Richmond Palladium (Daily), 5 May 1904 — Page 6

lllOIIUOND DAILY PALLADIUM, THURSDAY MAY 5, 1904. ooooooooooooooooooooooopcopoooooooooo o o o Harrows TJa at Harrow Port Arthur Effectually Shut Oft From the Sea It Is Claimed.

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For Infants and Children. .,- The Kind You Have

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THE GROUND AND NOT THE FARMER We have the latest, the "up-to-date implements" that give satisfaction.

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MONEY LOANED Prom 5 to 6 per cent. Thompson's Loan and Real Estate agency, Main and seventh . street. 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 fifteen daj-s 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. Don't wait lor Decoration Da) but order your Monumental work at once of Perrj T. Williams, at 33 nortli 8tli. Warning;: Never take a substitute when you can ret the original; Ideal Bread is the genuine article. tf A Love Letter. Would not interest you if you're looking for a guaranteed Salve foi Sores, Burns or Piles. Otto Dodd, of Ponder, Mo., writes: "I suffered with an ugly sore for a year, but a box of Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured me. It's the best salve on earth. 25c at A. G. Luken & Co.'s dni2 store. ViCORCUS HOCTILITIE3 Have Bean Resumed Again ;t RevoltIng Hsrercs. Berlin, May 5. Dispatches received from Colonel Leutwoin, governor of German Southwest Africa, indicate the energetic resumpticn of hostilities against the Hereros. Esteroff's force of 706 men at Otjosasu has been ordered to pursue the enemy's main body, which is retreating apparently COLOEIj fEtTTWEIN, OOVEKNOB OF OEBVA.N SOUTHWEST AFRICA. to Otjiamangombe, northwest of Katjapl, and to endeavor to gain its east flank. Estorff is pressing forward with his mounted men, having sent the native cavalry ahead. The German main force of 964 men ! camped on the railway ready for operations when tho East Prussian

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horses which are now on the way arrive. The north division of 176 men is going from Karibib to Grootfontein with provisions, while the east division of 209 men is quarantined at Otjihaenena. The losses of the Hereos at Onganjira and Oviumbo prove to be greater than was at first believed. Among the wounded is Chief Samuel. ON SAME SCAFFOLD Three Murderers Today Pay Penalty fcr Atrocious Crime. Nashville, Term., May 5. From the same scaffold three murderers took the drop into eternity together at Winchester, Franklin county, Tenn., today. The crime for which Jo Delp, John Evans and Henry Judge have paid the penalty was a particularly atrocious one. On August 3, 1903, Delp and Evans called at the home of aged Simon Bucher in the mountains near Winchester, enticed the old man into his garden and shot him in the back. Leaving him for dead, they returned to the cabin, shot Mrs. Bucher down and set Are to the house. Next morninsr a nassiner horseman discovered the

ruins and found old man Bucher with J leaders in Methodism made up the proMinuffh life in him to make a state-' gram, which kept the tired and travel-

ment. which led to the arrest of Delp and Evans. Their confessions implicated Henry Judge, who, they said, hired them to do the murders, promising a payment of $125. Judge's motive, it was alleged, was to get free access to cut timber which stood on lands which Bucher was employed to watch. Terrible Pcwder Explosion. Newport, ind., May 5. A powder mill owned by the Northwestern Powder company, three miles from Newport, was blown up with frightful results. Four men were killed outright and two were injured. The dead are: Desota Briggs, Albert Mayhew, George Mayhew, Henry Griffin. The injured: Quincy Foster and M. I. Taylor. Ten thousand pounds of powder exploded, and the bodies of Briggs and Griffin were blown into such small pieces that they could not be picked up. The other bodies were not badly mangled. The injured men will recover. The mill was two frame buildings, situated in a hollow about one-half mile long. One building was known as the glaze mill, where the explosion occurred, and the fire spread to the corning mill. The loss was $7,000. Structural Ironworkers Strike. Pittsburg, May 5. A strike which is expected to extend to a national movement against the American Bridge company was ordered yesterday by the local union of structural iron workers and bridgernen, and over GOO men in this district went out today. Iowa for Hearst. Des Moines, la., May 5. William Randolph Hearst swept the field in the Iowa state Democratic convention held here yesterday. He had a majority of over 150 in the convention, and Hearst resolutions were adopted and Hearst delegates were selected. Dangerous Forest Fires. Tomahawk, Wis., May 5. Forest Ares are burning and spreading rapidly in this section and north of here near Moncoua and along the Soo railroad. TERSE TELEGRAMS As s result of a c'ondburst in central Texts live children were drowned. By the explosion of a powder mill, at Newport, Ind.. four persons were killed. The grand jury at Denver, has returned forty indictments against twenty-six persons alleging fraud. A hurricane devastated Cochin China, May 1. About a hundred natives were killed and great damage was done. Judge Goodwin, of Aurora. 111., has been ae lected by Io-t master General Payne for the position of Assistant attorney general for the postofflee department. At Angelica. N'. Y., the bodies of John Vangorder and his sister were found in the sittingroom of their home. They had been murdered by robbers during the night. Sam Park, the New York walking delegate Who wa9 sent to Sins? Sing several months ago after hia conviction on a charge of extortion, ( died in the prison Wednesday. 1 Later reports of the Russian reverse on the Talu are to the effect that the Japanese captor d 28 small rapid fire guns, besides 20 leld guns. Tbty also captured 30 Russian officers and ouer &00 men. A. general strike of the Union teamsters 'of Grand Rapid. Mich , was called by. a vote of the local union, the members demanding that the team-owners meet them to arbitrate &iffr , uw regarding boars and wage

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GENERAL CONFERENCE Of the Methodist Church in Session at Los Angeles. Los Angeles, Cal., May 5. The absence of many delegates at the opening session of the 31st general conference of the Methodist Episcopal church, due to belated trains, disturbed to some extent the program that had been arranged, and the first day's work ended at 6 o'clock last evening with nothing accomplished except the selection of a conference secretary. This honor fell to Rev. James B. Hingely of the Minnesota conference, and it required three ballots to make a choice. The afternoon session met at 3 o'clock and spent three hours in balloting for secretary and in referring to committees various resolutions bearing on the questions to be considered by the conference. Last night at 8 o'clock the reception of the general conference by the citizens and churchmen of Los Angeles was held at the pavilion. Addresses of welcome by representatives of the state, city and church in southern California and responses by prominent worn hour. delegates occupied until a late Bryan's Influence at Home. Lincoln, Neb., May 5. W. J. Bryan controlled the Democratic convention in his home county yesterday and a platform reaffirming the Kansas City platform was adopted. No names for presidential choice were mentioned, the convention voting to adopt the unit rule and practically agreeing to act as Bryan thinks best in the national convention. To Secure Japanese Investments. Seoul, May 5. Representatives from the chamber of commerce of the Japanese communities have met at Chemulpo and formulated six articles embodying suggestions to the mayors of the various Japanese communities in Korea and requiring an official guaranty for the security of Japanese investments in the interests of the country. Omaha, Neb., May 5. Rev. Father Edward Geary, assistant pastor of Holy Family Catholic church, is dead as the result of injuries inflicted on him by highwaymen Monday night, who attempted to rob him in front of his church. Father Geary was seventy-five years old and has been a pastor in this city for twenty-three years. "Hello Central," Give me any grocery, they all keep "Ideal Bread." The Finest Cleaner Made Cleans bath tubs perfectly. Every Woman is interested ana mourn know about the wonderful MARVEL Whirling Spry The new Varlnnl Pyrlncr. njrr..Most Convenient. It Clrttaiwa In. taut.; . Aik yrarsrasKlntfar II. I f he cannot supply the MAIIVK1.. accept no other, bat send stamp for Illustrated book mM. Itari Pftves "foil particulars and directions In. valuable to ladies. M A RV K&i CO., mag,, new sent.

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Cf rcnirstantlal Reports Carry the Conviction That Admiral Togo's ' Plan Worked at Last. While No Official Conformation of These Reports Are At Hand They Seem Credible. London, May 5. The Tokio correspondents of both the Telegraph and the Chronicle assert that Port Arthur is effectually "corked." London, May 5. The opinion gains ground here that the Japanese have at last effectually blocked Port Arthur. No official Japanese report on the subject has yet been received, but the Tokio correspondents are very posi tive regarding the matter and describe the determination with which the enterprise was undertaken. The Telegraph's correspondent declares that the entrance to Port Arthur is "absolutely sealed," and adds that the Japanese fleet in effecting its purpose steamed into the entrance at full speed and that the naval officers who made the two previous attempts begged permission to carry out the next attack by daylight, that being easier, and their request was granted. "So determined were they to succeed," adds the correspondent, "that they decided it necessary to lose half their men. The number of casualties sustained by tne Japanese has not yet been announced." In favor of the supposition of Japanese success in blocking Port Arthur, it is pointed out that the previous attempts had left the channel so narrow that a couple of vessels sunk in the fairway would probably suffice to seal up the entrance, while there is a noticeable evasion and half-hearted-ness in the Russian denials of the enemy's success. There is no confirmation here of the Paris rumor that an engagement between Russian and Japanese squadrons had taken place off Vladivostok, and St. Petersburg knows nothing of the rumored capture of New Chwang. It is reported that the Japanese advanced to within eighteen miles of Feng Wang Cheng and that another engagement is expected almost immediately. Major General Kashtalinsky's insistence on the fact that he was ordered to accept battle by Lieutenant General Zassalitch is interpreted as showing his intention to throw the responsibility upon that officer for risking a fight with his inferior forces and to confirm the reports that General Zassalitch had been censured. Reports have been received here that the Japanese captured a quantity of railroad material after Sunday's battle. This is supposed to indicate that the Russians had made great progress with the railroad from the main Manchurian line to the Yalu. If this is so it would be a simple matter for the Japanese to repair this line, which would materially assist them in their advance through a difficult countrj'. English correspondents with the Japanese forces on the Yalu are permitted to send the most ample descriptions of the people and the country traversed, but not a word about the fighting. ! A Tien Tsin correspondent says he is convinced that the Russian position in southern Manchuria is exceedingly weak in consequence of the enormous number of men detached to guard the railway and to obtain provisions. He believes that the forces at Hai Cheng and Liao Yang are greatly over-estimated. The camps, he says, are nu merous, and there are few men in them. There are several fortifications in the hills between Feng Fang Cheng and Hai Cheng, but the line of communication is weak and straggling. Some reports current here state that the Japanese loan will be $50,000,000 at 6 per cent and will be issued simultaneously in London and New York. The Cost of Battle. St. Petersburg, May 5. The Russian losses at the battle of Klu Lien Cheng were 2,000 men and forty officers far greater than previous reports indicated. This is the official estimate of Major General Kashtalinsky, who directly commanded the division that suffered the brunt of the attack and whose report has just been received by the emperor. Many are inclined to place the Russian losses even higher. General Kashtalinsky mentions also that more than 700 wounded had arrived at Feng Weng Cheng and these may not be included in his calculations. He made no attempt to estimate the Japanese losses, merely stating that they must have been colossal. Sully's Offer Rejected. New York, May 5. The creditors of Daniel J. Sully & Co., have again rejected Sullys offer of settlement and adopted a resolution declaring that no more offers would be considered until Sully has withdrawn his objections In the bankruptcy court to their involuntary petition. , . .

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