Richmond Palladium (Daily), 8 November 1904 — Page 5

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Mr, T- M J.c wna L hostess j-i . . i..V xor a w inst Darrv ai uer uumc North Eleventh street yesterday afternoon. It was one of the most enjoyable affairs of the social season, w The Evening Whist Club was en-' tertained last evening by Miss Anna Harrington at . her home in North Twelfth street The prize was won by Miss Blanche Luken. The affair was perfect in all of its apAinfm'pnts. A nice luncheon was served. The club will hold its next meeting with Miss ktta Luken in South Thirteenth street.' 1 ' ' ; The Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary Society of the First 'English '"Lutheran" church will meet at tho home of Mrs. John Leive- in South Fourth Street November "Ninth. Wednesday, -X- -XThc Ladies of the Fifth Street Methodist Episcopal ohureh, will give a social tomoirow evening at the church. All are very' cordially invited.

The Ladies' Aid Society , of; the, The Dorcas Society was entertainTvrft.Hef V.inm.nl -hurch ed bv Miss Esther Besselman at

will meet this afternoon at two o'clock in the church parlors. The Ticknor Club met with Mrs. John Dougan yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Gilbert Dunham will bo hostess nest week at her homo in North Tenth street. V.' r- -vThe Penny Club had a called meeting at the home of Mrs. E. C. Dickinson last evening. A large number of ladies were present and all feel very much encouraged that their turkey and venison dinner, which' is to be given Wednesday, November 21, will be a success as the ladies arc selling a large number of tickets. Those ladies surely deserve the patronage of the public as this dinner is given for sweet charity.

A LIE IS NO MORE TO BE EXCUSED

OF POLITICS. This -epigram if now-applicable to lias necessarily conn? in contact. The the eharc-e of Mr. Parker a-ainst the American people have never allowed

President. Parker's Charges. . No truer expression was ever uttered than the phrase of President . Roosevelt that "a lie is noi more to be excused in politics than, out of ! politics." Although tins epigram was uttered mny years ago, yet its application was . never more direct than during the close of this political campaign.;, We believe that four months aeo 'Judire Parker would

)iave hesitated, if not scorned, to at-.It '" rltnof ''fnlsAlinnrl nhnnt anv man

nrA wt have thA spectacle of this man who is standing for the suffrages of his fellow citizens, from a public platform uttering the basest falsehoods against his President, his ""jv'"-"-' o - v ' opponent. But the He which is now ivAn is no more iot be excused m . the heat of a "political campaign than j was a falsehood to be condoned out side of the realms of politics. Mr. Alton B. Parker ' sat as a J udge to deliberately determine upon 'the mcr7 its of a case being argued before him.1 We believe that he would 'never have given the least attention to a statement of one man publicly accusing another of blackmail and basing his accusation only upon the jrround of" maliciousness and black guardism, and now as a private citi ti- I zen not only, is the good taste Mr. Parker criticised, but his very right is questioned and his motive condemned in accusing the President of the United States of characteristics which he knows are not possessed, or of thoughts which would not for a moment be' harbored in ! the mind of a man with a career so honorable as that possessed by Theodore Roosevelt. , " There is no doubt that the judgment of Alton : B. Parker has given way to prejudice, yes, even a desperation, which has been born during association with political tricksters and jleraagogncs, . We' cannot believe that us charge of blackmail andribeimade against our President by i ;ratic candidate is an honest mm sineei-e one. We can only conclude that Mr. Parker has simply fallen from his high pedestal into the mire and tilth with which he Colds or Fevers Are broken up In a sinle niht, r "6 serious illness rrtventHl. by tukii V V

Married, at the Fifth Street M. E

narsonaire 114 north sixth street, this ijomingat xu.ou, uy 0. t', 1 -- - bel F Kost. Both the young ople (have been residents of Richmond all J their lives. They left for Chicago on the ll:lo train where Mr. Lee has a position on he staff of the Chicago t American, fheir many friends join in extending their congratulations and wishing, them success m their new home. Mrs. Mary Sutton will be hostess this afternoon., for the Aftermath society at 2:30 o'clock at her home in National road. '::' . Mrs. Sol Fmnkel will be hostess for the initial meeting of the Cam'paignAYhist Club this evening at her home in JSoutli t.igam sireei. very pleasant time is anticipated. - The Navaio Euchre Club moots with Mrs. Andrew Roser at her home in South Tenth street this afternoon. -; v.- w her home in South lourth street yesterday afternoon. Eighteen members wore present and spent part of the afternoon sowing, after which a Iwrl.f Iniwli was indulged in. Music was furnished by Miss Alice Knollenberg. Mrs. Charles Bradway . and Mrs. Hoorner, of St. Louis, were, guests of honor. The next meeting will be with Mrs. John Eggenieyer in South Fourteenth street. -X- X Dr. G. II. Grant and wife are ex; pectcd to return home next Thursdav. -tt -XThe marriage of Mr. Arnold Klein and Miss Mary McCarthy Avill occur at St. Mary's Catholic church next Wednesday morning at S:30. IN POLITICS THAN OUT such campaign tactics to go nnrcbuked. They arc not new as comincr from campaign managers and .spellbinders in the heat of a campaign or even from the editorial pages of onr great papers, but never before have we witnessed the speeta cle of one candidate deliberately and openly denouncing his eppouent as a blackmailer and a briber and ready to sell his great oilice to the c;v-: tributors to the funds nocssarv to carry out the work of a campaign. is an innovation in American poli- j ! l?r which Ave believe will never be ! repeated for the reason that net only the independent voters but even the partisan, will hesitate to vote for a man with so little character as that disnlaved bv Jitd'Te Parker in his tirades against the President of his x - - - countrv and asramst the canamate who will be opposed to him at this election. The rebuke, we believe, will be so emphatic and so decisive that the example set by Judge Parker will not be followed by any candidate for the Presidency for a long time to come. SENATOR DAVIS AGAINST CAN DIDATE DAVIS. In the light of Vice-Presidential Candidate Davis's position regarding . the duty on coal, it will be well to r ...... . call to mind the position which he took about eleven years ago. On Tuesday, September 19, 1S93, Senator Davis of Test Virginia, appeared before the .Ways and. Means Committee then engaged in framing the Wilson tariff bill: Mr. Davis appeared before that" committee for the numose of protesting against taking off the duty on coal. "He' was asked by Mr. Reed if giving coal protection did not establish a privileged class, and his answer was as follows: 'If you can all a million people a privileged class who. produce it, dig it and bring it tJ the-" .market, they are a privileged class.'' Mr. .Reed, then said, "I want you to furnish an argument to these people ..who are opposing this on the ground '-.that it is. a privileged class. If you could point out the fallacy of their views I would be obliged to vo'i." jir. l'avis repiieu as xoilows : " 4The class of peonle who are inter ested in it who dig in the mines. perhaps make 75 cents a dav or pos sibly $1 or $2 a dav. If 300,000 or 400.0CO of such reonle, and many of them, in mv litle State may be call

MCBMOIID PAttXf AL

where you can find a class, that is not privileged." Then Mr. Davis added, referring to the people of Chairman Wilson's own district hi . West ..'-Virginia : "Make -wool free and you take fz-om them their bread.?' Mr. Bynum then asked Mr. Davis: I)oes the duty not add that much to the price of the coal?" whereupon Mr. Davis replied: 'My gracious that is hardly a fair question. The coal is sold itself at .$2.30 and how could it be added to the nrice of eoalf It is sujnrested that 95 per cent, is labor. When Mr. Davis made the state ment that' the duty on coal amount ed to 22 per cent advalorem, while the range of duties upon the dutiable list amounted to per cent., he added that the Committee had better level it up And . let the coal producers ccme in with the remainder of the list. In reply to the questions asked by Mr. Payne, if the miners in West Virginia and Maryland have adequate protection in the 75 cents a ton, why should not the raisers of wool or the manufacturers of-' wool and every one else have a protection that would be suilieient to make up the difference in labor conditions between this country and countries abroad ? Why shoudl they not all be upon the same plane? Mr. Davis replied : "Certainly they should. I see no reason why they .should not. The trouble is that coal is below the rest of the list, and you talk about taking more off coal." These few extracts from that dav's hearing show the position which Senator Davis took in desiring adequate protection for an industry in which he was interested. The conditions have in no way changed from thai dav to this, except that Mr. Davis lias been compelled to change his views upon the tariff just :i .TinVe Parker has been compelled to change his views 'upon the money question. Honest v and sincerity- have civeu place to expediency for campaign I purposes only. BROTHER-IN-LAW To Elmer Watt Was Motonnan Noakcs on Car That Killed Him : The saddest part of the tragedy in connection with the killing of Elmer Watt Saturday night by a Dayton & Western car" at the State line crossing, is the fact that Motonnan . James Noakcs, running the car th:U struck the unfortunate man, was his brother-in-law. and he iss neaily j"rostratol" with grief. Elmer Watt was the wncr of a saw mill between ..Weiville and New Hope, Ohii. The funeral will take place Wednesday morning, at 10 o'clock at the borne, east of estvillty the burial will be at the New Paris cemetery. Watt leaves a wife and three children. DALTON TOWNSHIP The long-waited-i'ov Sth oftjovember is here toduvv and -the., Republi cans will do their whole dutyvfor the whole national and Slate, tickets. ... :The correspondent in last Fridav morning's Palladium is verv much mistaken when he thinks lha; we arc mad about any township pol ities,. : Ave, as Republicans, stancLu so for years, will have all the. -honor there is to be derived from voting the full State and national Republi can ticket, although for one cam paign in our lives we have had. no chance, to make-anv demonstration no speakers having been supplied by our county or township committees, which-has been very uncommon m this township. There will be a big loss in this township from removals. but.it seems there was no chnuce nor effort made to hold them. The fellow that wrote the Dalton town ship Republicans up as bolters had better go away back and sit down. Farmers are sratherimr corn, butf"t is not as dry as would be best for cribbing. There is a fair -yield' and fair quality. ' There was not very much wheatsown and it is so dry it -can not do much for a start. Lon Taylor's infant, child has been very sick for a week and very little prosnect for its recovery. W. S. Farlow, administrator of the John Baldwin estate, sold the real estate last week to Mrs. Cora E. Baldwin. - Vote earlv. Vote for Roosevelt. ' ' .

8

FRESH DOPE ON INDIANA TEAMS GRIDIRON CONTESTS FURNISH FEW SURPRISES UNFAIR TACTICS BY DEPAUW Wabash Continues to Look Good as : Well as Butler Last Saturday's Games. The Indiana Medics played a hard game- against .Purdue,- managing to score a fluke touch down on the Boilermakers. While flukes con tribute to the ptmeral excitement of a a football game they have little part in the "dope" on any team.' Pur due evidently did not force the game as it might have done, apparently saving the men for the Indiana game. Credit is due Redden 's men for a fast and scrappy contest, and they are also to be credited with playing a clean and aggressive game most of the time. The De Pauw-Lake Frost game Saturday was no surprise, except to those who really expected to see De Pauw play a different quality of football from the game played in former j-ears. It is easy to see, after watching a De Pauw game, why it is that Indiana, Purdue, Wabash, Notre Dame and most of the Indiana colleges and universities have placed a ban on tne ovieinouisis. uemwrixiv slugging, holding, kneeing and the like are not clean football tactics. Perhaps the quality of the coaching may have something to do with this. No coach, be the provocation what it may, can be excused for using language such as Coach McFadden was oniltv of near the close of Saturj- j m dav's jrame. Those who heard him --fortunately for McFadden 's repu tation the number was small were astoundedthat the coach to the reputable college would descend to the use of such language on a football field. De Pauw will be obliged to change a great deal more than she showed signs of last Saturday before the university can rightfully claim games with the schools that have bared her. Butler's showing against Earlharn -..roc v. XXrhrAt f fO A 5 f 51 11 f f f t 1 1 Trvingtonians, although the Quakers' two field goals prevented a shutout. The t iYeii'si ve work of Butler was excellent, except for the fumbling that prevented several touchdowns. Butler i days a fast and aggressive game, but the .tendency to fumble must be eliminated before the team can do much with elevens such as Wabash has this year. SARAH BERNHARDT Tells of An Amusing Her Life. Incident In And to think" writes Sarah Bernhardt in. the current, installment of , her ' Memoirs " in the Strand Magazine,, "that my first claims to celebrity were my extraordinary thin . . . .ii t T 1 a ness and delicate neaitni x nau scarcely made by debut when epirams, puns, jokes, and caricatures concerning me were indulged in oy everyone to his heart's content. Was it really for the sake of advertising myself that I was so thin, so- small, so weak? And was it for this too, that I remained in bed six months of the year,' laid low by illness? My name became celebrated before I was really so myself. At the first night of Louis Bouilhet's piece, 'Mademoiselle Aisee,' at the Odeon, Flaubert, who was an intimate friend cf the author, introduced an attache of the British embassay to me. " 'O, I have known you for some time, mademoiselle, he said. 'Ton are the little stick with the sponre on Hie top.' "This caricature of me had . just aooesred. and has hfViin tle.d -l i eh t of idle folk". I ws om'e a yo.nnsr cirl at that time, and nothing cf thit kind hurt or tronVed me. Tn the first place, all the doctors hd nven me up. so that 1 ws moiprni about things, but all the doctors were mistaken. ' ' Vote early . " Vote for Roosevelt.

1901

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