Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 271, 18 September 1912 — Page 6
PAGE SIX,
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXD SUJf-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1912.
FRIENDS ARE
DE OF YOUNG BLOOD For the Church to Succeed, It Was Pointed Out at Meeting, Young People Must Take Interest. (Continued from Page One) jAdelbert Wood of New England Yearjly meeting; Enos Harvey, formerly of (Richmond, of the North Carolina Yearly Meeting; George D. Weeks and Sarah Weeks, of the Nebraska ! Yearly Meeting; Ida Allen, of the Wiljmington (O.) Yearly Meeting; Liman !G. Casan, of the Kansas Yearly meeting; and Morton C. Pierson, of the j Western Yearly Meeting. It was decided, this morning, to accept the suggestion of the committee on ministry and oversight, to secure a j stenographer to record all minutes of the meeting. The last clause in the section governing the appointment of committees, which reads that no representative, or delegate, to the meeting may be appointed on the special committees was rescinded. There will be 160 appoint ed on the standing committees and 170 on special committees. However, it was the unanimous opinion of delegates that the nominating committee should exercise care in not appointing fthe same individuals on a number of committees. Mr. Tibbetts, stated that ton previous occasious the same men iand women are appointed on five and '.Bin committees. THACKERAY AS A TALKER. A Grand Oratorical Display That Did Not Take Place. Thackeray was terribly self conclous and usually presented a very poor appearance when he attempted to deliver a speech. "Why can't they get Dickens to take the chair?" he grumbled when he had to preside at the general theatrical fund. "He can make a speech, and a good one. I'm of no use. They little think how nervous I am, and Dickens doesn't know the meaning of the word." An amusing story Is recorded of the occasion when, with Mr. Fields, the well known American publisher. Thackeray, traveled to Manchester to make a speech at the founding of the Free Library Institution in that town. The would be orator declared that, although Dickens and Bulwer Lytton and Sir James Stephen were to precede him, he Intended to beat each of them on this occasion. He insisted that Mr. Fields should be seated directly In front of him so that he should Dot miss a single word. Later, as he rose, he looked at his friend as much as to say, "I'll show you what speaking is." He began fluently, was excellent for two minutes anfl then In the midst of a most earnest sentence stopped suddenly, gave a look of comic despair and sat down. "My boy," he said when the meeting was over "my boy, you have accidentally missed hearing one of the finest speeches ever prepared by u great British orator." "Some Aspects of Thackeray," by Lewis Melville. What He Wanted to See. It cannot be denied that the saddest thing In the world is a man trying to buy in a department store a garment for a woman. Discouraged before he begins, a walk through acres of garments which are none of his business depresses him still further. Saleswo- . men are pitifully tolerant, even kind. but his sense of inferiority grows. One unfortunate who tried to buy a eweater for a wife who was out of town did at last rebel. His first mistake was in language. "Thirty-six chest," he said. , "Thirty -six bust," corrected the young woman. At last tin a helpless tangle he bought meekly twhat he was told to buy. Then she asked, "Is there anything more I can t how you?" "Yes," he said solemnly, "the quickest way out." New York Sun. Thoughtful of Mother. Little Albert is a bright boy. In playiing the other day he upset a beautiful Imported flower bolder, a gift to his I mother from a friend who traveled abroad. I "There, see what you've done," his mother said, pointing to the fragments on the floor. "Yes, mother, but don't take 6ff your slippers. You might cut your feet," warned the lad. Philadelphia Times. v
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SENATE VACANCIES ARE TO
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UM
Retirement of Many Republicans May Lead to Democratic Control of the Upper Branch of the National Legislature Present Majority Is But Slight.
(Palladium Special) WASHINGTON, Sept. 18. j There ' will be an unprecedented number of vacancies in the United States Senate after March 4, and that the majority of the vacancies will be in seats now held by Republicans, is one of the political probabilities that is commanding the attention of politicians just at present. It is even predicted that the Senate, on the count of members actually entitled to sit after the next inaugura-
tion day, will likely be Democratic by j due to the fact that a 6econd vacancy reason of the number of Republicans -was produced after the nominations, by who will retire without their legisla-1 the ejection of Lorimer from the sentures choosing anybody to take their , ate, will be handled nobody as yet places. j knows. The state will be terrifically The senate stands today Republican : mixed, with the new party running by only eight majority. There are two ' like wildfire and certain to get a consenators to be elected in Illinois and siderable number very likely a pivotal two In Colorado, with prospects ex-j strength, in the legislature, cellent for a huge muddle in each i In Wyoming, Senator Warren, destate and serious chances of no elec-; spite the perfection of his machine tions. Each state has a vacancy at j and the long establishment of his powpresent, and in each the term of the ! er, has a big fight ahead. Governor
sole sitting senator will expire on March 1. The Progressive party is coming in with prospects of holding the balance
of power in a number of states. Take to get a showing in the legislature that Maine. The legislature was chosen j will compel serious consideration of last week. Judge Powers resigned his I their claims. seat on the bench two years ago to be j It's the same way in South Dakota a Republican candidate for the senate, j and Montana, and not very different The legislature went Democratic and j in Michigan, where Wflliam Alden he was left out. Powers is now a Pro- j Smith has the fight of his life for regressive says he is, anyhow. The election, while the Progressives are
legislature just chosen has thirty Progressive members, and it is claimed that they hold the balance of power. The Democrats will support Senator Gardner, the Republicans Governor
Burleigh. They are figuring up in in the Legislature a majority for eithMaine that the thirty Progressives ! er a regular Democrat or a regular are not under any obligation to sup- Republican will be impossible, port Burleigh, and that they may sup- Kansas and Nebraska are not likeport Powers, or divide among various ' ly to be deadlocked, according to preProgressives. In that event an elec- j sent advices. Nebraska has the Oretion may be prevented. If Governor- j gon plan, which pretty nearly assures elect Haines, with the state patron- j the selection of a senator and makes age, throws his influence to the Pro-; deadlocks impossible. That is one of gressives and it is intimated by the , the good things about the Oregon plan. Maine newspapers and politicians that i It will likely save both Oregon and he is going to do just that then the j Nebraska from bad musses, for in each election of anybody of the Burleigh the situation is such that, under ordi-
stripe is additionally unlikely. New Senator in Massachusetts. Massachusetts must elect a new senator in place of Murray Crane, who has taken himself out of it. The Bay Staters have been acting afraid of the cars. Sam McCall took himself out of the congressional race in his district supposedly to run for senator, but he hasn't announced himself, and there is suspicion that he will not. The Democrats claim they will carry the legislature, but the Massachusetts gerrymander is one of the most intri-
cate and effective, as befits the state j that all bets are off and may stay where that institution was invented, j off for a good many weeks after elecand it gives the Republicans such a tion. Senders is a Republican, named strong advantage that the state would ! to fill a vacancy.
have to go for Wilson by a pretty big plurality before the Democrats could seize the legislature. In a number of the rural and some of the industrial districts, moreover, the Bull Moose party stands a good prospect of electing members of the legislature. A large enough number of these to tie up the whole senatorial election is quite among the possibilities. That would mean a long fight and good chance for March 4 to roll around before anybody had been chos en. -1. A- V V V A LJ I U 11 U k'V . (V'l 1J,1V1V, has declined to be a candidate to succeed himself, and there was talk that Aldrich would ask to be returned if the legislature went Democratic. He has denied that he had aspirations, and even moved to New York to live, for the time being at least. There is a long row of aspirants on both the Democratic and the Republican side of tae party line, while the Progressives again insist that they are likely to hold the balance of power. New Jersey will need to elect a senator in place of Briggs, stand-pat Republican. Governor Wilson has declared against James Smith, Jr., who nevertheless is determined to fight it out. Congressman "Billy" Hughes has resigned his seat in the House to run for the senate, and is supposed to be the Wilson candidate. He was one of the Wilson floor leaders in the Baltimore convention, and back of that wash one of the most efficient workers for the Jersey governor in the contest for delegates. Jersey's legislature is a problem with, once more, the chance
SPECIAL GU
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EROUS NEXT YEAR
that it will be very close and that the Progressives will have a weight far out of proportion to their numbers. It will be recalled that Senator John Fairfield Dryden was finally beaten because a single Republican independent refused flatly to stand for him. New Jersey is used to that sort of close fights and has every prospect of one this time. In Illinois, Judge Lawrence Y. Sherman took the Republican nomination away from Cullom, and "Jim Ham" Lewis got the Democratic nomination. Nobody knows how the entanglement Carey is fighting Warren, and the whole north side of the state is reported in revolt against Warren. Once more the Progressives are expected active all over the state and the Democrats claiming they will control the legislature. Probably the Democrats will not do that, but if the third party ccmes in with a respectable strength nary circumstances, the legislatures would be pretty certain to be split into factions and a long fight precipitated. In North Carolina, it is just beginning to be realized, there is a situation that promises great difficulty in Choosing a senator; the state is developing a tremendouB Progressive strength, and there are three Democratic candidates for the Senatorial nomination. Tennessee has to choose a successor to Newell Sanders, and the situation there is so utterly mixed It will be observed that most of the places where deadlocks may intervene, the states now represented by Republicans. There is little prospect, save in North Carolina, of delay in selecting senators who will be Democrats succeeding Democrats. Thus the Democratic party stands to hold about all it now has, while the Republicans will be the victims in most of the possible deadlocks. IS A CANDIDATE M. D. Doddridge is a candidate for Commissioner from the Western Dlstrict, subject to the action of the Progressive county convention. Ton will never get on the sunny fcide by waiting for the world to turn round. Atlanta Constitution.
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JOINT CONVENTION OP PROGRESSIVES 9 At Connersville, Sept. 23. Candidates for County Offices Increase.
The following call for a joint district convention for Wayne and Fayette counties was received today: Pursuant to resolution in convention held in Richmond, September 3rd. The delegates and alternates selected for that convention are requested to. reconvene at Connersville, September 23rd, for the purpose of electing a Progressive nominee for joint representative for the place made vacant by Jas. K. Mason. Convention will assemble at 10 a. m. at the said city of Connersville, Monday, September 23rd. GEORGE R. CARTER, Chairman Committee. The list of active Candidates for various places on the Progressive county ticket grows daily. Two more candidates have come out for sheriff, Jacob Bayer and Jesse Bailey, formerly deputy sheriff. It is also reported that friends of Alfred Cutter are urging him to become a candidate for that office. M. Welch has announced his candidacy for treasurer. Cash Beall has resigned as chairman of the county Progressive finance committee owing to the fact he is a candidate for treasurer. Clifford Price succeeds Mr. Beall as financial chairman. RAINED ICY BULLETS. A Hailstorm In the Pyrenees Is a Serious Matter. In a letter to the London Times a traveler tells of a hailstorm that came upon his party In the Pyrenees, "it was as If night was devouring day before our very eyes a r.'.pUt. too. of tempest rud torn cud trailing clouds, of storm, smoke and thunder." Midway in the darkness was "the clear cut straight Hue of cloud which Invariably tells of hail." Except for the shelter of a small tree the travelers were exposed to the storm's fury, and when they examined the hailstones they found they were of the average size of marbles, with a scattering here and there of much larger 6tones. "ns large as golf halls." This, however, was merely the prelude. The real storm came after they had reached their tents. "Suddenly the whole land was bombarded by great hailstones as large as lawm tennis balls." These fell with deafening roar on the canvas of the tent, and "it seemed only a matter of a few seconds for us to be battered into the earth, tent and all." An India rubber bath in front of their shelter, "with its sides beaten down in places, was half full of things like white cricket balls.", , When the storm had finally passed the mountains around were white with the hailstones. The hall was weighed. "Six stones went to the kilo." The size was that of "a tennis ball and almost uniform." Seventy sheep were killed on the heights above the travelers' shelter, and in a neighboring valley thirty-five cows and some mules and the body of a child that had been wandering in the mountains "were brought down by a etream." Not Too Good. Uncle inquired of little Bobby If he had been a good boy. Bobby No. I haven't. Uncle Why, I hope you haven't been very bad. Bobby Oh. no; just comfortable. The Camden Sanitarium for the treatment of Rheumatism and Diseases of the Kidneys. Address: The Camden Sanitarium, Camden, Ohio. Gold Crowns $3.00 BIIUjC T Ul F ,....3.DU Full Sets $5.00 vioig rulings $1.00 up Silver killings 50c up Inlay Work a Specialty. Examination Free. All work Guaranteed. we not oniy ciaim, our nave inaisputami r.:.m"'.r.e:: extraction of teeth. New York Dental Parlors 90AYA Main St. RICHMOND, IND. v WEEK MAIN STREET
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MRS. C. BERNHARDT WILL CONTEST WILL
Dissatisfied with the $25,000 j Bequeathed Her by the Late E. G. Vaughan. It was learned today from sources ; that are considered authoritative that Mrs. Dorothy Vaughan Bernhardt, of j Indianapolis, is contemplating con-, testing the will of her grandfather. the late Edward G. Vaughan, who died J here a few weeks ago at an advanced . age. ! Under the will of her grandfather, j Mrs. Bernhardt, daughter of the late Frank Vaughan. was given $25,000, j and her mother $5,000. Ms. E. G. Vaughan, the widow, received $30,000, ( under a prenuptial agreement. The j residue of the estate was to be di- j vided between' Mrs. Mary Reynolds, of j Dayton, 'Ohio, and Walter Vaughan. the only two living children of Edward Vaughan. ! The value of the estate was said to ; be $20,000, but persons who are in a position to speak authoritatively, as- j sert that its real value is twice as j great. No legal action to break the will j has been filed in the Wayne circuit court. It is known, however, that the matter has been placed in the hands of local attorneys. W. C. T. U. CONVENTION Wednesday, September the 25th, the County W. C. T. U. convention will be held at the First Christian church, corner Tenth and South A streets. In the morning a business session will be held. In the afternoon, Mrs. M. F. Johnston, president of the Art association and a woman well known in club circles will talk on "Suffrage." Mrs. Hannah Stanley of Williamsburg, will also be a speaker for the afternoon. Mrs. Mary Sibbitt, known as the "Kansas Cyclone" and a woman of national fame as a temperance speaker, will address the meeting. The public is most cordially invited to attend the sessions. The program which is now being prepared will be announced later. WILL NOT RUN NEW CASTLE, Ind., Sept. 18. Joseph A. Greenstreet, Tuesday afternoon issued a statement declaring that he would not be a candidate for renomination as the congressional candidate of the Progressive party in the Sixth District at the convention to be held next Monday in Connersville.
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Two New York Gunmen Are Arraigned Today. (National News Association) NEW YORK. Sept. IS Harry Horowitz, hotter known as "Gyp the Blood," and "Lefty Louie" Rosentweig, the two gunmen charged with the murdor of Herman Rosenthal, the gambler, pleaded rot guilty and demanded an immediate trial today when they were arraigned before Justice Goff in the criminal branch of the supreme court. Justice Goff called the case of the two gunmen immediately upon their arrival in court, and their attorney entered a plea for them. The whole proceedings lasted but a few minutes and they were then returned to the Tombs. Palladium Want Ads Pav WHAT YOU BUY
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As a Candidate for Govern: in Minnesota. tXatlonat News Association) ST. PAUL. Minn.. Sert. IS. Ea? returns from the state-wide prinvfr vesterdav indicate that Gov. Eberhlt '.has been renominated, and that V. iSenator Knute Nelson has been - dorsed for re-election. Returns ap i coming in slowly. The polls did lit close until 9 o'clock at night. BOURNE NOT WANTED. SALEM. Ore.. Seut. 16. Jonath Bourne. l S. Senator from Oregoi. who failed of renominatlon by the Re publicans was defeated for the sairf office by the Progressives. A. 8 Ciark. a Portland attorney, was nominated for the sentorhip. A number of speakers denounced Bourne a nnt a true progressive. . , AND WHAT YOU GET Penslar Hair Tonic Eliminates Dandruff and' Scalp Irritations for you; otherwise we pay the moeayt back. WHITEN YOUR NECK Use Penslar Buttermilk Cerate that comes In the dainty white pot. Will not grow hair. 50c. iii(l!:iiit(nummini!:i(uiiii;iti'ti
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