Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 311, 7 November 1913 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, NOV. 7, 1913
The Richmond Palladium
AND 8UN-TEL.EGRAM.
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Blaaonic Building. Ninth and North A Streets. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.
IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS
In Richmond. M eenta a week. By MaiL In advance no year. 6AM; six month. 2M; one month. 45 cents. Rural Itoutes. in advance one year, $2.00; !t months, $1.25; one monsta 25 cent.
Entered at the Pot Office at niAmont Indiana, a Second C1b Mail Matter.
tries) have had harder bargains driven with I ninPjlTTO Q T I 101(11 them in the matter of loans than any other peo- jAUlUuA I LU NLLIuIUIi
pie in the world. Interest has been exacted of j them that was not exacted of anybody else, be- I cause the risk was said to be greater, AND i THEN SECURITIES WERE TAKEN THAT '
DESTROYED THE RISK! An admirable ar
rangement for those who are forcing the terms!" j
Not the least interesting thing about this great speech, which will richly repay the most careful study and re-study, is that it was deliv
ered extempore from shorthand notes prepared ; SPEAKS
by the President in a twenty minute sitting ;
shortly before the meeting. . :
Wm. H. Smith, Humorist, Assails Wilson Policy Toward Mexico
The Rev. Stanley Hughes Holds Moral Nature of Child Neglected.
AT EARLHAM
Election Aftermath "The day after," that season of blues and excuses and reaction, has been weathered and survived. The sour cup of defeat has been quaffed as graciously as human nature will permit and erstwhile cocksure candidates are busy preparing for the next campaign and philosophizing as to how it happened. A number of discredited braves are pulling themselves out of the snow and getting ready for their little trip up Salt River. The sexton is digging graves in political burying grounds, and brave gentlemen are retiring to private life. Meanwhile a number of interesting and suggestive features of the year's campaign crop out and invite comment. There is Sulzer, for instance. That good man has become almost a public institution and receives well nigh as much space in the press as that other "peculiar" man, Harry K. Thaw. He was elected assemblyman by the Sixth district, carrying the office by a sweeping plurality. What really happened, of course, was that
Mr. Sulzer merely cashed in the turbulent sentiment now raging against Tammany Hall. His victory shows how high the tide has lifted against the Tiger but is in no sense, what he himself claims, a popular vindication of his record. The ex-governor is merely a poser, of slovenly and picturesque habits who has a trick of capturing the imagination of the crowd. A slight perusal of his printed speeches reveals little more than a store of highly flavored old fashioned, political catch words and phrases. Boiled down in some cannibalistic pot nothing would prove solid enough to sink to the bottom except his unusual gift, of flowery declamation, an ability not good for much in a state's law making assembly. Another surprise in the election outcome was Schenectady's defeating her preacher-Socialist mayor, Charles Lunn. Lunn pulled a thousand, more votes this time than when elected, but gave up the ghost to a three headed fusion ticket of Progressives, Republicans and Democrats. He was somewhat eccentric, a little bull headed, and visionary in some things, but a capable executive for all that as even his dearest enemies have had to admit. Of course, he did little to set up "Socialism" in the home of the General Electric Company, but managed to set a pace that will tax his successor to the limit. And the way Charles Sumner Bird swept into second place behind the Democratic nominee in the Massachusetts gubernatorial race has sent flying back to Limbo the well masticated charges that the Progressive party is now defunct in Massachusetts. Bird not only left his Republican competitor far in the rear, but raised the Bull Moose vote in several of the better developed sections of the state. The extraordinary industrial leader and manufacturer pledges to get back in the harness four years hence, or as many times as necessary thereafter, to put Bull Moose principles to work in Springfield's assembly halls. And now put on the soft pedal. Local Republican chiefs are publicly charging up to Zimmerman the disemboweling of G. O. P.-ism in Wayne county. His personal machine was too strong for us in the regular organization, aver the braves, and we had to give in to him.
Big Strike in Copper Country On September 23, about 15,000 copper miners walked out on strike in Houghton, Hancock, and Calumet, Michigan. This is the first serious labor disturbance in fifty years in the copper districts of the Michigan peninsula. All told, these mines, which spread over
three counties, produce
Present Educational System Branded "Principle of ! Suicide."
William Hawley Smith, lecturer and hurnorits. traveler, educational author- I itv. and at one time associate of Hill Nye on the lecture platform, after a day's visit with friends in this city left today with his wife for their winter home in Tyron, N. C. Mr. Smith is now more than seventy years eld hut is still hale and hearty and his humor even more quaint and droll than when he and the inimitable Nye toured the country together and left pales of laughter in their wake. Fiut humorist that he is. his humor.
Mike Xve's, is based on serous, vital
facts. He is a deep student of the psychology of children und is r.'fos nized as one of the pioneers in the field of educational reform. His hook.
; " The Kvohition of Dou," is a stanri- ' ard textbook for teachers and hundreds of thousands of copies of it have , been sold. Received Only $200. "I'nfortunately 1 pot less than $200 for it," remarked Mr. Smith today.
The statement that Karlham college is far in advance of many of the larger educational institutions of the country, because the system used by the lofal srnoo! embraces not only the scientific training of the student, but
annually 220 000 000 a! the spiritual growth and develop- Edward Everett Hale read it in a l:t-
pounds of Copper, Or about 20 per cent Of total address at Earlham college Thursday and told me il was a good thing. I
Of this the famous mor'ng iy Stanley Hughes, i). it., a published it in book rorm. At that
iiunuei Miiuem ai me couege, aim , time evolution was generally regainabout ; now rector of the Episcopal church at j ed as nothing more or less than athe-
.New Province, R. I. ; iSm, so it fell flat. I kept the plates, "The ancient educational principles ; however, and finally sold them to a involved primarily the teaching of re-; printer at Peoria, 111., which is my
ngion, said the speaker, "and the greater institutions of this age will eventually adopt it. The basis of ed
it the United States and
furnishes
produced in the nation,
Calumet and Hecla shaft
75,000,000 pounds per annum. Normally, 16,000 men work in this district, half of whom are employed by the Calumet and Hecla company. Of these almost one half are Finns, who, with few exceptions, are Socialists.
All told, no less than thirty-eight nationalities j
are represented, the maioritv being Cornishmen,; spiritual element, and yet
Irish, Swedes, Finns, Croatians, Italians, Hungarians, and other peoples from south-eastern Europe. For years the Western Federation of Miners sought to organize locals in the copper district, but with little success. The miners were reasonablv well satisfied, conditions were not unusuallv
, u i i r i i j (teaching of any one religion in the thev mav conquer it and so much the fourth act portravs the apple orchard
. 1 v v. a , aui tii kjci i vi LUiiu. o piai i uiau. jl - pulMlc SCuOOlS, tor I KnOW
I ucation
i France particularly, is calculation, and
e
and yet after we
have taught a child how to spell and read, in an expensive building, surrounded by every convenience, we turn him out on the streets and in the slums without a principle to help him
home when I am home, and he sold them to a Chicago publishing house. The profit that firm has made off my little hook has not bolstered up my finances, however." Mr. Smith has spent much time in Mexico and he Is keenly interested in the situation in that country at the present time. He frankly states that in his opinion President Wilson has made a mistake in not recognizing the Huerta government. The Anglo Saxon
ideal of government is neither tinder-
icans. Mr Smith said. Huerta he says, is neither better nor worse than his two predecessors. Dia7. and Madero His elimination of Madero with an army rilie was not in violation of the rules of Mexican politics, which are based on the principle of survival of the fittest and power and plunder for the strongest man. "I would hate like sin to see some of our big Yankee soldiers used for targets down In that country. It would be a useless action in sending them there, for as soon as they were withdrawn the Mexicans would immediately resume their national pastime of shooting each other . up.' he said. i Mr Smith has many amusing rec-' olloctions of Hill Nye. Most amusing of them, however, is his account of how Nye used to write his weekly letter which was syndicated to newspapers throughout the country and for which he was paid $5' per letter. Nye would prite this letter every Sunday morning. Mr. Smith satd. tioine to his room he would sit in a chair, place a tablet on one knee and begin to write. St) thoroughly concentrated j would Nye's mind be on the work he j was engaged in that he would fro- j quently slip from his chair to the ! floor and would then continue to write while kneeling. Probably before he had finished writing he would be prone upon his ' stomach and when he had completed: his work his face would frequently be purple from his exertions, both i
mental and physical. "The whole country would scream with laughter over thes letters, but there were very fewpeople who knew what serious work '.hey were for Nye." said Mr. Smith. "Once while he was writing his syndicate letter the hotel he was in caught on fire but he did not know it until a stream of water came through a window in his room. He almost fell
COMPLETE REPAIRS Final repairs were made on the Pennsylvania coal docks yesterday and this moraine the first engine were coaled. During the time the docks were undergoing repair, the engines were loaded by means of large iron buckets and a crane. The coal bins were reinforced with steel rods and a new floor was placed in the building. New iron fixtures were also placed throughout the structure.
TRAIN DELAYED Pennsylvania passenger train No. Jt was delayed a quarter of an hour this morning by the changing of engines. The big mogul which drew the train into Richmond had a leaky boiler and the fireman was unable to keep up steam.
NEW ORDER IN EFFECT All freight engines and passenger trains Nos. 16 and 36 on the Pennsy Line have been ordered to coal at the docks Rev. near Anderson. Ird New docks have recently been completed at that place and will mean the saving of many minutes by coal from the docks instead of by the bucket and crane equipment. Thi order went into effect todajr.
C. & O. AGENT HERE H. F. Shaw, of Muncie, Commercial Agent of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad was in Richmond in conference with freight agent Greenstreet.
OVERSEES REPAIRS
counteract ineir influence. o,, k,. nroMi,i r, i.tin imor. out r.f ihn hntul ihon "
The Protestant churches, in allow- j ing education to be a public institu-; - - - ----------1- -- .. 1 l tion, and therefore bound to be a an evil so frightful that men shudder i play faithfully depict the scenes and compromise, have adopted a princi- j at the sight. So much the more should : times of the period in which 'Little pie of suicide. I don't advocate the j thev face it that thev mav know how i Women" was actually lived. The
I 1
c-anizatinn difficult.. Tint in 1008-10 fivp unions never work. Just how- we are to meet
. , , , , . , , i this problem is a matter of serious
were ai iasr eiiectea ana it is tnese wnicn nave i thought.
Presents Solution. "As a ruggestion," concluded the speaker, "those of you who are interested in the subject may find the solution in the method used by the
it would , more their duty, though it be on Sun-
led the present strike.
day." This production will be offered at the Gennett tonight. Don't fail to take advantage of this opportunity.
at Plumfield in golden autumn. Newelectrical effects will be used, which have never been seen before on the local stage.
. 1 . - .. ... iiit- .t ui ii v . lilt iiirnii e 1 jr-1 ! I el nm. ivti
ibcuoois 01 -oa hcoua. aii cnimren, 1 . . .. - - . ! crowds that visited that dodu ar Die
hnlie ottpnrl rtl Ll peuui iiidiu-e mm me piuuuv
The miners' chief demand is for an eight hour
day and a minimum wage of three dollars for all j both Protestant and Catholic, attend
men working underground. At present only j ?n In ioHtKnd no p.bout 85 npr cpnt of miners and 25 ner cent of judice is felt in business. But on
- ! Thiirsdav mnrnire all the ofhnnle in !
trammers (who do the heaviest work and are Nova Scotia close, and the boys and!8Pecial mention should also be made
seldom able to stand the strain longer than sev-iRfi eacl? l a church of their ' .sl; f . - ... . . ..! father's choice, where thev are stlven I tact the entire company are seen to
en years) receive three dollars or more. And all catechetical and Biblical instruction. work ten hour schedules which means, after time 'I,tJ ?.eem tnaj ua S-V8tem "ke th'9 could be adopted by our great repubis taken going to and from work and ascending J lie, and thus solve a question, which,
and descending the levels, about eleven hours ! rfeSu,t ifor rSn? SUn?ly
a day. Another source of discontent is the single man drill which has lately been introduced. This machine weighs about 150 pounds, is cumbersome, difficult to operate and must be carried by
hand UP slippery balconies and adjusted firmly ered by the president Saturday at In
, c , . , 1 dianapolis before the City and Town before use, a process which requires usually j a8SOClation wnich be in session
"The Two Orphans." , , Murrette. -The Two Orphans" are plaving to j The exclusive service of the General the largest hiKines of the season at Film company continues to grow In
the Miirrnv the theatre heine nacked , popularity as was snown Dy
as was shown by tne
visited that poj
ture house yesterday. The feature
picture "Wild Animals at I-arge" was
Speaks at Goshen College.
President R.
tion is by far the best ever seen in thla ettv nf thf prpaf lrl nlav Mr.
Sayles is doing a clever piece of act- , Pronounced by all w no seen it as one
g this week in the part of Pierre and 01 nlot'1 wonaertui pit-mre me,
iiau evtr seen. louay ine leaiuie picture entitled "The Frozen Trail." a Klondike drama will be Been. This picture was shown in Indianapolis last Monday and Tuesday and was seen by several Richmond people, who said it was one of the beat pictures ever seen by hem. A comedy made by the
William A. Brady's production of I Lubin comoanv. the subiect beine "A
good advantage. There will be anoth
er matinee tomorrow. "Little Women."
J A. L. Lopshire. of Ft. Wayne, road ; foreman of engines of the O. R. and I. ! railroad, was In Richmond today overj seeing the repairs on some of the rn j glnes of the road which are being re- ! paired at the Pennsylvania shops.
ECKLES
flow is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots. There's no longer the slightes; ne J of feeling ashamed of your freckbs, as the prescription othlne Uoubl strength is guaranteed to remoxt these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othine double strength from Leo If. Fihe an. I apply a little of It night and mo-tiing and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begi.n to disap pear, while the lighter ones have nr Ished entirely. It Is seldom tt.t more than an ounce Is needed to v-t;;i-pletely clear the skin and gain a bea-h t:ful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength othine as this is sold under guarantee of money back If It fails to remove freckles.
"Little Women," which scored wonderful successes in New York and Chi-
lu. iveuj lb aillUUg Hie , rntrn the nnat i-oar will ho TirocontoH
college men who spoke Friday at the at the Gennett theatre, matinee and installation of the new president of ,,. oatlirrt!,v Vnvmtr is -l ittle
Goshen college. John E. Hartzler. j women" the play, is really "Little
1 j ujamrui ivtrwj i cjn trcc:iiLt-vi lilt? 11i dowed colleges of the state.
Another address also will be deliv-
Hungry Tramp" and "The Scarecrow"
both pictures on the same reel will also be shown and the prediction is that record breaking crowds will visit the Murrette today and tomorrow as "The Frozen Trail" la so strongly en-
Women," the book, by Louisa M. Al-! dorsed bv those w ho seen the picture.
cott, published over forty years ago : that capacity audiences should rule. and given a stage version by Marian , de Forest, by arrangement with Jessie J A Gente -nd Effectlve Uaxatve. Bonstelle, who secured the consent of 4 nnfi pffertiv. inra.
2!
about One and a half hours Because of the hardiat tna time- Tne subject of this ad-il,!16 heirs to the dramatization, j tive ig what peopiP demand when suf- , , . . ,. , . - dress will be "The Bible as Outside : or s", . J5weeh ,mp,e, .or ; fering from constipation. Thousands labor required for operation and the loneliness Of i High School Work." home life in New hngland during the j,wear by Dr. King's New Life Pills.
At the Murray. W eek of Nov. 3. The Two Orphans
working all day a mile below daylight without a companion the miners have bitterly complained. As soon as the strike was declared, prominent union leaders, among them being John Mitchell, hurried to Calumet to take personal charge. At the same time the mine owners began a process to have an injunction issued forbidding picket
ing and marching. In three or four days Gov- j
ernor Ferris hurried 2700 militia to the scene and declared the strike district under martial law. But there was little or no disturbance. Union officials repeatedly urged their men to go
pbnut nrarmpH vpmain nniot nnrl nx-niH vinlonpo
I . 1 Concerning "Damaged Goods. I in any form. But the employers were in such! when the remarkable special guest I fear of violence they secured a gang of WaddellJ ?f"i?.nce of "Ilamad Goods" m j J e. t i Washington was proposed last spring : Mahon "detectives" from Chicago. Most of and i.t was found impossible to have
these are Chicago discharged policemen and car- j nff'thT" w a sngZ PosS l'V bad records. viewed a number of the leading slergy,r... . , . 'men of the city to ascertain whether W ithin a day or two six or eight of them fol-!they would oppose such a perform-
lowed an Austrian miner home, fired through hisi!noe-. Te?nin e necessity , ,. , . , 1 tor Piling the play on the Sabbath,
Doaraing-nouse winaows and Killed two men, one the foremost ministers of the
a youth, and wounded two others.
Civil war. Mr. Brady has given the ' UuKh Tallman. of San Antonio. Tex.
At the Gennett. Nov. 7. "Damaged Goods. Nov. 15. "Little Women."
city
play an elaborate production. Many of the old fashioned properties and costumes which are used in the playwere furnished by the heirs of the Alcott family and residents of Concord, Mass., who are desirous of having the
writes: "They are, beoynd question, the best pills my wife and I have ever taken." They never cause pain. Price 25c. Recommended by A. G. Luken. Ad vert I semen t
the men were jailed pending trial for manslaugh-
The President's Mobile Speech Great historical land marks are often set up, like Solomon's Temple, without sound of hammer or saw. We believe President Wilson's speech at Mobile, Alabama, delivered October 27th, will ultimately join that extraordinary family of American speeches of which Lincoln's Gettysburg address is the best known example, and further, we believe it will mark a new era in our diplomatic relationship with Central and South American countries. Secretary Garrison was so impressed by the utterance he declared it would hold a place in future history as "the Mobile declaration" and be pointed to as the completing work of the Monroe doctrine. In fact the deliverance did carry the famous doctrine through to its logical conclusion. We have forbidden other nations to seize territory in Central or South America, said the President, in substance, and now it is time to apply the same doctrine to ourselves and announce to the world that the United States will bind herself to the principle as closely as any European state. "The United States," he said, "will not again seek to secure one additional foot of territory by conquest." One of the most striking parts of the address was his analysis of Big Business's part in Latin American countries. He did not hesitate to charge many of the revolutions, disturbances and upheavals to the machinations and devices
nf V Tntaraste "TIir (J of? AmartKan
A? there iras ' took tne position that the lesson of liic vcirt!the nlav was of such vital imnnrtancn
no visible provocation for this wanton murder, j that the community could not afford
to los the opportunity of hearing it, even though it had to be given on
1.. i-i IT ... V" 11," i ,J.. .
ier. since tnese men are nirea to quen aisturD- Minnay. me concensus or opinion i u,. ,..;n -r; . c ,as voiced by the Rev. Dr. U. G. B.
"I"-" """'.v w -UIlllIlul"Kj Pierce, pastor of All Souls Church, of i j disorder because the longer disorders continue j which William H. Taft was a mem- j i v,u 4. t i. -i. i ber during the four years of his pres-; jthe longer their .lob holds OUt. But in spite of ; Wncy. Dr. Pierce said: "I feel that i I every effort so far made to incite the men to;the dramatic presentation of this teri . i , , , ,. ,. i rific message, so much more powerful ' ! violence in order to arouse public prejudice ; han any then kind of presentation1 ' pgainst them a month's striking has brought could possibly be, w-m be of such inj estimable value and so great an oppor- ; almost no trouble at all. j tunity for the city rhat it becomes a j solemn duty of all citizens who can to attend it. And I say this though I ! Governor Ferris has endeavored to arbi-1 ara 'ery, i10'18 pf encroachments up-
trate and restore normal conditions, but the : and recreation. This is not theatrical
Thp PorloT-'al Tiorwrt- 'entertainment, but the disclosure of
Better
Dumplings Occasionally, even the best cooks have difficulty in making light, delicate dumplings and steamed
or boiled puddings.
Not from lack of skill, but from the failure of the baking powder to properly do its work.
Because it raises at just the right time and in just the right
manner, you can always depend on
MURRETTE Today "The Frozen Trail" A Klondike Drama Special 2 Reel Feature "The Hungry Tramps" Lubin Comedj The Educated Monkey Vitagraph Drama
THE WHOLE SOME BAKING POWDER
owners refuse to listen.
ment of Labor has made every possible effort to adjust the differences, but with equal futility. During: the past ten years every $25 share has been paying $40.20 dividends ; of course the good stockholders who "probably live in New England and Europe are loathe to share any part of this neat sum with dirty foreigners like Finns and Croatians ! Arbitration seems out of the question. The strike has settled down to a long, dreary endurance test. The mine owners are trying to starve the strikers out and so compel a settlement on the company's basis. We wonder how long the nation is to endure this industrial anarchy which eats like a cancer at the social fabric of the land ! Every mother's son of us pays his share of the cost of these barbarous miscarriages of our unorganized industrial system. While two groups fight each other for larger shares of the proceeds, the general public, with its millions of consumers, stands meekly by and foots the bills.
OF LOCAL INTEREST
Some People We Know and We Willi Profit by Hearing About Therr. ; This is a purely local evert. It took place :n Richmond Not in some faraway place. You are asked to investigate it. Asked to believe a citizen's word; ! To confirm a citizen's statement. Any article that is endorsed at home Is more worthy of confidence Thar, one you know notlrns about, Endorsini by unknown people. Mrs. John Brannan. IS South Third street. Richmond. Ind.. says: "Doan's Kidney Pills are just as represented and are a fine kidney remedy. Whenever any of us have pains in the back or other troubles caused by irregular , kidney action. Doan's Kidney Pills give relief." '. The above statement must carry conviction to the mind of every reader. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy ask distinctly for Doan's Kidney Pills, the same that Mrs. Brannan had the remedy backed by home testimony. 50c at stores. Foster-Milburn Co.. Props.. Bu2alo. N. f . "When Your Back is Lame Remember the Name." j (Advertisement?
1027 Main
Phone 2577
Dressed Chicken FRESH VEGETABLES Lettuce, Cauliflower, Spinach, Celery, Turnips, Carrots, Jersey Sweet Potatoes, Parsley, Cabbage, Parsnips, Green Beans, etc.
turday Specials
r FLORIDA DC GRAPE FRUIT Ut NORWAY MACKEREL 15c Lii!! 15c EXTRA SPECIAL FOR MONDAY AA Good Keeping Table Potatoes AA ZXJL In Five Bushel Lots UUI Orders Taken Saturday for Monday Delivery-
GENNETT FRIDAY, NOV. 7 Matinee and Night. Damaged Goods Prices 23c Up Seat Sale Murray Theatre Now.
MURK A V ALL THIS WEEK The Francis Sayles' Players In th irreateet rdaT T" written. The Two Orphans Orer a quarter hundred people in the caat. The greatest production of the season. NOTE During the week the curtain will rise at 8 p. in. prompt, and at 2:15 at matinees. PRICES Matinees Tues, Thure. and Sat, 10c and 20c. Nights, 10c, 20c and 30c Next week. "The Lottery Man"
LOANS 2 Per Cent Per Month
on household goods, pianos, teams, stock, etc.. without removal. Loans made in all surrounding towns. Call, write or phone and our agent will call at j-our house.
Private
Reliable
The State Investment and Loan Company Rocm 40 Colonial Blag. Phone 2560 Take elevator to Third Floor. Richmond, Indiana.
