Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 50, 8 January 1913 — Page 2

PAGE TWO.

THE RICHMOND PALLAD1131 AND SI X TKLWiKAM, WEDNESDAY,.! AM AliY S. ISMS.

UfiTERMEYER SHOWS UP ADMINISTRATION Reads Letters that Money ."Trust Probe Was Hindered by Officials.

TAFT handed a rap

Untermeyer Says President ..' Ignored Request for an Executive Order.

BISHOP MOORE TO DELIVER ADDRESS

ATTEMPTS TO ANNUL MARRIAGE OF GIRL

LEARN OF DEATH

OF AN INVENTOR

ROGUES GALLERY" AID IN AN ARREST

f Word has been received her' of the 'death of Joel Stubbs, son of the late Henry Stubbs. of Wayne county. Mr

Program for Tonight at FirstAVm. Doyle Files Complaint HenntnenMinn;:sota Tne deceased ! Frank Townsend Arrested inStock Being Frozen to Death

WHOLE WEST SWEPT BY A FRIGID WAVE

M.

E. Supper Last Evening.

Against Hensley Grand Jury Probe.

j was S2 years of ase. He was a tonjductor on the Underground Railway ! f rom 140 to some time in the fifties. ! carrying negroes from slavery to free-

A complaint was filed with the coun- ' dom. He was of a very inventive mind

ty clerk yesterday afternoon by Vil-;aud at the time of bis death was work-j lt.rv

Ham S. Doyle, father of Georgianna 'ng on a ne invention. Doyle Hensley, the twelve-year-old j

Bishop David H. Moore, of Indianapolis, will deliver tho address at the First M. E. church at this ev -nipg s meetine of the week of rponpn'p? .aprv.

ices. Bishop Moore is well known wife of Benjamin Hensley. in the at- SAY'S CHARGE UNTRUE here and is a fluent speaker Th pro- i,emPt to annul thc" marriage and to j gram for tonight follows: !have the maiden name of the child: Mrg Hodgin, mother of Mrs. Omer

Organ Prelude restored. ; R Hilbert, whose husband

Concert in E Flat Parker

Connection with an Attempted Hold-up.

on Texas Plains. Kansas Snow Covered.

Ohio river this afternoon continued to rise and at 1 o'clock the stage was 24 4 feet and both the Allegheny and Modongehela were rapidly rising. AnothI er flood will cause the water to back up through the sewers and flood all buildings along the rivers. Although

preparations are being made at all the points below here the continued rise rentiers heavy damage almost inevitable.

Hilbert, whose husband charged

The child being but twelve years of Wes Holder with assault and battery

,f,. (National New Association) WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. Controller of Ahe currency, Lawrence Murray today urged a change in law which would make public the list of securities and stockholders in national banks when he appeared before the money trust investigating committee. Explaining that stockholders frequently "get from under" by transferring their 'stock when a bank was about to fail he said, the actual owner of securities sh6uld have his "name made as public as the newspapers. Publicity In bank securities would keep out doubtful holdings he asserted. Controller Murray took the stand after Samuel Untermeyer, counsel for the investigators, had concluded the readings of correspondence between himself and the president and the at-

i Benediction Nuptiale Hollins ! ae at tne um of the marriage, it

Hymn. I probably will be declared illegal and

Prayer. Male Quartet. "Ave-Verum" Mozart Mrs. L. ('. King and Mr. Clements

j the costs of the litigation will probi ably be defrayed by the defendant in ; the case, Benjamin Hensley. j The child-wife sobbed piteously

in police court yesterday morning, stated this morning that the allegations placed against Hilbert and his wife are untrue.

Offertory "Evening" Wagner ' w nen brought into the court room this

Mr. Clements Male Quartet. Address Bishop David H. Moore, D. D. LL. D. Installation of the New Brotherhood Officers Bishop Moore. Benediction. Organ Postlude in E Flat n Lefebure-Wely About 100 members of the congrega

tion attended the picnic supper giv

morning to appear before the grand jury which is probing the case. She believed that she would be committed ! to a state institution to reform young girls. "I don't want to go away" she

pleaded. Mrs. Candler who brought charges against her grandparents, Joseph and Mary Allen alleging that they contributed to the delinquency of the child while in their care said they should

BOWLING NOTES

en in the basement of the church last i not be Permitted to care for her in the

evening. Dr. U. B. G. Ewing acted as toastmaster. Dr. Somerville Light, of Elkhart, spoke at the meeting held at 7:30

o'clock last evening in the church au-!

torney general, showing that the com- ditorium. The minister held the rapt

mittee had been delayed in its efforts

to obtain information from the treasury department. ' The first letter read by Untermeyer was dated September 6, and directed to Controller Murray. In this letter Untermeyer called attention to the resolution under which the money trust probers were operating and urged that the controller furnish evidence relating to the operations of national banks as thlB information could not be otherwise obtained. Three other letters ere sent to Murray, Untermeyer said, and to none of them was he able to Obtain a satisfactory reply. Untermeyer then read a letter dated September 24 to President Taft. "The controller called attention to the fact that this information cannot be obtained without an executive order from your excellency," read the letter. "Without this information the investigation will bo seriously hampered." V-No answer, Untermeyer said, was received from this letter.

BILL 16 TOO ILL. t NEW YORK, Jan. 8. All doubt as to William Rockefeller's plans about appearing as a witness before the mony trust investigating committee, no matter what the decision of an official commission may be and no matter how many subpoenaes are issued for him, was dissipated today by the flat declaration of Dr. Walter Chappell, the millionaire's throat specialist, that Mr. Rockefeller will decline to testify. "Mr. Rockefeller will not appear before the committee," said the specialist. "He is not in condition to talk even to his friends and relatives, therefore it would be impossible for him to talk before a committee." . The doctor declined to either deny or affirm the report that the oil baron is now in Bermuda.

APPRAISERS NAMED IN SPENCER CASE i j. E. L. Spencer, proprietor of a jewelry store at 618 Main street has gone into voluntary bankruptcy in order thr t!ement of the affairs of the y be made. 1 . ;liff. William Rindt. and Mr. $p( i;iv. were appointed appraisers by the Dickinson Trust company. The disposition of the stock will be made After the inventory is taken. Mr. Spencer's liabilities are $5,000 and his assets between $6,000 and $7,000.

attention of the audience for an hour. He took for his subject "The Religion the World Will Not Permit to Die." The speaker insisted that this religion is not a dream but a present reality. It is not known by the length of its creed but by its deeds, he said. It is a religion of human interest and sympathy, Dr. Light declared. "It ministers to the poor and has a helpful message to the rich," he continued, "and by it society is transformed and the individual given a new and better life. The world is tired of religious counterfeits but receives with open arms the true religion of Jesus Christ, which proves its divinity by its spirit of humanity." The Rev. B. Earle Parker, pastor of the church, closed the service with an old-fashioned Methodist altar service.

future if they have acted as the child

claimed. She will probably be sent to White's institute where she will be taught house work, sewing and many things concerning domestic science. This school is not a criminal institution and the inmates are fur hotter

than those in the state reform school. ' fProuse 6 wiiii.m t i, i 1 Donohoe 12

Following are the individual aver

ages of bow lers in the Y. M. C. A. ; league :

l uamei Ave

' Lyons 5 Bond 3 Harlan. 9 i Erk ;

Price 9 Harris 3 Miller 9 Lyboult 1 Hare 12 King 9 Hughbanks 4 Wallace 3

Through the aid of the "rogues gal-

in the otfice of Chief of Polk-e

Gorinon. Lee Turner, who was an alleged victim of an attempt of highway robbery Monday night, recognized the picture of Frank Townsend.as the man whom be believes is guilty of the offense. The chief asked Turner to look through the pictures and ascertain if he could recognize his assailant. Turner immediately picked out the portrait of Townsend. Turner was in the company of Henry Sitloh and a man whom he believes to have been Townsend, Monday night. Sitloh and the man believed to be Townsend, were feigning intoxication

Turner said, and in order to protect

FEAR FOR ORANGE CROP. LOS ANGELES. Cal . Jan. S

(National New Asm. iati.n Striving to save what they can of the KANSAS CITY. Jan. S. -The Ion et-t t orange and lemon crops, citrus fruit temperatures in twenty years were re-' grow ers continued their three day batcorded in central Kansas early today, j tie against cold all last night. Today Sellna reported -S below zero with 'it was admitted that unless the freeimuih suffering in the country dis- ; in weather abated before night the

trtcts. A blauket of snow tweHe inches deep covers the state.

ZERO IN ARIZONA.

crops would be virtually a total los.. Already the freezing weather ha blighted the whole orange country between San Barnardino and lx An-

EL PASO. Tex.. Jan. S. -Sheep are ! gelcs. the heart of the citrus region, frwwiin- and t attle are dviim bv the I Vegetables in the truck farms also

hundreds in the range country about f

here, while the cold weather that has shattered records for the past twentysix years continues. The official thermometer show ed 1' above zero early todav. The snow has ceased and a

them from arrest. Turner says, he i strong wjud is Plowing, took them away from the central part i Douglas. Arizona reports a cold of town. At Seventh and North A ; wave sweeping the entire Southwest, streets. "Townsend" left Turner an l! breaking all records. After a snow

165 ! Sitloh, telling them that he was going ' storm the temperature dropped to i ,

have been ruined.

The loss today was variously estimated at from $15.omUKH to $4i).Oin.ooo. The cost of smudging has been heavy. It is estimated that it has cost approximately $750,000. Trees in the groves have not been killed, it is aVserted. although young nursery stock has been killed.

160 159 134 150 149 146

145

home, it is said.

Later, near the C. and O. depot, j death at Douglas

and knocked him down. The assail? u' then sat on Turner's chest he says i and attempted to remove a wallet, con-

taining $95 which Turner had in his

! below zero. Two men were frozen to j

142 141 141 140

139

Out of the total number of, 54,600 passenger cars in this country three thousand are of steel.

in his daughter's welfare and has always known where his child lived and often visited her. The grandparents deny that he visited the girl. The late Mrs. Doyle, mother of Georgianna, asked that her daughter be cared for by the grandparents it is said. After the grand jury probes the case it is probable that charges of criminal assault will be brought against Hensley for the marrying of a child of such tender age. All witnesses in the case will be brought before the grand jury which will complete its investigations the first of next week.

An Extravagant Comparison. "There doesn't seem to be any hustle at all about that boy of Dascomb's." "Hustle! Say, if there was any chance to fix np a race between Steve Dascomb and a glacier I'd back the glacier." Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Knollenberg 3 Buhl 9 Firth 8 Weed 6 Parke 6 Neff 6 Diehl 3 Kline 3 Lange 9

l Crawford 9 jSaettel 9 i Thiesing 6 ' Gentle 9 i Williams 1 I Cutter 2 ! Henley 5

Thomas 3 Wilson 6 Firth Owen 9

144 coat pocket.

As Sitloh and .Townsend were the only persons who knew of the money, Turner believes that they took him into the secluded spot for the purpose of robbing him. Townsend was arrest-

137 ed this morning and placed in the city

135 jail pending a hearing. 133 : mmmmmmmmmlmmmmmm

133 133' 132 130 129 127 127 125 125 122 118 113 109 108 104 103

WISCONSIN SHIVERS. MILWAUKEE, Jan. 8. After two days and a night of sleet accompan

ied by a heavy wind street car service here was demoralized today despite the efforts of nineteen rotary sweepers. The train service throughout the state is badly delayed by the storm.

OHIO IN FLOOD. PITTSBURG, Pa., Jan.

8. The

Villi irnw

Worse Than the Ache. When should you apply a sovereign remedy to your tooth? When it is a-king.

M. 13 A

Protection

u I

If you buy a Stlckney engine now and later want a larger one, our insurance plan will protect you If you buy any other make you are up against

it Come in and let us explain my proposition. Billheimer & Oglesber EXCLUSIVE AGENTS

Billheimer & Oglesber Cambridge City, Ind.

:'' Not Inquisitive. ' ' Uncle George What! Hate all your lessons? Come, now, yon don't mean to say you hate history? Niece Yes. I do. To tell you the truth, nncle, 1 don't care a bit what anybody ever jdid. London Punch.

THE BEST TEACHER Old Experience Still Holds the Palm. For real practical reliability and something to swear by, experience plain old experience is able to carry a big load yet without getting swaybacked. A Western woman found some things about food from Old Experience a good, reliable teacher. She writes: "I think I have used almost every breakfast food manufactured, but none equal Grape-Nuts in my estimation. . I was greatly bothered with weak stomach and indigestion, with formation of gas after eating, and tried many remedies for it but did not find relief. "Then I decided I must diet and see if I could overcome the difficulty that way. My choice of food was Grape-

Nuts because the doctor told me I I

could not digest starchy food. Grape-Nuts food has been of great benefit to me for I feel like a different person since I begun to eat it. It is wonderful to me how strong my nerves have become. I advise everyone to try it, for experience is the best teacher. "If you have any stomach trouble can't digest your food, use Grape-Nuts food for breakfast. at least, and you won't be able to praise it enough when you see how different you feel." Name given, by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book. "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. .They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. . --. M , Adver ttaecoen tj

REDUCTION On All Sterling

This reduction is off of our old price. Recently sterling silver has hcl an increase of two 10 raises in price, so you are really getting a reduction of 35. discount on the best brands. Sterling Silver Knives and Forks, Butter Spreaders, Salad Forks, Tea and Table Spoons, Sugar Shells, Cream and Gravy Ladles, Cold Meat Forks, etc., etc.

ESTABLISHED 62 YEARS

The Jewelry

TH

House of Dickinson A mi mi tlu a. II JANVARY

Begins Thursday, Jan. 9th

BUT ONCE EACH YEAR

occurs this exceptional opportunity to buy the best of Jewelry, Watches, Diamonds,

Cut Glass, Silverware, Clocks, Etc., at sue h reductions. This annual event coming each January Is looked forward to, talked and asked about months in advance. It is an event that means many dollars saved by those economically inclined. Needless to say that every price quoted is strictly bona-fide and that qualities and durability are guaranteed at Sale Prices just as if the prices were not reduced.

REDVCTION On All Silver Plated

and it's all of standard quality and from the best known and most reliable makers. You know the brands and you are familiar with the regular prices. DEDUCT NOW

ALL STERLING SILVER Is Reduced During this Sale 15

lA OFF ON ALL JEWELRY Select any article you may desire from our Jewelry line and deduct 25. Prom the stock you find no difficulty in choosing the very article you will appreciate.

Mesh Bas Beaded Purses 4 Off

Va Discount 2S CLOCKS We have the very clock you want from the finest French Clock to the 6imple alarm. Regular prices range from 65c up.

Reduced Prices on Tc3llt(Dlhl 3 S Note the Savings

Men's Watches

: size Elgin and Waltham Movent, 20-year Gold Filled Casein Face, $8; Hunting Case $9.75 It) size Elgin Waltham Movement, 20 year Gold Filled Case Open Face $7.50; Hunting Case $9.25.

18 size Elgin and Waltham ment, 20-year Gold Filled Open Face. $8.75.

Move-Case.

18 sire. Illinois Movement, 17-jewel et $10.75.

Ladies' Watches 0-size Elgin and Waltham Movements, 20-year Gold Filled Case, Open Face S8.75. Same in Hunting Case $9.75.

RAILROAD WATCHES ' Illinois Movement, 16 size, 17 Jewel, double roller adjusted to heat and cold in 4 positions, accepted on some steam and electric railroads as the standwatch. Fitted in 20 year gold filled case at $18.00. Illinois Movement, 16 size, 17 jewels, 20 year Gold Filled Case, Open Face at $15.00.

IBtwy a KDIIAM(D)KIID)

And Save

During THis

JTainituiairy Sail

Despite ths steady advance in Diamonds, we are offering you the choice of any and every Diamond in our stock at a 5 Discount. It is only because of our established policy of giving a discount on everything that this opportunity is yours.

WATCH OUR WINDOWS FOR SPECIAL VALUES AND NEW BARGAINS

ONLY A FEW PRICES ARE QUOTED BUT WITH ONE OR TWO EXCEPTIONS ON RESTRICTED UNES, EVERY ARTICLE IN THE STORE IS REDUCED IN PRICE.

WATCH OUR WINDOWS FOR SPECIAL VALUES AND NEW BARGAINS

(0)o m,

The Diamond (Si Watch Hoixce

Minus His Crouch. "Saw my husband downtown today, hut passed him. 1 didu't recogniz Mm." Tlow that?" "He was smiling." Kansas City .lrttirn-d BEN 11UR LODGE Has installation of officers, Thursday night. Ixrt all members be present. Anna Kennedy, Scribe

Smoke Meat in a Modern Way The object of smoking meat Is to preserve it and to slightly modify Its flavor. .The old fashioned method accomplished this, but by a long and tedious process. OUR LIQUID SMOKE Is merely a short cut to better results. The meat is simply coated with It and is at once better preserved than by prolonged smoking. TRY IT THIS SEASON.

PRICE QUART, 75c.

"the Drug Feller"

9U&.M aim, rorr io- ,

Don't Put It Off Any Longer. Beautiful Cabinet Folders, $2 per Doz. Best Post Card Work in City, $1 Doz. 20th CENTURY STUDIO 919'2 Main Street.

Hadley's Grocery J

Try Our Coffee Roasted Today It Will Please You

i

n

LTT3 B

It Wins its bJay bp service LC Smith & Bros. Typewriter (Ball Bearing Long 9' taring)

la baying typewriter yoa vrant Mtuiictory tuwer to three queaboaa: What Hilt it do for me f How bieil Will it do ItT How long Will it do it? By answering thete queries wkh the need of the typewriter owner and user

'J in mind, the LC South & Bros. Type1 writer rnmunv Km nminA tk (rw

rank in the typewriter held. Sane people itiiak tfwt Iptmritm it tr wnttr md that m mt there iki. Mi Umm mmr look itk but there a lot of rlilmen a cuaeacjr. The aew Model Fire Urfc aot mJy fa

etacat oarrapaBdcace bet tar l

e end m fact tor every i

ItabUbeviDatea

volooei throoati ctm. permit tiome adi

ad aocoi

Ml IJtK !.

mnlihit tie -tay t tJI mwra mkm wt. Wbm er frm M 'ear ue fJJ Frt. L. C. SMITH & BROS. TYPEWRITER CO. H-adOeWefcrDom-tei Fereiea Be . SYRACUSE. N. Y Li. b. A. nractMn7iW'CtM INDIANAPOLIS BRANCH, 112 Monument PU INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

CEO. A. SCHWENKE, Local Representative 3C9 Second National Bank Bldg, Richmond, Ind.

r