Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 281, 30 September 1912 — Page 6

ilGE SIX THE RICHMOND .lMJiLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1912. 4 j ' Coldfeeto the Monk f lq0w lic a m job c 1 By Gi 3 Magerjl I ' Mt. O5LDFEGT0, YOUVe ) I ( HEf&'S A I ITTL F 8A3- I f TAKE THIS MOKEt KaNO SW. YOU'D BeTlr.) ( JOOR- sHm, T 5 UVSt( Sif ! Been u,cth us' now . - IT A.J"oTn our td the quaricH v ) take these revolvs J "l-mEwr VSe- , TIME. - I'M CO.KG- (IT $ 20 OOO . ( ( AND Pf OFF THE HAI C W4 ND TcS ! S - 1 TO ENTRUST TOU WITH SHoor,SlR. V- ' J DAfcElX; CT , VAY r"J WKS TO T ) ,v V rZ (XCORTRUST S, - V" . AfcmND AJO 9t Mot . i in i, -,. rir - -i. hnJ-i-L s i i insiasa-i -i iiniini m 1t B . -p r

10GRESSIVES IEING URGED TO REGISTER

xt Monday Is the Last Day on Which Voters 3an Register Before the ilection.

SCADS AND SCADS OF LITERARY AMMUNITION

(Continued from Page One) for extra days, or to refuse so to 1 open. It is true the laws says l voters in a precinct, by petition yriting, may ask that the registraplace be kept open one or two ad)1 days after Oct. 7. Wording of Law.( "we is what the law actually says: the board of registration . . . shall iln in session, if necessary to ac.modate the voters, during like n (from 5 a. m. to 6 p. m.) of the t one or two succeeding days, M so requested in writing by five 5TB of the precinct." If necessary to accommodate the Ws," is the killing phrase, and the voter will remember this phrase .he law, and govern himself shrewdfo as to prevent any use of this rase against him in his precinct. presence of this mysterious qualiJig phrase serves to put the wise ter on his guard against delay. It mns he must register Oct. 7, if he' not already done so, and that he mid not wait to register Oct. 8 or ire is a strong probability, if the ent voter puts off registration Jag to attend to that duty the or third day of the October region period, he will go to register .Ind the registration place in his Act is closed and his chance to this year gone. Bewara the litloker." It is safest to regard that ;r" as being inserted for a pur- ' It is the part of safety to repis)Ctober 7 and give the politicians xanco to get in their work. M' Progressives Concerned. is especially necessary that Pro4ve voters register without fail ,7, if they have not already regd. The two old parties have U' long organized, drilled and in2ted in the work of getting their registered. The Progressive is in the field with a new organit. So far as the two extra days gistration are concerned, the ProIves are obviously at the mercy B old party registration boards in recincts. That is, if Progressives o register Oct. 7, and the old parttt their voters on the books in jrecinct, the old party registraboards will not be likely to hold ,in extra days to accommodate jressives. Socialists or Prohibialsts who have failed to register, or io may desire that the place of regisition be kept open. The old parties, through counsel, je that "on petition of five voters ' the precinct in writing the board Vontinue its sessions one or two Vts may be designated in such 'on. Any such petition should be jated to the board while in sesfor receiving applications." i point is, then, that the voter having once registered, has read out of the precinct where he 4ered, must get from the county ,tor a certificate showing his first Btration, and he will get that cerate "before Cct 4," if he is wise.

WASHINGTON, Sept. 30. Fifty million count 'em fifty million missiles of political warfare have been manufactured and hurriled to the firing line on the campaign upon which the

1 nation has embarked for the salvation

of the country, and, incidentally, several hundred seats in the House of Representatives and the Senate. This is the tally of the output of Washington's great political ammunition factory, or rather it will be the tally before the campaign is over according to one of the expert manufacturers engaged in the work. In governmental Washington it is "night all night in the night time" and every day is Sunday, save in the "ammunition factory," the great building of the government printing office at the corner of North Capitol and H streets, northwest. There it is day all day in the daytime and there is no Sunday. The rumbling machinery whirrs incessantly and tired shift is replaced by another shift indifferent as to all times of day or night. Wagons flash in, receive their bulky cargoes and rumble off to the nearby railroad station to return in a few minutes for more. All night long from the many tiers of windows that pierce the tenstoried buildings the electro-mercuric lights fling their blue glare far over the sleeping city, silhouetting to the gaze of the daybreak pedestrians the

sweating workers as they flit back and forth at their tasks. It is the business place in the United States it is business, magnified, multiplied, lifted to the Nth power. And there is necessity for its haste, for this giant ammunition factory must tnrn out the main supply of missies and projectiles for the battles in this, the hottest campaign that ever added warmth to a superheated summer. And not to one but to all beligerants must it supply their material made according to models approved by the veteran warriors of the political arena and fashioned to suit the individual ability of the fighter or the particular form of the fighting the battle

; may assume in different sections of : the country. Here will be found every j form of literary weapon from the small, caustic leaflet containing but a j paragraph of satire that pierces like i a steel-jacketed bullet, to the heavy ; hundred page solid shot carefully com- , piled from statistics or the oratorical I bombshell, loaded last winter by some

more than 16,000 acres. From all of : which it is easy to be seen that the

.output of the government printing ofj fice during a campaign year is stupen- : dous.

Thus it is that the printing office is running night and day and thus it is that the 4000 employes in this, the largest printing shop in the world, have turned for the present from the

; publication to any great exent of placid farmers' bulletins for the Depart- , ment of Agriculture and are working ! during every hour of the day upon dociuments of militant politics with an I energy that shines forth from amid the somnolent noddings of the city's j other full activities like a diamond i from a bed of clay. This increased activity will, say the officials of the ; printing office, continue to grow as the i campaign grows more fervid, reaching Its greatest height early in October

and its minimum during the first week in November.

APPLY FOR CHARTER

Centerville Capitalist Will Organize National Bank. (Palladium Special.) CENTERVILLE, Ind., Sept. 30. Application for a charter for a national

, bank has been made to the controller i of currency by a number of residents. IThe application, which was presented j but recently, has not been acted on. In case the application is acted upon j favorably, the name of the institution will be The Centerville National Bank, i However, the right to name a bank 'as well as the right to grant permis- ; sion to start a national bank, lies with the national controller of currency. In case the bank is started the capitalii zation will be $25,000. A meeting of I the stockholders, who are all Center

ville men, will be held some time this week.

LIVE STOCK TRAIN HEREWEDNESDAY Purdue Experts Will Lecture on Beef Cattle Feeding Bring Live Stock.

TWO SMAL

Called Out the Saturday an

Two small fires, on and the other this mo

ed by flying sparks.

was called to the honjjf Dan (herb.

about1 11: 30

FRES

pepannent

jToda:

Faturda night

ng. wet caus-

le depetment

city sanitary inspect

o'clock Saturday niglfo extlnish a

blaze in tbe wood shl which sparks

from a passing C. &

This week will mark the inauguration of a new movement for better live stock in Indiana. Arrangements have been completed with the Penn

sylvania railroad to operate a live ! fire. The damage

Etock improvement train through the ; j10Be companies we

northern part of the state. The train home of Harsh Ralsd

will stop at Richmond Wednesday ; nue aDout 9 o'cloclihls miming.

evening, and a demonstration or stocK Sparks from the chi

win be held at tbe corner or North t houn droDDinz on

BASEBALL RESULTS

NATIONAL LEAGUE.

New York i Pittsburg

j Chicago 89

Won Lost Pcv. .100 45 .690 90 57 .612 89 57 .610 74 75 .497 . 70 76 .479 . 61 88 .409 46 91 .381 . 49 99 .327

ANNUAL TAG SALE A BIGJUCCESS About $750 Realized from Tags for Benefit of the Reid Hospital.

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS,

St. Louis S; Cincinnati 3. Pittsburg 9; Chicago 0.

GAMES TODAY,

Cincinnati at St. Louis. Pittsburg at Chicago. Philadelphia at New York. Brooklyn at Boston.

AMERICAN LEAGUE.

Won Lost

Boston 101 Washington 89 Philadelphia 87 Chicago 74 Cleveland 72 Detroit 6J

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS.

Chocago 4; St. Louis, 0. Cleveland 8; Detroit 1.

GAMES TODAY.

New York at Philadelphia. Boston at Washington.

City Statistics

REAL ESTA TE ;, TRANSFERS

cob Wilbur to Lee Hensley. Sept. 1912, $158. Pt. lots 12-13. Richmond race. ilthazer A. Be6cher to Albert W. ig. Aug. 27, 1912. $175. Lot 235 tea add. Richmond. 0. C. Weist to .Henry C. Miller, .120, 1912, SI. Pt. N. W. 1-4 sec.

r WANTED n all around wood workI machine hand. Watt & or. it

j far-seeing political general on the ' St. Louis

i floor of the House or Senate with a i New York 4J

view of bursting this summer and

scattering destruction and dismay in some distant stronghold of the enemy. It is principally for the 400 odd representatives in Congress that this legion of literary shot and shell is manufactured. Many of them will come up

for reelection this fall and reelection j means the necessity of gaining votes, j Votes, to follow the sequence to its source, need convincing campaign arjguments of one sort or another. The

arguments are the projectiles manufactured at LTncle Sam's Great ammunition factory in this city here are framed all the arguments which representatives and senators have spouted on the floor of Congress in prepara

tion for this fall's battles and have obtained "leave to print as public documents" so that they may be scatterjed broadcast over the country dealing i destruction to the aspirations of their ; political opponents. The amount of spell-binding literajture that is turned out for campaign i purposes by the government printing I office is amazing. While it is practical

ly impossible to obtain exact figures with regard to the output of the "government projectile factory," I was recently informed by an official high in that office that the number of separate documents printed and sent out by the order of various members of Congress, eiher for their own use or for that of other candidates for office during the coming campaign would, for the pear ending with Election Day, approximate sixty million. There is according to the reports of the government's printing office, an average of sixteen pages in each of the documents named. If the printed pages were placed end to end they would circle the earth five times and have enough left over to reach from here to Manila. If they were stacked in a single pile they would overtop by six miles the combined, heights of Mount Everest, Mont Blanc and Pike's Peak thus reaching more than thirty miles up into the sky. If the printed pages could be laid flat side by side, they would cover an area of ground equal to twenty-five square miles, or

46 58 60 76 77 SO 98 9S

Pet. .687 .tJ05 .595 .4i3 .483 .463 .M7 .33

Marriage Licenses. Carl Voss, 21, woodworker, city and Hazel Morarity, 17, city. John Edward Firth, 24, laborer, city and Mabel Gibson, 17, Wayne township. Deaths and Funerals. BYARS Sarah Byars, aged ninety years, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Ross, 309 South Fifth street, Sunday morning. The funeral will be held Tuesday morning at nine o'clock from the home. Friends may call any time. Burial in Boston cemetery. COLLINS The body of Joseph Collins arrived here from Los Angeles, California, Saturday night and was taken to the chapel of Jordan, McManus and Hunt. Friends may call this evening. The deceased is survived by a cousin who came with the body. The fuiiral will be held Tuesday mornlns from the St. Mary's church at nine o'clock. Interment in St. Mary's cemeteryRICHARDS Mrs. Ella Richards, aged seventy-seven years, died Sunday morning at eleven-thirty o'clock at her home, 306 South Tenth street. Death w&s due to a complication of diseases. The body will be shipped to Indianapolis, Tuesday morning. Burial at Crown Hill cemetery. Short services will be held at the grave.

Albeit the amount received this year from the sale of hospital tags, was not as large as that realized last year, the Ladies' Aid society of the Reid Memorial hospital is pleased with the results of Tag Day The amount taken in was $735.95. This does not include small amounts in some of the boxes which have not been opened as yet. It iB likely that the total will reach about $750. Last year $961 was realized from hospital Tag Day. Of that amount, however, Daniel G. Reid gave $120. During the past year Mr. Reid has given money for the installation of a laundry at the hospital. Eighty-three members of the Aid society and a number of young women assisted in the sale of tags and for the "tight-wad" it was a difficult feat to be on the downtown streets without buying a tag. In addition to the number of women selling tags, the society placed forty-seven boxes into which a coin could be dropped for tags in groceries, meat markets and at the entrances of shops and factories. Fourteen hundred tags were sold at one cent per tag, as fourteen hundred pennies were counted Saturday night, by the committee in charge of the work. Most of these tags were bought by children. A few large donations were recorded. Mrs. E. G. Hill, president of the hospital aid society stated this morning that the society appreciates the liberality of the Richmond citizens and said that the money would be spent in the best way possible towards the good of the institution and patients.

Ninth and A streets, followed by a lec-;

ture in the Commercial club rooms.

The plan of the Purdue university experiment station is to disseminate the best information on live stock possible. The animal husbandry department has, perhaps, carried on more extensive experiments on beef-cattle feeding any other department in the country. The results of this work will be presented by the live stock carried and by the lecture that follows. Specimen feeding steers will be carried and exhibited on this train and exhibited at each stop. With the high price of feeding cattle and the high price of feed, it is important that every one engaged in this business use the most up-to-date methods in his feeding operations. A full discussion of cattle and hog feeding in all of its phases will be given in the lectures. A short discussion will also be given on the selection of tbe type of feeders.

Ralston residence, efhe shingles on

fire. The damage 4

RICHMOND

SHUN

A POULTRY SHOW TO BE HELD HERE I Annual Exhibition of Fancy

Chickens and Pigeons As

sured for JanuaryJ

1

1

The Greater Richmond Poultry and Pet Stock association trill hold lt annual exhibition at the Coliseum Janu-

(-ain haduet on ;ary 141S inclusive. I Arrannetienta

slight Three i were made at a meeting gundy night

called to the.ami reports from the various commit-M-ilr18 Innate that ths whlblUon thig

roof of : the

small.

Not One Has

Service Sinclpening of

the Loca

tation.

PRICE OF EGGS SOARS SKYWARD Huckster Loses Eight Dozen at the City Market Last Saturday.

"They either fefiie briny deep or shop conditions Richmond are ideal." is the verdlf T. M. Miller, first class eleetriciai charge of the navy recruiting stfti here, on the

refusal of Ricbmofoys to join thei.

fee of the local

in this time not

ared in his of-

service. Miller has had station two weeks, one applicant has

fice in the Masoniailding to enlist

in the navy.

Miller believes tithe Titanic catastrophe prejudicithe minds of

many young men Inst the service.

y of a scarby .er ''N outclass anything of Its

kind ever shown here, i

Dogs will not be entered at the show. It was held that previous exhibitions showed that dogs are undesirable. Poultry and pigeons will be the main features of the show. II. A. Pickett, one of the most prominent judges of poultry In the state mill act as Judge In the awarding of prizes. Cash prises will be given, an Inducement which has not been offered before. The merchants of the city will not be called on to give prizes as In former years.

Last year s show at the K. of P. tem

ple was one of the moat successful ones ever hell, t r , ,

UTHS

HE NAVY

sted in the

In former years

trouble in securi

novelty of the ser

mind of the inlan

rent in the other

noted recently, M

STEAL DOG LICENSES Prosecutions will follow the theft of many dog collars and license tags reported to the police department in the last few days. A systematic theft of dog licenses, according to the police, has been going on for several weeks and dozens of complaints havo been filed. It is believed that persons who did not purchase license tags for their dogs are stealing them from dogs which wear them. The police are on

i the track of several thieves and ar

rests are promised.

Uncle Bonbon. An elderly beau had been delivering himself of certain forcible home truths when lecturing his nephew. "Wonderful chap, your uncle,' observed a friend when the old gentleman had disappeared. "So well preserved." "I don't know so much about his being well preserved." growled the offended nephew, "but he Is unpleasantly candid." Youth's Companion.

Cat Proof Fneo. A fenee can be made cat proof by stringing a tight wire about two incbe above and prallet t the top.

A Dobatod Definition. "A gentleman. saya a contemporary, "is a man who feels uncomfortable while he sits In a car and sees a woman banging to a strap. Not so. brother. A gentleman doesn't keep his seat long enough to feel uncomfortableBoston Transcript

No Roturna Wanted. " TEJ says to me, Why don't ysr "It ImT "It im. I says. -What's the use of ray 'lttm im? E"d "it me back again." "London Tatler.

avy had little

ecruits, as the

appealed to the

s. A strong cur-

ction has been

holds.

there is more

BREL..

Ak C"rnpgnsation and K

sion System,

Local brewery workers mill be In-' terested in knowing that tbe United Brewery Workers union will again submit to a referendum vote the proposal to establish a compensation and old age pension system, which was defeated a few months ago by a membership vote in which the total mas about 2 to 1 against It. The action was decided by the unanimous vote of the general conveation of the organization. The convention also rejected, for

the precent at least, a proposed union

Miller argues Q

With eggs selling at twenty-seven sport in the navylvice than in the ' of the organisation of brewery work-

cents a dozen, there was a justifiable other branches. Tmhances fur pro- ers of this country with those of Eureason for the outcry raised by a huck- motion are better,! the opportunity rope, into one: general union throughster at the city market Saturday ev- of seeing the worilltter. out the worldj Sentiment among the

j brewery workers seems to be that the

union made a rniistake in rejecting the compensation and old age pension plan

according to delegates to the convention, hence it vas decided to resubmit it. Numerous petitions that It be resubmitted were received.

WILL HO

ening w hen his sister stepped into a i

basket of the costly produce and smashed eight dozen. The hiifkstr kaw a hanrianm nrnlt

destroyed. Housewives who saw the The memDrs mfRhnn whri thpv ha th r proveraent Assocl

their nan trie a and rpllar

Vvtra tnnlr innthar 4,,mn n nrlno las i tOber 13, in the

week, and dealers say they do

b PICNIC

e South Side Im-

n will hold their

, annual harvest pm; on Sunday, Oc

and friends.

kinds, including

ilion. music and

urea of the say s

lview park. The

not ' P'cnic is fr tne fibers of the ssso-

know when the upward tendency will ci"lon- ineir ratF8

stop. Grocers were receiving twenty- Amusements or eight cents a dozen for eggs today. j Rncin5 a tn It Is said by produce men that big contests will be dealers are trying to corner the mar- s BPrt-

ket and tnat eggs mill sell for sixty cents a dozen this winter. Buyers for dairy and egg brokers are purchasing heavily through the country grocery stores. Thousands of crates of eggs are placed In cold storage every m'eek. Richmond housewives are expected to boycott eggs and serve other dish

es. When butter reached a prohibitive j figure last winter housewives through-!

Didn't Pouting Wife-

ried yon said I'd If?

Well, the troublcl

about so much i

, ! any longer. Boat

irk Out.

en we were tnar-

nothing to d bnt

sit about and locLretty. Husbssid

that from sifunj don't look rtetty

Transcript, i

HE WAS HUNTING HICKORY NUTS

ORS ANDBUILDERS

out tne country Began to cut aown irrtTTri? Tfi rTTMrTX9 A CT their use of the Droduct and the nric vF 1 1VH X 1 IsXtXH X IVHV A

of butter soon fell. This course may be !

adopted here.

The Foster CcltxucUoa Co- art opened a factory br the manufacture

of Cement BlockfCopIngs. Porch Col

umns. Caps SillaJtc at TLe Old Mill

Works. I j

The mystery regarding the empty They have a cdplete outfit f SMd

suit case found behild Earlham ceme- era machinery ah are using notikig

tery was solved yesterday when the but washed and traded materials 3b

police learned that it was left there ' all their wort I yon are a con trie

by Will Schutte, of 608 South Eighth i tor It will pay yd to use the best at

street. The suit case was found lastlterlals obtainabl If you are gskig

m reek by a squirrel hunter, hidden In to build it will ij you to lnlst Oat

some bushes, and the matter was reported to the police. Schutte mas in Bearch of hickory nuts and unable to find any, abandoned his suit case and expected to return for it later.

A SMALL BLAZE

T

For the blood.kad kindred ails. Nothing better: tr it. At all druc store.

PIAN) TUNING D.E.ROBERTS 13 Years Iractlcal Experience. Formerly 4th the Steiaway House at Irilanapolls. PIONE 3684 r

i i

your contractor ise tbe Foster ctnstruction Co.'s rodncts. Would be pleased to have :all at Factory and Inspect their Pre acts or call phone. Res. 2529 or Fac try 340 j

I

(Pallmliom Bpeeial HAGERSTOWN. Ind, Sept. 30. Fire broke out in the Light Inspection Power company here Sunday and but for . . i . . x

uie prompt ww ui uie voiumeer lire j

department, it might have been disastrous. The blase started when a dry kiln became overheated, igniting part of its wooden structure, which spread quickly to some paints. The damage did not exceed $200.

Insects. Tbe list of insects is iaaeeaed arnaally by the addition of about 8.000 specimens.

f

Hauclfs Bee

Tapped frtpi the wood a the Winder bar, North t

Street

MEERSCSAUM, BRIARS andCALABASH From Cent to $12X0 ED. FELTMAN Csar Store 609 ftilN STREET Smoke Ed-kel, that fiood 5c Cigar. , j

DR. JOHNSON t - Dsntist Cemstock Building 10) Main

Half he Pleasure of eating l Cream or drinking Sodas. Pbt hates, etc, is la the surroulngs. You'll appre

ciate this visit ou:

breezes

music ent

bles, spot! mirrors, e

scan with

the best

' same p

Titus P'

TfceG

more wnea you

parlors. Cooling

provided. Good

ins yom. clean ta-

floors, glistening

ling spic and

ompt service and

everything at the

rou pay: at less in-

i r

a r

, V - v f -it?