Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 316, 9 November 1912 — Page 2

. PAGE TWO.

THE BICHMOKB TAIXADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1912.

ENGLAND TO GUARD . LIVESJOF YANKEES Will Guard Their Interests in Turkey Until U.S. Warships Arrive.

(National News Association) MALTA, Nov. 9. Five Battleships sailed for Turkish waters today within two hours after receiving rush orders from the British admiralty.

A FRIENDLY OFFER. WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 British Ambassador Bryce called at the white house today and informed President Taft that if American warships did not arrive at Constantinople in time to protect Americans in Turkey and the Balkan states Great Britain will be glad to protect them. The discussion of the Turkish embroglio was intended by the British ambassador was to emphasize the friendship between the United States and Great Britain.

WILL ENLIST AID

Y. M. C. A Wants Delegation for State Convention.

At a meeting of the directors" of the Y. M. C. A. last evening, Richard Sedgwick, James Judson and Everett Lemon were appointed a committee to stimulate interest among the business men of Richmond in the-state convention of the Y. M. C. A. to be held in Hammond, November 22-25. : The associations in Indiana have been appealed to by the state association to ask business men to attend the session which will result in establishing an-association in Hammond. At present, according to the residents in Hammond who are desirous of having the Y. M. C. A. established in that city there are no amusement piaceB for young men, excepting pool rooms and saloons. The business men's banquet will be held November 22 and a representative body of business men from this city is asked to attend. It was through the influence of the business men of the state when the state convention was held in Richmond that the local association was established.

ROOSEVELT LEADS ' IN GOLDEN STATE

Man of the Hour in Balkans

tfpsSfc Ik 7 .

ONE ROBBER KILLED! QUAKERS VS. GIANTS

King Ferdinand of Bulgaria, under whose directions his victorious army has succeeded in turning the Turkish forces at Adrianople and advancing to Constantinople.

By Trainman After a California Holdup. (National News Association) REDDING, Cal., Nov. 9. Armed posses today are searching through the mountains north of here for two train robbers who riffled the registered mail aboard the northbound Shasta limited on the Southern Pacific railway last night. The third robber was shot and killed by Brakeman Tpm Sanford. The holdup occurred at Delta, 35 miles north of here. The beavy train had stopped for water before the climb up the grade towards the CaliforniaOregon line. While it was standing two men crawled into the mail car and a third boarded the tender of the engine. A hunder yards beyond the tank the engine exploded a torpedo that the highwaymen had placed on the rail. The train came to a stop and one of the robbers climbed over the tender and covered Engineer Henry

I Wentz with a revolver. Sanford was ! the first of the crew to realize what had happened. He ran back to a saI loon that stood near the track at Del- ! ta and borrowed a revolver. Then

running along the train, keeping well in the shadows he saw the robber in the engine cab and fired. The bandit fell to the ground dead. The other robbers hearing the shot jumped from the mail car. They carried the registered mail with them. News of the robbery was sent out and the sheriff hastily formed a posBe and started in pursuit. It is believed the robbers will try to make their way either northward to the Oregon line, or west into the rough timbered and unsettled country lying between the railroad and the coast.

Earlham Rooters Hopeful of Defeating Wabash. The Earlham football team went to Crawfordsville today to battle with

the Little Giants for the secondary championship of the state. A victory for the Quakers will again place the team in the running for state honors as Wabash administered a serious defeat to Butler, which is the only I. C. A. L. team that has defeated Earlham this season Waba6h by all dope should be the w'ner in today's contest. However, from the fact that Earlham made sue ha good showing against Indiana last Saturday and has several veterans back in the lineup, the game should be a very close one. Coach Thistlethwa'.te has been drilling the men In a defense for the forward pass which the Wabash men used so successfully last season. Earlham has a number of plays which were to be used in the Indiana game but were not sprung and it is expected that these plays will cause Wabash considerable worry as Earlham's offensive is an unknown quantity to Wabash. The same team that faced Indiana started the game, with the following changes: Murray, tackle and Lancaster end. Mere back in their old positions. Williams started in Brow-

nell's position at half back and Vick-

ery, who has been supplanted at quarterback by Johnson, was as general utility man.

MYSTERIOUS MURDER

Of Young Girl Baffles Police.

tin

ing u made was held a year ago, A. R. Turnbull and Mr. Schilling eM tied in the vote and Turnbull on bv

J lot. Judge Parnum held that ii:rl i-vctes were cast lor Turnbull and thzt ithe law deciding ties by drawing i I'.nconftitutional.

RIDGKFIELD. Conn.. Nov. V The !

body of a young woman who had been murdered was found early today in a mill pond adjoining the wire netting factory of Gilbert A- Bennett, at Georgetown. The body had teen wrapped in a table cover and bouni wiih ropes before being cast into the water. The head had been left uncovered, revealing the features of a your.g woman with dark hair and eys. No marks of violence could be seen on the face, and it is believed the woman

was first drugged and then hurned in-1 to the pond. One end of the rope was dangling from the waist, which leads ' to the belief that the body had been weighted when thrown Into the water, but that the weight had afterwards became detached. The body was discovered by an employe of the factory while on his way to work. Nobody in Georgetown has been able to identify the body. I

rvioiMUivi tiNXS and MARKERS at No. 12 North Sixth Mreet. Lttween Main and luclk Library If yo i are needing an thing in this line, cr.ll ar.d see for yourseUea. If you want first class material and workmanship, I will guarantee satisfaction. II. II. II ATT AWAY No. 12 North Sixth Street

TAFT UPHOLDS THE RULING OF FISHER

SPECIAL SESSION IS TO BE CALLED

f (National News Association) SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 9. Roosc

velt was still maintaining his hold on j

California today by a lead of 609 votes nhead of Wilson. A revised count of t!h! presidential vote in Los Angeles county resulted In a loss of 33 votes fty the colonel.

(National News Association) WASHINGTON, Nov. 9. President Taft today upheld Secretary of the In

terior Fisher in a decision affecting J 500,000 acres of oil lands now held by ,

the. Uncle Sam Oil company of Oklahoma. j Secretary Fisher recently ruled that ; the oil company could not negotiate ', with the tribal councils of Oklahoma Indians for another lease of 200,000 acres of ol lands because they already , held options on territory of similar j size. I

CINCINNATI TEAM SECURES CHANCE

(National News Association) SPRINGFIELD, 111., Nov. 9. A special session of the present legislature will be called to meet about Nov. 20, according to information given out here today. The session will elect a U. S. Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the ousting of Wm. Lorlmer. Albert J. Hopkins, who was primary candidate for the senatorship before the election of Lorimer will demand the election. Lawrence Y. Sherman will also be a candidate. The new leMature will be Democratic. The Democrats will contend that calling the present legislature, which was Republican, to fill the vacancy is illegal.

APPOINT, VIEWERS

Viewers appointed by the board of county commissioners at a recent meeting to establish the width of a rocd running from the Sycamore school house on the National road north to the New Paris pike are working on the matter today. The viewers are Howard Horton, county surveyor, Walter S. Commons, and Francis Mc-M'nn.

(National News Association) CHICAGO, Nov. 9. Frank L. Chance was today released by the Chicago National league club to the Cincinnati Reds. The usual waiver price of $1,500 was taken. This announcement was made by President Charles Murphy. .. , '

RAILROADER KILLED

RUSSELL TO SPEAK At the monthly meeting of the Baptist Brotherhood Sunday afternoon at 3:00 o'clock, Prof. Elbert Russell will speak on "The Blhle and Our Public Schools." These meetings are always open to the men of the city. All who are interested are invited to attend and participate In the discussion. The name of the speaker is assurance of an interesting meeting, as he never handles his subject in a trite or conventional way, but always in such a manner as to arouse interest and impart instruction. This is an opportunity that Richmond men ought not to overlook.

FILED A CLAIM

Claim against the estate of the late Harriet Griffin was filed in the coun

ty clerk's office this morning by Mary

Griffin. The amount of the claim is $300. The claimant avers that the claim is based on board, nursing and care furnished the late Harriet Griffin, from July 1907 to January, 1912.

SOCIALIST WINNER i IN LEGAL CONTEST; CANTON, O.. Nov. 9 Harry S. ' Schilling. Socialist, was today de-; dared mayor of Canton by Judge Bar-

num. The election on which the ml

MONEY TO LOAN

Special rates on Quickest service.

farm mortgages.

CECIL L. CLARK 401 Second Nat. Bank Bldg. Phono 1291.

STAY AT HOME AND GO TO THE THEATRE Sounds funny, doesn't It? Yet that is exactly what you can do If you own a Vlctrola stay at home and enjoy the finest kind of a performance. The greatest singers, musicians and comedians in the world are at your command, and you ran arrange a program to suit yourself. Stop in today and get a Vlctrola for your home. Any style Victor ($10 to $l0o or Victor Vlctrola ($15 to $250) you prefer, on easy monthly payments. The cost of a few theater tickets a month-will pay for the permanent enjoyment cf the VICTOR. Richmmond Talking Machine Co. : PHONE 1948. 2S N. 8TH ,T.

HAVE BABY SON

OPENING LECTURE

Herbert Pettijohn, the popular Boys' i Secretary of the Y. M. C. A. has been ; receiving congratulations galore for j the past two days. The cause for all this handshaking and cheery greet- j ing, was that the stork appeared at j the Pettijohn home in North C street, ' Thursday and left, a fine son. The j child has been named Robert4 Both

mother and baby are doing nicely.

(National News Association) MARION, Nov. 9. William T. Harvey, yardmaster for the Clover Leaf railroad was instanlty killed today at the Sixth street crossing when the automobile of J. M. Gigson a farmer, knocked him under a passenger train. The auto struck Harvey as he was warning others at the crossing. The machine then collided with the train but Gibson and Otto Wells, who was riding with him, were not seriously hurt.

CELEBRATE DEFEAT OF UNCLE JOSEPH

Professor Elbert ; Russell will give the opening lecture in .his Sunday school lesson series next Monday evening. The subject will be "The Great iQueption," and the text will be

taken from -Mark-8:29-9:1. Over 100 j

members have already joined the class which will meet at the Y. M. C. A. every Monday evening for the next six months. Men and women are eligible to the class.

GRAND JURY BUSY

t' Quarantine. It Is Impossible to sny with anything like certainty Just how old the custom of quarantine is. We know that it was observed at Venice as arly as the year 1127. whereby all merchants and others coming from the Levant were obliged to remain for some forty days In a. lazaretto before they were admitted Into the city. The custom Is now coextensive with the civilized world, and to it Is doubtless fo be attributed the rapid advance that has been made within the past quarter of a century In safeguarding the people from the plagues, which in the olden times were so destructive of human life. New York American.

The October grand jury is continuing its examination of witnesses in the Thompson murder case this afternoon. It is likely that it will require at least one more day to conclude the investigation. It is necessary that the grand jury return an indictment against Mrs. Mae Fee Moore, the confessed murderess, before she can be tried on the charge of first degree murder.

Hospitals In Smyrna. Seven races have their own hospitals In Smyrna Greeks, Armenians. Turks. Jews, French. British and Dutch.

(National News Association) DANVILLE, Hid., Nov. 9. To celebrate the defeat of "Uncle Joe" Cannon for congress more than 1,000 persons gathered in the streets of Sidem, near here, Thursday night and witnessed the burning in effigy of the exspeaker. The effigy was carried

through the streets on a stretcher and !

later set on Are In the principal street of the town.

STEEL CO. BUSY

(National News Association) NEW YORK, Nov. 9. The U. S. Steel corporation today issued a report showing that on October 31 there was a total of unfilled orders of 7,594,000 tons, this being an increase of more than a million tons over the previous order.

Be sure to get your copy of the Winter Quarterly at it illustrates the latest authoritative Winter Styles and also contains hundreds ol gift suggestions that can be easily made at home with the use of The Ladles' Home Journal Patterns. You can get the book at our pattern counter

City Statistics

Deaths and Funerals. GAYLORD Harriet W. Gaylord, aged 68 years, died Friday evening at bIx o'clock at the home of her sister, Mrs. H. H. Huntington, 1322 Main street. Death was due to apoplexy. The body was shipped to Shortsville, New York, this afternoon at four-fifty o'clock for burial. Marriage Licenses. " Howard Hawekotte, 22, machinist, city, and Hazel Morrow, 21, city.

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