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PAOC FOUD THE BICmiOND PAMjADIUM AXD SUX-TEL,EGRA3I, FRIDAY. MARCH 8, 1012. t I i- r - - "'V C3 S3-TCfC3 PaMlaaed aadewaed by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. . Issued Hrerjr veala Except Sunday. Offlee Ceraer Nert th ana A streets. Palladtant sad lua-Ttltfrtm Ptoonea -business Offlee, SMti News Peaart men, XIII. RICHMOND. WDIAWA SUBSCRIPTION TBRMS Id Richmond ll.es per year (la ad vitoi) or 10c per week. RURAL. KOCTSS On roar, in advance I months. In advanea t On monta, In advanea Addraaa changed aa aftan aa desired; Ivan" " 914 a4arSM IBuat b Dubaorlbara will please remit wfta ardar. which ahould ba given for a specified tern; name will not be enter ed until na.4nt la received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS mm One year. In advanee Six man tba. In advance One month. In advance Kntr4 at Richmond, Indiana, peat office aa second class mall matter. New Tork Representative Payee m Youna. -S4 Writ lid street, and li lt West 12nd street. New York, N. T. Chicago Representatives Payne as Youna;. 747-7 4 Marquette Building. Chlcaco. III. irt jy are) gnamenesa. No. MlanlNnal.l.T.tHf This Is My 72nd Birthday 1 IIR CHARLES MOSS. 8ir Charles Moss, chief justice of Ontario, was born in Cobourg. On tario, March 8. 1S40. He was called to the bar In 1S69 and soon attained a high place in the legal profession. Among the honors and distinctions which came to him in his early pro fessional career were has appoint ments as lecturer of the Law society of Upper Canada, in 1S72. as a Bench er of the Law society, In 1880, and as Queen's Council, in 1881. In 1900 he became vice chancellor of the Unl varsity of Toronto. Me was appointed Justice of the Court of Appeal for Ontario in 1897 and has been Chief Justice since 1902. During the ab sence of Lieutenant-Governor at the coronation last year and on several previous occasions Sir Charles Moss acted as administrator of the Govern ment of Ontario. Congratulations to: Homer C. Davenport, cartoonist, 45 years old today. George Gibbs, American illustrator and novelist, 42 years old today. James A. Hemenway, former United states Senator from Indiana. 62 years old today. Oliver Wendell Holmes, associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United 8tates. 71 years old today. iBramwell Booth, eldest son of "General" William Booth and chief of staff of the Salvation Army, 64 years old today. For peevish, puny, cross and fretful children, nothing equals Hollister'o Rocky Mountain Tea; a harmless reg ulator and a sure pacifier; a small dose according to age, given dally will make and keep them well, and bring robust health: as good for the mother as for the child. 33c. A. G. Luken. MASONIC CALENDAR Friday, March 8. King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Stated Con vocation. Rejected Engines ef War. Certain engines of wsr have been re jected by civilised nations in times gone by because they were too de structive and too horrible. England bis still in keeping a secret war plan of the tenth Earl of Dundonald which the authorities rejected because, while It was Infallible. It was too inhuman, to use by man against man. Even Louis XV. ef France had backbone enough to refuse Dupre's terrible Invention. If the story of this discovery be true the plan was to create by a secret process a conflagration whose intensity was but Increased by water. It would burn town or fleet Louis refused to have the secret published, and It went down to the grave with Dupre. Miss Ida Warder has purchased the Austin Store at New Paris, Ohio. DIET AND HEALTH HINTS Bv DB. T. J. ALLEN Pead SaeelaUat THE MINERAL ELEMENTS NEEDED IN THE DIET. ' One may be eating eutltelent albumen, starch, fat and sugar, which eenetltute M per cent, er more) of all solid nutriment the body needs, and yet may be come weak sickly. Inefficient Ml finally die fee lack ef proper rMuttehment. For perfect nu trition we must have In the bleed. In addition: Potash, ao dhmv pnoaphonio, calcium, maa iteeJum, Iran, aulaHur, chlorine and fluorine. Potash la aaaantlal In every part ef the body, but especially In the brain and nerve centers. In all nerve dleerdere It la found t be deficient In the bleed. Perhape the quick wit ef the Iriah la due, partly, to the supply of potash and they have get for from petatoee and which farm aa large a pert of their diet. The beet eearcee of potash are: Beana, aeuteee, awuits, wheat, let. ! fW uH SvifiaeUraT v iltSwiBU'sTTyrfii I'lltsln1! iSaiirifalWa1' I 9 A Nickel's Worth. ' Of course conditions are not the same on the corner of our own little Eighth and Main street that they are over at Indianapolis say at the cor ner of Illinois and Washington streets, but Just the same we have an evil suspicion that the Indiana novelist, Meredith Nicholson, waa thinking Just a little bit of Richmond, Indiana, when he said that a certain lot of street cars are "abort and yellow and came in bunches," thereby resembling bananas. Even if the street car situation in Richmond has not Improved in the years that the present equipment has been in existence It haa certainly not Improved to the point where the T. H. I. 4b E. can leave off with its efforts. The fact of the matter is that Richmond has been shamefully neglect ed in the matter of equipment. Also the fact is that In Richmond the street railroad is suffering from dry rot. The citizens may be getting precisely what they deserve. But we doubt if they think so. Years ago the cltixens gave a franchise to the local street railroad. At that time it did not contemplate the coming of the T. H. I. A E. It had no visions of glory of that company engaging in the interurban business. When the horse cars gave way to the electric cars there waa rejoicing. When the South Eighth street line was added to the then meager equip ment there was rejoicing. When the extension to the line now running to the asylum was made there was rejoicing. When the present street cars were extended to Centerville there was rejoicing. Since the interurban ser vice has been installed between Indianapolis and Richmond and Richmond and Dayton there has been rejoicing. As far aa the freight traffic and the passenger traffic between the cities is concerned: as far as the passengers brought 1 by the interurban lines is concerned, this has all been a great success as far as the citizens are concerned. But there has not been rejoicing when it comes directly to what the citizens expect from their street car service. The citizens have s right to be disappointed. The fac of the matter is that as far as extensions and Improvements to service are concerned that the citizens have not. prolted much from the T. H. I. & E. Not very many citizens who own automobiles are concerned with the situation arising when the cars running on South Eighth street make them late to their work at the shops. This may be said of the West Rich mond cars particularly. A statistician might figure out how many hours the men who work in the shops lose by waiting for the cars on their present schedules. That would be interesting. At this point will appear counsel for the T. H. I. & E. showing that it is perfectly possible to walk from most places in Richmond to the usual destinations without relying on the street cars. If anyone ahould make a serious examination into the minds of the Richmond citizens who spend sixty cents a week going to their work, they would find considerable resentment against the schedules and equipment of the T. H. I. & E. in Richmond. They do not stop to consider, as the counsel for the T. H. I. & E. does, at what price the franchise was pur chased any more than they think about the bonds that were floated in Philadelphia. The simple fact of the matter is that people here are Interested not in what they may be about to receive; nor yet in what the capitalization of the company may be: nor in any of the recondite mysteries of their books of the company; but simply in what they receive for their nickels. If they do not ride to their work they at least might ride. How many people are there that walk and have it over with, without waiting for the cars at all? Such a situation means inefficiency. And this is inefficiency that the people here In Richmond have to pay for. The fact of the matter is that they are quite willing to pay for the service that they ounht to pay for but tbey are unwilling to pay for what they do not receive. If it is all reduced to ?o simple a will all be quite simple. A Fighting Bishop. On one occasion Bishop Selwyn was going down the river Walkato with a Maori when the latter, who was very lazy, left off paddling the canoe, at the same time muttering that if Selwyn were pot a bishop be would well, "go for him." In a moment the bishop told the man to turn the canoe ashore, where, strip ping himself of everything episcopal, he said, pointing to his robes, etc.: "The bishop lies there: the man Is here. X am quite ready. Come on." The Maori did not "come on," how ever, but quietly resumed his work without another murmur. London Tit Bits. Only One "BROMO QUININE" That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUI NINE. Look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. Used the World over to Cure a Cold In One Day. 25c. "THIS DATb MARCH 8TH. 1702 King William III., died and Queen Anne came to the throne of England. 1801 British defeated the French at battde of Aboukir, Egypt. 1808 Dr. Nathaniel Alexander, governor of North Carolina 1805-7, died in Saliabury, N. C. Born in Mecklenburg In 1756. 1834 Commercial treaty concluded between the United States and Japan. 1856 Indians defeated in an attack on troops at White River, Washing ton. 1862 At Hampton Roads the Confederate ram Merrimac sank the Federal ship Cumberland, captured the Congress, and forced the Minnesota aground. 1874 Millard Fillmore, thirteenth President of the U. S.. died in Buffa lo. Born in Summerhill, N. Y., Jan., 7, 1800. 1887 Henry Ward Beecher. famous pulpit orator, died in Brooklyn. Born in Litchfield. Conn., June 24, 1813. 1889 John Ericsson, Inventor of the Monitor, died. Born July 31, 1803. 1911 Southern Commercial Congress opened in Atlanta. A LITTLE DIJ!PP! ENDS DYSPEPSIA A!ID HAKES STOMACH TROUBLE VANISH. No Indigestion, Gas, Heart burn or Headache five minutes later. If you 'had some Diapepain handy and would take a little now your stomach distress or Indigestion would vanish In five minutes and you would feel fine. This harmless preparation will di gest anything you eat and overcome a sour, out-of-order stomach before you realize it If your meals don't tempt you. or what little you do eat seems to fill yon, or lays Hke a lump of lead in your stomach, or If you have heartburn, that ia a sign of Indigestion. Ask your Pharmacist for a 50-eent of Papers Dlapepsin and take a matter as getting a nickel s worth it Menoolos In the English Army. About a century ago a British army order was Issued forbidding officers to wear eyeglasses or spectacles. But a shortsighted officer belonging to a crack cavalry regiment had no mind to resign his commission or stumble blindly, and he Invented ' the single eyeglass. When called to account by the authorities he claimed that the monocle, being of the singular num ber, did not contravene the order against spectacles and glasses in the plural. Red tape accepted this literal rendering of the law, and, becoming popular In the British army, the mono cle was In a short time adopted by civilian beans. London Globe. Italian soldiers in Tripoli have been entertained by cinematograph views of their families and sweethearts at home, provided by order of the commanding general. JN HISTORY will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, Nausea, Debilitating Headaches, Dizziness or Intestinal griping. This will all so and. besides, there will be no undigested food left over in the stomach to pois on your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Dlapepsin is certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it pre vents fermentation and takes hold of your food and digests it Just the same as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from all stom ach misery is at any drug store wait ing for you. These large 5Q-cent cases contain more than sufficient to thoroughly cure almost any case of Dyspepsia, In digestion or any other stomach disturbance. A-WIUJR R M-3B1T TPEAdWIS ADVICE Amos Mug-gins In a paper saw a matri monial ad.; It told all about a lady and tbe fortune that she had Lands and houses, stocks and money, all bequeathed her by her dad. Furthermore It said the damsel waa both beautiful and yeang, With a wealth of gentle speeches ever rippling off her tongue And effusively her praises by the little ad. were sung. ' ' I Amos Muggins wrote the agent who waa playing Cupid's part And affirmed that he was smitten by the little fellow's dart. That the fair and wealthy damsel could obtain his hand and heart. So the agent wrote to Amos and advised him to come on For the damsel waa aa timid as a young and startled fawn. And If Amos did not hurry then the dam sel might be gone. Likewise, wrote the genial agent, Amoa should remit a fee And he set the figure of It quite aa high as it could be. Amos sent the cash, observing. "This looks pretty good to me.M Amos met the lovely lady aha was not so 'young In years But her heart was gay and youthful, and it furthermore appears That she had a false complexion and wore jewels In her ears. Amos thought about her money and of how he'd make it whlu. She, alas! was also thinking of that bank account of his Which. Indeed, we oft discover is the way this old world Is! Tbey were married and when Amos held her closely in his arms He inquired with gentle murmurs of her money and her farms. And the coy and blushing damself said that they were false alarms! Amos spoke some words in protest, and his fair and lovely bride Asked him If 'twas gentlemanly to hint that a lady lied! ' Then she scolded him severely, and she hit htm once beside. She attacked her loving husband and her scratches made him groan, And she gave him her opinion. In no un decided tone. Of a man who wouldn't love her for her lovely self alone. Amos went back to the agent and he asked him to explain. Saying that such rude deception filled his tender heart with pain. But his efforts to get matters straight ened out were all In vain. "You have handed me a lemon!" Amoa vowed, and shook his head. "You have handed me a lemon, in In ducing roe to wed." "Well. I guess you'd better squeese it," waa all that the agent said. SOMETIMES. Johnnlne Paw, what Is a "para dox? Paw Weil, a paradox, my son, Is something that doesn't seem to agree with the facts which permit it to ex ist. Johnnie Oh, I thought it meant a pair of doctors. Paw Well, I guess it does. A Helpful Hint. "Glorianna B.." of Westport, writes that she has been "keeping company" with a young man for ten years, and would like to know what to give him. She adds that he has never proposed, and she would like to make him a present that will encourage him. Give him a box of sand, Glorinna. Very Likely. Palmist Ah, there is a Una which Indicates that your husband will spend a great deal of money on yon. Client That must be my clothes line. James L. Cowles, the father of the parcels post movement in this coun try, is nearly eighty years ohl, but still Is remarkably active mentally and bod ily. He Is secretary of the Postal Progress League, with an office in New York. He was graduated from Yale in 1866 and returned, twenty years later to take up the law course. Miss Adelaide De Vorak, Fancy Trick and SoeeA Skzi- er, at Coliseum tcnizht. Ad- 1 1 I J L- Tl 1 11 1' I mm m m m aw r anrA n Roosevelt Defines His Position in Editorial Appearing In "Outlook" tNatloaaJ Xws Association) NEW YORK, March 8.Uuder the caption "Do You Believe In The Rule Of The People V Colonel Theodore Roosevelt laid down the gage of battle and defined the stand he will take in the campaign against President Taft for the Republican nomination in an j editorial which appears in the current issue of "The Outlook." "Let me ask those who disagree with me frankly to state whether or . policy of their representatives, legla not they believe that the people have lative and judicial, in these matters the right to rule themselves, and to settle for themselves the course they wish to pursue as regards and vital questions of public policy," says the Ex-President. Colonel Roosevelt's chief argument is directed against the criticism of his policy in regard to the recall of judges as declared in his "platform j speech" before the Ohio Constitution al convention. "There has been much effort made," he said, "to fog the issue raised in my Columbus speech. In reality, the issue is perfectly simple: Do you be - ilieve in the rule of the people? If you do, 5'ou are with us. If you do not, j you are against us. "Many good and honorable persons do not believe in the rule of the peo- ple, and openly say so. We disagree with these persons, but we can respect them. There are other persons, how - : ever, who do not believe in the rule : take at the very least two years' time. : of the people, but who dare not say so, if jn two years the people cannot come : and who endeavor by trickery, by j to a sober and deliberate judgment, j chicanery, by fraud, to seem to give ! then it is impossible that they should : the people the right to rule and at the ever so come. If they have not the same time to deprive them of that j character and the intelligence to en right. These persons we do not re- j able them after two years' delibera , Pect. ' tion, after seeing the whole matter "Those who stand for the cause of threshed out by the legislature and be Eocial and industrial Justice, to be ob-' fore the executive and by the court, tained through the genuine rule of the ' and finally by public speakers In an , people, are but carrying forward the work which dropped from Abraham Lincoln's hands when the patient, tired, kindly eyes were closed forever, He strove against intrenched wrong, against privilege in the most hateful form of his day. We, in our day, strive against hateful forms of In - trenched wrong and privilege. We are not striving in bitterness of spirit, or with anger and hatred as far as in us lies, we seek to emulate Abraham Lincoln's charity and kindliness in dealing with those who, as we believe, minx erroneously; out we aiso en- Jdeavor to emulate the unflinching re solution, the unswerving purpose, with which he fought for the great cause of righteousness. "Abraham Lincoln respected the judges. But he regarded them as the servants and not the masters of the people; and he believed that the peo ple had the right to decide for them- selves the great fundamental questions of public policy, upon tbe proper so lution of which it depends whether there shall or shall not be true social justice in the land. "Therefore we hold that, as regards these questions of public policy, courts like executives and legislatures, must bow to the sober and well-thought-out judgment of the people. "Let me repeat once more what I have so often said that I am not now speaking of ordinary cases of justice between man and man, such as must be decided by judges here in America as they are decided by judges in all other lands. I am speaking of the action of the court when it declares that a law passed in the collective in terest of the whole community is un constitutional; and I have especially in view the laws affecting human rights from a most vital standpoint the laws affecting the terms and con ditions of, life and employment among the wage-workers. i If in any state the constitution so ; clearly defined the power of the legis lature to act for the general welfare as to prohibit the courts from nullify- How to Remove a Poor Complexion (From London Fashions) Cosmetics can never really help a poor complexion; often they are pos itively harmful. The sensible thing ia to actually remove the thin veil of stifling, half-dead scarf skin and give tbe fresh, vigorous, beautiful young skin underneath a chance to show itself and to breathe. This is best done by merely apply ing mercolized wax at night, like cold cream, washing it off in the morning. The wax can be obtained from? any well stocked druggist. It absorbs the disfiguring cuticle gradually, harmless ly, leaving a brilliant natural complex ion. Of course thia also takes with It all such blemishes as red blotches, moth patches, liver spots, blackheads, pimples, etc. As- a freckle remover and general complexion beautif ler this old-fashioned remedy is unequaled. FIRE SALE FLOUM During our recent fire we had quite a little flour slightly damaged. Some of this we have sold and all say that while the sacks are scorched a little, the actual flour does not taste of fire at all. We will therefore offer this flour at sale pri ces during the week. 3 Kinds of Flour Gold Coin, Polar Bear and Gilt Edge. 100 lb. Sacks at $1.75 IRxuiinicgjcB IFcbcbcQ 16 Soulh 7lh St ing any law that is consonant with morality and public policy as under, stood by a majority of the people, and if in actual practice the courts re spected such constitutional prohibi tion, then there would be no need for what I propose; because in such case there would be no need for what I propose; because in such case there would be full recognition of the abso lute right of the people to decide the and this is all for which I contend. But in actual practice I know ' no state where such conditions prevail. Therefore 1 hold that provision ahould be made in the constitutions of the several states, which, in the event of a clash between the legislature and ; the courts as to the constitutionality ot such legislation as I have spoken of, should permit the people them selves to decide what the true interpre tation of the constitution la. I am not concerned with terminology. Wheth er this is called a referendum to the ; people or whether it ia called a ahort- er and simpler way of amending the constitution, to my mind matters noth- ! ing. The essential thing is to get the j power for the people, i "It is not merely untruthful but sil- ; ly to aay that such a process would : leave us "at the mercy of the mob." . Such a process aa I advocate would election, to themselves decide what . they meant when they framed the ! constitution, then it is idle to talk of their being fit to frame a constitution. ; do not propOBe to glve tne peo. ple any new power x propoge re. atnpe tn thl,m tha ou, of whlch ; they haTe been defrauded, the power ; whlch lt ig their rIght and theIr duty i to .MrHil. T nromi. to nrovlde a I better and more effective metnod for the exercise of tbe power reserved and mherent In the peop,e to make or , unmake tnelr conButution or construe the constitution in accordance with their well considered needs. "Let the power so secured, to them be a real and not a nominal power, a power of actual exercise; a power which shall not be exercised save after sober and deliberate thought, but which shall permit such sober and deliberate judgment of the people to humma It nhmilri hfivim, th tin. ; que8tloned law of the land. "In concluding then, let me ask those who disagree with me frankly to state whether or not tbey believe that the people have the right to rule LIFE'S SYMPHONY old age, by depositing a portion of his income with an institution that holds such a deposit as a sacred trust, and will, either at prior death or at the commencement of his declining years, deliver a sum of money greatly in excess of the amount he has thus accumulated. Of such nature are the Endowment policies of The Provident Life A Trust Company. This company stands unrivaled In Security, Per manence and Low Cost of Insurance. E. B. KNOLLENBERG, Agt, Knollenberfl Annex. Cor. 12tb& Haln inroad Fancy Navel Oranges CHOW VEGETABLES New Potatoes Tomatoes Cucumbers Mangoes Cauliflower Head Lettuce Egg Plant Young Onions Carrots Smoked White Fish Finnon Haddleo Fancy Grape Fruit 2 lor 15 25 lb. Sacks at .......... 50c 50 lb. Sacks at ..90c BEGTTS MUSTARINE , Ends Neuralgia, Earache, Toothache. Headache and Backache Ilka magic. Bogy's Mustarlne big box tS oante the old fashioned mustard poultice improved and brought up to date. . Just rub it on it absorbs quickly, will not blister or soil clothing better than any liniment or plaster. It's such a wonderfully effective remedy that Leo H. Fine, a druggist, sells It on money back plan It buyer la dissatisfied. Rub it on for , sprains, lameness, rheumatism, lumbago swollen Joint, chllbralns. It quickly stops the misery of pleu rtsy, sore throat and chest, backache, stiff neck, coughs and croup. Tbe ag ony from bunions and callouses Is In stantly banished. People who suffer from cold feet can change them to warm onejS for Begy's Mustarlne re lieves the stagnation and causes tbe blood to circulate freely be sure it's Begy's it will do all we claim or mon ey back. themselves, and to settle for them selves the course they wish to pursue as regard great and vital questions of public policy. If our opponents do not believe in this right of the people, then they must repudiate the princi ples and the policies of Abraham Lin coln; If they do believe in the right of the people to rule, then they are bound also to hold that the power of the people, in the language of Mr. Justice Bradley, speaking tor the Su preme Court, is 'superior to all legl-. latures and all courts, and expresses the will of the ultimate sovereignty of the whole country.'" Qrand opening of Geo. ftchelt's latest and up-to-date saloon In the city, . Free turkey and dressing, 8 o'olock, Satur day night; S17 North 1 St. 7-3t Onata Watauna, the Japanese auth oress, who in private lite Is Mrs. Ber trand Babcock, is so fascinated with golf that when not writing she spends most of her time on the links. WE'LL STOP THAT ITCHING FOR 25 CENTS ZEMO AND ZEMO SOAP GIVE INSTANT RELIEF Are you troubled with Ecsema? Does your skin Itch, burn, smart or bleed? If so come into oar store and get a special tie treatment of the one sure, quick and positive cure you've been looking tor. ZEMO is the guaranteed remedy that has relieved thousands of skin sufferers. A delightful, efficient and germ-destroying antiseptic wash that soothes and heals an inflamed and lr ritated skin Just aa readily aa it cures Ecsema, Pimples, Rashes, Psoriasis and other stubborn forms of akin dis- ZEMO la worth its weight in gold to skin sufferers and we urge yon to try this trial treatment. Qulgley's drug stores, 821 N. E. St, and 4th and Main. is best played by him who In his earlier years guarantees himself an independent IDS 14c dos. FRUITS Fancy Eating Apples Fancy Grape Fruit Malaga Grapes Lemons . Bananas Rhubarb Fancy Florida Oranges Cranberries Stirpes ' little Just as soon as you can. There mission 10c. 7-n .3,. . .y.y,. . , '..iiuj&j;. - i '