Richmond Palladium (Daily), 26 July 1904 — Page 6
niomxom daily palldiuii, Tuesday, jtjly 26, 1904.
TRAINS Every Day flnneie. flarion, Pern and Northern Indiana cities via C. G: & L Leave Richmond Daily, except Sunday, 6:15 a m,7:05 p m. U:05amd'Iy Sunday only, 9:35 p m. Through tickets soia to all points. For particulars enquire of U. A. Blair. C. P. A, Home Tel. 44 PATENTS 2p )zJ will advise, you whether your ideas can be patented. Small improveI ments and simple inventions have made much money for the inventors. We develope your ideas ox assist youin improving your invention. We takeout patents in United States, Canada and foreign countries. Our terms are reasonable. Marlatt & Dozier, 42-43 Color tal Bldg. Rich mood CHICHESTER'S E WO p VIl.V8AFE. Alw.yi raliabl. Ladles uk DrMfrtm for uuiuiuvsiiui s ivnubAsn In KEU n-l 4old mn.lllo Ooxm. araiac with bin. ribbon. Take mo other. BefvM Dncnnm Rabatltatloaa mmi lmlta tla. Huj of jour lruggit. or 4r. it Firapi for Partl'Nlara. Teatlaiaalai: ..ad "Relief far Ladle," a UtMr, by rr tara Mali. 1 0.OOO Testimonials. SoM b Draggt.ia. Chleaeater CkeaaleaJ J. tabt paper Madlaon Konara. 1'HU.A- " MONEY TO LOAN. 5 and 6 per cent. Interest FIRE INSURANCE, In the leading companies. Managers for the EQUITABLE LIFE Assurance Society of New York. THE 0. B. FULGHAM AGENCY O. B. Fulgham. H. Milton Elrode Room 3, Yaughan Bldg. X"1 I II miu LUil greatest money nuking inventions have been suggested by minds familiar with the needs of the. age. . K THE AMERICAN INVENTOR "will keep you in touch with subjects of current interest in the line oi new inventions and experiment, it wil aid you to develop ideas of practical value. Issued on the 1st and 1 5th of every month. 1 Twentv-etoht earns each issue. Sold at al news stands 10c per copy or tent by mail $1.50 per year. THE AMERICAN INVENTOR. copy sent free Washington. D. C THE SHIRT WAIST is agitating QUESTION the men. Not bothering us much, however, shirtwaists, we will do the laundering. Carpents Cleaned by a New Process. THE RICHMOND STEAM LAUNDRY 1-H'l 1M11M HI -I-I-I-I O. G. mUtAY; Broker in Grain . ' Provisions and Stocks., Room 1, Tolonlal Building Telephones-Ola, Black 311; New 701' WHEN HI CHICAGO Stop at tha Northern Bmthm A Hotml Combined S floor, fixe new rooms. Meals a-la-Carta ai ail uuum BATHS OF ALL KIM OS, Turkish. Kussian. Shower. PlunKe.ete. The fjrt swimininir pool in the world. Turkish bath and Lodgme. l.OO. Most inexpensiv fcrst Class hotel ia Chicago. Right iu th, titan o 1 " NowNortharn Baths & Hotel
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MORPHINE
What is to Become of the Constantly Increasing Number of Drug Victir? Can They Be Oared? This question is agitating the minds of the best ministers, doctors and thinking men of today. There are J over a million drug users in the Unit ed States alone, and the number is rapidly increasing. All unite in say-L-j that a reliable cure is the only salvation. This is no ordinary dis ease and yields to no ordinary drugs r methods of treatment. We now offer our treatment which we guaran.n will cure any case of Morphine, Opium, Laudanum, Cocaine or other drug habit or refund your money. To any person suffering from this dreadful disease we will send a trial package of our treatment absolutely free. Write, today. All correspondence strictly confidential in plain en elopes. Address, Manhattan Thera peutic Association, Dep't B., 1135 Droadway, New York City. Woman U Interested and should know about the wonderful MARVEL Whirling Spray The new TaaJnal Syria. Jnjee(ton ana auction. Best lat est Most Convenient. It Cleaaaea lastaaU. Ask yaar dranlut for It. it ne cannot aiiDuiy tne MARVKL. accent no other, but send stamD for in nst ratea dook amea. it gives full particulars and directions in valuable to ladies. MARVKL CO., mm Tiaae mag., new lora. Nasal CATARRH In all its stages there should be cleanliness. Ely's Cream Balm Cleanses, fio ihoa and heals t9 discard membrane. It enres cfttarrli un J drives away a coid iu the head quickly. Cream Tialm Is placed into the nostrils, spread r over the membrane aud ia absorbed. .Relief is im mediate and a enre follows. It is not drying does not produce sneezing. Large Size, 60 cents at Drug gists or by mail ; Trial Size, 10 cents by mail. ELY BROTHERS BS Wtr-prt 3fwt. tpv orV Laundry Blue At All Grocers Won't Freeze Won't Break Won't Spill Won't Spot Clothes iosts 10 Cents, Equals 20 Cents vorth of any other kind off bluing Wiggle-Stick is a stick of soluble blue in a filter basr inside a perforated wooden tube, through which the water flows and dissolves the color as needed. ; DIRECTIONS FOR USE: fViggteStick around in the water Manufactured only by Z LAUNDWY BMW COMPANY. CJslcajrv From Chicago daily, June 1 to September 30. Correspondingly low rates from all other points. Two fast trains per day. The Colorado Special, solid through train, over the only double-track railway between Chicago and the Missouri River. Only one night from Chicago; two nights en route from the Atlantic Seaboard via the Chicago, Union Pacific and Nortn-Western Line Send two-cent stamp for folders and booklets, with list of hotels and boarding houses, rates and much valuable information concerning railway fares, scenery, climate, etc. All agents sell tickets via this line. A. H. WAGGENER. Traveling Agent, 22 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, III.
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BIG STRIKE GROWS
Stockyards Struggle Develops Into Great Industrial Fight. HOPE OF PEACE GONE With Allied Trade Out'In Sympathy One of Greatest; Strikes In History Is Now On. Nearly 30,000 Persons In Chicago Alone Are Idle In Consequence of Strike. Chicago, July 26. With all peace negotiations broken off and with all the allied trades unions employed at the different plants, with the exception of iue teamsters and the stationary engineers, out on strike in sympathy with the butcher workmen who quit work two weeks ago, the stockyards strike has settled down to what promises to be one of the bitterest fights between capital and labor in the history of America. As has been threatened for some time, the allied trades employed in the packing industry quit work when called on to assist the striking butchers in their efforts to bring the packers to terms. In several instances the men did not wait for the official notification from their leaders to go on strike, but threw down -ueir tools and quit work of their own accord. At 6 o'clock last night the statement was made by Michael J. Donnelly, president of the butchers' union, that every union employed at the stockyards with the exception of the teamsters and engineers, had responded to orders for a general sympathetic strike. The engineers, he declared, would join the strikers today and unless there was peedy settlement of the difficulty, he said the teamsters would undoubtedly Join their brother workmen in their struggle for supremacy. According to Mr. Donnelly, the sympathetic strike swelled the number of men who have quit work at the stockyards in Chicago alone to nearly 30,000 persons. Both sides to the controversy declare that they are perfectly satisfied with the present state of affairs and that they are w"Mng to make it a fight to a finish to determine who shall dictate the terms of a settlement. According to the packers the general strike was a failure, it being claimed by them that not over onehalf the members of the allied trades quit work when officially called out by their leaders. The further statement was made by the packers that should all the union men decide to Join the strikers it would make little d?TTerence to the employers, as they had sufficient resources to contest the ground for an indefinite period. On the other hand, the labor leaders assert tnat all the union employes at the different packing plants, together with several hundred employes of the Union Stockyards company, quit work in response to the general order for a sympathetic strike. A new phase of the strike situation developed late yesterday afternoon, when notice was given by the unions to the independent packers at the stockyards that their men would not be allowed to handle animals which had been brought into the yards or handled In any way by non-union men. It is necessary for these independent concerns to take all of their livestock into their yards over Union stockyards runways, where the stock must be handled by non-union men, since the union men employed by the stockyards company in this line of work were among the employes who Joined the sympathetic strike. The ultimatum of the unions loaves the independent packers no alternative but to receive their livestock directly from tne country or else close down business entirely. Before peace negotiations had been entirely broken off representatives of the teamsters' union were in conference with the packers In an effort to arrange some sort of a settlement which would prevent a spread of the strike. At this meeting the packers were asked to concede that the first peace agreement, signed last Wednesday and which was later repudiated by the strikers when a second strike was called, be declared null and void and that the packers submit a new proposition for peace terms. The committee also notified the packers that the striking butchers would stand by last Saturday's demand, which was that all men be reinstated within ten days or their cases be submitted to immediate arbitration; all butchers and casing men to be taken back within fortyeight hours after work was resumed. No progress towards a settlement was made at the conference, and the teamsters committee retired to consider a new proposal. Immediately upon the return of the teamsters' committee to union headquarters they entered into a conference with the representatives of the allied trades to consider a proposition submitted to the unions by the representatives of the packers. In the meeting between the teamsters and the packers, the latter offered to change the time of reinstating all the strikers from forty-five to thirty-five hours. They made no concessions other than this, and th!s proposal was submitted to wie allied trades committee. Trosident Donnelly, of the butchers' union, however, refused to consider the proposal, and all hoDe of an I Immediate settlement was lost
FINE SIMPLICITY
Will Mark the Notification at 8aga more Hill. Oyster Bay, L. I., July 26. The arrangements have been made for the notification of Theodore Roosevelt of his nomination for the presidency by the Republican party. The ceremony will take place tomorrow at 12:30 p. m. Following custom, the notification will be at Mr. Roosevelt's home. Sagamore Hill. The members of the notification committee, appointed by the Chicago convention, will assemble at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New York this evening to make preliminary arrangements for the ceremony of the following day. Speaker Joseph G. Cannon, chairman of the committee, wiii receive the members of the committee as they arrive there. At 3:30 o'clock Wednesday mcrning the committee the committee will board a special train at Long Island City for Oyster Bay. On account of the isolation of President Roosevelt's home, only 125 persons will be in the party, including the members of the notification committee and relatives and frends of President Roosevelt who re side in the vicinity of Sagamore Hill. CHEERED THE AUTO Crowd About Distressed Bank Welcomed Arrival of Gold. Columbus, Ohio. July 26. With $35,000 In gold, C. P. Cole, president of the Lancaster bank, made a dash in an automobile from Columbus to Lancaster, Ohio, arriving in time to prevent the bank from closing its doors In the face of a run. He made the run of forty miles in the fast time of one hour and twenty-three minutes. Crowds lining the sidewalk about the bank, gave a cheer as the automobile arrived and the nature of the cargo was made known. Ex-Postmaster Arrested. Winamac, Ind., July 26. A. G. Lewark, ex-postmaster at Medaryvllle, was arrested and brought here to answer a charge of perjury. Some time ago Lewark was held short in his government accounts to the extent of over $900, and his bondsmen were required to pay the shortage, Lewark having filed an exemption and escaped payment. It is now claimed that Lewark holds a $2,000 Judgment against some property in the Jasper county oil fields and that he failed to list this Judgment when he filed the exemption. Victims of Foul Well. Warsaw, Ind., July 20. City Marshal William H. FunK and City Engineer J. V. Goodman were killed by sewer gas in a lift well. Funk desended into the well to inspect the walls. He was soon asphyxiated, crying for help as he became unconscious. Goodman went after Funk, but no sooner reached the bottom of the well than he too succumbed to the gas. The bodies were recovered by use of pike poles. Dog Wrecked Auto. North Tonawanda, N. Y., July 26. George F. Schultz, a Buffalo lawyer, is in a serious condition and Mrs. A. L. Pearce of Sanborn lies at the point of death, the result of an automobile accident. While running at high speed on a country road Schultz's automobile struck a dog. The heavy machine was turned over in the ditch, crushing Schultz and Mrs. Pearce be neath it. Admits Heavy Shortage. Holyoke, Mass., July 26. John R. Blarney, for eighteen years treasurer of the eastern division of the Ameri can Wire Workers' association, has disappeared and in a letter to the secretary of the division, mailed from Chicago, he admits peculations amounting to over $10,000. Noted Minister Dead. Bellefontaine, Ohio, July 26. Rev J. B. Helwig, D.D . a noted Presby terian preacher, is dead in a sanitari um here at the age of seventy-one years. He was formerly president of Wittenberg college at Springfield, O. Ohio Domestic Tragedy. Youngstown, Ohio, July 20. James Kennedy, aged thirty-one, last night shot and killed his wife, aged twentyeight. He then fired two bullets into his own body. Kennedy's wounds are not serious. Packers Circumvent Pickets. Fort Worth, Tex., July 26. -The strike situation here has been without feature. Pickets have been main tained as usual, but in spite of these the plants have put on 150 new work men. TERSE TELEGRAMS It is said that the fortune left by the late Paul Kruger ia between $i,0i0,000 and $"i.000,000 Bishop J. J. Fox has been consecrated bishop of Green Bay, Wis., diocese of the Catholic church. In accordance withorders issued by General Tf uropatiin, the Russians have evacuated New Chwang. Possible complications between Russia and other powers play an important role in the wheat market. The Pike attraction, "Under and Over the Sea," is one of the greatest points of interest to Exposition visitors Fire which started on the river front in the Hndy Brothers Manufacturing Co.'s lumber yard, at Bay City, Mich., caused $80,030 loss. The resources of the independent packers and the country butchers are now being taxed to the utmost on account of the meat packers' itriko ' Settlement of tho Chicago strike may be in eisted upon by Mayor Harrison, if developments hJiow that the public interest absolutely demand it. The independent companies have been served with notice that their employes will not handlo any stock driven into tbe Chicago yard by non-union men. .
DAYTON & WESTERN TIME TABLE. (In effect July 21st, 1904.)
Leave Richmond for Eaton, West Alexandria, Dayton, Troy, Piqua, Sidney, Lima, Xenia, Springfield, Columbus, Hamilton and Cincinnati, every hour, 7 :00 a. m. to 9 :00 and 11 :00 p. m. Two Hours to Dayton. Leave Richmond for Cedar Springs and New Paris at 6:00 a. m. to 9:00 p. m., 10:30 p. m. New Paris spe cials at 7:30 p. m., 10:30 p. m. Last through car east of West Alexandria, 9:00 p. .m. Through rates, through tickets to all points. All entirely new cars; clean, comfortable and swift. For further in formation call Home phone 269. C. O. BAKER, Agent. Excursion Fares to West Baden and French Lick Springs via Pennsylvania Lines. July 22d to 25th, inclusive, excur sion tickets to West Baden and French Lick Springs, account Meeting of Commercial Law League of America, will be sold fro mall stations on the Pennsylvania lines. For in formation regarding fares, time of trains, etc., apply to local ticket agent of those lines. Excursion Rates to Middletown via. Pennsylvania Lines. August 2nd to 5th, inclusive, ex cursion tickets to Middletown, ac count annual fair, will be sold via the Pennsylvania lines from Kokomo, Richmond and intermediate stations. For information regarding fares, time of trains, etc., call on local ticket agent. Reduced Fares to Cincinnati via Penn sylvania Lines. July 16th, 17th and 18th excursion tickets to Cincinnati, account Annual Meeting Grand Lodge, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, will be sold from all ticket stations on the Pennsylvania Lines. For information regarding fares, time of trains, etc., call on Local Ticket Agent of those Lines. Special Summer Tourist Fares via Pennsylvania Lines. Will be in effect June 25th to September 30th. inclusive, to Colorado, Utah, Wisconsin, South Dakoto and points in Southwest, For particulars consult ticket agents of Pennsylva nia Lines. Domestic Troubles. It is exceptional to find a family where there are no domestic raptures occasionally, but these can be lessen ed by having Dr King's New Life Pills around. Much trouble thsy save by their great work in stomach and liver troubles. They not only relieve yon but cure. 25 cents at A. G. Lnken & Co.'s drug store, Unremitting care used in the con struction of Ideal Bread. For goodness sake eat Ideal Bread. "The Way to Go." Every Sunday, excursions via the Dayton & Western to Soldiers' home and Daylton, $1.00. Trains every hour. Go any time you wish. A clean and cool Sunday outing. No smoke, no cinders, no dust. 7-tf A HALF MILLION ACRES. $30.00 to Colorado and Return. Via Chicago, Union Pacific & North western Line. Chicago to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo, daily throughout the summer. Correspondingly low rates from all points east. Only one night to Denver from Chi cago. Two fast trains daily. Tour ist sleepiag cars to Denver daily. The North-Western Line Russia-Japan Atlas. Send ten cents in stamps for Ris-so-Japanese War Atlas issued by the Chicago & North-Western R'j. Three fine; colored maps, each 14 x 20 bound in convenient form for reference. The Eastern situation shown in '?;;;": with tables showing relative .'J nsivai -.iienglu and inar. eiiu resources of Kussia and Japan. Address A. M. Waggner, 28 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, HI. Low Rates to Boston via. Pennsylvania Lines. August 12th, 13th, and 14th, excursion tickets to Boston, account National Encampment Grand Army of the Republic, will be sold from all ticket stations on Pennsylvania lines. For full informatics regarding fr -es. time of trains, etc., apply o local ticket agent of those i.es.
BLAZE AWAY 1 Who cares? I'm fortified with an"!l. orado" laondeved collar. "The via hat don't melt down." a
The Eldorado c steam Laundry
No. 18 North Ninth St. Phone 147. Richrucrd, Indian A FINE On Street Car Line In Boulevard Addition AT A BARGAIN W. H. Bradbury & Son Westcott Block. Harness For Show and harness for eve'y day use mean a difference in quality in some makes here they are identical in strength and durability. More style, of course, in fency driving harness, but all our harness is made from good stock, and every set maintains our reputation as to workmanship and finish. All sorts of horse equipments at very moderate prices ------ The Wiggins Co. A Practical Magazine for 7 HE GENTEEL HOUSEKEEPER EACH SSSUe CONTAINS BEAUTIFUU.Y ILLUSTRATED DISHES. DECORATIONS TOR THE TABLE. DAINTY MENUS FOR ALL OCCASIONS. ETC IT IS THE AMERICAN AUTHORITY ON CULINARY TOPICS AND FASHIONS. Current Issue 10c. $1.00 Pen Year TABLE TALK PUB. CO., PHILA. aoueitom WANTED MERAL TtKMI 111S Chiithut St. The Place to Put Your money is into real estate. I can "put you next" to a number of good pieces, all certain to increase rapidly in value, and easily attainable by any man who is in earnest. Look over my list. T. R. Woodhuist 913 Main street. w 1904 f f M $i 5o,ooo ; FOR. Athletic Events In tho Great Arena at the Exposition svn . n . i yLook at theMa 3) OFTHt SHORT JJHES
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