Richmond Palladium (Daily), 20 November 1901 — Page 2
RICmfOiTD IAJIYPAI.iiBITn.r,rEDXESDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1901.
A DOUBLE TOAST
Kins: Edward's Name Closely Followed That of President Roosevelt. A FLOW OF ORATORY! Accompanied the 133d Annual Banquet ot the New York Chamber I of Commerce. Diplomacy and Anglo- American ti? lationa Are Anion? the Prominent Themes. New York, Not. 20. The 133d tnnual banquet of the chamber of commerce was held at Delmonico's last evening. Covers for 450 were laid in th main banquet room, which was Imply though effectively decorated, chiefly with American flags. At the table of honor, presided over by President Morris K. Jesup, were Ambassador Joseph H. Choate, John Hay, secretary of state; Senator John MORRIS K. JESCP. Mc-Laurin of South Carolina. "Whitelaw Reid, Governor-elect Albert B. Cumtnings of Iowa, Senator Chauncey M. Depew, the Rev. Dr. Donald Sage Mackay, Andrew Carnegie, Mayor-elect Seth Low, Lieutenant General Nelson A. Miles, J. Pierpont Morgan, William R. Dodge, Samuel D. Babcock, Major General John R. Brooke, Carl Schurz. Alexander E. Orr. Governor Odell, Rear Admiral Albert S. Barker, and W. B. Rldgeley. The professional and business circles of the city were well I t - 11 9 ... V. The speechmaking was opened by President Jesup in a very few words. He then proposed a toast to the memory of William McKinley. It was drunk with all standing and In silence. President Roosevelt's health was then toasted, while the orchestra played, and at the next toast, that of King Edward of England, the British national anthem was played. In introducing Secretary Hay, President Jesup proposed a toast to "Our diplomacy." The secretary was warmly welcomed by the guests, and his speech at various points met with . great enthusiasm, especially when he : mentioned the name of President McKinley. The speech obtained rapt at- - tention and the applause was deafening when. In his peroration he said: "No wantonness of strength will ever induce us to drive a hard bargain with another nation because it Is weak, nor 'will any fear of ignoble criticism tempt us to insult or defy a great power because it Is strong, or even because it is friendly." After he concluded Secretary Hay was obliged several times to acknowledge the applause accorded him by the diners. Governor Odell spoke to the toast "The State of New York." and Mayorelect Low replied to the toast "The City of New York." Joseph H. Choate, ambassador to tne court of St. James, was next introduced. After the applause had subsided he spoke with his usual eloquence, dwelling mostly on the recent visit of the delegates cf the New York chamber of commerce to Ixmdon. He enlarged on the sympathy that had been shown by the British people at the time of the death of President McKinley. and said that not only had the sympathy been manifested almost every hour for days after the event by royalty, but that all classes were quite as sorrowful. Mr. Choate was followed by Senator McLanrin of South Carolina, who spoke to the toast of "The Monroe Doctrine of the Twentieth Century. The senator's address was very well received, and he was frequently applauded. Governor-elect Albert B. Cummins of Iowa followed Senator McLaurin. The last speaker of the evening was Rev. Dr. Donald Sage Atackay. who responded to the toast "The Higher Ideal of Civic Righteousness." Couldn't Sln1 Hie (tun. Tacoma. Wash, Nov. 20. The Met ropolitan bank failed yesterday as a result of a run which started over a misunderstanding with regard to a suit filed against a defunct bank of a similar name. The deposits amount to $500,000. Dwight Phelps was subsequently appointed receiver. Troops Have Qaietiiuc Effect. Earlington. Ky Nov. 20. Quiet prevails in Hopkins county, and from all indications there will be no trouble fer several days at least, especially U ae troops stay here.
UK WANTS TKOOra
31 P. Iickenoii w Ksady to Kk;ss" Itamiit Vt itli Arm Sofia. Nov. 20. It ia reported tha Mr. Dickinson, the United taes diplomatic agent here, has informed tne government of Bulgaria that the abductors of Miss Ellen M. Stone aal Mme. TslIUa, with their captives, are concealea in a defile of the Belleritza mountains, near Smotch, district of Dubnitza, and has requested that troops be sent x surround the place and liberate the captives. Both Mr. Dickinson and the Bulgarian foreign office decline to confirm or deny this report. Nevertheless, it Is believed that Mr. Dickinson, persuaded of the impossibility of coming to terms with the brigands, and relying upon his belief that they will not harm their captives if the troops are employed against them, has, after consulting with Washington, decided upon this move. Only eight bandits now guard Miss Stone, and some of these are known to sympathize with her. About a fortnight ago Mr. Dickln:on approached the foreign office and proposed this same plan, but its carrying out was abandoned because of the uncertainty of the location of the bandits. MiitiiKit most ioil A California Fiend Mot Content Wllb Simply (Slaying Hie Victims. Los Angeles, Cal., Nov. 20. The dead bodies of A. P. Wilcox, wife and two-year-old son were found in their home at Downey, two miles from this city, yesterday. All the bodies were horribly mutilated and the bloody condition of the premises indicated that the murderer or murderers had met with a fierce resistance. Wilcox and his family had been shot and then literally cut to pieces with a knife. The crime was discovered when a neighbor called at the house and found the place evidently abandoned. On forcing the door he found the dead bodies of the murdered family stretched out on the floor. The woman had been shot while carrying a plate from the stove to the table. The baby lay in the middle of the room, while the disembowoled body of the father was stretched near the door. No clue to the murderers has yet been found. nattered Her Nerves. Chicago, Nov. 20. A peculiar case of nervous hysteria is being treated at the Chicago Polyclinic. The patient, Mrs. Marie Becker of Colorado, last Monday visited the Chicago stockyards to watch the cattle being slaughtered. She was horrified at the sight, but passed on to where the pigs were being killed. As noon as she reached this place she collapsed, crying and screaming. She was removed at once to the polyclinic, but the conditions brought about by tlfte shock" to the woman's nerves are said to have so far baffled the skill of the physicians of the institution. KxtradiUMl. Mexico City. Nov. 20. James Eckert, known, it is alleged, in the United States as Russell B. Drake, is in prison at Guadalajara, having been arreste i on requisition from the United States government, and will await the arrival of the sheriff of Tiffin. Wood county, Ohio. The charge against him Is the embezzlement of 550,000, also forgery. Drake is about 60 years of age and was well regarded by his fellow countrymen residing in Guadalajara. The sheriff of Tiffin is expectsd in Guadalajara this week, 'when the man will be surrendered to him. Cattle Caught In Wreck, Liberal, Kan., Nov. 20. A doubleheader train of cattle was wrecked seven miles east of here on the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific railroad yesterday, killing an unknown man and about 200 cattle. Some of the trainmen were injured, but none seriously. The front engine was derailed when going at a high rate of speed, and the 10 cars were shoved up in a pile and demolished. Neither engine .was badly damaged. Anery Squatter. Guthrie. O. T., Nov. 20. Revenue Inspector Guy P. Cobb is in the Creek nation at the head of a strong force of Indian police, ejecting squatters and putting Creek citizens in possession of their allotments, as designated by the government. The squatters are angry and threatening, and in many instances force is necessary to eject them. TtllSK TKI.KGKAM8 Alabama is to hare tbe firt legal hanging for hisliwaj robbery. ire in Charlotte. V. C, tiamaired property to the amount of tl0rt.rt.-u. A lelermlion ot t uban men-ham arrived in New York yesterday tso route to visji President RoosevetU tVn- fos; in Chicago cmaeI many collisions, in nne of which one man iu killtM and twelve injure I. The Myor of Buffalo has suspended tbe Treasurer from offline, charging that heisl-VO,-00i hort. Fire in the flte-sMir brick buil line of the Peoples :trae at 91. Paul entailed a i. estimated at tlj).i. TheJPrineess rrphia Bam ha Dhu'eep !mirh.of India, has entered a Chicago medical coiletre l take ajfour-years' course. RibberHiew open the afe in the vult ol the First national bank at M.nd.vi. Wis., and secured between i.0u and . Tbe report aenerally circulated Sunday that the steamer EUia had bean wrecked n the coast of Newfoundland, proves to be incorrect. General and Mr. Crbin have returned from their bridal tour ia New York and Canada, tiea. Corbm ha.- resumed aU official dunes at ta war department. The mam ape ol Miss Patti Pattisoa of Louisville and :ir Charlea Bom took place yestrrdav at the home of the fcp.t' parents Mr. and Mr. Andrew Ellison, at LouisviileThe grand Duke and irran 1 THichess of Hest will be divorce on the ground of insnperablt personal averstoa it 1 said, ail erToru to arranp a ssudiu Tivaadi fcsnc failed.
A FAIU UUOWTtl
Is Shown r"or Patriarchs Militant Iitrtnt the Vear. Indianapolis, Nov. 20. The grand encampment, I. O. O. F., of Indiana, held its 54th annual meeting yesterday J in Odd rellows hall, with an attendance of about t0.) delegates. Th meeting ended with last night's session. Routine work, of the order was. transacted and repterts were read. The report of the grand patriarch, H. C. Seearce, dealt with the condi tions of the patriarchal order in this! jurisdiction and of his official acts dor- f lng the past year. It showed that tne j total number of members last Novem- j ber was 12.2S3. which grew to 12.9.3 by June of this year, making a net gain of 642. First Favorable Decision. Anderson, Ind.. Nov. 20. In the first ot tne nite river pollution cases, niea Dy tne iarmers oi Aiaaison coun;y against strawboard companies, the farmers got a favorable decision yesterday, and the cases will come to trial. The decision was made in the action of Noah Ryan for 91,000 damages against the Anderson Strawboard company,. The defense set up a demurrer that th 0-rrmnrta wr0 nnt Riiffiffnt In court the point was argued and tlxr demurrer wan overruled and the cases were docketed Smallpox at I'urdne. LaFayette, Ind.. Nov. 20. The secretary of the state board of health, after investigating the cases of smallpox in this city, which, include two Purdue University students, pronounces the malady genuine and approved the quarantine regulations imposed. President Stone has advised the students to be cautious and not suffer themselves to be stampeded. Hide Cost Him bear. South Bend. Ind.. Nov. 2d. Ed Parker, 17 years old, lost his left leg while trying to steal a ride on a tail way train. to ;i;r kk.kiiii u McKinley Monument Asisot-i.it ioiir, Seekii: Joint Action. Washington. Nov. 20. The William McKialey National Memorial Arch association having received from the association for the erection of a McKinley monument at Cr.nion, O., a request that it suspend its appeal to the public for contributions until the fund deemed necessary for the erection and maintenance of the Canton monument was secured, has determined that it would be impracticable to do so, because the indf finite delay would mean the defeat of its purpose. It is stated, however, that in its desire to work iu harmony with the association for tho erection of the Canton monument, believing that bota memorial., should b"e and could be erected by popular subscription, it has, through its executive committee, telegraphed to President Day and Vice President Hanna asking them to lay before the executive committee of the Canton monument association at its meeting in Cleveland tomorrow a proposition for joint action by the two commissions in the collection of funds and for their distribution on an agreed basis. Fraternity Not liroken. Pittsburg, Nov. 20. The tinplate workers of the Amalgamated association have voted unanimously against the proposition of the late strike settlement to have their scale held for three years. The officers of the American Tinplate company in New York have been notified of the decision and tHe scale will therefore terminate within one year. The unanimous decision of the subject shows the punpose of the men of the recognized union mills to stand with their brother members in the mills made non-union by the strike settlement. N"Kroe to Co It Alone. Jacksonville. Fla., Nov. 20. The negroes who have instituted a boycott against the streetcars on account oi the recent ordinance separating the races on the cars, held a mass meeting and agreed to organize a stock company of 20,000 shares at $1 a share to operate a stasre coach service throughout the city exclusively for negroes. The 1" labile Continues. Norfolk, Va., Nov. 20 The British steamer Monmouth. Captain Troop, which irrived here yesterday direct Get the Most Out of Your Food You don't and can't if your stomi ach is weak. A weak stomach r does not digest all that is ordinarily taken into it. It gets tired 5 easily, and what it fails to digest ; is wasted. j Among the signs of a weak stom ach are uneasiness after eating, fits of nervous headache, and disagreeable belching. "I have taken Hoods Sarsaparilla at different times for stomach troubles, and a run down condition of the system, and have bea greatly benefited by its use. I would not be without it in my family. I am troubled with weak stomach and nausea and find Hood's Sarsaparilla invaluable." K. B. Hick W.Chester, Pa. Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills Strengthen and tone the stomach and the whole digestive system.
from cape Town, souoi Ainca. reports the existence of over 8 0 case of bu-
fbonic plague in the vicinity of Cape frown when she left that port. Up to fthe time she sailed 38i deaths from jthe plague tad occurred. ( l .-( Wh.lr p-MklIJC. 3PSJ Eau Claire, Wis.. Nov. 2d. Dr. Dwight Washington Day. a prominent physician of this section of the state, dropped dead yesterday afternoon while reading a paper beforethe In terstate Medical Society. Apoplexy i3 given as the cause or h;s death. Bisr VIoiiy l" .erm -in "oij;njrGuthrie. O. T., Nov 2d. Forty thousand acres of land near Navajo. Greer jaunty. Oklahoma, have betn sold to a j; representative of a colony of 1.O00 'German families who are coming to Oklahoma from Germany to locate, each family getting acres. i j (-h!dven t'ouUln'i w-p. . charlotte. N. C. Nov. 20. Three jchildren of Mack Elalock. colored, the 'oldest a 4-year-oli, were burned to death in Wake county, N. C, yesterday afternoon. Their parents locked them ,in their houae while they went away fo work. ... ,,.,,. . I . . nounced the medium in a soiemu voice. "My husband rapping?" said tbe widow absently. '"Gracious, he must liave forgotten his key!" Detroit Free Press. I Owl? Explanation. "Faint heart never won fair lady." tve quoted oracularly. J "Then." said tbe gentleman who bad eardiaeal weakness, "my wife must have used peroxide. Baltimore American. J A Lumrv. I Elderly Spinster (coyly I think there should be a tax on tbe "single State." !on"t you. colonel? i Unjrallnnt Bachelor Yes. fis on all other luxuries. Philadelphia Itecord. Onril Her a (ireat Denl. ? Jones (referrius to the pleasnut faced lady who bad just passed! Ah. uiy !oy. 1 owe a great deal to that woman, f Brown Indeed! Who is she? Jones My landlady. Where She Tempted. V "If you call tne by my tirst name again. I'll kiss you right on the corner." "But. Jack. I haven't any corners. FOUND AT LAST A remedy pat up in lozengerform ua as plea tnt to take as i ta name would imply and a poA tive cure for Constipation, whether obstinate ot occasional, also Sick Headache, Sallow Complex ton, Jaanrficc Eyes. Offensive Breath, TerpU and Sluggish Liver and Biliousness. C. E. Carter's Laxative Chocolates will positively enre any of 'he above conditions. It is pleasant to the tase t ad a purely vegetable laxative with no bad after-effects, nor pain, nor griping. It is essentially necessary to good health that tbe Liver and Bowels be kept in a dean, regular and healthy condition, and Carter's Laxative Chocolates will aid nature in the proper discharge of her duties, and prevent any more serious complications which might arise from lack of attention. It is invaluable for Children and very delicate Women, and has no nauseous or objectionable taste. PRICE, 25 AND 60 CENTS. The 50c. box ccutains two and one-half times the quantity of the 25c. sise. j C. E. CARTER CO. 71 W. Jackson St.. CHICA60, Trade supplied oy A. G. Luken A C ., wholesale drusrtrist', 628 and 630 MiiD street, Richmond, Ind., and iCbarles I. Matraw. drutry'st. 201 Ft Wayne Avenue. Richmond, Ind.
A "PEAR OF PEACHES
j ' PENINSULAR
Sun burst double heating, Radiant double heating, two prettiest and best base burners made. JONES HARDWARE CO. s.,.rx!,' B 8,ree-
1
Omega Oil - gives out before the, other i i 1 :ui..
urea ana acnes icmuiy a day's work or night's pleasure. A tired, weak back pulls a person right down and renders life miserable. The kidneys are often supposed to be the cause, but usually the muscles and ten
dons in the back have been strained. Omega Oil is the proper and only permanent remedy. Rub it into the pores of the back, and a feeling of renewed strength and vigor will come immediately, and a few such treatments will fix you up all right again. Omega Oil takes out soreness and inflammation. It invigorates and freshens all the muscular tissues. It contains ingredients that you never used before. 702
HEIVITA HI
Cure Impotency, Night Emissions, Loss of
eases, all effects of self-abuse or excess and indiscretion. A nerve tonic and blood builder. Brings the pink glow to pale cheeks and restores the fire of youth. By mail 50c. per box, 6 boxes for $2.50, with our bankable guarantee to cure or refund the money paid. Send for circular and copy of our bankable guarantee bond.
rjERVIlLETS EXi:rTH Positively guaranteed cure for Loss of Power, Varicocele, Undeveloped or Shrunken Organs, Paresis, Locomotor Ataxia. Nervous Prostration, Hysteria, Fits, Insanity, Paralysis and the Results of Excessive Use of -obacco. Opium ot Liquor. By mail in plain package, $1.00 a box, 6 for $5.00 with oar bankable guarantee bond Cs rare In 30 days or refund money paid. Address , IN ER VITA MEDICAL COMPANY
aMnwxr Jacfcaon Streeta For salebyA. G. Luken & Co., e nn- rrpt. Richmond
YOUR FINANCIAL DIFFICULTIES can be obliterated by borrowing enough to let you out." And what you borrow you can pv hack in weekly or monthly installments (on a sort of building and loan association basis) without feeling it. We loan money in any sums on watches, diamonds, silverware, etc., left ia pledge. We lon on many kinds of personal property without removal of same. advance money on salaries. All business strictly confidential. RICHMOND I.OAX CO., ESTABLISHED lt5. Room 8, Colonial Building, S. E. Cor. Maia end 7th Sts. Home Phone 445.
izjKiLi
111U " parts of the body. aa. It gets Restore Vitalitj Lost Vigor and Uanhocd... Memory, all wasting dis PILLO CTO. ( mici,oo. 'lli Main Street and the Wccre Drag ih ' ) G
If 3
PENINSULAR
