Richmond Palladium (Daily), 11 April 1904 — Page 6
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, MONDAY. APEIL 11, 1904.
FARES TO ST. LOUIS. World's Fair Excursion via Pennsylvania Lines. The sale of 'excursion tickets over Pennsylvania Lines to St. Louis account of the World's Fair, will begin on Monday morning:, April 25th five days in advance of the date of the for mal opening of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. The excursion rates from Richmond are fixed as follows: Tickets good for the season, returning any time to December 15th, will be sold every day at $14 for the round trip. f '" Tickets good returning within sixty days, not later than December 15th, will be sold every day at $12 for the round trip. Tickets good returning within fifteen days will be sold every day at $10.50 for the round trip. Coach excursion tickets with return limit of seven days, will be sold twice a week, every Tuesday and Thursday, beginning May 17th, until June 30th, at $7 for the round trip approximately one cent a mile. Coach excursion tickets are restricted to day coaches, whether on regular or special trains. For further particulars consult C. W. Elmer, Ticket Agent, Richmond, Ind. Joseph W. Stevenson is getting out of the livery business on south seventh street. He sold part of his stock to William Green, the south
ninth street liveryman, and will have a public sale of the remainder of the stock. " FIRE ALARM BOXES. FIRST DISTRICT. 12 First and south C, piano factory. 13 Second and south B. 14 Fourth and south D. 15 Fifth and south B. 16 Fifth and south H. IS Seventh and south H. SECOND DISTRICT. South of Main, Between Seventh and Eleventh. 21 Eighth and Main. 23 Eighth and south E. 24 Seventh and south G. 25 Ninth and south A. 2G Tenth and south C. 27 Eleventh and Main. 2S Eleventh and south J. THIRD DISTRICT. South of .Main, East of Eleventh. 31 Twelfth and south B. 32 Twelfth and south E. 34 Fourteenth and Main. 35 Fourteenth and south C. 36 Eleventh and south A. 37 Twentieth and Main. FOURTH DISTRICT. North of Main, West of Tenth to River. 41 Third and Main, Robinson's shop 42 Third and North C. 43 City Building. 45 Gaar, Scott & Co. 46 No. 1 Hose House, N. Eighth. 47 Champion Roller Mills. 4S Tenth and North I. . FIFTH DISTRICT. West Richmond and Fairview. 5 West Third and Chestnut. 51 West Third and National Road. 52 "West Third and Kinscy. 53 West Third and Richmond Ave. 54 Earlham College. 55 State and Boyer. 56 Grant and Ridge. 57 Hunt and Maple. 5S Grant and Sheridan. 59 Bridge Ave., Paper Mill. SIXTH DISTRICT. North of E, East of Tenth. 61 Railroad Shops. 62 Button's Coflin Factory. 63 Hoosier Drill Works. C4 Waj-ne Agricultural Works. 65 Richmond City Mill Works. 66 Westcott Carriage Works. 67 Thirteenth and North II. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Between Main and North D., East of Tenth. 7 Ninth and North A. 71 Eleventh and North E. 72 Fourteenth and North C. 73 No. 3 Hose House, East End. 74 Eighteenth and North C. 75 Twenty-second and North E. SPECIAL SIGNALS. 1-2-1 Fire Out. 10-10-10 Natural Gas Off. 312 Noon and 6 p. m. 10 Natural Gas On. One way Colonist Rates to the West and Northwest via The C, C. L. Washington, Oregon, Montana, c. For further information call on 2. A. Blair, C. T. A. Home 'Phone 44. Colonist Tickets to West and Northwest via Pennsylvania Lines. One way second class colonist tickets to California, the North Pacific Coast, Montana and Idaho will be sold via Pennsylvania lines from March 1st to April 30th, inclusive. For particulars apply to nearest Ticket Agent of those lines. Beara thu si The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature cf
TIME GROWING SHORT
Candid&les for Place on State Ticket on the Anxious Seat. Indianapolis, April 11. With but fifteen daya in which to complete their canvas, the candidates for places on the Republican state ticket are up to their ears in business. , Nearly all of the delegates have been re-elected and the candidates know now just what they have to work on. Hanly will be here tomorrow to open headquarters. Penfleld and Taylor are now here, and It is understood that Sayre will be here before the end of the week. The candidates for lieutenant governor, Newby, Miller and 1 Ball, are also expected to be here most of the time from now on. The race for reporter of the supreme and appellate courts between Corwin, Nash, Self and Smith, is growing very interesting, and while it will not be decided until near the end of the convention, the delegates will not be permitted to forget it. Secretary bims of the state committee will endeavor this week to complete arrangements for the convention. A special to one of the Indianapolis papers conveys the interesting information that John K. Gowdy, consul general to Paris, is about to return to Indiana and that as soon as his present term expires that he will retire. Gowdy was appointed by President McKinley in 1897. The appointment was regarded as an exceedingly good one. Gowdy was painfully plain and newspapers poked a lot of fun at his high top-boots and his eccentric ways. It was predicted that he would cut a rude figure in "gay Paree,"- but "Oom Jock," as he was called when he was chairman of the state committee, soon demonstrated that he was a polished gentleman as well as a thorough diplomat. He is regarded as one of the most capable men in the consular service, but 'tis said that he is anxious to return to his Rush county farms. The representatives of William Randolph Hearst have found to their sorrow that T. Tagart is not to be caught napping in his own balliwck. When headed by Secretary Walsh of the Democratic national committee, they descended on Indiana and opened headquarters at the Claypobl, some of the Hoosier politicians were alarmed. But not so the wily Taggart. He started to doing things, and while hia methods may be questioned as to fairness, they were certainly legal and Justified by him in the statement that he has as good a right to try new tricks as Hearst. No call was issued for the convention held by the Seventh district Saturday, but it accomplished Taggart's purpose in electing two Parker delegates and in beating Hearst, which satisfied him. The interviews given out by Hearst's managers in Chicago stating that ballot-boxes had been stuffed and other fraudulent means used by the Taggart forces in the Indianapolis primries are not borne out by the real conditions. The primaries were the quietest that have been held here in many years. The slates at the police station show there were no arrests the night of the primaries. Mayor Holtzman and Superintendent Kruger say there was good order. It is true that the Taggart forces held the election machinery and that they took advantage of every opportunity to win, but there were no disgraceful scenes, and all statements to that effect are regarded as the wail of the defeated Hearst hosts. Walks Eighteen Miles in Sleep. London, April 11. An extraordinary case of sleep-walking is reported of a young servant girl. She went to bed the other night in her employer's house, at Roughton, Sussex. When she woke up she found herself on Household Heath, Norwich, eighteen miles away. On a former occasion she took another night walk in her sleep, waking up to find herself fully dressed in Cromer, several miles away from where she had gone to sleep. Interrupted Cock Fight. New York, April 11. On Sunday the police interrupted a cock fight in the private stable of Robert A. Pinkerton, the detective, in Brooklyn, and took tiirty-two prisoners, among whom were several men in evening clothes. Twenty-five game cocks also were captured and six dead birds were found In the stable. Most of the prisoners, a majority of whom were wealthy, wore locked up. Second Trial for Dunn. Fort Wayne, Ind., April 11. The Mate for the new trial of Charles Dunn, once tried and convicted of the murder of little Alice Cothrell, has been set for May 23, with Judge Smith of Jay county sitting in the case on a change of venue from Judge O'Rourke. The chief witness against Dunn is dead and some witnesses have moved away. Trolley Car Turned Over. Santa Barbara, Cal., April 11. A streetcar ran off the track in this city Sunday and was turned over. Three people were killed instantly and two were so badly injured that they died soon after the accident. Twenty were more or less injured. Fierce Sunday Feud Fight. New York, April 11. In a feud fight here Sunday three brothers, Thomas, William and Michael Gilbridge, were seriously if not fatally stabbed, and Harry and John McShane, also broth, ers, were badly wounded. Gomel, r.zzzlz, II. IZastsr Sunday r--"'-- Q"cl7 her?. Tliero were no a-tl-j2-!ch demonstrations.
LITERARY NOTES
LITERARY NOTES. A certain popular novelist of the Middle West recently received an unusual letter. It advised a literary expedient so simple and yet so effective that the author calls himself a duffer for not having thought of it before. Dear Mr. Nicholson: The Main Chance is a very enjoyable book fine character-study. Write a sequel wish you would have Jim Wheaton succeeded in every way and Timothy Margrave die, a victim of black small-pox You can kill such beasts in books but not in life without a lot of trouble. Sincerely your, well-wisher, N.W.J. Mr. W. L. Alden says in a London letter to the New York Times Saturday Review: " Among the recent American novels which are having a good sale here should be mentioned Mrs. Anna Katherine Green's Filigree Ball. I read it the other day, and certainly it is a very ingenious story of its kind. Mrs. Green is exceedingly clever in concocting a plot and in concealing the denoument until the end." The Filigree Ball is published in England by T. Fisher Unwin. Grover Cleveland is not in the habit of posing before the public as a literary critic. But when he does talk about books, he manages to be as interesting as he is on other subjects. Not long ago lie Avas discussing recent political novels with his friend, Mr. J. II. Eckels, former comptroller of the currency. Mention was made of "The Spoilsman," The Lieutenant Governor, and finally of Brand Whitloek's The 13th District. "That book interested me greatlyj" said the ex-president, "because it deals with matters which persons acquainted with politics know about." He then went on to explain that The 13th District analyzes the character. of a congressman who fails to distribute political patronage to the satisfaction of his constituents, and becomes involved in trouble thereby. In a philosophical way, Mr. Cleveland added : "The hardest thing a man in public life has to do is to pass around appointments so as' to please everybody. The one who has the distribution of offices must not onbT consider the individual cases, but keep the whole situation in mind at the same time. I have had to suffer many a pang because of the way some of my friends have taken refusals." It would be entertaining to hear Mr. Cleveland's comments on Whitloek's new political story, Her Infinite Variety, which is as funny and amusing as The 13th District was realistic and impressive. "The Reader" offers to its readers the value of two magazines in one. Not only does it cover completely the field of a general magazine, but it is a recognized authority in the world of letters. Each month it contains a chronicle of literature and the drama, illustrated with portraits of those who are achieving things worth while. Its reviews are authoritative and readable. The most noteworthy of the new publications are discussed by critics who say their say quickly and pointedly. Their reviews are being constantly quoted as the index of sound opinion. No other river, hardly another physical feature on the globe, has appeared so continuously in th eannals of discovery and diplomacy as the Mississippi. This fact, together with the celebration of the centenary of the Louisiana Purchase, gives special interest to Professor Frederick Austin Ogg's volume on "The Opening of the Mississippi: A Struggle for Supremacy in the American Interior," which narrates the discovery of the Mississippi and the contest for rights in it down to Jackson's victory at New Orleans. In his book, "Greater Russia," of which The Macmillan Company are issuing a new edition next week, Mr. Wirt Gerrare tells about a secret railroad owned and managed by the Russians, which runs through Manchuria to Pekin. Mr. Gerrare had to disguise himself as a Russian, cross the border in another way, and then contrive to get on the train when no one was Avatching. No other foreigner has been' on this road, and its existence came to be known through Mr. Gerrare 's book. Just what bearing this branch of the Siberian Railroad will have on the present Avar will probably transpire when the Japanese land forces encounter the Russians. In the light of Mr. Morley's subsequent relations to Gladstone whose
"Life" by Morley has recently been published, it is amusing to find Lord Acton Avriting to Mary Gladstone, some tAventy years ago: "I hope you Avill not quarrel with John Morley, for he seems to be making the Pall Mall the best liberal paper in England. But he has so many points of antagonism to Mr.Gladstone that I am afraid. He is a skeptic; his studies are all French, eighteenth century; in political economy, he is a bald Cobdenite, and will do scant justice to the political aspect of the French treaty. ' ' The letter appears in the recently published " Letters of Lord Acton to Mary Gladstone," to which Mr. Herbert Paul has prefixed a memoir of the historian. The theatrical edition of Mr. Wister's novel. "The Virginian," has just appeared, with sixteen illustrations of scenes and characters from the play. Seldom do the people who represent a book on the stage carry
out so well one's mental picture of the characters. Mr. Joseph A Graham's volume on "The Sporting Dog" in The Ameri can Sportsman's Library appears in the nick of time. Interest in hunting dogs has developed fast of late, and Mr. Graham's book is characterized by those who have read it as the first adequate volume on its theme. Next week the Macmillan Company Avill publish Mr. John Graham Brooks' well-known book on "The Social Unrest," in a paper-bound edi tion at 25 cents. Last year this volume was welcomed as a clear-sighted exposition of many current problems and developments in the relations of labor and capital, and the new edition is in response to a demand for its publication in an inexpensive form. APRIL FORUM. In the April-June Forum Mr. H. Litchfield West's review of the quarter's events in "American Polities" estimates the career of the late Senator Hanna, and discusses the situation in both the parties in relation to the Presidential election. Mr. West reaches the conclusion that "there must be a shaking-up of dead bones if the coming campaign is to possess anything of old-time interest and vigor." A unique contribution to the AprilJune Forum is a paper by the late Grant Allen, entitled "Personal Rem iniscences of Herbert Spencer." It was written ten years ago on the un derstanding that it should not be published until after Mr. Spencer's death. It is particularly noteworthy for the light it easts upon Mr. Spencer's relation to his philosophical disciples. Special Trains to California $50 Round Trip. Specially personally conducted trains through to San Francisco and Los Angeles via the Chicago, Union Pacific & North-Western Line, leave Chicago and various points east, April 2Gth and 27th. Stopovers at Denver, Colorado Springs and Salt Lake City. Side trips at a minimum of expense. $50 round trip from Chicago; correspondingly low rates from all points. No extra charge for travel on special trains. Tickets are also good on The Overland Limited, solid through daily train, less than three days to the coast, over lhe only double track railway betAveen Chicago and the Missouri RiA-er, and via the direct transcontinental route. Two trains daily. Choice of routes returning. Write for itineraries of special trains and other detailed information to A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth Avenue, RICHMOND LAWNS Would take on a beautiful green if Mertz's Bone Fertilizer were used now. Send or telephone your orders to Tom Mertz. Both 'phones 103, or Rural Route No. 8. Send in an order for a sample if you want your grass to grow well next summer. d e-o-dtf
A tonic for the aged and infirm. GiA-es strength and vital force to every part of the body. A Spring tonic that makes sick people Avell. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents, tea or tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. TIME CARD Richmond Street & Interurban Railway Company. Cars leave hourly for Centerville, East Germantown, Cambridge City, Dublin and Milton from 5 a. m. to 11 p. m., returning same hours. Sunday, same hours, except first car leaves at 6 a. m. Indianapolis Cars. Local cars leave Richmond for Indianapolis and Indianapolis for Richmond at 5, 7, 9 and 11 a. m. and 1, 3, 5 and p. m. First car Sunday at 7 o'clock a. m. C. A. DEN MAN, Supt.
UNYON'S
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