Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 298, 19 October 1912 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

IHK RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN TELEGBA31, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1912.

The Richmond Palladium and San-Telegram Published fcbd ewnd Dy tne PALLADIUM PKINTINO Oi. issued Every Evening- Eixeept buno. Of (lea Corner North th and A strae Palladium and Sun-Telearam Phone Uujlnesn Office. Sets; liewa Department. 1121. RICHMOND. INPIANA

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New York Representatives Payne Younff. 30-34 West 33d street, and 2SS West 82nd street. New York. N. T. Chicago Representatives Payne Young-, 747-743 Marquette Building. Chicago. JJL

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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,

Lawson N. Mace, Scottsburg. Auditor, H. E. CuBbman, Washington. Treasurer, B. B. Baker, Montlcello. Attorney General, Clifford P. Jackman, Huntington. 8tate 8upt. of Publio Instruction, Charles E. Spalding, Wlnamac. Statistician, Thaddeus M. Moore, Anderson. Reporter 8upreme Court, Frank R. Miller, Clinton. Judge Supreme Court, First Division, James B. Wilson, Bloomlngton. Judge Supreme Court, Fourth Division, William A. Bond, Richmond. Judge Appellate Court, First Division, Minor F. Pate. Bloomfleld. Congress. Glerluf Jensen, Shelbyville. Joint Representative. ; John Clifford, Connersvilla. Representative. John Judkins. Prosecuting Attorney. W. W. Reller. Sheriff. Jacob Bayer, Recorder. B. F. ParsonB. Treasurer. Albert Chamnesa. Coroner. R. J. Pierce, M. D. Commissioner. (Eastern District.) Albert Anderson. (Wayne Township.) Commissioner. (Western District.) , Mordecai Doddridge, (Washington Township.) Surveyor. Levi Peacock.

FEASTED ON LOBSTER.

Vie Did It on the Sly and Repentod Sorely Afterward. Come years ago the government transplanted about 20,000 eastern lobsters in Monterey bay. Before shipping wooden pegs had been pnt in their claws so that they couldn't fight with each other en route to this coast. Before transplanting those in charge neglected to remove the wooden pegs, with the result that the lobsters all died. The government accordingly sent another shipment and this time saw that the pegs had been removed before planting the lobsters. Some time thereafter the Albatross steamed Into Monterey bay, under the command of the United States fish commission, looking for results of the transplanting. Lobster traps were set it different points, but nary a lobster was captured. The government then posted notices offering $2,000 for a specimen of the transplanted lobsters. Two years passed. A Santa Cms fisherman, out in bis little smack, caught one of the lobsters. Then, thinking that there was a law against catching them, he sneaked the lobster to his home, cooked it. ate It and destroyed all evidence. Later he divulged the secret to some other fishermen. I caught a lobster sixteen inches long." be said. "What!" they exclaimed. Yea. and I was afraid to sell it, so I ate It myself." "You ate it?" "Yea" And they broke to him the sad news that there was a reward of $2,000 for a sample lobster from the bay. "And 1 had a $2,000 meal" said the fisherman and fainted. San Francisco Chronicle.

Infantile Mortality. Fifteen out of every hundred chi! dren born In England die before reai-b ing one year of age.

J. W. Copeland. of Dayton, Ohio, purchased a bottle' of Chamberlain'? Cough Remedy for his boy who had a

cold, and before the bottle was all used the boy's cold was gone. Is that

act better than to pay a five dollar doctor's bill? For sale by all dealers. Advertisement.

Indiana Must Do J ts Duty. It's up to the people of Indiana to elect Albert J. Beverldge, governor of the state. The Commoner may sneer at him, the yellow press may hurl its mud at his head, and the frightened political leaders of the Democratic and Republican parties may slander him to their heart's content, but the great bulk of the American people who have triumphantly cast off the shackles of partisan bondage and who are demanding real men to direct the government of this nation, are looking to Indiana to return Mr. Beverldge to public life, where he, and other men of his type, are so badly needed, to take the places of the Smoots, the Guggenheims. the Simmons, the Penroses and the Warrens. Speaking for the emancipated American public two great, and powerful journals, the Saturday Evening Post and Collier's Weekly, the former strictly non-partisan, the latter supporting both Roosevelt and Wilson, have called upon the Indiana voters to give Mr. Beverldge the rewards he so richly deserves. The leading editorial in the Post this week follows: BEVERIDGE IN INDIANA. "The political system in Great Britain is national as distinguished from our local one. Thus, any man whose services are notably important to the nation is quite sure to be retained in public life irrespective of how elections may go in his own neighborhood. No doubt in the last two hundred years, as many illustrious members of the House of Commons have been sent there by constituencies far from their places of residence as by their own districts. Under such a national system Albert J. Beverldge, of course, would never have been retired from the senate by the mere passing chance of a cIobo election in Indiana, for at that time there were hardly half a dozen members of the Upper House whose services to the nation were as valuable as his. "If the nation could have voted, how many Heyburns, Warrens, Tillmans. Lorimers would it not gladly have swapped for the Indianian? "Since then he has done good service notably in delivering, at Chicago, the best political speech of recent times. We believe that speech, brilliantly summing up a broad condition and a high aspiration, will become classical. The ability it displays is not of the sort that thoughtful persons of any party would willingly see lost to our political life. "Beverldge is again before the people of Indiana as a candidate. We hope they will perform a service to the nation, as well as to themselves by electing him."

William Jennings Bryan.

Every man and woman in the immense crowd that filled the coliseum last evening thoroughly enjoyed thcaddress delivered by William Jennings Bryan. It was entertaining and witty, and, occasionally. Instructive, but it is doubtful if the Commoner changed many votes. As a whole the address was confined to praise of the Democratic, party. Most of the great issues of the campaign were dealt with in an unsatisfactory manner, being passed over lightly with a Jest to amuse his audience and divert their minds to less important topics, which he would jump into rapidly, giving a rare display of mental gymnastics. Some pertinent questions were asked of the Commoner by Mr. Beveridge Thursday night. The questions were vital and important in determining the Issues of the campaign. They were answered by Mr. Bryan to the effect that Mr. Beveridge had stood by Wall street all the time Mr. Ralston was supporting Mr. Bryan in his fight against Wall street; that Beveridge was an insincere reformer, and that "he would leave Mr. Ralston to take care of Mr. Beveridge." Mr. Bryan's failure to deal with state issues in a more logical and explanatory manner was not treating the crowd fairly, for the greater part of the audience had heard Mr. Beveridge treat these issues in a clear, concise way and they came last night to hear Mr. Bryan discuss the Democratic viewpoint in the same intelligent manner. Mr. Bryan is beloved and respected in Wayne county as he is all over this republic, but his attitude in this campaign, as illustrated in his address here last night, is not particularly admired by hundreds of his friends In this locality. He has been praising weak and unfit candidates on the Democratic ticket when silence on his part was best. His slogan, in his fight to put Wilson in the white house, has been: "My party, may it ever be right, but my party, right or wrong." In this state while thousands of Indiana people have condemned the attitude of the Indianapolis News Mr. Bryan has praised that paper; knowing full well Mr. Beveridge to be a courageous and incorruptable man, he has called him fraud and hypocrite and in the same breath has praised Sam Ralston, knowing him to be the creature of the worst type of bosses dominating the Democratic party Tom Taggart, the man to whom Democracy paid tribute by permitting him to name one of his own henchmen a candidate for vice president. The Progressive party's platform, that remarkable declaration of human rights, Mr. Bryan has been carefully avoiding. To compare it with the platform drafted by the Democratic party as a sop of Wall street, would be, Mr. Bryan realized, hazardous to the cause the Commoner is fighting for.

man is nevertheless a standpatter and was quite prominently occupied with the campaign that ended in the county commissioners going back on their promise and denying the Progressives any representation at the voting booths. Time was when young Mr. Shiveley gavc promise of developing into a Progressive. Back in 1905 he was one of the leaders in the fight against Dr. Zimmerman and contributed largely to the defeat of the Republican candidate for mayor that year. Mr. Shiveley at that time was either interested in reforming our municipal government or in assisting in the overthrow of H. C. Starr, the boss of the Republican machine and member of a very prominent competing law firm. Mr. Shiveley has neve "insurged" since that memorable campa'gn. On the contrary he appears to have taken a post graduate course in standpatism and graduated with high honors at the head of his class. He is up-to-the-minute in all the modern parlance of standpatism. Because the Palladium and Item print the truth about the action of the county commissioners which action Mr. Shiveley assures us was eminently fair and satisfactory and because we comment strongly on the perfidy of promise breaking and point out the manifest danger to the Progressive . cause which will not be represented when Its votes are cast. Mr. Shiveley accuses us of using terrorism. , The Palladium is not inclined to take a harsh view of young Mr. Shiveley's outburst. Were we one of the few to remain on a derelicit ship whose rotten planking was finally giving away, breathing the putrid fumes of decay and mortification thrust forth from the hold by the inruch of water, purblindly declining aid of the ef?'?rnt, sife nnd up-to-date vessel in the offing because it bears the name "Progreff fve." yet pridefully hating to admit to the years' long travesty of sham and mock battling by taking to the already crowded raft "Democrat." riding heavily just to leeward and in imminent danger of going to pieces under the hammerings of the big seas of Unre6t despite the steadying hand of Ae Peerless Pilot over the hand of the New and Untried Navigator at the long sweep tiller doubtless were we in such a predicament with Precedent at our elbow telling us that her cousins the Fates, were present for another great day of reckoning, we too would give vent to our soul's peevishness of dispair and humiliation. Therefore, we sympathize with young Mr. Shiveley. Were it possible we would push back the hands of Time to 1905 when he "insurged" against local municipal conditions and bid him carry the same spirit through life and scorn the proffers and blandishments of the false god "Standpat." However, and alas, that is one of the impossibilities accomplished only In fairyland". Mr. Shiveley in his present predicament, however, still serves some good. He is a living warning to other young men of Richmond and Wayne county of the fate that ultimately overtakes those who serve ths god of "Things as they are" and the goddess of "Let well enough alone," who married and bore that monstrous child "Standpat." Those "saddest w. rds it might have been" apply with awful force to this young man. And we beset eh all Progressives to bear with him in the spirit that ht'lda out thehelping hand to the lame, the halt and the blind. Don't, oh do not, hani him the frosty mit.

This Date m Hisiory

"GASGARETS" FOR A SICK, SOUR STOMACH. Gently cleanse your Stomach, Liver and Bowels while you sleep.

asset a a, i. aw a a. V fca V UltVU V-'a I ... . , aW Woman's Suffrage party met at Wor- "id nd Ioul lhat n " lhe

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OCTOBER 19. 1630 First general court In America helt at Boston. 1745 Dean Swift, author of 'Gulliver's Travels," died. Born Nov. SO, 1667. 1781 Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, Ya.

Icester, Mass. 1905 Japan extended an enthusiastic welcome to the American battleship fleet. 1911 Miss E. F. Pendleton installed as president of Wtliosley college.

i his isA.y 51st h.rJida

WILLIAM J. BURNS. V.V.l'.am J. Burns, probably the best

known detective in America, was lira in LiaiLiaon . tK:. ii, isll. of It.sh i-art.nt..te. li t, tdmatlon was rtciinu m tno public scUooU of Columbus, O. He was first employed as a clerk in a stcrt. and his next business step was in detective work. In 1SS5 he helped to unearth tally sheet I forgeries in Columbus and Cincin-

! r.ati. his first notable case. For 22 ' years, up to 1903, Mr. Burns was in the

Federal secret service and handled . many big cases for the government. ! 10 1S99 he ran down the I'hiladelphlaI.ancaeter counterfeiters, who had robbed the government or $250,000 through ccunterfit cigar stamps. A few years later his investigation into land frauds resulted In the conviction lot" numerous high public officials, in- ; eluding a United States senator. Here recent among the notable exploits of Mr. Burns was the gathering of the

nervousness, nausea. Moating after eaticg. feeing ct fullness, dlztiness and sick headache, means a disordered ftoraacb, which cannot be regulated until ycu remove the cause. It Isnt our stomach's fault. Your stomach is as good as any. Try Cascartts: they Immediately cleanse and r gulate the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul tanes; take the i xcesjj bile from the liver and carry eff lha constiiwtvd waste mater and poUcn from the intestines and bowels. Then your stomach trouble is ended. A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning a lOcent box from any drug store will keep your stomach swett; liver and bowels regular for months. Don't Icrget the children their Httle insides need a good, gentle cleansing, too. t A l crtlem-nt

evidence that resulted In the conviction of the Los Angeles Times dynamiters.

Congratulations to: Earl of Longford. 48 years old today. John 11. Finley. president of the college of the City of New York. 41 years old today. Col. Sir John llanbury-Williams, former military secretary to the Governor-General of Canada. 53 years old today.

News Forecast For Coming Week

Condolence to Ray K. Shively Ray K. Shiveley in a communication to the Item last evening defended the action of the county commissioners in breaking up their promise to appoint Progressive inspectors, and further declared that the Palladium and Item were the real political bosses of Wayne county and were maintaining their position as such by terrorism .tactics. It may be necessary to explain that Mr. Shiveley, the junior member of the law firm of Shiveley and Shiveley, while a comparatively young

i WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 19. Although election day itself Is only three j weeks off, the national campaign oc- ! caslons no more excitement than it did two months ago. As yet there are

no indications of the proverbial I "whirlwind finish." The candidates Roosevelt and Johnson, Wilson and ( Marshall, with a host of lesser lights I who have been intrusted by the several parties with the work of spell- ; binding, will continue on the stump, but as the entire country has now been ' pretty well covered it is hardly to be expected that the campaign tours will ; attract more attention than hereto- ! fore. So far as his plans have been anj nounced President Taft has no imjportant public engagements for the ; week. It is expected he will journey on I Saturday to Cambridge Springs, Pa., j to deliver the principal address at the dedication of the Polish National Al- ! liance College there. The institution is the first college of the Polish Nai tional Alliance in this country and the

total membership of 100,000 of that organization scattered throughout the United States will unite to make the dedication a memorable event. Another event of the week of interest in educational circles will be the inauguration of Dr. Stratton D. Brooks as president of the University of Oklahoma. The inauguration will take place Monday and will be made the occasion for a gathering of noted educators from all parts of the country. The Commerce Court has fixed Thursday as the time for hearing ar-

Religion and Medicine

guments on the constitutionality of the order of the Interstate Commerce Commission requiring the oil pipe line companies to file schedules of their rates for transporting oil. The case of Clarence S. Darrow, the noted attorney charged with jury bribing as a result of developments in the trials of the McNamaras for the Dynamiting of the Los Angeles Times building, is scheduled to come up in Los Angeles Monday for its second trial. The entrants in the international

balloon race for the James Gordon Bennett trophy will gather at Stuttgart, Germany, at the end of the week in readiness for the start of the contest. The United States, Germany, Belglum, France, Austria and Switzerland will be represented by three balloons each; Italy by two, and Denmark, England and Russia by one each. The National Dairy Show will have its opening in Chicago Thursday. More than a dozen national associations con

nected with the dairy industry will hold their conventions in Chicago during the week of the show. Other important gatherings of the week will be the International Dry Farming Congress at Lethbridge Alta., the annual meeting of the American Missianary Association, at Buffalo, and the annual convention of the association of Railway Electrical Engineers.

Fads for Weak Women

. . . ... j . . Al

Nine-tenths of all the sickness ot women ts due to some Brrmitmrai v. ease ot the organs distinctly feminine. Such sickness can be cured is cured every day by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription It Makes Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well. It acts directly on the organs affected and is at the same time a general restore. tive tonic for the whole system. It cu-es female complaint nht in the privacy of home. It makes unnecessary the disagreeable questioning, examinations and local treatment so universally insisted upon by doctors, and to abhorrent to

every modest woman. We shall not psrticultrize here as to the symptoms ol those peculiar affections incident to women, but those wanting full information as to their symptoms and means of positive cure are referred to the People's Common Sense Medical Adviser 1008 pagea. newly revised and up-to-date Edition, sent frtt on receipt 031 one cent stamps to cover cost of wrapping and mailing uly, in French cloth binding. Address : Dr. R. V. Pierce, No. 663 Msin Street, Buffalo, N. Y.

Contractors Are Hustling We know from experience that he must have odds and ends ot all kinds of building material, and MUST HAVE STUFF QUICK We are ready with a full line of builders' supplies. Lumber. Cement and Sewer Pipe WILL DELIVER RIGHT AWAY Siilaiher Brothers Co.

Iff- If mm Q Wwv mm Iff w! 4!

S. B. HARTMAN, M. D. Is there any intimate relation between religion and medicine? Yes. there is. The old-time healer was always the priest. Theology and medicine have not maintained a separate existence very long. They used to be one. Yes, there is an intimate relation between religion and medicine. It is well known ct a person who eats with unthankfulness and illnatured spirit, that his food will not have the same effect as if he were in a kindly mood. The same is true of medicine. If a person swallows a medicine with suspicion, has no faith in its action, is more or less afraid of the one who gives him the medicine, it cannot do him as much good as if he had unwavering faith in it. The mind has a wonderful influence over the body. Those who believe that a loving Father controls the destiny of mankind are a great deal better prepared to meet the vicissitudes of

life and to overcome disease than the one who has no such faith. A truly religious man makes a better patient than an irreligious man. In using the word religion I am not referring to any particular kind of religion. The Jew and the gentile, the Catholic and the Protestant, each have a religion in which they believe. They also agree in the essentials. A religious man may believe that it is necessary for him to use every means in his power to get well. He may believe that it is perfectly proper for him to employ doctors and take medicines. But he also believes that when he has done the best he can there is a higher power that has charge of his affairs, that absolute justice will be done him, that no evil thing can befall a good man. He goes forward with confidence, sick or well, rich or poor, and gets a great deal more confort out of life than the man who has no religion. I have found myself saying many times to people who have a chronic ailment, "You need religion as well as medicine. You need faith in an overruling providence that guides

everything to wise ends; that the af

fliction of disease teaches a lesson that every one should strive to learn." This does not mean that sick people are to sit down and trust that an overruling providence will de everything. Nothing of the sort. He is to use remedies guided by his best judgment but in the use of them he can believe that all things are well and that in the end all things will come out right. Any medicine has a better chance to cure a man who holds such 'a faith. Some men are so faithless and unbelieving, so restless and desparate, their minds so unsettled, that even the best medicine has litle chance to do them any good. Therefore I say that religion is often quite as necessary as medicine, that the want of religion frequently defeats the action ot the beat medicine. Many a chronic invalid has search

ed in vain for a physical remedy simply because he has lost his grip on vital religion, the religion that not only provides salvation in the world to come, but soundness of mind and body in the world that is. ! Yes, there is a most intimate re-! lation between medicine and religion. Other things being equal, the irreligious man stands a poor chance of getting well when he is sick, while the religious man frequently gets well In the most astonishing way after the doctors have all given him up to die. With a firm faith in a rational religion and an obedient use rf the right remedy a great many hopeless invalids could be restored to perfect health. Well, you have made It clear as to what you mean by religion. But what is the remedy you would recommend? Of course I would recommend different remedies for different conditions. But the particular remedy that I am interested in at this time, the remedy that meets more chronic ailments than any other remedy I know

. of, is Peruna. Peruna Is a remedy for that multitudinous group of ailments that are dependent upon catarrhal

derangements. I am furnishing a book on catarrhal diseases which I send to any person free. In this book I explain quite fully the uses of Peruna. Those who do not care to wait to send for the booklet at this time will find information and instruction as to the general uses of Peruna explained within the wrapper of each bottle. Pe-ru-na, Man-a-lin and La-cu-pia manufactured by the Pe-ru-na Company, Columbus, Ohio. Sold at all drug stores. SPECIAL NOTICE: Many persons

! inquire for The Old-Time Peruna. ; They want the Peruna that their ! Fathers and Mothers used to take. ' The old Peruna is now called Katarno. If your druggist or dealer does .not keep it for sale, write the Kartano Company, Columbus, Ohio, and they will tell you all about it.

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RICHMOND PALLADIUM OCTOBER 1 T-lli

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