Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 64, 24 January 1913 — Page 4
PAGE FOUB
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TEIEGRA3ItFRIDAY,.FANUARY 24,
The Richmond Palladium And Sun-Telegram Published and owned by th PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. lamed Every Evening Except Sunday. Office Corner North 9th nd A Street. Palladium and Sun-Telegram Phones Business Office, 2566; News Department, 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA. RUDOLPH O. LEEDt Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS In Richmond, fS.OO per year (in advance) or 10c per week. RURAL ROUTES One year, in advance '?'59 Si months, in advance ;
Address changed as often as desired ; both
new ana old addresses must oe given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given lor a specified term; name will not be entered until payment is received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS One year, in advance $5.00 Six months. In advance 2.60 One month, in advance 4S
Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mail matter.
New York Representatives Payne A 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.
. l..Uiia of A mar.
WAW amkiwd and crtifUd ! tb aimUtioB sf this psjtUeMism. THw figr of circlatto contained in tk Association' fport only are guaranteed. Assodition ef American Wverbsers
No. W. .Whitehall BM. N. T. CHj
Heart to Heart Talks By sJ AMES A. EDGERTON
IT CAN BE DONE. In the McAuley mission, New York, Reuben Johnson, eighty-three years old,' gave his testimony. He said that up to the age of seventy-two his life had been "just one souse after another." Then he had entered the mission, had quit drinking and now would not touch a drop of liquor. It can be done. Another man they called him "Brother White" offered his testimony at about the same time In a Salvation Army meeting. He was of a good family, had held . a government position, had resigned this and gone Into business for himself, making thousands of dollars, and had a pleasant home blessed by a beautiful wife and child. Then he took to drink and got so low that bis relatives and friends disowned him. He struck his wife, and she left him. He got Into jail. He lost everything. He was on his way to jump Into the river when, passing a Salvation Army barracks, he went In, turned over a new leaf and stopped drink. Now he holds a responsible position, again has his home and family and is received by his relatives and friends. It can be done. The writer knows a similar case. The man was a lawyer, but became a drunkard and was down and out. In his case Christian Science was the rescue bark. For years be has not touched a drop, is again a successful lawyer and a man among men. It can be done. There are thousands of similar cases all over the land. Sometimes it has been one Influence that worked the change, sometimes another. The means are not so important as the end. The fact Is that these men, with the help of some outside agency, have reformed and saved themselves. It can be done. How often have we, heard men say that they could not overcome a particular habit, whether it was drinking, drugs or some other weakness that injured them mind and body. Bosh! Any man can quit anything on which he sets his will. Man is not a slave, but a master. If he doesn't quit it Is because he doesn't really wftnt to quit Then some agency from outside must change the direction of his desire. But If he actually wishes to be rid of the old weakness and to make his life betterIt can be done.
The Pythian Calendar
Coeur De Lion Lodge Xo. 8, K. of P. meets at Castle Hall every Tuesday ttight. Next Tuesday, the 2Sth, the rank of Knight will be conferred by Past Chancellors. Refreshments will e served. All Knights welcome.
Moving Pictures in Richmond. In the course of the hearing of the government's suit against the moving picture trust. In New York City, the following interesting testimony concerning the moving picture business in the metropolis was given: "Are there different tastes in pictures in different parts of the city? Mr. Grosvenor asked. "Yes, that is very decided," was the reply. "The Italian and the Jewish people and the people living in the more crowded sections seem to care more for dramatic scenes and Western scenes, with lots of action. "The better class, as, for instance, the West Siders, like clean comedieB, scientific pictures and films of scenery, particularly scenery through which they have traveled. Some of my best customers with the larger theaters that seat 3,000 dont want any stabblngs or Western pictures, but in the lower class section; these are greatly in demand." After reading the above one is compelled to draw the conclusion that the proprietors of moving picture houses in Richmond believe the taste of the good sized army of "movie fans" in this middle western city of culture is on a par with the taste of the population of New York's great East Side where squalid tenement houses and miserable sweat shops abound. The great majority of films shown in local moving picture houses depict gun fights between cowboys In some mining camp gambling house, or ferocious frontiersmen chasing Indians over the prairies, filling them full of lead from their smoking six-shooters. Probably if the experiment were to be made our moving picture magnates would discover that films popular with the residents of New York's West Side would also meet with the approval of the Richmond public. But, if we must have gun play in our moving pictures we would like to have the opportunity of witnessing some Turko-Balkan war scenes as a temporary relief from Western tragedies.
The Case of Senator Warren.
Senator Warren, of Wyoming, has a hide much too thick to be punctured with small arms. Collier's has discovered, so, in the current issue, it opens a bombardment on that misrepresentative of the Wyoming people in the national senate with a siege gun, bluntly charging him with a crooked business deal in which the victim is alleged to be the government, of which the senator is a high official. The charges Collier's has made against Senator Warren in the course of the past six months are much too serious for them to be longer ignored, either by the senator himself or the United States senate. Either Collier's is telling the truth about the Wyoming solon or it is grossly libeling him. However, Collier's appears to feel perfectly secure in the position it occupies for it has openly defied Warren to institute libel proceeding? against It. Here is the latest attack of the pugnacious New York weekly on the sheep-herding Wyoming statesman: "This paper some weeks ago printed an account of certain thefts and perjuries for proit committed by the Hon. Francis Emory Warren, United States Senator from Wyoming, chairman of the Committee on Appropriations, and otherwise Intrenched in positions which make him one of the four or five dominant ngures in the United States Senate and in the Republican party. That detailed list of Senator Warren's thefts was thought at the time to be inclusive, but there was an Important omission which it is the purpose of this belated paragraph to set down: Senator Warren is a member of the Committee on Military Affairs, and has long used his position on that committee to make money for himself. Some one brought it about that the army should acquire lands for maneuvering purposes in what is known as the Pole Mountain District of Wyoming. (Whether' the initiative came from Senator Warren himself must remain a matter of inference; we are thus explicit because this comparatively unimportant detail is the only part of the facts here set down which is not a matter of official record.) Then, as chairman of the Committee on Appropriations, Senator Warren secured from the United States Treasury the money necessary for the purchase. Thus prepared, Senator Warren, through the F. E. Warren Mercantile Company (the dummy corporation which he uses in many of his thieving transactions), bought several sections of land on the site of the proposed maneuvering grounds In the Pole Mountain District from R. S. Van Tassel for $18,894 58 remember the figures. The official details of tills purchase are entered on the records of the County Clerk for Albany County, Wyo., as of December 28, 1910. About eighteen months later, on May 17, 1912, Senator Warren completed his theft by selling to the United States Government a portion of these lands for $22,460. At the present moment, therefore, Senator Warren's cash profit from this transaction is $3,565.42. In addition he still retains 320 acres of the land. It is hardly important enough to record, as a final detail of his profits, that he continued to use the land which he sold to the Government as a grazing ground for his sheep." Senator Warren is now a candidate for re-election before the Wyoming legislature. As the result of a lively fist fight in the lower house of that body this week the tide may turn to Warren and return him to the Senate. What a powerful argument for the direct election of United States senators.
Headache? -It's Your Liver.
TOO MANY PEOPLE TAKE HEADACHE POWDERS WHEN A LIVER TONIC 13 NEEDED.
NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD
Try Olive Tablets the Substitute for Calomel.
Anyone who takes Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets the moment he suspects his liver or bowels, will never have headache. There is no necessity when you take Olive Tablets, of following them up with nasty, sickening, griping salts or castor oil, as you should after taking calomel. Olive Tablets do not contain calomel or any other metallic drugs; they are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil, sugar-coated, easy to take, and never grippe or cauee weakness. Thousands of people take one every night at bedtime just to prevent disorder of the liver, constipation, bad breath, pimples, headache, etc. Dr. Edwards, calomel's old enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets after seventen years of practice among patients afflicted with liver and bowel troubles. Try them for a week. Take one on retiring nightly. "Every little Olive Tablet has a movement all its own." 10c and 25c per box. The Olive Tablet Company, Columbus. Ohio. (Advertisement)
This is My 61st Birthday
MARCUS A. SMITH. Marcus A. Smith, United States senator from Arizona, was born near Cynthiana, Ky., January 24, 1852, and received his education in the Blue Grass state, graduating from Transylvania university, in Lexington. In 1881 soon after he was admitted to the bar, he went to Arizona, and has been prominent in public ever since. Within a year after he took up his residence in the territory he was made prosecuting attorney. This position he held until he was elected delegate to Congress from Arizona in the Fiftieth Congress, the term beginning in 1887. He served as a delegate through eight terms and the most of his time was employed in pressing the claims of Arizona for admission to the Union. From the beginning of his career Mr. Smith had been a Democrat. So when Arizona finally achieved her desire to become a state it was but natural that the Democratic party, being in control of the legislature, should bestow upon Mr. Smith the honor of becoming one of the first two United States senators from the new state.
sculptor, 58 years old today. Beatrice Harraden, author of Ships That Pass in the Night," 49 years old today. Joseph H. Choate, former United States ambassador to Great Brittain, 81 years old today. Moses P. Kinkaid, representatives in congress of the Sixth district of Nebraska, 59 years old today.
This Date In History
CONGRATULATIONS TO: Edith Wharton, well known novelist, 51 years old today. Charles H. Niehaus, noted American
JANUARY 24. 1749 Charles James Fox, celebrated English statesman, born. Died Sept. 13, 1806. 1781 Americans surprised and captured the British garrison at Georgetown. S. C. 1861. United States arsenal at Au
gusta seized by Georgia troops.
1870 Pronce Arthur "Duke of Connaught," presented to President Grant at Washington. 1872 Liberal Republican movement began with a convention held at Jefferson City. Mo. 1903 United States and Great Britain signed a treaty providing for a commission to settle the Alaskan boundary dispute. 1905 Allen T. Davidson, the last survivor of the Confederate States congress, died at Asheville, N. C.
in X
The Msssaga In ths Box. On a table In the waiting room of a
Specialist is an inlaid box. When one ! opens It and most visitors to the spe-; clalist do a smaller box is found and ! one not so large inside that. This continues until finally the last is ' reached, a tiny thing with a slip of ;
paper Inside it. On the paper is a single word. "Curiosity." "I keep It there to amuse waiting patients," explained the specialist. "If there was only one who went through the scale of boxes be might feel sore about It, but he or 8 tie leaves the box closed for the uext comer, and when there are quite a few in the waiting room It gets to be a pretty good joke, and 1 can bear laughter as the latest arrival gets stung. 1 picked the box op on a trip to India and happened to leave It in the waiting room one day. Now it stays there ail the time." New York Sun.
f ouiiic UU1C5 Biaxi irom menuu strain
or indigestion, but more often from general weakness, and lead to appalling conditions unless checked. Treat the cause, not the effect, SCOTT'S EMULSION overcomes nervousness in a wonderful, permanent way by making
life-sustaining blood corpuscles; it nourishes the nerve centres and acts as a bracing tonic to build you up.
Scott's Emulsion does not stupefy it feeds them in Nature's way. Scott & Bowttb. BloomSeld. N. J. 12-46
Srasa Masonic "9rfS Calendar I
Friday, Jan. 24 King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Called Convocation, work in the Past Master's degree.
Elsinore and the Ssner. When F. H. Heald settled on the Machado ranch, near San Diego, and began to build Elsinore. then unnamed, he was puzzled about the christening. What should he call the coming city by the lake and springs? Finally be chose lake something or other a long compound but the postofflce authorities would not have it. They wrote Mr. Heald that one word was enough and sent him a list to choose from. Re took Elsinore and a few days afterward announced the fact to old Senor Machado. The aged don was for a moment nonplused. "El Senor,' he said, "which senor do you mean, yourself or myself?" "Yourself, of course," replied the diplomatic Heald. And to this day the Machados believe that the name Elsinore Is but a gringo corruption of "El Senor," the senor who owned the original property. Argonaut.
This is what you near "Give me a package !
TURKISH BLEND
CIGARETTES This blend of pure, good tobaccos leads the cigarette demand in this whole country. "Distinctively Individual"
ClQAPBTTES 'Ml ma a. axnts tffijw
J ps jtSep HI
Only 49c Complete Shoe Repairing Outfit. We can supply you with Shoo Leather. Birck's Harness Store 509 Main Street
Money to Loan
Use our money to pay your little outstanding debts. We will give you plenty of time to pay It back, from one month to one year. We make loans from $10 up on household goods, pianos, etc., and all business . strictly confidential. Mail or phone applications receive prompt attention. THE STATE INVESTMENT A LOAN CO. 40 Colonial Bldg. Phone 2560. Richmond, Indiana
Massachusetts has 192.000 unionists. Twenty states have free employment bureaus. Master mechanics at the various navy yards have received substantial wage increases. Wages in Japan have risen 50 per cent in ten years, the cost of living 33 per cent. British Columbia Chinese have formed a union and demand forty cents an hour for digging potatoes. A vigorous campaign is to be made to bring the zinc miners of Missouri into the fold of unionism. Patternmakers' unions propose to take a referendum vote on an international convention this year. Milwaukee working girls are organizing co-operative buying clubs to reduce the high cost of living. Thirty thousand members of the Christian labor union in the coal mines of Prussia have gone on a strike. Since its organization in 1910, Kansas City's welfare board has provided free legal aid to 11,103 poor applicants. There are 969 local unions with a membership of 75,914 in the Bricklayers' and Masons' International Union. Arizona has adopted a law that prohibits an alien from being employed on any public work within its jurisdiction. Since January 1 every member of a labor organization in St. Louis has the seal of the American Red Cross Society on his working card. Cleveland, Ohio, union carpenters will receive an increase of five cents on the minimum wage scale, beginning April 15, next, making the rate 50 cents an hour. A free employment bureau for unskilled labor has been established in
San Diego. California, under the auspices of the Federated Trades and Labor Council. An effort is being made by organized labor to abtain better pay for postoffice clerks, and the movement will have the backing o fthe American Federation of Labor. The Plumbers' International Union now has 55 locals, an average wage of
, $5.00 a day, and in most cases the ' locals have an eight-hour day and a Saturday half-holiday. The lace industry of Belgium gives employment to about 45,000 women and girls, some of whom begin their apprenticeship when only six or eight year sof age. Women teachers of Glasgow, Scotland, are campaigning in favor of equal pay for equal work, with a fair prospect of winning a victory, public sentiment being generally on their , 6ide. ' Haverhill, Massachusetts, master barbers, who have refused to grant the demands of the barbers' union for a $13 minimum wage, have engaged women barbers to take the places of the strikers.
BALD HEADED ROW Early piety Not Always the Causa cf Baldness Inasmuch as it is an accepted fact that baldness, falling hair and dandruff are caused by a germ, doesn't it stand to reason that the only way to prevent such calamaties is to kill tht germs? And doesn't it stand to reason that the only way to kill the germs is to use Parisian Sage, which Leo H. Fihe has so much faith in that he guarantees it to cure dandruff, falling hair and itching of the scalp in two weeks, or money buck? Parisian Sage is a delightful hair tonic, pleasant to use. It is not sticky or greasy, and contains only those ingredients that will surely benefiL It is now sold by drugists all over America, and by Leo H. Fthe for iv) certs a large bottle. It is used extensively by women who desire luxuriant hair with a radient luster. The girl with the Auburn hair is on eery
package. t Advertisement
DRUNKENNESS Is a curable disease, which reauires
treatment. The ORRIXE treatment; can be used with absolute confidence. ' It destroys all desire for whiskey, beer, i or other intoxicants. Can be given in , the home. No sanitarium expense, j No loss of time from wrirk rsn K :
given secretly, if after a trial you fail to get any benefit from it use your money will be refunded. ORR1NE is prepared in two forms: No. 1, secret treatment, a powder; ORRINE No. 2, in pill form, for those who desire to take voluntary treatment. Costs only $1.00 a box. Come In and talk over the matter with us. Ask for booklet A. G Luken & Co., 630 Main Street (Advertisement)
Mow'd Youi Like To Gett a Check A Couple of Weeks Before Christmas? Just in Time to Buy Your Presents That's just what you will do, and you will hardly realize where it came from if you join our Christinas Savings Club Join now by making the first weekly payment. If you can't come, send it by mail or get some one to bring it for you.
First Naflonal Bank 7th and Main Sts.
m
TWO STORES
Tin
TWO STORES
Friday and Saturday Grocery Offerings PEAS PEAS PEAS PEAS PEAS PEAS Good, Tender Early June Pack, Not Real Small Sifted Quality, bat Tentfer,. Fhro Eating Quality, Very Special Saving 12 Cans, $1.006 Cans, 55 Cents 2 Cans, 2fr Cents.
CORN CORN CORN CORN CORN CORN Good, Clean Illinois Pack, Standard Corn, Fine Value, Sweet, and Cans Solid, Full of Corn. You Cannot Equal This Buy. 12 Cans, 75 Cents Cans, 40 Cents 3 Cans, -20 Cents.
ASPARAGUS ASPARAGUS ASPARAGUS ASPARAGUS Big, Tall 25c Cans, Long Tender Spears from 35 to 40 Spears in a Can, Extra Select Stock, Worth Twice the Price 12 Cans, $2.206 Cans, $1.15 Per Single Can 19 Cents
TOILET PAPER TOILET PAPER TOILET PAPER A Quality Piece of Goods, Not Small Sneak Rolls, but the Regulation Size of the New repe Paper 7 Rolls, 25 Cents 15 Rolls, 50 Cents 33 Rolls, $1.00 GRANULATED SUGAR GRANULATED SUGAR Best Quality in a Quantity that Does Not Involve an Investment and Permits You to Own It at a Big Saving in Price. 10 Pounds, 57 Cents 10 Pounds, 57 Cents 10 Pounds, 57 Cents.
MATCHES MATCHES MATCHES MATCHES The Real Safety BLUE TIP Match Never Flies and Is Ahrays Safe, Usually Sold 5c Box, 6 Boxes for 25c A Very Special Price 6 (5c) Boxes, 19c 6 (5c) Boxes, 19c 6 (5c) Boxes, 19c
SPEARMINT GUM Full Box 20 (5c) Pkgs. 55 Cents
Canned Sweet Potatoes Large Cans Good Stock 10c Can
SARDINES Small Cans In Pure Olive Oil 3 Cans 10 Cents
CHEESE, CHEESE Full New York Off the Big One 25 Cents Pound
JUMBO OLIVES Finest Queens In the Bulk 30c Quart
RIPE OLIVES In the Bulk Best Quality .25c Pint
ECONOMY BECKONS IN OUR ADVERTISEMENTS Every Prudent Woman Should Read ThemT Hundreds Have Studied Them with Profit. It Costs Nothing and Will Certainly Start Something for You. HE WHO IS PROMPT IS PROSPEROUS Let Us Hear from You. X Mo Ejjgjeimieyeir & Sonus GROCERS 4th & Main Sts. 1017-1019 Main St.
