Richmond Palladium (Daily), 26 September 1904 — Page 4
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1904.
FOUR
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coughs and colds. Heal your throat with Ayer s Cherry
Pectoral. Ask your doctor
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
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in rrr T 17 A IT at any time to get your paper from your carrier, you i lr YUU f AIL, far a faf or by at once notifying the office by telephor
JOHN S. FITZCIBBONS, Editor and Business Manager
Beginning with the issue of next Saturday, the Palladium will be a morning paper. It is the intention to have the paper in the homes of the subscribers at or before 0 o'clock, so that men who work in the shops will have an opportunity to look over the paper before going1 to work. We iK'lieve there is a demand for a morning paper and the Palladium will be one of the very best ever printed in this city. It has been ten years since this city boasted a morning paper, and this will be the first time tlie Palladium appeared as such after its long and useful career in the evening field. In the days when the other morning papers were printed in Richmond the rural route system was not in vogue, and there were no internrban cars to hurry the papers to the nearby towns. Today all of these advantages exist and we propose to take advantage of the conditions. After the Palladium appears in tlie morning field the farmers and persons in the small towns will l-.et have to wait twenty-four horns for a daily paper, but will receive it a few hours after being printed. This is very important inasmuch as they are made acquainted with news when it is news. When important events like national and State elections oeear, tlie news is given fresh. During polo season the results of the gan :- in all th? leagues will be published each m ruing. This feature will be given special attention. Besides these facts, there is a commercial reason why a morning paper is l-KH'df'd. Merchants are in favor of it and encourage the enterprise. For these and other reasons the Palladium will go into the morning field. We trust the many friends of the Palladium in the past will continue their good offices and assist us to make the kind of paper that Richmond has needed for a long time.
Nobody has denied to Judge Parker the possession of an extremely amiablo disposition. He has a kindly feeling for all men including political rascals. If he had not he could not have maintained intimately friendry relations with "Dave" Hill and "Blue-Eyed" Billy Sheehan for thirty or forty years and could not have consented to have "Pat" MeCarren and "Tom" Taggart associated with him in the present campaign. He dislikes to take harsh views of anybody, and if he were to get elected the rascals. of his party would not suffer much harm at his hands. George Ade, the author and playwright seems to have sized up the Democratic candidate with that unerring insight which is his eminent characteristic. "I heard a story," he said recently, "out in Indiana which seems to fit him. An old farmer s-aid: 'I never seen this feller, Parker, and I never heerd him speak, but judging from accounts that I've read of his doin's, he's just about the sort of a chap that folks would take to a Sunday school picnic to hang up the swing for the children.' "
To ?-how their appreciation of our efforts, a list of names of new subscribers as long as one's a.m has been telephoned or handed in since it was announced the Palladium would take the morning field. Several others, to show their appreciation, have s-'iu us checks for a year's subscription in advance. These kindnese are all eneoura'jir;- and make us feel as if sei.ie l the burden of gertin; out a paper have been lifted.
Omaha via the Northwestern Line In addition to its already remarkably complete train service between Chicago, Council Bluffs and Omaha, The North-Western Line has inaugurated elegantly equipped parlor car service through to Omaha without change, leaving Chicago 10:15 a. m. daily, arriving Omaha 11:40 p. m. uffet, smoking and library car on this train also opened to parlor car passengers. Other fast trains leave Chicago 7:00 p. m., 8:00 p. m., and 11 :30 p. m., daily over the only doule track railway between Chicago and the Missouri River. Information and ickets can be secured from your home agent or address A. H. Waggener, Trav. Agt. 22 fifth Ave., Chicago, 111 To All Trading Stamp Collectors. As announced some time ago we will give no trading stamps after October 1. We would urge our customers to fill their stamp books by that time. If you buy your fall and winter shoes of us before that time you can 3o it. We have an immense stock of shoes and all kinds of fall footwear. NEFF & NUSBAUM Mr. John II. Johnson and family who have been at Bay View, Mich., for some time hove returned horn''.
NOTICE
Possibly a case or two of consumption in the family. Then don't neglect your
aDoui inis. J C Aver Co Lowell. Mass 21 21 .. 25 .. 8 00 will conSleeplessness. 'No one knows what insomnia means unless he has suffered from it. The person who is compelled to pass sleepless nights craves sympathy, but it's the lat thing he gets. Let such a one go to a friend with his sufferings, and instead of receiving expressions of regret, he will get replies like these: "Well, it never troubles me." "I sleep like a top," etc. Dr. George H. Jones, of of Crescent. S. C, suffering from sleeplessness, consequent to a severe attack of lagrippe, writes: "When your your Phen-a-mid reached me, I decided to try one of the tablets, which relieved me somewhat and in three hours I repeated the dose, which caused me to fall into a good, natural sleep, the first for almost two weeks." Phen-a-mid Tablets contain no harmful narcotics. They do not depress the heart nor upset the stomach. Phen-a-mid Tablets are a positive cure for insomnia and for all forms of aches and pains, incuding headache, neuralgia, rheumatism. dyspepsia, etc. Jo cents at all druggists or bv mail from the manufacturers, OsbornCohvell company, 40 cliff street. New York. ' S Resriiiiiinsj Wednesday morning, Sept. 2Stfi. tlie SliarUey millinerv store will display nil the latest fashions In fall and winter Street and Pattern Hats.
'n1QNSbEl
BICH1HD IEI
FOBM GOMPAHY ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION PILED WITH THE SECRETARY OF STATE Capitalised for $10,000,000 Four Hundred Acres of Land Has Been Leased. Articles of incorporation of the Greensfork Oil and Gas company have been fied with the Secretary of State. The company incorporated for $10,,000,000. The men concerned are County Recorder King R. Williams, Geo. I). Cole, Dr. F. II. Dunham. The gentlemen in the order named are president, vice president, secretary-treasurer. The company is organized to buy, lease, sell, develop, own and operate gas and oil wells. They have already leased four hun dred acres of good Clay township lands and have options on several other farms. The gentlemen who compose the directory are all first-class citizens and will no doubt do well. FIFTY YEARS Mr. B. Johnson Arrived Here at 10 a. m. . Fifty years ago this morning at 10 a. m. Mr. 15. Johnson arrived in Richmond. At that hour this morning Mr. Johnson called at the Palladium ofliee in honor of the event. The Palladium congratulated Mr. Johnson on his long residence in this city. His first vote was for John C.Fremont and he has never missed voting for a president since that time. Mr. Johnson does not look to be over fifty years of age. Jn all those years he has taken the Palladium and promises to continue. FIBE HOBS Bought by Benton Woodard of Cam- " bridge City. Cambridge City., Ind., Sept. 26. Jesse A. I.isure and son, owners of 1,500 acres of choice land in Rush county, sold to Benton Woodard, of this city, and began delivering Saturday, (i-10 head of hogs, which will average 250 pounds at .5.00 per hundred, amounting to about $13,000. Two weeks ago they sold 183 head of fat cattle fro mtheir farm, receiving better than $14,000 for them. ODD FELLOWS To Have a Big Meeting at Cambridge City. On the 14th of next month the Odd Fellows of this county will have a big time in Cambridge City. Degrees will be conferred upon several candidates. The following teams and captains will put on the work: Shelbyville, first degree, Lou Webb, captain. Herman lodge, second degree. Louis Crome. captain. Woodward lodge, third degree, Jeff Meyers, captain. A large number of Odd Fellows will attend the meeting. The following men were here from Union City today to attend the malpractice law suit, venued here from Union City, which was to have been heard todav. but wh?r-h -o.- ,-.f. noneu: nr. f. neynaru. Dr. F. Reynard, Dr. S. B. Rubey and Hon. Theodore Shocknev. Overstreet in Indiana. New York, September 20. Representative Overstreet. secretary of the Republican congressional committee, will leave for Indiana in a few days to give special attention to some of the Indiana districts. The Sharkey inilliiierv store, 7 south 7th St", will show the world famed Conn ell v Turbans, Wednesday. September 2SU1. 1
EAELHAM LOST
In the Crime With Wabash Athletic Association Saturday. Saturday afternoon at 2 Earlham's football team lined up for their first garre of the season to play against the Wabash Athktie Association at Wabash. Earlham s lineup was as published Friday. By 2 o'clock the rain had ceaed but the field was very muddy. This with their great superiority of weight gave the Wabash players a great advantage. First Half. Wabash kicked off but soon obtained the ball on downs. Ater twelve minutes of hard play Colbert, of the Wabash Athletic Association made the first touch-down, but failed to kick goal. Score, Wabash 5, Earlham 0. No further score was made iw the first half. Second Half. Brunson kicked off for- Earlh.nm. After repeated successful end runs Fisher -scored the second touch-down for Wabash and Colbert kicked goal. Score. Wabash 11, Earlham 0. Colbert scored one more touch-down for the Wabash Athletic Association, but failed to kick goal. The game closed with Ealrham inside the W. A. A.'s fifteen yard line and making desperate efforts to score. Final score, WabaMi 10. Earlham, 0. SECOND CHAPTER. Laporte. Ind., Sept. 2G. The second chapter of the sensational raid by society woung women at Rolling Prairie upon a bniliing within which it was alleged gambling was carried on. was written when the young men of the town assembled and dratted resolutions decrying the destruction of the property and taking a solemn pledge not to give any social attention to the young women who were members of the band of crusaders. The young men maintain that they are moral citizens and wholly unworthy of the ban of ostracism which has been placed upon them. There is promise of further developments. They Stick to Their Friend. South Bend, Ind.. Kept. 2G. Friends of Thomas Edward Clark, held here on the charge of bunco steering, in victimizing Henry Crofort of $5,000, are making a desperate effort to secure his escape from trial. It is said an offer was made Crofort's family to pay him $2,000 if he would not prosecute. The offer was rejected and the party conducting the negotiations said $ 10,000 would " be spent to secure Clark's release if necessary. The parties went before the city judge and secured an agreement to reduce the bond to $2,000. Information was then filed before the county judge and a writ of habeas corpus was prayed. The judge intimated that he would not reduce the bond of $10,000 already fixed, and then the writ was withdrawn. Took a Long Chance. Anderson. Ind., Sept. 26 While being taken from Montyelier to Marion, William Crocket, colored, leaped from the car window at Linwood and escaped from the officer in charge. The officer's revolver was emptied at the fleeing negro, but the whizzing bullets seemed only to increase his speed, which was too much for the pursuing officer. The negro was being brought to Marion as the prosecuting witness in a criminal case. Police Are Investigating. New Albany. Ind., Sept. 2G. A dastardly attempt was made by unknown vandals to blow up the trestle of the Southern Railway company at this place. A blaze was discovered in the trestlework near East Fourteenth St., but was extinguished before much damage was done. Later seven sticks of dynamite, wrapped in an old cloth, were found under a log at the foot of East Third St. The police are investigating. i Liberty Bell Will Stop. Indianapolis, Sept. 26. Mayor Holtzman has received a letter from Henry Clay, chairman of Philadelphia's liberty bell committee, saying that the historic bell will make a stop in Indianapolis on its way home to Philadelphia from St. Louis, the latter part of November. Plans will be made for a big celebration when the bell visits the city, in which the school children will take a prominent part. Young Woman's Suicide. Marion. Ind.. Sept. 2G. Because of disappointment in love Viola Randall, aged 21 year- swallowed strychnine at the home of her sister, Mrs. Mary Leonard, with suicidal intent and died scon after taking the drag. Shot Himself in Srain. Lafayette. Ind., Sept. 26. W. A. Bartholomew, in a fit of insanity, committed suicide at his home, two miles west of Clarkshill, by shooting himself through the head. A widow and child survive him. Will Run Against Watson. Connersville, Ind.. Sept. 26. At the Sixth district Democratic congressional convention U. S. Jackson was unanimously nominated to make the race against James E. Watson.
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HORROR
DEATH LIST IN THE TENNESSEE DISASTER INCREASING MORE THAN SIXTY DEAD Two Passenger Trains Come Together Head-On With the Most Fearful Consequences. Knoxville, Tenn., Sept. 2G. The death-list as a result of the fearful wreck on the Southern Railway near Newmarket Saturday has grown to sixty-two, and it will probably exceed seventy, as many of the injured are In a serious condition and more deaths will occur at the hospital. Sunday there were six deaths at that institution. A force of 1-50 men toiled all day Sunday at the scene of the wreck. Engineers Parrott and Kane were found beneath their engines, but their bodies were not badly crushed. Small fragments of bodies were found in many instances, but it is thought that they belong to holies already found and brought to this city. The cause of the terrible loss of life in the heavy eastbo'ind train is explained. It soeir.s that t!: second coach plowed its way into a tank in such a manner that the ether cars were jammed into it and, pushed on by the we'ght of the heavy Pullmans, were crushed like eggshells. The complete list of injured as given by the railroad ofncials shows a total of 162, but this includes all persons who were only slightly h-trt or scratched. The appalling loss of life and maiming of the living resulted apparently from the disregarding of orders given to the two train j to me--t rst a ?tatior. which has for a long t i i ? ben their regular meeting point The claim of failure to see eit ! ?- tb station or signals cannot be sot up bv the engineer of the westbound train, were he alive to enter a nlen of defense, as the accident happened in broad daylight and, acerdirg tr the best information o":.t" in-U. he bad the order in a pi'lo frame in front of him as his monster of iron and -a el rushed by the 5ta'on. s-ri a mile and a half farther came full upon an east-bound passenger train making for Hodges, in compliance with instructions to meet the west-bound train, which carried the sleepers from the oit for Knoxville. Chattanooga and other Southern cities The possibility exists that the illfated engineer may have been asleep or that death had suddenly tike the sight from his eyes before I!n !-es was reached P'lt. nothing fs known save that, the orders wore not obeyed. The trains were on time and not making over thirty-five miles '-in hour, yet the impact as they ronudod a curve and came suddenly upon each other was frightful Poh engines and the ajor portions of both trains w 1 demolished and why the orders wen diregarded or misinterpreted will pro ably never be known, as t he engineer of the two trains were crushed, their bodies remaining for hours tinder tbwreckage of the monster locomotives, Train Ran Into Wreck. Rochester. N Y.. Sept 26 Six people who were injured in a wreck on the , New York Central raifroad a short distance east of Lyon were brought to Rochester hospital Three sleepers on the Western express, a fast train bound from New York to Chicago, left the track because of a split, rail, and threw the passengers to the floors of the coaches Just as the train came to a standstill a fast freight east-bound ran into the derailed cars. Mrs Newman Erb"?. wife of the vice president of the Pere Mar quette railroad, who was brought here with both limbs cut off, died at the hospital. Mr. Erbs was bruised and injured. Killed in Railway Yards. Cairo, 111., Sept. 26. Two men were run over and killed by a switch engine in the Mobile & Ohio yards last night. One of them was Clem Slaught, an iron molder, with an Evansville union card in his possession. He was terribly mangled, his head being cut from his body. The body of the other man was cut in two. In his pocket was found the name of Adamson. A union card of the Firemen's Association of the Great Lakes was found upon him. Death Comes In Pulpit. Allentown, Pa., Sept. 26. Rev. Jacob Steinhauser. D.D., pastor of St. Michaels Lutheran church and professor of Hebrew in Muhlenberg college, sustained his third stroke of par-alj-sis while preaching a sermon in German yesterday, and died a few hours later of age. He was fifty-four years j I - I Wlven doctors fail, try Burtlocki Blood Bitters. Cures dyspepsia, constipation: invigorates the whole sys-tem.
j- Kindly keep j. uppermost In your 4. mind the fact T that the
1 4. J First National t Bank JL i Wants your banking bust- JL, ness, and will accord you J, every courtesy and accom- V Miiuuctiiuii consistent wiin ine . t M 1 , . M . most liberal and modern t X T JL methods of banking. T X ? I..x..I..:,.I..I..I, x X X YOUR TRIP to Los Angeles or San Francisco will aot be perfect unless vou use the CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY e'Aher on groing or returning jour either on the going or returwin journey. It has the grandest and most wonderful scenery in the world, which is in full view fro mthe train for COO
miles, or can be viewed from the many u
mountain resorts along the line. Stopovers Allowed. Free Observation Cars. Trip Through Puget Sound between Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle without extra charge. Write for illustrated literature. A. C. SHAW, Gen. Agt., Passer. Dept. Chicago, I1L Republican Ticket . . 3 NATIONAL. President. Theodore Roosevelt. Vice President. Charles Warren Fairbanks. STATE. Governo- J. Frank Hanly. Secretary of State Daniel E. Storms. Auditor of State David E. Sharrick. Attorney Gene Charles W. Miller. State Superintendent of Public Instruction Fassatt A. Cotton. Reporter of Supreme Court Geo. W. Self. State Statistician Joseph H. Stubbs. Lieutenant Governor Hugh Th. Miller. - '-r. Judge of the Supreme Court, Second District Oscar IL Montgomery. Third District John V. lladley. LEGISLATIVE. Congress. James E. WatsonJoint Representative. Richard Elliott Senator. Roscoe E. Kirkman. Representative. Dr. M. W. Yencer. COUNTY. For Sheriff. Richard S. Smith. County Recorder. Frank C. Mosbaugh. County Treasurer. Benjamin B. Myrick, Jr. Surveyor. Robert A. Howard. Coroner. Dr. S. C. Markley. Prosecuting Attorney. Wilfred Jessup. Commissioner Middle District, John F. Dynes. Commissioner Western District. El wood Clark. A HALF MILLION ACRES. $30.00 to Colorado and Return. Via Chicago, Union Pacific & NorthWestern Line. Chicago to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo, daily throughout the summer. Correspond- - r 1 t f -I! nnta Mil. Only one night to Denver from Chi-. eago. Two fast trains daily. TourLt sleeping cars to Denver daily.
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