Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 118, 30 March 1915 — Page 4
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-ft." PAGE FOUR THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1915
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
w AND SUN-TELEGRAM '
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, PubUahed Every, Evening Except Sunday, b 1 , 7 ; Palladium Printing .Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Sts. 5 Rt G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris Mgr.
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Entered at the Pott. Office at Rlchmondi Indiana, aa Seo Tr ' . r : " ond Claaa MaU Matter. ; -
' : v ? The Statesmanship, of Lincoln. 4 The two pre-eminently constructive statesmen of the last century were Lincoln and Bismarck. In Germany they are now celebrating the centenary of Bismarck, who was born April 1, 1815. The present month brings to us in America the fiftieth Anniversary of the end of the- Civil war and the death of Lincoln. President "Lincoln accompanied the Federal troops when , they , ; entered Richmond April 4, 1865; Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox April 9; Lincoln was shot in the evening of April 14 and died the following day. Wholly without prejudice or sectional feel
ing, Lincoln was intensely occupied with plans for
the restoring of harmony and the quick return of the seceded states to their full autonomy and their proper places in the Union when his death plunged the nation in grief. He had the same conception as Jefferson's of the paramount importance of national union, and of maintaining our continental republic upon the basis of the federal system. For'his leadership all parts of the : country ought now to be profoundly grateful. If he could have lived a few years longer, we should perhaps have been spared some unfortunate chapters of
our subsequent history and should have worked out policies, both domestic and foreign, that would have made us a greater and stronger nation than we are today. But he accomplished enough to earn secure fame as a statesman of supreme rank. He was an American in whom were blended the characteristics of all parts of the country in a way that made him national in the full sense :
a humanitarian of great vision, in whose heart there was no animosity towards any nation or race of mankind. The world's greatest need today is of leaders of the Lincoln mold, who will be
lieve that welfare of each nation can be made to
harmonize, with that of all the others. Hating war, Lincoln was, nevertheless, impelled to lead a collossal four years' struggle on behalf of an American unity that should make for permanent peace and human liberty. If he were alive today lie would probably hold that our country ought to ascertain and then to express in clear terms the common sentiment of the non-belligerent countries. He would stand for the world's liberation from war, upon the basis of principles and agreements that would removes the causes of strife and provide a higher structure than national sovereignty. He would have America, strong enough to make its voice heard in the councils of the fearful and the self-seeking. He was like the greatest of our early statesmen. Washington, ' Franklin and Jefferson, in the breadth of his sympaties and in his grasp of the large essentials of human progress. His Americanism had in it no element of hostility towards any. other nation ; on the contrary, his principles and methods, if adopted by the leading peoples of Europe, would have led the world, long before this time, to practical disarmament and to some form of union that would have made each nation, whether small or large, as safe as Rhode Island and Pennsylvania and Arkansas find themselves under the. arrangement by which they accept a modified sovereignty for themselves, and yield to the federal union the right to adjust all possible differences and to manage many common concerns. From "The Progress of the World," in the American Review of Reviews for April.
WEDS SERB OFFICER IN NEW YORKiCITY
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Suffrage Notes ' Iu This Column Will Appear Topics on the Equal Suffrage Cause.
Women of neutral and belligerent countries will gather at The Hague the latter part of April for the discussion of peace measures. Miss Jane Ad" dams has accepted by cable the invitation for the Woman's Peace party. The Royal Astronomical society recently voted 50 to 3 in London to admit women as Fellows on the same terms and qualifications as men. The Wisconsin Woman Suffrage association will send a model of its suffrage school to the congressional union booth at the Panama-Pacific exposition. To the same booth ,the Massachusetts Suffrage association is sending a miniature Bunker Hill monument representing the woman's part in freeing Massachusetts. The Evening Press is the latest of the New York newspapers to come out editorially for suffrage. The Daily North Side News in the Bronx, recently issued a special suffrage edition un
der the direction of Oreola Haskell.
"When women in the trenches of the daily sweat and grind Of life, their, fullest share of burdens tote, Will you answer me a question, that keeps buzzing in my mind, Why couldn't, shouldn't won't the women vote?" The New York World recently took an unbiased count among all classes of women and found that 77 per cent desire the ballot. Thirty out of thirty-three mayors in the sixth district of the Empire state, say they will vote for the equal suffrage amendment. Mayor Mitchell of New York, addressing about 3.000 persons at a suffrage meeting in Brooklyn, promised recently that he would vote for woman suffrage on November 2. It is no wonder the women are rejoicing to
have Mayor Mitchell and also Governor Whitman enrolled for suffrage. It Is expected that between two and three hundred American women, headed by Jane Addams, and sailing on the "Peace Ship," will attend a peace conference at The Hague, beginning April 28. The Columbus Grange, said to be the largest in Indiana, has unanimously adopted a resolution Indorsing woman suffrage. The National Grange has also endorsed it.
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Pioneer Introduces i ." ..- .... i i . i .... Fine Sheep in Wayne
lames Hammond, Early Last Century, Rated Most Progressive and Wide-Awake . Resident of County.
.. BY B. HUDDLESTON. V James Hammond -was one of
the
MSS ' MJ STEVAN0V1TC H
The photograph shows Mrs. "M. J. Stevanovltch who was married in the Russian Cathedral of St. Nicholas to Caotain Stevanovitch. Royal Serbian
Commissioner in New York.
ACCEPT REDUCTION.
The New York Call, which has stood for woman suffrage for eight years and has a daily "Votes for Women" department, recently issued a special suffrage edition.
The women of Kankakee, 111., have clubbed together and are hiring a maid to attend to the housekeeping of one of their number, in order that she may give more of her time to municipal affairs.
Mrs. Emma Smith DeVoe. who has just finished a speaking trip in New York, says that the question which has amused her most was whether women who voted had to stand in street cars. She says she once saw a man in Seattle give his seat to a
PITTSBURG, March 30. National President John Wflliams of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, announced today that the official count of Saturday's referendum 6hows that the sheet and tin
nlate wage reduction has been accepted.
Indigestion and Biliousness. When you feel bilious or have trouble with your digestion give Chamberlain's Tablets a trial.. These tablets have become a favorite with a great many people for those disorders. You are certain to be pleased with the prompt relief which they afford. Obtainable everywhere. adv.
Telephones are coming into use in Tripoli.
poor woman, help her off the car, carry her basket to her gate, inquire about all her children and then walk on to his home, all because she could vote and he was running for an office.
CONCERNING CANCER Write to The Wber Sanatorium, 17 Garfield Place, Cincinnati. Ohio, for inloriuation concerning the Medical
Treatment of All Forms of ExternsAJ Crsths, especially Cancer. Kstab- j lished 25 years and well endorsed. 96- i rage book free. j
most up-to-date men in Wayne county from 1827 to the close of his Ufa. In 1840 he, hired himself. .to a sbeep drover in Boston township for ?enta a day and helped drive sheep to the prairie where the Douglas monument now stands in. the. heart of the -city of Chicago. Vhen;;he returned home he was allowed J1.50 for walking home including his expense money. He made several trips to Michigan for young Tiner trees for Nicholas Smith of Abington, a nurseryman. At the time. of. the dreadful cholera scourge in Boston township in 1848 he nursed through the entire epidemic and bad a number of slight attacks but fctood at his post' by the bedside of Nicholas Druly, Bartley Burns and Joseph Stanley till each of them died. - Only One Family Left.
He told us in our review several years ago that the .town of Boston was entirely depopulated save by one famly by . the name of Jones who 'ived in a cabin in the corner of thr "graveyard." This family had no symptoms of the malady. It was difficult to get grave diggers and often two bodies had to wait In the open until graves were made. " In November 1849, James Hammond and James Sumpter went to Texts and gathered oaage orange seed which they cleaned and brought home. With 125 bushels they arrived home the next spring. They sold the seed for twelve dollars a bushel, sewine what
they planted for themselves that year.i
This was the ' Introduction of osagc hedge in Union and Wayne counties. -Sells Sheep For $10. James Hammond attended the first fair held in Wayne County at Richmond in 1851. He exhibited the first lel6estershire long wool sheep ever brought to Wayne County. At this fair, he said he had to stand guard over his sheep to keep the old women from pulling all the wool out of it. It was such a curiosity that they all wanted a souvenir. He sold a bheep of this breed to John Jaxon of Richmond for mutton which weighed one bundrd and ninety pounds, and received $10 for it. James Hammond was born in Manchester, England. April 6. 1825, and married Sarah Bond, sister to former Sheriff Allen O. Bond. October 2. 1854. He and his brother' Thomas settled in Dublin before their marriage and both l them died here a few years ago.
IF CONSTIPATED 01) : on miio "pippinrrp"
DILIUU0 UHObRnilO Tonight Clean your feowala and atop headache, colds, sour stomach.
' Denmark has about eighty-five bead of cattle to every 100 inhabitants.
Get a 10-cent box. ' - . Take a Cascaret tonight to cleanse your Liver. Stomach and Bowels, and you will surely feel great by morning. You men and women who have headache, coated tongue, a bad cold, are bilious, nervous, upset.-bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stomach, or have backache and feel all worn oat. Are you keeping your bowels clean with Cascaret or merely forcing a passageway every few days with salts, cathartic pills or. castor oil? Cascarets immediately cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and poison from the bowels. Remember, a Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning. A 10-cent box from your druggist means healthy bowel action; a clear head and cheerfulness for months. Don't forget .LIU
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a '5 :o Ma a
. B. Dickinson, T
524 Merchants Bank Bldg., Indianapolis, Jnd.
Pal! Listen -to this: Prince Albert is the one pipe tobacco that gets right under the epidermis of the most veteran pipe smoker. Men who have become case-hardened to tongue tortures are falling in line along with young fellows who are just getting
pipe broke. Men everywhere love the ripping good flavor and fragrance of
MICK
MJHF
the m:
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Thev like the absence of
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out of P. A. by our famous patented orocess. " P. A. is sold in the tidv.
pocket-handy red tins, ioc; toppy red bags, 5c; also in pound and halfpound tins; but the pound crystalglass humidor is the jim-dandy package for home and office use. You go to it! You can buy any of c Am at any ttore that elh tobacco.
R. j. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Whuton-Salem, N. C
Cecelia V. Henderson Piano, Voice, Theory and Harmony Music Studio, Phone 1702 206 N. 11th St.
Ua
Carpenters recommend
;IJQ0ET
SHINGLES .. VATEKTZD They are double-width, built-up shingles with the butt ends of treble thickness. They go tm like wooden shingles, but with half as many cracks and fewer nail-holes to grow into leaks. Neponset Shingles are spark-proof and weatherproofcan't rust, crack, buckle, nor blow loose. Color, a rich tone of gray. Let us show you this last word in roofing material.
Irvin Bleed & Son
EASTER PLANTS And CUT FLOWERS On Display Now at LEMON'S FLOWER SHOP
We Are ready to loan In any amount from $5 to $100 on Household Goods, Pianos, Teams, Fixtures; Etc., without removal, for one month to one year in monthly, weekly or quarterly payments. We Pay Off Uoans With Other CompaniesHome Loan Co. 220 Colonial Bldg. Phone 1509, Richmond, Indiana.
Order a Pretty EASTER BASKET of FLOWERS Now for Easter. LEMON'S FLOWER SHOP
Extra Quality Maple Syrup 11 lbs. to the gallon. Phone us before it is gone. HADLEY'S GROCERY, Phone 2292.
Five Suites of Office Rooms Two Rooms to Each Suite In the New Palladium Building For Rent at $ 1 5.00 Per Month Heat and Water Furnished
i
usiness
R
oom
1 B
Size: 18x52 feet. Modern For Rent at $50.00 Per Month Heat and Water Furnished
Call at the Palladium Office
Or Phone
2834
Mow is The Time to Plant Your Treeo You can see the largest, most complete, cleanest and finest stock of, trees, shrubs, evergreens, vines, hardy flowering plants and small fruit plants that you ever saw at the :
DglD3 j MPS FOCI
Cambridge City, Ind. Capital Hill Come and be convinced. Landscape gardening a specialty. Wayne county's nursery.
