Richmond Palladium (Daily), 21 April 1904 — Page 8

eight.

RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1904.

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Thus far we have made no mention of our Linens. They have been able to speak for themselves. ON THURSDAY MORNING we shall offer someextraordinary values, only a few being mentioned here. We quote a ft w of the cheaper things. Better goods are fully as cheap. Fringed Linen Doilies 4c 30x30 Linen Lunch Cloths, while they last, 25c Extra line hemstitched and drawn work Lunch Cloths, also in color?, 50c 2 yds long hemstitched all linen Table Cloths worth much more, only SI. 00 We are selling a 66-inch, all linen, extra heavy German Damask, actually worth 75, at 50c Special values in Towels, Napkins, ttc. See front center case.

BOTH PHONES

LEE B. NUSBAUM

WE SELL PEEKLESS PATTERNS.

For Brain and Body

DEa

BREAD

"Get the Habit"

Red, white and blue label on every loaf. For sale by all grocers. Made only by

Attorney William II. Kelly is hav

ing an attack of the, mumps.

jjrs. iCaiherinep,Mptt arri

f rom Lafayette , this afternoon. .. .-.

J;, A. Walls spent; yesterday

Winchester on professional business,

Asa Uhl went to Markleville, Ind.,

last evening on a short business trip.

Miss Eva Worl of Hagerstown

spent yesterday with Miss Hazel Wil

liams.

Ladies' street hats, $1.00 "and up n

Mrs. C. A. Brehm's, 41 north e?ghth street. Special tdiscount.

Children's "street hats 50 cents and

up at Mrs. C. A. Brehm's, 43 north

eighth street.

allTeady

For the Settlement in the Carpente Assignment Casa The Carpenter assignment ms tier

is now tvmoleted a ad on and after

today, ekvins will be paid at the

county clerk's office. v

After &U the preferred claims are

settled there, remain? $771.50 to b

prorated' with $11,803.03, which will

mean 6.53 per cent, instead' of 10

per cent as claimed heretofore.

COURT

HOUST

Richmond

Go

Not Much of Interest Gathered There Thomas J. Study filed the suit of

Caroline Grimme vs. William 1 Grimme, for divorce.

A marriage "license was issued Elmer A. Unthank and Bertha Bunger.

Robert A. Howard filed final settlement in the estate of Elizabeth Dobbins. DR. DEAD

A Prominent Methodist Dies in the South.

Word was received at Eaton, Ohio, yesterday, of the death of Dr. J. E. Prentiss, vice-presidnt of Grant university of Chattanooga, and Athens, Tenn. The cause of his Jath was not stated and the news came as a great shock. He was former pastor of Methodist churches at Dayton and Eaton, O.

HELD IN THE CITY BUILDING

THIS AFTENOON

DELEGATES SELECTED

The Majority of Whom Are For Par

kerHearst Has Five.

The Democratic ' convention was called to order in the city building

this afternoon with B. F. Wissler, county chairman, , in the chair. The call for the convention was read. Mandus Mason was elected secretary.. A motion was made to reaffirm the Kansas City platform and the. same was lost. . , Delegates were elected for the May and July conventions. - Fifteen, of the delegates were for Parker and five for Hearst. ' ' " The following delegates and alternates were selectd: Abington Samuel Clevenger, delegate; Ed Dye alternate. Center G. W. Cornelius, delegate; W. D. Cook alternate. Jefferson W. R. Wimmer, delegate; James Rabford alternate. Greene M. II. Wooley, delegate; Joe B. Borton alternate.

New Garden Geo. B. Harris, delegate; Albert Thomas alternate. Jackson B. F. Ingerman, M. E. Mason, Marry miller, delegates; Geo. W. Drischel, Geo. A. Doney, Thos. Enyart alternates. Wayne delegates John Hallowell, T. J. Newkirk, J. M. Lontz, Clifford W. Merrill, Wm. K. Young, T..J. Study, Ben Price, Richard Allen, B. F. Wissler, Wm. Hippard, Benjamin Hill.

INDIANA OFFICERS. (By Associated Press.) . tXT ! "a ..... a . rt fni V. -

aha- delegation the, Congress, of the Daughters of-the Revolution have ap pointed as 'regent and vice regent Mrs. James M. Fowler and Mrs Robert S. Robertson. . ; u DEADLOCK BROKEN. (By Associated Press.) Findlay, O., April 21. No change in the deadlock in the eighth disdistrict Republican convention up to the noon adjournment. The only incident was the rquest of the Champaign delegation to withdraw for consultation, but after its return the vote was cast as before. ,

$1.00 r.

$1.00 .

RpMNP.HiPi::

ToMUNCIE

MARION, PERU

and intermediate points

Sunday, April 24th Via C C.&L.

Train leaves at 10:45 a. m., returning ar

rive in Richmond at 8:1a p. m. C. A. BLAIR, City T. A. Home Phone 41

FIGHT FOB MILLIONS

STORE

THE RAILROAD

GIVES TRADING STAMPS

MBOJfflEF

Bank Officials Sentenced to the Peni

tentiary. Indianapolis, April 21. James L.

Broderick, president, and W. L. ol-

ins, cashier, of the Indiana Naional Bank of Elkhart, Ind., under

their plea of guilty to causing a fail- !

ure in bank for $6,470.00 were sen

tenced todav. Broderick for four

teen years and Collins for six.

The Richmond Palladium

THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1904.

LOCAL ITEM SI

Optical goods at Haner's. The staff of life, -"Ideal Bread."

Eye glass changed at Haner's. j Dr. W. A. Park for dentistry, tf Mrs. W. S. Hiser's shorthand school. Try the Palladium for job printing. Spectacles correctly , fitted at Haner's. P. W. Smith was in Fort "Wayne yesterday. ' ' Hear Frederick Dann in the "Maniac ' 21st. Cecil Wintersteen visited in Connersville yesterday. J. D. Snavely spent yesterday in .Anderosn on business. . Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter of Hagerstown were here yesterday. Isaac Jay has returned from a business trip to Cincinnati. ;;; L. C. Abbott spent yesterday in Dayton, transacting business.

Rev. Trout of Cambridge City, was

here yesterday visiting friends j

George Butler of Cambridge City,

was here yesterday with friends.

Hon. IL'-U. Johnson returned last

1 c'

night from a trip to Indianapolis.

j: Mr. v and Mrs. John Ingerman re

turned yesterday to Cambridge City.

J

See Nell & Nusbaum's west window for cut prices on Douglass and Terhune shoes. 11-tf Miss Maude Rice returned yesterday from a short visit with Mrs. Enrs Veal of Economy. Coming: April 21st, The Great Baltimore 'Fire Pictures with Cleveland's Minstrels, I O. O. F. hall. 19-3t Mr. V. H. Hastings returned home last night from a business trip to

Logansport and other cities.

Mrs. Ingram arrived yesterday af

ternoon from Indianapolis to make a short visit with her daughter, Mrs. James Judson.

uood light win not alway cure a

sick business, but it will go a mighty

long way toward keeping a business

from getting sick.

On occount of several imitators

Manager Cleveland has cut the price of admission to 10c to see -minstrels

and Baltimore Fire. 21st.

Mesdames Hannah Stanley, Elvi

Nelson, and. Messrs. D. D. Ramsey,

Dr. Clark and Elmer "Weaver of Econ

omy, spent yesterday here.

JYLiss itnei &an born arrived yesterday evening from Fountain City On a short visit with Miss Mabel

Barber, of south thirteenth street.

Typewriters, all .makes, rented,

sold. Rentals, $3 to $5 per month

Repairs and ribbons for all machines.

Tyrell, W. U. Tel. office. ' 'Phone 26.

A four-light gas arc is guaranteed to- give as great amount of light, as socalled 2,000 electric arc, ajxjji a much more satisfactory illumination, for far less money.

PLEADJDILTY

Pursued to an Abandoned Mine

Where He Killed a Miner. (By Asociated Press.) Birmingham, Ala., April 21. At

Republica, today, a negro was discovered stealing meat. He was pursued

to an abandoned coal mine. Just be

fore entering he fired and killed

William L. Bagley. 'The entrance to

the mine is guarded.

DEATHS AND FUNERALS Juday Miss Pearl Juday died to

day at her home, 324 south ninth

street, after a lingering illness of

consumption. The funeral will be an

nounced later. Interment will take place in Eldorado.

Brooks Marion the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Brooks died this morning at the home of her

parents, 231 Chestnut street, "West

Richmond, at the age of eleven

months. The funeral will be Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock from the

home. Interment at Earlham. RAILROAD PERSONALS.

W. B. Calloway, general passenger

agent of the C. C. & L. railroad, has

gone to Bass Lake to make arrange

ments for the opening of the excur

sion season. He will return to Cin

cinnati tomorrow.

W. N. Talent, - division; freight

agent of - the Pennsylvania -railroad, has gone to Pittsburg to, attend the semi-annual meeting , of Hhe traffic

officials of the company.

Another Injunction Granted in No:lhern Securities Cace. Trenton. N. J.. April 21. Suit has

been begun in the United States cir- I cuit court for the district of New Jersey against the Northern Securities company by Edward H. Harriman, Winslow S. Pierce, the Oregon Short Line railroad company and the Equitable Trust company of New York, trustee under the Oregon Short line participating mortgage, to restrain the Northern Securities company from carrying out the plan adopted by its directors for the distribution of the stocks of the Northern Pacific and Great Northern Railway companies held in the treasury of the defendant company. The facts in the case as recited in the bill of complaint cover substantially the same ground on which was based the intervention suit in the United States circuit court for the district of Minnesota, which was decided on Tuesday adversely to the Harriman

interests. Judge Andrew Kirkpatrick

has issued a temporary order restrain

ing the carrying out of the plan of dis

tribution. The court has fixed next Monday, in Trenton, for the hearing of ( the motion to make the injunction permanent. It is stated that this injunction will operate to prevent the proposed meeting of stockholders of the Northern Securities company called for today at Hoboken, to vote on

the Northern Securities directors' plan

of distribution of the treasury stock.

INSTRUCT FOR OLNEY. (By Associated Press.) Boston, April 21. The Democrat State Convention adopted resolutions instructing the delegates to vote for

Richard Olney for President.

REGAINED HEARING.

Young Lady Had a Tooth Pulled and

Aural Faculties Restored. . (New York World.)

The joy of losing an aching wisdom

tooth and regaining the hearing of

her right ear in one operation has come to Miss Louisa Fischer, of No. 1674 Madison avenue. Today, instead of sailing for Bremen to consult eminent aural specialists about' her deafness, she will take a 4 train . for St. Louis to be at the opening of - the fair and celebrate her deliverance. - Miss Fischer is a musician. She lost the hearing of her right ear a year ago and suffered intensely from pains in the drum. She could neither play nor sing, and her life was made miserable. She went to aural special

ists, but all of them shook their heads and gave her no hone. They advised that she o to Bremen. So distressed was she that she decided to undertake the long trip and test the slen

der hope they held out to her. She engaged passage on the Belgravia, which is to sail this morning. Trunks were packed and everything was in readiness. As a last thought she dropped in on a dentist only two doors away to have him attend to her teeth. She told him about the troublesome wisdom tooth that jumped and jerked at all hours of the dav and night.

''Pull it," he said. She consented,

and out it came.

e t Trr 1 1 1

"wny, me pain in my ear

young Parisians are in a state to do

some very lively sporting.

"The areoplane has come to stay. "Chanute and Herrin, improving on the unhappy Lilienthal, obtained

results which encouraged .Wilbur

Wright and his brother to undertake what have turned out such brilliant experiments. Nothing could be imagined simpler than theWright aeroplane. , . ... . ! "The American ' brothers Wright have demonstrated that roughly, for

sporting purposes, the tobogganing will be as 100 to 8 in proportion to the height from which one starts with a box-like areoplane to the height of a dune overlooking a wide : flat expanse of oand below. The sport gets in his aeroplane and holds tight, lying flat, Four men take each a corner and run with the aeroplane against the wind to the edjje of the dune. Then they throw it out and it goes 'plane-ing,' as the French say, sustained by the air, sliding down the air so to speak. The formula 100-8 means that if you start from a height of 8

yards you will toboggan diagonally

down to a distance 100 yards from

your point of departure, while if yon

start from a height of 80 yards your

trip will be 1,000 yards." , Pc ople's Exchange

TORONTO UNDAUNTED

Plucky Canadians Will at Once Re build Burned District.

Toronto, Ont., April 21. Although the business interests of the city have been shaken to their foundations by the disaster, no time will be loaf in

beginning the work of reconstruction

A meeting of the bankers' association

was held last night to discuss the situation. It was decided that there is no danger of a financial panic and that no action to avert such a contingency would be necessary. The principal sufferers - from the disaster are firms

of high financial standing who can re establish - themselves without assist

ance. Most of them were well covered

by insurance, a large percentage of

which would fall upon foreign con

cerns. The total loss- will, according to most conservative estimates, reach $12,000,000, and the total insurance $8,360,000. The area swept by the fire

embraces fourteen acres and from 5,000 to 7,000 persons are thrown out

of employment.

The Hazard of the Rail.

Washington, April 21. The Inter

state commerce commission has is

sued a report showing that in the

United States during October, Novem ber and December last the total num

ber of railroad casualties aggregated 14,485, a decrease of 702 as compared

with the preceding quarter. There

were killed 175 passengers and 99

employes ana . x,s3i passengers and

11,382 employes? were, injured. The

damage by these accidents to cars, en

Sines and roadways amounted to $2,-

627,000, a decrease of $57,348. . -

ij .

STORAGE Ground and Main. Vern

floor, sixteenth Smith.

FOR SALE A new ten-volume Americanized Cyclopedia Britannica. Inquire at Palladium office. It's a bargain for some one. TOR SALE Old papers for sale at the Palladium office, 15 cents a hundred and some thrown in.

is

gone!" cried the astonished rirl as

she got un from the dentist's chair.

She went home to finish prepara

tions for her departure. The noises in the street were no lonrer muffled.

ler own voice was clear and distinct

again, bhe sat down to the piano and once more felt the joy of listening to harmoniziner notes that came

clear and strong.

She was no longer deaf. The girl

ran back to the dentist when she at

ength realized what had happened.

Dancing for joy, Miss Fletcher decid

ed on the spot to give up her trip to

Europe. 'I'-aWR

"I will celebrate my deliverance by

going to St. Louis and hearing the

band play," she decided.

AERIAL TOBOGGAN.

A New Sport With the Necessary Ele

ment of Danger. (Philadelphia Record.) The gilbd youth of Paris have late

ly gone in for a new fad, called "aerial tobogganing," which is nothing more or less tban sailing through the air by the' means of aeroplanes. These

winglike constructions enter largelv

into the make-up of some flying machine. Many investigators who have been engaged in the conquest of the air contend that the aeroplane offers

the only solution of manflight, and

that the use of the balloon as a means of buoyancy is all wrong, as it pre

sents too much surface to be acted up

on by the wind, making the machine

uncontrollable. With the aerooplane it is contended that man will eventually be able to fly as the eagle and

the buzzard, which can be seen a-sail-

mg in the air with outstretched wings

ror minutes at a time without the

movement of a muscle.

Aerial tobogganing is a new, hardy sport, not without danger, which will doubtless soon be better known to the world, as the men who have taken it

up are of unusual wealth anl promi- j

nence. These are: Ernest Archdeacon, Jacques Balsan and the Cojnte de la Vaulx, who "risk their skin," as the French say, willingly for the excitement, seconded by experts of the type of Mtllet,, the balloon constructor and fearless areonaut; Girardot, the automobile constructor anl breakneck racer; the electric Henri de Rothschild, doctor, bone-setter and multi-millionaire, anl George Dargent, the model maker and general aeronautic specialist of the French army's balloon park at Chalais-Houdon, these

HOUSES WANTED If you have centrally located houses to sell report to Wm. Ruppert, 41 soutL tenth, street. I have buyers. 20-2t.

WANTED 6 extra hands to repair water damage on farm. Bring yov rubber boots. Tom Mertz. Both phones. No. 103.

LOST Small package containing tooth brushes, thread, &c, in Boston Store paper. Leave at 20 Ft Wayne ave., or telephone 412. FOR RENT Furnished front room with light, heat and bath for gentlemen, 27 south eighth st. 21-2t

Ideal Bread is a perfect brain food.

You get one pound and one eighth of the finest bread you ever ate if you buy "Ideal."

If you have "Ideal Bread" on the table, you are bound to please every member of the family.

FARES TO ST. LOUIS. World's Fair Excursion via Pennsylvania Lines. The sale of excursion tickets over Pennsylvania Lines t St. Louis account of the World's Fair, will begin on Monday morning, April 25th five days in advance of the date ef the for mal epening of the Louisiama Purchase Exposition. The excursion rates from Richmond are fixed as follows: Tiekets good for the season, returning, any time to December 15th, will be sold every day at $14 for the round trip. Tickets good returning within. sixty 1 days, not later than December 15th, will be sold every day at $12 for the

j 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, Deginning 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 spec-', ial grains. On ; ' ' r.,,' '"' For further partieolars consult C. W. Ehrner, Ticket Agent,? Richmond, Ind. ' .

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