Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 346, 21 October 1910 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIU3I AND SXJX TELEGRA3I, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1910.
ROOSEVELT AIDS HIS OLD FRIEND Ex-president Goes to Massachusetts to Speak in Behalf of Sen. Lodge.
HIS ASSISTANCE NEEDED ATURDAY EX-PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT WILL' GO TO NEW HAMPSHIRE WHERE HE WILL SPEAK FOR R. R. BASS. (American New Service) Boston. OcL 21. Former President Roosevelt arrived In Boston today to . deliver a campaign speech in behalf 'of hla friend Senator Henry Cabot Lodbe, whoie term in the United States senate will come to an end next March and who is a candidate for reelection. Colonel Roosevelt, It is understood, is going to tell the MassaChusetts voters how Senator Lodge tood'by him In the trying times when he was striving to secure progressive legislation, ' from a reluctant senate And how they could not hope to have an abler representative in the upper branch of the national legislature. The fact that It has been deemed advisable to have the former president speak in his behalf is taken as an Indication that Senator Lodge for the first time in seventeen years feels that his hold on his senate seat is not past the breaking. The fact that the senator abandoned his annual vacation trip to Europe this summer and has been busy with his campaign since the middle of July is regarded as further evidence that he realizes the gravity of the situation. Proud of Senator Ledge. Massachusetts has always been proud of Senator Lodge, whose career in many respects has been distinguished and worthy of the best traditions of the state. But the republican leaders admit that If the senatorship were to be decided at this time by a direct vote of the people Mr. Lodge would likely be defeated. No one believes that Representative Butler Ames, who is the only announced candidate for the Lodge toga, has much ot a chance to break Into the senate. There la- believed to be a
chance, however, that Mr. Ames may
have following enough In the legislature to prevent the caucus selection of - Mr. Lodge. The greatest danger, however, to the senator lies in the chance which admittedly exists that the dem
ocrats may control the next legisla
ture on Joint ballot. While, the republicans of Massachu
setts have controlled the legislature
for many years by a safe margin, there are many districts Id the state , In each of which the party majority at the last election for members of the legislature was less than 300
votes. The democratic hope for su
premacy Is based on expected changes
In these districts where the republi
cans have control by very narrow mar
gins. An overturn In one-halt of the
districts where the republican major
ity always has been small will give
the legislature to the democrats and with It the power to name a senator
, to succeed Mr. Lodge.
The tariff Is in part the cause ot
republican troubles in Massachusetts
as It Is in other states. It Is to be assumed that Maasachusetts la a protective tariff state and that the disaffection Is directed against the method rather than the principles. Many re-
puoucana are restive and there is a
feeling in places that there have been
few signs of progress to prove that
the roikers of the national platform
were sincere in their promises.
The republican leaders hope that the speech of Colonel Roosevelt will hold the Insurgent republicans in line
and also anslst In reclaiming the inde- . pendent and mugwump vote and drawing It back Into the republican fold by
. an appeal to partisan spirit
split between the ,- progressive . and standpat elements of the republican party is probably more pronounced in New .Hampshire than in any other section of New England. It began
four years ago, when, after a heated
campaign. Winston Churchill, the novelist, and a leader of the progressive
faction, was defeated for the gubernatorial nomination by Charles M. Floyd, the machine candidate. Mr.
Floyd failed of election by the peo
ple, and was made governor by the legislature. Two years ago the progressives were again defeated and their success this year has but tended to widen the breach between the two elements.
Because of the difference of opinion
between the rival republican factions the democrats are much encouraged.
and with a united party back of their candidate the leaders hope that they.
will be able to place New Hampshire in the democratic column this year.
Mrs. Austin's Famous Pancake
Flour. Delicious light cak8, all gro-
'OlilTS T0 SLAYERS
Twelve Year Old Girl Dramati
cally Accuses Prisoner of Father's Death.
Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 21. A dramatic
scene was enacted in the criminal
court when Blasius Polder was placed
on trial for the murder of Michael Rednar.
Polder cringed and turned white and
red by turns, exhibiting signs of fear and cowardice when the twelve-year-
old daughter of the man he killed
wai on the witness stand. She was
an eye witness to the slaying, and
when District Attorney W. A. Blakeley asked: "Which man did the shooting f" the girl stood up, and, pointing directly at the rrlsoner, answered: "That man sitting at the table killed my father."
Polder dropped his head and trem
bled like a leaf.
IN NEW HAMPSHIRE.
Portsmouth, N. H., Oct. 21. Colonel
Theodore Roosevelt is expected in
New Hampshire tomorrow to speak In
behalf of Robert R. Bass, the republican candidate for governor. Mr. Bass was nominated by the progressive
wing of the republican party and Col
onel Roosevelt Is keenly Interested In
his success.
The candidates for state office are
hopeful that the visit ot the former
president will have the effect ot heal
ing the breach in the republican ranks and thereby Insure the success or the party at the polls next month. The
DYIIAMITIIIG CASE
HOW BEIIIG TRIED;-
! Martin is shamming and continuing to play a part. They admit that she may be insane but insist that her mind
clear enough to realize what she is
doing, and to distinguish between right
and wrong." "As a result of her errat-
conduct and her insistence upon
CADETS Oil A CRUISE
Allegation Made That Woman Tried to Have California Judge Killed.
Ic
A GREAT TROUBLE-MAKER ACCUSED WOMAN HAS BEEN THE SOURCE OF MORE WORRY TO OAKLAND POLICE THAN ANY OTHER ONE PRISONER.
MAN SHOWED HIS CHAGRIN
Fine Chrysanthemum blooms, deliv
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Road, west. Phone 3135. 21-2t
Get Measured Now Fcr Cut New Tcllor-Mcde Salt at Woolley's, 918 Main
(American News Service) Oakland, Cal., Oct. 21. Mrs. Isabella J. Martin, the alleged dynamiter who has been a source of more trouble and. worry to the local authorities during the past two years than any other prisoner v.'ith whom they have ever had to deal, is again prominently in the public eye. y Her case comes up this week for its' second trial. ' The woman was convicted in December, 1S08, of having instigated her minor son, "Baby John" Martin, to blow up the home of Superior Judge Ogden. She had had litigation in his court, and imagined that she had not been fairly treated. At the First Trial. At her first trial the contention of the prosecution was ' that the boy's act was in fact her own, as he was acting In fear of his life when he blew up Judge Ogden's home.' , The convicting testimony was that Mrs. Martin kept the youth "Baby John" terrorized with the threat of death to the point of compelling him to do her bidding in setting off the bomb. But
the appelate court ruled that the dan-
the appellate court ruled that the dan
ciently Imminent to free him from being an accomplice and ' without cor
roboration the testimony of an ac
complice is not sufficient to convict.
The Supreme Court, to which the
district attorney took the case, refused to disturb the finding of the Appellate Court and the case was therefore assigned for retrial. During the period of nearly two years that Mrs. Martin has been confined in jail she has caused much trouble for the jail authorities by her eccentric conduct. She has written many letters to persons of prominence complaining that shp has been mistreated and that her health and life have been endangered by confinement in a poorly ventilated cell and by lack of proper nourishment. When brought into court last July to have the date fixed for her second trial the woman attempted suicide by cutting her wrists with a piece of broken glass. The jail attendants insist that Mrs.
conducting her own defense the attorneys who defended her at her first trial and who successfully carried the case to the higher courts have reluctantly withdrawn from the case.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
. Boston, Oct. 21. With twenty-five cadets aboard, the Argentine warship. President Sarmiento. arrived In Boaton harbor today for a visit of tour or five days. While here the officers of the ship will take occasion to inspect the progress that is being made in the construction of the giant battleship that is being built for the Argentine
navy at the yards of the Fore River j
Shipbiulding company in Quincy.. .
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EE IB. iSMM Miim
