Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 45, 2 January 1913 — Page 2

J -S it -w

-VF i .v. THE RICHMOND PJ LLAIUUM AM SUN TELEGRAM, THURSDAY JAM AKV V. l:ri..

4

r

SIX NEW ADDITIONS 'IS BO to? REPORT Seventy-two Resolutions Are Passed On 1,605 Claims Have Been Filed.

As Bliown by various reports being compiled by city officials, the board Df -works has approval six new additions to the city of Richmond during the past year. Three alleys have been vacated and one street opened. There has been 72 improvement resolutions presented to the board, of which 56 were passed and 16 rejected. Up to the present 40 improvements have been completed and 16 remain to be done this year. The total cost of completed improvements during the year was almost $128,000, th city's share of which will figure over 133,000. The city council passed 25 appropriation and transfer ordinances, 10 general ordinances and four resolutions in 1912. There were 1,605 claims filed in the city clerk's office during the year. The general fund balance which will be transferred to the new books is $40,902.64. This is not as much as the city started with January 1, 1912 when the balance was $42,458.96.

CRUELTY TO A CALF

Is Stopped by Patrolman Voglesong.

HOCKIH GIVEN JOB PEELING POTATOES

Patrolman Vogelsong, acted as hu

mane officer this morning when he stopped a farmer who was on his way to one of the slaugnter hou&es with three hoes and a fattened calf and compelled him to take hi& stock to the slaughter house in a manner which would not be abusive to the animals. The farmer had the calf tied behind

j He Will Also Be Husking On

ions in the Kitchen of the Penitentiary.

MiSTAKEWAS' MADE In C. H. & D. Indictments by Grand Jury.

(National News Association) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. Jan. 2 An examination of the records of the State Railroad Commission today showed that at th tine of the Irvington wreck, for which officials of the C, H. & D. railroad are under indictments of the grand jury, the railway

company was not under orders to in-

TWELVE NEW YORK FIREMEN ARE HURT In a Dangerous Blaze in an Apartment House Early

This Morning.

WILSON'S INNOVATION I MOST GRANT DEMANDS

To Distinguish Himself from Other Americans.

Or Allies Will Withdraw from Con f erenciT!-

National News Aov-31 v

LONDON. Jan. 2 Speaklnsftjrtfc allies at the Balkan peace conference

when he j today Mr. Daneff of Bulgaria declared

(Xational News Association) LEAVENWORTH, Kan., .(an. 2 Up to noon today twenty of the 33 Indiananolis dynamiters whn wt-re re

ceived at the penitentiary yesterday stall block signals on that section of j

the wagon and was half dragging and nad been assigned their duties i the track. The grand jury indictments

half pulling the animal along the; Herbert S Hockin of Indianapolis, ' charged the directors of the com-! streets. The knees of the animal were ' popularly known as the "double-cross-; pany with failure to install signals as (

bruised and several parts of its body ; er - was assigned to the kitchen, required by law. indicated that it had fallen on the j -where his duties will be peeling on- n December 3, which was after the street. The patrolman discovered that ; i0ns an(j potatoes for the daily meal. ! wreck, the commission issued an order the animal was afraid of the hogs j Frank M. Ryan, president of the In- for tne installation of block signals on which were inside the wagon and or- j ternational Ironworkers union, was as-; tnat division, dered that they be led to slaughter ; signed to the carpenters' shop, where J '

separately. jNo trouble was expenenc-i ne Will be given light work.

ed in leading the calf after this method was tried

LONDON IS FACING A SERIOUS STRIKE (National News Association) LONDON, Jan.2 The taxicab strike threatens to become the nucleus of serious- labor troubles in London. At a meeting of the Union bakers today, representatives of the organization decided to make demands upon their employers for more money and better working conditions. London has not faced a bread famine from a strike of Bakers for ten years. Officials of the union of Taxicab chauffeurs held a meeting today and rejected overtures made to the 6,000 strikers. They declare the strike will not end until the price of petrol is reduced. Meanwhile the city is greatly Inconvenienced and horse cab drivers hava raised their schedules of rates, thus reaping a rich harvest.

OPERATIVES STRIKE Total Garment Workers Now Out Is 100,000.

j Peter Smith and Charles Beum also go to the carpenters' shop. E. A. Clan:cey was assigned to the store room, I while Henry W. Legleitner, another member of the executive board, was sent to the brick making plant, to i make bricks for new sidewalks around I the prison.

I W. J. McCain was assigned to the BOISE, Idaho, Jan. 2 R. S. Sheri

kitchen as assistant cook and to help ! dan and C. O. Bronson, publisher and

! in waiting on the table. manager respectively of the Boise Cap-

TWO EDITORS FINED And Jailed for Printing T. R.'s Protest.

(National N-ws Assoi lafin) NEW YORK, Jan 2. Twelve firemen wtre burned ani a scoiv or more persons had narro' escapes from death early today ven a fire supposed to have been of incendiary origin, completely destroyed the two upjer floors of a five-story apartment house at 20 East 106th street.

Many

(National News Association) TRENTON. N. J.. Jan. 2. Among

the fir? innovations whu-h President

.-l,vt on will inaugurate

I .u-. i, in i . that unless Turkey produces a map to- ! enters tue White House will be to ! i . . . , . , , . ( morrow satisfactory to the allies the : equip himself with a presidential but-1 r withdraw from tne ton to distinguish him from other plain conference. This means that Tnrkey

must grant the territorial demand f

American citizens. This button will

bear the coat of arms of the United States.

Curious. A lady one day remarked to Bulwer

tenant of the building were Lytton bow odd it was that a dove

compelled to sally forth in their night j (Latin, Colombo should have been sent

clothing and take shelter from the (

cold in the Suydenham hospiral across

out to End tne oia woria. ana coiumbus. (Colombe, should bare found the new. "Yes." agreed the novelist, "but more curious still is the fact that one came fnm Noah and the other from GenoaP

(National News Association) NEW YORK, Jan. 2. Ten thousand more operatives joined the garment workers strike today, making the total now out nearly 100,000. Prospects for a settlement became brighter today when several firms made overtures for peace negotiations which probably will begin tomorrow.

to the steel construction shop, where they will help make cells for the new east, wing of the prison. Among these were Earnests Basey, Mike Young.

Fred C. JVebb James E. Munsey, John j P. Butler and "Nipper" Anderson.

TEAMSTER HAD SUM;

WAS NOT ASSISTED i

COURT NEWS

serve ten days each in the county jail and were fined $500 each by the state supreme court for contempt In publishing Col. Roosevelt's criticism of the state supreme court's decision which barred the Roosevelt electors from the Idaho ticket.

the street. The firemen were burned when a stairway upon which they were at work gave way. Edward Botta. aged IS, was overcome by smoke and was found by a fireman just in time to have his life. The police believe that the $re was started by enemies of George Vito who lived with his family in the building. Vito has received a number of threatening letters recently and a

short time ago a barbershop which he contracts which contain an abstinence owns was burned out. The damage was iclause and wnlch wa9 one of the tnings

the allies.

WEAK THROATS tMedical examiners Dr.J. E. King and Dr. X. L. Bramcarap In their -aminations of th sohol oMldveo report many cases lrhere rodent hare weak throats and 4afeuf teti. Hundreds of school children afflicted with adenoids and ma oaal r greater number haT Bsleetd tWAr teeth, examiners say.

Today's News in the Sporting World

CHICAGO, Jan. 2. More than a dozen Cubs have already signed the 1913

Township Trustee Haworth

Perry Freeman filed a complaint against William Wedding as a result of the defendant's inabilitv to nav a

j promissory note amounting to $2,000.

does The note was made out October 15.

SERVIA TELLS WHY SHE NEEDS A PORT

"CORN CULTURE" IS SUBJECT FOR HELMS

(Palladium Special) ; ABINGTON, Ind., Jan. 2. J. S. Helms, of Abington township, will deliver an address on "Corn Culture before the Franklin county corn school at Bath tomorrow. Mr. Helms will ajso go to Purdue University to score tne corn at one of the Purdue short courses, January 6.

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

VIENNA, Jan. 2. Direct negotiations between Servia and Austria, regarding Servias demands for an out-

not believe in using the county's mo- h 900 and a chattel mortgage was given i v ' ; ! AU,mL1 octt U"6UU

Count von Becholdt, the Austrian foreign minister, represented Austria and M. Jovanovitch, the new Servian minister to Austria, represented his home government. In opening the pour parlers, M. Jo-

$15,000.

OPPOSE CIGARET; 100 BOYS IN CLUB

(Palladium Special) NEWCASTLE, Ind., Jan. Boys' Anti-Cigaret League

earnestly desire the boys to

2. The

that caused the break between President Murphy and Manager Frank Chance last season.

ST. LOUIS. Jan. 2. The referee stopped the Johnny-Kilbane Ollie Kirk

i featherweight bout In the second

OtllCers , , iv n-..Ti Ifl-V frnm

I i u u Ll VI last uif.uk

keep

being knocked out.

ney to provide for every applicant for ! on stock and personal property located assistance at his office. This after- in Washington township. Second

noon a teamster who admitted he was ; mortgages were given on the

tne owner ot a team or tine horses and , property, had been employed all summer at the j

rate of $3.50 to $4.00 per day applied THPF'F' T fQT T TVT?G for coal at thA trusty's offioo Ho urna I ".JHI liUOl Ijl'tiS

questioned by Mr. Haworth and final- i ly refused with the order to use his j own money or do without. The appli-

same

HOTEL FIRE ' vanovlctn presented Servia's chief ar-

I guments, aeciaring mat. tne commer- : . . i .n . i . : .1 j . .

KEYSTONE, W. Va., Jan. 2. The i cmi me ol Uie Uiluou ut'iWIlus ul'"

cant was found to be the possessor of ruins of the Hotel Wilcox, which was plenty of money. His attempts to I burned to the ground late last night

sponge off the county were futile.

i City Statistics , j

Births. Mr. and Mrs. Felix Metzger, 301 S. W. Second street, girl, first child. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Ulrich, 1310 North C street, boy, second child.

and in which three persons lost their lives, are being raked today in search of the remains of others who may have perished. The hotel register was destroyed and the names of the dead are unknown although one of them is believed to be James L. Reynolds, a wealthy lumberman of Buchanan county, W. Va.

the securing of an Adriatic port. A note in reply will be presented as soon as Servia's arguments are digested.

ENDS HIS LIFE

(National Xcws Association) PORTLAND. Ore., Jan. 2. Despondbecause he was not permitted by his father to spend the holidays at his

j home in San Francisco, Edward Ghira-

Many thrilling rescues were made, ' delli, one of the sons of the millionthe flames engulfing the hotel co j aire chocolate manufacturer of San quickly that many were compelled to j Francisco, committed suicide in the flee In their night clothing. j hotel Portland last night.

their pledges and do all they can to . . 1 . 1. It , nlcn

utue.- , K1" "T" NEW YORK. Jan. 2. Joe Jean-

card books right away so the names the Hokoben negro, had to . can be enrolled by the first of thend to the ll lit .to gain a decisn

over tjaiuing jim juumuu, ouviu

year. There are over 100 enrolled now.

Flower Perfumes. A garden full of flowers Is more fragrant when shadowed by a cloud than when bathed in sunshine; at least that is the conclusion to which experiments of a French scientist lead. He asserts that it is light and not, as commonly believed, oxygen that exerts the greatest influence In desortying odors. According to the same authority, the intensity of the perfume given off by a flower depends upon the relation between the pressure of water In the cells of the plant, which tends to drive out the essential oils that cause the odor, and the action of the sunlight, which tends to diminish water pressure in the cells. Spriflkling the plant Increases the turgescence and as a consequence a more copious production of perfume. At night the air round a Hover bed is heavy with odors, because then their emanation Is not opposed by the sunlight. New York Tribune.

negro, in their tea round bout her last night.

EDINBURGH. Soottand. Jan. Bombardier Wells, the English 'heavyweight champion, won-. 100-yasd. dash in the powder hall rase s in IS 1-1 seconds.

NEW YORK. Jan. . "Tpung lUktT Donovan, son of the famous middleweight of a decade ago, easily outpointed "Fighting" Kennedy in their ten rounds New Yeans day bout. BUFFALO. Jan. J. 'One RoundHarris shewed a come back quality here last night when be easily outpointed Dan Daily, the Newoastle (Pa.) giant in their tea roaod boat.

"BLOOD IS THICKER THAN WATER

Without good red blood a man has a weak hwt and poor nerves. ThbMMM of the blood, or anaemia, is common In young folks as well as old. Especially is It the case with those who work in illy ventilated factories or those who are shut up indoors in winter time with a coal stove burning ap the oiyttert or emitting carbonic (oxide) gas. This blood, or blood which lacks the red blood corpusdea, in anaemic people may have been caused by lack of good fresh air breathed into lungs, or by poor digestion or dyspepsia. Sometimes people surfer intent

ain over the heart which is not heart aisease at au. dui causea oy inaigesina. ,V hat ever the cause, there's lust one remedy that you can turn to knowing

that it has given satisfaction for over 40 years.

DR. PIERCE'S

GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY Is a blood cleanser and alterative that starts the liver and stomach Into vtgoroos , action. It thus assists the body to manufacture rich red blood which feeds the heart nerves brain and organs of the body. Tha organs work smoothly like machinery running in 01L You feel dean, strong and strenuous instead of tired, weak and faint. Nowadays ynu can obtain Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Tablets, as well as the liquid form from all medicine dealers, or tablets by mail, prepaid in $1 or 50c size. Adress K. V. Pierce. M. D Buffalo, N. V. DR. PIERCE'S GREAT 1008 PAGB ILLUSTRATED COMMON SENSE MEDICAL ADVISER WILL BE SEST FREB. CLOTH BOUND FOR SI OSB-CEXT STAMPS.

We are going to offer to the people of this vicinity at a very remarkable reduction all our white goods. After inventory we find we are fairly overloaded with white goods of all description. We take this means for reduction.

COMMENCING ' Saturday, January 4 at 8:00 a. m. and lasting six days, ending Friday, Jan. 10 we will conduct this most wonderful saving advantage Remember, everything in white goods sacrificed for Six Days Only. Don't fail to take advantage of this opportunity.

Lace Curtains $2.00 values, per pair .. 95c $3.00 values, per pair SL45 $3.50 values, per pair SI.95 $4.00 values, per pair $2.45 CURTAIN SWISSES 12c kind, special 8c 10c kind, special 5(j

iff ' w tif

TABLE LINEN AND TOWELING AT A BIG REDUCTION

35c Table Linen, Special ... 9q 50c Table Linen, Special ... 3c $1.00 Pure Table Linen .... 69c $1.25 Pure Table Linen 89c

$1.50 Pure Table Linen, Extra wide 98c 15c Pure Linen Toweling, yd. I lc 20c Pure Linen Toweling, yd. 4c 15c Huck Toweling, per yd., 9c

Towels 15c Towels c 25c Towels j 7 c 35c Towels 23c 50c Pure Linen Towels 39c 75c Pure Linen Towels 48c Muslin 5c values 3c 10c values 7c 15c values q 18c values j 2c

Bed Spreads $1.50 Spread 95c $2.00 Spread $1.45 $2.75 Spread SI.95 $3.50 Spread S2.45 Pillow Tubing 18c Tubing, 36 in. wide, Special 1 4c 22c Tubing, 42 in. wide, Special 1 6c

Handkerchiefs 5c values 2C 7c values 3c 15c values 9c 20c values 4c 35c Pure Linen 23c Dresser Scarfs $2.50 Battenburg Scarf, Special $1.45 Long Cloth MYi and 15c values, Special at 9c ft lie Men's Collars 15c values 5c The famous Silver Brand and Arrow Brand Linen Collars. Men's Underwear Men's 50c Heavy Ribbed and Fleeced Underwear ..39c $1.50 Union Suits 95c $2.50 Wool Union Suits . . S .45 Dress Goods 50c Cream Lustre 37c 50c Cream Voile 37c

Muslin Skirts We have a beautiful selection of these, beautifully trimmed. $1.00 values 69c $1.50 values 89c $2.00 values SI. 39 $3.00 values SI.95 Men's Shirts Men's Stiff Bosom Shirts, $1.00 values, Special 39c

wi3ors8t M Covers

25c values 9c 35c values 27c 50c values 37c 75c values 45 C

Ladie's Under-

wear

75c Combination Suits 46: $1.00 Combination Suits ....TCJL. 50c Ribbed Vests 39c 50c Ribbed Pants 39c 50c Misses' Union Suits . ...39c $1.50 Ladies' Union Suits ...95c Corsets 50c values 39c $1.00 values 69c ' $2.00 values .'.98c Sheeting 9-4 Sheeting, 30c values.-.. .23c

Eighth and SXJorth E

THE

mMiL m& tk

Richmond, Indiana

THE STANDARD MERCHANDISE COMPANY

-.1

f i

.V

L IE , t. , ..T.