Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 52, 10 January 1913 — Page 6
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EXPECT TURKEY TO DEFY THE POWERS Attitude of the Ottomans Is Giving European Powers Much Worry.
A BATTLE IS REPORTED Between Turks and Bulgarians and Eaich Side Is Blaming Other, Now. (National News Association) LONDON, Jan. liO. The trend of developments today in the Turko-Balkan situation BtroogJy Indicated that Turkey has decidl to defy the powers. While the ambassadors have agreed upon a program which they plan to lay before the petxe envoys when they are again called together the two chief clauses are not satisfactory to Turkey. Mizima Pacha, one of the Turkish peace delegates, after .receiving messages from Constantinople today, said "We absolutely will not. minrender Adrianople to the allies. Th;t is final." The attitude of the Turks is giving the ambassadors cause for worry and there was another meeting; at the foreign office today at which representatives of the foreign powers and Sir Edward Gray, the English foreign minister, canvassed the situation in an endeavor to find some means by which the porte could be induced to yield. It had been planned by the ambassadors to convoke tho envoys again on Monday or Tuesday of next week but the hostile determination of the Turks today caused the aigents of the powers to postpone announcing any definite date for, a renewal of the peace parley. Fight Causes Alarm. Those vitally interested in the course of Turko-Balkan affairs found further cause for apprehension in dispatches telling of a flght between Bulgarians and Turks near Lake Darkos in Thrace in which each side accuses the other of violating the general armistice. Rechid Pacha of the Turks said that despatches received by him said that the Bulgarians had been the aggressors. Word from Sofia laid the burden upon the Turks. The negotiations which have been going on here between Dr. Danoff of Bulgaria and M. Jonesou and M. Mishu, . of Roumania, over Roumania's neutrality claims have been broken off. Dr. Daneff today asked the Sofia government to appoint a successor for the Roumania negotiations. "The Roumanians are as unstable as the Turks," said Dr. Daneff. "Their stubborness has led to the triple negotiations which have been in Tuberculosis of Hip Successfully Treated REGINALD FITCH. The remarkable recovery of little Reginald Fitch from tuberculosis of the hip shows conclusively that Nature's Creation is Just us effective in the treatment of tuberculosis of the bone as it is in cases where the lungs are affected: "To Whom It May Concern: Last October our son Keginald began suffering with his right leg. We had him examined by five specialists and d . tors (had five X-ray tihotos) and the V-ase whs pro nounced tubercular hip 'njt and shorten- ! ins of the leg incCThey prescribed Bradford frame. So. TZT the 25th day of October, we put him on this frame, trapped flat on his hack with five-pound weight attached to his foot. In a day or tt two a friend came In to see him and gavs e one of your pamphlets. We immediately ordered Nature's Creation. We began using it November 5th. and almost at once we could see results. We soon took him off the frame (though kept him on nls reeti ana ignored our doctor s In structions, but kept tip our treatment of t took him to Staunton. Virginia, for N-ray and another examination. Our doctor was greatly surprised at his recovery, remarking that U was wonderful and that h never expected to see our boy that well again. The X-ray showed the joint almost entirely healed. Last of Decem ber we let htm on his feet again, and for i a short wnile he limped slightly, but now romps and plays continuously as though nothing had ever happened to him. Hi is now beginning his third bottle of medicine, and ere this is gone we expect him to be entirely well again. H sleeps well, ents heartily and seems his former self, e!l due to Nature's Creation, whicl". v cheerfully recommend to all tubercular sufferers. Kver wishing success to Nature's Creation, we are. yours verv re speotfully. Mr. and Sirs. E. K. Fitch. Waynesbort, Virginia. January 31, 1912. On August 7th, 1912, seven months sfter he wrote the above, Mr. E. K. Fitch wrote: "I am glad to report that our son is enlrely well as far as we can see. It's m pleasure to always recommend Nature's Creation and harOly a day passes that I do not talK or discuss it with some one." Valuable booklet containing full Information regarding the use of Nature's Creation tn the treatment of tuberculosis and the conditions which lead to It. such as weak lungs, bronchitis, impure blood, run-down system and asthma, wi!l.be erat free 9! all charges. This booklet also coaf!r; photr and test'mnriiaW fror in. ml parties. Address ST. Marxami. 417 Aate JLit BiiUtung. IndXaaapoliB, laiL
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UPSET STOMACH. "Pape's Diapepsin" regulates your stomach and ends Indigestion in Five Minutes. Wonder what upset your stomach which portion of the food did the damage do you? Well, don't brother. If your stomach is in a revolt; if sour, gassy and upset, and what you just ate has fermented into stubborn lumps; your head dizzy and aches; belch gases and acids and eructate undigested food; breath foul, tongue coated just take a little Diapepsin and in five minutes you truly will wonder what became of the indigestion and distress. Millions of men and women today know that it is needless to have a bad stomach. A little Diapepsin occasionally keeps this delicate organ regulated and they eat their favorite foods without fear. If your stomach doesn't take care of your liberal limit without rebellion; if your food is a damage instead of a help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless relief is Pape's Diapepsin which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug stores. It's truly wonderful it digests food and sets things straight, so gently and easily that it is really astonishing. Please, for your sake, don't go on and on with a weak, disordered stomach; it's so unnecessary. (Advertisement) progress here, in Sofia and in Bucharest being broken off. Roumania is asking too much as her price for keeping neutral in the war." . ILLEGAL SALE OF LIQUOR IS PROBED Indictments charging some resi dents of Dublin, Ind., with bootlegging may be returned by the January term of the Grand Jury as the result of a probe into the reports of illegal sale of liquor in Jackson township. Archie Bell, colored, was taken in custody by Deputy Sheriff Mote last evening at Dublin and taken before the grand jury this morning. Bell is twenty-two years of age, and has been employed as a teamster in Dublin by a contractor. Bell has had little trouble in procuring liquor in Dublin it is said. He was brought here for the purpose of testifying before the grand jury. The probe on the part of the grand jury is the result of statements of Dr. C. E. McKee, whose son Paul was given liquor by Bell, he says. Dr. McKee stated that he would push the matter to the limit and do everything in his power to have the alleged sale of liquor stamped out in Dublin. Boys Were III. Young McKee and other boys whose ages range from thirteen to sixteen, were given liqiuor believed by the boys to be whiskey, by Bell on January 8, 1913, the physician says. The boys were violently ill after they had drank the liquor. As soon as Dr. McKee became aware of what was being done he immediately investigated and reported the matter to the authorities. "What we want is to get to the bottom of the matter and find out if possible where Bell gets the whiskey. The persons who are operating the blind tiger are in league with him and have been using him as a tool," said Dr. McKee. The other residents of Dublin, who appeared before the grand jury today are Isaiah Fricker and C. M. Williams. Both men are desirous of stamping out the sale of liquor in their home town. Several arrests in Dublin may follow the charges which have been made against residents of that place today. IS NOW TEACHER Ruth W. Kohlstedt, formerly of this city, was among those to receive a certificate to teach in the elementary c lasses of the Los Angeles schools, recently. Miss Kohlstedt is well known in this city. HORSE CASE HEARD The suit of Harmon Shofer versus Charles Piehl to recover $75 which the plaintiff was to have been paid him on a horse trade is being heard today in the court of Luther C. Abbott, justice of the peace. The earliest mention of coal is said to have been made by Theophratus. 4"S"4M CAPS While They Last i, ! LICHTENFELS In the Murray Theater A A A A A A if At Jt , ti t A if- -- -- -- - Don't Put It Off Any Longer. I Beautiful Cabinet Folders, $2 per Doz. i Best Post Card Work in City, $1 Doz. j 20th CENTURY STUDIO 919' Main Street. TRY COOPER'S BLEND COFFEE For Sale a Cooper's Grocarv.
A REVOLT PLANNED BY WORKING WOMEN Better Living Conditions to Be the Demand of 30,000 Gotham Girls.
HAVE ABLE LEADERS Prominent Women Directing Strike. $5 a Week the Average Wages. (National News Association) NEW YORK, Jan. 10. Mrs. O. II. P. Belmont, Mrs. Rose Pastor Stokes and ! other influential women who have been taking an active interest in the strike of the women and girls in the garment making trade, announced today that they would enlist their friends to aid the strikers who are struggling for the betterment of living conditions and to uplift the womanhood of the thousands of girls and women employed in the trade. Besides these women, there are on the firing line today the ablest women organizers and leaders of such movements in the world. Personally directing the girls in their struggle for a wage that will give them a living pittance, are Leonora O'Reilly, vice president of the Women's Trade League; Gertrude Barnum, organizer of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union; Rose Schneiderman, of the executive committee of the Women's Trade League; Josephine Casey and Viola Pike, also organizers. Mrs. Barnum said: "The shirtwaist and shirtmakers will strike early next week. This will add approximately 30,000 (a large majority of whom are girls) to the army of strikers in the garment making industry. "The object of the strike is to secure an improvement in the wages and working conditions and to bring up the lower levels of the trade to the highest planes possible. I want to em phasize the fact that what we are asking for these girls will be of benefit to a large degree to the better class of manufacturers in the industry." Cost Exceeds Income. "Five dollars a week is the average wage of the women and girls who are ! cr?L-iniy Tz-nwl or? chaltar it Viae Vkaan ! ioiiiniugi -s. wu unu tjiiviin t i. uua uiV-11 found, cost at the minimum, $5.50 a week. This does not include carfare. The result is that hundreds of these girls walk forty and fifty blocks o and from their work. They cannot afford the ten cents a day carfare. "When the worker is the mother of children she cannot attempt to support them on what she earns, so sends them to institutions and the state sup ports them. Though many of the I
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workers earn $10 a week while busy, j they work only six months in the j year. Talks with the strikers bring j stories that are alike. Under such con-; ditions the women and girls are fore- j
ed to live in unUghted, unventilated j rooms, sometimes four and five sleep-( ing in the same room. They pay on an I average a dollar a week for their ! room. Their meals cost $4. A typical story of living conditions is that of Lucy Taddio, of 329 East 107th street. "After working sixteen years at the trade." she said, "I have averaged $5 , a week, buttonhole making on mens;
coats. I make $10 a week in the busy ; ,-. years, died last evening at his home. ! season, but there are six months when ' S", John street, after an illness of sev-'. we have no work. Out of my $5 ajeral months. The deceased is survived!
week I pay $1 for my room, $1.75 for food for mvself and sixty cents car-
fare. Then it costs me $2.50 to Doara my baby. My three boys are in a charitable institution. I fall short 85 cents each week in my living e.xpens-jand es." Yetta Rosenburg, a young girl worker, said it cost her $1 a week for
rent. $3.o0 ror iooa ana sixiy mii iui carfare. She could buy no clothes. HOWARTH EXPENDED THE LARGEST SUM As usual Wayne township loads the other townships in spending the largest amount during the last quarter for the poor relief fund. In Wayne Township $774.79 was expended in the last quarter of 1912. The amounts spent in the various townships was Abington $11, Center $144.80, Clay $39.43, Franklin $19.65, Green $2.00, Harrison $3.00, Jackson $449.04, Jefferson $75 25. New Garden, $27.60. Perry $2.00, Washington $148.80, Webster $2.00. The county commissioners have approved all reports filed. CHANCE MAY LOSE HIS ORANGE CROP (National News Association) CHICAGO. Jan. 10. Frank Chance, who signed a contract Wednesday to manage the New York Highlanders, departed for the west today. "Husk" hastened his departure when he received a telegram from Mrs. Chance saying that the manager's orange grove at Glendora had been severely damaged by the frost. Chance had planned to remain in- Chicago until tomorrow. "I'll be back through Chicago about Feb. 8 cr 9," said Chance when he started. JURIST STRICKEN (National News Association) NEW YORK, Jan. 10. Judge Hough, presiding jurist of the United States circuit court, collapsed in his chamber in the federal building this afternoon. A physician pronounced the jurist seriously ill and he was taken to a hospital. 3 Country Butter 32c Country Eggs 29c Pure Honey 15c Pet Milk 3 for 25c Lard 13c Corner 5th and South A
Siatisiics Deaths and Funerals. McCULLOUGH- The funeral of ; i McCullough w,H be held Sat-j urday afternoon at 2:0 o'clock from; the home. 30 South 12th street. Rev. j S. W. Traum of the First Christian church w ill be in charge. Friends may call any time j ui,.mk l ZMl Henry Olmetzer. aged L oy a widow, Mary E.; two sons. Harry! and Fred and three daughters. Mrs. j iiuis Kssniacher. Mrs. Herbert Mul- j j hoiland. and Miss Bertha Olmetzer.! two brother-. William of Dayton. OhioJ Aaron of North Star. Ohio and two! sisters. Mrs. William Rentz. and Mrs.) j William Triebold of Greenville. Ohio.! j The funeral services w ill be held at ;me iwme Saturday afternoon at 2:00' o'clock. Rev. Conrad Huber of the St. Paul's Lutheran church to be in charge. Burial in Lutherania. Friends may call any time. CHICAGO FACING A SERIOUS EPIDEMIC (National News Association) CHICAGO, Jan. 10. Reports to the health officers here today show the epidemic of scarlet fever and diptheria increasing. Twelve deaths from the fever were reported as Thursday's total. The number of cases of both diseases are on the increase. The city's hospitals for contagious and infectious diseases are crowded. The city attempted to rent the untenanted Baptist hospital for temporary use. The directors of the concern were willing, but the University of Chicago, trustee for the holders of the mortgage on the building demanded such a high rent that the proposition was dropped. HE DROVE JOHNSON OUT OF GYMNASIUM (National News Association) CHICAGO, Jan. 10. Jack Johnson. negro prizefighter, who began training few days ago to "regain his stand - a ing in the pugilistic world," was idle today. The reason for the negroe's absence from the gymnasium became known when "Bill" O'Connell explained he had barred Jack from his old training quarters. "I found it necessary to tell Johnson to stay away from my place," he said. "His presence was hurting by business. Several of my pupils said they would quit if Johnson was permitted to train there." Palladium Want Ads Pay.
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SUSPENDER MEN IN BANKRUPTCY
t Palladium Special. CHICAGO, Jan. 10. Suspenders are on the wane. In fact, suspenders almost are things of the past. The old-fashioned Christmas gift pair iith bows of pink ribbons covering the clasp and gorgeously flowered shoulder straps, have almost ceas-ed to be. In their stead has come the belt and that is why tho Craft Suspender company has taken one fond look back into the Euspender past and given up the struggle. The firm, which is one of the oldest of its kind iu the country, has Instituted voluntary bankruptcy proceedings in the I'nited States district court. We began more than 20 years ago," Marion A. Craft, president of the corporation said, "and o watched the growth of the business from a small affair into a great success. Those were the tine days. Every one wore suspenders then. But two years ago the big change began." MAKE YOUR. ,OWN COUGH SYPvUP $2 worth for 50 Dissolve one pound of sugar in a j half pint of water; add two ounces of; LOGOS Cough Remedy Extract ; shake j and it is ready for use. This gives ! ou a ful1 Pint of a lBcal. pleasant. soothing and effective cough syrup. good for every member of the family, j w hich would cost you $2 or more to J buy already prepared. It will quickly stop the severest j cough and sooths the sorest chest and j throat in a jiffy. Just a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours, is repaired, j If your druggist does not have LOGOS Cough Remedy Extract, send 60 cents to Logos Remedy Co., Fort Wayne, Ind., and receive a full size ! package, postpaid. - j Gold Crowns 13.00 Bridge Work $3.00 j Full Sets $5.00 Gold Fillings $1.00 up i Silver Fillings 50c up Inlay Work a Specialty. i Examination Free. ' All Work Guaranteed. We not only claim, but have indisputa ble proof of the greatest and most perfect method now used for the painless extraction of teeth. New York Dental Parlors S0414 Main St. RICHMOND, IND. Open Evenings. the Thirteenth 7? Phone 2577 BROOMS 15c
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TURKISH BLEND CIGARETTES.' A quality from skillful blendinjr : of pure, choice leaf. Fatima have touched a higher point of popularity than any other cigarette in this country! Opportunity. January Jewelry Sale Watches, Cut Glass, etc. Don't fail to attend this sale as it means savings to you in any lines wc may carry. Better prices and quality than you are used to getting at sales of this sort. J. F. Ratliff JEWELER 10 North Ninth Street. Swear OH From having colds. This is a good season to swear off from having colds. You can do this if you will begin to use PENSLAR CCLD REMEDY In time. Keep a package on hand and you will not suffer the lung congestion, coughs and other troubles that result from colds. WE GUARANTEE IT. PRICE 25c. "the Druo Feller" ovsb-m aw, rowr i04 I A Change Made The C. B. A. class, formerly of the First Christian church, will meet with their families and friends at the Commercial Club rooms in the Masonic Temple, Cor. Ninth and North A, to hold Sunday school services at 9:05. EVERYBODY WELCOME. i ; : : i ! Exceptional! r Values J In Cut Glass Tumblers ONLY 48 CENTS 4These tumblers go well with higher priced ones. They also make good club prizes and birthday presents. If you watch our windows you will al- ! 1 X i X ; so see rare bargains in t jewelry and other goods. km THE JEWELER . 810 Main St
20 SZ-Lh ICfGAXSTTES f V jtjrH.yraxzKt. 'Jf I mtrttmM war a. x5m 5?
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