Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 67, 28 January 1913 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICIOIOXD PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1013.

The Richmond Palladium And Sun-Telegram Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Iwued Every Evening Except Sunday. Office Corner North 9th and A Street. Palladium and Sun-Telegram Phone Buamcaa Office, 2566; New Department, 1121. . RICHMOND. INDIANA. RUDOLPH O. LEEDS Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS la Richmond, $5.00 per year (in advance) or 10c per week. RURAL ROUTES One year, in advance '?'? Six months, in advance One month, in advance u Address changed as often as desired: both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be catered until payment is received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS One year, in advance $5.00 Six months, in advance.......... 2.60 One month, in advance.... .45

Enured 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. 11. Aa.twia.tina mi Am fffllia Advertiser ka exWAW wniMd and certified to fthtrcalatioBfthbpb Iicatfe. T!ifigmr of ciralatMa onUined in tb. AasocUtioa'e report only etra guarnted. Assodalitm of American Advertisers No. w. ,WhitehII Bltff. H. T. City Heart toHeart Talks. By EDWIN A.NYE. FORGET IT. Do not nnrsa yonr grievance. It some one has slighted you or imranded you let It go at that. Do not let your complaint of the Injury grow chronic. And, above all else, do not pat your grouch on exhibition. Hide your sore toe. Because half the slights you complain of are imaginary; half the injustices for which you suffer self martyrdom were not intended. You fed those troubles until they got ripe. Some people put themselves Into an attitude of continued suspicion of neglect or injury. They find what they are looking for, whereat they make everybody miserable by continual chewing of the cud of resentment How treat your grievance? Forget It! The more you dwell upon a thing of that sort the bigger it gets. The longer you drag it through your mind the deeper you cut the channel until by and by it becomes a well worn rut Get out of the rut. Force yourself to think of something else. Make new channels for your thoughts. Change the subject. Get busy trying to make others happy and thus make yourself happy. You will then have no time to bother with' your grouch. That is one way. Another way which has high sanction is to heap coals of fire upon the head of the one who has injured you. Speak some pleasant word or do some gracious thing to him who has tried to hurt you, and if he Is guilty and has a heart In him he will be sorry. You aee By this treatment of the other fellow you will do this: Instead of the other fellow getting you into his power by making you miserable you will have evaded his shaft and turned his malice back upon himself. In any event forget Do not permit your mind to rub a alight wound Into a festering sore. Life is too short for such abnormal cultures. Treat the skinned surface with en antiseptic and let it go. Forget it! Back to the Apse. A man who suddenly became very rich went to live in New York and began to spend money with a lavish band. He decided that his name needed advertising, so he visited a genealogist I suppose," he said, "if I pay you enough money you can trace my family back to Adam." "My dear sir." replied the genealogist "if you're willing to put up the money we can prove by evolution that your family existed before Adam." Lipplncott's Magazine. COINS UNDER WEIGHT. In England It's th Duty of These Who Get Thsm to Break Thorn. It is the duty of each loyal British abject not merely to refuse gold coin that is under a certain weight, but to break it "Every person." the act reads, "shall, by himself or others, cut break or deface such coin tendered to him in payment and the person tendering the same shall bear the loss." But in spite of this act it is a risky business interfering with coins which you may suspect to be under weight or spurious. Some months ago a Grimsby woman offered a half sovereign in payment of goods to a local shopkeeper The latter put the coin in a test Ing machine and. as it broke in two refused to take it. The coin, however, was pronounced by experts to be perfectly genulue. and when the case was takeu into a court of law the shopkeeper was order ed to refund 10 shillings to the cus tomer. Aioiiey. both gold and sliver, wears out at a startling rate It is reckoned that there Is usually iKXMMKi.OOO in gold coin lo Run la rid. a very large proportion of which is locked in the strong rooms of banks Yet of that which U in active circulation the wastage Is so great that during every twelve months 70,000 worth of gold and silver is robbed off into fine dost Pearson's

The People Will Be

The people of Indiana intend to have a strong and effective public utilities measure passed by the legislature now in session or make the Democratic party pay the consequences, and it is not reasonable to believe that party is prepared to sacrifice its future prospects. It is probable that more general interest is being taken in this question than any other now pending before the assembly and any attempt to thwart the people's will on the part of reactionary party leaders and that class of corporations afraid to trust the supervision of their affairs to a public service commission, will be bitterly resented. There is not the slightest doubt that the generally satisfactory Shively bill occupies a prominent place in the "undesirable legislation" list of the reactionary faction which Thomas Taggart owns body and soul, but its principal features are exactly what the people are demanding, and this point was made very, very plain at the committee hearing given the public utilities bills last night. Those volunteer representatives of the people who have been attending the public hearings on the Shively and Keegan measures have rendered an excellent service to the state, for through them has spoken the voice of the people, which the wise politician always heeds, and they, having made plain that no public utilities bill except the Shively measure, or one which measures up to its standards, will be acceptable to the general public it is safe to predict that the legislature will provide satisfactory supervision over public service corporations. At the committee hearing last night it was brought home to the Richmond people the necessity of state control over public utilities by the action of representatives of the Richmond Light, Heat and Power company, a subsidiary of a powerful New York corporation with plants sprinkled all over the eastern section of the United States, opposing the Sh'.vely bill. What such corporations oppose it is wise for the people to support.

The Voters Must Help.

Citizens of Richmond won an important victory yesterday In having the board of public works postpone action on the water works contract until the legislature had taken definite action on the public utilities commission question even our impetuous mayor, Richmond's Lew Shank, withdrawing his demand for immediate settlement of the vexatious local problem and yielding to the popular will. But having obtained this respite the work of the public spirited citizens of Richmond has not ended. They must now center their efforts on giving powerful support to the movement to force through the legislature a satisfactory public utilities measure. Indications are that the legislature will either pass the Shively bill or one equally as good, still it is a wise rule never to take anything for granted, and the people of Indiana should stand by their guns until the ink of the governor's signature to the kind of an act they want has dried. Wayne county's representatives in the general assembly will support any good public utilities measure but no doubt they would be more encouraged in the stand they have taken if they should receive personal expressions of support from their constituents. Wayne county's three representatives in the assembly are Senator Walter F. Commons, Representative John W. Judkins and Join Representative Earl Crawford. If you are in Indianapolis call on them. If you do not intend to visit the capital city send a letter to each one, assuring them you and the other voters are behind them in the fight for state supervision over public service corporations.

This is My 47th Birthday CHARLES S. BARRETT. Charles S. Barrett, who is regarded as being one of the most prominent men in the United States in the movement to educate the farmer for the proper development of his land, was born in Pike County, Georgia, January 28, 1866. He attended normal schools at Bowling Green, Kentucky, Lebanon, Ohio, and Valparaiso, Indiana, and then began tilling the 6oil on his own account, teaching meanwhile, from time to time until 1897, when ne went deiinitely into the work of organizing the farmers. He started ilrst in Georgia, where within a few years there became established a flourishing union, of which he was elected president in 1905. The work was then enlarged to embrace the nation and in 1906 Mr. Barrett was elected president of the National Farmers' Union, and has held the office ever since. Recently he was named by President Taft as a member of the Industrial Commission created by Congress to investigate the relations between capital and labor. CONGRATULATIONS TO: Rev. R. A. Torrey, well known evengelist, 57 years old today. . Jared Y. Sanders, former governor of Louisiana, 44 years old today. Daniel Wizard, president of the Baltimore and Ohio Railway, 52 years old today. Rear Admiral H. G. O. Colby. U. S. N., (retired), 67 years old today. S. Baring-Gould, noted English clergyman and author, 79 years old today.

Healthy Baby is Precious Blessing

To Make It Healthy and Keep it Healthy Use a Reliable Baby Laxative. In spite of the greatest personal care and the most intelligent attention to diet, babies and children will become constipated, and it is a fact that constipation and indigestion have wrecked many a young life. To start with a good digestive apparatus is to start life without handicap. But as we cannot all have perfect working bowels we must do the next best thing and acquire them, or train them to become healthy. This can be done by the use of a Saxative-tonic very highly recommended by a great many mothers. The remedy is called Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and has been on the market for two generations. It can be bought conveniently at any drug store for fifty cents or one dollar a bottle and those who are already convinced of its merits buy the dollar size. Its mildness makes it the ideal medicine for children, and it is also very pleasant to the taste. It is sure in its ; effect and genuinely harmless Very lltjtle of it is required and its frequent 'use does not cause it to lose its ef fect, as is the case with so many other remedies. Thousands can testify to its merits in constipation, indigestion, biliousness, sick headache, etc., among them reliable people like Mrs. M. Johnson, 752 Dayton St., Kenosha, Wis. She is the mother of little Dorothy Johnson who was always in delicate health unbr mother gave her Dr. CldwUi

Heeded.

James Francis Smith, former governor general of the Philippines and now a judge of the U. S. Court of Customs Appeals, 54 years old today. HOW TO BREAK UP A BAD COLD. Geo. P. Pfiung, of Hamburg. N. Y., says: "Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will break up a cold the quickest of anything I have ever used." This remedy contains no opium or other narcotic. It is most effectual and is pleasant ari safe to take. Try it. For sale by aF dealers. (Advertisement) This Date In History JANUARY ?8. 1725 Peter the Great of Russia died. Born in 1672. 1807 Pall Mall, London, lighted by gas, the first street of any city so illuminated. 1820 Jersey City incorporated. 1822 Alexander Mackenzie, a famous leader of the Liberal party in Canada, born. Died April 17, 1892. 1841 Henry M. Stanley, the celebrated African explorer, born near Denbigh, Wales. Died in England in 1904. 1855 First train passed over the Panama railroad. 1871 Paris surrendered to the Germans after a siege of 131 days. 1882 First cable street railway began operating In Chicago. 1889 General strike of street railway men in New York city. DOROTHY JOHNSON Syrup Pepsin. Mrs. Johnson says: "I i never say such rapid improvement in ! the health of any one. Syrup Pepsin is j a wonderful remedy and I shall never ; be without it again." Thousands keep j Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin constantly in the house, for every member of the family can use it from infancy to old age. The users of Syrup Pepsin have learned to avoid cathartics, salts, mineral waters, pills and other harsh remedies for they do but temporary good and are a shock to any delicate system. i ! 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 will do to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 417 Washington St., Monticello. 111., and a free cample bottle will b mailed you.

ysf

A CHARGE AGAINST SOCIALIST LEADER EUGENE V. DEBS. NEW YORK, Jan. 27. Eugene V. Debs, three times Socialist candidate for President, must appear at the May term of the United States Court of the Third Kansas district, according to the stipulations in the bond put up by his brother, on which he was released on $1,000 bail. Debs was arrested on a charge of obstructing justice by corrupting a witness in the government case against the "Appeal to Reason," the Socialist organ published at Girard, Kan. r The Masonic Calendar Tuesday, Jan. 28. Richmond Lodge No. 196, F. & A. M., called meeting, work in Master Mason degree. Refreshments. Wednesday, Jan. 29. Webb lodge. No. 24, F. & A. M. Called meeting, work in Fellowcraft degree. Friday, Jan. 31. King Solomon's Chapter. N-o. 4, R. A. M. Called convocation, work in Most Excellent Master degree. Two Rooorda. "I have crossed the Atlantic twenty times." boasted the man from New York. "Have you?" replied the man from Chicago. "My record beats that" "Oh. really V How many times hav you been over?" "I've never been over at all. but I've set foot in every state of the Union." "Quite remarkable. By the way, old chap, how many states are there now?" Chicago Record-Herald. Good Scheme. lucks rou Keep aupucates oi an your old love letters? What an ideal Wicks Yes; when I have done something particularly foolish 1 Just read over one of those letters. It is quite encouraging to know that I'm not nearly so much of a fool as I used to be. Exchange. Sore Throat or flouth. When the mouth or throat is irritated or diseased you have the common ailment of Sore Mouth or Sore Throat. If not quickly cured, you are in danger of contracting more serious or even fatal maladies such as Croup, Quinsy, Tonsilitis or Diphtheria. No other remedy will curs Sore Throat or Sore Mouth so quickly, so surely as T0NSIL1NE because TONSILINE is the one remedy especially made for that purpose. r You'll need TONSILINE one of d llAW UBJS, VI mjuv ftucu UU3 druff store is closed better have a bottle ready at home when you need it moet. 2oc and &0c. Kos--ital Size tl.00. All Druegists.

MoMlto-Eincl Grocery Specials Tomorrow Wednesday Only Eggemnieyer's Two Sttores A Change of Items Each Day and Specials Good ONLY On Days Mentioned For TOMORROW Only-Not Longer Your Choice of any of these Items 19 Cents Tomorrow Ojly 2 (15cPkgs) Not A Seed Raisins 19 Cts. t 2 (13c Cans) Early June Peas 19 Cts. Your CllOlCe 2 (13c Lbs.) Cooking Figs 19 Cts. 1 (25c Bottle) Grape Juice 19 Cts. For 1 (25c Can) Hershey's Cocoa 19 Cts. I 1 (25c Jar) Pure Fruit Preserves 19 Cts. ) y-i H 2 (15c Cans) Spanish Pimentoes 19 Cts. ( i M I 3 (10c Cans) Orleans Molasses ..) 19 Cts. JJ flQ 1 (25c Size) Jumbo Norway Mackerel 19 Cts. rD 7 U WATCH FOR THE CHANGE OF ITEMS FOR THURSDAY -J L. V THE ABOVE SPECIALS WEDNESDAY ONLY. ' We are selling the 25 Lb. Cloth Bags of Granulated Sugar NOW for $1.35. Watch for a SPECIAL FEATURE PRICE on this item, Saturday. J. M. EGGE1EYER & SONS

Sour Stomach

Gas on Stomach Bloating Constipation Quickly Vanish with a Home-Made Remedy Here is the recipe: Take two teaspoonfuls of ordinary baking soda, add two ounces of LOGOS Stomach Tonic extract and enough water to make a pint. Shake it up and you have a home-made remedy that drive away all signs of stomach trouble in & jiffy and then builds up the entire digestive system. If you are troubled in any way with your stomach, get busy with this tonic treatment. The remedy is easy to prepare; it does the business and saves considerable money. Get busy with your stomach now, and save trouble later on. You buy the LOGOS Stomach Tonic extract for fifty cents a two ounce bottle. If your druggist does not have it send 50 cents to Logos Remedy Company, Fort Wayne, Ind.. and receive a full size package, postpaid. PUNCTUATION. Tho Modern System Was Introduced by Aldus Manutius. Punctuation by means of stops or poiuts, so as to Indicate the meanlDg of sentences and assist the render to a proper enunciation. Is ascribed origi nally to Aristophanes, nn Alesundrian grammarian, who lived In the third century B. C. Whatever his system may have been, it wns subsequently neglected and forgotten, but was reintroduced by Charlemagne, the various stops and symbols being deslgued by Warnefrted and Alcuin The present system of punctuation wa Introduced In the latter part of the fifteenth century by Aldus Manutius. a Venetian printer, who was responsible for our period, colon, semicolon, comma, marks of interrogation and exclamation, parenthesis and dash, hyphen, apostrophe and quotation marks. These were subsequently copied by other printers until their use became universal. Most ancient languages were innocent of any system of punctuation. We find in mauy early mauscrlpta that iha loftora urn nlnroxl it onnnl distances apart with no connecting link between, even in the matter of spacing, an arrangement which must have rendered reading at sight somewhat difficult

i i

'oLciIh

Eleventh Season of the Pioneer De Luxe Train GoIdenSfafelimifed via Rock Island Lines Every worth-while excess train feature but no excess fare. Via the direct route of lowest altitudes every mile a mile away from winter daily from Chicago and St. Louis to Kansas City, El Paso, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and San Francisco.

LARGE TIMBER SALE In the Northwest to Be Held April 1.

t Palladium Special.) SPOKANE. Wash.. Jan. The largest sale of government timber er made in the northwest will be con3umaiated April lp wneil the national f,twfrv. VP.,.. .m di-no. of 000,000 feet of saw timber in the Kaniksu forest in Fend Oreille county of eastern Washington to the highest bidder. At the same time there will be sold 190.0DO cedar poles. The minimum prices that will be considered by the government tor the timber vary from $1 to $5 per thousand feet and it is estimated that the timber will r.et the government at least an average of $3 per thousand, making a total of considerably more than a million and a quarter dollars for the lot. Coeur De Lion Ixdge No. 8. K. of P. meets at Castle Hall every Tuesday night. Next Tuesday, the 2Sth, the rank of Knight w ill be conferred by !Past Chancellors. Refreshments will be served. All Knights welcome. Not Easily Caught. Wife I ee you're putting on your new coat It makes my old bat look awfully shabby Huhand-!s that so Well, thnt's soon mended I'll put on my old coat Kliegende Blatter. Worry polon the mind Just as much as a deadlv drug poisons the body and Just as surely. MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN. Trada Mars. I. u k . . . i arrant mm t elaa 11 IBnmiA, tfreaa. IEK. iCddraaa. uoni accept Bample miUed FREK. addraaa. nrauhatityie. A. 5. OLMSTED. LeRorTN.Y.

i ysszstA ine

r &9 YA Dau:

Calendar

. OartainBaiiaf for Feverlahaeaa, CaBtttpailaa, H a mji ac h a, MtaD-x-h Traaklea, Tee tWlair P laaraejr a, aad Deatra?

Tickets, reservations and informatim J. F. Powers District Passenger Agent 9 Claypool Building, Indianapolis, Ind.

High Grade Team Harness YES We manuajCture - all our Harness and have a complete line of heavy and light team and buggy Harness. Collars. Halters, Whips. Pads, etc. I have absolutely everything for the horse. Let us sharpen your Clipper Knives and repair your

Tine Harness lVlan 509 Main Street

IN 1913; NO MORE RHEUMATISM Also Gout and Sciatica Easy to Cure It Now;

Leo II. Fihe guarantees RHEUMA to banish Rheumatism or money back. He sells lots of it. People come for for miles to get it. RHEUMA quickly stops the torturing pains, relieves at once the intense suffering, and drives the Uric Acid poison from swollen joints. ! IIHFl'M A is a wnnrirfm nmi!v a splendid doctors best prescription; you don't have to take it a week and then wonder whether It is doing the work or not. Start to take it today RHEUMA won't waste any time; it starts to act on kidneys, liver, stomach and blood today, and tomorrow you'll know that Rheumatic poison is quitting you for ever. Use RHEUMA for rheumatism. sciatica, lumbago, arthritis, neuralgia and kidney disease. It surely does the work a bottle for only iO cents. Mail orders tilled by the Rheuma Co., Buffalo. New York. The Usual Method. Pa Embrace me. Thora. Reginald has asked your band in marriage. Thora Bnt l don't want to leave mother, pa. Pa Oh. never mind that Take her along with you. Stray Stories. There no need of It. Stilt m little Ko-N don'e. the original ami renuiiM Catarrhal Jelly up ttt noatxlla. Ita ovUu&c. hvalloc Proei artiM aulrVlv It oo tain tar 1 1 hay far, eolda. catarrh, aora throat, exarrhal I I haailarba.iUafBMa.vtp. ao4l oaW la ttaaaa aa tl I aaaitary lubaa. by u,a arufxuta. twapM traa. KOMDOM MPS. CO DR. E. J. DYKEMAN DENTIST Hours: S a, m. to 5:30 p. m. Evening by Appointment New Phone 2053. 10th & Main Sts. Over Starr Piano 8tore. PARCEL POST INSURANCE AS LOW AS 2't CENTS PER PACKAGE For Information Call Dougan, Jenkins & Co. Eighth and Main 8ts. Phone 1330 ANYTHING EflecttTic - GET IT AT 12 North 5th Street A NEW HOME If you are thinking of building, see me before letting your contract. I'll make it worth your while. J. S. CALDWELL 214 CHARLES ST. PHONE 4S27 GLASSES TO SUIT your eye Glasses to overcome the error of refraction, to make your vision normal once more that's my aim. as a registered Optometrist take advantage of this service. C. M. Svveitzer Ptton 1099 927'2 Main St.

mi