Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 296, 17 October 1912 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THR RICHMOND PALLADJLM Mi SC N TV.h.lAi UAJt. TIII'RSD AY OCTOBER IT, 1912.

The Richmond ilhjijai end Son-Telegram Published kbd ewnnd oy the PALLADIUM PRINTI1G CO. Issued Every Evening tixcept una Of tic Cor nor North 9tn and A str Palladium and Bun-Teiearam frhone--Business Office, 2t; wi ilar. meat. 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA

Kaaolph . L.ea. BUBtfCHlPTlOW Tint" In Richmond e.0 per UB vance) or Ho par weest. rural uotriMa year, in advance .....-f"J blx months, m aa vance ... l"Z: use month, in adva&v ...- i;,tTi Addresa cb.an.red a oen tola new and eld addresses nM " a'ven. . Subscribers will cImm remit order, which should t given "51. Pacified term; naou will not 0 faX d until parent la received, MAI. SUBSCRIPTIONS One yea, n advance ., 5.0'i Six months. In advance ' On month, lc advanoe .......... Entered at Richmond. Indian v pe n office aa toi.nd class mtiU master. New York Representatives Payne A Toung, 80-34 West 3d street, and 59a& West. S2nd street. New York. Ji. Y. C. lea sro Representatives Payne ci Young,. 741-14 Marquette Building, Crlcaso. I1L aTl Tk Association of Ane filjlieail Advertisers bases V amioed and certified to tiie circulation ef this publication. The figures of circulation eontninexl in too Association's raport only are guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers No. ,c9- Whitehall Bldg. II . T. City Progressive Ticket For President, Theodore Roosevelt. For Vice President. Hiram W. Johnson. Governor, Albert J. Beverldge, Indianapolis. Lieutenant Governor. Frederick Landis, Logansport. Secretary of State, Law son N. Mace, Scottsburg. Auditor, H. E. Cushman. Washington. Treasurer, B. B. Baker, Monticello. Attorney General, Clifford F. Jackman. Huntington. 8tate Supt. of Public instruction, Charles E. Spalding. Winamae. Statistician, Thaddeus M. Moore, Anderson. Reporter Supreme Court, Frank R. 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, Bloomfleid. Congress. Gierluf Jensen, tihelbyville. Joint Representative. John Clifford, Connersville. Representative.;; John Judkins. Prosecuting Attorney. W. W. Reller. Sheriff. Jacob Bayer. Recorder. B. F. Parsons. Treasurer. Albert Chamness. Coroner. R. J. Pierce, M. D. Commissioner. (Eastern District.) Albert Anderson. (Wayne Township.) Commissioner. (Western District.) Mordecai Doddridge, (Washington Township.) Surveyor. Levi Peacock. AMATEUR SMUGGLERS. The Large- Part Anonymous Letter Play In Their Undoing. About 25 per cent of the amateurs caught smuggling are betrayed by anonymous letters written to the customs officers of the port of New York. This statement is made by the surveyor of the port of New York, who says: "Much of our Information concerning the amateur smugglers comes from anonymous letters. Discharged servants, envious dressmakers and jewelers, even friends, give the information which brings results. We get information from persona who have heard others Wasting of how easy it is to defraud the government These are chiefly trades people who hear their customers declaring how much cheaper they iniy buy their goods abroad. "Discharged servants write man.v anonymous letters. One letter I remember from a lady's maid contained such detailed account of the purchases of jewelry, dresses, trinkets and other articles that we knew were right in making a search. "Nearly all the attempts at smuggling by amateurs are the results of luxury and extravagance. They want to collect souvenirs and presents and pay no duties. The plea of ignorance Is no longer an excuse. The matter of paying duties Is talked about every day. "A woman arrived the other day and declared $300 duties to be sure she had everything right. We found only enough to charge her $350 in duties. She saved $150 by trying to be honest. . Nobody who plays fair with the United States will ever have any trouble on the docks of New York." New York World. Sick headache is caused by a disordered stomach. Take Chamberlain's Tablets and correct that and the headaches will disappear. For sale by all dealers. Advertisement. ELKS fleet Every ThuredayNight

That Hallelujah Chorus.

By this time Governor Wilson must regret that reckless talk about a hallelujah chorus of big monopolies behind Theodore Roosevelt in the Presidential contest. Of the big industrial combinations which the Democratic candidate pictured as the hallelujah chorus the only one Wilson could name when challenged to back up his rash accusation was the Steel Corporation. And even the Steel Corporation, according to Governor Wilson, was supporting Roosevelt only with its "thought." One of the most ardent Wilson journals, the Newark Evening News, deplored the failure of its hero "to draw the line sharply on the safe side of misstatement," and added, "it is a simple matter of history that Colonel Roosevelt's dearest foes have been the predatory corporations and their retainers." With these predatory corporations and their political retainers working tooth and nail against Roosevelt in the present campaign, and some of them willing even to brand themselves as lawbreakers and corruptionists in the desperate hope of smirching their enemy, the Wilson charge had to recoil on the enemies of the Progressive nomiuee. That silly charge could only emphasize what it did emphasize, that the predatory corporations are lined up either for Wilson or for Taft, but against Roosevelt. Governor Wilson failed to back up his accusation with even the single instance of the United States Steel Corporation, nearly all of whose directors are fighting Roosevelt either from the Taft or the Wilson camp. But Mr. Wilson did succeed in exposing his own weakness on the trust issue to attack. And Mr. Roosevelt has brought against Mr. Wilson a charge which he does not make idly or wildly, but which he supports with ample proof. Mr. Roosevelt charges that as governor of New Jersey Mr. Wilson has failed to take against the monopolies chartered by the State of New Jersey the very steps which he says are the steps that ought to be taken to check the evils of monopoly. Colonel Roosevelt quotes the law of New Jersey which says that the charter of any corporation may be altered, amended, or repealed by the legislature, and that it may also dissolve the corporation at its pleasure. In Wilson's term as governor of New Jersey no such action has been taken, and Mr. Roosevelt finds that Governor Wilson has never urged such action against the trusts by the legislature of the State which has chartered such trusts. Mayor Gaynor is quoted by Mr. Roosevelt for the statement that "four-fifths of the trusts of this country are organized and exist under this New Jersey statue. If the people want the trusts broken up or prevented they need only elect governors and legislators who will carry out their will and stay at home to do it." Again, Colonel Roosevelt quotes the law of New Jersey which provides for the criminal prosecution of officers of any corporation organized for the furtherance of any unlawful object. Governor Wilson has not enforced this law of New Jersey against any great monopoly. If these New Jersey laws are inadequate to deal with the corporations chartered by that State, Mr. WTilson as governor has done nothing to make the New Jersey anti-monopoly laws effective for the purpose. And yet Mr. Wilson strongly favors State action to regulate the great industrial corporations, three-fourths of which are chartered by the State of which he is governor and subject to the regulation of the governor and legislature of that State! Either the remedy proposed by Mr. Wilson is worthless or he has grossly neglected his duty to the State which has chartered the hallelujah chorus of great corporations and to the whole American population on which they prey. Surely the chief example of State regulation for trusts should have been set by the State which has chartered most of them. Surely the leading illustration of how to deal with monopolies by State authority should have been furnished by the most prominent advocate of that policy, who held the power to apply this remedy in his own hands. Yes as Mr. Roosevelt so truly says, Governor Wilson's record on trust regulation as governor of New Jersey is a blank. What he ha? clone undr his own program is '"exactly and precisely nothing." Washington Times.

This Is My 67 th Birthday JOHN J. GARDNER. John J. Gardner, one of the veteran members of the New Jersey delegation in the national house of representatives, was born in Atlantic County, N. J., October 17, 1845. He was brought up as a waterman until 16 years of age. Through his own efforts he succeeded in obtaining an education at the University of Michigan. At the age of 17, previous to entering college, he enlisted in the 6th New Jersey Regiment of Volunteers and served until the close of the civil war. He began his business career as a real estate and insurance agent i,n Atlantic City. He was elected an alderman of Atlantic City in 1867 and later served five terms as mayor. Then came a period of fifteen years as a member of the New Jersey senate, the longest period of service of any senator in the history of the tSate. He was elected to Congress from the Second New Jersey district in 1893, on the Republican ticket, and is now serving his tenth term. CONGRATULATIONS TO: Thomas F. Ryan, well known capitalist, 61 years old today. James R. Garfield, former Secretary of the Interior, 47 years old today. James R. Day, chancellor of Syra cuse University, 67 years old today. Vice Admiral Sir George le Clere Egerton, of the British Navy, 60 years old today. Earl of Selbourne, former British High Commissioner in South Africa, 53 years old today. Benefits Forgot. Alice What a rude, boorish fellow Mr. Brown la. Ethel What did he do. dear? Alice Why. he gave me his sent in the sfeet car without lifting hbi hat Boston Transcript

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This Date in His.ory

OCTOBER 17. 1777 British army under Burgoyne surrendered to the Americans at Saratoga. 1781 Richard M. Johnson, ninth vice president of the U. S., born at Brant's Station, Ky. Died at Frankfort, Ky., Nov. 19, 1850. 1797 Napoleon gained the Venetian dominations for France by the treaty of Carapo Pormic. 1803 The fortress of Agra, "the key of Hindustan," surrendered to the British. 1853 A filibustering expedition, under Col. William Walker, sailed from San Francisco to establish a pro-sla- ' very colony in Lower California. i 1889 Gen. John F. Hanfrandt, governor of Pennsylvania, 1873-79, died in Norristown, Pa. Born in New Hanover, jPa., Dec. 16, 1830. 1 1902 Lord Kitchener appointed to ! command the British forces in India, i 1908 Gen. Count Nodzu, famous Japanese soldier, died in Toklo. Born in 1844. The Masonic Calendar L Friday, Oct. 18. King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M., called convocation; work in Royal Arch degree. Refreshments. Saturday, Oct. 19 Loyal Chapter, No. 4!); O. E. S. Stated meeting. Saturday, Oct. 19, O. E. S. has initiation and basket supper. Cascaret tonight will surely straighten you out by morning a 10-cent box will keep your head clear, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular and make you feel cheerful and bully for months. Don't forget your children their little insides need a good, gentle cleansing, too, occasionally. -ANY DRUG STORE CENT WOF .

HEAD STUFFED? GOT A COLD? TRY PAPE'S

One Dose Pape's Cold Compound Gives Relief Cure in Few Hours. You will distinctly feel your cold breaking and all the Grippe symptoms leaving after taking the very first dose. It is a positive fact that Pape's Cold Compound, taken every two hours, until three consecutive doses are taken, will end the Grippe and break up the most severe cold, either in the i head, chest, back, stomach or limbs. It promptly relieves the most miserable headache, dullness, head and nose stuffed up, feverishness, sneezing, sore threat, running of the nose, mucous catarrhal discharges, soreness, stiffness and rheumatic twinges. Get a 25-c package of "Pape's Cold Compound" from your druggist and take it with the knowledge that it will positively and promptly cure your cold and end all the grippe misjery; without any assistance or bad after effects, and that it contains no quinine don't accept something else said to be just as good. Tastes nice acts gently. (Advertisement) Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. PTYE A SONG THAT LIVES. j To write something that will live and be sung by little children long after you are dead Gus Fischer did that. You never heard of Gus Fischer I William G. Fischer of Philadelphia? j Well, no matter. He died the othet day. and I want to say. though the dis- j patches gave as his obituary just three lines. I should rather have written his! one successful song than to be the author of the best seller of the season. You may be world weary or blase. you may have been out of Sunday school these many years, but ! Remember how your feet hung from the church pews halfway to the floor? You see. In those days there was no' primary department with separate room and low chairs and tables and group teachers. Remember the superintendent? He looked so different in his Sunday clothes from week day Will Smith. He .smiled so much more, for one thing. How snappily he banged bis desk bell for order! And there you are, dressed in your Sunday best, and you hold the hand of your little sister, and the other hand grips the big red penny for the poor heathen children over the sea. How solemnly grand the little cabi net organ on the platform! "Now. children," smilingly shouts the superintendent, "let us all stand up and sing No. 23." Ami No. 23? Why. that was Gus Fischer's song, which we all knew and all could sing: I love to tell the story, 'Twill be my theme In gloryTo tell the old. old story Of Jesus and his love. You did not know what the "theme in glory" might be. but your childish treble rang out strongly and helped to swell the chorus. Don't you remember? Now. there's nothing classic about Gus Fischer's production, and it has no great melody. It never lent Itself to the village band 4ike the smooth melody of "Safe In the Arms of Jesus." bntIt is safe to predict that so long as there are children to sing it sc long will that song be used. Gus Fischer will write no more. Is It profane to fancy that, whatever may be his "theme in glory," be must sometimes pause and listen to hear the children sing his song of the old, old story? Sore Throat Cure. To core Sore Throat quickly, safely and surely yon must use a remedy made for that special purpose. TON SI LINE is simply a Sore Throat Cure. It doesn't perform miracles but it does do it whole duty in curing throats which are sore. TONSIL1NE is an antiseptic, kills the Sore Throat germs and corrects the conditions which produce Soro Threat and like diseases. The first dose gives reliaf, and a few doses cure. A quick, safe, soothingr, healing, mtiseptic cure for Sore Throat briefly deecribes "TONSILINE, 25 cents and 50 cents. Ilospital Size $1.00. All Druggists. CAFE 12 Free Fried Oysters Saturday afteraoon and evening, any style at any time. Oyster Sandwich, 5c. Chile Con Carne, 10c. 512 MAIN STREET SEE OUR FIXTURES, DOMES, SHOWERS Varied assortment from which to choose. No old stock. CRANE ELECTRIC CO. 12 North Fifth. Phone 1061. WE PAY SI PER SET FOR TI7I?TI OLD FALSE 1 HHi 1 O. wbJca are of no valae to you. Highest prices paid for old Gold. Silver. Old Watches, Broken Jewelry. Precious Stones. Money Sent by Return Mail Phila. Smelting & Refining Co. Established 20 Tears MS Chestnut St, Philadelphia, Pa.

THE STATE PRESS.

WAS HE SINCERE? What manner of man is Roosevelt? Never was there another like him and perhaps that is why, in part, that his acts and motives are so misunderstood and misconstrued. "I will make this speech if I die," he said last night against the protest of his physician. "Braggart!" Many narrow men would say.' But where would be the motive? Though apparently cooler than any of those about him, probably Theodore Rocsevtlt as fully comprehended his own dangerous condition as any. And if the end was near he had a message that he did not wieh to leave unspoken. He wanted to tell his audienct and his country while standing in the shadow of death, thinking that then at least they would believe, that the cause he strove for was a righteous cause; that he was in the cause with his whole heart. And what was that cause? "A movement," he called it. "for the betterment of mankind, the movement for the making of life a little easier for all our people, a movement to try to relieve the burdens of the man, and especially the woman, iu this country, who is most oppressed." That was a part of his message. How well it fitted with his words a short time before, words that probably saved the life of the miserable being who had shot him. when he said to his friends and the mob who were upon the assassin "Don't hurt him, I am all right." There was no bitterness in his words that followed when he told his hearers in substance that the ripened fruit of the bitter newspaper campaign carried on against him for months might inspire such a deed. It was the natural thing, he 6aid, that brutal and vicious minds and minds that were weak, should be affected by it. This speech of Roosevelt though uttered haltingly at times will live after many of his more brilliant utterances are forgotten, because the great unselfish heart of the man is revealed. I Only the truest sincerity can withstand such a test. His coolness, too, throughout the whole trying episode, is marvelous. Let his critics before renewing their assaults, should he fully recover from his wound, put themselves in his place mentally, and maybe their venom will be tinctured a" little with shame. Connersville News. A COMPARISON. State House Democrats now are making the same arguments to acSpecial Tonic Offer Free A 50 Cent Box Why oh why, do you keep putting off writing us for our free 50-cent box of MahmMan Tonic TabUul If you really knew what happiness, strength and added years these tablets have brought into thousands upon thousands of lives all over the world, you wouldn't hesitate one minute you'd investigate at once the true merits of these wonderful health-giving, pure-blood-making tablets. There are more Malta-Man ionic TabUtt sold each year than any other tonic in the world and we've gained this great following simply through our generous plan of giving away the first box freeall we want is a test you see the results within a few days. If you are weak and nervous: sleep poorly: keep on losing weight: your stomach and digestive organs constantly out of whack in short, if your system is run down and you need a tonic to help build it up, you will make no mistake by trying- Mahm-Man Tonic Tablmlt and we are willing yes. anxious, to send you a 50-cent box absolutely free. Simply send us this coupon and you will thank your lucky stars that you saw this advertisement and that you did not let this opportunity pass. o it today at once. Mahm-Man Tonic Tablmtt are sold at all Drug Stores. 50c a box on a guarantee or money refunded. l'"" CUT OUT THIS COUPON mikf.hai TAni.rrm.. nmi. ill 20ft Make-Man Bid., Chicaao. 111. I hafe-aaveruied Make-Man TbleU before and wiah to receive, free, a full-i fio box. Druggist's Kama .. . . My Mama.. ! Addrens - .- - i-vt,- i mmmmmmmmmm Om km wily to meh famU mamammmmmmr cl Dictionary and reaeire P The S4.0Q . e Q-a a , m cu arc ways iihi color plates, at this office The S3.00 WEBSTXHIAN 1912 " I . - "'-,ta - witn square

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count for the higher cost of Democratic Btate administration that were made in 1908 and 1910 by the Republicans who were then in power. ' It is amusing to note their change of tune. In 1903 and 1910 these Democrats were charging that the Repub-

j llcan under Hanley were wildly extravagent. As to that the record stands, and the people may judge for i themselves. The Hanley administration spent large suras of money. In lf'OS. fcr example, the disbursements net. ran to a point near $3,000,000, and this included more than 11,600,0 ;0 of permanent improvements. The year 1903 was a grtat building year, democrats said the Republicans unj der Hanley were wildly extravagent. j Having it from the Democrats themj selves that the Hanley administration ! was "extravagent" in a hundred places, and having the biggest Hanley ; year, 1908. as a measuring standard, what is to be found under Democrats? ; In 1910 under appropriations made by a Democratic House and a Republican Senate, and signed by a Demi ocratic governor, the disbursements, 'ntt. were $500,000 more than in 190$, the biggest Hanley year, and the largest year in the history of the state. , The record shows that the Democrats and Republicans, in 1910, under Democratic appropriations. disbursed $500, 000 more than the "extravagent" record of 1908. This never has been explained by any economy rule the Democrats have been able to devise. What happened in 1911, an all-Democratic year? In 1911 the disbursements were not even confined to money actually available for use in 1911. The $92,000 general balance of

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RICHMOND PALLADIUM

OCTOBER

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F.sprienr? U the extract of suffer'jjk - Arthur Help. Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter, and after th first application you will aay It was the best investment you ever made. Your hair will immediately take on that life, lustre and luxuriance which is so beautiful. It will become wavy and fluffy, and have the appearance of abundance; an Incomparable gloss and softness, but what will please you most will be after Just a few week's use. when you will actually see a lot of lne, downy hair1 new hair growing all over the scalp. Phone No. 1760 say style eaehsae. easreas EXTEMSE It-aO. from day to day.) th nricnttal nub. T by tne woria s gold on back and t rnirn ana comfn m contents, there 4 uiicc I rpages ol I n, -j Present Tit r r-i and the i plaio cloth bit- 5 stamped aa goiS 5 . plate I littcd. SUt s

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