Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 268, 14 September 1912 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR:
THIS RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND 8UN 'TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1913.
fee Richmond Palladium asd Son-Telegres! Publlahed a4 by the PAIXAOIUM PRINTING OX aaued Erary JCventaa- Excapt BunoavJfflce Coraer North lth and A stra 'alladlum aad Sun-Telegram Paonea laalneaa Office. IMIi Mews iyrtaent. UM. RICHMOND. INDIANA
l4lph O. I,eeaa. MUM SUBSCRIPTION TJtfUaM a Richmond IS.SO par year ls vane) er Its par weak. . RURAL ROUTES no month, la aavaaee 5r .A5drM" chanet aa ettaa aa ri oth new ud aM - bum d Uvea. aJ.. 2i?f;. "toh should ba oTve tot R"1. : nam will not t a aasaa; ri iea t m lavsia aa. resaU wi" pateat la raoatvaav MAIL, BUBSCRIPTiaiW In a a a ( A px months, in advance .......... month, la aavaoee Entered at Richmond. India, peat uc ma aacona ciaea mau New York Repreaentatlvea Payne rounc. 80-84 West ld a treat, and ! w Wt S2nd street New York, N, T. Chicago Reprosentatlvee Payne & fount. 747-74S Marquette BaUdlng. Caicaaro, I1L The Aaaoeiatioas of AmaT icaa AdVartuera haa ax. axnened and cartifiad to tha aircalatiaa of tale eejfealiUl at lieaUesw Tha figures of cxrcalaaaat aontaiaad in tha Asaaciatioa'a report only are guaranteed. Assadalica of Americas Wverfisers No. 1C9- .Whitehall Bids. R. T. Oty State Ticket Nominated by Indiana Progressives For President, Theodore Roosevelt For Vice President. Hiram W. Johnson. Governor, Albert J. Beveridge, Indianapolis. Lieutenant Governor, Frederick Landis, Logansport Secretary of 8tate, Lawson N. Mace, Scottsburg. Auditor, H. E. , Cushman. Washington. Treasurer. B. B. Baker, Monticello. Attorney General, Clifford F. Jackman, Huntington. State 8upt of Public Instruction, Charles E. Spalding, Wlnamac. Statistician, Thaddeus M. Moore, Anderson. Reporter Supreme Court, Frank R. Miller, Clinton, fudge 8upreme Court, Firet Division, James B. Wilson. Bloomlngton. ludge Supreme Court, Fourth Division, William A. Bond, Richmond, ludge Appellate Court, First Division,. . Minor F. Pate. Bloomfleld. ' Heart toleart Tallest y EDWIN A. NYC SADIE'S WISH. f Here are two pictures. i Inside the Hotel Vanderbilt, New Terk, eight women, stylishly gowned, and eight long haired lap. dogs sat together at an elaborate luncheon. The women were rich women. The dogs 'were' of long lineage and blue Mood, pedigreed. Imported prize winners, and the luncheon was given In the special honor of a Chinese spaniel. This canine was champion of his class. 1 The Chinese room of the hotel was net Chinese enough to suit the fastidious taste of the dog owners, so decorations were hired and money lavishly pent to make the room resemble a royal palace In Peking. Chinese gods grinned from pedestals, and Chinese screens v and tapestries were, everywhere in evidence. A Chinese chef - was hired and prepared a special menu for the occasion. The women ate and fed the dogs, each sitting beside its owner and devouring the morsels offered by .dainty fingers. That is one picture. 1 Outside the hotel, attracted by tha laughter and banter of the women and tha yaps of the toy spaniels, four wide eyed east side youngsters in tattered garments peeked through an open window on the alley side. Their mothers, doubtless, were too busy with their washtubs to know how far away the kids had strayed. Should they turn up by supper It would suffice. The grimy youngsters, three boys and a girl, paused when they heard the strange kl-yis of the aristocratic spaniels. "What's them dogs doin'7" asked one. "Thought they didn't let dogs in them swell Joints." "Aw, we can find out," answered another, placing a soap box he was taking home for kindling under the window. Sadie, the only girl of the group, clambered on It, by Invitation, and gasped at what she saw. "Oh, Mikey. they's a feedin' dogs In there swell women is. Givin' 'em all sorts of classy stuff too. And one dog's isot his feet in a woman's plate, and she don't care." Each child had a, look in. and then they started homeward, and Sadie said, a little wistfully, "Some dogs don't get very much, but I wisht I was one of them dogs." Look on this picture and then on that. . - The pictures themselves are sufficient excuse if they set you to thinking. ' Get out your Eusebius or your Ferrer and read the stories of the startling 'contrasts of the Roman world and ask yourself. How far have we traveled In 2,000 years? Time and TrouM. Ten minutes would get rtd of lots of rrpuDie toat it takes boars to te!L-
r
Mr. BarnesTaft Ally. The city government of Albany, New York, is probably the most corrupt of any city in the United SUtes. It Is now and has been for years under the domination of a vicious and avaricious political machine, andthe master of that, machine is William Barnes, Jr., the man In command of the political brigands who stole th Republican presidential nomination for William Howard Taft and the man who is the brains and supreme director of President Taft's campaign for re-election. Although a graduate of Harvard University Barnea is as menacing and unscrupulous as any ward healer of the lowest type, yet President Taft, occupying the highest office in the gift of. the American people, asked this disreputable Albany politician to secure for him his renominatlon and then approved the plan of making Barns the controlling force in the Republican presidential campaign. A man is judged by the company he keeps, an old adage tells us. It is Interesting to note that the most menacing figures in public life today are advocating President Taft's re-election. Among the arch enemies of popular government in the van of the Taft forces are Penrose, Guggenheim, Warren, Keallng and McKInley, but, in our opinion, Barnes is the most sinister, and upon him President Taft leans the heaviest. In the current issue of Collier's Weekly, America's most fearless periodical, a graphic pen picture of Barnes is drawn. In part the article reads: Barnes is the successor of Thomas C. Piatt as the Republican boss of New York State. He controls the city of Albany through a regiment of officeholders, national. State, county, and city, and through a partnership with a sort of political Camorra, perhaps the worst band of dive keepers of any city of Its size in the country. Albany is a fence for the worst criminals of New York City. Barnes is -the most successful combination of university graduate and strong-arm politician in public life. He is one of the few men of his birth, rearing, and education .who have conformed successfully to the lowest level of politics. He is head and s houlderB in ability over the men he rules. He Is dominant and tyrannical fertile in ideas and brutal in his execution of them. He has quarreled with practically every Republican Governor of New York of his time, notably with Hughes, Odell, and Black. At a festive gathering in Albany, during his light with Governor Odell, Barnes in a speech parodied Tennyson's lines: Governors may come, and Governors may go. But Barnes goes on forever. This district (the tenderloin) in Albany is one of the vilest in the country- It covers acres in the heart of the city. At one time it aroused the ' wrath of the clergymen ,of Albany. There are factories In the district employing hundreds of young girls. One minister, whose congregation was made up of poor people, 6aid that constant complaints came to his ears from the mothers of these girls, who were not only compelled to witness scenes of revelry, but who, on their way to and from work, were accosted and lured to these resorts." Answering the plaints of the clergymen, Barnes, at a Republican dinner, said he did not believe in Interfering with "innocent pleasures." Even the courts are among Barnes's political assets. Governor Hughes appointed a Supreme Court Judge in Albany to fill an unexpired term. The judge was independent. Barnes refuted him a nomination to succeed himself, and nominated and elected in his place the attorney of the New York Central Railroad. There is but one foe to c riminals in Albany. He is the Police Judge, John J. Brady, a Democrat whom even Barnes cannot defeat; and, as if to clip his power, there is a State law by which the criminal in Albany, alone of all State criminals, can say to the judge of the Police Court: "I will not let you try me. I prefer Barnes's man Frost" and over to Frost's Recorder's Court the criminal goes and is turned loose. Frost is a law partner and relative of Luther Warner, former chairman of the Republican County Committee of Albany County. After describing the methods employed in rewarding the various cogs in the Barnes machine of Albany Collier's adds: And thus the course of graft in Albany runs: through the Tenderloin; in and about gambling houses; in streets, alleys, and sewers; over skylights and roofs, even to the tips of the lightning rods ; in and out of the banks and trust companies; into managers and horse stalls; to the pumping stations of the water system; into the fire houses, and up into the flagstaff s (repairs of one flagstaff cost $430.64, In three separate installments); out to the doorstep of Barnes's bungalow; down into the furnaces of the schoolhouses; and into the paint on the public building. (Vouchers numbered from 6100 to 6108, inclusive, were all issued on the same day, and all under $250 each, for renovating the headquarters of the Board of Education in the City Hall. They amounted to $1,038.67.
Wake Up, Venezuela.
What has become of Venezuela? Has our rowdy little South American neighbor dropped completely off the map? With all the rough house going on in the Caribbean Sea and Mexican Gulf countries Venezuela's placic calm is as suspicious as the silence of a live volcano. However, your Uncle Sam, with a new gray hair sprouting on his venerable pate daily from all the disturbance at his back door, is keeping his weather eye glued on the former vest pocket burough of Mr. Castro and praying that the peace which now reigns over Venezuela will not be interrupted until he has thorough ly spanked Mexico, Nicaragua and Santo Domingo. For the past two years war vessels and transports filled with marines have been scampering about the Spanish Main stamping out riots., The army has also had to be called on to assist in the police work. While khaki clad troopers have hurled threats and warnings at Mexico over the Rio Grande, the navy has scolded the Haytians for blowing up their president; sea soldiers have chased insurrectos through Cuban cane fields and Nlcaraguan jungles, and now the bluejackets and marines, with their work in Nicaragua still uncompleted, are being rushed to Santo Domingo to squelch a revolution and protect custom houses, which are operated under the supervision of Americans. The late "Fighting Bob" Evans once suggested that Santo Domingo and Hayti could be' made very desirable places if it were possible to submerge the island for about five minutes. No doubt Uncle Sam would apply this remedy to all his Central American and Mexican Gulf neighbors if it were practical. It is to be hoped he will find some effective remedy before hie available supply of marines is exhausted.
This Is My 58th Birthday BISHOP ISRAEL. Bishop Rogers Israel, head of the Protestant Episcopal diocese of Erie, Pa., was born in Baltimore, Sept. 14, 1854. His education was received at Dickinson college, where he gradu ated in 1881., He was ordained a deacon tut the Protestant Episcopal church In 1885 and a priest the follow ing year. In the succeeding years he filled pulpits In Meadville, Scranton and several other Pennsylvania cities. When the Protestant Episcopal diocese of Erie was created Dr. Israel was selected as its first bishop and was consecrated in February of . last year. Congratulations to: Charles Dana Gibson, the artist, 45 years old today. Charles B. Smith, representative In Congress of the Thirty-sixth district of New York, 42 years old today. Few, if any, medicines, have met with the uniform success that has attended the use of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. The remarkable cures of cohc ; and diarrhoea which it has effected In almost every neighborhood have given it a wide reputation. For sale by all dealers.
Constipated? Go To Your Doctor It Is impossible to be well, simply impossible, if the bowels are constiSated. Waste products, poisonous substances, must be removed om the body at least once each day, or there will be trouble. Ask your doctor about Ayer's Pills, gently laxative, all vegetable. He knows why they act directly on the liver f-Lfflr0
This Date in History
SEPTEMBER 14TH. 1777 Burgoyne crosses the Hudson and encamped on Saratoga Heights. 1829 Treaty of Adriahople, ending the war between Russia and Turkey. 1847 American army, under General Scott, entered the City of Mexico. 1852 Duke of Wellington, the victor of Waterloo, died. Born in 1769. 1901 Vice President Roosevelt took the oath of office at President of the United States. 1908 Bert M. Fernald elected governor of Maine. 1911 The Russian Premier Stolypin was assassinated by an anarchist. Those wishing to entertain Friends coming to the Yearly Meeting of Friends, leave your name and number you wish with either of the committee: Nancy Moorman, 126 South 16th; Robert Randall, 1234 Main; Henry Roberts. 114 S. 16th; Dr. G. D. Bailey, No. 31 South 15th; Wm.' J. Hiatt, 106 South. 15th. , 14-lt Modern Cannon. - In modern high velocity cannon the pressure of the gases at the moment of firing generates tremendous heat.. II is estimated that this beat runs as high as 8,000 degrees and even 9.00C degrees.
WILL TAKE STUMP Miss Jane Addams Will Start on Tour for Roosevelt.
f National Newa Association) NEW YORK, Sept. 14. Miss Jane Addams, of Hull House, Chicago, will take the stump for the Progressive party, it wa3 announced. She will begin September 25, and will start her work with a big mass meeting in New York. Much of Miss Addams' speaking will be done in the Middle West and the Far West, where an active suffrage campaign Is on. Miss Addams' tour, in' point of speeches to be made and the jumps, will be almost as strenuous as that of Col. Roosevelt. NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD There are three thousand co-operative dairies In Germany. Roumania has a trade union membership of amout nine thousand. Cement workers of Boston, Mass., have succeeded in organizing the waterproofers. The total benefits paid by the Cigarmakers' International union during 1911 amounted to $576,130.61. Ten new carpenters' locals have been organized in the San Joaquin valley, of California, since January 1. The Coopers' International Union of North America, held its annual convention at St. Louis, Mo., this week. In a very short time there will be a complete alliance of a working character between the musicians, actors and the stage employes. The International Association of Marble Workers now has ninety-seven locals in good standing and the organization is in. a prosperous condition. The Wisconsin State Federation of Labor is now represented by about one hundred and fifty local unions and had a balance in the treasury on July 1, of $2,747. The boot and shoe workers chartered five new unions during the month of June, one of them at Amperes, Nova Scotia, and another at St. Johns, Newfoundland. The organizations of labor are steadily increasing their membership in Spain and increases in wages in all departments of industry are steadily beingg obtained as a result. In the lace and lingerie industry of Florence, Italy, the work day for women, established by law, is ten hours. Hand embtiderers receive 40 to 50 cents and lace makers 45 to 55 cents a day. ' A free labor bureau for the purpose of bringing the unemployed into direct touch with possible employment or for those desiring to better their employment is the latest innovation Introduced by the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. For the quarter ending June 30, 1912, the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers paid $2,300 in sick and accident claims, the average benefit being $24.69. Fpr the same period the association paid $1,300 as death claims. The strike of stevedores and freight handlers that recently stopped all traf fic at the port of Malaga, Spain, has been won by the workmen. The em ployers yielded to the union demands regarding a higher scale of wages and more pay for overtime. Compensation for industrial accidents is gradually becoming an established fact in the United States, as it has been for years in some of the European countries. Thirteen states in the country now have compensation laws, all of them enacted within the last three years. Ten thousand glass blowers will suffer a reduction of 20 per cent in their wages as a result of an agreement reached in Atlantic City, N. J., between cbmmittees of the National Association of Glass Bottle Manufacturers and the Glass Bottle Blowers' Association of America.
everybody will like.
Wish
How the High School Can Meet the Needs of the Community
How can the high school best meet the needs of the community? The people of Colebrook, New Hampshire, think they have solved the problem. Their experiment is interestingly described in a bulletin just issued for free distribution by the United States Bureau of Education. Colebrook Academy is located in a town of about 2,000 population in northern New Hampshire. Starting in the first third of the century as a private school, it later became part of the public system of education. For years It has successfully done the work expected of a high school in the traditional branches of the New England school. Now it is, trying to do something more. Without lowering its standards, without ceasing to furnish the training necessary for those going into the professions, it is endeavoring to provide an adequate education for the great mass of boys and girls who ought to remain and grow up with the country. It is seeking, in other words, to readjust itself to the needs of the particular community in which it is. Just what this readjustment means may be seen from, the following four significant additions to the school plant: the greenhouse, the dairy laboratory, the domestic arts department, and the workshop, including a carpenter and blacksmith shop. Complete courses are given in agriculture and domestic science. Colebrook is the center of a rural district, and these are the vital interests of a large part of the population. Colebrook Academy does not propose to become a vocational school. It remains a general high school. The courses in agriculture and domestic science exist side by side with thorough courses in the traditional high school subjects, as well as the commercial branches. "Its purpose is not primarily to make good farmers, or skilled mechanics, or professional housekeepers," 6ays Hon. H. C. Morrison, state superintendent of New Hampshire. "The primary object is the education of the boy and girl to become a sincere and efficient and SMALLPOX EPIDEMIC (Palladium Special) WINCHESTER, Ind., Sept. 14. When the schools were opened for the fall term here, four cases of smallpox had been reported to the health authorities. The health officials immediately ordered all children vaccinated. They then reported to the state officials that the citizens were not supporting them in their efforts to check the malady. HOW TO MAKE CANNA BEDS. Do Not Plant For Many Varieties ar Colors. As cannas are subtropical plants they thrive only in warm weather and should be planted only when the season is well advanced. May 20 to June 15 Is best for the territory between latitudes 40 and 45. The plants are deep rooted, therefore the bed should be dug deep. It also is Important to provide; plenty of plant food. Three inches of well rotted manure spaded Into the soil is not too much. Do not elevate the center of the bed, but leave level so water will not run off. If the bed is to contain several varieties of cannas much care should be given to the selection of the varieties. If the bed is to be viewed from all sides put the taller varieties in the center and use the shorter kinds for the border rows. Your florist can give advice about tho varieties best suited for the purpose. Do not plant too many varieties. Unless It Is an exceptionally large bed two or three will be better than more. For small beds a dozen to eighteen plants are enough. It is good taste to use some other plant for a border. If tall growing cannas are used the fountain grass Is unsurpassed, and for dwarf kinds such plants as col ens. dwarf salvias and dusty miller opt serviceable. Shakespeare's Shrine. Shakespeare's birthplace at Strarford-on-Avon Is visited annually by 40.000 persons.
Say, Daddy, isn't he the meanest thing ever? Won't let us. get any idea of what it is. T " Just says that it's someiing
he'd hurnrup
happy man and woman, capable of be
coming an educated worker with material things, capable of getting life's happiness out of work rather than out of the leisure which comes after work, if indeed it comes at all. A further purpose is to educate the strongest youth toward the farm and the industries instead of toward the professions and business exclusively. In j the work of the school' it is repeatedi ly emphasised that the new courses are established in the belief that there is just as truly a cultural development of the individual to be had from com- ! petent instruction in agriculture or do mestic science as from competent instruction In Latin. The significance of the Colebrook movement lies in the fact that it demonstrates the basic principle upon which the American high school must stand or fall; that it shall be a direct source of strength to the community that pays for it. The feeling exists that secondary rural schools have in many instances weakened the communities which supported them; that by the J very efficiency of their work, they nave trained young men and women for other fields of usefulness and have thus frequently deprived the community of the services of its best citizens. It is said that New Hampshire has been a notable sufferer from this process, and . that readjustment is necessary if the process is to be checked and the upbuilding of the country districts Is to go on again. All over the country there is the same problem. It seems obvious that it the public high school is to justify itself it must constantly put back into the community the best of each generation as permanent residents. Particularly Important is the part to be played by the reconstructed rural high school in the country life movement. The Colebrook Academy dignifies the fundamental arts of agriculture and .home-making. Given schools of this type, with a program of studies matching the real interests of the community, and rural civilization may in truth be made as efficient and satisfying as other civilisation. SPECIAL EXAMINATION On the request of teachers In Richmond and Boston. C. O. Williams, county superintendent, held a special examination yesterday in his office at the court house. Eight teachers took the examination. Liberty. Liberty Is being free from the things we don't like In order to be slaves of the things we do like. Life. BOWELS BALL LIVER TORPID? CASGARETS If Constipated, Bilious, Headachy, Stomach Sour, get a 10 cent box of Cascarets. Tou men and women who can't get feeling right who have headache, coated tongue, foul taste and foul breath, dizziness, can't sleep, are bilious, nervous and upset bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stomach, or have back-ache and feel worn out Are you keeping your bowels clean with Cascarets, or merely forcing a J passageway every few days with salts, cathartic pills or castor oil? This Is important. Cascarets work while you sleep; cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poison In the Intestines and bowels. A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning a 10-cent box from any drug store will keep your stomach sweet; liver and bowels regular and head clear for months. Don't forget the children. They love Cascarets because they taste good do good never gripe or sicken. a fittte.
IS SERIOUSLY INJURED (Palladium Special) HAGERSTOWN. Ind, SpL 14 Mrs, Carrie Stonebraaker. wife of John Stonebreaker. a retired merchant, fell.' causing the dislocation of the wrist bones and fracturing a bona in. the forearm.
The Masonic Calendar L Tuesday. Sept. 1". Richmond lodge No. 196, F. & A. M. Called meeting. Work in Master Mason degreeWednesday. Sept. 18. Webb lodge. No. 24, F. A A. M. Stated meeting. Friday, Sept 20. King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4. R. A. M. Called convocation. Work In Mark Master degree. Saturday. Sept. 3L Loyal Chapter. No. 49. O. E. S. Stated meeting. Exchange Social and refreahmenta. FARMER'S WIFE HADHEAP TO DO Mrs. Shepherd Was In Bad Shape When She Could Not Stand on Her Feet Durham, N. C "I am a fanner's wife," writes Mrs. J. M. Shepherd, of this city, "and have a heap to do. "Four months ago I could not stand on my feet, to do anything much, but at this time I do the most cl my work. I took Cardui and it did me mora good than all the doctors. "You don't know half how 1 thank you for the Cardui Home Treatment 1 wish that all women who suffer from womanly trouble would treat themselves as I have. Ladies can easily treat themselves at home, with Cardui, the woman's tonic. It is easy to take, and so gentle in Its action, that it cannot do anything but good. Being composed exclusively of vegetable ingredients, Cardui cannot tar up trouble in your system, as mineral drugs often do. Its ingredients having no harsh, medicinal effects, and bemz nonpoisonous and perfectly harmless, Cardui is absolutely sate for young and old. Ask your druggist 1 Ic will tell you to try Cardui. N. a-VMi Ladies AdXsory Dept. Chart eoosft Medicine Co.. Chattanooca, tool, tor Sptrm InsmetionM.mnti 64-pare book. Home Treattncat 'rt Womu. acct la nUin wrajor. oa request. Make your vacation visits more enjoyable with a E odl siM It's easy. Let us show you. Prices to suit any purse. Ross' Drug Store PLACE FOR QUALITY. ' Phone 1217. S04 Main St USE BREHM'S LAWN SEEDS For a strong substantial growth a good quality of seed should I J be sown now. Get the best costs no more. GEO. BREHM CO. 617 MAIN 8TREET. 1KB Reduction on All Flxtvras and Domes. Crane Electric Co. X PHONE 1061. 12 NORTH 5TH 44SeeMttl JUST TELL US The AMOUNT of money and tha TIME you want to uaa tba same and we will make yon RATES that can not be anything but satisfactory to you. We loan from S5.0A to $100.00 on furniture, pianos, teams, wagons, etc without removal, giving you both the use of tha money and security. , Tour paymeata can be made in small weekly, bimonthly or monthly "'Sfiiti to suit your income. CaS at oz office, writ or paosa if la stead of money. TEE STATE KYESTLILnT & 10AH CCirPAHT Room 40, Colonial Bids, '" Phone 2560. Richmond, in.
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