Richmond Palladium (Daily), 6 January 1906 — Page 4

pa nB -Form.

THE KOONING PALLADIUM SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 190S. s .

THE PALLADIUM

est li i k i at i icnMoxi:aoFiacE as SIXONt CLASS MATTKk. 1'n ' i'iiliadiuu. ' will be found At th folieWing piaoj; P&iladiam office. Weatcott Hotel. Arlington IIoteL Union News Company Depot. Gates Cigar Store, West Main. The Empire Cigar Store. Two cents at all places of aale. TOOT! TOOT! FOR WEDDING SHRILL WHISTLE OF ENGINE TAKES PLACE OF SWEET MATRIMONIAL MUSIC. A ROMANTIC ELOPEMENT Marriage Carried Out Along the Most Modern Lines of Procedure. At Anderson. V Anderson, Ind., Jan. 5. Blasts of a big steam whistle that sounds the weather forecast for this city and vicinity, took the place of an organ and wedding marches Wednesday evening, in a marriage that was marked with the features of an old fashioned romantic elopement, Miss Anna Lelia McGuire, eighteen vears old, and Chester Lox, age tweni ol ty, wore married in this city, al- , ' , i,,i though the young woman had to e ceive her parents and.sister and theu join her lover for a fast three mile J. . , i , . ii Hiin thtv-mrrli ia flnrlrnpca to tins city, where she had'her wedding gown concealed at the home of. a friend. She( quickly made a change of costume, while Mr, Cox- rushed around town to get the county clerk to issue a license, and then engaged a minister, the Rev. John S. Aldridge. ... Before the parents and sister of the bride became .alarmed by her absence from home, she telephoned to them that she had been married, and Avas forgiven as far as possible, over a telephone.

MARCH

The bride is a daughter of Mr. andifrom that Vnee did not feel iust;fici

Tr .,, , , w Mrs. Ilenrv McUuire, who have been ,. . , n , livir"' three miles east of this city, . , , i r . . and are preparing to move to West Virginia, Nr. Cox is the son of a fpvmor near this city, and is employ ed in a local factory. . , . . , , . , , cuts objected to the marriage be-1 e i , ise of her pge and undertook to re-1 par cause strain her from carrying out her plans. The elopement was originally arranged for Tuesday evening, but Mr. Cox was told that if a lighted lamp was at a certain window she could not get away. When he drove out to the McGuire home Tuesday evening the lamp was at the window.

Meanwhile she had slipped her best' .. t , . . , . , . 1 1 .. T4.iIn Spite of Supreme Court's Decisdrcss to a srirl friend in this city. It

was then arranged , that he should drive out Wednesday evening, and as soon as she heard the weather whistle she would leave the house, ostensibly ; to call on a neighbor across the road, ana ne snouia arive up quickly, ne did so, and was accompanied by anotner coupie, woo assisted in uie wending that followed, while the parents of the bride thought she was . at the neighbor's home. MORE THAN BILLION DOLLARS ARE SPENT Amount Done by Manufacturers .in Commerce of the NaHcn. Washington, Jan. 5. Manufacur- J ers participated to the extent of more i than a billion dollars in the $2,500,000,000 of commerce of the United States during the eleven months ending with November, 1905. Statistics announced by the Department of Commerce and Labor show that the value of manufacturers' material im-1 ported was $513,000,000 during these eleven months, and of manufactures exported $5 nnn.non th exported $520,000,000, against 159.previous year. The valmaterial for use in mannne of crude 1 x-.. : : mvu.i...s iu mis iiuie wns $?9,000,000, against $309,000,000 in

r

the same inouths of the previous year. ' During those' months - there -'was a. re rnarkable; increase in the exputs of agricultural products,". especially of corn, the value of which rosti from 21.000,000 in the previous year to 00,000,000 during the first eleven months of this year. TWENTY-SEVEN TEETH OF MASTODON FOUND Were Fished Out of the Kankakee River hy a Dredge. Danville, Intl., Jan. 5. John R. Pritchetty who has been working with a dredge in. the Kankakee swamps, has returned home, bringing some relics of which he is proud. One day recently ( the 4 dredge lifted from the swamp twenty-seven, teeth and; the jaw; bone of a mastodon. The largest of the teeth weighed almost 'nine pounds and the jaw-bone was six and one-half feet long. - There was a scramble among the workmen for the prizes, Mr. Prit?hett obtaining a tooth weighing nearly four pounds. He has been Offered $12 for his find but refuses to part with it. SILVER DOLLAR PASSING ITS USEFULNESS IS WANING. FAST Slowly, But Surely, Paper Money Is , Coming Into More General Use.,. .,tj Slowly, yet surely, the silver dollar is disappearing as a circulating medium in this country. It is still very common in the western states, more particularly beyond Indiana, . . J 1 per money is coming into larger use, 1 . J ' and in time, under the government ..... , . lo J"v f aoandomng he coinage of dol,.ars' lt Prom!ses be as plentiful 'as lit now is in the Last. One iTouoie wiui paper money in tae West has been that it could not be kept clean, and in many cities boards of health have pronounced against it ffor sanitary reasons. This argument however, is losing its force in the face of the possibilities of supply now offered by a large number of subtreasuries in Western cities. There was a time when the only sub-treasury of importance in the West was in Chicago, and bankers doing business at points more or less remote in paving me evpressas-e on new . , money to take the place of the old. T . .x .. , ., , ,, In such a situation the silver dollar, . , . . , ' already popular in the West, because of Western interest in silver prodneIt was sanitary and the fact that it ... . was hulkv did not seem to trouble the , - . ,. general puoue. HOWARD SAYS HE HAS SC ME NEW EVIDENCE ion Prisoner Still Has Hope. In the near future a surprise may ibe sprung by the attorney for Jim jlioward, whose case seems to have been cl0Sed by the decision of the Su preme Court reaffirming the Ken tucky tribunal, as Howard last night for the first time stated definitely that he had developed new and important evidence, and that although he was not yet willing to reveal it, he would do so when it became necessary. W. M. S nith his attorney, is waiting for the full decision of the Supreme Court, and will try to find a legal opening in his opponent's ar.mor upon which to work. Howard, J however, is anxious that instead of uie t.r,. . jj riume purely upon r. legal and technical basis itshould be now begun on the strength of the evidence he has gathered. "Ever Miice I have been here," be said last night at the county jail, where he as been confined for sev .eial years, 'I have devoted mvT time to working out theories of my own regarding Goebel's death. I hav leathered a mass of evidence, anl have learned things which are of importance. Just wail they are I do t;ot care to say at present,-and shall wait until my attorney eomp!el?s his r.vaiuuiauon ui me COUri, aeciston I still feel hopeful.

MIGRANTS TO HOOSIER STAT!

NEARLY ONE-SIXTH OF THOSE WHO COME TO STATE ARE HUNGARIANS. ONLY ONE FROM AFRICA Commissioner General's Report ' 'of Tide of Civilization in His Report. Nearly one-sixth of the immigrants who are coming to Indiana are- Hungarians. They belong to the Magyars, a class of IIungarians.li6 sprang originally from'theHpral country of Europe. - -'-h . V v" Some interesting facts - concerning the stream of immigration that is turned toward Indiana are told by Commissioner General of Immigration Sargent in his annual report just made public. During the fiscal year ended June 30, 1905, the number of immigrants who come from the old world and found homes in Indiana was 6,742, out of a total immigration to this country of 1,026,499. Only one black man from Africa located in Indiana during the entire year. The commissioner general, of course, has 'no record of the black men from Kentucky and other southern states who cross the Ohio and find a congenial atmosphere in the Hoosier state- i Y The commissioner general's report of the compqsite .elements that entered into the tide-of immigration that swept into Indiana in the fiscal year 1905 is as follows: Magyar, 1,025; African, 1; Bohemian and Moravian, 231; Croatian and Slovenian, 401; Cuban, 11; Dalmatian, Bosnian and Herzegovian, 13; Dutch and Flemish, 291; English, 331; Finnish, 56; French, 140; German, 739; Greek, 95; Hebrew, 199; Irish, 195; Italian (North), 302; Italian (South), 298; Japanese, 1; Lithuanian, S4; Polish, 643; Roumanian, 61S; Russian, 2; Ruthenian or Russniak, 22; Scandir navian (Norwegians, Danes and Swedes), 186; Scotch, 214; Slovak, 323; Spanish-American, 1; Syrian, 107; Turkish, 131; Welsh, 49; all other peoples, 7. PENNSYLVANIA HAS PHENOMENAL EARNING Gross Income for November Increases $2,127,000 Over Last Year. -New York, Jan. 5. Gross earnings of the Pennsylvania lines east of Pittsburg and Erie for the month of November show an increase of $2,127,200 compared with last year, and a net gain of only 962,800. For the eleven months of the fiscal year 1905 gross earnings increased $14,066,100, and net 3,909,500. The Western lines of the system reported an increase of 891,500 in the gross and 436.000 in the net for November, and a gain of 7,008,000 gross and 1,421,100 net for the eleven months. ANNUAL REPORT Trustee of Harrison Township, Wayne County, Ind. Annual report of the trustee of Harrison Township, Wayne County, Indiana, for the year ending January 2, 1906: ' Township Fund. ,Y Jan. 3, 1905, balance on hand last settlement $ 38 SI Jan. 30, 1905 Received of H. v J. Hanes 244 10 July 10, 1905 Received of H. J. Hanea ...... 1 272 63 Total balance and receipts. $555 54 Disbursements 494 07 Balance 61 47 Tuition Fund. Jan. 3, 1905, balance on hand last settlement $ 19 80 Jan, 30, 1905, Received of H. J. Hanes 169 05 July 10, 1905, received of H. J. Hanes 171 20 Total balance and receipts. $360 05 I Disbursements .... 356 85 Balance .. $ Local Tuition Fund. Jan. 3, 1905,. balance on 3 20

fa

1 5 Q

Peruna is recommended by fifty members of Congress, by Governors, Consuls, Generals, Majors, Captains, Admirals, Eminent Physicians, Clergymen, many Hospitals and public institu tions, and thousands upon thousands of those in the humbler walks of life.

hand, last settlement $175 10 Jan. 30, 1905, Received of II. J. Hanes 286 59 July 10, 1905, Received of H. J. Hanes, : 293 01 Total balance and receipts. $754 70 Disbursements . . 544 01 RnlnnVo .210 fiQ Special School Fund. Jan. 3, 1905, balance on hand last settlement . .$ 78 96 Jan. 30, 1905, Received of II. J. Hanes 297 GO May 9, 1905, Received of T II. Kuhn ................ July 10, 1905, Received of II J. Hanes 255 99 Aug. 23, 1905, Received of William Cheeseman 77 00 Total balance and receipts. 711 55 Disbursements .. 539 68 Balance $ 71 87 Road Fund. Jan. 3, 1905, Balance on hand last settlement $ 6Sf Jan. 30, 1905, Received of H. J. Hanes, 2 21 Jan. 10, 1905, Received of H. J. Hanes, 390 88 Total balance and receipts. $393 95 Disbursements 353 63 Balance 35 27 Dog Fund. Jan. 3, 1905, balance on hand last settlement $166 00 Mav 9, 1905, received from W. H. Wilson ........ 53 00 Total balance and receipts. $224 00 Disbursements .. 66 00 Balance $153 00 Totals. Balances and Receipts..... $2,999 70 Disbursements $2,459 29 Balance .$ 540 50 ...MERCHANTS' DELIVERY... PHONE 758 TRUNKS, BAGGAGE i PROMPTLY DELIVERED. j Headquarters at Weyant's Harness I Store.

X3

hi YA1 -CM 2 .l isk year druggist for Free Peruna The Southern California New Train. Best Route. The Los Angeles Limited, electric lighted, new from the Pullman shops, vvith'all latest innovations for travel comfort, leaves Chicago 10:05 p. m. daily, arrives Los Angeles 4:45 p. m. third day. Solid 'through train via Chicago, Union Pacific & NorthWestern Line and The Salt Lake l?nnf Pnllmnn .IrnwJn vnn, nn.l tourist sleeping cars, composite observation car, dining cars, a la carte service. For rates sleeping car reser vations and full particulars apply to

2 00y"r nearest agent or address A. II.

vggener, i rav. ,gi., -i jacKwns Blvd., Chicago, 111. 12-31 Personally Conducted Tour to California. 't i - i a . i Exclusively . first-class tour under J ., , , r the auspices of the lounst Department, Chicago, Union Pacific & North-Western line; leaves Chicago Wednesday, February 7th, spending the disagreeable portions of Fcbrn..u'L a a on nn shine and flowers. $350.00 includes all expenses, railway fare, sleeping cars, meals in dining cars and hotel expense, service nrst class m every respect. Itineraries and full partic-

nlars on application S. A. Hutchin- (Eastern district; suDjeci to ine ueson. Manager, 212 Clark St.. and 120 publican nomination. Jackson Blvd., Chicago. SHERIFF

Bent Her Double.

"I knew no one, for four weeks, tion. l , when I was sick with typhoid and r M kidney trouble,' ' writes Mrs. .Annie- ... CORONER. Hunter of Pittsburg, Pa., "and when lP '(? A vrtrrr"i isa caDdiI got better, although 1 ' hi one of . 'x0rY0Kner ot uayne Coamy, the bestdoctors I couldl r T was.mbjeet to the Republican nominabent double p." V'' v my hands lon on my r--" - I walked. From this terible aHiction I was rescued : DR. MORA BULLA is a candidate by Electric, Ditters, which restored for Coroner of Wayne County, uIk my hePh and strength, and now I ject to the Republican nomination. can walk as straight as ever. They ''' T -ri ttrrr -rT . , j n i , , r, DR. A. L. BRAMKAMP is a canare simplv wonderful." Guflran- , . . . , . " . . v a t : j didate for Coroner of Wayne County, Jed -to cure stomach, liver and kid- '...'. -r, ,. , . . n T t . subject to the Republican nommappy disorders; at A. G. Lnken tion fo.'s' drucr store; price 50c. - FOR ASSESSOR.

Cures

m

t'-n ft Hi Almanac for 1906. ANNOUNCEMENTS REPRESENTATIVE. W. S. RATLIFF is a candidate for uTu vmiim" , , StlbjeCt tO tbe KepilbUCan llOIMnation. CLERK. ttARRY PENNY is a candidate for elerk 0f the AVayne Circuit Court, subject to the Republican nomination. AUDITOR. I). S. COE is a candidate for Auditor of Wayne County, subject to .. 14 .,.'. J the Republican nomination, 1 TREASURER. R MYRICK ig a candidate or treasurer of Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination. COMMISSIONER. C. E. WILEY is a candidate for Commissioner of Wayne County LINUS .... MEREDITH is a candidate for Sheriff of Wayne County, s'ibiect to the Republican nominaALPHEU8 G. COMPTON is a candidate for County Assessor, subject to' the Republican nomination.

iiV".JP'rSpir,,-;:Kr