Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 69, 24 April 1908 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FTC ID AT, APRIL lnm.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM.
Palladium Printing Co., Publishers. Office North 9th and A Streets. RICHMOND, INDIANA. PRICE Per Copy, Daily 2c Per Copy, Sunday 3c Per Week, Daily and Sunday 10a IN ADVANCE One Year S500 Entered at Richmond, Ind.. Postofflce As Second Class Mail Matter. REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATE. Governor JAMES E. WATSON'. Lieutenant Governor TREMONT C. GOODWIN E. Secretary of State FRED A. SIMS. Auditor of State JOHN C. WLLHEIMKR. Treasurer of State OSCAR 11 ABLE Y. Attorney General JAMES BINGHAM. State Superintendent LAWRENCE McTURNAN. State Statistician J. L. PEETZ. Judge of Supreme Court QUINCY A. MYERS. Judge of Appellate Court DAVID MYERS. Reporter of Supreme CourtGEORGE W. SELF. DISTRICT. Congress WILLIAM 'O. BARNARD. COUNTY. Joint. Representative ALONZO M. GARDNER. Representative WALTER S. RATLIFF. Circuit .Tudse HENRY C. FOX. Prosecuting Attorney CHAS L. LADD. Treasurer ALBERT A LBERTSON. Sheriff LINUS P. MEREDITH. -Coroner L. BRA MK AM P. DR. A. Surveyor ROBERT A. HOWARD. Recorder WILL J. ROBBINS. -Commissioner Eastern Dist.HOMKP. FAR LOW. -Commissioner Middle Dist.BARNEY H. LIN DERM AN. -Commissioner Western Dist.R'OBERT H. BEESON. WAYNE TOWNSHIP. Trustee JAMES H. ltOWARTII. Assessor CHARLES E. POTTER. HENLEY REFUSED FOR BUSINESS REASONS. Editor Palladium: Newspaper controversies as a rule are all but satisfactory, but in justice to myself, and that the people should know my position in this matter, I make the following statement in reply to communication in Thursday's Item purporting as coming from the Eastern Polo Players. I do not believe that ny such statement was made by them, as I have always been on the best of terms with them, and have now no reason to believe that the friendship that has existed In the past does not now exist. If anyone of them suggested anything contained in the article mentioned, they have been misled by others in making false representations to them. As to statement that "I fought their being allowed to play here." will say that as president of the board of directors of the Richmond Athletic association, I did not oppose the renting of the Coliseum for a Polo carnival, as the Btock in the Coliseum was solicited and subscribed for with the understanding that the building was to be used principally for the games of polo, of which we had a very successful season, and our stockholders were very well pleased with returns. In order that we might build up the business that was bo successfully started the past season and eventually be ready for the Eastern polo stars which could be secured one or more at a time to strengthen our teams and build up the game as it was done before, I objected to renting the Coliseum for the Polo carnival to bring the All Star teams here, which in my opinion would not help the business for the Athletic, association, but on the contrary it would have the bad effect it did in Kokomo, Marlon, Lo;ansport and Anderson, where they Rot all star teams last spring, and where they did not finish the season, end lost money for the associations besides. Again I objected to renting for this polo carnival for the pure and simple reason that any opera house, firm or business man would have in turning over their business for a week for any association to make money out of, and when through, and they have out of it all they could get, turn it back to the owner in worse condition than when received, as far as the business is concerned. After working several months, in which I gave a good portion of my time to establishing the game of polo here again, and for the reasons above given,
and from the fact that board of directors of the Richmond Athletic association all saw different and voted to allow the use of the Coliseum for the Polo carnival, I did, as stated, resign from the polo management, and have had nothing whatever to do with it since. The statement regarding the challenge being "inspired'' by me, or that I have
had anything to do with the Richmond , players, or have advised them in any way, or that I ever saia mat an tne players advertised would not be here, or that I had spent all my time knocking the whole carnival, is absolutely false and misleading. In conclusion I desire to say that I ! hold the highest, regard for most of the members of the Elks' Lodge, and j also the Eastern polo players, and feel j that in all I have said or done has ! been in a business like manner, and as I saw. for the best interest for the fu-! ture in polo, and also for my associ- : ates who placed me in the position to j represent their interests first. Respectfully, M. C. HENLEY. FAIRBANKS MAY DO SOMETHING YET South Carolina Is Glancing His Way. Washington. April 2 1. Fairbanks, according to the opinion of L. W. C. Blalock. of Columbia, S. (.'., who has arrived here will receive the endorsement of the republican State convention of South Carolina, which is to meet next, Tuesday. Mr. Blalock is in this rity on a political errand, the nature of which he declines to olvulge. "Fairbanks has gained much strength recently." continued Mr. Blalock. "It strikes me he will be endorsed by the state convention. Foraker Is popular in our state. I don't think he will figure in the convention seriously. It is known he will not have any chance of bring nominated. He has many friends, though in the state. "There are over one hundred colored delegates in that convention to about twenty whites. You may know the colored delegates are going to have almost everything their own way. Roosevelt, is not as popular in our state as he seems to be elsewhere." HEARTED OVER AFFAIR Mrs. Vanderbilt, Shamed Over Divorce, Sails. New York, April 24. Unhappy over her inability to effect a reconciliation between her son. Alfred Owynne and his wife, Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt. Sr., has sailed for Europe on the Kaiserin Augusta Victoria. She will remain abroad for years, if not for good. Several times Mrs. Alfred Vanderbilt and her mother-in-law conferred over the matter. Wednesday morning the mother tearfully pleaded with the wife to withdraw her divorce suit so that the stigma might, be withheld from the Vanderbilt name. His mother fears, Alfred, once free, may be led into marrying again. His first marriage was against her wishes, and it was years before she became reconciled to him. That the chief heir of the Vanderbilt millions should marry the young woman whose name has been mentioned in his wife's divorce application is a bitter anticipation ip her. Excessive Drinking Orrine Destroys the Craving for Drink Sold Under Positive Guarantee Excessive or continued use of alcoholic beverages always results in a diseased condition of the nervous system. The drinking man is often heard to say, "I can stop of my own free will and when I wish," but the poor fellow is now devoid of the power to act at the proper time and in the right way, it's too late, the craving has secured a firm hold and because of the diseased nervous system he has not the ability for sustained effort. The result we all know. Drunkenness is no longer considered a crime; eminent scientists and physicians have agreed that it i3 a disease and must be trertted as such. The home treatment that has been used for a number of ytars. and is highly successful, is Orrine. It is sold under a positive guarantee that if it does not effect a cure your money will be refunded. Orrine Is in two forms. When desiring to give secretly, purchase Orrine No. 1, and if the patient will voluntadiiy take the treatment, Orrine No. 2 should be given. The guarantee is the same in either case. Orrine costs but $1.00 per box. Mailed in plain sealed wrapper on receipt of price. Write for free treatise on "Drunkenness" mailed in sealed envelope by The Orrine Co., Washington, D. C. Sold by leading druggists everywhere and in this city by A. G. Luken & Co. It is estimated that New Zealand has an available coal supply of 1.2"X.Ot0,oK tons, of which not more than 20.M.'t tons have been touched. This was the first of the British colonies to try experiments of state ownership of colliery property. Th Sunrise Of LIfK Infants and children are constantly needtnsr .axative. It is important to .now what to grive them. Their stomach and bowels are not strong enough for salts, purg-ative waters or cathartic pills, powders or tablets. Give them a mild pleasant, rent!, laxative tonic like Dr. Caldwell' Syrup Pepsin, which sells at tba small sum of 50 cents or $1 at drag store. It is the one great remedy for yon to have m the haose to give chH4rea when they need it-
Says Many Men Need Prescription If you want to be stroner. vigorous and full of boundinghealth, and to enjoy to th? fuilst i-xtcjit the trreat natural functions with which nature endows all mankind then y.u should follow tiio trentnT-iit outlined hv one of New York's most prominent and successful prar t loners ; one who lias (frown wealthy by treating- the dissipated members of the select an J wealthy classes. The treatment is said to have acquired a wonderful reputation even in the hospitals and privat" sanitariums throughout the east, owing to its peculiar propensityto fortify the r, rv force and generate Ivalth and a consequent personal mat; n i t ; sru. Stj essential to the happiness of everv normal human beinx. It is claimed to be a blessing: to those who are physically impaired, ftlooniy, despondent, nervous and who have trembling of the hmbs. dizziness, heart palpitation, cold hands and feet, insomnia, fear without cause, timidity in venturing and Keneral inability t.i aM rationally as at hers do. Also of ast benefit to writers, professional men, office workers, and the victims of society's late hours and over indulgence in wines, liquors, etc. Bv preparing the treatment at home secretly, no one need know of another's trouble, while the i n ft rerj ien s are mic h us.,1 in fillinsr vnrious prescriptions, so that even the purchase of tuem separately need occasion no timidity. Some drutrKists,
i 5 4may not have ail of them in stock, but can easily obtain them from wholesale firms who supply the trade with rare concentration and extracts. Tf the reader decides to try it. gf t "three ounces of ordinary svr ip Sarsaparilla Compound," stud one ounce compound Kluid f '.aim wort:" mix and let stand two hours; then get one ounce compound essence of Cardiol arid one ounce Tincture Cadomene"; mix all together, shake well and take a teaspoonful after each meal and one at night. If convenient also take a hot salt writer bath niphtly to jromote the quickest action by improving tho circulation. HUGH T. MILLER NOT A CANDIDATE Will Not Run for Congress as Rumored. Indianapolis, Ind., April 21. Talk that has been going the rounds for several days to the effect that Hugh T. Miller, of Columbus, lieutenant-governor, might consent to run for congress in his district the Fourth was ended today by Mr. Miller himself. He said: "I have told my friends that six months of active politics in one year is more than enough and that I could not consider seeking a position in congress. Several republican leaders of the district and a good many friends seemed to think that I might, be willing to seek the nomination and make the race, but I have told them 'No.' I have other things to attend to and I have had quite enough of politics for this year." Mr. Miller was a candidate before the recent state convention for the nomination for governor. He made a canvass of the state and worked hard at his1 job of politics for several months. He is now resuming his business activities. BURNS ACTIVE AGAINST JUMPERS Pennsy Detective After Mew Castle Men. Isaac Burns, local Panhandle detective, is waging a crusade against train jumpers at New Castle. Burns was at the Flower City yesterday and caught a negro named George Brown after he had jumped aboard the train. The Panhandle company has had a number of accidents happen on its trains at New Castle and proposes to bring about a stop of the practice. SITE AT LAUREL FOR TUBERCULOSIS HOSPITAL Thought Location Will Be Advantageous. The claim is made by the newspapers of Rushville and Brookville that the site at Laurel for the proposed state tuberculosis hospital will be the one picked upon by the commission. The site is said to possess many peculiar advantages that make it preferable to all others that have been suggested. The land slopes well for drainage and the surroundings are such as to keep the atmosphere free from contamination. ROBBER FINALLY MOATERLOO Men Who Held Up Williamsburg Boy Captured. Williamsburg. Ind., April 24. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jones of this place have received word from their son Guy at Chicago, that the robber who held him up while in the drug store at which he works, and robbed the store, has been captured. The holdup attempted to repeat his performance at another drug store in another part of the city and was arrested. He has been identified by Guy Jones and others. Ljctitia: Gold MedsJ Flour makes the 'whitest bre4- Atltia.
LIQUOR JN WIN Succeeded in Getting Personal Liberty Plank in Illinois Platform.
CONVENTION WENT MAD. Springfield, 111., April 24. Illinois democrats yesterday wrestled violently with the counter demands of saloon and temperance forces of the state and the liquor men finally won, securing the insertion of a "personal liberty" plank in the platform by a vote of (TJ'j to CS3. Members of the Chicago delegation, tied by the unit rule, protested in vain and their vote was cast for the liquor interests by one man. In view of thej recent hot local option elections in the s tate, which have resulted disastrous-j ly for the liquor interests, the conser-' vatives in the party tried to smooth j over action at this time, realizing that such a plank will cost the narty thousands of voles, but the issue overwhelmed everything else. National politics, the tariff, the Bryan-Johnson and otlu-r feuds were swamped in the fight over a declaration on "personal liberty." Sixty counties voted against the demand of the United Societies and the convention reached the proportions of a mad house at times. CURES FOR LOVE. Sages and Writers With Widely Differing Prescriptions. Absence is one of the means of curing love. Two thousand years ago Ovid advised his readers who wished to cure themselves of an unlucky attachment to flee the capital, to travel, hunt or till the soil. "Love," said Coleridge, "is a local anguish. I am fifty miles away and not half so miserable." But other men have found that absence Increases love. La Rochefoucauld probably hit upon the truth when he said that "absence destroys weak passions, but increases strong ones, as the wind extinguishes a candle, but blows up a Are." If the love is all fancy and has little strength it may be cured by personal contact with the object. But the safer plan perhaps is to keep out of the way; hence travel is a good expedient. Business perhaps is a better one. Ovid said, "If you desire to end your love employ yourself and you will conquer, for love flees business." Still another expedient is reflection upon the unhappiness of married life. A man in search of this view can find it everywhere. Addison said that "beauty soon grows familiar to the lover, fades in his eye and palls upon the sense," and Hazlitt that, "though familiarity may not breed contempt, it takes the edge off admiration." Goethe said, "With most marriage it does not talte long for things to assume a very piteous look." But none of these men married happily. Goldsmith said, "Many of the English marry in order to have one happy month in their lives," and Colley Cibber, "Oh, howmany torments lie in the small circle of a wedding ring!" But undoubtedly the best way to get rid of one love is to have another. "All love may be expelled by love as poisons are by other poisons," says Dryden. Heine says: "The most effective antidote to woman is woman. In such a case the medicine la often more noxious than the malady, but it is at any rate a change, and in a disconsolate love affair a change in the inamorata is unquestionably the best policy." CAPPING THE WIGS. Official Visit of London's Lord Mayor to the Law Courts. A curious survival of mediaeval custom is witnessed in London n every lord mayor's day. This is an official visit of the lord mayor to the law courts. In old times the sovereign himself awaited at Westminster the coming of the lord mayor in a chariot of state with sword bearer, mace holder, chaplain and gorgeously liveried coachmen a"nd footmen. The forms have been changed, and the visit is now paid to the high court, but the spirit of the act remains, for the lord mayor opens bis term In the Mansion House with a ceremonial involving recognition of the supreme authority of the crown. The instrument used for expressing this traditional idea is an old fashioned cocked hat. When the lord mayor in his splendid robes of office enters the high court with his retinue in costume he solemnly lifts his cocked bat three times from bis head and salutes the lord chief Justice and the Justices. The Judges always wear robes and wigs when in court. For lord mayor's day they have also a flat black cap, which can be slipped over the top of the wig. The lord chief justice and his associates return the lord mayor's salute graTely, but do not take off their black caps. If they were to do this, they woulcLplace the crown on a level of equality with the municipality. The lord mayor, with his retinue, then visits the Judges in other courts to Invite them to the Guildhall banquet. When the rustling noise of the procession is heard each judge fumbles in a drawer, pulls out a little square of black cloth and crowns his wig with it. The lord mayor takes off his three cornered hat three times, and the justice on the bench bows, but remains covered. New York Tribune. More Oratory Wanted. The remark made on a prolix Scotch counsel when some one observed that he was "surely wasting a great deal of time" is among the wittiest of bar anecdotes: "Timel He has long exhausted time and has encroached upon eternity!" It Is seldom, to do the judges justice, that they encourage this failing in counsel. But in Cockburn's memoirs I we are told how a dull and common- ; place advocate was almost frightened j out of his wits by an observation of Lord Meadowbank. who thought his etyie undignified: "Declaim, sir. Why I don't you declaim? Speak to me aa if I were a popular assembly." St. James I Gaxatta.
tVatcH
HIGH SCHOOL PUPILS TO GET DIPLOMAS Dublin Commencement Takes Place Tonight. The Thirty-third Annual Commencement Exercises of the Dublin high school will be held at the I. O. O. V. hall tonight. The themes are as follows: "John Oreenleaf Whit tier," by Lucile May. "The Night Riders" by Ozra Thompson. "Elements of Greatness," by Estella Pea. "The Tresent Day Reform," by Howard Champe. "An Ounce of Preventative Is Worth a Pound of Cure," by Margarette Scott. "Save the Trees," by Thomas Butler. "Immigration a National Question," by Mabel Voris. Music will be furnished by the Hiatt family of New Castle. MAIL CARRIERS ARE JUBILANT New Order of Postal Department Received. The city mail carriers are jubilant over a new order of the postoffice department in regard to the delivery of mail. The order is as follows: "That after December "1, los, mail shall not be delivered by city carriers except at. residences and offices where approved mail receptacles arc placed at the door or entrance." The order requiring receptacles has long been advocated by the carriers. Heretofore they have been required to deposit mail on porches, open doors and place it In other inconvenient and unsafe places. The manufacturers of mail boxes will of course be as glad as any one else if the postoffice department insists on enforcing the rule. The latest expression in the word crop of 10x is "notel." It was first used in Cincinnati, and means a person who has no telephone. Neuralgia Pains Are the result of an abnormal condition of the more prominent nerve branches, caused bv eongestion, irritation, or disease. If you want to relieve the pain trv Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills. fhey often relieve when everything else fails. They leave no disagreeable after-effects. Just a pleasurable sense of relief. Try them. "I have neuralgia hadaeh right ovpr my eyes, and I am r?allv afraid that my eyes will buret. I also have neuralaria pain around1 my heart. I have ben taking Dr. Miles' AntiPain Pills recr-rrtty and find they relieve these txoublea Quickly. I geldnm find tt necessary to taice more than two tablets for complete relief." MRS. KATKEKLNE BARTON 1117 Valley St. Cartba. Mo. "1 have awful epells of neuralgia and have docvored a great deal without (rettlrr much benefit. Por th last two years I have been taking Lr. Miles" And-Pkia PlUsi and they always relieve me. I have been so bad with ne&raigla that I sometimes thought I would go cray. Sometimes it Is neceeaary to take two of them, but never more and they are mre to relieva ma." MBS. FERFUE.R, 2434 Lynn St.. Lin corn. Neb. Your draoglet Mils Dr. Mites' AntlPaln PMfs, and we authorize hkn to return the. price off rs package (only) If It fafla ta banefft you. Miles-Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind
WyVrti Coming to Towr WitH A imik StcHel Fxill kif fiil o Money and Pfttl I'm Going
This Paper Tomorrow Same Ask Your Grocer The total elitiital energy Mipplied i in London during th-' !a.-t t ;ir was ! .'1.",1TL".T'. kilowatt hours. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY
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