Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 167, 24 April 1909 — Page 8
PAGEEIGIIT.
txxe nicmioro paixajtiuh astd stj-tlegilaii. sattjixday, aprhv s4, f 10 0PTI0II FIGHTS Ellfl Mil m Indiana Counties Will Settle Saloon Question for Two Years. NO INJUNCTION IN WHITE III KEDTOCB M1E Gill PM1D0II
TCttiTI OF TOE COIUFOOT AND SATISFACTION YOU WELL EXPERIENCE AFTER RENTING A, Safietly nDepsuti EdKs IN THE FIRE ' and BURGLAR-PROOF SAFETY DEPOSIT VAULT OF McEdimsonii Tmstl Comnpaimy And tbe price : ONLY C3.C0 per year and upwards. Wc solicit your patronage. Vaults open from 8 a in. to 4 p. in.
In the Weatcott Ex-governor Taylor and ExTho "IHoiraJWi Scjtiacitro secretary State Finley Happy Men. Is the Newest, and It's Good. GOVERNOR WILLSON ACTS
Ssits Tepeests -No More No Le sa in all the Latest Styles and Fabrics, to suit every ago and taste At a Positive Sav ing of S5.C0 71 O MAIN Yea Will Enoy Earning Gccd Cos! Most people hate to take care yf a fire and remove the ashes, ut after all, everybody enjoys " the comfort and satisfaction that eomes from burning bright new shiny coal such as ours. Give us your next order. D. C Cullcrdlck & Sea. K3 South filth St. There is nothing to Equal Zwissler's Quaker Bread For sale by all Grocers PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.
Albert O. Martin, Dentist.
Colonial Budding. Rooms 18 and 19. LOANS MADE ON FURNITURE. PIANOS, TEAMS. LIVE STOCK AND ALL PERSONAL PROPERTY WITHOUT REMOVAL MADE AT A RATE GUARANTEED TO BE LOWER THAN CAN BE HAD -filSt ..AilY in Ttia cirr. 0IJ DANA Ttzzi 1341. 3 J FfntV Ctltxfel
1 4
ROOSEVELT STARTS 00T FOR JUNGLES Breaks His First Camp This Morning and Goes to Pease Ranch.
HE EXPECTS BULLY TIME GOVERNOR JACKSON DRASTICALLY RESPECTS EX-PRESIDENT'S DESIRE FOR THE UTMOST OF PRIVACY. Kapita Plains, Africa, April 24. Except for tbe presence of a few lions in the vicinity of his , tent, Col. Roosevelt's first night in the jungle under canvas was uneventful, and early today he broke camp and started for Sir Alfred Pease's place, where he said hs hoped to bag his first big game. "I expect to have a bully time!" were his parting words. Before leaving, jol. Roosevelt bade goodbye to the governor, officials and correspondents accompanying him. Insisting that hereafter he Intended to be a private member of the society. At Nalrchi Gov. Jackson drastically enforced Col. Roosevelt's wishes for pri vacy, issuing orders that any one attempting to follow would be forcibly turned back and deported from the country. The camp was established near the railroad station here for the Roosevelt expedition and all during the night lions were prowling about in the vicinity of the tents. It has been found that good paper can be made from the lalang grass of Malaysia. BAKED HAM (Cooked Done) POTATO CHIPS (Made without Lard) BULK OLIVES. HADLEY BROS. PHONE 1637 THOR NEW WORLD'S RECORD. Made at Los Angeles April 11th. Five miles in 4 min. and 37 sec Remember this was a STOCK machine. .WATCH THAT THOR. .' G. U. DUNKLE. 18 Hala LOAN S MADE IN SUMS OF FROM $5 TO 1200 FOR ANY LENGTH OF TIME, ANYWHERE IN THIS SECTION OF COUNTRY. LOANS MADE ON WEEKLY, MONTHLY OR QUARTERLY PAYMENTS. STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL DEALINGS LOAN GO. Clij, Rsa 40. defeats! 11
PRIZE FIGHTING MUST BEST0PPE0
Governor to Break Up the Game at Indianapolis, South Bend, Etc. ALSO AFTER FRENCH LICK TELLS PROSECUTING ATTORNEY TO LEARN IF THERE WA8 GAMBLING ABOUT EA8TER TIME MUST ACT. Special Correspondent. Indianapolis, April 24. Prize fight ing at Hammond, South Bend, Indian apolis and other places in the state is to get a jolt from Governor Marshall, according to a report that was herad last night. The governor has been Informed that in Hammond and South Bend they are having the real old fashioned kind of prize fights, while in Indianapolis the fighters aummel each other just as hard, but the referee does' not give adecision. It is said that the governor is not able to die tinguish between the two and that he will get after all of them. For a year before Governor Marshall's inauguration there was . no fighting in Indianapolis, and but lit tle in other towns in the state. But when he became governor the sports apparently had the idea that it meant a return to the old system of wide open license for any old thine;. In this, however, they are disappointed, for Governor Marshall does not propose to allow anything of the kind. During the campaign he frequently made the statement that those persons who felt that If he was elected Governor, Indiana , would be a . wide open state, had better change their minds, for it would not. Found No Gambling. Several days ago the governor wrote a letter to Prosecuting Attorney Houston at Salem and gave him evidence that gambling was being carried on at French Lick. He requested that prosecutor to investigate and prosecute if he found that law had been violated. Houston wrote back that he had made a personal investigation and found that there was no gambling at French Lick. It Is understood now that the governor has written him another letter, telling him that no matter whether gambling is now being carried on there or not. he must ascertain whether there was any gambling at French Lick about Faster time, and if there was he must prosecute the guilty- parties. He has not received an answer to this letter. This is taken to mean that Governor Marshall intends to make the gamblers walk the chalk line and that he intends also to see to It that the prosecutor does his duty. It Is said that similar word will be sent to the prosecutors of St. Joseph and Lake counties. : If yon have backache and urinary troubles you should take Foley's Kidney Remedy to strengthen and build up the kidneys so they will act properly, as a serious kidney trouble may develop. A. G. Luken 4b Co. Then She Fainted. little Mr. Crnmpson arrived home one evening rather earlier than usual to And his wife away on a shopping expedition. He picked up a ladles' paper and was soon Interested in a recipe for making ginger biscuits. "Happy thought r said Crumpson. TH give the missus a pleasant surprise." And when the lady arrived home she found a nice plate of biscuits on the table. "Splendid, George, dear!" she said as she nibbled one of the dainties. "What. do yon can them?" "Ginger snaps, pet; all my own make. was the prood reply. "Where did yon get the ground ginger. George T "In the enpboard. darting. That green thv yon know." "Cupboard! Green tin!" came the exclamation. "Oh. George, that was roach poison!" London Scraps. Tommy Pop, what Is meant by circumstances over which we have no control? Tommy's Pop Modem chttCen, my onStttaS, -
JUDGE WAftON DISSOLVES TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER AFTER HEARING ARGUMENTS OF BOTH SIDES.
ELECTIONS NEXT WEEK. Monday Jackson and White. Tuesday Delaware. Thursday Kosciusko (now "dry by remonstrance), Martin and Starke. , ' Friday Tippecanoe, Jefferson, Washington (now "dry" by remonstrance.) Saturday Jasper (now "dry", by remonstrance.) By the end of next week fifty-five counties In the state will have settled the saloon Question for two years a least. Ten elections are ordered for the week. ' Five more elections will be held during the following week. Clay and Pulaski, both "dry" by re monstrance, and Spencer, will have elections on May 4; Fulton, also "dry" by remonstrance, will vote on May 5, and the election- in Posey county will be held on May 7. The "wets" in White county early this week applied for a temporary re straining order to prevent the election next Monday on substantially the same grounds that have been used in- similar actions in other counties. It w granted and Judge Wason on Thurs day heard the arguments of the attor neys for both sides to make the order permanent. Yesterday he gave bis decision dissolving the temporary ln junction. This will allow the election to be held Monday. Where Chief Interest Is. The , greatest interest in the eontests next week is in the fights in Delaware and Tippecanoe counties. Muncle, the seat of Delaware county has eighty saloons, and Lafay ette, the seat of Tippecanoe county, has 101 saloons. The campaign at both these places is bitter, and the contest will be close to the finish. - The fast that Purdue university is situated a' Lafayette makes the interest in the fight there more general - throughout the state, owing to the large number of students. The "drys" there say they will carry the county by a- good majority. They have a ' strong organization and are making a hard campaign. The "wets" are not far behind In the matter of activity and hopefulness. They are sending out much literature, having public meet ings and say they will have a good ma jority when the polls close on election day. , "Drys" to Have Parade. - The campaign in Delaware county is so strenuous that business is practic ally paralyzed. Both sides are hold ing public meetings, and -both are go ing after the city and country vote. The "wets" have been giving particu lar attention to the farmers in the county and hope to reduce the large majority that the "drys" expect from the rural districts. The "drys" have an organization which old politicians say surpasses anything that ever cam Daiened for votes in that county. . Ev ery precinct is thoroughly organized The "drys" have arranged a big parade for Saturday and they hope to have several hundred people take part. But, lness men, women, school children and Sunday school classes will have a prominent part in the parade. Floats have been built and the "drys" say the demonstration will equal any political rally ever held in Delaware county. The campaigns in the other coun ties are spirited, and although some of the counties are- "dry" by remon strance the friends of temperance are taking no chances and are waging campaigns to insure good majorities. Kortv-two counties . have voted "dry"; three "wet,"r and nineteen "dry by remonstrance. ! SPANISH OUEEH L Pays Tribute to Woman Acci dentally Killed. Madrid April 24. Dowager Queen Christina today Instructed her chain berlain to make all arrangements for the funeral of tho aged woman who was run down and killed by her automo bile. - The woman was crossing the street when she was struck. The queen, who was on her way to the theater, was greatly agitated. She took tho injured woman to a hospital and sent her own surgeon to attend her. - King 'Alfonso ' and Queen Victoria visited tho woman before her death. The driver of the automobile was ar rested. , Daniel Webster's father's name was Ebeneser Webster. '.- He was born in Kingston, N. H In 173, served in the French war under Sir Jeffrey. Amherst, and was one of the first settlers of what is now, Franklin, N. IL, In 1761 He died in 1S05. when -Daniel ' was
FUI1ERA
of
UGITIVES MEET AND ISSUE A JOINT STATEMENT WHICH IS MELODRAMATIC IN ITS FERVORTAYLOR TO REMAIN.
Indianapolis. Ind.. April 24. Almost too full of emotion to express themselves, former Governor William 8. Taylor and former Secretary of State Charles Finley, of Kentucky, met in Taylor's office last night, soon after a message had been flashed over the wire to them that Governor Wlllson had granted them full and nncondl tional pardons in the Goebel case. Kentucky, which for nine years has been so near, and yet so far, from them, was once again within their raftge. . Their mental vision of the homes from which they have been fu gitivea so long was almost too vivid to be true, but the message before them was reassuring, and they Issued a joint statement, melodramatic in its fervor, declaring that the final end ing of Kentucky's reign of terror is an added proof to them that there is ' God in Israel." Opened Flood Gates. The statement opened the flood gates . that have been closed up for yearn. It seemed to be an outpouring of their innermost thoughts. Governor Willson's action, they said, was added proof that "right will not remain forever on the ueaffold, nor wrong forever on the throne." Their statement was not without its tinge of bitterness. As happy as they were over the par don, they did not refrain from saying that the case had not ended to their liking. They asserted that they would have preferred a fair trial, and that there-never had been a minute of their exile in which they were not ready and willing to return to Kentucky under absolute promise of a fair and impar tial trial. "No Tongue Can Tell." "We would stultify ourselves .were we to say that these have not been hard, bitter and cruel years to us,' says their statement. . "No human tongue can tell, and no pen can write, what we have suffered as they have dragged on. "We doubt If we should have been able to endure them but for the loy alty, friendship, love and sympathy of old friends in Kentucky, who stood firm, fast and true, and of new friends in Indiana, who came to us in the hours of dire need. "Men never lived who owed a deep er debt of gratitude to friends than we. It is a debt we can never hope to pay. The most we can ever do is to acknowledge and cherish It. That we shall ever do. so lone ne memory lives. "The recollections of the countless kindnesses and unstinted sympathy that have come to us will live fresh and green in our hearts." - Finley will arrange his affairs to return to' his , parents' home at Wil liamsburg, Ky., within a short time. He may make his. home there, but Tay lor never will become a resident of his old state. He haa established a law business here, and he proposes to stick to it, although he says he mayvisit Kentucky. NO SECRET . . OR MYSTERY Kodol Is Composed of the Natural Acids of the Healthy Stomach Only. It Makes Weak Stomachs Strong. Kodol contains, in liquid form, all of Nature's natural ferments, and Juices,' such as pepsin, panereatln, hydrochloric add. and aromatic tonics thus enabling It at once to digest every particle of food with which It comes in contact.' A tables poonful of Kodol digests 2 pounds of food. A bottle of Kodol digests 40 pounds of food and it makes no difference what kind of food it may be Kodol win digest it; and where there la perfect digestion in the stomach, there is necessarily a perfect and healthy stomach. A good, healthy digestive process can always be assured to one's stomach, by merely keeping a bottle of Kodol handy, and taking a little of it now and then. Ton do not have to take Kodol all the time. Ton only have to take it occasionally, just at the: times when you need it. Our guarantee Get a dollar bottle of Kodol. If yon are not benefitedthe druggist will at once return your money. Dont hesitate; any druggist will sell yon Kodol on these terms. The dollar bottle contains 2 times as much as the SSe bottle. Kodol is prepared in the laboratories of E. C. DeWltt Go; Chicago. Me Had Med A stage carpenter I his . mansgir. far . est Increase In "Why " said the ananacer. "I t't quite see my way te givinc yen a rise. Tea) have nwthsni; orach to de. Half the time yew are; merely standing In the wings listening to the, play." "Tea, sir," replied the carpenter, with a wry face as he turned te
We Are Sellina Tben
Judge Mayer - Sulzberger, of the Court of Common Pleas, of Philadel phia, who has declined the ambassa dorship to Turkey, proffered him by President Taft. was elected in 1S94. Previously to that time be has gained wide prominence as a lawyer and has added to his reputation since then by his work as a scholar and Jurist. He is a versatile linguist and has a wide knowledge of Oriental history and cus toms. His private library is one of the largest, in Philadelphia and contains many rare works in the Semetic languages, as well as a choice collection of English literature. There is preserved in the Bodelan library. Oxford, an Innkeeper's bill for breakfast eaten in England by Peter the Great of Russia. The Czar and his twenty companions managed to dispose of half a sheep, a quarter cf lamb, ten pullets, twelve chickens, three quarts of brandy, six quarts of mulled wine, seven dozen of eggs, with salad in proportion. Peter was always a hard drinker. He would drink a pint of brandy and a bottle of sherry for his morning draft; after dinner he managed eight bottles of sack "and so to the playhouse." But his favorite drink was hot pepper and brandy.
3 PER CGWT. OH GAUOITJQG
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: CS. The increasing exodus of emigrants is alarming England. Mr. Ellis Barb er in the Nineteenth Century points out that the chief cause of emigration ia unemployment and Ill-paid employnient. Lately emigration has been Increasing at an alarming rate. The net total. 71.188 in 1M. rose to 13365 In 1905 and 237.204 in 107. ' "Nations which choose to rely for their food on foreign countries, and which cannot expore a sufficient quantity of manufactures to pay for them, have to exportt men. Men are the largest of our 'Invisible export." " i FARM FOR REttf. t Wca.vlwrt.te.d t itl sieapem alewnules mitt 1 sm4 S. Wetcei A.V I Tata m all i if JStSSiss - Abo has drop shelves for 1 fitted with racks for towek. Ns the "New Perfection'' in
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