Richmond Palladium (Daily), 30 June 1904 — Page 8
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RICHMOND DAILST PALLADIUM, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1904.
1 1 1' i i Mini m 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 n n t T"T,,H"i"iiMi"i"ii"t M i.'.i n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i-i i vm-i-vw THE PARTY'S CREED
9 (c7
2
Friday and Mb
Bargains Over the Entire Store That Mean Two Busy Days .....
Ladles' Wash Suits Our west window tells the story. Why bother with the making, selecting of styles and trimming when such beautiful suits can be had for the cost Of making, say nothing of material.
SEE WEST WINDOW. Ladies' prltty, nobby Suits, $2.00 up to... .............. . . ... See them!
$8.00
Ladles9 Shirt Waists Specially reduced for Friday and Saturday. Our entire line of White India Linen fljO EZt Waists at Special Discount, 85c to Wil Ladies' Wash Skirts Just received more than J 00 fine Wash Skirts made of pique, duck and gingham. Some of them have been selling at $2.00. Friday 4 Art and Saturday . 3liUU
Satin Striped Lawns 50 pieces fine Satin Striped Lawns, fancy figures, stripes, polka dots all colors, including champaign colorings easily worth 2c; Friday and Saturday I 2C
One lot of 25c Dress Ginghams, to close at Ten Dozen Ladies' Fancy Drop Stitch Hose, 50c value, for 2 days 35c, or 3 pair for . .
Cents' Furnishings Fine Madras Nselfcee SSirts, $l 00 quality, Friday nnd Saturday
25 doz. Men's Fancy Sox, 1 5c quality, Friday and Saturday 3 for See our line o finely trimmed, good elastic, Men's Suspenders, Friday and Saturday. .
I2 c $1.00
75c
Clear
Enunciation of Principles, by Chicago Convention.
REPUBLICANISM'S PROUD HISTORY
Found the Country In the Slough of Commercial Despond and Placed It3 Feet on the Firm Rcsk of Prosper- . Ity Protection a Cardinal Doctrine of Republicanism Splendid Record t of the Administration cf Theodore ' Roosevelt. The full-text platfcrm adopted, by the National convention of the Republican party at Chicago on June 22nd is as follows: Fifty years ago the Republican party
came Into existence dedicated among other purposes to the great task of arresting, the ' extension of human slavery. In 1800 It J 1 elected Us lirst president. During twenty- ' four of the forty-four years which have i I elansed since the election of Lincoln the
I , Republican party has held complete control
n baa sot fvl ie gvernm-' 7 tte tocia IV -V
pie. loi
.LEE B. H USB MUM
1,H"M"M"I"1-XmI III M"H"H"H"M Mill ! :......M-M
ahrmae's
718 MAIN STREET
We have the mostccmplete line of
Hot Weather Shoes in the city at prices the very lowest.
Men's"patent colt low shoes, hand sewed, at
Ladies hand turn low shoes, patent tip, at
ILOGAL ITEMS?,
Optical goods at Haner's. W. Rossiter, carpet layer, phone 13S1. Mrs. W. S. Hiser's shorthand school.
Dr. Park for lik N. Tenth street.
Misses low shoes. Children's low shoes Canvas shoes for men and boys at 50c a tai
FRED C. LAHRMAN, 718 Main Street.
h class dentistry, Lady assistant.
The finest stock farm in this vicinity. Apply to Moore, over G N. 7th St. Mrs. Laura Brooks and Son, Sidney, are spending the week near Kushville. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Coffin, of Indianapolis, are visiting Mrs. Coffin's mother, Mrs. William Baxter in this city. The giving of dark green trading stamps will continue and the premium store on South Seventh street will re
main here.
Typewriters, all makes, rented, sold. Rentals, $3 to $5 per month.
Repairs and ribbons for all machines. Tyrell, W. U. Tel, office. 'Phone 26.
FIRST
CUT
(Continued From First Page.)
but
harmony, and although this is
the first season of the band, it was plain that much practice only could have brought out such fine results. ; Individually the performers are all first-class musicians, and collectively s well the grandstand at the Driving
Park will not be able to bold the crowd that will be there tonight. The attendance was cut down by the rain last night, but still, the stand
was very well filled. j
Sixty Years of Popularity is the record of Painkiller (Perry Davis'), but the shops are full of imitations made to sell upon the great reputation of the genuine; be cautious, therefore, when you ask for 3
30-2 i bottle to see that you get the genu
ine. An unfailing remedy for uiiglis, colds, bronchitis.
The World's CreatestNewspaper
The CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Up-to-date Farmers Read "Practical Farming" The beat Agriculture Department in the West.
For Women Fashions, Beauty Hints Household; Talks, Book Reviews For Men Market Reports Sporting News, Fair Politics For Children Cut-Outs, Comics, Stories
D. OF R. Members of Eden Rebekah Lodge No. 30, are requested to meet at the lodge room this evening, June 30th, at 7 p. m. to make arrangements to attend the funeral of Sister Ida Mitchell. By order of Elizabeth Kemp, W. G.
TENOR CLEF TRIO. The Tenor Clef Trio will appear at the Second Baptist church under the management of Prof. 0. J. Butler, July 19th. Rev. Gaines, pastor.
The Stately, Majestic, Ostentatious and Educational Pageant of Barnum & Bailey. The parade of the Barnum & Bailey Greatest show on earth is this year said 1o be superb and most marvelous.' It contains many novel features of h high educational character which are of great value to every child. The inaugural parade will take place about 10 o'clock a. m., in all cities in which the great show will exhibit.
i PEOPLES EXCHANGE
WANTED Four hands to plow corn, work in the harvest and do general farm work. Good wages. Tom Mertz, Salisbury Road. Both 'phones. ntf. WANTED Small farr.ily washings
and gentss' washings, also at 320 south eighth street. Enquire upstairs.
. MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT
A grand musical entertainment will be given at the Brand Army Hall on the evening of July 4th, for the benefit of Eureka lodge No. 3. Everybody cordially invited. Admission 10c. 30-3t
Supt. O. R. Baker, of Winchester, and his little son were in Richmond yesterday evening betweeen trains. The professor is a native of Wayne county and is always a welcome visitor here.
McCutcheon's Cartoons
$4.CO a Year Daily $6.50 Daily and Sunday
STORAGE Ground and Main. Vera
floor, sixteenth Smith.
rOR SALE-Old papers for sale at the Palladium office, 15 cents
hundred and some thrown
FOURTH OF JOLT PRICE LIST
in.
FOR SALE House hold goods of all kinds, including bookcase and roll top desk, 232 Richmond Ave. . : 28-5t
6 ball Roman candles lc each 8 ball Roman aandle .4 for 5c 10 ball Roman candle 3 for 5c 15 ball Roman candle 3 for 10c 20 ball Roman candle 5c each 2 oz. sky rockets lc each
3 oz. lb
sky rockets sky rockets
sky rockets
LObI A pair ofsteel rimmed classes 1 lb
; between 5th and 9th on Mam or be- . -iWe retail at wholeale prices. - , tween 9th and Main and N. B. Fin- ; ILIFFS" DEPARTMENT STORE
of the goveiaiuent. ior eighteen more or the forty-four years it has held partial control through the possession of ou or two branches of the government, while the Dem-
! ocratlc party, during the same period, has
This long tenure of power by tle ltepnmican party ia not due to i-iiuuce. it is a demonstration that the Itepulillvnn r:i: ty has commanded the confidence ol tne American people for nearly two generations to a degree never equaled In mr hhto-.v. .ti! has disDlaved a hurh cuuuc.iy f. -J
i government which has been inside even mt.v I conspicuous by the Incapacity nnd iulli-m ity of purpose shown by us oiwumts. I The Republican party entered tiii.ui :t:; I present neriod . of complete hi;ju--ui:;-y in ' 18U7. We have every right to oiigi-aiulrt-.' I ourselves upon the work since iiien acI couipllshcd, for it has added luster even to I the traditions of the party wh'.ch carried the government through the stories of tiitf ' civil war. I - We then found the country after four
years or lieinocratic ruie in evil puui. oppressed with misfortune and doubtful of the future. 1'ublic credit had been lo.vered, the revenues were declining, the debt was growing, the administration's attitude toward Spam was feeble and mortifying, the standard of values was threatened and uncertain, labor was unemployed, business was punk in the depression which h:id succeeded the panic of lmtii, hope was faint and coutidencK was gouc. We met these unhappy conditions vigorously, effectively and at once. We replaced a Democratic tariff based on free trade principles and garnished with sectional protection by a consistent protective tariff, and Industry, freed from oppression
S fllia stimuiaieu uy me encouragement 01 wise laws, has expanded to a degree never J I lwfiiie known, has cououered new markets
I and has created a volume of exports which
Under the Dinsley tariff labor has been
fully employed. Wages have risen and all j
industries nave revivea ana prospered. e firmly -established the gold standard which was then menaced with destruction. Confidence returned to business and with confidence an unexampled prosperity. For deficient revenues, supplemented by Improvident issues of bonds, we (fave the country an income whicli produced a large surplus and which enabled us. only four years after the Spanish war had closed, to remove over one hundred millions of annual war taxes, reduce the publ.e debt and lower the interest charges of the government. The public credit, which had been so lowered that in time of peace a Democratic administration made large loans at extrav-a;a-it rates of interest, in oidr to pay current expenditures, rose under Republican administration to its highest point, and enabled us to borrow at 2 per cent, even In time cf w ar. We refused to palter longer with the miseries of Cuba. We fought a quick and victorious war with Spain. We set Cuba free, governed the island for three years and then gave it to the Cuban peonle with order restored, with ample rev.ji...-, .ith education and public health established, free from debt, and connected with the
United states uy wise provisions ior our mutual interests. In the Philippines we have suppressed insurrection, established order and given to life and property a security never known there before. We have organised civil government, made it effective and strong in administration, and have conferred noon
the people of those Islands the largest civil liberty they have ever enjoyed. Uy our possession of the Philippines we were enabled to take prompt and effective action in the relief of the legations at Pekin and a decisive part in preventing the partition, and the preservation of the integrity of China. The purchase of a route for an isthmian canal, so long: the dream of American statesmanship, is now an accomplished fact. The great work of connecting the Pacific and Atlantic oceans by a canal is at last begun, and it is due to the Republican partr. We have passed laws which will bring the arid lands of the United States within the area of cultivation. We have reorganized the army and put It in tke highest state of efficiency. Osr administration of the great departments of the government has been honest and efficient, and wherever wrongdoing has been discovered the Republican administration has not hesitated to probe the evil and bring offenders to Justice without regard to party or political ties. Laws enacted by the Republican which the Democratic party failed to enforce and which were Intended for the protection of the public against the unjust discrimination or the illegal encroachment of vast aggregations of capital have been fearlessly enforced by a Republican president, and new laws insuring reasonable publicity as to the operations of great corporations, and providing additional remedies for the prevention of discrimination in freight rates have been passed by a Republican congress. In ihis record of achievement during the last eight years may be read the pledges which the Republican party has fulfilled. We propose to continue these policies and we declare our constant adherence to the i following principles: Protection which guards nd develops our industries is a cardinal policy of the Republican party. The measure of protection should always at least equal the difference
in the cost or production at home and abroad. We Insist upon the maintenance of the principles of protection and, therefore, rates of duty should be readjusted only when conditions have so changed that the Cublic interest demands their alteration, ut this work cannot safely be committed to any other hands than tuose of the Republican party. To trust it to the Democratic nartv la to
Invite disaster. Whether. a in 1892, the Democratic party declared the protective tariff unconstitutional, or whether It demands tariff reform, or tariff revision. Its real object is always the destruction of the protective system. However specious the name, the purpose Is eTer the same. A Democratic tariff has always been followed by business adversity, a Republican tariff by business orosperity. To a Republican congress and a Republican president this great question can be safely lutrusted. When the only free trade country among the great nations agitates a return to protection, the chief protective country should not falter In maintaining It. We have extended widely oar foreign markets, and we believe In the adoption of all practicable methods for their further ex
tension, including commercial reciprocity wherever reciprocal arrangements can be effected consistent wltli tlie principles of protection and without injury to American agriculture, American labor, or any American industry. We believe. It to be the duty of the Republican party to uphold the gold standard and the integrity and value of our national currency. The maintenance of the gold standard, established by the Republican farty, cannot- safely be committed to the euiocrntic party, which resisted its adoption and has never given any proof since that time of belief In it or fidelity to It. ; While every other industry has prospered
'dies of fore!rn governments has not f
many years received from tne
of the United ftates Adequate
nicnt of ur..- kind. We tnerer
tslatlon which will eneonr.if e ui :
the Aiiiti.;iu i:ie:eii.uit lir.ULt,
cordially approve the b-gnaiii r, cf
coiifevias, wti.'cir cteaied tue me.e
ruie cimiruifsicn to iuvsi!puev;iy upon tlusj u!ieet.i 'I
A navy --pawe: t ul tnoug'j to - djfnv United fc't..tc iigu ut;t n.y attatA. t
hold the JltmviiK uct;r.: r.nd wat
our com incite i. ittiUt.. tu tue xni
t ie r.-eiiimf of tae Aiuf.cnu neon
iialut;t.u tucU a nary it tue nxed policy ct-
t.ic jut';iiiii.c;.u . 1 We vord ny approve the ' attitude of l'tOK.-deut ilitoxeveU ml a .?-; ,u regard to tnc fiMUK.ua of Cs biiiii.'. sn.l
lu-.;j.;e a - coui.iinsncw 01 me uepuoi.cua
Ki.vy- .u iu.it ii-.eri.u. , ii.c Civil service law- .was placed on U
statute boo by luo iucpaiji.cuu - part
v.--i.cli ms I'.lwuy rtista'ned .it, and
renew or former declaration tuat It shall be tuorougiil b-r.srtt enforced. We are ulways ialudfcl ;f .thc country's . debt to tbe aohl.era tJ. u.lo:'s . of '- tiieUnited - Stale, and we believe In mating V ample provision for them and in the l.beral administration of the pension laws. . We favor the peaceful settlement of International differences by arbitration. ' We commend the vigorous e Jo its made by the administration to pitert American citizens In foreign land'?, and pledge ourselves to Insist upon tne just and equal f rotcction of all our citizen abroad. It is he unquestioned duty of the government -to procure for all our citizens, without distinction, the rights of travel and sojourn In friendly countries, and we declare ourelves in favor of all proper efforts tending; to that end. Our great interests and our growing commerce In the Orient render the condition of China of high importance to the United
States. We cordlullji commend the policy pursued in that direction by the administrations of President McKluley and President-Roosevelt. We favor such congressional action as shall determine whether by; special discriminations the elective franchise in any state has been unconstitutionally limited, . and. If such ia the case, we. demand tnat representation in congress and in electoral colleges shall be proportionally reduced as directed by the constitution of the United. States. - Combinations of capital and of labor are
the results of the economic movement f the age, but neither must lie permitted to
3 for 5c . .5 ceach .10c each
der please return to 46 South 5th
3
.Sixh and Main streets.
la t Ion, American shipping encuged In for
Ign t ratio in competition with the low cost of construction, low wages and heavy sul-
Infriuge upon the rights nnd interests f the" people. Such combinations, when lav -fully formed, for lawful purposes, are !!'. - entitled to the protection of the laws, bi t both are subject to the laws, and, neither ! can be permitted to break them. j The g'-eat statesman and patrlotfc Amer- j lean. William McKinley, who was re elected by the Republican party to the presidency four years airo, was assassinated just nf the tiireshhold of his second term. Tht entire notion mourned his untimely deat!t and did that justice to his g'reat qualities of mind and character wh.'ch -history will confirm and repeat. The American people were fortunate In his successor, to whom they turned with a trust and confidence which have been fully justified. President Roosevelt brought to the great responsibilities thuo sadly forced upon him a clear head, a brave henrt. an earnest patriotism and high ideal of public duty and public service. True to the principles of the Republican Earty and to the policies which that party ad "declared, he has also shown h!mso!f ready for every emergency and has' meS new and vital questions .with ability and with success. The confidence of the people In hi justice Inspired 1 y his public career enabled him i to render personally an Inestimable service -to the country bv bringing aTwut a settlement of the coal strike which threatened such disastrous results at the opening of the winter in PJ02. Our foreign policy under his administration has not only been able, vigorous and dignified, but in the highest degree successful. The complicated questions which arose in Venezuela were settled in such a way by President Roosevelt that the" Monroe doctrine was signally vindicated, and the cause of peace and arbitnftion greatly advanced. His prompt and vigorous action In Pm- . ama, which we commend in the highest terms, not only secured to us the canal . S route, but avoided foreign complications which might have been of a very serious 1 character. , . He has continued tbe policy of Preslden.-) McKinley in the Orient ami -our position in . ' -China, signalized by our recent comnwrJ A cial treaty with that empire, has never ; been so high. i ', He secured the tribunal by which the " vexed and per'.lors question of the Alaskan. . i. boundary was finally settled. Whenever crimes against hnmantty have been perpetrated which have shocked or people his protest has beeu made and onr good offices have been tendered, but always 1 with due regard to international obliga- ( tions. Under his guidance we find ourselves at '
peace with all the world, and never were we more respected or our wishes more regarded by foreign nations. Prominently successful In regard to our foreign relations, he has been equally for
tunate in dealing with domestic questions. Tbe country has known that the public credit and the national ciirmwy were absolutely safe In the. hands of his administra
tion. In the enforcement of the laws he , ' has shown not only courage, but the wis- r dom which understands that to permit laws I to be violated or disregarded opens thedoor to anarchy, while the just enforcement ! of the law is the soundest conservatism. 3 He has held firmly to the fundamental i American doctrine that all men must obey , the law, that there must be no distinction between rich and poor, between strong and weak, but that justice and equal p-otectlon under the law must be secured to every citizen without regard to race, creed or condition. His administration has been throughout vigorous and nonorable. high-minded and patriotic. We commend It without reservation to the considerate Judgment of tbe Americaa people. it is incredible, but it seems to be true, that most of the Democratic leaders appear to be ignorant of the tariff history of Great Britain, which for so many years was held up to us as a paragon of fiscal and industrial wisdom. The truth is that England built j up an enormous trade under the policy ' of protection. When her commercial supremacy was established . and when it was assumed that England could successfully compete with all other nations, free trade was considered. But axt until the free traders of that country were led to believe that other coun- " tries would adopt their policy did they "
themselves adopt it. But the drift or , the world since then has been in the- ; : other direction, and even England's , ' experience has not been satisfactory. So "now, as John Sharp William, the Democratic leader in the house, has publicly declared, even free trade Brit - f sin Is on the way back to protection. After centuries of success under protection and a half century of disappointment under free trade, Great Britsin prepares to loin th9 other nations in the drift toward protection. Her? If s fact of overwhelming significant. , , that everybody should keep in mi? X all the while if he is to have a graspof the tariff question that he needs in order to vote intelligently on the sub ject. Of course the leaders of the Democratic party are not all willing to admit this, and there are a good many reasons to believe that some of then do not even know the facts In the case, -incredible as this ignorance seems to bt. y . ' . Honolulu," June 47 Jonah Komulae, a member of the house of representatives, and E. H. Johnston, a lawyer, have been sentenced to imprisonment for one year at hard labor for conspiracy to deft aud the territory through tie collection of fraudulent : Touchers for expenses incurred by ths-
house of representatives. .
At
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H-.H 1' i M1 M '1 1 1 I1 I-I-I-l'l-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-H-I-H-I-I-l-I"!'
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