Richmond Palladium (Daily), 20 September 1904 — Page 6
BIZ
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1904.
9
MA
ON WHEN UP-TO-DATE FARMERS WILL WANT A FINE
wff' jib
For WHEAT and FALL FERTILIZING IN GENERAL
REMEMBER THAT
TQM M
Makes the best grade of Fertilizer in this part of the country. His wagons are calUd out every day to take care of dead animals and while so doing he will deliver Fertilizer to all parties desiring it
DO NOT FAIL TO ORDER SOME OF MERTZ'S BONE FERTILIZER HE ALSO HAS A GOOD SUPPLY OF CRACKED BONE FOR CHICKENS It. makes them LAY EGGS. Farmers having bones on hand can bring them to Mertz's mil and have them ground for the toll. Write or phone your ordersto TOMDMERTZ Both phones 103. RuralRoute No. 8
Send in your order coming rush ofearly fall. 3 2
BOM
early and avoid the
A HORRY-UP CALL
Has Been Issued For the Officers of St. Petersburg Guard. SERVICE AT THE FRONT Russia Gives an Indication of the Mortality Among Her Officers In the Recent Battle. Little Interruption Has Occurred to Break the Lull at the Theater of War. Except for Important reconnaissances by Generals Rennenkampfl and Samsonoff, there seems to have been little interruption of the quiet taat ensued after the-hard fighting around Liao Yang more than a fortnight ago. Indicative of the mortality among Russian officers at the front is the report from St. Petersburg that about oneseventh of the officers in the regiments of guards stationed at the capital are to be drafted for service with regiments at the scene of war. The Japanese are reported to be advancing slowly upon the positions held by the Russians in a line extending about twenty-seven miles. There have been no developments at Port Arthur beyond a reported futile sortie by the garrison against a height which recently fell into the hands of the Japanese. By Way of Shanghai. Shanghai, Sept. 20. There is an unconfirmed rumor here that General 2BNERAI. MTSCHTSCFTENKO, COMMANDBB OF COSSACKS. Mlschtschenko, commander of thi Russian eastern Cossack brigade, has been killed. The Lena Dismantled. Vallejo, Cal., Sept. 20. The work of dismantling the Lena was finished last evening. PREPARING FOR BATTLE Russians and Japs Will Probably Clash at Tie Pass. St. Petersburg, Sept. 20. There la a story afloat that a sudden call has been Issued to officers of the guard regiments stationed at St. Petersburg to report for service at the front. Mukden, Sept. 20. All is quiet here, but fighting is anticipated in the neighborhood of Sinmintin, thirty-five miles west of Mukden. Bt. Petersburg, Sept. 20. While still insisting that General Kuropatkin has sufficient troops at Mukden to contest the Japanese advance, the war office admits that it is not likely that a decisive battle will be fought there. Everything goes to show that the main Russian position is at Tie Pass, flanked by hills running out on the left and by the river on the right. ' Official reports to the war office are to the effect that the Japanese did not make any further move toward Muk den until Sept. 17, when reconnaisGENERAL BEXSESKAMrFF. sanccs in force disclosed that thej were still massing at Yentai and Bentsiaputse. No Japanese have been discovered east of the latter point. The reconnaissances, General Kuropatkin Bays, were brilliantly carried out by Getseral SamsonofTs and General Rennenkarapff's Cossack brigades, with a mixed detachment of infantry and artillery under Rennenkam nil's personal command. They captured a village north of Bentsiaputso, which wa3 used
... I . .. I II. I . I l . I Illl. II
s "a pivot. The Russians drew off lamr, losing a few men killed or wounded, after securing valuable information regarding the Japanese strength and position. A couple of days earlier General Mistchenko's detachment of CcssacUs reconnoitered toward Yentai at the cost of a few score wounded.
Sortie Ends Disastrously. Tokio, Sept. 20. A strong Russian force made a sortie from Port Arthur Sept. 18 and attacked the Itczshan fort which "was recently captured by the Japanese. The fighting lasted some hours and the Russians eventually were repulsed with heavy loss. INTERESTING MEETING Sovereign Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows at San Francisco. San Francisco, Sept. 20. The sovereign grand lodge Independent Order of Odd Fellows, convened in this city yesterday. Escorted by the uniformed Patriarchs Militant, the officers and members of the sovereign grand lodge marched from the Lyceum theater to Native Sons hall, where the business sessions of the lodge are held. George Hawkes of Pennsylvania was elected to preside as deputy grand sire protem in tlje absence of R. E. Wright. C. H. Lyman of Ohio was made assistant grand messenger. The sessions of the sovereign grand lodge promise to be of much interest. The coming election of a grand sire to fill the position that will be vacated at the close of his two years' term by John D. Goodwin attracts the most attention. Under the rules of the order Deputy Grand Sire Robert E. Wright should te elevated to the exalted position, but Mr. Wright has been forced to decline to serve on account of illhealth. It is probable, however, that his name will be presented for honorary election, after which he will likely resign. Those mentioned for the place are Judge John L. Nolan of Tennessee; W. L. Kuykendall of Wyoming; E. S. Conway of Illinois, and Hill Montague of Virginia. 6HOT HIS MOTHER Drunken Virginian Deliberately Fires Upon His Parent. Bristol, Va., Sept. 20. Mrs. Minerva Greear, a widow, fifty years of age, has been shot to death by one of her sons at her home near Fort Blackman, Scott county, Va. Of her two sons, Robert and Grover, it is not known which fired the shot which ended the woman's life, as each declares the other guilty of the murder. It is said the boys were drinking in a room adjoining that occupied by their mother, firing their pistols when she entered and asked them to stop. One turned his pistol on his mother and sent a ball into her heart, causing death instantly. An investigation is being held. Alarmist Conditions Denied. ''Z St. Petersburg, Sept. 20. Investigation of the internal conditions of Russia by. a gentleman who has just returned from an extensive tour of the interior discloses a much better situation than foreigners generally believe to exist in this country. The investigator found absolutely no evidence of an impending crisis, but on the contrary found no special features in the situation making for discontemt of the people. The greatest of all these is a wonderful harvest throughout the empire. Fast Train Left Track. Topeka, Kan., Sept. 20. Union Pacific passenger train No. 4, eastbound, was ditched at Kansas Falls, six miles west of Junction City, yesterday afternoon. The workmen were ballasting the track and the rails spread, throwing the entire train from the track. The rear Pullman turned over twice. Eleven of the seventy passengers were injured, two seriously. Shot His Mother-In-Law. Raleigh, N. C. Sept. 20 George Tilley, a young married man, living about fifteen miles from this city, in a fit of rage fatally shot his mother-in-law and inflicted a serious but not necessarily mortal wound on his wife, who at the time was holding a baby in her arms. He then fled from his home. He quarreled with the two about some family matter. Italian Consulate Mobbed. Lugano, Switzerland, Sep. 20. A meeting held here to protest against the labor policy of the Italian ministry developed riotous proceedings. The rioters proceeded to the Italian consulate, from which they tore the Italian coat-of-arms and threw it into the lake. TERSE TELEGRAMS One boy anl two horses were killed and four bovs seriously injured by lightning at Marietta, I. T. Fire destroyed a grain elevator, the Masonic Temple and several stores at Rolla, Mo Loss
160,000. John Ware, a nepro. was lynched in Franklin countr, Ga., for fatally shooting Cy Daniel, a whitH man. Postmaster-General Payne has retnrned to Washington after an absence of several weeks and has resnmed his duties in the department. It is a violation of law in Indiana to be in the fields with dog and shot gun after OcflSber 1 without a license. The United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners has met in biennial convention at Milwaukee. In a rare riot near Cairo, 111., six men were slain. The trouble arouse over a craps game in which both blacks and whites were engaged. The current season's gold output of the Klondike is estimated at lc00o,000. It is said that the recent filing of artie'ea of incorporation of the Chicago Southern railway Co.. has removed all doubt as to the intention of John R Walsh to have a line through Illinois to the Mississippi river. The Western opp'y Co.. at Ch'eaffo, one of the largest farm implement jobbing Anns in the Middle West, has been placed la the hand of a receiver. . -
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AND 5 UltlUTES Richmond to Cincinnati X : ViaC. C.& L Through car service via Cottage Grove and CH, & D. via College Corner. Oxford, Hamilton. Leave Richmond 4:05 p. m. Morning train leaves 9:05 a. m. J C. A. BLAin, Home Tel. 44. P. & T. Agt tW. B. Calloway, G.P. A. J Crude MetJiods of laundering have no place with us. We are ver alert to improve, but improvements are scarcely pcssible where work is done so well as it is in the Richmond Steam Laundry Hurry orders receive our prompt and careful attention, acd even with rush work the wash entrusted to us will be thoroughly treated, and be as well finished as though we were allowed fall time. D. W. Walters, Prop. 919 Main Street. Thones 157. nm nuvisc you wueTiicr your lUcas can be patented. Small improvements and simple invention! have made much money for the inven tors. We develope your ideas or assist rouin improving your invention. We takeout patents in United States, Canada and foreign countries. Our terms ire reasonable. Marlatt & Dozier, 11-48 Color Ul Bldg. Richmond 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. FULGIIAM AGENCY O. B. Fulgham. II. Milton Elrode Room 3, Vauglian Bldg mocker hav been suggested of mind Luniku milh me needs of the. ate. THE AMERICAN INVENTOR iB keep you k touch with subjects of current Interest to the few of new inventions and experiment, h wiS aid you te develop tiett of prac&cal value. Issued on the 1st cd 15th of every month. TmtiKsvht SIM mxA im Soli at S news (tends 10c per copy or sent by mad $1. 50 per year. THE AMERICAN INVENTOR. SifyW copy sent fnt 1 1 h-m-M-H 1 1 1 1 Mrfr tO. G. mURRRY Broker in Groin 4 Provisions and Stocks. T!Anm l. Colonial Building Y Telephones-Old, Black 811; Mew 701" H I I I I I I 'I-H-X-X- I I I I Through Car Service via Hamilton to Cincinnati. The C, C. & L. have arranged for through car service from Richmond via Cottage Grove and C, H. & D. to Cincinnati this in addition to their own through service via C, C. & Indirect. Through car leaves Richmond 4:05 p. m. daily except Sunday running via College Corner, Oxford and Hamilton arriving Cincinnati 6:10 p. m. This service greatly reduces the present running time into Cincinnati, the run no being made in two hours and five minutes.
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