Richmond Palladium (Daily), 27 August 1904 — Page 1
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4 4 Call on the Palkdhnu for f se Stationery. . INDIANA WEATHER. fair tonight and Sunday, warm(I EKLY ESTABLiIRWRn lmi. RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, SATURDAY, AUGUST 27, 1904. ONE CENT A COPY. LY ESTABLISH E U 1876.
iiotl
8MJTAIM OPENS
I FLYING- COLORS
r
POLICE COURT
HARGRAVE
CASE
IS. JOHN A. LOGAN THE AT
TRACTION YESTERDAY.
Hampers delighted
i Excellent Programs Greatly Enjoyed by All-Splendid A
Addresses.
Had Several Patrons But All Were Released.
The gang in police court this morning coasted of bums and drunks and all were released. j Peter Ulahas was slated for va- j
"raney. Frank Carter, vagrant. Fred Lahman, vagrant. John Pay (but he didn't), drunk.
AWAITING
ACTION
ALL DAY
PCI
IC
SEPT
5.
ACCUSED OF SELLING LIQUOR UNDER AUSPICES OF CENTRAL
AT THE GLEN
TOTE MONDAY
On Continuing the Strike of the Stock Yards.
Chicago, August 27. President Shea, of the Packing House Team-
Irnder most ideal weather condi- sters Union, has telegraphed the
strikers to meet Monday night and vote on continuing the strike at the stock yards. The teamsters today abandoned picketing.
HARGRAVE IN JAIL
Charge Will Have to Be Filed by District Attorney Keeling A Dayton Man.
LABOR COUNCIL
tlf (Hill "111! IU1 . t i v v. v. v 'fjy justified the managers' predieis and hopes that the present Chau qua Avould be far more largely at-
Ted than the one of last year, the
Chautauqua opened yesterday,and first four entertainments have n of a hitrh standard such as most
"i i t i i 1 1
it lie people nau not consiuerea jws-
The appearance of the grounds in feral made a very fine impression !m all those that have visited the t .. . 1 , 1
ce, tlie general cleanliness, cooi fezes, and ideal conditions being;
hmented on very favorably by all.
fhe meal and refreshments tents
good business today, and are prova arreat boon to the campers,
Ividing excellent meals for them at
v moderate prices. One very nohce-
thing is the much larger number
campers this year than last, and
corresponding ' decrease in the
hber of advertising1 tents, of mer-
nts. business houses, etc., there
L nnl,. 4liro nf Hip latter on the
I fS v - - funds this year. Ul of the comforts of home are in j tents, and the campers stated toVtHtHhfirstiight was orte:of at pleasure, with not one marring ict. 'Most of the tents are on the
Uern side of the grounds, where
ground is highest and as yet no wbacks have been reported by
se spending the week "in camp."
hfie pretty condition of the grounds
1 the Glen Park in general is a
ree of great satisfaction to all of Richmond people, and the subject
manv comments from the visitors.
Yesterday Afternoon.
kfter selections bv the Richmond
1 Knightstown bands, Mr. John L.
be introduced Mrs. Logan with a
rt address.
IVhen Mrs. Logan arose she was
Ion an ovation, the entire audience
linging to its feet and waving flags.
is. Logan spoke in part as follows
''Four Great Generals:"
.-(Continued on fifth oaga.)
SAVED HUSBAND
lucky Man Has Lucky and Plucky
Wife.
;t. Paul, Minn., Aug. 2G.-While
campbell was bucking the
sat market and losing enough to
ikrupt him in one Chamber of
rimerce office in Minneapolis his
e was in another working the right
unclr' every time. Finally the
band came to the end of his rope, home that evening he turned to his e with doleful face and announced t they were ruined. He supposed had 'been busy with her domestic
ies an oay, and pictured the nardp she would undergo bv discharg-
the kitchen girl, but the thrifty e nonchalantly inquired his total ,'!uil then produced the bankers' 'upts more than offsetting the monher husband had poured into a
Iris is one of the true stories of the Hit wheat excitement. Women have n trading as never before. Some
mnrp made monev. About 50A
jnen followed the market the past 5k, and those who lost bore their iies as philosophically as men noon
mge. One woman dropped $600,
she had in the world, but never
fmpered, and came back next day
h($5Q she had borrowed, and with fch she made enough to pay back J loan and make a start the next
D. B.
CONFERENCE
Will Be Held at Marion, Indiana, Next Week. Rev. Broughman, pastor of the United Brethren congregation here, preached his last sermon for the conference year last Sunday. The U. B. conference convenes at Marion next week. Rev. Broughman does not expect to return here next year. While a resident of this city he made many friends who will regret it if he does not return.
j Benjamin Hargarve, the colored man from Dayton arrested at tie UJlen for selling liquor to some of the ! picnickers, is still in the city iaii. Of
course lie is just being held there viih. out any charge being 'placed ava'pst him! That would necessarily have to come through the district attorney, Keeling, of Indianapolis, as United States Commissioner Jesse S. Reeves would have no right to file charges until it came through the district attorney. At present there is no charge against Ilargrave and will be none unless the district attorney makes it. He has been notified by Mr. Reeves of the arrest of Hargrave and his confinement in jail.
AT GLEN MILLER PARK There Will Be Dancing and a General Good Time All Day Labor Day.
CAR SERVICE !KR0MA AND
Appreciated by Patrons of the Chautauqua. Persons attending Chautauqua are loud in their praise of the service rendered by the street car company. The twentieth street cars, the Glen Miller cars and the Dayton & Western cars, all carry passengers and it makes it very convenient for comers and jroers.
SBDCRAFT
BURNED TO DEATH
j STORIES TOLD BY THE?! A3E
VERY CONFLICTING. .
KROMA BLAMES SjHUCRAFT
"PORT ARTHUR HAS FALLEN"
NEWSBOYS ARE NOW CRYING IN LONDON
THROUGH THE STREETS
The regular weekly card party at the Country Club, postponed from last week,, will be given next Wednesday. The hostesses will be Mrs. Stimson and Mrs. McCabe.
Monday, September 5, will be Labor Day. and it will be celebrated in a quiet way in this city. The shops will all shut down for the day and there will be a general suspension of business. The labor organizations will have no public parade, neither will there be a speaker here this year. , Central Labor Council has made arrangements to give an all-day picnic in Glen Miller park to which all the
I citizens are invited. At noon there will be a picnic dinner on the 1 -i- n.. l,..:
lirouiius, every iaimij' uiiiigiiiy uicn dinners with them. In the afternoon there will be games and a general good time indulged in. In the evening at XDdd Fellows hall a dance will be given under auspices of the Central Labor Council. Everything will be carried out in firstclass order. The Richmond City band will furnish music at the park.
Rendering Vat Bursted at Neeguanee, Michigan. (By Assnciared Press.)
j Xeegaunee, Mich., August 27. Ed Cornowetlr, manager of the Dalton ! Packing Plant was burned to death today by the bursting of a rendering
vat. Xeck Webb, a workman, will probably die from his injuries.
ITS
T
ERODS
COMPTROLLER
Report Says the Japanese Have Effected an Entrance to the Port Great Excitement.
Of the Currency Makes Inquiry and Reports. Washington, August 27 The comptroller of the Currency saj-s he made inquiry through the bank examiners concerning the vequirements of the banks to move the crops and the replies indicate the demand on the banks will be about the same and at about the same time except in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Ohio, Minnesota and Wisconsin, where it will be greater and two orthree weeks earlier.
DRORCES
(By Associated Press.) London, 'August 27. A correspondent of the Evening St. Bernard at Tien Tsin says it has good reason to believe the Japanese have effected an entrance to Port Arthur and that the fall of the fortress is virtually accomplished. Newsboys are in the streets with extras announcing 'Port Arthur Has Fallen." The Japanese minister to Great Britain says he as no confirmation of the report. Xiborg, Denmark, August 27. A Russian cruiser and two torpedo boats passed here this morning going northward. Liao Yang, August 27. General Kuroki has joined the forces with General Oky in an attempt to cut the Russian line between Anshaskan and Liandiansian. The battle of August 23 was along the eastern front. The Japanese resumed bombardment early on August 2G. The Russians' field guns dismantled thirty-two Japanese guns, mostly mountain pieces. The Russian casualties are placed at over a thousand on the 2Cth.
Health Office. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Asa Stanley, a boy. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Ritchie, a girl.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Amos Beachy I a bov.
Indianapol Sixth in the List of the Indiana Towns. Indanapols, Ind., August 27. In a list compiled by the United States Census Bureau. Indianapolis stand? sixth among the principal cities of the country in the number of divorced persons. Indianapolis has 1,30 1 divorced -persons among its inhabitants, 512 men and STM women. Chicago stands first, v.nh 4,341, and New York second, with 2,1 4G. T!vj divorced women outnumbering the divorced men in nearly all of the twenty-six cities given. The total number of divorced persons in the U uted States is 51,538, of whom ,r2,20.j art- women and 1S,3S4 are men.
Is the Sudden Disappearance of a Little Girl. (By Associated Press.) Danville, Ky., August 27. The citizens of Lancaster are greatly excited over the mysterious disappearance of Maggie Collet, aged ten. She was last seen about 3 o'elock yesterday. Later her bonnet was found in a nearby field torn to shreds. Searching parties have been organized.
SOUSA'S BAND
COMING
HERE
WILL ENTERTAIN THE PEOPLE OF THIS CITY
ON FRIDAY, SEPT. 23
His Tvrenty-Fifth Semi-Annual American Tour Will Be at the Coliseum.
Strike to Continue. (By Associated Press.) r Zanseville, O., August 27. By a reference to the vote the miners of the Crooksville district rejected the proposition of the operation, and the strike started five months ago, involving two thousand minenrs,. will continue.
Manlove Family Reunion. The annual reunion of the Manlove family will be held at the Guyer opera house in . Lewisville, Henry county," on Saturday, September 3. All the
relatives are urged to attend.
Governors Proclamation
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, STATE OF INDIANA EXECUTTVE DEPARTMENT It is befitting, in a land where human toil bears with it the dignity of social service rather than the reproach of servitude, a land from which class conscious labor happily disappeared with the overthrow of the institution of slavery, a land without laws or institutions except those established through the voluntary action of its citizens, and therefore a nation made what it is by those who toil, and still within their care and keeping, that there should be formal recognition of labor as a national rather than as a class or factional interest, and to this end law and custom have set apart an annual holiday. The manner of its celebration should serve to emphasize the honorable estate to which labor has attained in this Republic, whose leaders have been chosen by the people from the ranks of tlioe who toil, and whose glory is the open door to enlightenment and opportunity awaiting all who bring to the work before them their best thought and most active endeavor, finding in their labor the joy of comradeship with all those forces joined in the upbuilding of the nation and of humanity. Therefore, by virtue of the authority conferred in me by law. I. Winfield T. Durbin, governor of the State of Indiana, do hereby designate Monday, September fifth, nineteen hundred and four, as Labor Day, and recommend its celebration by thecessation of usual occupations, by the public display of the flag whichstands for the sacrifices of our fore fathers made to the end f that liberty and opportunity might in this land be the portion of those who toil, and by such other methods as may commend themselves to all our people. In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused to be affixed the Great Seal of the State of Indiana, at the Capitol in the city of Indianapolis, this thirteenth day of August, nineteen hundred and four. WINFIELD T. DURBINV Seal. Governor of Indiana. By the Governor: DANIEL E. STORMS, Secretary of State.
After an interval of nine and a half years, Sousa, the March King, and his famous band, are to make a second visit to Richmond, giving two concerts atthe Coliseum on the afternoon and evening of Friday, September 23. His only previous appearance here was on the afternoon of April 0, 189-5, in what was then the Grand Opera House, now the Gennett Theater. The great band leader was then just at the beginning of his fame which has since become world wide. This will be his twentj'-fifth semiannual American tour and the first of any length since the wonderful tour, extending from September, 1902 to August, 1903. During the eleven months between the dates named the Sousa band furnished music for the millions from the Pacific ocean to the Gulf of Finland, from the Rio Grande to the Xeva, from Puget Sound to the Danube, and from the Great Lakes to the Baltic, traveling more than 35,000 miles by land and sea, and giving 556 concerts in fourteen different countries and 25S different cities and towns. The name of the great American conductor and composer is now as well known in London, Paris, Berlin. Vienna and St. Petersburg as in Xew York, Chicago and San Francisco. Mr. Sousa brings with him a band of fifty instruments some of which have never been seen here and the following soloists: Miss Estelle Lieblintr, soprano; Miss Jessie Strauss, violiniste; and Mr. Herbert L. Clarke, cornetist. Such a combination of talent can, and does, present ; programs of extraordinary variety and charm, and it is the intention of rhe local management to put the prices "of admission at figures which will -give evervone a chance.
While the Latter Prcf esses Innocence Going Over RTite Today For Identifier ion.
The prtdiminu v j f aring of I': auk Shucraft. charired with st : '"i; a hore and bugv, t . irt1 1 v iih a -t-t of harness from JVrt Conk' in )wview last Sundav night, nii? c-.:. tinned yesterday aOernoon. ;,,ucraft plead not guilty, vjijle Kroma .uad? a confession implying bth. The Greenville liverymn, Mr. XeVmaii.' was here and identified Kror t a the man who "tried .to sell him tho outfic. It was Xewimri'-: presence that prompted Krom i io confess. II? -aid Shucraft plann:: ! lie ste-ilimr Ia.t Sunday night. Aier takln-z lh rig they drove north through Fountain City and Lynn lo Winchester and from there to Greenville. Oiiio. Kroma was instructed to sell bo rir for $05 and he would c called in for purpose of identifi M:'on. A't of tliw projrrani. he say?, was carried out. Shucraft denied this story, He says he didn't meet Kroma until Monday and he had .the horse and ri; when he met him. Supt. Gormon thought.it would be well for purposes of identification to have Kroma and Shucraft taken over the route supposed to have been traversed by them. Mayor Zimmerman has withheld his decision for a few days in order to give them time for thorough investigation. The two sus peets were accompanied by Prosecutor Comstock and Patrolman Livels-bercrer.
Shorthand School Closed. Mrs. Iliser's .school of shorthand closed the summer term yesterday morning for a two weeks' vacation. Refreshments were served and a general informal conversation carried on as to the requirements of stenogra pliers. This school will open on September 12 with the introduction of several new methods fqr perfecting
'shorthand writers.
THE ELKS
State Meeting at Anderson to be Big Affair. When the State meeting of Elks i3 held at Anderson next week all of the cities of Indiana will be represented! the invitation to the 4S lodges being also extended to Mayors of all cities in the state, and a personal invitation has been acknowledged by the Mayor of this city. This is an innovation in State assemblies Of fraternities, a compliment alike to all cities of the State, whether or not they have Elks lodges and characteristic of Anderson hospitality. Reduced rates on all railways will be in effect on August 30, good returning September 2. .According to word from Anderson it will be a city cf Purple and White, all next w-eek, but the State meeting of Elks will' not open until Tuesday and will close Thursday evening. Wed nesday is expected to be the big day. Features for enjoyment of everybody on Wednesday will include the great parade at one o'clock Wednesday afternoon with no two Elks lodges uniformed alike and numerous fine bands in line. Following the parade there, will be amusement at the fair grounds three squares from the eonrt house in Anderson, including an Elks ballr, game, for a loving cup, band contest,, and other, events Cash prizes offered for the parade features -bands,1 etc, will be awarded in front of the grand stand at the fair grounds.
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