGE E. FOSTER. George E. Foster, Minister of Trade and Commerce in the Dominion Government, was born in Carleton County, New Brunswick, September 3, 1847. He received an excellent education at Edinburgs and Heidelberg and was at one time a professor in the University of New Brunswick. He was first elected to the House of Commons in 1S82 as an Independent Conservative. The election was afterwards declared null on a petition, but be was re-elected by a larger majority. He entered the Government of Sir John A. Macdonald in 1S85 as Minister of Marine and Fisheries. He succeeded Sir Charles Tupper as Minister of Finance in 1S88, and continued as such throughout the Abbott, Thompson, Bowell and Tupper administra

tion, until the defeat of the Conservative party in 1S96. With the election of t the Conservative Government on the reciprocity issue last year, Mr. Foster entered the Borden ministry. Congratulations to: Queen Olga of Greece, 61 years old today. Gen. Stewart L. Woodford, soldier, lawyer and diplomat, 77 years old today. Joseph H. Gaines, former congressman from West Virginia, 48 years old today. Walter L. Hensley. representative in congress of the Thirteenth Missouri district, 41 years old today. Martin D. Foster, representative in congress of the Twenty-third Illinois district, 51 years old todav.

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Greenwich Tims. Greenwich mean time is the standard for the railways of France, Belgium. Spain and Portugal.

Newbros' Herpicide Costs No More Than "Something Just as Good"

Why Take Chances

For a woman to adorn her head with false braids, puffs and rats, or a man to wear a topee, is like buying an off-brand hair preparation instead of Newbro's Herpicide. The "false hair" and the "off brand" are both substitutes for the real thing. The original is always conceded to be better than any imitation or substitute. "Something just as good" is a heresy of the rankest kind. Newbro's Herpicide is the original remedy and does as promised. Years of success and thousands of satisfied users have made it standard. Herpicide kills 'the dandruff germ, keeps

the scalp clean and stops falling hair. Its proper use before baldness appears

manes false hair and wigs unnecessary. Newbro's Herpicide in 50c and $1.00 sizes is sold by all dealers who guarantee it to do all that Is claimed. If you are not satisfied your money will be refunded. . Applications may be obtained at good barber shops and hair dressing parlors. Send 10c in postage for sample and book on "The Care of tho Hair,- to The Herpicide Co, Dept. R-, Detroit. Mich,

9gSSkl-l Rir.MUnMn DAt i ai-iiii (enreunco i

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Tbe 94U(J luxe illustrations in the announcement from day to day.; This dictinnarv i n,,ki;ck4 r tho m-icnnal rwiS-

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1912

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JieidstonStotlifarm ANNUAL SALE

O K

High Class Colts m Mares Standard Bred and Registered Stock We can not raise and train all we breed; we must sell part of each year's product to make room for the youngsters coming on. This sale will consist of our last year's crop of Rythmic Bel foals, the service fee of which was fifty dollars, and one of the most famous three year olds ever produced. These yearlings are all possessed of extreme speed, which we have not the time to develop, and desire that Wayne County, and our neighbors, have an opportunity to secure for the benefit of the future horse industry of this section, no such opportunity as was ever offered to our farmers and horse lovers as this, and perhaps never will be offered again, for if this sale does not prove satisfactory, the product of this farm will seek a market at the horse sales where this class of horses is appreciated. We hope to see every animal sold to a resident of this County, that the blood may be perpetuated and our breed of harness horses may excel that of any section of the country'. We have the stock and no farm in th world has a better lot of brood mares than Reidston Farm to produce famous horses, and the future champions are just as likely to be among this bunch as Lny that ever has been or will be foaled. Reidston produced this year's champion three year old, and will produce more of them in future years, and you are just as likely to buy one out of this lot that will bring you $5,000.00 or more as Baldy McGregor was a year ago now. We will also offer some work stock and some excellent young drivers that will show for themselves. Every one sold as registered; certificate will go with purchase. SALE TO BE AT Chalk Taylor's Barn North Eighth Street SMTOMY, SEPT. 711 six months from day of Bankable Note, duly secured, TERMS-Cash, or Bale.

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