Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 June 1914 — Page 7
za
6
Will Open at. Bene
jinmem oration of St. Beneobserved at this morning ihartrand, co-
Indianapolis,
igreement ^fvKices- ,^e ./ill be assisted
of
the
Pllblireuuch, prov-
are
\ent of Bidder,
of Syra-
by thf ev. Dr. Ryan, eratic*- P^s, who will
I^Arges T^s
be
fe
other
THNfED BY1
ich, St. Ann's
Imeef fe the Revs.
brolj
Tu1equest
Block.
fo!l
ind'
Offers Terre
ceremonies.
{iGTON, Juli for mon
preacbe
by tbe
T^itary chief,h conferencecal progra A Niagara le
n°™lnB
pother cauut '.'p. Bampiw i. restore ori* p\'ettro
G®ne
jplomacy. 1 M- ®rC^S ©resale: Mediators w. Dressle rebel chief .M ^.Vnes De j-.. tW, .nd Agnes day or twcs
a
r"\.
wei»r®s?l®
Viators
epivTdi"
that acceptas ..God of Mign
some change in tne
loupe, which was
the* erV
declaration of principl*
consent of his varioiisi
S el
that
^^htv'i-^uis Pot^t Welte, ishd Miss
§$. A per .s.ilnto the
-V MUhtl REV. h. H.
S^wfca?JlBIK PHASES OF
Gre
ul"
ices. A:
dlction
Carranza stated, worn.
wlU be
gt
BerV
He was said to hive 8-^
2^°rs
ices
emn
high
1
that Tdieceaeed
meeting a-fish
^he propoST
musicaioro^f
be reached'the revolutler the Some of ^.e declared
chu,foi*rd
tatlves hel0k -with fa\ •••?r dincome to
ilbut 0
thersjra 1
ke
conference Outcome. T'_"The, tain of the /Wtever couall J%e, the
ef
of diploma*1"-"" ^Ao2art
along lines ^ould not b« ibiilotte campaign Wj3 to the batt) irs Falo lick «&SW-w3)nary agent- vho will
16 reV
TheT that Hueif t^e
So
ida ailguas Calie sjr, Mrs.
Si Sundaired, they w.rgf Brooks, cars ofance. Thels%s Car'®rat Haute\ campaigi^l Schul-
?chm idt: Haripg,
.Jjitzenbach,
trains^^
in£J—
«^T JOIN FORCES.
jterOffer Services Daring inal" Encampment. ide?s^oner
Walter
A. Haley
^^etter from oJe E. Beas-
ay
3ter of Troop No. 1, of yiskingiwhat part the local
rsoing
to take in the com-
p..encampment and saying jts would be very glad to the work'if it could be
roop of Boy Scouts will be at Poplar Street Baptist jesday evening. Rev. Wag-
Poplar Street church and mmissioner Haley are the and organizers of the new
DS HEAR BULLETINS.
erest in the Fight Among Local Fans. six hundred fight fans gathit of the Tribune office Sat•oon to hear megaphone
Johnson-Moran fight in '^'!1etins were received ^.d Press, and were "x as rapidly as reiat greeted any showed the
('v|l.
"Doc" Waters,
•& 'or
,towd Vne artist, anv:ell to rounds in clear, fcould be heard y£(J( crowd evidently 3 .he show.
ounty
mne
«men
^ate
^v?V
^Albrecht Store
jvC6' evening at 6
0
\e®^iy and August, ^*re a Saturday ^Sh Saturday aft«^uly and August, p. m. These sales interest to Tribune
EWELRY MDSat
Line of Watches
a**—
and
The other development of today that Was evidence of th« friendly feeling exhibited on all sides and that the merchandise committee of creditors will do its utmost to keep as many as possible of the retail stores from being taken over by receivers.
In those cases, where receiverships are necessary, the creditors will see to it that there are reorganized and that the good will of the going concerns is not dissipated.
It was brought out today that some $800,000 belonging to employes of the firm is tied up in the suspension. One' employe, Albert F. Bergner, alone has a claim for $28,000. That such creditors will be taken care of sterns certain. This was shown in the action of Judge Hans Tonday in granting an order of release to counsel for receivers of $707.04, which was & fund paid in at the rate of 25c and 50c weekly by the girl employes of a Claflin subsidiary for their vacations.
MINUTE TALKS.
W. A. GRIFFITH (Livery Man)—I believe I will be able to erect the livery barn on North Fourth street in spite of the injunction asked for by the school board. A number of property owners on North Fourth street feel that a livery barn there would be much better than some of the houses that exist there.
JAKE FRISZ (Chairman of the Labor Day Committee)—One of the contests to be held Labor day will be a tug of war with a pair of overalls used instead of a rope. Overalls will be awarded to the winners.
D. J. WILLIAMS (Former Secretary of the Central Labor Union)—Everything points to a busy season for the rolling mills in Terre Haute when the fall trade opens. The men are working regularly now but the trade will not pick up until the fall.
HARRY McCABE (Secretary of the Central Labor Union)—The hot weather caused a brief session of the central body last Thursday. We were disappointed that we didn't have our speaker here to talk on the compensation law.
WALTER A. HALEY (Scout Commissioner)—The boy scout camp at the Shades of Death was broken Friday and the boys are back in the city. W« had a fine time during the outing and the scouts were much benefited oy the life in the open air and the exercise.
JOE SEDLETZECK (Booster for. the Washington American League Team) —Walter Johnson lost another game. What do you think of that?
JAMES FAGAN (Baseball Fan)— Terre Haute has as good a team as there is in the league, but they are playing in tough luck. I am thinking about making a bet that they finish one, two, three.
THE TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED PAdE inate great reaP1^ *"te marke* w&ndiann ht® alm^^ rock* below. ^.
Ganges,
arid S*.4,
23L
a
free Druggists U'a Family
Si. Benedict's Church Which Observes Its Jubilee Today
BENEDICT'S CHURCH, NINTH AND OHIO STREETS.
REV. 1. H. MEYER, PASTOR.
THE CLAFtIN AFFAIR
and ^editors Evince Friendly Feeling,
and Will Assist in Speedy Adjustment.
NEW YORK, June 2T.—Definite tabulation of outstanding liabilities of the H. B. Claflin firm may be prepared within the next two weeks. This was the promise held out by the various creditors' committees tonight after several meetings were held. Two cheering phases of the situation relafl developed. One was tne that with practically every creditor heard from not one has evinced any sign of irritation, all have extended the wish that the rehabilitation be carried on as expeditiously as possible and with the minimum of red tape and possible waste through court formalities.
volving about the Claflin failure were One was tne announcement
REBELS CAUSE MORE TROUBLE
Continued from Page On*.
by the constitutionalists at Juarez. When Washington demanded an Investigation In the death of the two men, Carranza appointed a committee. As soon as the board began its work, Villa put the lid on the probe and It ended abruptly. Majpr Rudolfo Fierro, whom the commission blamed for Benton's death, was badly wounded at Zacatecaa. If he dies, the Carranza committee may make a report to Washington otherwise, silence will continue. Fierro was Villa's chief lieutenant at Juarez.
In Mexico City August 15. ZAOATBC AS, Mexico. June 27.— Telegrams received tonight at constitutionalist headquarters from Gen. Agulre Benavldes, commanding the Zaragoza brigade that has. been pur-, suing the remnant of Gen. Medina Barron's federal army, say the Hu ertas arrived today at Las Animas, twenty-eight miles north of Aguas Calientes. He reported several skirmishes with the rear guard of the retreating federals.
BenavideB said he believed Aguas Calientes had been evacuted, but that he could not confirm it. He has dispatched couriers to ascertain if the federals are preparing to make a stand or retreat to Queretaro. Gen. lYanclsco Villa has left for the front with his army of 17,000, only a small garrison having been left here. Villa announces his intention to push on to Queretaro and Mexico City aa soon as possible. He declares he expects to be in Mexico City by August 15.
General Benavides sent a later dispatch from Salina del Plnon Blanco that he had' overtaken 2,000 federal regulars and routed them, killing 200 and taking 400 prisoners. The prisoners are said to include General Benjamin Argumendo and eighteen officers of his staff. All of these officers nave been executed, constitutionalists here declared.
Argumendo on Thursday was erroneously reported as having been killed In the fighting here. The privates among the Irregulars asKed mercy on the ground that they had been forced into service against their wllL They were spared, pending appeal to Villa himself.
Two train loads of wounded were sent to Torreon hospitals today to relieve the congestion in the local hospitals, which are filled to overflowing. All surgeons In Zacateras have been drafted into the hospital service to help Villa's corps of forty-five physicians. These men are badly overworked.
Carranza Playing for Time. WASHINGTON, June 27.—In the face of this confidence there were many officials here tonight who insisted that. Carranza was "playing for time and that he had succeeded in hoodwinking the United States and the A. B. C. mediators. While they were delaying in the hope that eventually the constitutionalists would become parties to the mediation proceedings, these officials said, Carranza and Villa were hurrying on toward Mexico City and would eventually take it and create their own government. This suggestion was squarely put to Alfredo Breceda by the United Press correspondent. He refused to discuss it. Breceda declared that Carranza will, within the next few days, announce a new cabinet. He says that reports' that Carranza wanted to be provisional president of all Mexico were un-true.
WISE OLD CROWS.
MARINETTE, Wis., June 27.—Crows on the farm of Henry Smithson, near here, fled in shame from his cornfields, according to his statement tonight, when he substituted up to date feminine apparel for the usual garb of his scarecrows. After a visit to Marlnettee, Smithson clothed the scarecrow in *fleatiT on
aJi4i
Jf'aohsfnnns skirts. The [Admiral BaJ«r.
-U9UJ aeAT.TT"0 oy
0 'Jfljp
-anS
ft,
..
r£KK£ HAUTE TRIBUNE.
WIFE BOUGHT BUSIES
New Yorker Asserts That Children Not His Have Been Foisted on Him.
NEW YORK, June 27.—Robert R. Fredericks accuses his wife, Mrs. Lavlnla Fredericks, bf having purchased three children and passed them off on Mm as her own and his.
Mr. and Mrs. Fredericks are involved In a suit for separation and Mrs. Fredericks recently applied to Supreme Court Justice Cohalan for alimony pending the trial of the suit Mr. Fredericks has retaliated by asking a referee be appointed to investigate his wife's claims to motherhood.
Fredericks is in the employ of the commissary department of the New England Navigation Co. He says that the children of whom he Is supposed to be the father and his wife the mother are Robert Louis, Esther Helen and Nathan Russell Fredericks.
In his plea to the court he said he had been told on good authority that the first of the three children to be assumed *by his wife was born on De cember 11, 1908, and was purchased by her for $100 or more In cash.
The child's mother, Fredericks asserted, continually blackmailed his wife by threatening to tell him about the child's parentage. The blackmailing continued, he said, until December, 1909, a short while before the mother died. Fredericks said his wife was compelled to pay $4 or $5 a week to the real mother of the child to prevent her divulging the secret.
The Becond child, according to Fredericks, was purchased by his wife for about $15, when the child was three days old. His wife, he said, contended that the child was born on March 31, 1910, whereas It was in reality born three days earlier.
Esther Helen Fredericks, the youngchild, was bought from a physician when she was two days old, Fredericks asserted. His wife and another woman, he said, bargained for the child and paid for it, but he did not know how much.
In regard to the boy, Nathan Russell, Fredericks made this statement: "This child was procured one day by the plaintiff in my absence. Upon my return home that evening from my daily toil the glad and welcome tidings was presented to me that I was the father of a bouncing boy, when in fact, the bouncing boy was procured elsewhere during the day and I was deceived and led to believe that I was really the father of a "bouncing boy."
Fredericks said the birth of the child was reported to the health department by a physician who could not be found at the address given in the birth certificate and whose existence at all seemed to him doubtful.
Mrs. Fredericks said her husband's assertions are false and that he made them in order that he might avoid supporting her and the children.
Justice Cohalan refused to appoint a referee to Investigate the parentage of the children and said the evidence which the husband sought could undoubtedly be obtained at the trial of the separation suit.
Heaping Up Insults.
Mrs. Bryde—I told my husband I was going to give him something of my own cooking and he said I'd better try it on the dog first. Wasn't that, a cruel suggestion?
Her Friend—Very!'-• And I thought your husband was so fond of dogs.— Boston Transcript.
'v^'^bJEN ltfS?OUBT.H The Tribune-
inloxicatiou ,s jls also co
1
uy to
a
ffli-M'mr w-yv '^n1jy munmii" w^'Via'
kuum-r,
ffiBra
m/
QuM'toat —J ttlttlistaijb stm
ii
aSJ
Watch and' Wait
Their Seventeenth Semi-Annual
Brief Mention of Indiana Happenings
COLUMBUS—Mrs. Archie Lazzell stirred her beans too vigorously with the result that the stove turned over and the house burned down, the loss being $2,000.
LOGANSPORT—Albert G. Jenkins, executor of the will of the late Judge D. D. Dykeman, has filed a new bond of $100,000, which was approved by the court.
ALEXANDRIA—Rev, W. T. McKlnney, for two y^ars pastor of the Pres^ byteria church here, has accepted a call to a pastorate at Johnstown, O.
CONNERSVILLE—Dorothy Jobe, 7 years old, was seriously wounded when a revolver with which she was playing was accidentally discharged.
RISING SUN—Eating the heads of forty-eight matches caused the death of the lS-months-old daughter of Mrs. Calvin Young, of this city.
PLYMOUTH—Emanuel Hepler, a farmer, near Etna Green, was struck by lightning /during the storm Friday afternoon an3 instantly killed.
MUNCIE—The cracker caused
Beginning Monday Morning, Julv
AT
9:00 A. M. SHARP
Preparations tor this wice-a-Year-Event are being pushed daily. Details of which will appear in next Friday's Issue of this paper.
of a flre1,500, when all its con-
discharge loss of
the barn of Carey Reed ana tents burned.
ELWOOD—More than three hundred children will take part in a campflre carnival here Thursday night to help defray expenses for the public playground outfits to be bought for this city.
OWENSVILLE—A postofflce has been established at Johnson, and W. D. Higginbotham has been appointed postmaster. He Jtiad advertised for business, saying he wishes to make a good showing at the start.
JEFFERSONVILLE—About one hundred "trusties" of the state reformatory have been made glad by the announcement that in the future they will be allowed to smoke and chew.
GEORGE FRED SPOUTS.
American Minister to Greece Criticises Albanian Ruler. ATHENS, Greece, June 27.—American Minister Williams proposes to assist Albanians to self-government, whether such action requires his resignation or not. He so indicated In an open letter issued today. In it he declared that his resignation had already been forwarded to Washington.
He bitterly crltized Prince William of Wied, selected by the powers as ruler of Albania, and painted a despairing picture of oppression which he said the Albanians were suffering from the government Instituted by the powers. He denounced Prince William and charged that he fomented a religious war.
UNCLE FOGY'S PHILOSOPHY.
When the worm turns, that is all he accomplishes. One commendable thing about the minstrels is th£t they never try experiments on us.
Laziness is frequently mistaken tor faith. To its possessor, conceit Is satisfactory as wisdom.
There are two kinds of women: The fashionable ones and those who are comfortable.
A woman would hardly marry a bowlegged man to reform him, and there are several other varieties of mis-shapen masculinity that it is just as futile to attempt to mend by means of matrimony—Judge.
Miss Laura Markle
Sheet Music and Music Books, Strings and Musical.
Small Goods Accessories 12
Terminal Arcade 820-822 Wabash
t.,. -JK. I'--1*
Sale
This big store is now being geared up for the greatest month's business in its history. Bargains of an unparalleled nature will await the onslaught of Terre
Haute's shrewdest shoppers—hints of these startling values will be set forth in Friday's Tribune—read every lin^ carefully—clip it the advertisement and bring it with you Monday. Bear in mind that every item in our immense stock is involved.
Reductions wilt range from one-quarter to less
NORTH TEERE HAUTE NOTH'
by Special Correspondent. NORTH TERRE HAUTE, June VI.— MrB. L. L. Sackrlter and daughter, Florence Evelyn, were the guests of her mother, Mrs. Albert Brlggs, and family, Thursday.
Miss Mary Freers visited friends In Terre Haute Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Silas Adams of Rockvllle, "Aunt Beckie" Lister, Cora Parker and Mrs. Edith Albright -tn Rosedale, Ind., were the guests of Rev. and Mrs. Silas Adams FVlday.
Mrs. Theodore Haase is seriously 111. Miss Minnie Cottrell was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Delia Campbell, of Terre Haute, Friday.
Mrs. Mary Niece and daughters, Anna and Ruth, of West Terre Haute,, were the guests of her mother and father,
to furnish a Home.
Victor or Edison
642 WABASH AVENUE (Where Pianolas Are Sold.)"
EXCEPTION
It's
Coming Soon
li,
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Pit cently. Mrs. Daniel Hackett and daughter, Mrs. Anna White, were vlsl In Terre Haute Sat /Hosea Humphrey was visiting Mr. S«id visiting-Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Cottrell fad others here Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barnes of near Terre Haute visited Mr, and Mrs. David Adams Thursday.
Mrs. Bess Snider and daughter of'Indlanapolls visited her sister, Mrs. John Crabb, Mr. and Mrs. A Modisett and Miss aPnsy Modisett recently.
Miss Marie Flynn Is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Lawrence Drake, of Terre Haute. The Mothers' club was to have met with Mrs. James E. Haase Friday, but the session was postponed until next week on account of the heavy rain.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith were vis-, ltlng friends In Terre Haute Monday. 1
WHK5 IN DOUBT Try The Tribune.
Try Our
Superior Record Service
If you are already the happy owner of either a
machine, let us sell you records. We get the records each month as they come-out and always carrier A' in stock the
uiviiwu ao iuvrnc kjvlv auu axwaj
Complete StochoT^
RECORDS .-•&*
We have all styles machines and will be glad to let you co npare them—
That can be found only at Scott & Hart's. the time to buy your summer furniture, as our liases ar/^Jenc* complete and the values big. It will certainly be tijj® vour advantage to look into these big bargains ancKln ti4
CASH OR CREDIT
SCOTT BART STOVE AND FURNP1'perorPage
311 WA8A
AVE*
No^-oneo:^
Is Believe Haft Prompted Killing and Dnohem.
Aw!
ABLE PLANS
•veiy to of Conspiracy I Prevent Double (nation.
80.—v««carcnn
ed
by
h%h
gov
plot which res tion on SUnday Ferdinand and •as of Hohenberg, its Inception *to nil da -'ch ortgl pa« la tc en
be "-^4 injure were certain •o
tie care
'training thesttft ore unable to' [time to pre-
danswrj
impossible expressed
Ictilt to
•$ Arol ••Ae
Svlna.
itienberg, is ntous ^oUtlct
(erzegovina, incise
Snfth
army the pA
re gathej \chool cjj
,aiy
ins", the!
*from
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1
W. H. PAIGE & CO.
N A v« }*rj&
produced b! fc of "^fiy. Arch ie became comparatively
the.
er a pray-j ""icen amid ^church jDolmat,
Icovered is, whift?^ dreds of afd nayaii yachts! a generalf a tor(he gover-j •SB "3uke and 3 accomremained\
Karl today, lfference, jph then is still to ref gflftigs, the itively hexperl^f
se Airf mofg*
ificati
yrancis Ferdii
pdens of goverJj and at t'M
on 2,
I*
