Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 260, 5 September 1912 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

TJU5 ILICHMONP PALLADIUM A'D 8U-TJELEQBA3I,TnURSDAY SEPTEMBER 5, 1012.

The Richmond Pallacyum and Sun-Telegram ?$ll,he a-" wn$ by the PALLADIUM PAINTINU 0i. IfJV"d Every Bvoning- Except Wuaday. Oft co-Corner North 9th utA atrePalladium and Hun-Telea-ram f boneUiMlneaa Omce. !; iJews eiart tnnnt. UL RICHMOND. INDIANA

Haaolah o. Imm ...sMUet

SUBSCHIPTIQ TBU la Riobmond ff.00 par rr lm " Irenes) or lOo or woo. ua month, m advanoe Acldre.s changed a often M dMtroa. ?vtelnBew ud 'lSWMM saust to-rS-?"Cr,5er" w" PIMM rH .TT.11?Idfi W tb should toe atfvo tof.t a " p.eat la received. MAIl, BUB8CKIPTION8 SU month. In advance .......... ? oa month, lo advance

Kntere4 at Richmond. Indiana, post office aa second class mall matter.

New York Tlprasentatlvee Payee Tpunff, 8034 West 13d street, and 216 West 8Jnd street. Now York, N. T. Cileaaro Representative Payne & Youn. 74T-74S Marquatto Bulldln. Chicago. IlL ,

Tho A.societioa of Amor

i lean Advertisers baa ax

amanod and Cortina to tho eircuUtioaof tbla Db-

licaliao. The figoroa of circalatioa ontaioed in the Aasecielion'a report only aro guaranteed. Assodation of American Advertisers No. 1C9- , Whil.k.11 Wd. i. Y. City

State Ttccet Nominated by Indiana Progressives

For President, Theodore Roosevelt. For Vice President. Hiram W. Johnson. Governor, , Albert J. Beverldge, Indianapolis. Lieutenant Governor. Frederick Landis, Logansport. Secretary of State, Lawson N. Mace, Scottsburg. Auditor, H. E. Cushman, Washington. Treaau rer, B. B. Baker, Monticello. Attorney General, Clifford F. Jackman, Huntington. I State 8upt of Public Instruction, ; Charles E. Spalding, Winamac. Statistician, Thaddeus M. Moore, Anderson. Reporter Supreme Court, Frank R. Miller. Clinton, judge 8upreme Court, Flrat Division, James B. Wilson. Bloomington. Judge Supreme Court, Fourth Division, William A. Bond, Richmond. Judge Appellate Court, First Division, . Minor F. Pate, Bloomfleld.

Heart to Heart ' Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE.

THE WOMAN WHO CARED. ' Is It true that the chief est enemy of the woman who would reform la her sister woman? If It is true there are exceptions. In proof of which is this story of the ignorant foreigner and the woman who cared. The poor foreigner was kept in jail for six years, charged with murder, and three times she stood in the shadow of the electric chair. The woman who cared was the wife of the sheriff In charge of the. jail at Hackensack, N. J. When the foreign woman entered the jail she could not speak a word of English. Indeed, her crime was largely caused by her ignorance of American speech and ways. Taking pity on the forlorn creature, the sheriff's wife taught her the use of English: also she gave the woman a chance to learn housekeeping, sewing, the arts of embroidery, etc. And then - Urged on by the woman who cared, the prisoner took up the study of stenography and typewriting. So great was her proficiency, in spite of the depressing conditions of her life and the great nervous strain of the various trials, she was able, when she stepped out of jail a free woman, to take rapid dictation and write a good letter. Moreover, the sheriff's wife stimulated In the prisoner a desire for reading, so that she is now an unusually well Informed woman. The transformation was complete. While she was in prison and was being given the opportunity to change herself from a crude, ignorant foreigner to a woman of Intelligence her bus. band bad been free. He bad worked with construction gangs, bad learned little or no English and war just about where she left him. Now she has undertaken to educate and Americanize her husband. Fine? I know nothing finer. No school could have done for this prisoner what the woman who cared did for ber. She gave the prisoner a chance, and. what was better, she knew her needs and sympathized and helped. Underneath the ignorant criminal she saw the possibilities of the woman. 'Now It is a great thing to preach the gospel to the heathen no doubt about that; but It is greater to.be the sort of borne missionary who is able to carry the gospel to the heathen in your . own house.

Liberal Indeed. Business Man Tur father gave yon a very liberal education, yon say? College Graduate Sure! The governor did cough op like 'a gentleman wnenew him for a check.

Th

Vermont and the Progressives. The Vermont state election showed at once the strength and the weakness of the Progressive party. The Republicans polled 26,000 votes, a bare majority of 6,000 over their Democrat opponents who piled up 20,000 votes. In 1910 the Republican candidate for governor received 35,000 votes and the Pemocrat candidate 17.500 votes. In this election the new party, the Progressive, received 15,700 votes. The result has been to throw the .election into the Vermont bouse of representatives, the first time this has happened since Vermont first went Republican in 1856. Professor Wilson professes to be pleased at the showing the Democrats have made in this state election. Following the state election in 190S when 16,000 votes were given lo the Democrat nominee for governor, William J. Bryan in November received but 11,500. Does Professor Wilson believe he will ever hold the place in the hearts of Democrats that Mr. Bryan occupies? Does he believe that he will be more acceptable to the Democrat voters of Vermont In 1912 than Mr. Bryan was in 1908? If Mr. Bryan could poll but 11,500 votes against Taft how many votes then will Professor Wilson poll witb Colonel Roosevelt In the race as the candidate of the Progressive party? The Progressives' 15,700 votes were gained after a campaign lasting only ten days by an organization naturally Imperfect, and composed largely of men inexperienced in politics though filled with the moral fervor that is actuating the Progressives in 1912 as it did the Republicans of 1856-60. The chief cause of the Progressives not polling a far larger vote in Vermont was the county ticket question. Progressives there had helped nominate the various Republican county tickets. Their friends were numbered among many of the candidaes. They had not time to give these candidates the opportunity of going over on Progressive county tickets. Hundreds of Progressives undoubtedly, therefore, were deterred from voting tho Progressive ticket at this election. The safety of their friends on the Republican county tickets was uppermost in their minds. At the November election this consideration will have been removed. Taft will not be helped by the feeling of loyalty to the county tickets that have already been elected, and Colonel Roosevelt, with the Democrat strength of 1908 in mind, will easily carry Vermont. The weakening effect of the county ticket question should be a lesson to Indiana Progressives. Unfortunately, unlike Vermont, Indiana will vote on the county tickets at the same time the vote is cast for president. Fortunately, unlike Vermont, Indiana Progressives have time to nominate complete county tickets throughout the state. This can be done in counties that have not yet held Republican primaries or conventions by the Progressives nominating straightout tickets with no feelings of obligation towards any candidate on any other ticket. In counties in which, like Wayne, the Republican county tickets have already been nominated. Progressives can do as Wayne has done. Let them nominate on their tickets the candidates of the Republican tickets, and give these men a fair amount of time in which to accept or decline. In the case of candidates declining the new nominations the vacancies can be filled. In this manner all obligation on the part of Progressives for participation in primaries or conventions held previous to the notorious Chicago convention is cancelled, and they are free to support the regularly nominated Progressive candidates on their county ticket. Vermont is at once the encouragement to the Progressives of the nation and also the warning that should be heeded. A very short campaign for a comparatively unknown candidate has thrown the election Into the Vermont house of representatives and sickening fear into the hearts of the Republican bosses. If it had not been for the county ticket question an even better result would have been the Progressives lot. The Progressives of the rest of the nation should now work to one end get Progressive county tickets in every county of the land. Therein lies one great aid to victory for our great moral, political and economic principles on November 5.

Patriotism.

If this country is to be saved from the vicious financial interests that have enslaved it through the corrupt boss system, it will have to be done by those citizens who can put behind them all selfish considerations and join the fight in the spirit of pure patriotism. After reading in last evening's Palladium the statement of Will Reller, who announced his retirement from .the Republican county ticket and his acceptance of the nomination for prosecuting attorney on the Progressive ticket, and the reasons he gave therein for his action, the Palladium believes this young man should be congratulated for cleaving straight to the line demarking between right and wrong. Wayne county, moreover, should be proud to produce such a one on any ticket for an office as important as that of prosecuting attorney. Reller certainly hit the nail on the head when he said in his statement of acceptance to Progressive county chairman Will Robbins, " And In the beginning I want to make plain that I in no wise regard the name Republican as now used synonomous with that name as used last February. In a national campaign year such aB this one, and more particularly so this year than perhaps any other, it means for a man's name to be on the Republican ticket when it could be on the Progressive ticket that he subscribes to and condones what was done at the Republican National convention, that he js in sympathy with the Watson-Keallng-Hemenway-Durbln crowd In Indiana and that by his vote and through his influence he encourages such disreputable political methods and is willing to continue such men in office. "I was present as a spectator at the Republican National convention in Chicago, and every element of fairness and honesty In my makeup cries out against what was done there, while my blood fairly bolls when I think of the manner in which certain politicians in this state have wrecked the Republican party, and prostituted the government of the people to their own selfish ends. I feel strongly- about these matters and believe that I would be giving my approbation to such men and their methods if I remained on the Republican ticket after your offer of a place on your ticket. I shall Bupport Roosevelt and Beveridge and having so determined I can not go through this campaign at war with myself, even though I lose office by the step I am taking, an office which means a livelihood and reputation to a young lawyer." Don't you voters like the ring of that statement? Doesn't it appeal to you tar more than if he had said the compromising, hedging, straddling," I will remain on the Republican ticket because I was nominated to it before the Republican voters, who participated in last spring's primary, were irrevocably divided by the happenings at the Chicago convention?" Hasn't Will Reller toea the mark like an honest and straightforward man? Hasn't he evinced a character that God knows you know is necessary in public officeholders if our country is to be redeemed from corruption and from being tho pawn of political and financial brigands? A patriot is one who places love of country above love of self. Will Reller has placed the standard of his patriotism beyond cavil.

Ho Told Hor. Teacher Willy, can yoa tell me the difference between caution an cowardice? Willy Yes. ma'am. When you are afraid yourself that is caution, but when the other fellow's afraid that's cowardice.

f Showing It. j" "I didn't know she was left handed." "She isn't." "But she seems to do everything with her left hand."

"Yes. Haven't you noticed the

gagement rnlgr Detroit Free Press.

en-

'Discouraged

Tho expression occurs so many times in letters from sick women, " I was completely discouraged." And there ia always good reason for tho discouragement. Years of pain and suffering. Doctor after doctor tried i vain. Medicine doing no lasting good. It is no wonder that toe woman feels discouraged. Thousands of these weak and siek women have found health and courage regained as the result of the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It establishes regularity, heals inflammation and ulceration, and cures weakness. IT MHKES trcaJT WOHEX STRONG BKD SICK WOMEN WELL. Refuse substitutes offered by unscrupulous druggists

ror uus reuaoio remeay. Sick women are invited to consult by letter, fm. AH correspondence stnotly pnyate and sacredly confidential. Write without fear and without - Dr. Pierces Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, lirar and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiay granules, easy to take as candy.

WATERWAYS MEETING Called to Order at New London, Conn., Today. (National News Association) NEW LONDON, Conn., Sept. 5. One of the most notable gatherings ever assembled ia the history of this country in the interest of waterway development was called to order at the Hotel Grlswold In this city today, when the Atlantic Deeper Waterways association met for its fifth annual convention. The visitors, who represented all of me eastern states from Maine to Florida, were welcomed to Connecticut by Governor Baldwin. President J. Hampton Moore of Pennsylvania, in his annual address, reviewed the work already accomplished in the project for an intracoastal canal from Boston, Mass., to Beaufort, N. C, and spoke most encouragingly of the prospects for the fulfillment of the great development plan towards which the association is bending its energies. The Cape Cod canal, which Is a prominent feature of the project, is rapidly Hearing completion. The southern end of the proposed waterway, from Norfolk to Albemarle Sound, is provided for in the last rivers and harbors act At the next session of congress the association will endeavor to have an aprroprlation made for the improvement of the old Delaware and Chesapeake canal, which ia to form another important link in the system. No session of the convention was held, this afternoon, the time being devoted by the delegates to a trip to Fisher's Island and an inspection of the great fortifications at Fort Wright President Taft is expected to come to New London tomorrow to deliver an address at the concluding of the convention.

This JsMy 60th Birthday

SIR JOHN NEWELL JORDAN. Sir John Newell Jordan, for many years a leading figure In the British diplomatic service, was born in County Down. Ireland. September 5. 1852, and received his education at Queen'c College. Belfast His career in the diplomatic service covers a period of more than thirty-five years and has confined wholly to the Far East. He began as a student interpreter in China in 1876 and became successively the assistant secretary and secretary of the British legation at Pekin. consul-general in Corea and minister resident at Seoul. With the, Japanese occupatlcn of Corea he returned to Pekin to became the Brtiish minister there, a position which he still holds. Congratulations to: Rt. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster, Protestant Episcopal bishop of Connect'cut, 64 years old today. Richard A. Jackson, vice president nnd general counsel of the Great Northern Railway. 54 years old today. Thomas E. Watson, the "stormy petrel" of Georgia politics, former congressman and People's Party candidate for President in 1904, 56 years old today.

The implicit confidence that many people have In Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is founded on their experience In the use of that remedy and their knowledge of the many remarkable cures of colic, diarrhoea and dysentery that it has effected. For sale by al! dealers.

Gold. The first mention which we have of gold Is in the eleventh verse of the second chapter of Genesis, or. in other words, 4,004 years before Christ Gold was used as money by the ancient Egyptians at a very early date. Herodotus tells that the invention of the coinage of gold belongs to Lydla. about .750 B. O. Authorities conflict about the first coinage of gold. Some say it was Miletus and some the Persians, but there are no records to show just when.

Golf Hardened. Many a isolf player in Just as horny hunded as ny son of toll. Chicago Rpcord-Hernld.

This Date in History

SEPTEMBER 5TH. 1761 Zachariah Poulson. publisher of the first daily newspaper in the United States, born in Philadelphia. Died there, July 31. 1S44. 1744 First Continental Congress assembled in Carpenter's Hall. Philadelphia, 1805 Malta capitulated to theBrltish. 1842 Lord Ashburton left the United States, after having coucluded the important treaty that bears his name. 1S47 Jesse James, the noted bandit, born in Clay County, Mo, Killed in St Joseph, Mo., April 3.. 1882. 1873 Great Britain paid the indemnity awarded in the Alabama claims. 1898 Queen Wilhelmlna of the Netherlands, ascended the throne. 1905 Japanese and Russian envoys signed the treaty of peace at Portsmouth, N. H.

FOR DANDRUFF, FALLING HAIR OR ITCHf SCAIP15JENT DAIIDERIIIE" Save your hair! Danderine destroys dandruff and stops fallinf hair at once Grows hair, we prove it.

If you care for heavy hair, that glistens with beauty and is radiant with life; has an incomparable softness and is fluffy and lustrous you must use Danderine, because nothing else accomplishes so much for the hair. Just one application of Knowlton'a Danderine will double the beauty of your hair, besides it immediately dissolves every particle of dandruff; you cannot have nice, heavy, healthy hair if you have dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life, and If not overcome it produces a' feverishness and itching of the scalp; the hair roots

famish, loosen and die; then the hair

falls out fast If your hair has been neglected and is thin, faded, dry, scraggy or too oily, dan't hesitate, but get & 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine at any drug store or toilet counter; apply a little as directed and ten minutes after you will say this was the best investment you ever made. We sincerely believe, regardless of everything else advertised, that it you desire soft lustrous, beautiful hair and lots of it no dandruff no Itching scalp and no more falling hair you must use Knowlton's Danderine. If eventually why not now? A 25 cent bottle will truly amase you.

Richmond Dry Cleaning Co. CASH BEALL, Prop. MEN'S SUITS, Dry Cleaned, Pressed and delivered $1.50 LADIES' LONG UNLINED COATS $1-25 SKIRTS, PLAIN OR PLEATED 75e New up-to-date plant, 7th and South H. Phone Your Orders, Wagon Will Call. Phones 1072, 2411, 1906.

yi4P-DlCTIOMARY COUPOM M&i RICHMOND PALLADIUM SEPTEMBER 5. 5-va I Cat aa the itw rwman. with fir others of iisnssisUlia liaise, aWsiinnf 1 ft s at thia ofBoowMi A. im si ii iinlheaeiaiset up iiHaaaw stylo ? of Phtinaurr t--t i f-ti'tn tt-ttt 1f-T f - T I saaa tW. f aasary. snH.ia. afaafc hbm mmi other w EXPCNSS isesas).

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Xsf JUS - e-reatest authorities from leading universities: is hotmd in 4

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Cautious. "If oar enemy smite us on one cheek what should we do?" asked the Sunday school teacher. -That depends on how big he la." replied WIHle Wise -Philadelphia Record.

Pretty Near RiflM. Slarkley Wlaemaa told mo today tbAt rd sever get back that ten spot I loaned you. Grafton He did? Markley Tea. Oraftoo WelL If it waaa t so expensive I'd make him out a liar right now. PhooVra Pres.

The next time you forget where the money went, remember that a National Cash Register knows and shows the accurate record of every sale. The National Cash Register Company, Dayton, Ohio. Richmond Office, 44 South Twenty-second Street

Pure Cider Picketing Vinegar This is one of our specials. It will keep your pickles. Fresh, whole mixed spices, etc. Hadley's Grocery

Phone 2292

1035 Main Street

He dston Stock

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ANNUAL SALE

O K

High Class Colts m Marcs 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 oldi 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 f.ny 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 Baldv 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 Bari North Eighth Street SMWBAY, SEPT. Tfli six months from day of sankable Note, duly secured, TERMS-Cfesh, or Bale.

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