Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 273, 20 September 1912 — Page 4
PAGE FOUIL
The Richmond Palladium and Son-Telegram Published e-d owned by th PAii.AUIUM PRINTINO Ok Iseued Every Evraiac Except kJunOay. Offjee Corner Nortb U and A atree. fWadlum and Bun-Telearam Phon UtMlneaa OHlce. !; ltwi Depart' nt. JUL RICHMOND. INDIANA Kaeelpa O. Lee Kaliee 8UBSCHIPTION TlfcRMr) n Richmond tt.O per year On nce) or lto par wee. yr. m advance ix months, in advance .... " unp month, la advance vf'l, changed m ettM as dealt; c?veiinW aBl oW ddrWM subwrlbwi will plea remit flder. w&a noold ba ! pecliud Urm;VnMW wUl dot M -u "ntU payment la receive. MAIL. HUBSCKIPTIOIfB n month, lo advance -5trd at Richmond. Indian. pot otrice aa second claaa bwU manor. New York Representatives Payne Iks'JS:u wiat "reel, and t5 Waat nd street Now Tori, N. T. dlcavo Representative- Payne ft Young-. 747.T4I Marquette BuUdlns. Chicago, III
flak A dAirilkflAa akf A maadfa i n A w rt ii.ri da. Vi - i 1 l J rllX wnnM ana cerwiev thaearcalatioaafthtanah. licalien. Th figures of cu-calatioa contained ia the Aeseciation' report only are guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers No. Whitehall Bld. H. T. City I State Ticket Nominated by Indiana Progressives For President, Theodore Roosevelt. For Vlco President. Hiram W. Johnson. Governor, Albert J. Beveridge, Indianapolis. Lieutenant Governor, Frederick Landis, Logansport Secretary of State, Lawson N. Mace, ScotE,drg. Auditor, H. E. Cushman. Washington. Treasurer, B. B. Baker, Monticello. Attorney General, Clifford P. Jackman, Huntington, State 8upt. of Public 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. Bloomington, Judge 8upreme Court, Fourth Division, William A. Bond, Richmond. Judge Appellate Court, First Division, Minor F. Pate, Bloomfleld. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A.NYE. WHO MADE HIM BAD? Old man Frltts ran away from his family when Johnny Fritts was nine years of age, and the Fritts family had a hard time to get along. The mother went out to work, and Johnny grew up with the weeds In the town streets. Whatever mischief might be done by the boys of the village most of it was laid to Johnny. Often the good wives lectured their young sons, using Johnny Fritts as the horrible example of wayward youth. Johnny's habits, indeed, were bad enough. He smoked and chewed and drank and swore, and nobody cared. One night a drug store was burglarized and cigars and whisky and a few stamps taken, whereat the local sleuths, working on the theory like father like son, arrested Johnny Fritts. He was sent to the reformatory on general principles. They did give old man Fritts" son a chance in the reform school, and Johnny became a model. After he bad been there a year with a perfect record he asked for a parole, to which he was entitled. They turned him down chiefly be- ' cause he was old man Fritts' son. Other boys who had committed graver crimes got their paroles on lesser showing. They had a pnll. Again, at the end of a second year, with a 100 per cent showing on conduct, Johnny Fritts asked for his parole, and it was refused. What was the use o.f being good? Young Fritts brooded over his un just treatment and became one of the worst boys in the reform school, and they put him in a little iron cage too narrow to sit down in eight hours at a stretch. Rebellious, defiant, a guard tried to punish him. and be killed the guard. Ha was sentenced to be banged and taken to the penitentiary. And there he met whom? Old John Fritts! Convict No. 3053 looked through the bars of the death room at convict No. 6019 and exclaimed, "My God! It's my Johnny! He has his mother's eyes!" Who made Johuny Fritts a criminal? Heredity in old Nelson Fritts, envi ronment in a neglected boyhood. Is that all? No! Add to heredity and environ ment the cruel injustice of a state! r BE NATURAL Some young people do not sufficiency understand the advantages of natural charms and how much they would gain by trusting to them entirely. Their tones and their gait are borrowed ; they study their attitudes before the glass until they have lost all trace of natural manner, and. with ail their pains, they please but little.
What Roosevelt Did.
On the editorial pages of standpat papers and from the mouths of reactionary stump speakera issues forth the inquiry; "What has Theodore Roosevelt ever done that he should be re-elected president of the United States?" Those papers and those speakers who ask that question know full well what Theodore Roosevelt did the seven yeara he occupied the White House and they know full well what he will do after he has been re-elected, hence the frenzied efforts on the part of Big Business and its press and oratorical peddlers of misinformation to defeat him. Theodore Roosevelt is their nemesis. He haunts them by day and night. It would take too much space to set forth all the beneflts the American nation has derived under the administration of Roosevelt, but his thirty-three notable achievements can be summarized as follows: 1. Extension of Forest Reserve. 2. National Irrigation Act. 3. Improvement of Waterways and reservation of water-power sites. 4. Heyburn Rate Act. 6. Employers' Liability Act. 6. Safety Appliance Act. 7. Regulation of railroad employes' hours of labor. 8. Establishment of Department of Commerce and Labor. 9. Pure Food and Drugs Act. 10. Federal Meat Inspection. 11. Inspection of packing houses. 12. Navy nearly doubled in tonnage and greatly increased in efficiency. 13. Battleship fleet sent around the world. 14. State militia brought into co-ordination with army. 15. Canal Zone acquired and work of excavation pushed with increased energy. 16. Development of civil self-government in insular possessions. 17. Second intervention in Cuba; Cuba restored to the Cubans. 18. Finance of Santo Domingo straightened out. 19. Alaska boundary dispute settled. 20. Reorganization of the Consular Service. 21. Settlement of the coal strike of 1902. 22. The Government upheld in Northern Securities decision. 23. Conviction of postofflce grafters and public land thieves. 24. Directed investigation of the Sugar Trust custom frauds, and the resultant prosecutions. 25. Directed prosecution of railroads and other corporations for violation of Sherman Anti-Trust Law (the Harriman, Tobacco and Standard Oil Suits.) 26. Keeping the door of China open to American commerce. 27. Bringing about the settlement of the Russo-Japanese war Treaty of Portsmouth. 28. Avoiding the pitfalls created by Pacific Coast prejudice against Japanese immigration. 29. Negotiating the twenty-four treaties of general arbitration. 30. Reduction of the interest-bearing debt by more than $90,000,000. 31. Paving the way for tariff revision. 32. Inauguration of movement for conservation of natural resources. 33. Inauguration of movement for improvement of conditions of country life.
Senator Simmons.
Mark Sullivan in his valuable page in Collier's this week, offers the following little morsel for thought: 'One of the most careful observers in Washington wrote this for the Denver Express: " 'Senator Penrose is following the footsteps of his predecessor, Mr. Aldrich, in trading across the party line when it comes to protecting the high tariff schedules. The other day, when the Pennsylvania Senator reported his suggested revision of the wool schedule . . . Penrose held a little informal meeting in the Senate lobby with Senator Simmons of North Carolina. The writer stood by and heard this conversation: Simmons: 'What do you want us to do? Do you need any votes?' Penrose: 'No, I think I can put it over; you fellows vote for your own bill.' Simmons: 'You don't need any of our votes then?' Penrose: 'No, you fellows vote for your own bill. I'll take a chance on putting it over and then I'll fix it up in conference.' "There have been many denials and near denials of this statement. Persons who understand the invisible government do not heed them; they know that this little situation pictures perfectly the relation between the reactionary Republicans and the reactionary Democrats."
In the paragraph appearing just below the extract reproduced above, Sullivan quotes from Woodrow Wilson and puts a pertinent question to the candidate: " 'If the Democratic party does not keep its promises now, it will never have another opportunity to do so.' Woodrow Wilson, speaking at Sea Girt on September 8. "Is Senator Simmons a man who can be depended on to keep Democratic promises?"
7his Is My 22nd Birthday . KATHLEEN PARLOW. Miss Kathleen Parlow, the famous violinist was born in Calgary, Alberta, September 20, 1890. As an infant she was taken by her parents to San Francisco and in that city, at the age of five years, she commenced the study of the violin. When sixteen years old she went to St. Peterszburg, Russia, where she continued her musical studies under the direction of Leopold Auer. Miss Parlow made her public debut in 1908 and has since played in nearly all of the principal countries of Europe and America. She has appeared before the Queen of England, the German Emperor and numerous other members of the European royal families. CONGRATULATIONS TO: Upton Sinclair, author of "The Jungle" and other stories, 34 years old toO.ay. Herbert Putnam, librarian of Congress, 51 years old today. Lloyd Bryce, United States minister to the Netherlands, 61 years old today. Gen. Charles N. Grosvenor, former Ohio congressman, 79 years old today. Sidney W. Wilson, president of the United Shoe Manufacturing Company, 58 years old today. Most Rev. Samuel P. Mateson, Arch
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I IVY THE WHOLCSgME BAKING POWDER
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bishop of Rupert's Land and Primate of All Canada, 60 years old today. Thomas L. Reilly, representative in Congress of the Second Connecticut district, 54 years old today.
This Date in History SEPTEMBER 20. 1797 U. S. frigate Constitution (Old Ironsides) launched at Boston. 1803 Sir Titus Halt, who discovered how to make alpaca cloth, born near Leeds, Eng. Died Dec. 29, 1876. 1848 American Association for the Advancement of Science held its first meeting at Philadelphia. 1854 The English, French and Turkish allies defeated the Russians at battle of Alma: 1857 Delhi, the once great capital of the Fogul Empire, captured by the British. I860 The American tour of the Prince of Wales (afterward King Edward VII.) began at Detroit. 1866 The Prince of Wales inaugurated a statue of Queen Victoria in Aberdeen. 1881 Chester A. Arthur took the oath of office at President of the United States. The sting of a reproach is the truth f It. Layer Cake is sure to be light, tender, evenly raised and of just the right texture if you use Rumford. The most delicate flavors are not injured Cakes are better in every way when you use
PRAISE THIS REMEDY FOR CONSUMPTION If the voluntary written words of grateful people, living in all parts of the country, praising Eckman's Alterative, a remedy for the treatment of coughs, colds, throat and lung troubles, are to be believed, this medicine Is certainly doing a vast amount of good for such sufferers. We state none but facts and give to you the names and words of praise of those who declare it benefited them in many cases coupled with the writers' statements that it restored them to health. This is a sample taken from many: St. Mary's Academy, O'Neill, Nebraska "Gentlemen: About seven years ago, I was attacked with the dreaded disease. Tuberculosis. I coughed unceasingly, could not sleep nor eat, even could not speak out loud and could do no work. I had three hemorrhages, raised blood most of the time and suffered with night sweats, fever and chills. A specialist of Columbus, Ohio, pronounced my case hopeless. "Nearly five years ago, I heard of your Alterative and procured some at once, with the result that I soon found myself restored to health. For the past four years I have been able to continue my teaching and though I have always had heavy school work, I am also able to perform much manual labor. I consider your medicine, if faithfully taken, a most excellent rem
edy for consumption. Mother Superior permits this testimonial." (Signed) SISTER MARIE. Sisters of St. Francis. Eckman'a Alterative is effective in Bronchitis, Asthma, Hay Fever; Throat and Lung Troubles and in upbuilding the system. Does not contain poisons, opiates or habit forming drugs. For sale by leading druggists. Ask for booklet of recoveries and write to Eckman Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa., for additional evidence. CHANGING THE SEASONS. In China It Is Summer When the fcmperor Says it Is. The emperor of China has some strange duties. One of these is the ordering of the seasons. It is summer in America when the sun warms the earth and not until then, but in China it is summer when the emperor says it is summer. As soon as the emperor declares that summer has come everybody in China puts off winter clothing and arrays himself in summer garb, no matter what his feelings on the subject may be. All domestic arrangements are made to suit the season as proclaimed by the emperor, although they may not suit the individual at all. The nearest approach to the Chinese system of ordering the seasons is the practice observed in France in all public buildings. There it is winter on and after Oct. 1. Fires are then lighted in all government offices, and the employees exchange their white summer waistcoats for the thicker and darker ones of winter. At that date the public libraries are closed at 4, and In the streets the sellers of toasted chestnuts make their appearance. In official France it is winter, no matter what the weather may say and no matter what unofficial France may think. New York Press.
Tested the Whole World Over and through three generations Beecham's Pills are universally looked upon as the best preventive and corrective of disorders of the organs of digestion and elimination ever known. They give speedy relief from the headaches, sour stomach, indigestion due to biliousness or constipation.
are no experiment They are too well known for that; and their mild and gentle, but sure action on the bowels, liver, kidneys and stomach, too well approved. If you are out of sorts take at once this famous remedy and you will endorse the good opinion of thousands you will know why Beecham's Pills so deservedly
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Specials All This Week Hams 17c lb. Bacon 16c & 17c lb. Boneless Cottage Rolls 17c lb. Boneless Cottage Butts 17c lb. Spring Chickens 18c lb. We have the best price on Lard in the city. Have You Tried Our Cincinnati Sausage? Wayne Produce Co. Phone 1377. . Comer 5th and So. A St
NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD
Theater ushers in Boston have tak- j .en steps to organize a union. Greater New York's thirteen gas 1 ; companies employ forty thousand per- s irons. ', ! In Arabia the pay of cooks and j house servenas runs from JS.30 to ' $13 20 a month. j Munich has women street cleaner : : There are women hod carriers through out Hungary. The International Spinners' Union i has expended more than $15,000 in strike and lockout benefits the past year. j There are three thousand womcr. clerks in the British postal service on salaries which begin at $325 and rist' , by $25 annually additions, to a maximum of $550. j The general price for laundering col i lars in Russia is five cents a piece, i The wages paid women are from $4 to i SS a month, with room and board in- ! eluded. In the year 1910 there were more ; than thirty-five thousand deaths from industrial accidents, while more than ' five hundred thousand more were injured during the same time, t The Central Trades and Labor Coun cil, of St. Louis, Mo., will make an effort to have the union label placed on coffins used in St. Louis. A new factory will comply with all the wishes of the unions. Declaring that their employers fail to pay them a living wage and that their tips are not enough to eke out fcuch, Des Moines waiters, waitresses end cooks have organized a local union of the American Federation of Labor. In Massachusetts there are 370,775 woman wage earners, one-quarter of the entire female population of the commonwealth. Of this number 91,000 are married women, three-quarters of whom are mothers with families averaging four children. Industrially Pennsylvania occupies jth foremost rank in the Union. Of a ! total population of about eight million j more than one million men, women i and children are wage earners, earn ing their livelihood in the coal mines, shops, mills and factories. In Prussia coal mines the usual underground shift, not counting descent and ascent, is eight hours, but in Upper Silesia it is 9.7 for hewers and rammers and 10.1 for other workmen; for surface workmen the hours range from 9.8 in State mines to 11.9 at Aix-la-Chapelle. The proposal of the English delegates to the International Miners' congress, meeting at Am6terday, In favor ! of a uniform working policy of not more than five days per week has been adopted. The next congress will decide on the date when the new regime shall go into effect. The city of Pinar del Rio, Cuba, is building fifty homes for workingmen similar to those recently built near Havana. The houses are to be allotted by a drawing and each lucky drawer will have a stated time to pay for the I home in installments and then he will gel. a deed to the land and house. According to the advance bulletin on manufactures just issues by the census bureau in 1909. the United I with wry fcea petat oat the romd to b 1th. COMPANY
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States had r6S,491 manufacturing establishments which gave employment during the year to an average of 7,67S.575 persons of whom $, 15,04$ wtre wage earners. These manufacturing establishment paid $4,365,613.tH in salaries and wages, and turned out produce to the value of $10,672,05J.000 to produce which materials costing $12,141,791 were consumed.
Notice Knollenberg's large Window for the Advance Ideas in Dress Goods.
5$gg Masonic ; Calendar 1 l!
Friday, St'lU. Chapter, No. 4. King Solomon's R. A. M. CUled convocation. Work in Mark Master degree. Saturday. Sept. 21. Loyal Chapter. No. 49, O. K. S. Stated meeting. Kxchange Social and refreshments. A SOUR, GASSY, UPSET STOMACH. "Pape's Diapepsin" regulates your stomach and ends Indigestion in Five Minutes. Wonder what upset your stomach , which portion of the food did the damage do you? Well, don't brother. If your stomach is in a revolt; if sour. gassy and upset, and what you Just ate nas iermentea imo biuuuuiu lumps; your head dizzy and aches; j belch gases and acids and eructate un digested food; breath foul, tongue coated Just take a little Diapepsin J and in five minutes you truly will , wonder what became of the Indiges- j tion and distress. j Millions of men and women, today! know that it is needless to have a bad stomach. A little Diapepsin occasion-. ally keeps this delicate organ regulated ' and they eat their favorite foods with-1 out fear. I If your stomach doesn't take care of your liberal limit without rebellion; if your food is a damage Instead of a help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless relief is Pape'a Diapepsin which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug stores. It'i truly wonderful it digests food and sets things straight, so genUy and easily that it is really astonishing. Please, for your sake, don't go on and on with a weak, disordered stomach; it's so unnecessary.
The Akron Sulky Corn Cutter la so very almplo In construction, so easily operated, so Inexpensive In coat and ao lacking In sjnkeap expense, that It Is eometlmea difficult to make farmer who are In need of an Implement to do the work which this cutter will do, realize that the Akron Sulky Com Cutter will do all that I claimed for It.
CUTS 6 TO 7 ACRES PER DAY NfJgWC. One customer say ha cut
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The Richmond Standard GASOLINE ENGINE
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RHEUMATISM TM CURED," SAYS JUDGE Crutches Cone Walk Aa Well Aa Ever Afttr Using Two SOent Bottles of Rhauma.. Read this, all victims of agonlxin Rheumatism. Read from one who wa a cripple what wonderful RHEUMA
will do. Leo II. Fihe ells It for only 0 cents a bottle and guarantee it for Rheumatism. Gout. Lumbago and Neuralgia"1, John Barhorst. Justice of the Peace of McIan Towcrhip, FL Loramie. Ohio, do hereby certify that alter treatment by three doctors without result. 1 have been cured of a very bad case of Rheumatism by using two bottles of RHEUMA. It is now two years since I used the remedy, and 1 am still aa well as ever. Previous to using RHEUMA 1 was a cripple, walking with crutches, and I feel it my duty to let other sufferer from Rheumatism know what It will do. Tha result seems almost mlaculoua to ma. 1 have advised RHEUMA to at least a dosen persons, and each one apeak aa highly of it as I . I will answer any one suffering from the disease If a wo-eent stamp is enclosed." May 31, 1912. g Your Feet Would Be 5 Proud to Wear a H Pair of 2 FELTMAN'S E TAN SHOES. QDOUD DDDGD JUST TELL US The AMOUNT of money and the TIME you want to us the same and we will make you RATES that can not be anything but satisfactory to you. We loan from $5.00 to $100.00 on furniture, pianos, teams, wagons, etc., without removal, giving you both the use of the money and security. Your payment! can b made In small weekly, bimonthly or monthly Installments to suit your Income- Call at our office, writ or phone If In aeed of money. THE STATE & LOAN INVESTMENT COMPANY Room 40, Colonial Bldg, Phone 2560. Richmond, Ind. Customers Say It Just Works Fine 16 shock in tea hour, thl was
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