Richmond Palladium (Daily), 3 August 1904 — Page 2
TWO
BIOHUOND DAILY PALLADIUU. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1901.
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X ! ! ! Mother. Say, Willie, go the corner grocery and get a loaf of Shaker' bread. If they have not got it, go to the next grocery, for I want the Shaker. Willie: No, mother; if they have not got it, I will go to Schroder's Bakery, U29 Main St.' There I'll surely get it. They have warm rolls every evening for supper, too. : DR. E. E. -PIERCE: nanftof will meet-patients at A UenLlSi: the office of Dr. Walls, w South Tenth Street, every Wedn Bday, prepared 10 do all kinds of D ntal Woik .... Do You Want to Know about the most delightful places In this country to spend Summer? A region easy to get to, beautiful scenery, pure bracing cool air. plenty of attractive resort,food hotels.good fishing, golf, something to do ali tbe time economical living, rest, health and comfort. Then write today, (enclosing twocent stamp to pay postage) mention this paper and we will send you our itKM edition of " Mic igan ?n Summer " containing 64 pages 200 pictures, maps hotel rates, e.c, and interesting information about this famous resort re glon reached via the Grand Rapids & Indiana R y "THE FISHINA LINE." X X X I PETOSKEY WEQTTETONSTNG BAY" VIEW MAuKINaCI'P NORTH PORT WAI IjOON LAKE HARBOR VT TRAVERSE CITY CROOKED LAKE A fine train service, fast time, exr cellent dining cars, etc., from St. LouIs,, Louisville, Indianapolis, ChlcagoC. L. LOCKWOOD, GEN". PASSENGER A TICKET AGT Grand Rapids, Hleh. "The Way To Go" 4; Special Rates via The Dayton - and Western to Franklin, O. Account of 9th Annual Session, Miami Valley Chautauqua July 15 to August 1 Round $1.40 Trip Through tickets sold July 14 to August 1. .Good returning till August 3d. Y Call on agent for full information X (QXDi To Lake Michigan : Special Excursion via C. C. & L. To Benton Harbor, Bllch., St. Joseph, Mich., South Bend, Ind. Sunday, Aug. 7, '04 More than 12 hours to enjoy the numerous attractions and delight ful lake breezes. , Special train leaves . Richmond af 9:30 p. m. Saturday ; returning, leaves St. Joseph at 6:15 p. m., South Bend at 7:15 p. m. C. A. Blair, P. and T. A. W. B. Callaway, G. P. A. MONEY LOANED From 5 to' 61 per cent 1 ? Thompson 's Loan and Real Estate Agency, Main and seventh streets.
SEN. FAIRBANKS
IS NOTIFIED THAT HE HAS BEEN NOMINATED FOR THE VICE PRESIDENCY Speech of Hon. Elihu Root Giving Formal Notice at Indianapolis. Indianapolis, Aug. 3 In notifying Senator Fairbanks of hi snomination as Vice-President, Hon. Elihu Root spoke as follows : Senator Fairbanks: The Committee which now waits upon you was appointed by the National Convention of the Republican Party held at Chicago in June, and its agreeable duty is to notify you of your nomination as tbe Republican candidate for the office of Vice-President of the United States for the term to begin on the 4th day of March 1905. We give you formal notice of that nomination with assurance of the un divided and hearty support of the groat Party which has executed the people's will in the government of this country for the better part of the last half century. The nomination comes to you in accordance with the best methods and practices of representative government. It was the result of long and earnest consideration and discussion by the members of the Convention. It was not the chance product of an excited hour, and it was not upon the demand of any powerful influence political or otherwise constraining the judgment of the delegates. It was not made for the purpose of conciliating possible malcontents, or of swelling the campaign fund of the Party. No bargains or intrigues contributed to it. No suppressions of the truth or misleading of the Convention as to your principles and opinions were necessary to bring it about. It was the deliberate, informed and intelligent judgment of the delegates from every state and territory, and it was their unanimous judgment. It is a exeat office to which you are called. John Adams, and Thomas Jef ferson, and George Clinton, and John C. Calhoun, and Martin Van Buren, and many others whose names are illustrious in the history of our country, have filled it. It is an office of high die-nitv and immediate, ever present importance. The credit and honor of our country are greatly concerned in the character and conduct of the man who presides over the Senate of the United States that powerful and au gust body, of which you are already so experienced, so useful and so hon orable a member. But the Vice-President has other grave duties of imperative obligation. When the people elect a President under our political system, they do not merely select the man for the office; fhey give their approval to certain controlling principles and policies of government; and the administration of which the Vice-President is a part is bound to give effect to these principles and policies. The primary duty of the Vice-President to be always readv to take up the burden of the Presidency if occasion requires, car ries with it a duty to be always ready to continue unbroken the policies which the people , have entrusted to the administration for execution. For the due performance of this duty the Vice-President should be familiar with the conduct of affairs by the administration as it proceeds, a part of its counsels, and imbued with a knowl edge of its labors, its perplexities and its motives, that can come only from intimate association and confidence and sympathy. Too often it has hap pened that after excited contests for the presidential nomination the candidate for Vice-President has been se lected from the defeated faction for the purpose of -appeasing their resent ment. and that after election he has remained antagonistic in spirit, and a stranger to the counsels of the President whom he may be called up on to succeed. Happily we are now in no such case. The people would fain see again such relations of sympathy and loyal helpfulness for the public good, as existed between President McKinlev and Vice-President Hobart; and the personal relations between President Roosevelt and yourself, your mutual esteem and good understanding assure us that these happy conditions will come again alter the fourth of next
March. We count upon your wisdom
and experience and loyal aid as an element of ever present strength in the coming administration. As to the supreme responsibility of the Vice-President in case of succession to the Presidency, we shall all pray, and no one more earnestly than yourself, that it may not eome to you. But we are not at liberty to ignore the possibility that it may come. Sad and bitter experience admonishes us that provision for succession to the Presidency is no idle .form. Of the last twelve Presidents elected by the people of the United States five nearly one-half have died in office and have been succeeded by VicePresidents. A serious obligation rests upon the political parties which select the candidates between whom the people must choose, to see to it that they nominate men for this possible succession who have the strength of body and mind and character which shall enable them, if occasion comes, to take up the burdens of the great presidential office, to endure its trying and exhausting demands, to meet its great responsibilities, and with firm hand and clear vision to guide the government of the Country until the people can express their choice again. Our opponents of the Democratic Party have signally failed to perform this duty. They have nominated as their candidate for the Vice-Presidency an excellent gentleman, who was born during the presidency of James Monroe, and who before the 4th of March next will be in the eighty-second year of his age. Before the next administration is ended, he will be approaching his eighty-sixth birthday. It is no disparagement of this gentleman, for whom I believe we all have the highest respect, to say that he shares the common lot of mortals, and that the election of any man of such great age would furnish no safeguard to the .American people against the disaster which would ensue upon the death of a president with a successor not competent to perform the duties of the presidential offiee. It is common experience that very aged men, however bright and active they ma3r appear for brief periods, cannot sustain long continued severe exertion. The demands of the presidential office upon the mental and physical vitality are so great beyond the capacity of any man of eighty-five. The attempt by such a man to perform the duties of the office would with practical certainty be speedily followed by a complete breakdown both of body and mind. In content. plating the remote possibility of the election of the Democratic candidate for Vice-President, the people of the country are bound to contemplate also a necessary result of such an election in case of the President's death, that others, not chosen by the people, and we know not who, would govern in the name of a nominal successor unable himself to perform the constitutional duties of his office; or worse still, that serious doubt; whether the Vice-President had not reached a condition of "inability" within the meaning of the constitution would throw the title to the office of President into dispute. The serious effect of such an event upon the Government and upon the business interests and general wel fare of the country, and the serious effect even of the continual menace of such an event, must be apparent to every thoughtful mind. In your election, on the other hand, this chief requirement will be fully met. In the full strength of middle life you are prepared for the exhaus ting duties of the Presidency. Your successful and distinguished career, the ability anr probity with which you have already discharged the du ties of high office, the universal respect and esteem of the people of Indi ana who have delighted to honor you, the attachment of hosts of friends throughout the Union all assure us that you have the character and the ability to avern wisely and strongly should you Decome President. Many indeed among our people have already turned toward you as a suitable candidate to be elected directly to that great office. It is the earnest wish of your party and of many good citizens who have no party affiliations that you shall accept this nomination, and that you shall be elected in November to be the next Vice-President of the United States. In expressing to you this wish, we beg to add an assurance of our own personal respect, esteem and loyalty. Cholera Infantum Thte disease has lost its terrors since Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy came into general use. The uniform success which attends the use of this remedy in all cases of bowel complaints in children has made it a favorite wherever its value has become known. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co., and W. H. Sudhoff, Fifth and Main streets.
MAGAZINE NOTES By Harry S. Miller. "Scribner's Magazine" for August is a fiction number, and contains some unusually good short stories. "The," by Rudyard Kipling is first in interest and importance. The theme is the love of children and the story bears all the characteristics of its famous author's previous work. In the short story field Kipling has been silent for some time, and his admirers win hail this his latest, with delight. The other contributions are by Thomas Nelson Page, Edith Wharton, Josephine Daskam Bacon, Henry Van Dyke, the late Guy Wetmore Carry!, Robert Chambers and Robert Grant. This number is finely illustrated, many of the pictures being in color. May Wilson Preston's sketches for Philip L. Allen's story, "If Bird or Devil" are particularly striking and cleverly done. The August "Century" is a veritable gem of magazine art, and is as beautiful a number as has ever been put out by its makers. The illustrations are of the highest style of excellence, and the accompanying reading matter is no less enjoyable. Eliot Gregorys "Visiting in Country Houses: a Plea for the Guest" is delightfully droll, and tinged with Mr. Gregory's usual gentle satire. W. W.
Dyar's "The Colossal Bridges of Utah" is, as its sub-title indicates, a recent discovery of natural wonders; and judging from the information given, the bridges are wondrous indeed. One of them (the Augusta) which is illustrated by an exquisite color drawing is said to be three hundred and thirty 'five feet long sixty feet thick, and leaving an opening underneath three hundred and fifty seven feet in perpendicular height. The principal contributors to this issue, besides those mentioned above, are Edith Wharton, Jack London, Albert Bigelow Paine, John Burroughs, Charles G. D. Roberts, Louise Imogen Guiney, S. Weir Mitchell and Manrice Francis Egan. Those who admire (and who does not?) the child stories of Frances Hodgson Burnett will enjoy her latest one, "In the Closed Room," which appears in "McClure's" for August. The story is enriched by five charming pictures, the work of Jessie Wilcox Smith, which adds not a little to its attractiveness. The "grafters" of Illinois in general and Chicago in particular are- ably discussed in an article by Lincoln Steffens. There are seven excellent short stories, by Jas. Hopper, O. Henry, Governeur Morris, Alice Brown, Mary R. S. Andrews, Samuel Hopkins Adams and Colin Mc Kay. Do you know that the C, C. & L. is quoting a rate of $14.05 to Mountain Lake Park, Maryland and return on account Mountain Chautauqua?. Selling dates, August 1st to 29th inclusive. Low Fares to Louisville via Pennsylvania Lines. Excursion tickets to Louisville, Ky., account K. of P. Biennial Encampment, will be sold over Pennsylvania Lines August 13th to 16th, inclusive. Information regarding fares and time of trains may be ascertained from Pennsylvania lines ticket agents. Ideal Bread is easy to digest.
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SUMMER STOVES SAVE MONEY They are as great an Improvement over the cook stove as it is over the "crane and flredogs."
KINWOOD GASOLINE STOVES GAS STOVES NATURAL GAS OIL STOVES
These stoves are of the and have the o
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"Oh, hear dem bells!" In every section of the nation they're eating that delicious ration COLUMBIA CONDCNSCO MINCE. ME. AT
Ready for the pie when you buy. Made of the best ingredients, with greatest care, in perfect cleanliness. Pure, sweet, rich spiced to a nicetv. Try it ! Never dries up. Sealed packages. Full pound package, plenty for three large
pies, l o cents. I l ') J f Ask voiir grocer, please. If he hasn't I 1 I j S-f it, scud his namo with yours to I -
Nearly Forfeits Life. A runaway almost ending fatally, started a horible ulcer on the leg of J. B. Orner, Franklin Grove, HI. For four years it defied all doctors and all remedies. But Bucklen's Arnica Salve had no trouble to cure him. Equally good for burns, bruises, skin eruptions and p'ies. 25c at A. G. Luken & Co's. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Protection Our Proper, Permanent Policy, is the title of the recent speech of Congressman McCleary, of Minnesota, which has just . been published by the Omerican Protective Tariff League. One copy free to every applicant. Send postal card request for free copy of document No. 82. Address W. F. Wakeman, secrtary, 339 Broadway, New York, N. Y. A VACATION TRIP To Niagara Falls at Low Fares. Ticket Agen C. W. Elmer will answe rinquiries about the annual excursion to Niagara Falls over the Pennsylvania Lines, which offers excellent opportunities for a delightful vacation trip at small expense. NIAGARA FALLS Round Trip From Richmond via Penn sylvania Lines. August 25th is the date of the annual excursion to Niagara Falls. ! T?-wi.- j ,,,:n t-a cn iw. 11UUUU lOIC Will UC 1IU1U Richmond. For particulars apply to C. "W. Elmer, Ticket Agent.
Jones Hardware Co.
North E and Tenth Sts. best makes latest improvements.
San Francisco and Return . From Chicago, HI., $61.00 going one way via Canadian Pacific Ry.f through the world-famous Canadian Rockies with their 600 miles of Stupendous Mountain Peaks, Awe Inspiring Canons, and Mighty Cataracts. Tickets good to go Aug. 15th to Sept. 10th, Proportionate rates from all other points. All agents can sell tickets by this route. For further information and illustrated literature write, A. C. Shaw, Gen'l. Ast.. Chicago. $50.00 California and. Return. Send 2 cent stamp for itinerary of special personally conducted tours to California, leaving Chicago August 18th and 25th, via the Chicago. Union Pacific & North-Western Line, account Triennial Conclave Knights Templar at San Francisco. $50 round trip from Chicago. Correspondingly low rates from all points. A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, 111. Personally Conducted Tour, Tent City Club, to Coronado Beach, CaL A delightful summer tour, personally conducted by representatives of the Pennsylvania and Santa Fe Lines. Special train will leave ' Richmond about eleven o'clock a. m. Tuesday, August 16th. Fare for the round trip from Richmond $56.50. Choice of direct routes returning. For itinerary and detail information address or apply to C. W. Elmer, -Passenger and Ticket Agent. NIAGARA FALLS EXCURSION. August 25th the Date, $6.50 Rate ; Pennsylvania Lines the Route. Full particulars about the annual excursion to Niagara Falls will be furnished upon application to C. W. Elmer, Ticket Agent, Pennsylvania Lines, Richmond. Ideal Bread is made by an entirely new process. o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
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