Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 315, 20 September 1911 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND PALI4ADIT73I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 20, 1911.
PAGE SEVEN
TREATY CAMPAIGN
ENDED Id Opposing Leaders Declare Victory Is Certain for Their Sides. THE SITUATION AT A OUANCE. Laurier majority In the Eleventh Parliment, 45. To carry reciprocity Laurier forerntnent must be returned. To defeat reciprocity ConservatlTea must gain 25 Beats. Influences In favor of Reciprocity: agricultural class. Western Grain Growers' association, low tariff advocates, British free traders, American settlers. Influences against Reciprocity: Ultra-imperialists, British tariff reformers and Canadian allies, protected manufacturers dyed in the wool Conservatives. CLAIMS OF LEADERS. Sir Wilfred Laurier, Liberal: Victory is in the air. I feel the swing that makes It sure. I am pretty old at the game. I have traveled over Canada more than once and today I find such' enthusiasm as I never found before. Robert L. Borden, Conservative: I am confident that tomorrow the electors of Canada will cast their votes against the ratification of reciprocity and that the Liberal government will be defeated by a subntlal majority. (National Nawa Association) OTTOWA. Ont., Sept. 20. The hottest political campaign Canada has witnessed since the days of Sir John Macdonald and the National Policy was brought to a whirlwind finish today with rallies and speechmaking in virtually every city, town and hamlet from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Tomorrow the electors throughout the country will express their political preference and on tneir verdict depends the, fate of the Liberal govern- ' meat, which, under the leadership of Sir Wilfred Laurier, has been in office for fifteen years, and also the fate of the proposed reciprocity pact with the United States, for which Sir Wilfrid stands sponsor. If Sir Wilfrid returns to power, the reciprocity bill will be passed soon ' after the reassembling of parliament next month, and at an agreed date both Canada and the United States will put the necessary tariff changes into effect. 1 If the opposition wins a majority, Robert L. Borden, its leader, will become premier, reciprocity will be dropped and Canada will remain a high tariff country desirous of continuing the present tariff relations with the United States. The polls will be open at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning and close at 6 o'clock la the afternoon. Unless the voting at large is unusually close it is i expected that: the outcome will be known by 10 p. m. (Atlantic time). , The campaign Is the last in which Tremler Laurier will participate, according to his declaration made at the beginning of the struggle. If he wins the contest, he will hold office continuously for a longer period than Sir John MacDonuld. The campaign has been hotly contested in all the provinces, and although conditions In certain sections of the Dominion are regarded as highly favorable to the Liberal party the result cannot be accurately forecasted. Upon the whole, .disinterested observers seem Inclined to the opinion that the government will carry the country by a reduced majority. . " The claims of the two sides on the eve of the election are about as follows: The Opposition declare they will gain seats from the Government
CANADA
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member of the Laurier cabinet; Robert Rogers, minister of public works in the Manitoba Government and head of the Conservative organization in the Prairie West; Richard McBride, premier of British Columbia, and Premier Mazon of New Brunswick. Liberal governments are in power in Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Qubec, Saskatchewan and Alberta. They have given the Government and reciprocity all possible aid in the campaign.
For Sale Two V foot roll rim copper bath tubs in good order. C. T. Price .and Sons. WORLD MUNICIPAL CONGRESS CONVENES (National News Association) CHICAGO, Sept. 20. Gov. John A. Dix of New York yesterday was the principal speaker at the International Municipal congress and exposition, which opened its sessions at the Coliseum, Monday. The subject, for the day was municipal charters. Others who were on the program are Prof. Ford McGregor of the University of Wisconsin; James G. Berryhill, Des Moines, la.; H. A. Mason, secretary of the California league of Municipalities and Richard S. Chllds, secretary of the Short Ballot association of New York. More than a thousand delegates, representing almost every state in the Union and every country on the globe are in attendance.
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SUICIDE GUIDED BY WEIRD WT HID Friends of Man Who Killed Himself See Fatality in the Tragedy.
LOS ANGELES, CaL, Sept. 20. When William G. Brads haw ended his life on a steamer bound for him in this city, there was no accounting for the motive that prompted him. There was the suggestion of a nervous breakdown from worry and, business troubles, the captain told of nights of insomnia suffered by Bradshaw while aboard the ship, and the coroner's jury accepted this as the solution of the mystery. Friends and associates of Bradshaw, who knew him in his business life as a successful and hard working realty operator, have been much puzzled to account for his act of self-destruction, and some there are who point to the suicide as the working out of a 6trange fatalism, it being the third of a series of deaths involving persons concerned in one of the most notable spiritualistic will cases this country has ever had. Was his death a response to some weird spirit influence; some mesmeric power that beckoned him on to Join those with whom he had worked, and J i 3 - V MR. XL II. CHASE. 79 years ef ass hygienic conditions in the best equipped Jaboratories in the world. It is a complete medicine c'lest of great value. For sudden illnesses of any kind it affords great relief and as a daily tonic for body building, for a stimulant with no reaction it stands supreme. , - Sold in scaled bottles only by drtrjSfists, Grccrs and dealers, or direct $1.00 a large bottle. Our doctors will 'send you advice free, tng:etlr with a valuable illustrated medical uooklet on flr.ri!ication. The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N,.Y. . .. Fall Wardrobe Raiher, a
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whose interests were allied with his; some ultramundane attraction that cast a spell irresistible and unconquerable over him? These are questions that have come to the mind of those who were associated with Bradshaw and who were familiar with his surroundings. Bradshaw waa one of the executors of the estate of Robert Crawford Smith, whose death in 1907 precipitated a long-drawn legal battle in which the heirs were arrayed on one side against a formidable host of spiritualists, mediums, believers and followers on the other. During the later years of his life, Smith had been a devout worshiper at the spiritualistic shrine and spent much time and more money in attempts to solve some of the problems that lay beyond the power of human Inquiry. When Smith died he remembered some of those who had helped him on these incursions to the astral realm and left them a portion of his $100,000 estate. To Mrs. Dora Barrett he left $10,000, to Miss Lottie Livingston 15,000 and to Mrs. Lola Swilling $2,000. Then came the contest, which was begun by Smith's sister-in-law on the ground that the spiritualists had ex
Automobile Talk Always Turns to the HUDSON "33" START a conversation about good automobiles. Refer to any one, or any number of cars and what they have done, and note how quickly the HUDSON "33" is brought into the discussion. This fact shows what regard the public has for the HUDSON "33." People recognize it as the one advanced car of the past three years. They acknowledge that its creator Howard E. Coffin has built a simpler, quieter, more beautiful and more aubMantMcar than could have been had four years ago at three times its price. If you will ask any owner of HUDSON "33" you will be more deeply impressed than ever with the fact that the HUDSON "33" is the car which experts refer to in ertabliahing a valuation for all other moderate-priced automobile. TO this famous car has been added for 1912, many improvements not possible and not even thought of when the original "33" was produced. All the experts in the HUDSON engineering department the largest, ablest staff employed by any manufacturer were assigned to produce this result. One went to Europe and came home with ideas he picked up to the factories and at the Paris and other automobile shows. What he learned there has been advantageously used on the 1912 HUDSON "33." Another gave his attention to greater carburetion efficiency. Om specialised on springs, and so on, covering the entire car. ALL came into a conference and told what they thought would make the HUDSON "33" a better automobile.. Mr. Coffin presided at those meetings. Every suggestion was thoroughly weighed by the experience of all these experts. What they evolved from this
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tgent Here is Neither Proven Pleasure
H.HAOEIVIEIER.
ercised undue influence over him at the time he made his will. But the will waa unshaken and not long ago all the bequests made by Smith were paid to those to whom he had left them. In the meantime Major Joseph Hardle, who had come all the way from Birmingham, Ala., to testify to the mental soundness of his old friend Smith, was such a profound believer in the merits of spiritualism that be never entered into any sort of a business deal without first consulting the spirits, died after an Illness that caused him long suffering. Two months ago John Cunningham, who was one of the executors of the estate, died al
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In -... nUlu K Tnurin Car. a Tornado. a Tamil Kaadstaf,
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E. R. ALBRIGHT, CENTERVILLE, IND., for Wayne, Randolph, Union and Fayette Counties.
a Problem Nor an and Proiit.
so; and third in the strange serlea of deaths that is interwoven with the Ala tory . of the trial . waa that of .Bradshaw, the other executor.
A plot to assassinate the king ot England in 1638, the famous Rye house plot, miscarried from the merest accident The house in which Charles II. was lodged happened to catch Are, and on this account he departed from Newmarket a little sooner than he had intended. Opening at Miss Klute's Millinery Store, Friday, Sept. 22nd. 22t 9th and Main. "The place you get the most change back." enadaU ascapt tha last Experiment-
