Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 326, 27 November 1914 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
TOE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, NOV. 27, 1914.
The Richmond Palladium
And San-Telegram Published 'ami owned by tfcs PALLADIUM FKINTING CO. luurrt IT...Sunday. Streete. B.cCorner North 9th rad Office, 2566; New Department. I1JL HICBMOND. INDIANA. KUDOLPH a LEEDS. SUBSCRIPTION TEEMS In Richmond. $5.00 per year (la advance) lOe per week. URAL ROUTES One rear. In advance Sue months, ia advance -J Line month, in advance .33 Addreia changed as oftea aa ttcairedi both new and old addresses must be ftvea. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; aarac will not be edtrred untd payment received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS One year, in advance ..........13.04 Six months, in advance 2.60 One month, in advance................ .41 Entered at Richmond, Indiana, a second ciaii mail matter. At. ort Repieaentatives Payne ft Young, 30 34 West 33d Street, and 29-3$ West 32nd Street. New York, N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne Young, :47-74H Marquette Ituilding. Chicaaro. 111. Cole Blease At It Again. Cole Blease, as Governor of South Carolina, granted pardons, paroles and commutations to 101 prisoners in the State Penitentiary and county convict Rangs. Of those released, sixteen vvere serving life sentences for murder and thirty-one were serving shorter terms for manslaughter. Fewer than fifty prisoners remain in the penitentiary and, with Christmas and New Year's still to come before Blease goes nut of office, the prospect is good that the South Carolina prison will be rrapty. Blease during four years as Governor has released 1,430 convicts. He has made it a practice to extend clemency to a long list of prisoners each Christmas. New Years and Thanksgiving. Apparently he looks upon justice as his own special, personal prerogative. Ms has made a farce of law in his liKlti and brought discredit and ridi cule on American institutions. All Kates join in thankfulness that he is ; about to be removed from opportunity which he never should have had in the first place. It is not surprising that there should he a man in South Carolina or any oth ,r state of the Cole Blease type. It , takes all kinds of people to make up j the world. The surprising feature is j that the electors of a sovereign state would elect him as their Governor, and , having tried him one term would put him back for a second. However, South Carolina showed its good sense by snowing him under in the recent contest for the United States senatorial ! otnination. Indianapolis Star. Your if Household's 1 Taste In Coffee Have you ever I truly learned it? I It is easy to find the exact blend that pleases best. We know how coffee tastes vary. That is why we offer in GoldenSun Coffee Five Blends All Delicieoa These five blends range from the very light and fragrant to the deep, rich, mellow, velvety kind. We proved that there are five distinct prefer ences in coffee. We blended the coffee for each of them. It is coffee, the like of which you've never tried. For Golden Sun is differentdistinctive better. If you are in the habit of ordering your coffee ground, be sure to get Steel Cut Golden Sun in cans and have it proper ly cut not ground. Good grocers sell it. LIFE FIRE ACCIDENT INSURANCE Insure with me and you will be protected right by a reputable company. F. I. BR AFFET Phone 1353.
U LanT
W THE WOOLSON J SPICE COMPANY 1 Toledo Ohio ' Largest Importers of ' t
The Foru
I Articles contributed for this ool- ! umn must not be in excess of four I hundred words. The identity of all 1 contributors must be known to the ! editor. Articles will be printed ia ; the order received. 1 Editor Palladium: Americans who still think that Germany was wrongln marching her army into Belgium may read with interest what an independent neutral European paper has to say on the question. A Swiss journal, "The Zuerich News,'.' wrote in October: "It "has now been revealed that Belgium, since 1906, has been a secret ally of England and France. The original Belgium documents found in Brussels have established clear evidence that an actual conspiracy of France, England and Russia against Germany was in existance since 1906. Belgium became a partner of the conspiracy. The king and the government of Belgium ought to have known and probably knew that in joining the conspiracy they committed not onl ya flagrant breach of neutrality against Germany but that they deceived at the same t time the Belgian people by maintain ing the outward appearance of continued neutrality. The contents of the BPprpt rtnmimfnts rirovfi hevond doubt that the arrangement between Bel gium and the other powers was not only made for the eventuality of a rmanyTVuTthrras m7de for all eventualities, i. e. for the aggressive purposes as well. The Belgian neutrality was strangled by the plot of 1906." My I draw the attention of the readers to the fact that the neutrality of Switzerland is similar to the neutrality which Belgium had claimed before the war. The Swiss people have the great est interest in having the neutrality of small countries respected by their powerful neighbors. It Is therefore re markable that Swiss public opinion turns not against Germany that invaded Belgium but against the Belgian "neutrality" fraud of the allies. OAKER MEZGER. Imperial German Consul, Cincinnati. Try This For Your Cough. Thousands of people keep coughing because unable to ge the right remedy. Coughs are caused by Inflammalion of Throat and Bronchial Tubes. What you need is to soothe this In"animation. laKe ur. Kings isew jjisco very, it. penetrates me uencate mucous lining, raises the Phlegm and quickly relieves the congested membranes. Get a 50c bottle from your druggist. "Dr. King's New Discovery tes 1! r WattsTFTovdale, Texas. Money back if not satisfied, but it nearly always helps. Adv. EATON, OHIO. Rev. D. R. Wilson of local United Brethren church, spent part of last week at Pleasant Hill, O., where he assisted in special services being conducted by Rev. E. P. Huddle, well known in Katon. Mrs. W. G. Webb of Gnadenhutten, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Warren Spring. Charles Mulvhill of Greenfield, Ind., spent Thursday here with Mrs. Emma Oxer and daughter. Miss Nell. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Jones, D. J. Musselman and Jacob Eidson were guests Thursday of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Brower at Xenia. Mrs. S. J. Brower and little son spent several days last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Mills, at West Alexandria. Mrs. W. E. Young entertained members of the Bridge Club Saturday afternoon at her home on Bruce street. Mr. and Mrs. George Davis and little son, of Dayton, are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Ross and other local relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Homan Royer, Mrs. A. S. Schlingmau and Mrs. Roi Risinger spent Monday in Oxford. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Lugar and son, Joseph, spent Thursday with triends at Frankfort, Ind. Try Mrs. Austin's Bag Pancake, sure to please you, all grocers. 26-7t SAYS IRISH WOULD FIGHT FOR KAISER MME. SCHUM ANN-HEINK. "There are in New York alone 100,000 Irishmen ready to go over to Germany at the first opportunity and fight against the allies." This statement was made by Mme. SchumannHeink, the famous prima jlonna, In admitting that she had written a proGerman letter published over her sig nature in the Berlin Tageblatt. "I've been here for sixteen years," she said, "and am a loyal American, but blood Is thicker than water. Half my family has already been wiped out in this war, and you can not criticize me if my sympathies lean . strongly toward the
fatherland."
TEST DAIRY COWS; PURPOSEjF CLUBS Purdue Representative Interests Boys in Dairy Extension Department C. R. George, field man of the Pur
due Extension department in dairying, was in Richmond this week in the interest of the dairy extension work In the schools. Mr. George is trying to organize cow testing clubs In the township schools, and has been successful In some parts. He had expected to confer with County Superintendent Williams, and ask his co-operation. Mr. Williams was not in town, however. Mr. George obtained the names of several teachers who did some cow testing last year in their schools, whom he will ask to form cow testing clubs in their schools. The plan of work in these clubs is for the pupils to keep a daily record of the production of several cows on their farms, and test samples of the milk from each cow, for butter fat. The cost of feed Is estimated, and the value of the cow's product. In this way the pupils can tell whether or not the cows are proving profitable, and often a lesson is carried home to their parents that results in the permanent increase of the profits from the home dairy herd. Mr. George will make a special effort to organise a oow testing club at the Columbian school in Wayne township. LANTZ DIES Centerville Loses Pioneer After Short Illness. CENTERVILLE, Ind., Nov. 27. John Lantz, 78, one of Centerville's pioneers died at his home Wednesday after a few days illness with pneumonia. Services will be held at the home on West Main street at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Although Mr. Lantz has been ill for the greater part of the autumn he has continued to conduct his business. He leaves a sister, Miss Amanda Lantz, with whom be lived, and two sons, Dan and Benjamin Lantz of Indianapolis, three brothers, Tom and Luke of Milton, and Henry of Los Angeles, Cal. SINCLAIR CHARGES THEFT OF IDEAS . .Upton Sinclair, the novelist, who has charged A. E. Thomas and Clayton Hamilton, authors of a new play that is making a decided hit on Broadway, with plagiarism. He declared that the big idea of the play is identical with one that he wrote in April, 1913, under the title "The Great American Play," which he says was read by a number of theatrical managers. Thomas and Hamilton scornfully deny Sinclair's allegations. CENTERVILLE 1 Mr. and Mrs. Stanley and daughter. Miss Harriett Stanley, moved from their country home West of town into the Johnston property on Walnut street. Mr. Wayne Stanley has taken charge of the farm home. Mr. and Mrs. Stevens and family entertained to dinner Thanksgiving her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Shriner and family of Muncie. Mr. and Mrs. Wlsler of Milton, called on their aunt, Mrs. S. A. Stevens, of East Main street, who is very seriously siC".. If you want health and a clear head, try LONDON'S Original and Genuln Catarrhal Jelly for cold in head, hay fever, hacking cough, bronchitis, dry nose catarrh, sneezing, deafness and inflammations of the skin and tissue. sells at 25 and 50 cents per tube. 35,000 druggists recommend this good old remedy. It has been doing good for nearly 25 years. If yon are skeptical and wish to try the merits of KONDON'S before you buy, write quick for a free trial sample and booklet. You will never regret getting in touch with a remedy like KONDON'S. We guarantee it to please or money back. Don't take a substitute they are dangerous.
JOHN
MM
Snapshots of New Paris
Mrs. Theodore Thurston of Fountain City spent Tuesday here on business. A. E. Petry of Webster was here Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Ritchie and grand son, Gilbert, left Wednesday to spend Thanksgiving in Chicago. Miss Mary Porterfield, who is employed at Finney's in Richmond,. spent Tuesday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Porterfield. Will Peek of Indianapolis was a business visitor here Wednesday. The funeral services of .the late J. Grant Hawley, which were held Wednesday afternoon at 1 o'clock from his residence in Gettysburg, were largely attended. A number of members from the local K. of P. lodge, of which Mr. Hawley was a member, attended, as well as the junior class of the high school, which went in a body. Mr. Hawley's son, Frank, is a member of the class. Burial was made In the family lot at Eaton. A case of base ingratitude was shown this week, when a tramp printer, one J. S. Dillon by name, repaid the kindness of the local Mirror publisher Arch Raney, by forging Raney's name to a check and successfully passed same on a local merchant. The check was taken in and cashed by the clerk, C. O. Whitaker on Soturday, but was not cashed in at the bank untill Tuesday, when the forgery was discovered, but Dillon was not apprehended. He remained in New Paris until Monday morning, even after committing the crime, but left before the banks were open. The amount of the Arcade to Show How Science T'
HAT the criminal of today cannot hope to escape arrest and convic
tion, once science has been employed to further the ends ot justice, has been vividly demonstrated in the apprehension of Professor Ashton Reynolds of Rexford university.
'Reynolds, it seems, had been a member of the building committee and was intrusted with funds, which he appropriated. When the facts became known to Ilelmar, professor of Greek, Reynolds, in desperation, determined to take the life of the man who he feared would expose him. Being an expert in chemistry, Reynolds conceived the idea of placing a deadly poison in Helmar's shaving cop. A few days later the educational world was shocked to learn of the mysterious death of Professor Ilelmar. The authorities, unable to cope with the situation, enlisted the services of Madelyn Mack, the celebrated girl detective. This expert investigator immediately discarded the prevailing theory that Helmar had been killed by a poisoned instrument in the handle of his green umbrella, which, in his eccentricity, he had carried every day. Her suspicions were directed toward Reynolds, and the manner in which she employed scientific devices to enmesh the ingenious criminal is illustrated above. With the detectaphone she was able to overhear Reynolds' private conversations, and through the vocaphone (at her left) she preyed upon the guilty man's conscience until he betrayed himself. , In "The Riddle of the Green Umbrella," the two part Kalem drama. Miss Alice Joyce gives an exceedingly interesting portrayal of Madelyn Mack's work In unraveling the mystery of Trofessor Helmar's death.
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Cecelia V. Henderson Piano, Voice, Theory and Harmony Music Studio, Phone 1702 206 N. 11th St. Try Cooper's Blend Coffee
check was small, 7, but the ingratitude is shown in the fact that Raney gave the man employment often when he did not need his help, and this was the case last week. He was seen in Richmond Tuesday, but the crime was not known at the time. The Presbyterian Sunday school contributed two barrels of flour to the Belgian flour donation at Richmond. F. R. Black of Dayton spent Tuesday here on business. Local friends of Miss Roxie Cuss ins of Anderson, Ind., will be glad to know of her appointment to the position of court reporter of Madison county, to take charge January 1. Miss Cussins is a New Paris girl, who has been employed in the law office of Ellis & Ellison, at Anderson, as stenographer for the last ten years, and the promotion is certainly a reward well merited. The young woman is one of the best stenographers in Indiana. Superintendent B. S. Davis had the misfortune to step on a rusty nail Tuesday evening while at the Orangeburg school house. His foot is sore, but he gets about without the aid of crutches. Miss Ethel Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown, was married Tuesday afternoon to Loy Howell of West Manchester, the ceremony taking place at Eaton. Mr. and Mrs. Howell left Wednesday morning for their home at West Manchester, where the bridegroom is proprietor of a restaurant. Dr. and Mrs. C. H. Harris entertained Thanksgiving State School Inspect
Saturday Only Captures Criminal Nearly thirty years ago this gtntlf man began using Duffy's Pure Matt Whiskey. The results were so beneficial that he has depended upon this valuable medicine in caso of sickness ever since. His pieture shows how hale and hearty Duffy's has kept him. "In Thompsonville, Conn., in April, 1885, when I was 22 years of age, I was very sick for three months. A druggist prescribed Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey. I took 12 bottles during that year and my weight after sickness was 110 pounds. In two years my weight was about 200 pounds. I am now 51 years old and my weight is 250 pounds. I always keep a bottle of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey in my house and would not be Vfithout it, for in sickness we have used it many times since with good results." Mr. H. K. Martin, 2207 Huntingdon
in the WELL DRESSED I I CIRCLE II V l WEAR DENNIS Y CLOTHES. yb
or 8ealock, wife and daughter of Oxford. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Sawyer entertained Thursday, Mrs. II T. McDonald, of Spokane, Wash., Messrs. and Mes-
dames A. J. and Chalmer Augbee and the latter's son, Willis of Fountain City, J. R. Gard and Mrs. Hannah Sawyer, Miss Helen Sawyer of New Madison and John M. Sawyer of Columbus. Margaret, the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Slorp, is quite ill. Richmond Lodge 196, F. & A. M. will elect officers for the ensuing year on Tuesday 7:30 p. m., December 1st., including one trustee for 3 years. M. D. Poulter, Sec. MURAY SHOWS NO SIGN OF FIGHT BY LEASED WIRE. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 27. Manager Jack Kearns was leading his protege Billy Murray around town today without a mark to show that he had defeated Sailor Petroskey. Kearns was itching for action and flashed $2,500 worth of bills that he is willing to bet Murray can defeat Jimmy Clabby in a 20-round bout. Sal-Vet, worm destroyer, conditioner and tonic. Quigley Drug Stores. 3-tf Unccda Biscuit Nourishment fine flavor purity crispness wholesomeness. All for 5 cents, in the motsture-proofpackage. Graham Crackers A food for every day. Crisp, delicious and strengthening. Fresh baked and fresh delivered, zo cents. A delightful new biscuit, with a rich and delicious cocoanut flavor. Crisp and always fresh, xo cents. Buy biscuit baked bp NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Always look for that Name No Hunting allowed on our grounds east of city. Richmond City Water Works. 5J -W tas- ggg"
I CO
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IN SUCH PAIN WOMAN CRIED Suffered EverythingUntil Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. Florence, So. Dakota. "I used to be very sick every month with bearing
down pains and backache, and had headache a good deal of the time and very little appetite. The pains were so bad that I used to sit right down on the floor and cry, because it hurt me bo and I could not do any work at those times. An old wo man advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I got a bottle. I felt better the next month bv I took three more bottles of it and got well so I could work all the time. I hope every woman who suffers Kke I did wiU try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. P. V. Lanseng, Route No. 1, Florence, South Dakota. Why will women continue to suffer day in and day out or drag out a sickly, halfhearted existence, missing three-fourths of the joy of living, when they can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? For thirty years it has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has restored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. If yon want special adTlce write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. MONEY Loaned on household goods, pianos, teams, fixtures, etc. without removal at the Legal Rate. We loan from $5 to $100. See us before borrowing. If unable to call, write or phone and our agent will call at your home. The State Investmyr & Loan Compaq PHONE 2560 Room 40 Colonial Bldg4 Richmond, Ind. CarlF.Weisbrod Piano Tuning and Repairing. Phone 2095. Man's Best Friend in Time of Need MONEY When You Need It Ask Us For It. We will lend you money on your Ix T rurnuure, nurses, s s ons, Piano, Cattle, Implements and Diamonds. Loans From $5 Up Any Amount. $35.00 coets only $4.80 for 3 months. Other amounts at proportlonave legal rates. Everything according to law. Write, phone or call we will send our agent to explain our rates. No charge unless you borrow. RICHMOND LOAN COMPANY Room 8, Colonial BuMding. Automatic Phone 1515. (Est. 1895.) .r - " ALMOST FREE Ek the abov. beaiias tbe $2.50 Vote cover stamped in (old, artistic Inlay
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