Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 45, 2 January 1913 — Page 4
M6E FOUR,
THE KICH3IOND .LLAIlIUM A'SD SUX-TELEGRA3I, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1913.
The Richmond Palladium And Sun-Telegram Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Iiiued Every Evening Except Sunday. Office Corner North 9th and A Streett. J'alladium and Sun-Telegram Phone Business Oftice, 2566; Newa Department, 1121. RICHMOND, INDIANA-
RUDOLPH G. LEEDS Editor.
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The Rockefellet War.
Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mail matter.
New York Representatives Payne & Young, 30-34 West 33d Street, and 29-35 West 32nd Street, New York, N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne & Young, 747-748 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111.
, lean Advertiser kas
sunsnad ud certified te tk aircalatio of this pb-
licatiem. ThftgrMofctrcUtMa onUiaad In the Asseciatis-'s report only mxm guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers No. 1C9- (Whitehall Bld. N. T. City
Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE.
DR. JEKYLL AND MR.. HYDE.
Clark Jones, a middle aged farmer of Georgia, owner of considerable property, a man of high standing in his neighborhood, asked a jury to send
him to the Insane hospital. He told an astounding story:
"All my life I have tried to ralk In the footsteps of my Saviour. I have
worked hard and tried to do my duty,
Bnt nor Impulses foreign to my real
and better nature have come over me
to do things that are not right
"I have even bought poison and a
pistol and rope to kill myself.
"At the critical moment my right
mind has returned. I have never harm
ed a creature. I hope to get to heaven, but I want to go clean. I fear the struggle between my dual natures will
not always end in victory for the bet
ter. That Is .why I ask to be sent to
the asylum." Poor Jones!
He talked so sanely and sensibly the Jury hesitated, but, on the advice of
the physicians, coraraitted him.
His confession is like a window
through which one may look into the soul arena where the good and the bad angels of his life) have fought for
supremacy. Fancy his" feelings!
He realized that not only was his own life unsafe from that other self,
but the 'life of his dear ones.
His house was divided against it
self.
Can you think of a greater tragedy? The foes that confront a man from without why, a brave man can face
them and fight them to the death. But
the foes within
Moreover, there is a lesson in the
soul struggle of Clark Jones:
How many men and women may be undergoing such a struggle or may
have succumbed?
How many may there be in prison today because of the unequal battle in
their inner selves between Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde? I am aot condoning crime. It Is not necessary toshield the malevolent or the willfully depraved criminal to suggest the possibility that some offenders may have been overcome by degenerate influences foreign to their better selves. And yon and I? Have we not within us, to some ex.tent, the possibility of-such a moral defeat?
THE COTTON INDUSTRY. Alexander Hamilton Foresaw Its lm. portance In This Country. There exists In the archives of one ef the oldest among the cotton spinning families in northern New Jersey a long letter from a banker of New York addressed to Alexander Hamilton when be was secretary of the treasury. The banker had heard that Hamilton purposed to build a cotton mill at Patersen, N. J. This project the banker condemned and stated that it was the opinion of all the merchants In New Tork whom be knew that not in a hundred years would the cotton milling business in the United States employ 200. Hamilton went ahead and planned the industrial town he named Paterson and also planned and financed a company for developing a water power and for financing corporations thereat Hamilton's original company, known as the Society For Useful Manufactures, exists to this day at Paterson. The agent whom Hamilton sent to England to buy cotton mill machinery was instructed to have it "knocked down" and placed in small boxes that were to be marked "Bibles For the Moravians of Pennsylvania." It was at that time against the laws of Engv land to sbip any kind of industrial machinery out of the kingdom. Haniilton's brother and two of his agents were caught trying to ship the cotton mill machinery to Paterson, and they were imprisoned for ten months. Co tv tor. ' Character. Fhould one tell you that a mountain hfid changed its place you are at liberty 1 6 doubt It. but if any one tells you th& a man has changed his character dtknot believe it Mohammed.
Now that Sergeant-At-Arms Riddell of the House of Representatives with his small army of deputies and secret service men have been unsuccessful in trapping Bill Rockefeller in the seige of the latter's New York chateau the War College at Washington should be called upon to provide a general plan of campaign directed against all three of the castles where the great money baron Is now supposed to be secreted. Riddell and his gallant men could he left to beleaguer the Gotham mansion while the New York police force could act as a reserve to assist in repulsing any attempted sortie. At the same time there is no doubt that a successful attack could be made upon the Rockefeller stronghold at Tarrytown by Bending up the Hudson a fleet of torpedo boats and river gunboats. While this flotilla bombarded from the river a land attack could be made by a few regiments of New York and Vermont militia, supported by batteries of moving picture machines and mounted reporters. Simultaneously with the assaults upon the New York and Tarrytown castles the North Atlantic fleet could shell the grim McKay fortress on Jekyl Island, off the Georgia coast. After all three of these strongholds had fallen and the honor and dignity of the United States had been upheld all that was left of Bill could be dug out of whatever place he had taken refuge in and sent by parcels post to the Pujo "money trust" investigating committee at Washington. "War is hell," as General Sherman once remarked, but Rickefeller must be subdued even if the cost is the shedding; of the last drop of blood of every able-bodied man in the republic. The call for volunteers and the proclaiming of martial law in the states of Georgia and New York are expected at any minute. Let every American do his duty.
NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD
ARMY CIRCLE WEDDING
RAILROAD NOTES
with tine coal, which would also lodge ' on the trucks and about other portions I of the cars. Now. however, every caf
jis scrupulously brushed out corps of
Youngstown. Ohio has the dUtinc-, Mng empleyed at terminals to
home.
A $100,000 labor temple is proposed
at Akron, O. Twenty-seven states enforce sanitary regulations in factories. The blind telephone girl has been tried and proved a success in Baltimore.
(National News Association) WASHINGTON, D. C. Jan. 2 The
lasmuuaore JOQn 8 cnurcn was me noil ot navmg me oniy lemaie nias-ier ; . . . found
the superfluous weight removed
om each car averages of 200 pounds.
Frances Hodges, daughter of Col.
Pittsburg is to have a working girls' ! cene of the first mi.itary wedding of jbolWmaker the world. Mia, Ali imp the year this afternoon, when Miss!0- Cnute ttxe 8ntral managtr o i . J., , . i- . . i . , Ithe Enterprise Boiler company ofiIIom
Kings Too Expensive.
One of the greatest reasons for the increasing popularity of the republican form of government is the fact that royal families are too extravagant luxuries for any people to indulge in in this era of high living expenses. The royal family of Great Britain costs the nation $3,704,800 per year. Of this sum the civil list of the King and Queen account for $2,256,000, ex-Queen Alexandria receives the trifling pension of $336,000, and the rest flows in from various sources to different members of the royal house. The civil list, that is the direct cash charge on national revenues, of the Emperor of Austria is $4,520,000 per year. Spain is a very poor country, but she manages to spend $1,944,000 per year on her royal family, one of whom is a deaf mute, one a consumptive and not one with trained wit enough to earn $12 per week. Kaiser Wilhelm has a civil list of $3,698,000 per year, but that sum is only a fraction of royalty's cost to the German people. The Kaiser owns an enormous amount of private property, enough to make him one of the richest men in Europe aside from his civil list, and the lesser- knights of Germany are not small when it comes to expenses. The King of Bavaria costs the country $1,286,000 per year. The King of Saxony draws $881,000 per year. Wurtemberg is a little principality, smaller than New Jersey, both in area and population. The Governor of New Jersey gets $10,000 per year. The King of Wurtemberg gets $400,000 for the same time. Uncle Sam pays his chief executive $75,000 a year with an expense fund of $25,000. Noting this American executive economy, Portugal some time ago sped from the tip of its boot its spendthrift Manuel, who alighted with a dull thud in England, and last year furnished the astonishing spectacle of the newly awakened Chinese people chasing their baby emperor and his mother and uncles and aunts into the tall and uncut districts of Mongolia.
has fused with the International Mold-
ers' Union. The Canadian federal Immigration department will send lecturere to England next year. Meridian, Miss., unions are advocating the establishment of a local tuberculosis camp and hospital. The National Civic Federation has organized a national department on industrial mediation laws. Minneapolis Trade and Labor Council is making arrangements for a campaign for the demand of the union label. Bangor, Me., Railway and Electric company has just conceded an increase, which approximates two cents an hour. A permanent exhibit of devices and means to prevent accidents to workmen has been opened at Copenhagen,
Denmark. There will be twenty-two members j of farmers' and trade unions holding j seats in the next session of the Colo-1
that citv. and she has just completed t 1 n nraus V1 , the work of installing some stet-1 road, for under the old method the tanks on the roof of the Park theater 1 shipper could clean his car after it had annex, a ten story building. On leav- j been weighed and would thus hare inc hieh school Miss Chute entered ; froicht amount Ine In weicht to the re-
ushers were all brother officers of the the drafting department of the Yari-' fuse removed, hauled free of cbargtv
ety Iron company of Cleveland, and remained with the companv until she 1 BUDGETS FOR 191S. ..... i
Became assistant to trie presiaent. Mie t jiot of the large railway
Youngstown twelve years ago.
Harry F. Hodges, U. S. A., and Mrs. Hodges, became the bride of Lieut. Albert H. Archer, of the engineering corps of the army. The best man and
bridegroom, while nearly all of th
Brass Foundry Workers' Association i Drlde-S attendants were daughters of
prominent army officers. Following the ceremony at the church there was a reception at the home of the bride's parents in Massachusetts avenue.
CHILDREN OF UAP.
"SAFETY ALWAYS."
They
svstems
at i Vovi Mi-it vpt mailt un th, biidet't for
improvements to be made in 1913. The improvement in railway business is makiue greater activity in this line
j Nearly all the letters passing from . 1HJsSibie. An improvement in average jone department to another at the Wa-irales would undoubtedly give it great bash railroad shops, depot, freight' . ,. ... ... a ,ni, , -impetus. I ntil that conies the raiihouse and vards bears the stamp. ... , .. . , . . . ,, . , ,, . , ' ! ways will hardlv be able to meet tne
; soieiy Always, anu mo wuuasu banner, the emblem of the company.
This stamp, it is said, w as designed j
Don't Have to Worry About
Food, Clothes or Shelter. In describing Uap. one of the Caroline islands. Dr. W. H. Furuess says that children become more or less pub
lic property on that Island as soon as by a switchman and approved by the
they are able to run about from house ; company officials
to bouse.
i legitimate needs of the country.
They cannot without extraordinary exertion fall off the island, and. like little guinea pigs, can find food anywhere. Their clothing grows by every roadside, and any shelter or no shelter
TO CLEAN CARS.
DOUBLE TRACKING. Although nothing could be learned ht-re to substantiate the rumor it is reported in Muncio that the Pennsyl-
The Pennsylvania has adopted vanla Railroad company is contem policv of thoroughly cleaning all 1 l'ltInK double tracking its main road freight cars before thev are weighed j ro Chicago to Cincinnati by way of
(and sent to shippers. In previous Andersou and Kichmontl ana mat a
line is to be built connecting the Mun-
was the
This Date in History
JANUARY 2. 1757 Calcutta retaken by an English force under Lord Clive, and the Soubah put to death. 1766 James Francis Edward Stuart Pretender to the Throne of England, died in Rome. Born In London, June 10, 1688. 1801 Union of Ireland with Great Britain. 1861 Georgia troops seized the United States arsenal at Savannah. 1895 Funeral of Sir John Thompson conducted at Halifax. 1899 Theodore Roosevelt inaugurated governor of New York. 1905 Port Arthur capitulated to the Japanese.
rado legislature.
A minimum wage of 25s ($6.08 a week for all able-bodied men will j henceforth rule in the municipal service in Glasgow, Scotland. j There is a well defined plan to in-, stall women as drivers of taxicabs and j other power-driven vehicles on the j streets of the largest cities of Eng- j
j land.
Street sweepers of New York city have petitioned to have their wages increased from 790 a year to $920. Extra pay for Sunday work is also asked for. At Toledo, O., twenty-eight Hungarian women recently took the places of
the strildng core makers in the plant of the National Malleable Castings company. Journeymen barbers are engaged in an active campaign to clean up unsanitary barber shops and to organize the seven thousand journeymen barbers
jin Chicago. j Linotype machine operators of Par
is threaten to go on a general strike unless a scale of nine hours for a day's work and 8 francs ($1.50) compensation is granted. The Plumbers' and Steamiitters' International Union has increased its membership by about six thousand within a year. The total membership is now about thirty thousand. "The only organization of its kind in the world" is what its official card claims for Ipswich Clam Diggers Union, 14,233, American Federation of LaTr. The union has just been formed.
is cood enoueh for the nlsht They
r.nmf .torro Ther. nr nrt xriirl practice a shipper w ould get a car con
Koocta ! arintoa hortn thTn TThnt itaiiiinK i ef use matter from a pre ious " cie division which formerly
n..it,0 r o.or, .in nniior iho kicrh tlnsd of merchandise. In the case of a ' old C. 1. K., with the main line at
1UU viV-LO at l vi-H-j ci.rksuuxvt . m. i - " t
' star powdered celling of their foster icoal car the bottom would be sprinkled , Haserstow n.
I mother s nursery or curl up on mats beneath their father's thatch?
There is no implication here that rarents are not fond of their cWldren. On the contrary, they love them so much that they see their own children in all children. It Is the ease of life and Its surroundings which have atrophied the emotion of parental love.
When a father has merely to say to i bis wife and children. "Go out and
shake your breakfast off the trees," or, "Go to the thicket and gather your clothes," to him the struggle for existence Is meaningless, and without a 6tmggle the prizes of life are held In light esteem. Somebody's children are always about the houses and to the fore In all excitements, and never did I see them roughly bandied or harshly treated
c
This is My 44th Birthday
More Troub'e With the Language. "He's a steady drinker. Isn't be?" "He's a drinker, all rigbt. but be never steady." Cleveland Plain Dealer.
jjxSssa Masonic 9rfS Calendar U L 1
Thursday, Jan. 2. Wayne Council, No. 10, R. & S. M., Stated Assembly and Installation of officers. Saturday, Jan. 4. Loyal Chapter, No. 49, O. E. S. Stated meeting and installation of officers.
Forgot Hie Own Tongue. A traveler in arctic Siberia, Mr. Vanderlip, a gold hunter, told the following of his return to civilization: "I found that half a doxen of the officers and men of the steamer which my employers had sent for me had come to hunt me up. The captain dismounted, and I tried to address him In Russian, but he said, 'You forget that I speak English.' Now, it may seem scarcely credible, and yet it is true, that for a few moments I was totally unable to converse with him in my native tongue. I had not used a word of It in conversation for months, and my low physical condition acting on my nerves confused my mind, and I spoke a jumble of English, Russiao and Korak. It was a week befoen I could talk good, straight English agaisJ-
RANSFORD D. BUCKNAM. Admiral Ransford D. Bucknam, familiarly known as Bucknam Pasha, vice admiral of the Turkish navy and chief naval adviser to the former Sultan Abdul Hamid, was born in Hansport, Nova Scotia, Jan. 2, 1869. Both his parents were lost at sea and his own life reads like a sea novel. His earliest youth was spent with his grandparents In Manitoba, but while still a boy he took up a life on the great lakes. Longing for more extensive travels, he went to Boston and shipped on an Australian packet. After a shipwreck and numerous other adventures he returned several years later to the United States and became master of a steamship on the great lakes But he again tired of this berth and proceeded to San Francisco, where he accepted a position as captain of a Pacific liner. When he left the Pacific it was to enter the employ of the Cramps at Philadelphia. Here he was assigned to deliver a war ship built for the Turkish government. In Turkey he won the favor of the Sultan and became the latter's chief naval adviser. He remained virtually the head of the Turkish navy until the overthrow of Abdul Hamid.
True zlorv consists in so living as
to make the world happier and better
for our living. Puny.
RHEUMATISM
DR. WHITEHALL'S Rheumatic Remedy For 15 years a Standard Remedy for all forms of Rheumatism, lumbago, gout sore muscles, stiff or swollen joints. It quickly relieves the severe pains; reduces the fever, and eliminates the poison from the system. EOc a tox at druggists. Write For A Free Trial Box. Dr. WHITEHALL MEGRIMINE CO. 253 N. Main St., South Bend, Indiana.
What is Castoria
ASTORIA is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil. Farefroric, Drops
and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It
destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought and which has been in use for over SOyears, has borne the signature of Chas. II. Fletcher, andhes beenmade under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. AH Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good " are but Experiments that
trifle with and endanger the health of Infants ana 7 Children Experience against Experiment jjFJ J Genuine Castoria always bears the inatureof ' ft vtcXi
n
CONGRATULATIONS TO: Baron Sufneld, one of the octogenarian members of the British peerage, 83 years old today. Miss M. Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr College and probably the best known woman educator in America, 56 years old today. Frederick B. Opper, the well known American cartoonist, 56 years old today. Francis E. Leupp, former United Stages Commissioner for Indian Affairs, 64 years old today. Henry M. Flagler, one of the foremost men of the group known as Standard Oil capitalists, 63 years old today.
CHRONIC CONSTIPATION CURED. "Five years ago I had the worst case of chronic constipation I ever knew of. and Chamberlain's Tablets cured me." writes S. F. Fish, Brooklyn, Mich. For sale by all dealers. (Advertisement)
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Tickets, reservations and information from J. F. Powers District Passenger Agent 9 Claypool Building, Indianapolis, Ind.
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yDTT9
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Twentytwo of These Cabinets Were Delivered by Us the Day Before Christmas Simply Because "hey Are So Much Better.
Come in and Have Us Demonstrate This Cabinet Priced $26.50
No Doors Open Over Your Work Board on this Kitchen Cabinet Has measuring cup on flour and sugar bins, pull extension sliding top, removable flour bin, crystal glass spice jars, large pot and pan cupboard, metal bread and cake box, two extra drawers-in fact the most complete cabinet made today. We'll Be Glad to Open An Account With You. DRUITT BROTHERS "Thirty Feet from Seventh Street"
U
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If You Don't Get Well It is Your Own Fault
DISEASES TREATED All Peivic Diseases of Women. Diseases of the Skin. Kidneys, Bladder and Prostate Gland. Impure Blood, Rheumatism. Indigestion, Functional Nervous Diseases, Constipation, Piles, Stricture, Rupture (without the knife), Hydrocele, Varicocele and General Debility. CHRONIC DISEASES OF MEN AND WOMEN TREATED
Now is the time for you to take advantage of an opportunity to GET WELL if there is a cure for you. We have been In RICHMOND for TWO YEARS and feel that our reputation is established for HONESTY and RELIABILITY In the way of treating DISEASE afflicted people. NO CHARGE FOR EXAMINATION
flJKJAN5flElMCAL (
MCHMONOLIND.
Physician's Medical Co.
RICHMOND, INDIANA
Office Hours: 9 to 11:30 s, m., 1 to 5 and 7 to 8 p. m.; Friday, 9 to 11:30 a. m-. 1 to 5 Only. Sunday. 9 to 12 t m, only. Telephone 2653 aod 2938.
