Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 303, 25 October 1912 — Page 4

PAGE FOUIi

THBMCmiOND PALLAD1U3I 4XD SUN TELEGBAJ1, FRIDA ! OCTOBER 25, 1912.

1 he Richmond Palladium ltd Sim-Telegram Pvhllabaa ewn4 by the PALLADIUM PRINT1MU O. IMttld Kvrv amine Emnl HunAAV

Office Corner North 8U and A etra.

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Kntered at Richmond. Indiana, peat office as aacond claaa mall Matter.

vNeir York Rpreeantatlves Pare We 82nd atraet, New York. N. T. ;-Tloat-o Repreaentattvea Payne . 77-74$ Marquette Building,

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The Association, af American Advertisers baa e amaned and certified ta tha eircnlatioa af this pe)b

Ii cation. The figures of circulation ontaiaed in the Association's report only are guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers

16' Whitehall Blrfg. M. T. City

Strange Bedfellows.

William Jennings Bryan and Oscar Underwood have been hoiding joint meetings in the east, each one urging the election of Woodrow Wil

son.

Progressive Ticket

For President, Theodore Rooeeveit For Vice President. Iiirato WV Johnson. " Governor. Albert J. Beveridge, Indianapolis. Lieutenant Governor. Frederick Landis, Logansport. Secretary of State, Lawson U. Mace, Scottbburg. Auditor,

Treasurer, 3. B. Baker, Monticello. Attorney General, Clifford P. Jackman. Huntington. 8tate SupL of Publlo instruction, Charles J5S Spalding. Winamac. .Statistician, ThaddeuS M. MdO; e. Anderson. Reporter Supreme court, Frank R. Miller. Clinton. Judge Supreme Court, First Division, James B. ' Wilson. Bloomington. Judge 8upremi Court, Fourth Division, William A. Bond. Richmond. Judge Appellate Court, First Division, Minor F. Pate, Bloomfield. Congress. Oierluf Jensen, Shelbyville.

Joint Representative. John Clifford, v0onnersville. Representative. , JohrTJudldns. Prosecuting Attorney. We?.;; Better. Jacob Bayer. fajerderV B.K, Parsons. Treasurer. Albert Chamneas. Coroner. R. J. Pierce, M. D. Commissioner. (Eastern District.) Albert, Anderson. (Wayne Township.) Commissioner. (Western .District.) Mordecaf Doddridge. . (Washington Township.) Surveyor. Levi Peacock.

This Dale in fysiory

OCTOBER 25. 1415 Henry V., of England, with about 9,000 men. defeated about 60,000 French at Agincourt. '. ''liT 1555 Charles V. abdicated as emperor of Germany. 1779 Washington's army went Into winter quarters at Morristown, N. J. 1810 George III., of England, completed the fiftieth year of his reign. 181!) First general assembly of Alabama convened at Huntsvllle. 1836 Luxor obelisk erected in Paris. 1854 Forty-seven persons killed in a collision cn the Great Western Railway of Canada, between Chatham and Detroit. 1866 Dedication of the Peabody Institute in Baltimore. , ' ' 1869 William W. Belknap, of Iowa, appointed secretary of war. 1900 Great Britain formally annex

ed the Transvaal.

Y

jHoHister'ss Rocky Mountain) Tea never fails to tone the stopiacli regulate the kidneys, stimulatetjue liver.

Hiu ' v iraiioc vuv ' vvvi . irvu L imi i try it. ;55c. Tea or Tablets. , A G. Lukeu & Company. Advertisement.

Old Time Kissing C u stems. ' The English distaste for kWlqKYs a thing of comparatively recent growth, m the seventeenth century oar.ftabits were the wonder of the foreigner. Xlcolaus de Bethlen. a IIuDgarian, who visited these shores in 163V relates that "my brother and I behaved rery rudely on one occasion, being unaware that 1( was the custom in that country to kiss the corner of the mouth of ladies instead of shaking bandana we do in Hungary. We were Invited to dine at the house of a gentleman of high rank and fonnd his wife and three daughter, one of them married, ready to receive u. We kissec the girls, bet not the married ladies, and thereby greatly offended the latter. Duval apologised for oar blander and told us that when saJntitu? we must always kiss the senior lady first and leave the girls to the last." London Express,

Carnival all next week, across front Glen Millee park. Sea Big LIU, t trained elephant. Free attractfenr- " Advertisement It

Mr. Underwood Is the party Mr. Bryan attacked in the Commoner as a tool of the special interests and the man he said he never would support if he were nominated for president. Mr. Bryan Is the party Mr. Underwood parboiled and skinned in the house of representatives when Mr. Underwood replied to Bryan's charges. Mr. Underwood is also the party that Thomas Fortune Ryan groomed and inanccd in the pre-conventlon presidential nomination derby, and Mr. Ryan, as you may recall, was the unhappy financier that Mr. Bryan tried to have thrown out of the Baltimore convention on the ground that he was a representative of crooked business. But now we find Mr. Ryan supporting Mr. Wilson without a word of protest from Mr. Bryan, and we find the Commoner speaking on the same platform with the man Mr. Ryan financed for president, blending their voices in a loud chorus of praise for "Please Call Me Woody." But Mr. Bryan is not inconsistent. Remember how he stumped the country in 1904 urging the election of Parker, then last July how he bitterly fought against Parker being selected chairman of the Democratic national convention because Parker represented the big business controlled element of the party? As we have remarked before, with Mr. Bryan it is a case of "my party, may it ever be right, but my party, right or wrong." The sacrificing of principles has never been a difficult task for Mr. Bryan to perform.

What the 7 imes Believes.

The Washington Times is of the opinion that the reason Mr. Beveridge has been summoned to appear before the senate campaign investigating committee is because that body desires to griddle a man who has violated all rules of the political game by returning good money after once getting his hands on it. The Times says: The Clapp committee was put at its present task by a curious combination of standpat Republicans, disaffected insurgents ,and regular Democrats, all moved by the common desire to Injure Roosevelt and all confident that somehow they could accomplish that much, at least. The results, item by item, have been curiously contrary to expectations. Instead of miring down Roosevelt in a scandal about the campaign fund of 1904, the investigation has borne out Roosevelt's statements in every detail, and it is the Parker campaign of that year that is dragged in the mud. Parker charged that RooBevelt's campaign was syndicated by big interests; the event proves that Parker, with $450,000 from Ryan and $250,000. from Belmont, was the most thoroughly syndicated candidate that ever aspired to any office. So it has been all the way through. It was going to be shown that millions of Harvester money were being spent this year for Roosevelt. Instead, it has developed that the President of the Harvester company gave liberally to help nominate Wilson, and that there was so much concern about the political effect, if it should become known, that there was serious consideration of returning the money. The Harmon and Underwood campaigns of this year were traced back for their inspiration to the same treasure chest that has been so generous of donations in the past. Small wonder that, under the goad of such a series of disappointments, the Roosevelt-hating majority of the committee, is prepared for guerilla tactics; that Senator Beveridge is to be hauled out of his Indiana campaign and made to testify about matters that do not properly come within the purview of the committee's authority. Mr. Beveridge is making a strenuous campaign as the Progressive candidate for governor of Indiana. It is conceded that he will beat the Republicans badly in the state. He is growing stronger day by day. The most effective thing that could possibly be done by way of opposing him would be to keep him off the stump a few of the days that remain to him in the campaign. So he is to be sent for; and for what? To explain why under the heavens he should have returned $10,000 tbat the national committee sent him to help in the fight in 1904! It is not surprising, of course, that gentlemen who have been able to view with equanimity the confessions of Ryan and Belmont that they gave the dower of princes to Democratic campaigns, should wonder that a Progressive, having once got his hands on a bunch of perfectly good money, should ever return a dollar of it. Manifestly, the spectacle of a piece of campaign money being returned, as not needed, is nothing less than a defiance of all the rules of the game. . Mr. Beveridge is the real malefactor. He is violating all the traditions. He should be summoned to the stand, and made to confess all. The union of political grab and graft should withdraw his card at once. A fine spectacle, indeed, he presents, admitting that there is a possible limit to the amount needed to run any old campaign!

CORROBORATION

Of Interest to Sun-Telegram Readers. For months Richmond citizens have seen in these columns enthusiastic praise of Doan's Kidney Pills by Richmond residents. Would these prominent people recommend a remedy that had not prtven reliable? Would they confirm their statements after years had elapsed if personal experience had not shown the remedy to be worthy of endorsement? The following statement should carry conviction to the mind of every Sun-Telegram reader. Mrs. F. Hamilton. 226 North Eighth street, Richmond, Indiana, says: "Doan's Kidney Pills have given me complete relief from kidney trouble. I am glad to confirm the testimonial I gave in their praise some years ago. My back was very lame and I felt worse in the morning and also when I caught cold. Two boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills made a complete cure." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sol agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. ( Advertiaement) f

NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD

The union of chorus girls in London now numbers nearly 500 members. Organizers for the Western Federation of Miners are at work in northern Minnesota. , Three new locals of Boot and Shoe Workers' union were chartered by the International during August. The American Federation of Labor expects a record breaking attendance

at its annual convention in Rochester next month. The General Confederation of Labor of France voted recently to stay outside the Socialist party. The vote was 1,000 to 35. The Texas State Council of Carpenters is working on a plan to build a home for the indigent and disabled carpenters of the state. On November 4, at St. Louis, Mo., the International Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes will hold its annual convention. In Fargo, N. D., in the last few weeks there have been organized the sheet metal workers, butcher workmen and the journeymen horseshoers. More new members were enrolled by the Brotherhood of Leather Workers on Horse Goods during August than in any one month In two years. Plumbers' and Steamfitters' International union has increased its membership by six thousand in a year. The total membership is now 30.000. During last August the Toronto (Canada) Street Railwaymen's union enrolled one hundred new members: forty-four left the railway service and three deaths occurred. The Santa Fe railroad says that as a result of its "safety habit" campaign among its employes the number of accidents has decreased 20 per cent within the last ten mouths. British sailors are agitating for an increase of pay. They are said to have had but one "raise" in more than fifty years, and they think their turn has come for better pay and greater privileges. Receipts of the Glass Bottle Blowers' International union during the last fiscal year amounted to $230,769.25 and the expenditures $238,525.85. The assets of the International, June 30, were $222,609.45. In a bulletin issued recently by the New Jersey State bureau of statistics it is shown that the increase in the cost of living in the state since 1898 has been 34.36 per cent., while in the

same period wages have advanced only 25.4 per cent. The state or Illinois recently opened to the public its new school for the study and prevention of occupational diseases and industrial accidents. The "school" is part of the new headquar

ters of the state factory inspector. It comes into existence by virtue of the occupational diseases law and the health, safety and comfort act. which requires the state factory inspector to com pell the installation of health and safety devices.

(Advertisement)

This Is My 52 nd Birthday

EDWARD W. SAUNDERS. Edward W. Saunders, who represents the Fifth district of Virginia in Congress, was born in Franklin County, Virginia. October 25, 1860. He graduated from the law department of the University of Virginia in 1882 and the same year he began the practice of his chosen profession in the town of Rocky Mount, Va. Five years later he made his debut in public life as a member of the Virginia house of representatives, of which he served as speaker from 1899 to 1901. In the latter year he ended his career as a state lawmaker to take a seat on the Virginia circuit court bench. He served on the bench five years, until his election to congress in 1906 to fill the unexpired term of Claude A. Swanson. He was elected for a full term the next year and has been twice re-elected. Congratulations to: Mrs. Anni Besant, the famous world

Jeader of the Theosophlsts, 65 years old today. Earl of Mansfield, 48 years old today. Sir Albert J. Durston, for many years engineer-in-chief of the British navy, 66 years old today. William H. Moore, wno has been called the originator of the modern plan of industrial combinations, 64 years old today. Ira C. Copley, representative in congress of the Fifth district of Texas, 46 years old today.

Are You Subject To Constipation ?

Here is a Simple Way of Correcting It Instantly Before it Becomes Chronic. Very few people go through life without some time or other being troubled with constipation. Thousands injure themselves by the use of strong cathartics, salt waters, pills and similar things. They have temporary value in somecases, it is true, but the good effect is soon lost, and the more one takes of them the less effective they become. A physic or purgative is seldom necessary, and much better and more permanent results can be obtained by using a scientific remedy like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It does not hide behind the name of a fruit or vegetable, but is what it is represented to be, a mild laxative medicine. It is so mild that thousands of mothers give it to tiny infants, and yet it is so compounded, and contains such definite ingredients that it will have equally good effect when, UBed by a person suffering from the worst chron

ic constipation. In fact, among the : great endorsers of Syrup Pepsin are elderly people who have suffered for years and found nothing to ben- j eflt them until they took Syrup ! Pepsin. It is a fact that millions of families have Syrup Pepsin constantly in the house, homes like those of Mr. O. P. Miller, Baroda, Mich., and Mrs. j Peter W. Lichtenberger, New Har- j mony, Ind. The special value of this

MR O. P. MILLER. ed to the needs of every member of the family. It is pleasant-tasting, mild and non-griping. Unlike harsh physic, it works gradually, and in a very brief time the stomach and the bowel muscles are trained to do their work naturally again, when all medicines can be dispensed with. You can obtain a bottle at any drug store for fifty cents or one dollar. The latter sise is usually bought by families who already know its value. If no member of your family has ever used Syrup Pepsin and you would like to make a personal trial of it before buying it in the regular way of a druggist, send your address a postal card will dc to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 413 Washington street, Monticello, Illinois,, and a free sample bottle will be sent to you. Results

grand laxative tonic is that it is suit-, are always guaranteed

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Don't get bald SHAMPOO regularly with Resinol Soap. Its soothing, healing, antiseptic balsams stop dandruff and itching, invigorate the hair follicles, and prevent loss of hair by maintaining perfect scalp health. In severe cases of hair and scalp troubles Resinol Soap should be assisted by Resinol Ointment rubbed thoroughly into the scalp at night. Shampoo next morning. Trial fr BenoI Soap (2Sc) and Resia iuu cc. no, 0intn)ent (50c) omnwnded and aold by your druairist for all aorta of akin and scalp troubles. For sample of each, write to Dept. 2-A. Resinol Chemical Co.. Baltimore. Mi inniiHiniiiiiniiiiiiHruiiniinininininsiiinniiiiHniiiiQii

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ICHMOND PALLADIUM

OCTOBER 25

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Don't Poison Baby. FORTY YEAR AGO klm.t every mother thoucht hvr child must bAv PARE(jOP10 ! i vKit'mm to make it tleep. 1 heoe Jrui; will produce sleep. "l M W ltU)lS TOO MANY wui r.rwluce th SLEEP 1 ROM WHICH l.ii !S NO WAKING. Many are the children who tiave been killed or vt i .. ? health has fat-en ruined for lift) by paregoric, laudav uurn and morpliino, ca'a of which is a narcotic product of opium. Druggists ate prohibited from soiling either of the narcotics named to cliildren at all, or to anybody without IttLtfi'ing them "poison. " The deiinition of narcotic i : "A medicine which rclinru pain and frxxiufr sleep. Out tchu h in fxnitcnohs dosta prtxfwcf afKmr, comt, con vuh ion ami tifn.w The taste ami smell of medicines containing opium are disjruised, and sold nniler the names of " Drops," " Cordial," " Soothing Syrups, etc. You should m permit any medicine to bo given to your children without vru or your iJivsician know of what it is oompn-ed. C ASTORIA DOES SOT CONTAIN NARCOTICS, if it bears the signature - of Chas. II . Fletcher. v Gcaaiie Castoria always bears the signature ofWiyf J-e&cJ&Zt

No Guesswork Ai

Kirschbaum Clothes

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A lot of men "guess" about their clothes. Small wonder, for a lot of clothiers guess, too. And the fjucsser usually gets stuck. There's no guesswork about the Kirschbaum clothes that's why we have them here, and why we unqualifiedly recommend them to you. Every piece of fabricis acid-test all wool. E very yard is shrunk to the limit riot by the woolen mills, mind you, but by the people who make the clothes. Every garment is hatni-teitored. And these Kirschbaum clothes are correct to the smallest detail. The style and snap you can see for yourself. For the other qualities we give you the maker's official Guaranty Bond and we back that up with our own moneyback guarantee.

Kirschbaum Clothes $15 $20 $25 Frors $15, $20 and $25 our prices for suits range up to $35 for the very finest fabrics and trimmings.

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IMPORTANT QUESTIONS abound in Life Insurance. For over 30 Years the proper placing of Life Insurance has been our sole study, and the valuable points gathered by experience we offer to our patrons new and old. J.O.BARBER ' H. F. PARDIECK, Special Agent. District Mgr. NORTHWESTERN Mutual Life Insurance Co.,

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