Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 332, 13 January 1908 — Page 8
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TITE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 1903.
MUNCIE STRIKE IS EXPENSIVE TO THE STATE OF INDIANA
The Riots Will Cost the Taxpayers of Indiana About $16,000 While the City Itself Will Pay Much.
MARTIAL LAW TO BE DECLARED AT AN END.
Governor Hanly Will Take This Action Within Course of a Few DaysMarion Strikers Get Addition.
Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 13. That the Muncie strike will prove the most expensive in Indiana's history is the pinion of Col. Harry B. Smith, commander of the Second Infantry, Indiana National guard, who has Just returned from Muncie, where he was in
command of the provisional regiment under Maj. Gen. W. J. MiKee. The evacuation of Muncie by all the state troops except five companies up to yesterday made it necessary that a regimental officer and his staff should remain longer. Col. Smith says that the strike riots no far have cost the state at least $2.Xm) per day, and as there have already been eight days of martial law and occupation at Muncie by the military the riots will cost Indiana tax payers at leasUHt.OW. In addition to this the frf'H) deputies maintained by Sheriff I'erdleu cost the citizens of Muncie and Delaware county $1.M per day. Each deputy will receive pay, under the law. at the rate of $2 per day. The total cost of the strike, including finanIcfal loss to the Indiana Union Traction company, will amount to something like $25,000. "It is only a question of a day or two now," said Col. Smith, yesterday, "until Governor Hanly will issue his proclamation declaring martial law in Muncie at an end. The moral effect of the occupation of Muncie by the roops was marked. It took that to teach them a lesson. The tax payers there are beginning to realize that the lawlessness is goin to cost them something. The behavior of the troops was of the highest order. I talked with members of the Commercial club and other leading citizens and they were highly pleased with, the conduct of the soldiers.
HOLDS KEY TO THE NEW JERSEY SWAMP MYSTERY.
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JOURNALISTS IN SESSION THIS WEEK
Indiana Editorial Association Will Meet in Indianapolis.
NOTABLES TO ATTEND.
A program of unusual interest has been prepared for the meeting of the Republican Editorial association of Indiana In Indianapolis next Thursday und Friday at the Claypool hotel. The
Thursday evening "session' will consist of the annual banquet, at which Will K. Penrod will act as toast master. The guests will assemble in the parlors of the Claypool at !:.' o'clock
and the banquet will be served at
o"clock. The guests of honor will be
Vice-President Charles W. Fairbanks,
Senators Albert J. Beveridge, and
James A. Hemenway, Harry S. Xew, James P. Goodrich, Union 1$. Hunt and
Will Freeman, state forester. Friday's session will be devoted to ques
tions confronting Indiana publishers.
Georgie Dickenson, th-9 young woman hom the police are seeking, and who it is claimed holds the key to the Xew Jersey swamp murder mystery. She has damaging eviden ce against the murdered woman's husband.
BID CITY OF VICE CRY OF NEW ORLEANS
Pulpit, Press and Bench Join In Campaign to Restore Morality.
WICKEDEST IN AMERICA.
COMPLETE REST FOR THE
Will Take Southern Cruise for
Health. J
The MnnriKe Of Llfto. Infants and children are constantly needtajr a axative. It Is Important to know what to Riv. them. Their stomach and bowels are not strons
enough for salts, purgative waters or cathartic
ills. powders or tablets. Oive them a mild. leasant. gentle, laxative tonic like Dr. Cald .ell's Syrup Pepsin, which sells at the smal m of 50 cents or II at drug stores. It is th ie great remedy for you to have ia tne house ii we children w' ' t.
The Bee Hive Grocery Co. Automatic Phones ...1198-1199 Bell 190 If you want the best oranges in the world order the DESERT Brand of ARIZONA Oranges of us. If you want the best BULK OLIVES in the city order of us. They are new and fresh. 30c QUART If you want the best of everything in the grocery line order of us. Cauliflower, Cucumbers, Head Lettuce, Egg Plant, Tomatoes, Ce.ery, Lettuce and Spinach.
Pierson's Pork Prices
Sausage 6c Fresh Hams 8c Pork Loins 8c Pork Loins sliced 9c Lard 8c Boston Butts 8c
Back Strap 12c Pork Tenderloins 15c Ribs 5c Back Bone 3c Pigs Feet 10c do. Fresh Side 8c
Shsulders 6 l-2c lb. We sell to consumers only. All ordors must be st-nt by mail. A charge of lT.c per hundred lbs. Willi no charge less than 10c. will bo niade for meat delivered iu Richmond. Terms spot cask. C. C. PIERSON Fountain City, Ind.
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CHICHESTER'S PILLS
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llMS1ft ltI2 4n ftf 1 I M tin.
vrars known n. Rest, hae. Alwavb Keltahie
SOIDRY nr?i nniSTS EVERYWHERE
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PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY
FOUNTAIN PENS. The largest and best stock inthecity. 25cto$3.00. Pens repaired while you wait Keep this in view. JENKINS & CO., Jewelers.
Petaluma Incubators
Standard Of the World.
Pilgrim Bros. Cor. 5th and Main.
Ii
SI 00 wi" Pen a savin9s account and give you a start that may prove of great value.
3 Per Cent.
S525,000.00
compounded twice each year is the interest your money will earna sure income, while your principal is not subject to fluctuations in value. capital, surplus and stockholder's liability is back of deposits insuring absolute safety for your savings.
You had better open an account without delay in this strong institution. Richmond Trust Company.
M MM
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this concern 70U, road carefully, u ddwell's Syrup Pepsin is positively fcusra J to cure indigestion, constipation, sick hes offensive breath, malaria and ail disease slna- from atomac trouble.
MARION STRIKERS GAIN RECRUIT Conductor Quits Post and Joins Rank
Of Union Men. Marion, Ind., Jan. IS. The striking street car men yesterday gained a retruit when Wood Harrold, a conductor Mi a North Marion car, quit work and declared his intention to espouse the cause of the strikers. The strikers claim that there will he further additions to their ranks, but U. V. Parker, local superintendent of the Union Traction lines, declares that all of the iresfnt men employed will continue at work. Because of a rumor to the effect that there would be violence at Gas City last night, twenty deputy sheriffs patrolled the etreets of the town until the last car had completed its trip. The rumor was evidently not well founded for there was no dinturbance of anykind. Governor Hanly had been notified by some one of the probability of trouble and he telegraphed the sheriff to swear in a sufficient number of deputies to preserve the peace of the town and protect property.
New Orleans, Jan. 13 The moral
awakening or New Orleans has arrived. The pulpit, press and bench in a campaign have aroused what is now roundly declared ' the wickedest city in America." The issue has been made:" "Shall the city of New Orleans become a decent city or shall it continue to be, as it has been in the past, the mecca of gamblers, and all the evils that usually .follow in their wake?" The leaders in the fight for a social cleaning up of the city declare that the time has come when New Orleans will be swept of the elements that have made her a moral plague spot in the United States. The newspapers have taken up the battle for a cleaner city, both morally
and physically. New Orleans has more than once
I been the center of an upheaval of ! public sentiment against the negroes, I against the saloons, against the gambI ling resorts, against the race-tracks ! and against the levee resorts. Al- : ways, however, the force of purifica1 tion has been spent before any actual i reform was accomplished.
Berlin, Jan. 13. It a now practically admitted by the government that it is necessary for the Kaiser to leave
Berlin in search of health and j
strength, although it is said that it is nothing more serious than the necessity of taking a complete rest. On February 27 the imperial yacht
I-Iohenzollern will leave Kiel and start , for the Mediterranean but it has not I yet been decided whether the Kaiser and the imperial family will be on ' board or whether thoy will be picked up in a southern port. At any rate, they will spend about three weeks cruising in the Mediterranean and to-
j ward the end o March they will take up their residence in the beautiful Villa Achilleion on the Itland of Corfu,
which will bo ready to receive them.
Is TLe Stomach Iinp-B.ab1ef An operation for the removal of the stomach iq Chicago hospital recently, promoted diacession among the surffeona whether the stomach could be removed and the patient be none t fe worse tor it. Before the discussion had well tiled out. the patient bad died. It demonstrated he could not live without his stomach. To krrr tl-ie stomach in eood condition, aad care consti t ntion. indigestion, etc.. use the treat herb lasa five compound. Dr. CaMwell's Syrup Pepsin 4rutcists sell it at W r-- i a bottle.
The resurrection plant of South Africa becomes withered and lifeless during dry weather, but after rain begins to fall it quickly revives.
Strong Men of the Markets. The porters of the central markets at Paris, which nre the largest markets in the world, are called "the strong men of the markets" because gt their great muscle and wonderful endurance. They wear hats as big as parasols, which enable them to carry ou their heads most unwieldy and unpleasant burdens, such as crates of fowls, rabbits and suckling pigs. Indianapolis News.
The first settlement in the state of New Jersey was by the Dutch, at Bergen, in 1617. Newark received its first charter in 1713.
London In Hef Glory. j Seen tinder the glory of a really fine sunset. London must be one of the
most beautiful and impressive spectacles In the world. You may look up j the Thames and 6ee the red sun turn-
, ing the pall of smoke that hangs over the shipping into a sultry crimson j cloud and lighting the dirty water and dingy wharfs with a ij,Ieam of gold. ; or see the tlnie of St. Paul's caught In j a mist of rich color, or the high build
ings of Bond street standing clearly out against the warmly tinged sky and wonder, not unreasonably, whether any other city that ever wa4f built could show such a magnificent series of pictures as can this dingy London of ours of an autumn evening. Country Gentleman Holy Water Stoups. The holy water stoup in mediaeval churches took many strange forms. In the little village church of Annonay. in France, there are two very fin ones made from the two parts of th1 shell of a giant oyster found in the Malay peninsula, whence they wers brought 150 years ago by a son of the village who was an oftieial in French India in Its palmy days. London Scraps.
It's row Economy To pay for goods that you do not get; but it is just as bad economy to pay more than necessary for what you do get. That is just exactly what you are doing so long as you trade at the stores that do business on a credit basis. NOTICE THESE PRICES : Potatoes, white and mealy, per bushel 80c Onions (fancy red), per bushel 85c Fresh Country Butter, per lb 25c Fresh Gathered Country Eggs, per dozen 25c California Cured Hams, per lb 10c Regular Hams (fine) per lb 12'ic 18 lbs. Granulated, 19 lbs. A, 20 lbs. C Sugar $1.00 Sweet, Sour, Mixed and Mustard Pickles. Stamps with each ten-cent purchase.
Model Department Store,
11 S. 7th St. Interurban Station. Colonial Bldg. New Phone 1 838. Bell Phone 47R
Smith & Goodrich, Props.
ipsa ii 1111
SPECIAL STAMP SALE THIS WEEK
25 STAMPS with one lb. of Coffee at 35c.
20 STAMPS with oue lb. of Coffee at oOc.
15 STAMPS with one lb. of Coffee at 2jc.
10 STAMPS with one bottle of A. & V. Catsup at lXc a bottle.
10 STAMPS with 2 pkgs of A. & P. Gelatine at 5c a pkg.
60 Stamps with one 18 oz. can of A. & P. Baking Powder at 50c a can. 20 Stamps with 1-oz. bottle A. & P. Extract at 25c.
20 Stamps with one pkg. A. & P. Seeded Raisins at 12c.
50 STAMPS with one lb. of Tea at 70c.
45 STAMPS with one lb. of Tea at fiOc.
40 STAMPS
with one lb. of 50c a lb.
Tea
10 STAMPS with 2 pkgH. of A. ii V. Yahhiug Powder at 5c a pkg.
10 STAMPS with 2 pkga. of Ball Blue at Sc a pkg.
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The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. 727 Main Street Old Phone 53 W. Nw Phon 1215
WHILE ON YOUR TRIP in search of pleasure and recreation don't forget to order the Richmond Export brand of well brewed beer. Might take a few bottles along for a case of emergency, or we could forward a few cases to jour Winter address by express or freight as occasion requires. The added cost will bring added satisfaction, because when you're getting Richmond Export beer you know you're getting prime beer. Minck Brewing Co.
Have you Ordered Your Printing For 1908? Be prepared and start tbe new year with a fall supply and the right kind of stationery. II you want the best at THE BIGHT PRICE, we can tarnish It. Let us furnish samples and submit a bid on your work. Our motto Is: Good work at Right Prices. We will save you money. We print Candidate Cards on short notice. Quaker City Printing Co.
Phone 4215
Over 17 and 19 North 8th Street.
A Trial Will Convince You Palladium Want Ads. Pay
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