Richmond Palladium (Daily), 28 April 1904 — Page 6

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IlIOmXOlTD DAILY PALLAD IUM, THURSDAY, APRIL 28. 1904.

CATARRH , once. It opens and Pm H H FA II cleanses the Nasal Pas- WtU 'III U ages, allays Inflammation, Heals and Protecd he Membrane. Bestores the Senses of Taste an t Smell. Large sizeoOc, at Druggists or by mails Trial siee. 10c by mail. ELY BKOS.. 66 WarrenSt., NewYork, ATENTS . will advise you whether your ideas can be patented. Small improvements and simple inventions have made much money for the inven tors. We dtvelope your ideas or assist youin improving your invention. We takeout patents in United States, Canada and foreign countrits. Our ttrm' are reasonable. Marlatt & Dozier, 42-43 Colonial Bldg. Rlcnmon STOCKS, BONDS and SECURITIES Any one wishing to sell Stocks, Bonds and Securities, I would be glad to list them . . . An' one wishing to buy Stocks, Bonds and Securities, I have them for sale IT'S THAT REAL ESTATE MORGAN 8th and N. E, Richmond, Ind rtifl'iffiiiiiiPar fl For Rent 6 ACRES Of good ground IB. Notice tc Contractors. In pursuance of a resolution of the common council of the city of Richmond, Ind., the common council of the city of Richmond, I luiinna, will receive sealed proposals at the oliice of the City Olerk until 4 o'clock, P' IU" MONDAY, MAY 16th, 1H04, lor the improvement of the alley between Randolph and Lincoln streets, from West Third to West Fourth street, by grading, graveling, boulderlng and three brick center gutters. All bids must be upon the printed forms prepared for the purpose, which may be obtained of the city civil engineer, and enclosed in a sealed envelope directed to the common council of the city of Richmond, Indiana. The bond required of the successful bidder shall be in the sum of $iMxjn.t, and must be flvety by residents of Wayne county, ndiana. Kach bid by contractors must be accompanied' bv a deposit of a cert i (led check for llOO.un, to be left in the hands of the city clerk subject to the conditions specified in the proposal. Before bids will be received, bidders must satisfy the common council of the city of Richmond, Indiana, as to t heir competency to conduct the work, and as to their resources for its vigorous prosecution. Rids shall state the price per lineal foot for the Improvement complete, also for all other items enumerated in the schedule, which price shall be in full for nil labor and materials required for the complete execution of the work. Said work to be completed on or before the loth day of June linn, under the direction of the city civil engineer, and in accordance with the plans ami specifications on file in the oliice of said clerk. The contract will be let to the lowest responsible bidder. The common council of t he city of Richmond, Indiaim, reserves the right'to reject any or all bids, or waive defects in bids, in tiie interest of the city, made In accordance with this notice. By order of the common council. JOI1M F. TA(i(iAHT, 21-:.-" City Clerk. Notice to Contractors. In pursuance of a resolution of the common council of the city of Richmond, Ind., tiie common council of the city of Richmond, Indiana, will receive sealed proposals at the office of the city clerk until 4 o'clock, p. in.. Ufc MONDAY. MAY' 10th, 1W1. for the improvement of the south side of Main street, from Kast Second street to East Fourth street, by the construction of stone curb, brick gutter and vitrified brick sidewalk from Kast Hecond street to East Third street, and storm sewer from Kat Hecond street to East Fourth street. All bids must be upon the printed forms prepared for the purpose, which may be. obtained of the city civil engineer, and enclosed In a sealed envelope directed to the common council of the city of Richmcna Indiana. The bond required of the successful bidder shall be in the sum of $:,ouo.oo, and must be ftven by residents of Wayne ccuuty ndiana. Each bid by contractors must be accompanied by a deposit of a cei titled check fci $1(1(1.00, to be left In the hands cf the citj clerk subject to the conditions srecllied ir: t he proposal. Before bids will be received bidders must satisfy the common councilcl the citv of Ricniii' iid, Indiana, as to theii compefencv to cond net the work, and as tc their resources for its vigorous prcsecutlcn Bids shall ,tate th? price per lineal loot for the Improvement complete, also lor all other items enumerate i in the schedule, which price shall be In full for all labor ant materials required for th complete execu Hon of the work. Said work to be completed cn or before the 1st dav of August, 1W 4 under the .direction of the city civil engineer, and In accordance with the plans and specifications on llle in the office of sala clerk. The contract will be let to the lowest responsible bidder. The common council of the citv of Richmond, Indiana, reserves the right to reject any or all bids, or waive defectsln bids, in the interest of theclty.made In accordance with this notice. By order of the common c uncll. JOHN F 'f AGO ART, 21-28-5 City Clerk. A WEEK - Oil Burner. Hm1 store or f nrnaces : barns crnda e ; barns ?rud OHIO tfc I KKJb WfUtHSUOSSI 2R Co.. ur M, fttow Vrk. M. nmiohju nrr. I. V.

TFIK AND 1IKAJ.INO CURE FOR CATARRH ELY'S Cream Balm Easy and pleasant to use. Contains no injurious drugs. It is quickly absorb-

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"SON CF THE SOIL"

Mr. Hanly's Sympathies Naturally With the Man Who Tolls. Indianapolis, April 28. Frank Hanly, who received tne Republican nomination for governor yesterday, Is a real "son or the soil." Twenty years ago he was a ditcher doing hard manual labor by day and educating himC3lf at night. He is forty-one and is perhaps the youngest man to receive the nomination for governor at the hands of th3 Republicans of Indiana. He was born in Champaign county, IV linois, and went to school but threo months. He was an indefatigable stuV dnt, however, and he is now one of the leading lawyers of northern Inc'dana. His first party service was in 1890, when he was elected to the state senate, where he remained two terms. He was a member of congress' one term and lacked but five votes in the Republican caucus six years ago of being able to land in the United States senate. He is one of the most popular and effective campaigners in the state and is one of the shrewdest organizers. One of the first to congratulate him yesterday was Senator Albert J. Beveridge, who defeated him for the senate. Hanly expects to make a thorough canvass of the state. It is now time to write some of the inside history of the Republican state convention, and the local correspondents will probably be at it for a long time before the subject is exhausted. It was not generally known until after the convention how well Hanly's forces were managed. H. S. Starr of Richmond, one of the shrewdest politicians in Indiana, was behind the Hanly guns all the time with Union Banner Hunt, the well-known Winchester leader, yet there were many newspaper men who did not know where Stanstood. St-arr, Hunt, Deputy Auditor of State Billheimer, John McCardle of New Richmond, and a few others were lining up the forces while Hanly 'was in his headquarters shaking hands with the delegates. It is known now that Hanly's managers had not planned to win on the first ballot. That they did so, hov.ever, was no great surprise, as they had figured the situation very closely and were confident that he had the votes to win at any time. Their idea was to get near the mark on the first and to go over on the second, but the stampede headed them off. Starr and Hunt said today that Tuesday night they knew within five votes of the number they wculd receive on the first ballot. Indianapolis, April 28. Now that the Republican convention is all over a review is being taken of how things were done. There is no doubt in the minds of those who were close observers that the three opponents of Hanly suffered for lack of organization. That an old-timer like W. L. Taylor should have overlooked such an important detail was beyond the comprehension of the party leaders with whom h; has been actively associated, yet it is conceded by his friends that he had practically no organization whatever. It is generally admitted by politicians that Taylor took too much for granted when in going from county to county the politicians told him they were for him. He did not stop to organize. Hanly, on the other hand, pursued a campaign of organization which kept him right at the front from the start. Sayre and Penfleld also suffered from lack of organization, and the only chance they had of winning at any stage was a revolt from Hanly. An example of what organization will do for a candidate who was regarded as an outsider at the start, may be noted in the oa.se of Hugh Th. Miller, who owes his nomination for lieutenant governor largely to the adroit way hi3 forces were handled. Serious Stabbing Affray. Brazil, Ind., April 28. Alvin Ringo. ex-deputy county sheriff, son of exSheriff Morgan Ringo of Staunton, is in jail here, charged with stabbing with intent to kill Town Marshal Isham Yocum of Staunton. The fight occurred when Yocum stopped a dog fight in which Ringo's dog was engaged. Yocum's condition is serious and physicians beVeve he will die. Both men were intoxicated at the time. Grave Charge Against Mother. Binghampton, N. Y., April 28. Mrs. Henrietta Dewltt was arrested at Sidney, Delaware county, charged with murder in the first degree, in causing the death Oi her seventeen-year-old daughter, Florence Mackintosh, by poisoning her with arsenic. The evidence before the coroner's jury pointed strongly toward the mother having caused the girl's death to obtain $2,000 life insurance. Will Pay Twenty-Five Per Cent. Duluth. Minn., April 28. -Charles F. Leland, president of the defunct Commercial banking company, has'filed an application in the United States district court asking to be discharged from bankruptcy. Claims aggregating $121,000 are proven against his estate. Patrons of his bank, it is said, will receive but a little above 25 per cent, of their deposits. . Many Immigrants Arrive. New Ycxk, April 28. The North German L;oyd steamer Neckar, which has just arrived from Naples, brought 111 cabin and 2,497 steerage passengers, the largest number brought by a single steamer this season. A Judge and Not a Soldier. London, April 28. A Tokio correspondent says that one of the Japanese spies shot by the Russians at Mudken was identified as Sondey, a Japanese judge, and not a military man, as has been stated.

1 Captain Essen's Victory Over Jap Merchantman Verified. St. Petersburg, April 28. The emperor has received a telegram from Viceroy Alexieff as follows : "Rear Admiral Essen, who is at sea with cruisers and torpedo boatsrdispatclied the latter to Gensah, Korea. The torpedo boats blew up a Japanese merchantman in the roadstead. The crew were sent ashore. The torpedo boatJ returned the same day to the' squadron." Plans for Another Army. Shanghai, April 28. The third Japanese army now mobilizing will comprise the fifth division of Hiroshima, the tenth from Hinieju and the eleventh from Zentsuuji. Preparations are on foot to mobilize a fourth army should it become necessary. The destination of these armies is a matter of considerable speculation here, though it is supposed that it may be the intention to use them against Vladivostok or Port Arthur. Harassing Chinese Villages. Tien Tsin, April 28. Four thousand Russians are harassing the Chinese villages west of the Shuangtaisu river midway between Chinchau and Yinkow. HAS THE CHARTS Giving Location of the Buried Fortune. Alton, 111., April 28. Dr. Isaac Moore, a well-known Alton physician, says he has received charts from Texas which indicate the exact spot on the Timmermeir farm in St. Charles county, Missouri, across from Alton, where the long-sought-for buried treasure of Captain John Schmoelzer, former owner of the land, is concealed. Schmoelzer, an old war captain, owned considerable property in St. Charles county when the war broke out. He left home, but before doing so buried in an old iron chest a large amount of gold. He was killed, and although relations knew the money was hidden somewhere, they never found it. Dr. Moore will go to the place designated at once. An old soldier companion of Schmoelzer, who was given the papers by Schmoelzer before the latter died, sent them to Dr. Moore just before he himself passed away. Natives Were Repulsed. Sydney, N. S. W., April 28.- While Acting Administrator Robinson, at Goorabri, New Guinea, was endeavoring to induce the chiefs to surrender the murderers of the noted explorer, the Rev. James Chalmers and his companions, 300 canoes attacked the government steamer Merrie England. The canoes were repulsed and the natives lost heavily, but there were many casualties among the whites. Wholesale Hanging Stories Denied, Warsaw, April 28. Arrests of antiRussian Polish agitators in all parts of European Russia indicate the extent of the revolutionary movement. The fate of the prisoners is uncertain, but the leaders of the social democracy declare that stories of wholesale hangings are false. Summary deportations are expected. The working classes and the peasantry are in active alliance. Getting Time to Hustle. St. Louis, April 28. Thirty thousand men are rushing to completion the work of putting the World's Fair in order for opening day. The force is beirg increased as rapidly as men can be hired. Three thousand more men have been added to the regular night force in handling the exhibits and working on the roadways and landscape department. TERSE TELEGRAMS Sftfo blowers robbed the postofiiee at Wheelrsbiir. O., of $ 10. The povernment torpedo boat destroyer Lawrence haj arrived at St. Louis. Bt the explosion of a boiler, at Flat Gap, Kr., M. W. Woo l ward aud Charles Pritchard were fata'ly injured. Fire destroyed the (rreater part of the business portion of Brainer J, Minn., causing a loss estimated at $150,000. The Hungarian government is watching with the keenest interest the American attitude towards the Hungarian emigration law. The lives of three firemen were lost and property rained at $200,000 w9 destroyed in a Are at the John Stanley soap works, at New York. At Rockford, Col., Mrs, J. J. Thompson and her 18-months-old grand-daughter were fatally burned by an explosion of oil used to start a Are. Indiana Republicans nominated Hon. J. Frauk Hanly. of Lafayette, for goTernor and Hugh Th. Miller, of Columbus, for lieutenant governor. President Palma has issued a decree anthorUing the acceotanfe of the bonds issued in lso.i9T by the Cuban revolutionary government as a basis for the bonds of government officials and others. Will Oppose Saloon. Greenfield, Ind., April 28. The temperance people of Fortville are preparing to oppose another effort to open a saloon in that town. Charles A. Brown has given notice that he will make application to sell liquor. Several of the applications have been successfully downed by the voters of Vernon township, and it is thought this one .will meet a similar fate. Caught at the Crossing. Shelbyville, Ind., April 28. Charles M. Perry, a horse buyer of this city, has received word of the death of John M. Fisher at Quakertown, Pa., who was killed while crossing a railroad in a buggy. Mr. Fisher was well known In this part of the state. Indiana T. P. A. Meeting. Lafayette, Ind., April 28. The fourteenth annual convention of the Indiana division of the Travelers' Protective association of America will be held here tomorrow and Saturday.

OFFICIAL CONFIRMATION

A CSAE OF IT. ' Many More Like it in RichomneL The following case is but one of many similar occurring daily in Richmond. It is an easy matter to verify its correctness. Surely you cannot ask for better proof than such a conclusive evidence. Elmer 0. Hawkins, of 43 north fifth street, machinist at Gaar, Scott & Co.'s says: "For two or three years I was troubled with a weakened and debilitated condition of the kidneys. There was a steady aching pain through my loins and I could not rest comfortably during the night. The secretions became, irregular and unnatural. I tried a great many dif-" ferent remedies but received no benefit until seeing Doan's Kidney Pills highly recommended I bought a box at Luken's drug store and used them. They soon fixed me up and I feel confident in saying that they are a 'permanent cure for kidney troubles." For sale by all dealers. Price 50c. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other.

MONEY LOANED rom 5 to 6 per cent. Thompson's Loan and Real Esti .gency, Main and peventb streets. 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. 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 fif- j teen days will be sold every day at $10.50 for the round trip. j Coach excursion tickets with re turn limit of seven days, will be sold twice a week, tevery 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. YaDann Top I to Los Angeles or San Francisco will not be perfect unless you use the CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY either on the going or returning journey. It has the grandest and most wonderful scenery in the world, j which is in full view from the train j for 600 miles, or can be viewed from the many mountain resorts along the line. Stop Overs Allowed. Free Observation Cars. Trip Through Puget Sound between Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle without extra charge. The cheap excursion rates for the Methodist Episcopal General Conference apply by this route. Tickets on sale April 22nd to May 1st, time limit June 30. Write for illustrated literature. A. C. SHAW, Gen. Agt., Pass'gr. Dep't . . Chicago, 111. aprl27 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 26th 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 1he only double track railway between Chicago and the Missouri River, 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,

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The Most Modern, Original, Up-to-date Amusement Enterprise on Earth, The Truly Original, Marvelous, Sensational Circus Ideas and Acts or Feats are always produced by this Show first, then imitators follow. Everything exhibited by the uHighest-Class Circus,' in the world is WELL WORTH SEEING Even down to the most minute details, every attention is given to the comfort and pleasure of its patrons.

Wallace's Circus Day Prograip : 10 A. M. THE GRAND STREET PARADE A unique combination of Glorious Street Cai nival. Spectacular Street Fair, a Zoological Display, Horse Fair and Glittering Pageant. 1 a. d 7 P. M. DOORS OPEMED to the Immense Waterproof Tents. I: If) fnd 7:15 P. M. PROF. BRONSON'S CONCEPT BAND of Renowed Soloist Mm icians besiin a 45 minute Grand Concert on the center stage 2 and X 1'. M. All-Feature Performance begins, comprising Multitudinous, Over whelming, Indescribable Gymnic, Acrobatic, Spectacular, Aerial, Trained uinial, Hippodiomatic Feats.

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