Richmond Palladium (Daily), 2 November 1904 — Page 4

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THE PALLADIUM IM EMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS i PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY,' AT 922 MAIN STREET. ! TEL.KPIIONKS: CBNTRAL UNION - - 21 IHrtEED AT RICHMOND POSTOFHCK AS CLASS MATTER nUverd by carrier to any pa "the city for seven cents a weeK. art of SUBSCRIPTION RATESt DAILY OfiVhlde citv. six months, In advance M OcUld city, one month. In advance.... w , .nii vor. In advance ow LFLiSlU? WEEKLY B v runll one year, fl.00 In advance. JOHN S. FITZCIBBONS. - Editor M. O. HOLL Y. - Business Manager H. S. CARTER, Reportorl RAMSEY POUNDSTONE al Staff UNION WLABEJ Let everybody turn out " Thursday niirht and hear Hon. Henry U. Johnson speak on ths issues of the campaign at the New Phillips. He intends io show Beveridge, Ilanly, Watson and Griffiths where to' get off at. The more speeches Mr. Johnson speak on the issues of the cammove votes will be made for the Republicans. Insincerity in any man never wins a point. Go on, Henry, and cut the. air some more. It will do some good. Henry U. Johnson is going to tell the Democrats all about it Thursday night at the New Phillips, ne ean do it. No one is better able to do it than Henry U. He has been on both sides of the fence and voted 'with the Republicans until, he became .obnoxious. He became disgruntled because President MeKinley declared war with Spain. He encouraged the Filipinos in their nefarious work by his talk against the administration. Oh, yes! He knows all about it. AVrhbishop Elder died in' Cincinnati yesterday after a short illness. He was born in 1810 in Baltimore, Marvland. and was one of a family of ten children. He was one of the brightest mon in the Catholic church, was a man worth knowing and 6n worth studying. The Cincinnati Commercial Tribune said: "His time was more valuable and more sought after than any public oflice bolder in the city of Cincinnati.' Yet it i a fact that there was less red tain? needed in gaining; admission to shake the kind hand of the highest church dignitary in the central part of the United States than it is to gain the ear of the average public official. The. reception- room at the home of the Archbishop" is, furnished without attempt at- ornamentation. The furniture is . of, tho most common kind. The carpet is' thin and threadbare, the divans are old and have seen service for a . number of years. Candidate., Parker, in 'addressing a New York audience last night, said: "More and more as the canvass has proceeded and the unjust stewardship of the Republican party has been made clear, am I convinced that in this election we are . confronted with issues which must' be determined rightly if we are' to avoid grave consequences to our country. "I am not speaking, I believe, in this even unconsciously from any selfish point of view. I am speaking with the conviction of a man who has taken into review the questions before the country largely in a judicial way--nnd the conviction has grown stronger as the days have gone by, and I - have examined this record of the Republican party and even the defenses it interposes for its justification that to permit the conduct of this party to go unrebuked is to invite the establishment of new and dangerous principles and standards for our guidance as a people." How does the above sound coming from a man Mike, Judge .Parker? "The unjust, stewardship of the Re-j publican party H', .ITliui'IXXUe Republican party gav to' tins 4Vdnh-

try thirty-six years of the greatest prosperity in the history of any nation. The Democrats were in power four years and carqe near ruining the country. The voters of this county are just as intelligent as the average spell-binder and will not ; be led astray by any of Judge Parker's talks. We have the evidence on our side and they, have their evidence on their's. Compare the records of the two parties place them side. by side

-and take your choice. ; o ONLY A FEW DAYS REMAIN. Five days only xemain for the ac tive campaign work, and these few days will witness as strenuous effort as have ever been put forth in Indiana oh the eve of a Presidential election. ' Both parties w ill leave nothing un done that might be done in the way of putting the finishing touches on the two months' campaign which they have waged for the State Elec toral votes. Republican managers believe, with J? 1La1m A i.-i nt every reason ior men wuuuaiu, that Indiana is now safe for Roosevelt and Fairbanks; that the entire state ticket will be elected; that a Republican majority in the next Gen eral Assembly is assured; that every lislrict now represented in Congress by a Republican will be retained and hat there is an excellent jchauce for gaining two members of Congress. Democratic leaders, while affecting confidence of being able to carry the State, are rally only hopeful that victory may be theirs and recognize that their hopes have but slight foundation. They are hone the less determined, however, to put up the hardest fight possible with their somewhat incomplete organizations, re-enforced by an abundance of money which they have not yet been able to lay their hands on, but which they rely, upon Thom as Tarrart to produce from the strong box of the National Committee when the time comes for its effective use. The Democrats will fight with all the desperation that comes with a folorn hope struggle for a great prize. With the Republicans, accordingly, the contest is primarily one to hold that which they already have. Their concern is rather to see that no ground is lost, and they are on the defensive, although aggressively : So. in every line. So far as the-active, party workers are concerned there is little likelihood that: the Republican cause will suffer from overconfidence. It has been learned in bitter, experiences of the past that there is. nothing absolutely certain about what Indiana will do until the votes are in and have been counted.' " " ' " 1 Some of the leaders are inspired by an altogether healthful fear that the State may i be taken away from ..... W 1 I tnem m tne closings ays oi tne campaign. They are confident 'that the victory will lie w ith fhem,,; but ' they have a very Avholesonie respect for the ability of their adversaries, especially .when the enemy , is. inilitanf, aggressive, practically united, : abundantly supplied with the hlunitiops of war and led by the resourceful and redoubtable T. Taggart. LARGE NUMBER Pive Thousand People Land in New , York ; Yesterday. ' ' i j New A'ork, November 1. More than o.OOO pasengers arrived here today on three , German liners the Moltke, from Hamburg, and the Kaiser Wilhelm II, and the Frederich der Grosse from Berlin. ! Of- this number 1,084 came in the first cabings, while 3.48S were in the steerage. Among the passengers on the Kaiser Wilhelm II, were Baron von Dem Bussche-lladdenhausen, counselor and first secretary of the German embassy at Washington; Andreas Dippel, Madame Gadski, Madame Sembrich, conductors Gustave Kegel and S. Meyrowitz of the Metropoli tan opera company Risero Hulero. (he Spanish dancer, and Thawf ' brother of ihe C "YannoutH. Henry K. Countess of

WiSDlTEfSDAY' UOBlilNG, NOVEMBER 2, 1904.

CENTRAL POLO LEAGUE GAMES FORT WAYNE DEFEATS KOKOMO IN FIRST GAME THE LAST YEAR CHAMPIONS Played in Great Form and Won by a Large Margin The Rink Was Crowded.

P. W. L. Pet. Lafayette ....2 2 0 1000 Ft. Wayne ...1 1 0 1000 Danville .....2 1 1 .500 Kokomo 1 0 1 .000 Terre Haute.. 1 0 1 .000 Logansport ..1 0 1 .000

Ft. Waype Won. (Special to the Palladium.) Ft. Wayne, Ind., November 1 Ko komo and Ft. Wayne played their first games of polo for the season tonight in this city. Last year's champions completely overwhelmed the Kokomo boys and Avon 9 to 2. The rink was crowded and judging from the actions of the crowd polo promises to be more of a drawing card -this year than it was last. Lafayette the Victors. (Special to the Palladium.) Lafayette, Ind., November 1. LaI fayette won its second game tonight m a wry spirueu coniesi wiin uanville by a score of 4 to 3. Warner and Gavit starred for Lafavette, while Daly and Campbell shared the honors for Danville. This was the first at home game for the Lafayette bo vs. SERIOUS FIRE Shelbyville is Vistied by a Disastrous Blaze. Shelbyville, Ind., November 1. The severest loss from which this j eit hils SlltTei-Orl in vparo 'rntnlfnl at ! 1 o'clock this morning, from a fire wlc horiginated in the engine room of the Nading elevator arid hominy mill, spreading to the Varidegrift wrench factory, and also destroying several small cottages. The alarm was first sounded by the whistle of a Dig Four railway engine. The fire department responded with usual j promptness, but the blaze had attain ed great headway, and with difficulty was suppressed.; ; Citizens ; turned out en masse, and with; garden; hose and buckets assisted stemming the progreR -..5Villia iam Nading, owner of the ele-J yator and mill, sustained a loss of $13,000, with $18,000 insurance. ' The Yandegrift Wrench Company was damaged $10,000, with $2,000 insuraneeNThe dwellings owned by Mrs. James McGuir-e, Mrs. Anna Fisher, 1 Mrs Fred Kuster and Mrs. Mary Bell ; House were , also wrecked, together -with household effects. The loss in' this instance will reach $S,000vith limited insurance. Mr. Nading had much wheat and corn in storage. The absence of wind prevented a widespread destruction, as the buildings burned rapidly, and blazing embers were carried high into the air. It is understood that the destroyed industries will be replaced. PATENT CARRIERS Will Likely Be Manufactured in this City. Mr. Fred Hamilton, of this city, who is a genius, was last May gitinted a 'patent on a mail and parcel carrier which was one of the neatest contrivances ever patented. It is! made "to use on rural routes and in i scores. Tast evening two gentlemen with capital to back them met with Mr. Hamilton at the Westcott Hotel for the purpose of forming a company for the manufacture of the contrivance.The gentlemen are much interested and it looks now as if the deal would be a go. Mr. Hamilton was granted a 1 patent last May. Several parties have been interested, but-. the men who met last night gave e, ory evidence of doing something.

ao e hrmrrlif L. Sweigart; of this city, has bought two colts, each seven months old, one . ,r ,i Ai i of which was sired by the great trotter Creseeus and the other by McKinney. - Petty Has Hopes. Muncie, I ndM November 1. Bobby Hart has written Manager Petty, of the Muncie polo club, that he does not understand the reduction in his salary, but that he will come West if he can not do better. Hisnrins will also ret urn. " Wild" Charley " Farrell is still in Muncie, but has not signed. , Holderness is still out. DeWitt wil again do 1he utility stunt. KNOCKING - The Indianapolis News Has Already Brought Out its Hammer. The Indianapolis News seems to have started the ball to rolling against the Richmond polo team. In the column edited by Ed Bingham in that paper last evening the following article appeared: f "Richmond is having a hard time making the polo players believe the Quaker management their only friends. It is a shrewd move to gain a little profit at the expense of other managers. The sconer the polo magnates have enough confidence in one another not to force an affidavit to be made that they will stand by their own interests, the better success the Western Polo League will have. BURIED THE CAT Baltimore Woman Puts Pets in Grave With Husband. Baltimore, Md,, November 1. The; suburb of Parkville is disturbed and the trustees of the Methodist Epis-' copal church are indignant because Mi's. Sarah Rice has buried her two pet cats in the church grave vardi beside the tomb of her husband. The board of trustees entered a protest, but Mrs. Rice ignored it, simply declaring the lot belonged to her, and she would do as she pleased in it. A civil magistrate found no law or precedent V'tb guide . him, and dismissed the case. ARBITRATION Treaty Signed by this Country and France. Washington, November 1. Secretary Hay and Embassador Jesserand today signed a treaty providing .for the settlement by arbitration of any possible disputes, between the United: States jand France. It is drawn, ion the lines; of the Anglo-French arbitration treaty. They Come High in Indiana. "Your brother.. in Indiana is com i. ing to visit yon, I understand ?" "Yes, he's coming this fall. He hasn't felt that he could afford the trip rintil now." f . "StrucU something rich has, he?" "I guess "it amounts to about the sitnie thing. You seethe's classed as a . doubtful voter." Cleveland Plain Dealer.- : j World's Fair excursion tickets to $t. Louis will be sold via Pennsylvania Lines at approximately one eent per mile each Tuesday and Thursday until September 29th, valid lb coaches of through trains, good returning within seven days. These are the lowest fares at which Word's Fair excursion tickets to St. Louis .re sold. Fifteen day tickets, sixty day tickets and season tickets sold daily at reduced fares, good in sleeping or parlor cars with required Pullman tickets. For full information,

Valuable Colts. Muneie, Ind., 'November

Sheahan's Famous Pictures,

152 Subjects-9 cents each. Boston Store, Thursday Morn' See West Window and Vestibule Casev

A GENEROUS OVATION ."" ' . : -Li ' :'.-. '

m r-ii Indiana s Greeting to Her Oistlnguisn3 i ed Senior Senator Is Everywhere Enthusiastic CROWDS MEET SPECIAL TRAIN At All Point Touched on the Great Swing Around the Circle in Indiana '. 8entor Fairbanks Receives Warm Evidences of the People's Earnest ' Admiration and Promises of Loyal Support. Fort Wayne, Ind.. Nov. 1. A gener ous oration was accorded Senator i Charles W. Fairbanks throughout the first day of his campaign tour of Indiana. Leaving; Indianapolis, his ! borne city, where he had rested over ! Sunday, the senator's train proceeded SKNTOR FAIKHANK?. by slow staaeM io Fort Wayne, where the evening mooting was held,. At al! the stations , where a stop was made the crowds wo'v large am! enthusiastic, particularly so in the cities of Tip ton, Elwood. Marion. Huntington and Fort Wayne. Fourteen spooehes are scheduled for today, the stations on the list being Butler. Auburn. Angola. Waterloo. Kendallviile. Wolcottville. Lagrange,! SturRis. Mirh. .-Goshen. Klkhart. South Bend. Laporte. Michigan City and Hammond. , . The work that Senator Fairbanks has Wore him this week in Indiana is enormous. His Indiana itinerary, arranged with great care to make It as comprehensive and far-reaching as possible, cover? more ground, probably, than aiiy ever devised during a campaign in this prate. Will Travel 1,520 Miles. Senator Fairbanks will travel .1,520 miles over the Motion. Lake Erie & Western. Big; Four. Wabash. ' Lake Shore. Grand Rapids & Indiana, Michigan Central. Pennsylvania, Clover Leaf. Chicago & Eastern Illinois. Eyansvllle & Terre Haute, Illinois Central, Southern Indiana, Evansville A Indianapolis. lialtimorc &. Ohio, Louisville & Nashville, Louisville. Henderson & St. Louis, and Cincinnati, Hamilton Dayton railroads. The senator's special train during the trip will be in the states of Michigan. Illinois, Kentucky and Indiana. HI car will be attached to four regular trainR The balance of the trip will 1m by "special train. Senator Fair T&anks is in fln Voice and good health, despite, the long speaking campaign which has extended into almost every Northern state, : ..,.... - Endurance of. the Speaker. Those who thought tnt the se&ator and vice presidential candidate could BOt stand the strenuosity of. a 'campaign like this have another thought coming. His strength and endurance U a surprise to even those, who know him best. Tie Is pleasant and affable to everylKxly and . his geniality dieabuses the minds of the readers of tome of the Democratic newspapers that have spoken of his 'VxclusiveBess. There is a sincerity about his greeting of his fellow-citizens as he meets them at the various stops which warms every heart. It Is certain that this trip will result fn fixing the senator more deeply in the affections of the people of Indiana' than ever before, if this be noi le. CASTOR I A for Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of

pelvic catarrh cured. I j ... - - , - -

General .Health Greatly Improved - by re-ru-na. MRS. E. VM S11ENAU. fH lSEHSHH2S2SHSa5H52SHSZ5S2lJ Airs. E. Von SWecas;, a Fifth atrwt, Milwaukee, Wis., vritM: I have leen asuiTt rc-r fcr year with female trouble, causing backache aui at times terrible head ache. I had also complications from indigestion and heart trouble, so that I PERFECT HEALTH REGAINED. ( oUu had to Ho down. I took six bottlea of IVruna. 1 was then in perfect health, I was regular, had no more headaches, In lact. my lieallh U now all that I could Wish." Mrs. K. Von Stienau. Kidney Trouble Cured. Mrs. M. J. Panley, Treasurer of th I Keltecca Ixige, I.O. O. F., writeii from irsirreer, .Minneapolis, Minn.: 'l was afllietd for weveral year with kidney trouble which became quite serious and caused meonsiderabte anxiety. spent hundreds of dollars try ing to be cured, but nothing gave me any permanent relief until I tried Peruna. It took less than three months and only ten bottles to effect a permanent cure.' 'Mrs. M. J. Danloj. Addr The P rura Mertlehie Co., ' lumliiis, !!, for f re tk on enin . 'iv Ir. s. I:. !!:t-:nn.' PEOPLE'S COLUMN All ads. under the abeve head wtl. eharged for at rate onehatt eeat a word. Sueh Item a Lost, 'Found, Help Wanted, etc., inserted free. FOR SALE Old papers for sale at the Palladium office, 15 cents hundred and some thrown in. LOST Three Peoples Building and Loan Books. Nos. 222, 31C, 317. Return to this oflice or 1305 Main street ' , l-2t. For Sale Ten syrup barrels, suitable for cider. Call at Price's coufeetionerv. 3-wk-2t. Big Minstrels. When you hear strains of beautiful music in the air next Saturday noon, you can be sure it is the famous Premier band of thei'McDermott & Diamond Brothers' modern minstrels, Jieading their grand street parade which will be an exhibition of more genuine entertaining talent than our citizens have witnessed in a bunch for many a day.. Be sard and see it, also their firie 'Entertainment at the New Phillips'Saturday, matinee and night. If you miss this opportunity you will surely regret it. It's one of the very "beM traveling. How About it? Ft. Wayne, November : l.-r-Mrs. Winnie Muller, who asserts that her father compelled her to . wed Eliaa. Muller at Van Wert, O., when- she was but thirteen years old, is now suing for divorce, alleging that within two weeks , after marriage Muller weiu insane and is now in a hospital at Toledo, Ohio. - Space Increased. Ft. Wayne, November 1. As a result of the burning of the Politzer block, which also damaged the Randall Hotel, Mr. Randall, owner of the destroyed, building, will utilize the space in increasing the capacity of the hotel to 200 rooms.

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