Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 104, 12 March 1913 — Page 2

PAGE TWO.

THE RICII3IO 0 PALLADIU3I AND SUX-TEI.EGKA3I, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1913.

LABOR LEADERS IN INDIANA ARE SORE John O'Mara, of Conductors1 Brotherhood Gives Opinion of Democrats.

(Palladium Special) INDIANAPOLIS. March 12. A furore of Indignation is in evidence among the labor unions and laboring classes in general, over the attitude of the recent session of the Indiana General " Assembly toward questions that have an important bearing on the welfare of the working classes. It is generally conceded in labor circles that the work of the legislature was a farce in securing the enactment of laws favorable to laboring men and women. That the Democratic party will have to answer to the laboring people of the state for its derelection along these lines, is apparent. It is already being predicted that the majority party in the legislature will lose thousands of votes at the next election on account of its failure to make possible certain needed reforms advocated by the working men and women of the state. The following words from John O'Mara, a prominent labor leader, of the Order of Railroad Conductors, expresses the feeling of a large number of the members of the labor unions throughout the state: "We do not complain when we are knolcked down and out," said Mr. O'Mara, "but we do object when they knAek us cold and then kick us while are down. "It must be made plain to the people of the state and to our people to the organizations for -whom the labor men stand, Just what is being done here and Just what Is being omitted by the legislature. "For myself, I am doubly hurt by this remarkable display on the part of the Democrats. These Democrats have made me out a liar. How can I go back to my people over the state and explain what has happened here and what is going on from day to day? Is there any possible way for me and my labor friends to square ourselves with our people? "We advised the labor men to support the Democrats and give the Democratic party a chance to make good. They made promises and I and my associates asked labor men to believe the pledges made by Democrats to labor men. Now what are we to say to the people we have deceived? "The Democrats were able to deceive thousands of Indiana wage earners last year, though the trend was tremenduously toward the Progressive party. We could not believe that the new party would make such a strong showing, and we feared to take the chance. For myself I am sorry that I did not see what was going to happen." I. am sorry that I did not see that the wage-earners were in a position last year to elect the Progressive ticket. I see it now. There can be no more deception. We know Just where we stand. The Democrats have had their chance. They failed to make good. It means, in my opinion, the sweeping early triumph of the Progressive party with its humanltarium platform and its direct appeal to the progressive quality in our citizenship."

HOW TO MAKE YOUR HAIR BEAUTIFUL

Ten Minutes' Home Treatment Works Wonders, Stops Falling Hair, Itching Scalp and Dandruff and Makes the Hair Soft Brilliant, Lustrous and Fluffy

Believe President Wilson has Secured . Progressive Members for his Cabinet

(Palladium Special)

WASHINGTON. March 12. Presi-

The President is also fortunate in

his selection of Mr. MeReynolds as At

ECCENTRIC MAN IS

PRONOUNCED "DEAD'

Bfg Timber of Guiana. The greenheart of British Guiana is one of the most remarkable and useful trees In the world. Of the three varieties yellow, black and maintop all are durable If cut at maturity and grow to such dimensions that logs can ."be had from eighteen to twenty-four inches square and seventy feet long. Greenheart la one of the eight woods esteemed as first class by the Lloyds, and admirable keelsons, piles and other ship timber, as well as submerged piling;, dock gates, etc., are made from it Owing to the great demand for the timbers- and the reckless destruction of trees, the government has pot a ban on cutting any which will not produce timbers eleven Inches square. Boston Globe. Baileenlsts a Bonanza. Is It true that you farmers are hostile to balloonists?" ventured the young aeronaut who had descended in the barnyard. "Why, no, stranger." laughed the old farmer as he came forward with a

pitchfork. "We are always glad to have a balloon land on oar place." Vm certainly glad to hear It" , "Yes, the last one that landed here came in bandy. I used the ropes to tie the steers, packed corn In the basket and cut the gas bag tip and made overalls for all the farm hands. Welcome, stranger, welcome!' Chicago News.

Better than all the so-called "hair tonics" in the world is a simple old fashioned home recipe consisting of plain Bay Rum, Lavona (de composee), and a little Menthol Crystals. These three mixed at home in a few minutea, work wonders with any scalp. Try it just one night and see. Get from your druggist 2 oz. Lavona, 6 oz. Bay Rum and dr. Menthol Crystals. Dissolve the Crystals in the Bay Rum and pour in an S oz. bottle. Then add the Lavona, shake well and let it stand for an hour before using. Apply it by putting a little of the mixture on a soft cloth. Draw this cloth slowly through the hair, taking just one small strand at a time. This cleanses the hair and scalp of dirt, dust and excessive oil and makes the hair delightfully soft, lustrous and fluffy. To stop the hair from falling and to make it grow again rub the lotion briskly into the scalp with the finger tips or a medium stiff brush. Apply night and morning. A few days' use and you cannot find a single loose or straggling hair. They will be locked on your scalp as tight as a vise. Dandruff will disappear and itching cease. In ten days you will find fine downy new hairs sprouting up all over your scalp and this new hair will grow with wonderful rapidity.

Any druggist can sell you the above. The prescription is very inexpensive and we know of nothing so effective and certain in Its result. (Advertisement

tteader, civil war veteran and enthusiastic student of Shakespeare, who was pronounced "dnd" by the super-

! ior of Spokane count v six week aso.

II 'really died :n this city this week.

; He had a brother who was killed in j the Indian mutiny at Calcutta, and his aunt was the famous Ann Devlin.

dent Wilson has been in office hardly J torney-general -and of Mr. McAdoo for (Edward Connolly's Aunt Was ! E troWier rath;r than reveal

long enougn as yet to enable him to , the Treasury Department. The Depart- j give any definite line upon the course I ment of Justice, like that of the Inter- j

his administration will follow. There j iOI meets problems the solution of ;

Ann Devlin Had Prized Letter.

. no qoudi mat ine general senumem ( wnich lmpeTatively demands a practt

iuhuius ms administration is one 01 good will and hopeful expectancy.

iglish soldiery

the hiding place

I Robert Kmmet. An eccentric, apparently

of the Irish hero.

sour-tem-

a fireman in the United States navy, serving on the United States steamships Potomac, Hartford aud Richmond. To the end ne was the prouJ possessor of a prized letter from the executive officer of the Hartford, Lieutenant Commander L. A. Kimberly, dated United States Hagship Han ford. Mobile Bay. November 26. 1S64. and reading: "This is to certify that Edward Connolly was attached to this ship at the time of the capture of the forts, ironclads and gunboats in

FUNERALJFJOBERTS Was Held This Afternoon Civil War Veteran.

(Palladium Special) WILLIAMSBURG, Ind., March 12, The funeral of George Roberts took place from the methodist church at 1:30 o'clock this afternoon. The deceased was 78 years of age and was born and raised and spent his entire life in Williamsburg. He was a veteran of the Civil War. A son and two daughters survive.

Turtle Soup at the Berg-

hoff saloon Thursday 15c per bowl. 112t

EPIDEMIC OF TRAMPS

Farmers Object to Their Sleeping in Barns. An epidemic of tramps is threaten

ing the city according to the police

authorities as hoboes from all parts of the country have been in the city for the past few days. Several went

to the office of the township trustee

today and asked for transportation to

various parts of the country. All were refused aid. It is believed that the "knights of the road" have been hibernating in the south and are beginning to migrate at this season as usual. Many of them are becoming bothersome to the farmers who object seriously to their sleeping in their barns because of the fear of Are.

There is a wide-spread recognition of the fact that the task before him is of colossal proportions. He knows that he comes into his high office as the choice of a decided minority of the voters of the country. Moreover, he comes into office proclaiming himself a progressive, uttering progressive sentiments and declaring his intention to surround himself with progressives only, but with a consistent and nearly life-long record of action and utterance diametrically opposite to his more recent profession. The first question, therefore, to which the expectant country demands response is as to the genuineness of his conversion to progressiveism. Answer in part to that question is naturally sought in the character of the men he has chosen as his cabinet advisors. As far as this selection affords answer to the question, it is favorable. He has placed Mr. Bryan at the head of his cabinet. If Mr. Bryan's activities in the administration are to be limited to the State Department only, his selection will have no special force in determining the progressive or non-progressive character of the administration, for the work of the State Department bears but slightly upon domestic affairs. It is the gen

eral impression, however, that Mr. Bryan's influence will be felt outside j the restricted limits of his own de- j partment. j The departments whose conduct will j furnish the best line upon the true I

purpose or the administration are those of Justice, the Treasury and the

Interior, with the last named probably I most important in this respect. For it is in the Interior Department that the great conservation questions come up '

constantly on which there is no possibility of avoiding the issue. The line between progressiveism and reaction is more sharply drawn on these con

servation questions than on any other, j There is no middle ground. Decisions ' there must be either progressive or j reactionary. j Mr. Wilson is fortunate in having '

the support and service of Franklin K. Lane in the Interior Department. Mr. Lane, as a member of the Inter-State Commerce Commission, accomplished more than all others to bring that commission to the high state of efficiency it has attained and to make it fulfill so largely as it does the popular ideal of what it should be. Mr. Lane

cal application of progressive princi-! pies. The genuine progressive of the '

country will watch this department eagerly for developments, especially in regard to dealing with trusts and corporations that will show conclusively whether the administration purposes to take a genuinely progressive Xatienal attitude toward the trust problem or to be content with a pseudoprogressive but really reactionary States right course. The course of the Treasury Department, and that of the Department of Commerce as well, also will be watched eagerly for developments that may furnish in part an answer to this same question. These are questions the answers to which can be found, only in the acts of the administration. Such preliminary indications as there are tend to justify the hope that the answer when given will be favorable.

' pered old man, beneath the surface j Mobile Bay. August 5. 1S64. I Connolly had a sunny disposition.) Connolly never m-urted and has no CIVIL WAR VETERAN Krora h!s rouh ,os; raoin on his relatives surviving him so far is is 'homestead south Of Spokane, taken up j known. i in 1873. and retained as a home ever;

since, many a wanderer departed fed (TEACHERS' CLUB and warm. To the lew he permitted TT C1 V I I T'VfMIlTrtNT jto enter into closest friendship with! jbim he revealed a rare and apparentlv inexhaustible fund of anecdotes of Wayne County Women. Teachj travels all over the world, cf battles '" club will give a luncheon. SaturJon Union gunboats, of early trials in day. March the .nd. at the Hotel

the western wilderness, of long months Westeott. Atttr tne lunt neon m'" of roving. , Helle O Hair, president of the IndianaConnolly cafne to the United States polis Teachers" Federation, will delivin 1S63 and the following year became er an address.

Brother of Recluse Was Killed in Indian Mutiny At Calcutta.

(National News Association) SPOKANE. Wash., Match 12 Edward Connolly, recluse, pioneer home-

ROMANCES OF PORCELAIN. The Climax to Palissy's SixUen Years of Misery. The maker of porcelain and pottery has decidedly the most exciting and

! romantic trade In the "world.

The great factories of Sevres and Dresden were founded by Bernard Pal issy. This man invented whtye enamel, but it took him sixteen years to make the invention sixteen years of hun ger, misery and persecution, which cul

I minated In the episode, used in II. A. t Jones play of "The Middleman." j wherein Pallssy maintained his furnace

fire by burning all the furniture In his house and finally opened the furnace door to find within the glaze which he had sought throughout the best years of his life. Bottgher invented bard porcelain. He was an alchemist, and one day. chancing to discover that his powdered wig was unusually heavy, he inquired the cause and found that the weight was due to the kaolin with which the wig was powdered. This kaolin wa the substance for lack of which Bottjrher's investigation had for yean failed. When Elers opened a porcelain factory at Burslem, England, be employed the most stupid and illiterate workmen, so that his secret processes might not become known. But Samuel Ast bury resolved to learn the Elers meth

od, and. affecting Ignorance and stu

has already evidenced strong sympa-! pjdity. he got a place in the factor, thy with progressive principles and j mastered all of Elers secrets and even- j

mere is suDstantrai reason ior expect-: tually opened a plant of his own,

wherein he duplicated in every detail

ing him to hew sharply to the line in

his work in the Interior Department

the work of Elers.

"THIRTY FEET FROM SEVENTH STREET."

You'll to better at Drulit rirolhers

"THIRTY FEET FROM SEVENTH STREET"

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The Eesauiy off WMQe Enaaunmdl FMinmiQinFe IS FELT MORE EASILY THAN DESCRIBED WHEN YOU SEE THIS BEAUTIFUL FINISH YOU REALIZE ITS RESTFULNESS To the Body as Well as the Mind.

Never a Chance for a Room to Grew Dim or Dreary When Furnished with Spotless White Bee?, Dresser and Chiffonier

WE SHOULD LIKE TO INTEREST YOU IN THE FURNISHING OF AT LEAST ONE ROOM OF YOUR HOME IN THIS STYLE

We WUl Help You with the decorations and all You'll Thank Us for the Suggestion if You Will Only Carry Out the Idea. See Omit East! WSimdlow

Corrected. Teacher What are parallel lines? Micky Mulberry, what are you grinning at? Micky Mulberry 'Sense me, Miss Sharpe, but any loidy might make de same mistake. Yer ...deans parallel bars, don't yer? Puck.

WHAT MEN WILL WEAR THIS SPRING

K Men's 6pring suits are in beautiful Scotches, tweeds and cassimeres, London grays, "Oxford blues and browns. All this wealth of new weaves and colorings are combined with the staple blues and grays in serges and tweeds, but decidedly pretty are certain English effects in which a distinctive pattern is produced by two tones of the same color blending Into the design. Over 600 styles in these new woolens at Emmons Tailoring Company. Fine suits $15, $18, $24 and up. Corner Ninth and Main. (Advertisement)

Saves Elderly People From Kidney and Bladder Miseries

Sleep Disturbing Bladder Weaknesses, Backache, Stiff

loints Kheumatic Fains Disappear After Few

Doses Are Taken.

er poisonous impurities that lodge in the joints and muscles and cause rheumatism. It neutralizes the urine so it

no longer irritates the bladder, over

comes unnecessary breaking of sleep

and restores the kidneys and bladder

health and strength.

matters not how long you have

Tered. how old you are, or what else

used. The very principle

xone Is such that it is practicalosslble to take it into the human

without results. There is noth-

on earth like it. It starts to

minute you take it and re-

u the first time you use it,

iur misery and suffering soon

You can secure an original

f Croxone at trifling cost

irst-class druggist. All drug-

authorized to personally re-

urchase price if it fails in a

in years are seak kidires of

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Anmiim(Bemeinitt

This company which has been organized for the purpose of building modern homes in Richmond to be sold for cash or easy terms, has now opened offices in Room 240, Colonial Building, where we shall be pleased to meet all of our old friends and new ones. We are now prepared to handle the home building and selling business in a satisfactory manner. We will alsohandle other good investments of merit and at the present time have several absolutely safe propositions that pay 6 per cent net, and a few houses that are listed below, and more under construction.

South West Fifth, between Main and A Sts.; piped for furnace, bath room with toilet, hardwood floors, hardwood finish in stairs and best room, both waters, sewer and gas ; 5 rooms, pantry and basement. There are four houses all about the same. One is sold.

Also a 5 room brick, 2308 North F. Modern 8 room house ; bath, hot water plant, electric light, hardwood floors, newly painted. Corner lot. Vacant lot in Benton Heights, cost $275; to sell at $175. In addition to these, 3 more houses are started and will be completed soon

Modern House 8 rooms and sleeping porch, furnace, bath room, hardwood floors. Paved street. The biggest house for the money anywhere. Will consider a trade on this, good rentals or farm. Quick possession. Also a 5 room frame, 469 Linden avenue, $1,550.

WITH THE EXTENSIVE PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS that have been made on the west side of the river the past year: Eight blocks of paved street; West Fifth street just newly made, and the National road just completed, makes it one of the best places in Richmond to purchase a home. Good street car service all the time, and all the other conveniences you have anywhere. We are always giving the real estate business our most careful consideration, and investing only in what we consider to be the best for the money in Richmond, and our experience in this line is assurance to you, that when you buy of us, or through our agents, you are bound to get something that is worth the price asked. The officers of this company during the past ten years have given this business much study and consideration, and our customers are assured of courteous treatment at all times.

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iome Builders"

ROOM 240, COLONIAL BUILDING PHONE 4347 L G. KEMPER, President Residence Phone 3234. 319 West Blain St.

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