Richmond Palladium (Daily), 20 May 1904 — Page 3

RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1901.

TIIEEE.

CURED HIS PARALYSIS And Won Lift-Long Gratitude of R. B. S. CLARKE Paralytic seizures Left Him After Using ittunyon's ; Paw Fats.

A VETERAN HONORED

Corydcn Campaigner Nominated for Reporter of Supreme Ccurt.

Gas City, Grant Co., Ind., Dear Sir: I owe you a debt of gratitude, and -words are insufficient to express my heartfelt thanks to you. I have suffered for four years from nervous prostration, which brought on a kind of paralytic attack. I was paralyzed in mind and body for about one minute and that would occur once every hour through the day. I have been under the treatment of very

able-doctors, but they failed to cure me. When I had taken about hal f of the second bottle of your Paw Paw medicino I was completely cured of those p::vJytic attacks and 1 have not-had one since. May the Lord bless you for being the means of bringing so much happi ness tc eo many homes. Very truly yours, (Signed) B. CLARKE, P. O. Box 57. Cast away all tonics, all medicines and all stimulants and let Munyon's Paw Paw make you well. It will lift you into the high altitudes of hope and hold you there. It will give exhilaration without intoxication It makes old people feel young and weak people feel strong. Sold by all Druggists. Large bottles $ 1. Paw Paw Laxative' Pills 25c. a bottle.

Newspaper men and veterans of the civil war are gratified because of the recognition given to one of their numbers a the recent Republican state convention, when George W. Self was nominated for Reporter of t!ia Supreme Court before the conclusion of the second ballot, over three popular competitors. In early life George W. Self did what his hands could find to do. As a boy he worked in" shipyards and brickyards. He toiled in spring and summer, and attended school in fall and winter. He read law with the late Judge Slaughter of Corydon and was duly admitted to practice. He has always been attentive to his business. He became well known in his county,

l (Patented! Lr

Laundry Blue

At All Grocers

Won't Freeze Won't Break Won't Spill Won't Spot Clothes Gosts 10 Cents, Equals 20 Cents worJh of any other kind of bluing

GEORGE W. SELF. and, by courteous treatment and honorable conduct, won the confidence of his people and built up a good practice, which he continues to enjoy. Some years ago a Republican newspaper was established in his county, but the proprietor was not able to maintain it. In order to keep a Republican organ in his county, Mr. Self purchased it, and, though knowing nothing about the practical work of a plant of that character, with his income from the plant and his legal pro

fession, he has ever since been able to keep the newspaper alive to battle for Republican principles. As a result a Democratic majority has faded from 700 to 175. Mr. Self has held office but once. In 1894 he was elected a state senator by over 900 majority, in a district hitherto Democratic by 700. He was not a candidate for re-election. He has served as precinct committeeman, county secretary and chairman, and was eight years a member of the Republican state central committee, having retired at the last organization of the state committee. Mr. Self is regarded as a good organizer. He was a I'nion soldier during the war of the rebellion.

were denied tickets to the hall, despite the fact that the. were scores of empty seat3, and a Parker badg3 was a sufficient "open sesame" to doorkeepers. The proceedings of the convention were one continuous shriek from start to finish, the machine doing its work relentlessly. . The character of .the proceedings may be judged from the statement of Henry Colerick,. a prominent Allen county anti-Taggart leader, on the floor of the convention, , that three hundred Hearst delegates had been robbed of their right to sit in the convention by the state committee,' by the refusal of Senator Kopelke of Lake county, former Democratic candidate for State Treasurer, to serve as a vice president of the convention because of the outrageous tactics adopted, although he came to the convention as a Parker man, and the repeated refusal of the chair to permit challenging of the votes of counties by Individual delegates, without regard to whether or not the vote had been correctly cast. Those of the speakers who protested against instructions for Parker were greeted with cat-calls, howls of derision and every variety of insult known to the hoodlum hanger-on of the Marion county Democratic machine.

The doors of the Republican party

are open to Democrats who fail to see

in this sort of thing "a return to the

Democracy of Hendricks, McDonald

and Voorhees," as it is described by the

Indianapolis organs of the reorganizes, the Sentinel and the News, whose expurgated accounts of the convention give no suggestion of the despotic character of the proceedings. The fair-minded observer will see in it only a return to the practices of Simeon Coy, and honest Democrats will resent at the polls the intrusion of such methods into the politics of the state of Indiana.

TAX RATE HAS BEEN LOWERED.

fQ W vr' W ' I .. . I -. ' .--' , ' . im Pit miik ' A ''l I I i- s'.v I ' To be a successful wife, to retain the love j

BLAZE AWAY! Who cares? I'm fortified with an "Eld orado" laundered collar, " The kind t hat don't melt down."

The Eldorado steam Laundry No. 18 North Ninth St. Phone 117. Richmond, Indiana. A FINE

Wiggle-Stick is a stick of soluble blue in a Lit.T baa inside a perforated wooden tnbe, thronh which the water flows and dissolves ti color as needed. DIRECTIONS FOR USE:

Yigsle-Stlck around in the water lifnnEf.icf sred only by !,M.TNDY BUJS COMPANY. CMcajr.

!aAa Li e laR

"I flr,l Ci';c:hrri so .""'"'I that I ironM not 1S wiliiM!;t tM";ii. 1 V. u t i'riu c.lccl 11 trt'it deal itSl tor j ill liver am! lie:,.laei,.. . Kw since taking CaKruret s ( liii'iy ( ' :tt h ic I fre) i fry Hiut'b fctt.i r I sh:!l r err u, n ! y recom meni them to my frieiuiS

li t lie i, t, im-l lie ! i

Anna JJaitiet., (3irii .Miii Ni

e ( r '111.

i ail Kiver, Mass.

BesT TorThe Bowels

ij'w ' CAN CATHARTIC '

Pleasant. Pa1nfn(,lf. Potent. Taste Good. Do Oofwl, Kover Sieken, Weaken or .; rl . 10c. ''. 50o. Never sold in lei'k. 'J 'i ! K' linirif) t:n,let tamiied CCC, GuarauteuU vo c ;rc or y.mr money back. Sterling Rerredy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 601 AKKl'AL S ALE, TEH MILLION BOXES

,mm& s mm

Weak Men Made Vigorous

k

m

vsx? $T3i)j$? rsxpxr siram&r

What PEFFER'S NERVIGDR Did!

It acts powerfully and nnlckly rures when all others fail. Youn men regain lo -t inanbood; old men recover youthful vipor. Abbolutely fanar- ... ..o N.mniKnpiiii. I.oHt Vitality.

1 mi potency. Nlirlitly KniiHion. Lost Power, .III... IT., fli.. M uninrT. H IMtinE UlH-

as. and' all rf ecu of telf-abnte or earcrtnf and

indifCTftion Wards off Insanity ana consumption. Don't let drtiRKist Impose a worthless substitute on von horaiKo if vilrl n inntfr nrofit. Insist on nav-

lnir FKKFKli'S KKVKiOK, or send for it Can e carried In vest pocket. Prepaid, plain wrapper.

niu in CiiruAi' iirnni itfnnAT. Pamphlet free

I'EFFKB MKJJICAL. ASS'N, Chicago, 111.

Sold by A. G. Luken & Co.

Harness for show

and harness for eyerf

day use may mean a difference In quality In some makes here tbey ar Identical In strength and durabil

ity. More styie, of

course. In fancy drtv

Ing harness; bnt all oar harness Is made

from good stooic and

every set maintain! onr reputation as to

workmanship and finish. All sorts of boras

equipments at very moderate prices. Tlie Wiggins Co.

Chairman of the Democratic State Convention Deals in Historical Romance. The Hon. Alonzo Greene Smith was chosen chairman of the recent Democratic state convention primarily on his reputation as a gentleman capable of pushing his program through regardless and delivering an address was only a secondary consideration. Hence it is not surprising that his extended comments on state

issues are in considerable part i

to be classified as romantic fiction i rather than as a contribution to im- j partial history. One of Mr. Smith's suggestions was that the Republican j party was responsible for the heaping 1 up of the state debt to the nine million )

dollar point during a period of Democratic control in Indiana because for most of that time, forsooth, they held

"the balance of power" in the legislature, and that they were entitled to no credit for paying the state debt because the state is now collecting its revenues under a law enacted by a Democratic legislature! Mr. Smith also gave forth the inference that the state debt had been diminished only to the extent of the revenues derived from the debt sinking fund, an oftrepeated assertion entirely at variance with the facts. Mr. Smith, who as attorney general derived from his office an income fully four times as great as that paid by the state to either of his Republican successors, and who naturally feels an interest in the

j tax-paying public, also alleged that the

Republicans had "increased the tax rate." Now as to the facts: The Democratic legislature of 1891 imposed

and nervous prostration.

mothers:

THAT STATE CONVENTION

Bulldozing Methods Score a Triumph

for the Reorganizers' Candidate. The political history of Indiana af

fords no parallel for the high-handed, dishonest and unrepublican methods

adopted at the recent Indiana Democratic state convention. They were employed by a coterie of politicians who had entered into contract with New York parties to deliver this state to the HiU-Parker-Belmont combine,

and were determined to deliver the

goods regardless of the proprieties or

even the decencies of politics.

A great deal has been said about the j the highest tax the state has paid since

liberal uso of money by the Hearst i 1SS7. being a total of So cents on each

be a successful wife, to retain the love

and admiration of her husband should be a woman's constant study. Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Potts tell their stories for the benefit of all wives and mothers. "Dear Mrs. Pixkham : Lyclia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will make eve mother well, strong, healthy and happy. I dragged through nine years of miserable existence, worn out with pain and weariness. I then noticed a statement of a woman troulded as I was, and the wonderful results she had had from your Vegetable Compound, and decided to try what it would do for me, and used it for three months. At the end of that time 1 was a different woman, the neighbors remarked it, and my husband fell in love with me all over again. It seemed like a new existence. I had been suffering with inflammation and falling of the womb, but your medicine cured that and built up my entire system, till I was indeed like a new woman. Sincerely yours, Mrs. Chas. R Ef.own, 21 Cedar Terrace, Ilot Springs, Ark., Vice President Mother' Club." Suffering women should not fail to profit by Mrs. Brown's experiences ; just as surely as she was cured of tbe troubles enumerated in bcr letter, iust so surely will Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable

Compound cure other women who suffer frov womb troubles, inflammation of the ovaries, kidney troubles, nervous excitability,

Head the story ot 31rs. Potts to all j i " Dk ar Mrs. Pixkiiam : During the early j part of my married life I was very delicate j in health. I had two miscarriages, and both j my husband and I felt very badly as we were ! p.nxious to have children. A neighbor who j had been vising Iydia E. Pinlcliam's ! Vegetable Compound advised me to try j it. and I decided to do so. I soon felt that ,

my appetite was increasing-, the headaches gradually decreased and finally disappeared, j and my general health improved. I felt as I if new blood coursed through my veins, tbe j eltiggisb. tired feeling disappeared, and 1 be- j came strong and well. ! " Within a year after I became the mother j of a strong healthy child, the joy of our home. You certainly have a splendid remedy, and I ; wish every mother knew of it. Sincerely j yours, Mrs. Axxa. Potts, 510 Park Ave., Ilot I Spring's, Ark." If you feel that there is anything at all unusual or puzzling about your case, or if you wish confidential advice of the most experienced, write to 3lrs. Pink-

ham, Lynn, Mass., and vou will be advised free of charge. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable. Compound has cured and is curing thousand? of cases of female troubles curing thorn inexpensively and absolutely, llemember this when you go to your druggist. Insist upon getting tydia " Pmlfkm's Vsgetahio Compound

On Street Car Line In Boulevard Addition AT A BARGAIN WV H, Bradbury & Son Westcott Block.

CO YEARfc EXPEHIEN";?

-km g a n en

1-1 I IiIU'IiM 1

-Si-

A f wi' iiSi. "Fv A

rfc7v,?, S7.f & U c. & 1 1 IS i

Anrone spndlng a sketch and descriptn iriaT lui'kly iuierf im. our o;niiiii free hoi !ier w in vt'iiticn is prrih' 1 r istenijihle. Coniniuiiic.i. strictly ..iiUdeiifial. HfiNnB03K rn Vaccina seiir. fieo. oliiett at:e!.(y f..; j.ti.ti. Patenra l.'fn throuch Munn 4 Co. .ciVo npti-ioluctic, without ch-iree. In the A !!i:n1som'v i'i!nslr.itij wee sly. l.nrset ii -dilation f ;il!v fsripfi:i I'.uri.a'l. 0m;s. ?3 i. ar : fo-ir rtioiiths, 1. StW Dyall rew (.. !tk.

contingent in Indiana, and doubtless it was well supplied. It required no detective work to determine, however, that the reorganizers were even better equipped with funds. Where this

money came from may be imagined

by those who know the relation of the

Parker candidacy to certain interests

$100 and $1.00 for each poll for the state. In 1893 a Democratic legislature imposed a levy lor that year of 34V2 cents on the $1.00, and for 1894 a levy of 33 2-3 cents on the $100. In 1S95 a Republican legislature reduced the levy to 30 1-G cents on the $100 for that year and made a further reduction

which are dissatisfied with the merger ! for 1896 to 29 2-3 cents. The 1S9G rate

decision and the general attitude of

President Roosevelt's administration

toward such combinations of capital as are illegal and oppressive, and desire

as president a man that they can use.

The caucuses preliminary to the con

vention of May 11th were characterized by the wildest disorder, precipitated by the bulldozing tactics of the Democratic machine, which, though in

alliance with David B. Hill, was un

mindful of his maxim: "There's no sense in cheating when there's no use of it." The action of the state committee in calling a snap state convention, separate from the convention for the nomination of a state ticket, the

sudden and secret caucus of the Seventh district delegates a month ago, the use of such methods as the Taggart machine is capable of adopting, culminating in personal assaults and the burning of ballots in Allen county and the creation of contesting delegations in several communities where th Parkerites were outvoted, the preliminary plans for organization adopted by the state committee all this made certain the triumph of the reorganizers, but, not content with all thia, they proceeded to use their embezzled power for the purpose of needlessly humiliating that element in the Indiana Democracy which is foolish enough to believe that the Democratic party ought to represent something more than the hunger of a political machine for a plethoric campaign fund and for the spoils of office. During the Indianapolis convention there wa3 not a moment when the Bryan element of the prrty stood the slightest show of exercising any influence upon the business of the meeting. The galleries were systematically packed with Parker partisans. The tickets were distributed through the Parker organization. Hearst' men

continued until 1903, when a Republican legislature increased the rate to 30 cents on the $100, and which increase also applies to 1904 taxes. This increase was added for the benefit of the state's educational institutions, the University at Bloomington, Purdue at L,afayette and the State Normal at Terre Haute, and was made necessary by the large increase of attendance at these institutions and to provide additional accommodations there. The tax rate is 12Ve per cent lower than during the period when Mr. Greene Smith and his colleagues were in control of state affairs, and yet the gentleman tells

the Democratic state convention that the Republicans have "raised the tax rate"!

THEATRE

O. C3-. MURRAY, Lessee and Manager " F R I D A W "m A Y 20" Tile Dearborn Theatre Management ' presents the one big operaticv comedy success of the year

Dont Be Fooled?

The market is belnjr flooded tvilh worth irottatiAn nt

' i0S ROCKY JVlOUNTAiW

- - .

To protect the public we call

YtkfSyV mark, printed on every paclc-

Far Selc by .-Ji UrviSUXL

ATE NTS srs will advise you whether your ideas can be patented. Small improvement and simple inventions have made much money for the inven

tors. .We develope your ideas or assist youin improving your invention. We takeout patents in United States, Canada and foreign countries. Our terms are reasonable. Marlatt & Dozier, V2-4S Color tal Bldg. Rlchmon

CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH

rEmWROVAL PILLS

M -TV"v Original and OiiIt Cenatne. V-! T-i TV A F E. ! i-'mm l.Kile. Drnrrirt ft for CIIK'HKSTKK-S KNOLISU f ''JWM '"- IK1) i :lit uietai'.ie anxct. -t A b''ir " tu. lukr no other. K Yu 1 I'"l,roii SahMltulion Md imttaf(J f!.n. ISuy of jotir lrucffit. or -'oi 4 i U k.mi for lrtl"ulara. Trttmon!.a V V -nd "Uellrr for I.B.1U." in iettr. by r. -X ' torn Mt.ll. 1 . Tniimnnii. Sfll r. v " Irui!(.. blrhrMrr 'hriuirl 'v, RotloB tbii pi.er tladUoa Nukk. 1'iilLA.. f K.

An Example of Temperance. Rev. J. B. Cranfill of Dallas, Tex., who will be remembered as the Prohibition candidate for vice president in 1892, attacked a fellow minister on board a train near Texarkana, Tex., on May 12th, and fired two shots at his unarmed adversary from a magazine pistol. Cranfill was placed under bond at Texarkana on a charge of assault to murder. The man whom this ex-vice presidential candidate tried to kill had secured from Cranflll's paper a libel judgment for $30,000. The Rev. Cranfill is one of those political preachers whose sweet spirit of Christian charity prompts them to declare from the pulpit that the man who does not vote their particular party ticket Is on the broad highway to perdition.

The reorganizers are asking the Bryanitps -.o vote for Parker because he voted lor Bryan, and they are asking the Clevelandites to support him because he was opposed to Bryanism. Yet they ridicule the Bryanltes.

with its ensemble of 75 artists, including ..THE FAMOUS STAR CAST and THE BIG BEAUTY CHORUS.

.Presented here in its entirety, and

precisely as given for 100 consecutive

nights in New York and 200 consecu

tive nights in Chicago.

Prices, 25c to $1.50. Sale of seats

opens at Nixon's Confectionery, 806 Main St., Wednesday, May 18.

Map of the World. A beautiful map, valuable for refrence, printed on heavp paper, 42x64 inches, mounted on rollers; edges bound in cloth, showing our new island possessions. The Trans-Siberian Railway, Pacific Ocean cabyes, railway lines and other features of Japan, China, Manchuria, Korea and the Far East. Sent on receipt of 25 cents in stamps by "W. B. Kniskern, P. T. M., Chicago North-Western Railway, Chicago, 111. Tickets on the Westcott Runabout and $150 check can be had at any of the cigar stores or saloons, or from any Red Man. Do not wait buy now, you may be the lucky one. Giv

en away at the Carnival, Saturday

nigkt, May 21.

The Quality Ym Want

You may not be able to judge meats but we are. We'll tell you which is good and why it is good. We'll sell you only the right kind. We provide the Best Meats sold anywhere. We are just as anxious for good meats as you and our experience protects you. P.J. MILES. 929 Ulaln St.

Reduced Fares to Cincinnati via The

Pennsylvania Lines. Excursion tickets at reduced fares

will be sold May 10th and 11th at all stations on the Pennsylvania Lines

to Cincinnati, account May Musical Festival. Also excuribn tickets to Cincinnati will be sold May 10th to 14th, inclusive, from certain stations, made known upon inquiry to local ticket agenty of Pennsylvania Lines.

1

Ask TMirdratiM for It.

I f li cannot supulv the JIAItVl:!., a -I't no

oilier, but send stamp for

illustrated book mbM. It gives full narticulars and directions in

valuable to ladies. !IAIt KL.CO. Tiuic lildff., Jew York.

Every Woman is interested and slioold know

about the wonderful

MARVEL Whirling Spray The new Trlol Syrlnee. IttjfC-

twn ana Aurfvm. Hest saf

est M 06t Convenient.

It tlrat In.tmyil.

Have your carpets taken up, cleaned and laid by the Monarch Laundry.

e&J-W iiii

Ml

Guaranteed

no to airicture.

ITHE Evans ChemicalCo.

MEN AND WOMEN. re Big G for unnatural tiiKchariiea, inflammations, 'rritations or ulcerations of til neon membranes. Pain lews, and not astrin gent or poisonous. Sold by DrareUla. o. sent in plain wrapper, bv ex ureas, prepaid, for 1 .00. or 3 bottles J2.7S. Circular sent on reqnesfe

TIME CAED

Richmond Street & Internrban Bailway Company. Cars leave hourly for Centerville, East Gennantown, 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. 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. DENMAN, Supt.

One way Colonist Rates to the fVest and Northwest via The C, CL t L. Washington, Oregon, Montana, tc For further information call on

Why don't you eat "Ideal Bread!" A. Blair, C. T. A. Home Thone 44,