Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 216, 12 June 1909 — Page 8

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND STJN-TELEGRA2I, SATUHDAT, JUNE 12,1COO.

PAGE EIGHT, v-

mil ufflaauiii

SVALL017 LETTER?

CITY IN BRIEF

JUDGE WKALLOtl

RETURIIS BLOWS

Many People Cannot Figure

How Members Can Rest v Under Reprimand.

f Fancy brick ice cream serv

ed at The Greek Candy Store.

Mandus Mason of Cambridge City,

trustee of Jackson township was in

the city on business today. : '

This weather is getting hot

and'the only way to cool off is with delicious ice cream, ice cream sodas, etc. Everything

A BIG SHAKE UP RUMORED Z'Tit L"ME LIGHT TURNED

Sw W f fMW UIIM Bi VMS WW m sw

Greek Candy Store.

Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Polley and

daughters of New York City, are the

guests ofCol. and Mrs. C. E. Wiley.

Mr. and Mrs. Polley will spend tomor

row with Jacob Polley, the father of the New Worker at Bethel. Mr. Polley is engaged, as a cartoonist and illus

trator of aiNew York newspaper. He

also does magazine drawing.

IT 18 GENERALLY THOUGHT THAT COMMISSIONER DOW LING WILL v RESIGN AS RESULT OF MARSHALL'S ATTACK. Y

Indianapolis Police Magis

trate Resents Attack by The Mayor.

ON

HE CLAIMS THE POLICE DISCRIM

INATE BETWEEN AUTO DRIVERS AND SALOON I STS RE VEALED SECRETS.

Indianapolis, June 12. There is a

rumor that a shake up of the Indiana

railroad commission may happen as a

Indianapolis, Ind., June 12. Smart

ing under the statement of Mayor

The iCe Cream made at the Bookwalter and the insinuations of

result of the scrap that is on between Greek Candy Store we guar

antee to be made from pure

cream; . no other ingredients

used.

OPEN PLAY GROUND

Governor Marshall and the commission over the attempt of the commis

sion to construe the full crew law

passed by the last legislature. Just

what the result will be no one knows

at this time, but there are many who

believe that Commissioner Henry M.

Dowling, who, wrote the opinion construing the law, may resign, even if

no one else does.

Governor Marshall "burned them

up" with the letter he wrote the com- judafrBoaas and N. C. Heiron-

commission plainly that it has no itTIUS Will Have Charge

business to monkey witb the full crew law because it is a penal statute and

only the courts have the right to con

strue a criminal statute. Not only

that but he intimates his belief that

the commission tried to point out to the railroads the weak spots in the law and to tell them bow to violate

the law without danger of prosecution. Is Sizzling Hot.

Not only that, but the governor lets It be known that he does not think the railroad commission has much

power anyway,

The call down which the governor

gives the commission is so sizzling

members of the ., Police Department that the repeated violation of the speed ordinances are due largely to the small fines he has assessed, Judge

Whallon, of the Police Court, yester

day, turned on the limelight on some

of the deeds of the Bookwalter admin

istration. '

He says that the police discriminate

not only in arresting auto drivers, but in the enforcement of the laws against selling liquor on Sunday. He charges,

also, that there has been- discrimina

tion on the part of the administration

in enforcing the smoke ordinance.

Judge Wihallon Is tired of being made

the scapegoat for the misdeeds of other

city officials, he says. He charges that

WILL HAVt brlUWtn bA I H considering violations of the law them

selves and' of discharging prisoners on

Of the Place.

their own Judgment.

He charges that Captain Asch, of the

Police Department, dismissed an auto

. . .. 11, 1 J i 41 V " - "

ona street, wm w opna vu yuu-, h thoughtt Ms in

The different diversions of th pub

lic play grounds, South Twenty-sec-

lic next Monday. Judge Boggs and

N. C. Heironimus of the Garfield school faculty have been employed by the school board to take charge of the

grounds.

Probably the best announcement

hot that' a good many people here are made so far in connection with the

not able to see how the members can

rest under it and still remain as members of the commission. The com

mission, as it stands now. Is compos

ed of w. J. Wood, democrat, of Evans

ville; J. P. McCIure, republican, of An

derson and H. M. Dowling, republican,

vestigation, there was no ground for

the arrest.

Want Judge to "Sting 'Em."

Judge Whallon says the police and

others connected) with the administra

tion overlook some violators of the law

and then come around with others,

and demand that he shall "sting 'em

FOUR CANDIDATES

on pip

Work Held bv Whitewater

Lodge Last Evening.

George Clements, Waldo Lacey,

Harry Walters of Dublin, and Ernest Schwerin were given the third degree last evening by Whitewater lodge of Odd Fellows. Mr. Schwerin is a member of Herman lodge, but by special arrangement was given the third degree by Whitewater lodge. An invitation to attend the memorial services of the Greensfork lodge, on Sunday. June 20, was accepted. An effort will

be made to get the Chicago trains to

and from that place to stop. Following the lodge meeting an enjoyable

time was had.

THORNTOtl HA1NS IS HOW MISSING

It Is Believed That He Has

Gone to Sea as a Common Sailor.

GIVES FATHER PROPERTY

BEFORE LEAVING HE WENT TO

SING SING TO SEE HIS BROTH

ERA NEW CHAPTER IN A PE

CULIAR LIFE.

improvements of the grounds is that

a nhnwnr wtn na installed immediate

ly in the club house. The contract H that he has refused to piay tne ha been let. The money to be er-1 game that way or permit the police to

naniferi in from the nrooeeds of a nlav bis Court to get even with any one.

given a few years ago under the aus- "Why don't the police treat all san1ra nf Mra. Guv McCabe and Mr. loon keepers alike," asked Judge Whal-

r - i Am . , 1 T XI 1 1

ion ua Monoay morning i uuu iu my Court persons arrested for such

next courts will be improved as will also violations, and they are generally sa-

or this city. Wood was reappointed Taylor, formerly manager of the

recently by Governor Marshall, and Light. Heat & Power Co. The tennis

uowung nas . agreed to resign

the track and baseball grounds.

FRIENDS OF GINN

ASK FOR PARDON

January, this agreement having been reached some time ago in' order to

avoia uaving tne governor make a new appointment to test the legal ex

istence of the commission. McCIure

will serve about three and a half

years yet Gives Its Opinion.

When the railroad representatives

and the members of the commission.

had their conference some time ago

on the subject of the full crew -law,

In order to establish a set of rules governing the application of the law,

the matter was placed in the bands of

Commissioner Dowling to write the , After he has served ten years of a opinion of the commission construing life sentence for murder, Henry counthe law. In this opinion the commis- ty friends of Vincent" Ginn are trying

slon stated that It would not recom- to secure a pardon for him. Ginn kill-

mend prosecutions in certain cases ed Frank Giltner at Middletown. Gilt-

for violation of the full crew law, es- ner was foreman of the Middletown

pecially in cases where a train leaves tin mills and Ginn was an employe.

Has

Served Ten Years Killing His Boss.

for

a terminal with a full crew required

by law for such a train but while en-

route it takes on more than are allow

ed by the law to be handled by the crew. It holds that in such cases and In emergencies the full crew law does

not apply.

It was this that stirred the governor Into action. He says It is none of the

commissioners business to promise Immunity from a arrest to any rail

road under the law.

Giltner discharged Ginn and the lat

ter approaching him from behind struck him on the head with an iron

bar ' fracturing the skull and killing

Giltner Instantly.

YOUNG MEN WANTED.

United States Government Gives Rail

way Mail Clerks $800 a Year to ' Start and Increases to $1200.

loon: keepers out at the edge of town.

In many instances, they are German saloon keepers who have kept family saloons in their present locations for years, and never have any trouble or offended any one. And if they happen to have a door open on Sunday the police get them and bring them before me and expect me to turn 'em up "Everyone knows that the big downtown saloons are open on Sundays, yet

the police do not molest them.

For a long time there have been

complaints that saloon keepers selling

certain kinds of beer, made by brewers who were friendly to the Republicans, are not molested on Sundays, while

those selling rival beer are arrested regularly."

Judge Whallon replied to the charge

of the members of the Board of Safety

that he does not co-operate with them in enforcing the 6moke ordinance. He

says the charges are untrue and the administration has discriminated

against certain men in the enforce-

ment of the law.

Refused to Crawl In. He says the Safety Board and a for

mer Smoke Inspector tried to put him

in a hole, but that he refused to assess fines where they did not follow the provisions of the smoke ordinance

He produced a letter from John B.

Wood, Secretary of the Safety Board, written last December, saying that MvHlnwn ltnjt KnAtii maA e o (not tf)0

UniOn National banK VS. W. Newton Claypool Building and asking

that warrants be issued for the arrest

of its owners for violation of the

smoke ordinance. The warrant was issued, but Judge Whallon says he has

an affidavit on which was written

'Olaypool affidavit held up at the re

quest of Lew Cooper until further vio

lation. D. C. W."

Cooper is President of the Safety

Board, and D. C W. Is D. C Walms-

ley, former Smoke Inspector, says

Judge Whallon.

Cooper says that the Safety Board

will investigate the charges of Judge Whallon that the police have told auto

mobile drivers they may run at 20

miles an hour north of Fall Creek.

A local newspaper is demanding that

Police Chief Metzger resign because of

the shooting of Samuel Dowden, an attorney, in an automobile Monday

night. It was said today that the city

authorities would not make an investigation of the case, but that it would

be taken up by the grand jury,

FOR FORECLOSURE

OF MORTGAGE SUIT

New York. June 12. Thornton

Jenkin Hains, novelist, shortt story writer, seaman and the defendant in

two murder trials, has disappeared.

Under some other name he is mak

ing bis living as a 3ailor once more, but no one knows what ship he is

aboard or whither he is bound. Not even his parents or brothers have an idea as to his whereabouts, and not

one of them ever expect to hear of

him again. The last seen of him was

In Washington. He was then heading for some distant port to go aboard a

ship and leave his country forever. He Went Dead Broke.

Hains left his little daughter, Mellie, with his parents and signed a doc

ument giving to the General, his fath

er, a lien on all the royalties from his books. He went to sea dead broke, to eat sailorman's grub, do a sailorman's

work and sleep in a sailor man's bunk

Since the killing of Wm. E. Annis at

the Bayside Yacht club over a year ago Thornton Hains has been persona grata with the publishers. One magazine, at least, that had accepted his stories and paid for them in advance of publication, has subsequently failed

to print them. Men who were once

eager to get stories from him and

be received by him as his friends

avoided him after his trial at Flush

ing.

Went to Sing Sing. Before his disappearance Thornton

went to Sing Sing to bid farewell to

his brother Peter.

He found Peter a ghastly wreck of man. His silky, black beard had

been shaved off and his face showed

cadaverously above his prison stripes.

The brothers were allowed one hour

together. Thornton showed mingled

rage and grief at the plight of his brother, of whose acquittal of the charge of , murder he felt sure. His voice was husky when he told Peter

goodbye.

E. Hoover.

In the Wayne circuit court, suit has

been entered by the Union National

Bank vs. William E. Hoover et al for

The demand

Uncle Sam will soon hold postal ex

aminations In the . vicinity of Rich

mond and throughout the United

States. About 42.053 nosltions -were foreclosure of mortgage,

filled last year and it is estimated that $1,000.

50.000 will be filled this year. Any ambitious young man with only a very

ordinary education can readily pass

l ne - government wants young men

with common sense to take examina

tions for railway mall clerks and post

office clerks and carriers, and the Government Positions Bureau, of Rochester, N. Y., with its peculiar knowledge of the requirements of the

examination, can fit any young man in

a snort time to pass. A government position means steady work, good pay.

and a yeiiriy vacation. This thorough- Occupied Attention Of Com

and women for Government examinations.' as stenographers, typewriters, Internal revenue and custom house

clerks, storekeepers and raurers. No I The county commissioners were

matter where you live, city or country, busy today with the township turn-

you have, under the civil service, as pike repair funds. They found the good a chance to secure a good gov- demands a little larger than usual ow-

eminent position . as anyone else. 1 ing to the amount of work that has

There is time to prepare for the ex-1 had to be done on the roads because

aminatlon soon to come, and any of the rains.

reader of the Richmond Palladium can I

get full information how to proceed

free of charge, by writing The Government Positions Bureau. 1445 Ham-

- Un Bldg., Rochester, N. Y.

jun 5-12-19-2S

Suit has been entered by Benjamin

G. Price vs. Arthur C. Charman for

foreclosure of a chattel mortgage; de

mand $225. - - -.

TURNPIKE REPAIR

FOUND CONSIDERED

missioners Today.

A RAID AT LIBERTY

Observant, but Net Penitent.

Barton had been very naghty sev-

Tbe Civic league of Liberty is tak

ing credit for the raid on the alleg-

fti tlaes, when spanking bad d bUnd tiger made this week. The

fcht produce the desired malts. So ceremony. A large quantity I drew htm dowm beside me and began of i, goods was confiscated and to reason gently with Mm. With his placed in the hands of the sheriff.

great brown eyes fixed on my face be Several boxes of "Pablos" were tak-

appeared to be listening Intently. Much I en m the raid. Dennis Crosby, the

pleased with the result of say plsa, I owner of the place, said he acted

congratulating myself wnen be within his lenl rirhts.

Mdeniy interrupted, me.

"Say, auntie," be remarked solemnly.

you wink nearly every time yon Coat yon fDeUpeatoc.

Only an Amateur Now.

"No, sir," said the man who bad been

asked for alms; "I can give you nothing. Ton are a professional beggar,

aren't you?" "I used to think so," replied the beg

gar, as be sadly pulled two cents and

a collar button from his picket, "but

I have come to the conclusion that am only an amateur."

Classified.

"She Is a clergyman's daughter, yon said, didn't you V - Inqu lred a young man of a friend vbo bad Introduced

htm.

Tes," was the reply. "He's the rector, his wife's the director, and she's the misdlrector." London Stray Stories.

One Request.

Mediem Is there any question you

would like to -ask your first wife? Sit

terYes; I would like to ask her to give my second wife her recipe for

mincemeat Kansas City Journal.

Even at the equator the average temperature of the sea at the depth

of a mile Is bat 4 degrees above !BgOiBt.

rT

wm

mm

Leave your home duties MONDAY and vc!l our Coat and Suit Department. Not a lot o3 descriptive matter, but simply a few cold 22So 1 Lot of separate white wool coats, regular price, $10.00 and $12.00, Menday's price ...GGsCD 1 Lot white wool coat-suits, former price $14.00 and $18.00, Monday you may have your choice for .G0C3 1 Lot colored Tailored Suits, regular price $15.00 to $17.50; Monday you will find them marked, choice................... G0C3 1 Lot Covert Coats, former price $8.50 to $12.00, choice during Monday's sale - .00.C3 1 Lot of Silk Dresses, one-piece and princess style, made of Taffeta and Messaline Silks, regular price, $15.00 to $18.00, Monday's sale price ...CI I. CO 1 Lot colored wash coat-suits, white, cream, tan, light blue, lavender and pink; these are extraordinary values; Monday will find them going at GG40

Cloak and Suit Dept. Second floor Take the Elevate?. MONDAY Hie Gc. E tofeitog C0).

n

"Your efirnslon," said the busy editor, "Is not available." "Is there any other place where I too Id send It?', queried the disappoint

ed bard.

Oh. yes!" V "Where, sir?" "The house of correction."

The Sword Swallower I'm la a great quandary. Manager What's the matter? The Sword SwaUower I asked the two beaded girl to marry me. and only one of ber accepted! Mansger What's the matter with the other of her? The Sword 8wallower She's afraid of bigamy!

Father What! Another dmsmsfc. crs bill? My dear girl, you saoatt fix your mind on something higher than dress. Daughter So I have, papa, I've got my mind fixed oa a lova af a hat In a downtown mlllraer'a window, and. Just think. It's only $19.98! TouH get It for me. woat yon. papa, dear?

PANIC ONJSTEAMER Passengers Become Frenzied

As Ship Tries to Make Her Pier.

PADDLE WHEEL INJURED

isew xorir, June iz. A panic oc

curred among the 400 passengers on

the Fall River liner Commonwealth

today as she was trying to make her

pier at the foot of Murray street A

hawser which had been made fast

from the bow of the boat to the dock snapped and became twisted in the

starboard paddle wheel and the

steamer drifted down the river.

The passengers were on deck, mostly forward. They soon saw that the commonwealth was helpless and was drifting. The wildest excitement followed until the tug Edward Brandon made fast alongside and towed the

steamer back and into her berth.

Ill BED TWO YEARS

Confined to bis bed almost continuously for two years, is the experience of William Hutchins. aged 87. living at 413 South Thirteenth street. His

conciuon is rapidly growing worse and be Is now regarded as In a critical condition. Mr. Hutchins In former days was a wood worker. His illness

is due to the afflictions of old age.

WILL ENTER RACE. ' Richmond bicycle riders are, begin

ning to train in expectancy of enter

ing the Hamilton. O.. bicycle race to be held in that city, September ,

Labor day-

ONER or

LATER

You will want something. When that time comes, set your choice of what you want in the quickest and essfsst way by putting a WANT AD. in the PALLADIUM. It will only cost you a few pennies and may mean Cellars to you. No matter where you live, our classified WANT ADS. will find for. you just what you want. You may be one of our country readers, or you may live out of town a short distance, or you may chance to pick up this paper in another city. No matter our WANT ADS. are valuable to you ANYWHERE, if you but find out by READING them just what they will do. Look over the different bargains each day; perhaps yea will find something you would like to have. You have tna opportunity in the classified column of picking what you want fronT propositions that may be money makers. It means MONEY TO YOU-to read these ads daily. And when you are in need of anything put an ad in this paper and you will not have to look further to satisfy your want.

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