Richmond Palladium (Daily), 28 September 1904 — Page 4

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS

'PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY. EXCEPT SUNDAY. AT 922 MAN STREET.

TELEPHONES:

CENTRAL UNION HOME

IVTEKED AT HICBMO.ND POSTOFFIOE AS 8f.CO' D-CLA33 MATTER

Dally delivered by carrier to any part of the city for six cents a week. SUBSCRIPTION. RATES:

O atslde cUv. six months, In advance O ntsld cltv, one month, in advance O utslde city, one year, In advance V E EKLY-By mall one year, f 1.00

i t-. tto t t n ATT at any time to get your paper from your carrier, you will conif4 IwU rxlLy fer a faTor by at once notifying the otflce by tlephor"

JOHN S. FITZCIBBONS, Editor and Business Manager

Thursday night, September 29, Hon. Albert J. Bereridge will deliver a campaign speech at the Coliseum. From present indications the house will be packed. Senator Iteverklge is one of the finest young orators in Indiana. He will not deal in dry facts Indiana. He wll no deal n dry facts but will preach the gospel of Republicanism as it has not been heard in this city for a long time. t Senator Fairbanks is a lion where ever he speaks. His campaign tour is very successful and his speeches are weighted with wisdom. It is this kind of man that wins in the race for anything. In a private letter from Mr. S. W. DUBLIN. Ed Beeson was among those who attended the late state air from Dublin. An immense amount of coal, has been going west on the Panhandle of late. Walter Cooper of Denver, Col., was the guest of his mother, Mrs. C. T. Swain and other relatives part of last week. Benton Woodward has . bought out the Clifford brothers' meat market. Miss Nellie Larsh attended the State Fair and visited friends at Indianapolis during fair week. Quite a number of the citizens of Dublin" have of late been feasting on the best of peaches of their own raising. We certainly can commend the spirit zeal and go ahead spirit of Henry Haskins in running his bakery entirely by himself as he does. Mrs. J. C. Mills was visiting friends at Fountain City last w&ek and from there has gone to Chicago to join her husband, Prof. J. C. Mills, who now has a lucrative position in that city. liev. Parker, from Tennessee, and who preached in the Radical church Sunday night of last week preached Sunday morning in the M. E. church and at niiiht the pulpit was occupied bv Rev. Bills an evangelist and who by the way will fill Rev. Walters' appointments while the latter will be absent some two months in other church work. Rev. Parker and also Rev. Bills are both interesting pulpit orators. Mrs. Thomas Henby a givat church worker went to Richmond the fore part of the week to attend Friends' Yearly meeting as she has important church work allotted her. Ed (Jarthwaite moved his household goods to Richmond Monday last and will live there as he has a position in one o the shops of that city. Emory Pierson, a noted Quaker minister of Kansas spent over night with Mr. and Mrs. Micajah Henley the first of the week, being old friends. Rev. Pierson is attending the Yearly Meeting at Richmond. The Finest Fabric made by human skill is coarse compared with the lining of the- bowels. When this tender membrane is irritated we have griping pains, diarrhoea and cholera morbus. Whatever be the cause of the trouble, take Perry Davis' Painkiller according to the direction? with ench bottle. Travelers in all climates carry Painkiller in their gripsrVcks. Large bottles 2." and 50 cents.

Wake up your liver! You sleepy fellow ! Don't look so dull ! Clear up your brain ! Just one

It's all vou need. Mild, liver. - - -- J. C.iyer Co Lowell, Mass. 21 SI In advance. 0 .. 21 .. 8 00 Oillilan to the editorof thePalladium we read between the lines that he is meeting with the success he so richly deserves. No man ever left Richmond with more friends than did Mr. Gillilan and he deserved them all and more. Every minute of his time is occupied in preparation for the days to come as well as for the ever present. Governor Durbin took a few hot shots at the Democracy the other day in a way not to be misunderstood. They try to case odium on is administration of affairs in the state,espeeially in the charitable institutions but in all these attempts dismal failure has been th result. CHESTER. Friday evening the Sunday school class of Will Reynolds paid him a surprise visit spending a very pleasant evening. . Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Will Reynolds, Miss Lena Hiatt, Miss Lee Addington, Emma Hall, Fannie Martin, Bertha Carman, Ada Morrow , Mrs. Newman I Ida Pickett. Mrs. Benton. Refresh ments were served. I Mrs. Will Morrow returned from Parker City Monday where she went to attend the funeral of Adam Keever. Mr. Keever was a pioneer resident of Randolph count-, one of the oldest and most respected. lie was the father of Mrs. George M. Joy, 'Mrs. Edwin Morrow, Mrs. Wallace. Frank Keever, of Parker City and Sig E. Keever of Terre Hauute. Hi funeral took place at Maneville Friday and was largely attended. Rev. Pierce of Richmond conducted the funeral services. Harry Roberts went to Indianapolis Tuesday to enter law school. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Fulghum took dinner with Mr. and Mrs. PeifTer Sunday. Wednesday evening, October 5th, Dr. Watt will preach in the Chester M. E. church. Rev. Harrison will preach here Sunday evening. 1 Rev. Lewis of Indianapolis, president of the anti-Saloon League, delivered a temperance sermon here Sunday. Mis? Maggie Smithson has returned 'to her home at Ridgevillc. I Orange blossoms will beplentiful 'at Chester during the month of October. Attend public, sale of household goods, consisting of carpets, curtains, bedroom suits, dining tables, chairs, ! dishes, ranges and many other artii cles on Tuesday, October 4th, 1904, 'at 9 o'clock a. m. Mrs. Laura A. Grass, 110 South Thirteenth Street. T. R. Woodhurst, Auctioneer. 2S-6t Take advantage of the special reduction on kid gloves tliis week at Knollenoerg's store. Send 2 cent stamp for itinerary of pecial personally conducted tours to California, leaving Chicago August .Sth and 25th, via the Chicago. Union Pacific & North-Western Line, account Triennial Conclave Knights Templar at San Francisco. $50 round trip from Chicago. Correspondingly ow rates from all points. A. II. Waggener, 22 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, 111

SIGNS OF ACTION

Japs and Russians Seem to lib Again Lining- Up For Battle. A FOIttYAliD MOVEMENT On the Part oQ the ".Japanese Armies Portends, an Karly 'and General Engagement Near Mukden. General Kuropatkin 1 Fortifying a Strategic Position In Preparation For Contingencies. Indications point to the imminence of a forward movement of the Japanese armies against the Russians at Tie pass, Sinmintin and Mukden. ' General Kuropatkin is fortifying Fak oman, northeast ,,of Mukden, in order that he may be prepared for the con tingency of the evacuation of Sinmintin. Reports of the naval engagement with the southeastern extremity of Sakhalin are not verified; on the contrary, it is believed the Vladivostok squadron remains in the harbor. There is no news from Port Arthur. LITTLE FURTHER NEWS Ths Curtain Again Rung Down on the Scene of War. St. Petersburg, Sept. 28. The war commission has received no further news from the front. A Mukden press telegram reporting that the Japanese had crossed the Hun river fifty miles above the city is believed to refer to scouting parties of Japanese whose presence there was recorded in the press dispatches of Sept. 26. The movement of Japanese forces on the Liao river, which was reported in a dispatch from General Sakharofl to the general staff on Sept. 26, is all the more significant, since Sianchan ,is the starting point of roads leading to Tie pass, Mukden and Sinmintin. The announcement that the Russians are fortifying Fakoman, twenty-five miles northeast of Mukden, shows that General Kuropatkin is preparing to check the flanking movement on Tie pass from the west in case Sinmintin should have to be evacuated. The entire absence of news from Port Arthur, it is feared, indicates a closer blockade there. Hitherto dispatches from General Stoessel have been coming through semi-weekly. The admiralty has not received any details of the reported sea fight off Aniva, at the southeastern extremity of Sakhalin. The Vladivostok squadron, it is understood, is still in the harbor. The cannonading at Aniva was probably a Japanese attack on blockade runners. A telegram received here from Batoum reporting that reservists are being transported along the Caucasian coast, brings the first intimation that troops there are being mobilized. There are only two army corps in the Caucasus, and one of these has apparently been ordered to the front. Prince Sviapolk-Mirsky was receievd in audience yesterday by the emperor. The prince will assume charge of the ministry of the interior on Oct. 1. The emperor will leave for Odessa today. It is his intention to visit Tiraspel instead of Kishineff, as has been previously announced. A MIXED FINDING Somewhat Peculiar Conclusion Arrived at by Georgia Commission. Albany, Ga., Sept. 28. The trial of Chief of Police Westbrook on sensational charges first preferred by Dr. L. G. Broughton of Atlanta in a sermon here three months ago and following which the preacher was cowhided by the chief, was concluded late yesterday afternoon. . Of the seven specific charges preferred the chief was found guilty of two, viz., drinking while on duty and in uniform, and visiting barrooms while on duty and loitering at such places. The commission imposed a fine of $25 for each of these offenses and ex onerated him on all other charges. On the charge of assault on the minister the commissioners said: "We find Chief Westbrook guilty of this charge, but in our opinion the peculiar circumstances justified him as a man in pursuing the course he did." Federation of Labor Officers. Terre Haute, Ind., Sept. 28. The State Federation of Labor elected the following officers: President, E. A. Perkins, Indianapolis; first vice president, George D. Herrick, Muncie; second vice president, Miss Lilly Fredericks, Indianapolis; third vice president, Wellington O'Connor, Staunton; fourth vice president, James W. Hegarty, Terre Haute; fifth vice president, Charles J. Steiss, Fort Wayne; secretary-treasurer, John W. Peters South Bend. Threw Himself on Court's Mercy. New London, Sept. 28. Colonel James A. Brown, former treasurer of the People's Savings bank at Stonington, pleaded guilty to four counts of making false entries in the bank's books covering up an alleged shortage of $20,000. Brown threw himself on the mercy of the court. Sentence wa3 dferr3d.

'A GREAT FINISH

Close of Campaign Will Not Lack In Interest. Indianapolis, Sept. 28. The Republicans will have a great finish for their campaign locally. Chairman Harry B. Smith said today that Senator Fairbanks will probably make th final speech. It will be- the occasion for a great closing ra!ly of the Republicans. Speaker Canr-on is coming the latter part or next month. Secretary Shaw, Secretary Tart and many others of prominence are to be here. Big preparations have been made for Senator Beveridge's meeting tonight. It is understood that he will reply to Judge Parker's letter of acceptance, and 'ti3 said that his speech will be a keynote for the president Mmself. Senator Beveridge will begin a tour of the state Friday. The convention of the National Association of Republican Clubs next week will be one of the big events of the campaign in this state. An idea of what the Democratic national committee is doing for Indiana may be realized ,from a statement made today to your correspondent by Chairman M. A. Ryan of the speakers' bureau of the Democratic state committee, who said that he has more speakers now than he knows what to do with. He had just finished reading telegrams from the national committee stating that J. Hamilton Lewis of Washington will speak next week In Indiana and that David B. Hill's first dates would be Oct. 17. 18 and 19. Within the last three days the national committee has offered Indiana more speakers of prominence than were sent in either '96 or 1900, and word has been received that more speakers will be sent later. Chairman Ryan was pressed at the first of the campaign for enough speakers to fill all of the demands, but now he is sending out to the county chairmen asking them to make arrangements for meetings. It is a part of the plan to carry Indiana by sending as many of the big guns as possible. If they don't shake old "General Apathy" off the trail within the next forty days it will be strange. It is probable that Hill will open his campaign at Fort Wayne on the 17th, speaking here on the 18th and Evansville on the 19th. He will probably return to Indiana during the latter part of the campaign. Senator Will Wood of Lafayette, law partner of J. Frank Hanly, called at the Republican state committee rooms today. He said that the Republican nominee for governor is in better physical condition than when he opened his campaign and that his voice seems to be in fine condition in spite of the strenuous task he has undertaken. Mr. Hanly has been speaking day and night almost since the hour of his nomination. t Probably no other candidate for governor of Indiana ever put in a more active campaign on the stump, but Mr. Hanly has In his favor a strong constitution .begotten in his youth, when ho toiled early and late at hard labor. During his professional career he has been a man of fine habits, so he is physically able to withstand a bruising campaign. He will make his closing speech at Lafayette the night of November 5. The betting on the election in Indiana Is still light. In fact practically no betting has been done up to this time. The first money is now appearing on pluralities. Even money is offered that the Republican carry the state by 5.000 and small odds are asked on wagers that the state will give a Republican plurality of from 8,000 to 10,000. It does not seem very likely that there will be much offered that the Republicans will carry the state by, 35,000 or 40,000, although it Is said that Congressman Hemenway told the president Monday at Washington that the Republican plurality will be 38,000, while Congressman Landis and other Republican spellbinders have been placing an estimate as high as 60,000. A few bets of $100 to $70 that President Roosevelt will be elected have been taken. S3Z

r.REDHT

The Globe Credit Clothing Go.

Open every evening.

TAGGART

j Will Not Have the Western HeadI onarters. (Ty Associated Pres.) New Yrk, Srp!ci;hor 2. It i !i"t the intention ..f Chairman Tatrart to open hejolouartrs in the wot. He eYHc:s to iit Imlitma, Illinois and Wisconsin, hut that will not take him away from active management of the national campaign. WINDOW GLASS The Cutters Have Formed a National Association. Hartford City, Ind., September 2. A. B. Lowe, of this city, wired' fro mthe Fast tody that the window' glass cutters had formed a national association with him as preident. It is said lie will act independently on the wage question. Dynamite Plot Discovered. Muncie, Ind., Sept. 28. Two small boys while at play discovered two large dynamite cartridges in the foundation of the J. P. Snyder produce establishment, almost in the center of town, a half square from the courthouse. There was enough of the explosive in the cartridges to ruin two such buildings as Snyder's. From Danger to Death. Princeton, Sept. 28. Charles Whitman, a farmer, was instantly killed by a passenger train on the Southern railroad, near Oakland City. He stepped from a side track to get away from a freight train and walked in front of the passenger train. Turned Up Alive. Wabash, Sept. 28. Walter Harris, of this city, who disappeared several weeks ago, and who was reported dead, haa returned to this city. He says the murder in Kentuoky of a man of his name caused th rumor of his death. Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week special Glove Sale at Knollenberg's. Attend public sale of household roods, consisting of carpets, curtains, bedroom suits, dining tables, chairs, dishes, ranges and many other articles on Tuesday, October 4th, 1904, at 9 o'clock a. m. Mrs. Laura A. Grass, 110 South Thirteenth Street. T. R. Woodhurst, Auctioneer. 28-6t Our line ol kid gloves is complete in sizes and colors. Special sale tliis -week at Knollenberg's store.

Merchant Tailors"

No. 516

The oldest and most reliable tailor establishment in the city. Guarantee every garment made. Prices to suit the times.

New Fall Stock Received.

Our Fall Opening Thursday, Friday, Saturday

Don't miss it. We will have on exhibition as handsome a variety ol NEW FALL STYLES for men, women children as can be found in the city. WHY will you wait to buy Fall and Winter Clothing when ou can come here now. pick out the finest obtainable, put it on and wear it, and pay for it in WEEKXY or MONTHLY payments ? Our prices are as low as any casli store.

Ladies' Tailor-made Suits $7.50 to $30.00 La lies' Tourist Coats $10.00 to $35.00 Ladies' and Misses' Butcher Coats $10.00 to $20.00 MILLINER Y$2 qO to $10 00 Men's Suits $3.50 to $23 00

6-8 North 6th St., Richmond, Ind

BACKACHE AND DIZZINESS

Iot of the Ailments Perutlar to tb Female Sex are Iue to Catarrh of Pelvic Organ. :Vre.Ji' '.'-- T - MRS. M. BRICKNER. 99 Eleventh Street, Milwaukee, Wis. "A short time ago 1 found my con ditlon very serious, 1 had headaches, pains In the back, and frequent dizzy spells which grew worse every month. 1 tried two remedies before Peruna, and was discouraged when I took the first dose, but my courage soon returned. In less than two months my health was restored." Mrs. M. Brick ner. The reason of so many failures -to cure cases similar to the'aliove is th fact that diseases peculiar to t h e female sex art not commonly FEMALE TROUBLE NOT RECOGNIZED AS CATARRH. recognized as being caused by catarrh. Catarrh of one organ is exactly th lamo as catarrh of any other organ. What will cure catarrh of the head will also cure catarrh of the pelvic organs. Peruna cures these casea 6imply becaus It cures the catarrh. If you have catarrh write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of jrour case, and ho will be pleased to jjiv you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of It!ft'.,n Sanitarium, Columbus, O. YOUR TRIP to Los Angeles or San Francisco will 'not be perfect unless you use the CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY I efther on going or returning jour either on the going or returning jour- ' ney. i It has the grandest and most wonderful scenery in the world, which is in full view fro mthe traia for 600 miles, or can be viewed from the many 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., PassgT. Dept. Chicago, III. Main St.

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Men's Overcoats $3.50 to $23 00 Youths' Suits and Overcoats $0.00 to $15.00 Boys' Two-Piece Suits $2.50 to $3.00 Men's Hats and Shoes $2.00 to $4.50