Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 357, 30 October 1909 — Page 8
THE RICH3IOXD PxVLL,ADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1909. THREATS MADE TO JAIL DRUGGISTS GUI IS PLACED III THE CAMPAIGN NEVER AGAIN! T. E. POWERS. For Their Failure to Produce Liquor Prescriptions on Demand. Things Are Now Moving Rapidly in the Hot Indianapolis Contest. MAY ABATE INDICTMENT DEMOCRATS ARE UNITED IT 13 PROBABLE THAT THE DECISION OF THE INDIANA SUPREME COURT MAY EFFECT THE LIQUOR SITUATION. FACTIONS APPEAR TO HAVE GOTTEN TOGETHER AND THEY ARE CONFIDENT THAT GAUSS WILL WIN BY BIG VOTE.
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Makes the most nutritious iL jf food and the most Q jj dainty and delicious
Indianapolis. Oct. 30. The supreme court yesterday construed the "blindtiger" law in a way that may put a stop to prosecutions of druggists by "strong-arm"' tactics adopted by the radical temperance people in many communities. The court held in the case of Dr. "William M. Pence, who was charged with the unlawful sale of liquor in Henry county, that a druggist cannot be required to produce the written prescriptions and orders on which sales of liquor were made in the aid of a prosecution against himself. If he is threatened with imprisonment for refusal to produce the prescriptions, that fact may constitute sufficient plea in abatement to an indictment based on such papers. Montgomery's Opinion. In the course of the opinion Judge Oscar Montgomery said: "The legislature had undoubted power to impose such reasonable restrictions on sales of liquor by druggists as it deemed necessary for the public good, and in the light of existing legislation in other states on the same subject, from which our statute was doubtless borrowed, we can see no excuse for the omission of snecific provisions subjecting all applications for liquor to police inspection, or requiring them to be filed in a public office, if it was the legislative purpose to make such papers public documents. "It is our conclusion, therefore, that, tinder the statute now before us. a druggist or pharmacist cannot be compelled to produce prescriptions and applications for intoxicating liquor, sold by him, for use before a court or
grand jury in a case or proceeding ! where such use may tend to incriminate him. "The bill of rights in the state constitution provides that 'No person in any criminal prosecution shall be compelled to testify against himself,' and secures a person against the involuntary production of his private books and papers in response to any process or order of court, addressed to him in the charatcer of a witness in every case where the use of such documentary evidence may tend to incriminate him." GRECIAN REBELS IN NAVAL BATTLE LATE YESTERDAY (Continued From Page One.) baldos spurned it as inadequate and secretly convened a meeting of naval officers, who all signed a document laying down their minimum demands. This document Lieut. Tibaldos presented Thursday night to Col. Tsorbas, head of the military league, and at the same time appealed to the league to make him minister of marine. Col. Tsorbas declined to entertain the proposals and an angry scene ensued, Ueut. Tibaldos retiring from the scene to prepare for the revolt, which followed today, and Col. Tsorbas to inform Premier Mavromichalis. Official's Delay Aids Rebels. The government, however, displayed curious hesitation. It took no steps to arrest Lieut. Tibaldos and permitted him partly to carry out his plans before any measures in opposition were taken. "Even yesterday morning, in order to prevent the shedding of blood, the government dispatched a friendly officer to endeavor to dissuade Lieut. Tibaldos from his wild design. The troops that had been sent to occupy coast points were able to prevent a number of Lieut. Tibaldos' comrades from joining him and as he had only a few officers to man his torpedo boats Tn commanded the lnval flAAt fnr his "attack. Vice Admiral Buduris, who had command of the arsenal, was without means of defense and was compelled to surrender when Lieut. Tibaldos threatened to employ force. Four actors are taking part in the latest Grecian drama a king, a crown prince, an ex-prime minister, and a soldier. The soldier. Col. Zorbas. head of , the "officers' union," is the man of the day at Athens. It is he who led thsicoup d'etat of a few weeks back when the officers demanded the reform of their own army and the dis charge of their commander in chief, or diadoque. Makes More Exciting. The fact that the diadoque is no less a person than the crown prince better known abroad as Constantine, duke of Sparta--and was made commander in chief by act of parliament nine years ago, renders the situation more excit ing. He was told by his subordinates that he must leave the country at once and take his brother with him. The plot of the play is this: " The diadoque was appointed com mander in chief of the army with in He was to bring a distinguished foreign officer to help him. 60 far no foreign officer has come, and, so Col. Zorbas says, the state of the army is far worse than it was nine years ago. The Greek army has compulsory service and nominally 22,000 men. But as
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there is no money in the treasury they are discharged from June 1 to Nov. 7 , every year, and thereby lose any good they might get from maneuvers. They have no guns, no ammunition, no uniform, and no staff. The war office and minister, the "union" says, have been abolished, and the diadoque has given all the colonelcies, generalships and staff appointments to favorites who have no military training, while men who have served since 1882 are still captains. ! WOMEN IN POLITICS First Fair Sex Convention in New York Was Held . Last Evening. ADOPT A REAL PLATFORM New York, Oct. 30. One thousand delegates, regularly elected at conventions held in every one of the sixty-throe assembly districts of Greater! New York, completely filled the floor of Carnegie hall last night at the first ' women's political convention ever held in New York City. j Mrs. Clarence Mackay presented the j platform which subsequently was ; adopted. Peaceful as was the purpose of the convention, there rested in adjoining cloakrooms 150 policemen with night sticks in their belts. No call on their services was made. Gist of the Platform. The platform first affirmed: "That men and women are born equally free and independent, equally endowed With intelligence, and equally entitled to the free exercise of their individual rights. "That the natural relation of the sexes is that of co-operation and interdependence. "That governments which impose taxes and laws upon their women citizens without giving them the right of consent or dissent, exercise a tyranny inconsistent with just government." It went on to recite that the full franchise has been extended to the women of Australia, New Zealand. Finland, and Norway, and in all elections except for members of parliament to the women of Great Britain, Denmark. Sweden and Iceland. Many Amendments Demanded. Standing on this basis of assumption, the convention demanded amendments to state and national constitutions permitting women to vote; amendments to the city charter requiring one-third of the board of education to be women; compensation for all civil service employes, including teachers, by position and not by sex, and the amendment to the state civil service law prohibiting the exclusion of any citizen from any examination by reason of sex. Tho Winnomuckoo. The Winnemuckee is a beautiful lake lying just east of the Sierra Nevada mountains. It is famous for its salmon or wine colored fish, the term -win-nee" signifying in the old Indian "wine colored or tinged with color. Winnee is the aboriginal name of a river in South Carolina, its waters so darkly tin Zed that It is now mmmnnlv Ma1 the Black river.
Colonel John Siveed's Conversations on Domestic Problems Copyright. 1009. br C S. Yost.
VII. Some Pointr on Raising Girls COLONEL SNEED'S son had come back to the old home for a visit and had brought with him his wife and little daughter, a busy, prattling youngster of three years, who pulled her grandfather's whiskers and stuck her chubby fingers into his eyes with impunity. "Daughter." said the colonel one evening after the child bad been put to bed and he bud rearranged his toilet, "what do you contemplate doin' with that streak of sunshine?" "Why, I'm going to take the best possible care of her." answered young Mrs. Sneed. "and try to make a good woman of her." "You're not figurin on makin an actress or an artist or a stenographer out of her. are you?" "No." laughed the daughter-in-law; "I haven't got that far along yet. But why do you ask?" "Well. I didn't know. It seems like every woman's got to have a mission these days-rone that's different, from the original and I "thoug&t maybe you'd laid out a brilliant career, with plenty of handclaps and bouquets in it. I'm mighty glad to know that makin' a good woman of ber is all you've got in mind. Understand. I'm not sayin' she couldn't have what tbey call a career and be a good woman at the same time, but I've got a kind of an old fashioned notion that the finest thing on earth is a good wife and a good mother. That's a career that's higher than any man can aspire to. and the good woman who don't get up to that level has missed something in life. "Anyhow, the makin' of a good woman is a big enough job for any mother to tackle. I've always bad a belief that there was more care necessary in raisin' girls than in raisin' boys. It's a good deal the same difference as there is between a post oak saplin' and a rosebush. One can pretty nearly take care of itself, but it takes a lot of watcbin' and a lot of trainin' to bring out all the bloomin beauty of the other. When the Lord makes a woman be plants within her the seeds of some qualities that when they grow no .a.o& blossom form the .main difference between her character and" that of a man. We can't exactly define them, but we know that they're there, and we also know that women are more attractive, more lovely and more lovable in proportion to the development of those qualities within them. Sometimes the seed don't seem to have sprouted at all. and then the woman is pretty much the. same as a man. Then, again, tbey spring up and grow like a moon Tine, and CTery man. bo matter bow low down mean he is. steps to one side and takes off his hat. "Put all these qualities together, add them up and you've got what we call womanliness. That's a mighty big word, and it takes in nearly all the rjftuea that we, can understand.
wen as some we can recognize, but can't quite place. It means purity and goodness and sympathy and tenderness and modesty
vofyLi and but it's no use tryin to ana 1 y z e it We ! know what it , means even if we don't know why ! we know it. and we're mighty sure it's worth all the time and trouble it takes to produce it, for it does take time and trouble. It's very seldom that w o m a n 1 i ness grows wild. It's got to be developed by cultivaA COMBINATION OF tjon wnat the high browed farmers at the state university call intensive cultivation and the mother who makes good on the job has to know what's what j "Now, my dear, I'm just a man. and I've got no right to set myself up as a counselor for mothers, but sometimes it's worth while to know how a man looks at these things, even if he does make a kind of a fool of himself by mi sin' in. I've got a notion, in the first place, that you can't begin trainin' a girl too soon. There isn't anything new about that idea, but it seems to me that what used to be the rule is gettln' to be the exception, and babies are left to grow up pretty much as they please, on the theory. 1 reckon, that it's no use to do anything until they get old enough to understand, j Weil. I've found out and 1 guess you have, too, that babies begin to under- j stand the minute tbey open their eyes, i and the time to begin on the job of makin' a woman is the day she's born. "And the first thing she ought to learn, my dear, is that ber mother is the greatest and best woman on earth and that what she says to do must be done because it's right. Now. you can't ' make her believe that just by teilin' her so. Every baby, particularly every girl baby, has to be shown. You may fool her for awhile, but sooner or later she s goin to get your true measure, and if it isn't op to the standard there'll be a loss of confidence, which is the first step toward failure in domestic affairs as well as in business. So it's up to you to make good, to be yourself what you want your daughter to be. That I admit is a pretty large or der, for it's a whole lot easier to tell others what to do than to do It ourselves, and the hardest place to live op to a standard is , the place where it's the most ; needed at home. But ail the same ifs worth doin". "Another thing ' that she ought to ; find out pretty early is that her mother is not her"BABL5ELl stave. That's an impression ifs mighty easy to fix and mighty hard to get rid of; also it's one that spoils more fine material for the makin of good women than anything else I know of. Ifs natural for the motWer to want to do everything she can for her child, and the child isn't to be blamed for lettln' her do it but the mighty soon gets in the habit of depwiln' op. motherland. thatmeaa Jhe
Indianapolis. Ind.. Oct. W. -Things moved rapidly yesterday among the leaders of the municipal campaign, who are bending their energy to carry the city next Tuesday. National Committeeman Taggart and ex-Mayor John W. Iloltzman were in conference together at the demo cratic headquarters, notwithstanding the reports that they are jealous of the efforts the other is making. The republicans have been trying to drive out the Holtzman-Keach democrats bv charging that Taggart Is the whole works of the Gauss campaign and that if Gauss is elected. Taggart will be the boss, and the anti-Taggart element will not get a crumb of comfort for their support To all appearances, however. Taggart and Iloltzman have no political opersonal differences, as they were working hand in hand. It was said at the Democratic headquarters that the two rival factions have buried the hatchet for the time being and are working together for Gauss. Moore's Prediction. Chairman Moore, of the democrat'? committee, predicted that Gauss will, be elected by a plurality exceeding .".X)0. He issued a public statement denying that any brewery money has been received by the democratic committee. He declared that he is willing to take the public into his confidence of the committee and to give to it a complete list of the campaign contributions if the republicans will do the same. He asserted that an affidavit will be made regarding the democratic contributions. It was learned today that some of the republican ward leaders are chagrined because Chairman Klausman has returned donations made by saloon keepers. Three instances of money returned by Klausman were stated by one ward committeeman, who said that Klausman's action is hurting the party with the independent saloon keepers.
who are now afraid that the republi cans will make it hard for them to run their business if Lew Shank is elected mayor. It was said that Chairman Klausman proposes to go through to the finish without accepting any sa loon or brewery money. Ten-to-eight bets on Shank were grabbed up yesterday by the backers of representative Gauss, the democratic candidate. The odds have changed to 10 to ! on Shank today. The betting is lively, and a large amount of money will change hands. Elaborate preparations are being made by the republicans for a mass meeting at Tomlinson Hall tonight, at which Senator Beveridge will close the speaking campaign for Shank. John S. Duncan, a prominent attorney will preside. Taggart asserted yesterday that the drift is toward Gauss, and that the latter is going to win. acveiopmem of ?JTZ s'u n ess Snd the" loss of self reliance, either one of which cuts out all hope of makin a womanly woman of her. Nothin makes my blood boil harder than to see a girl sit in the parlor and bang the piano while her mother bends over the dlsbpan. And yet nine times out of ten it's the mother's fault A girl, no matter what ber station in life, should learn right at the start that she has somethln' to do in the world besides giggle and look pretty. She ought to be taught what to do and bow to do and then, if necessary, made to do. But if yon begin right and begin early you'll never have to force her. and when you get respect for mother as well as love firmly established in a girl's mind and BASQT&a THS PXASO. heart you've gone a long ways in the makin of a good woman, a womanly woman. The rest is easy. "I reckon that's all tonight, my dear." Dews to a Fine Point. A woman is never as old as the woman next door would like to have the other neighbors believe. A woman is never as old as she has to believe herself. A woman is never as old aa the family Bible unfeelingly testifies. A woman is never as old as she looks to her growing daughters. A woman Is never old, anyway, if she is wise. A woman is always wise. Therefore sea Is - Never, never OkL Boston Herald.
A&soIatetfrPtm No fretting over the biscuit making. Royal is first
aid to cook's
Three Years Old Letters Are Found in a Wrecked Mail Car
Hamilton, O.. Oct 30. It is possible that had it not been for the distressing and disastrous wreck on the Pennsylvania line near Coilinsville, O. a few days ago. in which three postal clerks were killed, certain letters mailed in Indianapolis. Ind., would in all probability never have reached their destination, or it may have tak en a great many years before this would have occurred. As It is n bunch of thirty-five letters that were mailed some time between March and November of 1906, were discovered in the wreckage of the splintered mail car. The package was turned over to Post Office Inspector Holmes, in Cincinnati, Thursday morning and he at once gave direcflons for their deliv NATIONAL ASPECT . Ill GOTHAM RACE Attorney General Wickersham Speaks Right Out for Bannard. SAYS TIGER WILL LOSE HEARST, WHO MAKES THIS PREDICTION, WARNS THE BALLOT BOX STUFFERS THAT THERE IS A PRISON AT SING SING. New York. Oct 30. With United States Attorney "General Wickersham bitterly attacking William J. Gaynor and W. R. Hearst in behalf of Otto T. Bannard and the Tepublican-fusion ticket, the mayoralty campaign assumed a national aspect last night Oratory, red fire, and invectives were scattered over nearly all of Greater New York. Hundreds of minor mass-meetings were held in the five boroughs, while the respective heads of the three tickets Independent Democratic and Republican were the chief speakers at the larger gatherings. W. R. Hearst spoke three times on the east side: William J. Gaynor spoke in Brooklyn and then came to Manhattan, while Otto T. Bannard. beginning in the theater district. swept downtown, then up into Har lem. None of the candidates brought out anything particularly new, but confined themselves rather to sum ming up their campaign arguments. Promises to Let Peoole Advise. Mr. Hearst, keeping up his appeal to the "common people. struck a
No Alcoholic
Atk year doctor If m family medicine, lib Ayer ' Sartparilla. u mot catty better with. out alcohol than with a. lHS:
Molt anil II Cemmemitt And Ain't Going to Be Everybody is hurrying cement work to completion before freezing weather, and cement stocks are running low. Dealers do not like to carry it over the winter. We - have specially fixed to take care of everybody that may be caught short of cement If your dealer fails you, you can get it at MattEier QSroftlbieirs Co.
many a success
ery first to the address If they can be located, or have them returned to the senders If that can be done; if not. they will be forwarded to tho dead letter office. Colonel Holmes accounts for the failure of the delivery of the letters to tho probability that bark of one of the letter cases In the mail car there must have been a ilarge sired crack through which th Tetters fell instead of remaining In the pigeon holes, and thus became concealed back of the lining of tho car. The letters found were Intact, and were tied up In packages as left by the clerks with tho ' slips underneath the cord. Of the bunch, 21, letters were mailed In Indianapolis. 7 in Anderson. 2 at Elwood. 5 at New Castle and all were destined to points in Indiana. popular chord by announcing that If he is elected mayor he mill hire a spacious hall, where he will appear at stated times for a heckling at the hands of the people to answer their questions and to receive their advice. Leaving this topic, he spoke of ballot box stuffing, a subject which he felt especially competent to touch upon, he said, in view of his experience In 1905. when he was defeated for mayor. Fraudulent votes defeated him th- he has maintained ever since, and he said that he fa prepared to meet repeating at the coming election. "Forty-six tiger cubs have been sent to Sing Sing." he said, "and we expect to send a regular Hudson-Fultno. parade to the same place during the coming month. "But we are going to kill the tiger this year kill him and skin him and nail his hide to the wigwam. Wants Police Free to Act, Mr. Bannard. abandoning the financial affairs of the city for & night, spoke principally of the police and personal liberty, a subject which ha been used principally by ex-Judg Gaynor. The police department he said, should be removed entirely from politics and the enforcement of the law should be reasonable, but not spasmodic. "The police can give n honest primaries and honest elections, he said; "they are in a position to do ft and I appeal to them for the sake of this city to lay aside politics and do it without fear or favor to any candidate. Attorney General Wickersham. speeding in Mr. Bannard s behalf In an uptown riding academy, said: "I am not here as a federal official or a member of the president's cabinet." he said, '"out as a citizen and a taxpayer of New York. In this capacity, despite my federal office, I feel it my privilege and my duty to aid in this effort to put competent and honest men at the head of the affairs of the city." Phokbc: There's nothin Ilk bread mid from uoia 31 eaju inour. Is alcohol a tonic T No ! it make the blood par? Nof strengthen the nerves r No I Is AVer's Sarsaparilla a tonic? Test make the blood pare t Tea! Does it strengthen the nerves? Tes ! I sit entirely free from alcohol ? Yes !
