Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 281, 20 November 1907 — Page 1

CHMONB PAIXABIIJM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND, IXD., WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVE3IHEK 2d. 11X)7. VOL. XXXII. NO. 281 SINGLE COPY. 2 CENTS. MRS. BRADLEY ENTERS UPON SECOND DAY OE TESTIMONY TWENTY-FIVE MILLIONS TO MEN OF AFFAIRS IN RICHMOND BE PAID EDR CERTIFICATES The Financiers Show Their Faith in Administrations Plans. Tells of a Call That She Made At the Home of Senator Brown.

TJH

AT THAT Tit JUDMOB IN HER HEAD Defendant Was Much Exhausted When She Had Finished Her Story On Tuesday-Court Adjourns,

Washington, Nov. 20 Mrs. Annie S. Bradley resumed the stand this morning in her trial for the murder Of former Senator brown. Shu identified letters from Brown to her and told of a call the made at Brown's house. He raged. She told him she wa going away. Ho wept and plead with her not to go. She said at this time phe had pains in her head. Tired Out by Strain. "I mm eo tired," Kaid Mrs. Bradley, ft. few minutes before 3 o'elock Tuesday after she had spent about four nours on the witness stand relating fh details of her acquaintanceship and intimacy with former United i States Senator Brown, with whose ;nurder slid stands accused, and Judge Stafford immediately gave orders for jQte adjournment of the court. She ftuA not ached the events directly

HITCHCOCK DID NOT AIISWERJIESTIOIIS Refused to Serve at Witness In the Trial of Hearst For Libel.

Promised early trial.

connected with the tragedy in which Brown was killed, but had very closely approached them. Tuesday's" 'stories dealt with 'he first acquaintance of Mrs. Bradley

with Brown and told how that acquain-f tance gradually ripened into friend-! ship and final!- into love. It was a ' long and pathetic narrative of illicit affection; of promises of marriage which could at first be made onlv on the condition of divorce on both sides, and then of disappointment and '-.vie!' when boih became free and could have been legally united if Brown had been willing. ( Mrs. Bradley told the particulars of many pledges made to her, told how . Brown had introduced her as his wife, I and how he had given his namo to j one of their children and also how he j had aided her in no less than tnrea'

criminal operations.

BROTHER KILLS BROTHER

A

MONEY POURING INTO THE SUB-TREASURY Treasury Officials Are Confident the Issue of Three Per Cents Will Be Over-Subscribed

New York. Nov. 20. Twenty-five million dollars will be paid by the First National bank, J. P. Morgan & Co., the City bank and several others to the United States treasury to pay

Reports from all oor the United States state that money in great lots is being st-nl to the Ktibtreasury for blocks of the hundred million certificates. Treasury ortickls are confident the is.ue will be over-subscribed. Th

for an equivelant amount in new three j money will be distributed to different per cent certificates before the banks ; parts of the country. The lmmey paid close today. ! for the certificates will be kept in This evidences the confidence the circulation, principally in crop diafinauciers have in the administrations tricts. Bids for bom's are being replan to relieve the currency famine, reived from many rities.

BIG CRUSH AT THE PBB CLUB MEAL

DRUNKEN

QUARREL

James Martis Was Found With Throat Cut.

CONFESSION WAS SECURED

CASE AGAINST THE ACTOR IS NOT TO BE DELAYED LONGER THAN TWO WEEKS IS APPEARING ON STAGE.

Meridian, Miss., Nov. 20 The dead bodj" of James Martis, prominent, was found near his home this morning with the throat cut. His brother, Ed

Martis, confessed and was arrested

The murder was the result of a drunken quarrel.

WALTER DALBEY. Portrait Photographer,

STATE WIDE WAR AGAINST SALOONS IS NOW VERY NEAR

New York, Nov. 2 Raymond Hitchcock, the actor, refused to answer questions put to him when he was called as a witness in the action for

criminal libel brought by former Congressman William Astor Chauler

against William R. Hearst.

Hichcock based his refusal on his eonstitutional rights, in that, as he ws himself under indictment, he could

Hot be compelled to make answers Which might tend to incriminate and degrade him. The witness was sustained by the court and an adjournjnent was taken as the defense was not prepared to call other witnesses. Hitchcock is under indictments growing out of charges made by young girls and th libel alleged by Mr. Chanler associate the complainant with Mr. Hitchrock in the society of these girls. The defense asked Hitchcock whether Mr. Chanler was present at the actor's great Long Island home on a certain Sunday in the latter part of lWrt, xrhen two girls were guests at the house. To this and other questions the witness refused to reply.

BURGLAR VERY ROSY IN THE QUAKER CITY Latest Visit Paid Was to the Schell Saloon on North Twelfth Street.

Indianapolis, Where a Big Meeting Will Be Held on Friday Night of This Week, Will Be Storm Center.

HOPE TO TAKE ON THE ENTIRE CAPITAL CITY.

GOT MONEY AND WHISKEY.

WILL HAVE EARLY TRIAL.

Hearing of Actor Will Start in Weeks.

Two

Nw York. Nov. 2t. The trial of Raymond Titchcock, the comedian, oa vlx indictments growing out of charges preferred against him of assault on teveral young girls, probably will be begun within two weeks. This announcement was made, following an agreement between the district attorney's office and the defendant's counsel as a result of which Hitchcock's

counsel withdrew a motion made several days ago. that he be permitted to inspect the minutes of the grand jury which returned the indictments. In withdrawing the motion the attorney t'uid: "This is done in view of an early trial for the defendant." Aj the Fame time Assistant District Altorney Garvin informed the court that the district attorney agreed that the case bould not be delayed end that he believed it could be brought to trial within ten days. The arrest and in

dictment of Hitchcock and his subse-

Campaign Wiil Then Go to Anderson and Other Large Cities of the State Nomination of Candidates.

SUES 01 WHICH TO BASE

SUIT ARE HOT MADE UP Court Sustained Motion to Separate Causes of Action As Alleged in the Complaint.

More People Want to Patronize Dinner Than Can Be Served With Ease.

OUTLAY A SPLENDID ONE.

BANKS ARE READY ' TO RETURN CASH

Chicago Will Resume Whenever New York Institutions Say the Word.

WAS THE THIRD ANNUAL DINNER SERVED BY THE CLUB AND ECLIPSED THOSE THAT HAVE PRECEDED IT.

Six hundred people ate turkey dinner

FACTORIES ARE RESUMING.

EFFECTS OF FLURRY DISAPPEARING IN HENRY COUNTY ROCKEFELLER ISSUES A STATEMENT TO CLEAR HIMSELF.

Chicago, Nov. 'JO. The banks in this

today between the hours of eleven and j city are ready to resume a cash basin two oclock, at the Pythian Temple, on j at any time. The Chicago clearing South Eighth street, and thus assisted j house association' has Bent word to

Issues-won which the Indiana railroad ' One of the chief questions which

commission will base its suit against be raised and on which the final with expectancy

the ladies of the Penny club in their noble work. The dinners served by the Penny club have become famous, and hundreds of people, especially business men. await this annual event

This was the third

New York that it is ready whenever Nw York is w illing to take similar action.

FACTORIES ON FULL TIME.

the Pennsylvania railroad ami the ('.. C. & Li. for refusal to grant a physicial union and freight interchange in

Richmond, have not yet been made up Judge

by attorneys.

.hid go Carter of the Superior court probably will be made to the supreme things served

Effects of the Finacil Flurry Disappearing.

Arc

New Castle, lnd., Nov. 20. The effects of the recent financial flurry are beginning to wear off in this city and vicinity. Factories which have been running short time on account of the uncertainty of the money market and

ONE MAN IS UNDER ARREST ON

SUSPICION WALKER TURNER j HELD ON CHARGE OF SWIPING!

$12 AT COY HOME.

decision of the case depends, will be year that the dinner has been serve:! the constitutionality of the act parsed and the attendance excelled that of by the legislature under which the either of the previous years, railroad commission is preceding. If The dinner was sumptuous in every

Carter should decide thr.t this way, the only drawback being the dif-

act is unconstitutional, an appeal ficulty of serving so many. The good!

for twenty-five cents

of Marion county, before whom the court by the railroad commission. The were enouah to satisfy a man who had

case will come to a hearing has sus- case has not yet been set for trial. If been on a forty days' fast. The din-

tained the motion to separate the is not known definitely when the pro- ner included turkey, and plenty of it. ' orders to hold shipments until further causes of action alleged in the com- 'position will be finally settled. ! cranberries, gravy, mashed potatoes, j orders, have resumed operations again plaint. Demurer will be filed to the Although the case in which the lo- dressing, slaw, coffee, bread and but-j on full time and all of them are now separate paragraphs of the complaint c;3l railroads figure Is attracting much ter. celery and many other good things. n operations in all departments. The by the Pennsylvania railroad, by the interest, the similar action of the the only requisite being to get what j banks are pieparing to resume their railroad commission attorneys. - Marion. Ind., Commercial club against one wanted. former business methods and the re-t

Indianapolis, Nov. 20. It was learn- As the paragraphs in the complaint t'.ie Pennsylvania. C. C. &. L. and. To- At noon the rush was so great that voking of the order limit withdrawals ..i...,.l . . ... f S i.- !i.i,nc-c1Mn f t 1- 1...!. T ! ,. ....,1 I ' rt . . . , . : 1 rt ,1 . e . I.. .... 1 I . . 1 .... i.t li l ' .B J : . f tik .-, .,, It! ATASt4

ed todav that Indk'liapOlis is to be SMttiMl l ihi-im, it. :.- iniiuosime i.i leuu. cii. J..tjui& ami eu-iu itiiuwdu. clOZens OI people f u: iiui-u u 111 tu oi aepobiis to ti waj i.- v if-it.ti

is attracting much attention. Next halls, and aisles and along tne tame.?, to take place in tne next ten days. Friday afternoon at Indianapolis both awaiting an opportunity to seize the i . . the complaintant and the defendants f jrsit vacancy that occurred at the tab-1 NO UNITED STATES BONDS, in this case will appear before the In- es. The ladies worked heroically and j

The Henry Schell saloon

Twelfth street was burglarized

day night or early this morning. One man Tias been arrested by the police, on suspicion but as yet the police have no evidence that ihe suspect had anything to do with t'le theft. When the bartender at the saloon same on duty this morning at 7 o'clock he found a window in the rear of the saloon had been brok-ui. Further investigation revealed the fact that t:ie cash register had beon broken into and that all the money, amounting to $4.50, had been removed. It was also discovered that the thief had taken with him a quart bottle of whiskey. After the Imrglary had been reported to police headquarters an officer was detailed to work on the case. About t o'clock he located a well known police character in the north end of town. This man was unable to give a satisfactory account of himself so he was arrested on a charge of suspicion. No money or whiskey was found on his person. The man who has been arrested in connection with this case is well known to the police. Walker Turner Arrested. Walker Turner, colored, has been

the scene of a great battle between the liquor and temperance forces. On next Friday night at a dinner to be given here for nearly a hundred ministers and representative business

ou North; men, plans will be discussed for push-

ues- ing a remonstrance campaign in every

ward in Indianapolis. Committees will be appointed to carry remonstrances in every way. Mass meetings will be held to enthuse the people and everything possible will be done to interest them to the point where a majority of Jhe voters will sign their names to the remonstrances. The temperance forces have tried several times to make remonstrances stick in some of the residence wards here and have failed. They will now tackle the entire city. They propose to enter the fight with the determination to win. Will Extend Crusade. The crusade is to be extended soon

Shiveley and Shiveley, local attor

neys, who are acting for the railroad commission, to ;uswer the complaints of ihe railroad as they should be answered. Each separate clause in the Pennsylvania's complaint against the interchange will be answered in full by local attorneys. On the strength of the demurs the case may be decided by Judge Carter.

diana commission. Both the Penney!- aid eyerv thing in their power to re- John D. Issues a Statement to Clear

vania and the "Clover Leaf" road, as it. is popularly known, refuse to inter-, change fivight with the C, C. & T.. much to the dissatisfaction of shippers in Marion.

0

HOLDING

A

SI

lieve the congestion. HimseiT. Many expressions of appreciation 1 , . 11 T New ork. Nov. John D Koekwere heard as to the excellence of the dinner. The one most expressive was : efeller is not hoarding government heard from a boy who from the appear-j bonds according to a statement issued ance of his plate had a tremendous ap- bv thos wllo id they were authorU-

to Anderson. It will be carried on there in much the same manner as at New Castle, where a house-to-hoie canvass is being made for signatures. The officers of the Anti-Saloon league are sure that they will soon succeed in driving all of the saloons out of New Castle. After Indianapolis and Anderson are tried the fight will be Carried into other large cities. It was stated today that 1.032 saloons have been put out of business in the last two years under the Moore remon-

Permanent State Organization Is Expected to Be The Result.

WANT UNIFORM SYSTEM.

THERE ARE NINETY-TWO COUNTIES AND JUST AS MANY DIFFERENT KINDS OF BOOKKEEPING BY THE -COUNTY AUDITORS.

at it sorrowfully for a time, then sighed and exclaimed "Gee: I wish I was an elephant."

Indiana." he said, "and there are ninety-two different kinds of boo'S-keepin by the county auditors. Every fellow that comes into office has his own ideas. Some of them arc good and others are very bad. No attempt has been made to bring about a uniformity, and now the auditors are beginning to

see the necessity for a change. It is j likely that at this meeting a committee :

will be appointed for the purpose of preparing such a uniform system, and it will be instructed to report at the next annual nueting. If the association succeeds in this effort it will probably ask the next legislature to enact a law establishing a uniform system of public accounting. "We will ask Attorney-General Bingham to make an address to morrow, giving us his interpretation of the public depository law. which goes into effect on December 1. We will also takeup the subject of gravel road and ditch laws and seek to have some kind of n

uniform interpretation of them. It! FINISH WORK IN JUNE. seems that every county attorney in

ed to speak for him. The statement

petite, or else his eyes were bigger ; th:in his stomach. As he pushed back;

from the table with still a good sized follows: niece of turkey on his plate, he looked! "I am informed that there appeared

THIRTY-HIKE GET BACHELOR'S DEGREE

This Number of Candidates Accepted by the Authorities at Earlham.

in newspapers recently reports inai i possess one hundred million dollars of Lnited Slates government bonds which I have refused to loan or sell for the purpose of helping the situation or aiding additional circulation by the banks. "I do not own at the present lime, nor have I owtiM at any time during the present crisis any United Statea. bonds whatever."

.History

arrested on a charge of having stol- strance law. Of the 1.016 townships en S12 from the home of Frank Coy. ; in the state. 742 are in "dsv" terricolored. i:.;m East Mjun street. Tur-! tory. In addition there are many "dry" ner came to call on the Covs' Tues- nnrrts in thP ?T4 "wpt" town shins

day. After his departure Frank Coy Several counties and cities are now ! dianapolis today, at which a state as-1

Fifty or more of the auditors of counties throughout the State were exi pected to attend the meeting at In-

the State has his own opinion regarding the application of these laws. This leads to coafusiou among the counties."

ouent mysterious return was one of the ' discovred that 12 which he had hid- without saloons and many will go en-; sociation will be organized. A pre-! MISS MFTCAl F Tfl PRFACh

tensations of the year in theatrical " 111 U!e raer

or a sewing ma- tirelv "drv" within the next few

circles. Hitchcock is now at liberty cnine was missing. Coy reported the weeks, remonstrances having been on $7,rK) bail and is appearing night-', 1"ater to the police who at once sus- filed in them. The league is looking ly on the stage in his old part in "A 1 l,lcU)ned Turner of the theft. Turner after the nomination of candidates for Yankee Tourist." ! denies guilt but the police are confi- places in the legislature who will be

nenr ne can oe convicted of pet ilar- .friendly to its cause.

TWINS BECOME HABIT. Goodhue, Minn.. Nov. 20. Mrs. A. Itosner has given birth to her sixth set of twins born since 1S9S. She is the mother of twenty. five children.

ceny.

j The man who broke into the bicvele 1

repair shop of William Thornton on Ft. Wayne avenue Sunday night is .still at large. The police are of the J opinion that the same man broke inito the Thornton shop and the Schell j saloon. The two cases of house j breaking are the first that, have been i r extorted- u.iiA rfn v.;o r -

ITHE WEATHER PROPHET.

INDIANA Thursday partly cloudy; fresh east winds, becoming variable. OHIO Thursday, rain; fresh northmml Ayl t f,

liminary meeting was held in Indianapolis several weeks ago and the idea of an organization was discussed. A committee, headed by Tom Nugent, auditor of Daviess county, was appointed to prepare a constitution and a set of bylaws, and November 20 was fixed as the date for themeeting for permanent organization. Nugent says themain thing in view is the adoption of a uniform system of public accounting. '"i"b.r are ninety-two. -comities, ia

Miss Metcalf of Earlham will preach at the Chester Friends church next Sunday morning at the usual hour.

Mira T. Cope

Harry Todd Cosullo Philosophy and Math. Edwin L. Ixan English. Edith M. Doney ....German Scott Eaton -Latin Wm. E. Elliott Civil Engineering John T. Haworth Geology Gustave Hoelscher History Aivin B. Heath History Byron Huff German and French Grace E. Huff Greek

Agnes ifunt German and French

EVER j Francine Jenkins Bibl

iBeulah Kauffman ..English

Mary Lawrence English Anna Jane Maria . Latin

Horace W. Marshall History

I Edna Metcalfe . ..Mathematics The following have been accepted ; Walter R. Miles, Philosophy and Biblo as candidates for the bachelor's Je-;E(1th jjoore English

Alice Norton German

CLASS WILL BE ONE OF THE

LARGEST THAT HAS

GONE OUT, FROM THE INSTITU TION MAJOR SUBJECTS.

;ge, in June,!

BE SURE TO GET TAG.

Thursday, November 21, is hospital day. Be sure that you get a tag as an indication that you have contributed toward this worthy-cause.

'gree at Earlhfem College

i ISOv Clara RaUiff English I Name. Major. , Ina jtuQ Iatin ; Clyde Allee Biology Rezin Reagan Chem. and Biology Laura Fern Allen English Roxie Stalker Engnlish

1 1 Robert Forrest Allen . Pauline Saint German

Chemistry and Biology j clarence W. Sumner. .Philosophy E. Anna Bailey History; an(j Education. Helen Baird Biology 'Glen Thistlethwaite. .. . ..Mathematics

' Jessie Beeler

German and French, C. Emmet Trueblood . Mathematics

(Helen Carter German Katis Coahraa Mathematics

Norman G. Wann Bible Martha Whitacre ..F.. English.