Richmond Palladium (Daily), 5 March 1904 — Page 2

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RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1904.

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-Make it a good beginning! For the humors that babies 'inherit or acquire,

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Is the best medicine. The gentleness of its action adapts it to the most tender system, ft eradicates Scrofula and all other Humors, cures all their inward and outward effects, enriches the blood, strengthens the body, gives babies a good start in life.

"My infant had bad scrofula sores on her neck and behind her ears. ' I could not wash her properly for weeks.. Began giving her Hood's Sarsaparilla and the sores healed." Mrs. E. D. Aldrich, Sharon, Vfc. "Nothing builds up the system like Hood's Sarsaparilla. We give it to all, including the baby, with

good results. We have great confidence in it." Miss Cleo Wilson, Bradford, Ark! Accept no Substitute for Hood's Sarsaparilla.

3 Small doses a day.

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goodness of corn the most nutritive cereal grown. Prepared particularly for table and home uses. Put up in airtight, friction-top tins which protect its purity, making it particularly preferable to the dusty, uncleanly barrel syrups, ioc, 25c and 50c. At all grocers.

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CHURCH IS FIRST Significant Admission - Male by President Smith in Sinoot Case.

SUPERIOR TO THE LAW

Should the Vital Principle of Mormonism le Attached the Church Would Ilise Defensive.

Between 'lievelatioii" antl low the Former Wouttl be Uppermost, Said Smith.

Washington, March 5. Interest in the investigation before the senate committee on privileges and elections on the protests against Senator Reed Smoot of Utah continues unabated. Most of the time was devoted to the introduction of documents subscribed to as tne law of the Mormon church. In that connection President Joseph F. Smith, who again was on the stand, testified that if the principle of plural marriage should be attacked it would be defended by the church. Intense feeling was exhibited by President Smith against individuals who, he said, had spied on the domestic and marital relations of the high officials of the Mormon church, and for that reason he had favored the passage of the Evans bill to prevent prosecutions for polygamous cohabitation, unless complaints were entered by husband or wife against the other. This bill was passed, but vetoed by the governor of Utah. It was brought out that all of Mr. Smith's predecessors as presidents of the Mormon church, had been polygamists and that the man chosen to succeed him has more than one wife. Mr. Smith was asked which he would obey, the law of the land or revelations from God, if the two were in conflict. He said he might obey the revelation, though it was not compulsory. He added: "I should not like to be put in a position where I would have to desert my children I could not do that." Senator Hoar asked a number of questions to determine the relative weight of revelation and the law of the land when the two came into contact, and asked particularly ir. regard to the old revelations. Mr. Smith said uiat with the older members it was the effort to uphold the laws, but with, the younger ones well, they were a little hard to control. Bringing the question up to the lat

ter period. Senator Hoar wanted to know what Mr. Smith would do if the revelations conflicted with the law. "Which would you obey?" he asked. "With me, perhaps, the revelation would be uppermost," said Mr. Smith. "Can you say pernaps' to such a question?" interrupted Mr. Hoar, severely. Continuing, he asked: "Suppose you received a revelation commanding your people to do something which would conflict with the law of' the land. Which would they have to obey?" "Whichever they pleased," was the reply. "There is no compulsion." Then he read from one of the standards of authority: "Let no man break the law of the land, for he that keepefh the laws of Gqd hath no need to break the law of the land." Mr. Smith in answer to Senator 'Beveridge said that under the discipline that had been maintained for the last twenty years the people in the Mormon church would obey laws rather than any revelation which might be in conflict. "Which would you do?" asked Senator Burrows. "I would strive with all my might to obey the laws of the land," said Mr. Smith, and he added: "But I should not like to be put into a position where I would be compelled to abandon my children. I could not do that." Mr. Smith said that he never had received any revelations direct from God, but that if any should come it might be by audible voice, inspiration known only or heard by himself or, as in the case of Joseph Smith, jr., who received the book of Mormon in writing.

A Suspicious Case. Hammond, Ind., March 5. A case of murder or suicide was discovered near East Chicago. The body of a man was found in an old canal with head submerged beneath the ice in less than a foot of water. The man's name was found to be Thoma3 Fitzgerald, and his home South Chicago. The police are working on the case.

Boiler Let Go. Towanda, Pa., March 5. By the explosion of the boiler of a saw mill at Greenwood, P. L. Brown, the proprietor and his two helpers, Wallace Tice and Robert Compton, were instantly killed. The bodies were maagled horribly.

Because His Bank Failed. Des Moines, la., March 5. President Larue of the Corning bank, shot himself through the head last evening, dying instantly. His bank tailed this week.

Only Three Lives Lost. Oklahoma City, March 5. Three persons perished in Wednesday night's prairie fire. The financial loss Is estimated at half a million dollars.

"Zfs proof of high culture to say the greatest matters in 4 the siviplest my. ' 'EMERSON.

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"A dose in time saves lives." Dr. Wood's Xorvaj? Pine Srup; nature's remedy for coughs, colds, pulmonary diseases of every sort. Lulu Stanhope, St. Louis: "I used to liave a horrid complexion. I took Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea and am called the prettiest girl in the city." 35 cents. A. G. Luken & Co. A household necessity Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. Heals burns, cuts, wounds of any sort; cures sore throat, croup, catarrh, asthma; never fails. Puts an End to it All. A grievous Avail oftimes comes as a result of unberable pain from over taxed organs. Dizziness, Backache, Liver complaint and Constipation. But thanks to Dr. King's New Life Pills they put an end to it all. They are gentle but thorough. Try them. Only 25c Guaranteed by A. G. Luken & Co's drug store. For eruptions, sores, pimples, kidney and liver troubles, constipation, indigestion, use Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Carries new life to every part of the body. 35 cents, tea or tablet form. A. G. Luken & Co.

"I owe my whole life to Burdock Blood Bitters. Scrofulous sores covered my body. I seemed beyond cure. B. B. B. has made me a perfectly well woman." Mrs. Chas. Hut ton, Berville, Mich.

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the death penalty. It is wise to Lavo Bucklen's Arnica Salve ever handy. It's the best Salve on earth and will

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