Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 3, 13 November 1913 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, NOV. 13, 1913
PAGE THREE
KM DELAYED Ofl NEW LIGHTING PUN Board of Works Postpones Decision Until Next Meeting.
0::ONENTS LINE UP
Residents Give North Seven!': direct Paving Plan v. Jolt.
Ti.: was the day the board of public works was to again hear a discussion on the much mooted question of Cluster lights for the business district f Main street, but there was no one present to discuss the matter with the board, so Mayor Zimmerman announced that the question would again be brought up at the board meeting next Monday and he requested that the Commercial club members who have been advocating this system of lighting be in attendance. There also promises to be an energetic lobby in attendance to advocate modern system of arc lighting instead of cluster lighting, this plan being the one favored by Superintendent Johnson of the municipal plant. Mayor Zimmerman announced that the administration was now prepared to furnish current for cluster lights, for the capacity of the city plant had been increased. Taboo Street Projects. The street paving project was rigIdly tabooed ft the board session today. City Engineer Charles stated he was preparing plans for the extension of Main street paving from Twenty-second street to the east corporation line and from Fourth street to the bridge; also plans for completing the paving of North Tenth street north of the railroad. The mayor's pet plan for paving North Seventh street from A to Fort Wayne avenue has received a severe Jolt from the residents of that street and he probably will not attempt to put it through. When a surveyor was peen at work on this street Monday, property owners shrewdly guessed that a paving project plan was on and they lost no time in circulating a remonstrance, which will be presented if the board adopts a resolution for the paving of North Seventh street. Threaten Counter Action. They also have informed the mayor that if any plan for paving the street 3s put through over their remonstrance they will make a determined effort to have the concrete paving in front of the mayor's residence replaced with brick paving. The question of giving the principal Streets a thorough cleaning was overlooked by the board this morning. Main street in places is covered with layers of mud one to two inches deep end it would be difficult for a stranger to determine whether North E ptreet was a paved or a mud roadway.
LATE MARKET NEWS
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS Furnished by Correii and TnoiUpioa. I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phono 1446.
Am. Can 27 Amal. Copper 69 Am. Smelters 60 U. S. Steel 55 Atchison 91 St. Paul 98 Gt. No. Pfd 123 Lehigh Valley 144 New York Central 94 Northern Pacific 106 Pennsylvania ..108 Reading 108 Southern Pacific 85 Union Pacific 148
ALABAMA
WRECK
27
-0 613 553-4 91"i 98 Va 123 146T, Sol 105 108 159 86 150
KILLS OVER TWENTY Train Plunges Through Trestle Forty Are Fatally Injured by Crash.
A Night of Terror. Few nignts are more terrible than that of a mother looking on her child choking and gasping for breath during nn attack of croup, and nothing In the house to relieve it. Many mothers have passed nights of terror in this situation. A little forethought will enable you to avoid all this. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is a certain cure for croup and has never been known to fail. Keep it at hand. For sale by all dealers. t Advertisement BICYCLE COLLIDES WITHJJTOMOBILE Jesse Bailey, Driving Machine, Knocks Don Clark to Street.
While riding a bicycle on the wrong Bide of the street this morning, Don Clark, who resides on North E street and works at the Nicholson Printing company was struck by an automobile driven by Jesse Bailey. The bicycle was badly damaged and a lamp of the car was broken. Only the fact, that the car was just getting under way and was consequently traveling at a slow rate of speed prevented a disastrous accident. Clark escaped with a few minor bruises. The accident occurred at Ninth and North A streets. Bailey had just left the poRtoffice and was turning the car around in the street. As he reached the curb on the right hand side of the street. Clark, who was not watching the road in front, rode directly into the machine.
NOTICE All members of tola Lodge No. 53. K. of P. are requested to attend lodge Thursday Eve., Nov. 13. Important business. C. T. Wiley, C. C. Alph E. Kutter, K. R. S. Oct 10-11-12-13
YOU'RE CONSTIPATED, B1LI0US1 CASCftRETS
Clean your waste-clogged liver and bowels to-night! Feel bully! Get a 10-cent box now. No odds how bad your liver, stomach or bowels; how much your head aches, how miserable and uncomfortable you are from constipation, indigestion, biliousness and sluggish bowels you always get the desired results with Cascarets. Don't let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable. Take Cascarets to-night; put an end to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness, sick, sour, gassy stomach, backache and all other distress; cleanse your inside organs of all the bile, gases and constipated matter which is producing the misery. A 10-cent box means health, happiness and a clear head for months Xo more days of gloom and distress if you will take a Cascaret now and then. All druggists sell Cascarets. Don't forget the children their little insif"ja need a gentle cleansing, too.
CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT. Open CIo Dec 86 86 May 90 &1 CORN. Dec 69 694 May 70 70 4 OATS. Dec 38 38 May 42 42
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Nov. 13. Hogs Receipts 23,000; market strong; top price $7.90 to $8.20; bulk of sales $7.90 to $8.10. Cattle Receipts 7,000; market weak; beeves $7 to $9.60; cftlves $9 to $11.50. Sheep Receipts 40,000; natives and westerns $3.75 to $5.25; lambs $4.85 to $8.10.
PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG, Nov. 13. Cattle Supply ISO; market steady; veal calves $11.50. Sheep and lambs Supply 1,000; market strong; prime sheep $5; lambs $7.85. Hogs Receipts 3,000; market strong; prime heavies $8.55; pigs $8.25.
CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK CINCINNATI, Nov. 13. Receipts 1,565; market steady; cnoice steers $8.00 to $8.50; calves $4.50 to $10.50. Hogs Receipts 4,685; top prices $8.10. Sheep Receipts 724; prime $4.25 down; lambs $4.00 to $4.25.
INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK INDIANAPOLIS. Nov. 13. HogsReceipts 11,000; market 5 to 10c higher; tops $8.15 to $8.30; bulk of sales $8.05 to $8.25. Cattle Receipts 1,800; market steady; choice steers $7 to $8.40; other grades $5 to $6.50. Sheep and Iambs Receipts 8,000; market steady; prime sheep $4 to $4.20; lambs $7 to $7.20.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Nov. 13. Twenty-one dead bodies have been recovered from the wreckage of passenger train No. 12 on the Central of Georgia railway, four miles east of Clayton, Ala, according to a long distance telephone message from Clayton received this afternoon. Two hundred and twenty-five tickets had been sold for the train and there were at least that many people on the five wooden coaches when the engine and three cars crashed through a trestle onto the rocks below. Two coaches were left standing on the-rails. Many bodies were crushed almost beyond recognition. The fatally injured may reach forty at least.
WARRIORS ARRESTED!
Williamsburg Men in Jail Pending Hearings.
The efforts of two men to file affidavits of assault and battery against each other resulted in the arrest of both today by Sheriff Bayer. John Newman, a section foreman and Walter Shields, both of Economy, had a fight and each hastened to take steps towards the prosecution of the other.
Now both are waiting trial in the county jail, charged with fighting. The , sheriff made the arrests at Williams- ! burg this morning.
CRAFTIEST LAWYERS FIGHT F0RFREED0M Abe Ruef and George Collins Present Petition to Court of Appeals.
AGRICULTURAL DAYS
, 21 AND 11
NOV
Purdue Veterinarian and State Official to Be on Program.
INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 13. Wheat, cash No. 2 red 95c; corn, cash No. 3 white 74; oats, cash No. 2 white 4134.
TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, Nov. 13. Cash grain: Wheat 96; corn 75; oats 42; cloverseed, cash $8.72-2.
RICHMOND
MARKET
LIVE STOCK (Corrected dally by Acton Stolle, phone 1316). Choice veal calves, per lb... 9 to 9c HOGS. Primes (average 200 lbs) per 100 lbs $7.75 Heavy mixed, per 100 lbs. $7.00 Rough, per 100 lbs $7.00 to $7.25 CATTLE. Choice steers, per lb 7C Butcher steers, per lb 7c Cows, per Id 2 to 5c Bulls, per lb 5c to 6c Veal calves $9.00 Light Yorkers $6.50 to7.00
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 13. Behind San Quentin walls Abe Ruef and George D. Collins, two of the craftiest lawyers that San Francisco has ever known, are collaborating on one of the most novel legal battles ever brought before the high courts of the state. They are battling, as attorneys, for Collins' freedom from the penitentiary. By express order from the prison this morning the court of appeals have a petition for a writ of habeas corpus for Geo. D. Collins, duly attested by Collins "as his own attorney. The petition consisted of 186 printed pages and was prepared by Collins and Abe Ruef during their spare time in the penitentiary. While Ruef signed neither petition, it is known in San Quentin that he not only collaborated with Collins in preparing the petition but that he financed it. Collins is serving fourteen years sentence in San Quentin for perjury, alleged to have been committed during the course of his trial seven years ago in this city on charges of bigamy. In his petition Collins alleges that his sentence was illegal and excessive.
Hog serum meetings which had been planned for this week by County Agricultural Agent Cobb, will be held Friday and Saturday, November 21 and 22. Dr. R. A. Craig, Purdue university veterinarian and in charge of the state production of hog cholera serum, sent word to Mr. Cobb that he would be unable to be here until then. State Veterinarian Nelson will be invited to attend the meetings, the first of which will be held at Boston. Dr. Craig and Agent Cobb will be in Greensfork where a meeting will be held in the evening. Saturday morning, the meetings will be at Centerville and Saturday afternoon in Milton. It is probable that the agricultural program which was to have been given Friday November 21 at the school of Lee J. Reynolds, east of Hagerstown, will be given the day before in order not to conflict with the meetings of Dr. Craig.
NICHOLSON ATTENDS
EXPECT DECREASE IN EGG PRICES
The warm weather of today has started considerable speculation among the dealers as it means that if long continued a considerable increase in the egg supply accompanied by a decrease in prices will result. Eggs at present are selling at 40 cents a dozen, but the demand is slight. Fresh eggs are almost unobtainable as there is a shortage all over the entire country. The scarcity of fresh eggs has
switched the demand to the packed j product and the price has jumped to ; thirty cents a dozen wholesale. This j makes the price to the consumer from j thirty-three to thirty-five cents accord-1
ing to the money making proclivities of the dealer.
S. Edgar Nicholson, editor of the American Friend, is attending the annual convention of the- anti-Saloon League of America in Columbus, O., this week. He will represent the Legislative and Temperance Board of the Society of Friends at a committee meeting tomorrow. Mr. Nicholson holds the title of n tional secretary of the Anti-Saloon League of America although he is no longer active in the office. Before he came to this city to take charge of the official Friends' publication, he had offices in Washington where he took charge of the affairs of the anti-saloon league. The league convened Monday night and will be in session until Friday night. There are between 25,000 and 30,000 attending the convention as delegates and a large number of others have come as a manifestation of their interests.
The United States forest service is experimenting with ammonia bombs for extinguishing forest fires.
(Corrected by Shurley & Gaar.) Phone 3744. CATTLE. Choice veal calves $9.00 Outs $6 00 to $7.00 Choice steers $6.50 to $7.25 Butcher steers $5. 00 to $6.00 Cows $3.50 to $6.00 Bulls $5. 00 to $6.00 HOGS. Heavies $7.50 to $7.75 Heavy Yorkers $7.50 Light Yorkers $7.00 to $7.25 Rough $6.00 to $7.00
Pigs, 90 to 100 lbs $5. 00 to $6.00 GRAIN MARKET (Corrected daily by Richmond Roller Mills, phone 2019). Wheat, per bu 88c Oats, per bu 37c New Corn, per bu 60c Rye, per bu 60c Bran, per ton . . $25.00 Middlings, per ton $2S.00
TRY COOPER'S BLEND COFFEE
For Sale at Cooper's Grocery
SPACE FOR STORAGE OR MANUFACTURING PURPOSES We are equipped to handle all kinds of storage. Space with plenty of light for manufacturing purposes. RICHMOND MFG. CO West Third and Chestnut Sta, Telephone 3210.
FALI
-J
MING
For Men
PRODUCE (Corrected daily ty Ed. Cooper, phone 2577.) Old hens, per lb 12c Old hens (dressed) pe. lb.... 15 to 18c Young chickens, per lb 15c Young chickens, dressed, per lb.. 22c Eggs, per dozen 35c Country butter, per lb 23c to 25c
WAGON MARKET (Corrected dally by Omer Whelart, phone 1679). Oats, per bu 3Sc New Corn, per bu 50c Timothy hay, per ton $1S.00 Clover hay $14.00 Rye straw $5.00 Oats or wheat straw ?5.00 Bran, per ton $26.00 Middlings, per ton $2S.uo
COAL. (Corrected by H. C. Bullerdick & Son) Phone 1235. Anthracite nut $8.60 Anthracite stove and egg $8.33 Jackson 55.75 Pocahontas $5.75 Run of mine $4.75 ! CITY STATISTICS f Marriage Licenses. Antonie Link Burden, colored, 25, farmer, Fountain City, and Ina Celia Chaves, 18, Fountain City. Births. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hunt, 2220 North D street, girL
The man who is in search of a new Fall Suit or Overcoat and wants a lot of wear, style and snap for his money, should come here and see. Our popular priced Suit or Overcoat at
$10
or $15
is without doubt the best clothing proposition in the city today because of the rare combination of quality, style and value.
More style, more thorough tailoring and a greater variety of correct models than you have ever seen for the money. There is a positive saving of from $5.00 to $S.OO on every garment. Look around and convince yourself before buying.
DELANO
PROMOTERS
SEEK LOCAL SITE Company Anxious to Sell $50,000 Block of Stock to Citizens.
STUDENTS TO HOLD FIRST SKATING PARTY
Richmond investors will be' given an opportunity to subscribe for stock in a local factory for the manufacture of an electric starting lighting and ignition device for automobiles. The
idea is the patent of an Indianapolis
Students of the high school are looking forward to the Senior skating party to be given on Friday evening of next week. The Coliseum has been rented for that evening by the committee ia charge. Wilson Taggdrt, chairman; Wilson Smith, and Elizabeth Myrick, and no one but high school pupils will be admitted as it is to be strictlv a school affair. The
chaperoncs will be Mr. and Mrs. i Pears.- of the Y. M. C. A. and several ' of the teachers of the school. The ; committee has arranged for programs! to be given out and the grand march , will start at 7:30. According to reports from students who have tickets fur
man and is known as the Delano sys- sale, there win De a large crow a pre-.
tern. sent as many ticKeis nave umi The device has been tried out on a posed of. Westcott car and sppms to work ner-
feetly in all kinds of weather. The in-! It has been estimated that 4.70S.OO0
ELDERLY LADIES ESPECIALLY Don't let your complexion be wrinkled and spotted; keep it young appearing and bright. You are just as old as you look, and you can have a fine complexion if you only sir it care. Advertisement. OPERA CREAM A Liquid Beautifier. It has ben used for twenty years by ladies of refinement and good taste. When properly applied with a sponge, it never shows, but ;mparts a velvety softness to the complexion that is unci tainable with any other preparation.
; Not only that, but it preserves the ' complexion so that the longer it la used the better the complexion becomes. Advertisement. TRY IT. i For sale by all druggists, or by mail
Ulltll 1 1 UIll IllilllUl.luiri ii " ' - - ' r of price. 25c. Manufactured by Dayton Drug Company. Dayton, Ohio. Adver
vpntor nmi th men nhn ar. hnrkinsr OOO wood screws are used in the Unit-1 tisement.
him do not ask for a bonus to locate ed Mates each year.
their factory in Richmond, but want
Richmond investors to buy stock. The hope to interest Richmond business men in the project sufficiently to induce them to take a $50,000 block of stock. As there is no vacant building in the city suitable to house the factory, it will be necessary to build a new structure. Circular letters will be sent out at once by the Commercial club to investors asking them to be present at a special meeting next week at which time the promoters will explain the project. A number of local manufacturers who have examined the device are very much pleased with it.
Advertisement)
20TH CENTURY PHOTOGRAPHS At a Reduction, This Week "nly. This Coupon Good for 50c On any Cabinet, or Dozen Post Cards. Bring this Coupon. TWENTIETH CENTURY STUDIO, 919J2 Main Street
"WEST SIDE SYNDICATE" ' Notice is herebv biven to all partfes having an interest in the "WEST SIDE SYNDICATE" to attend a meeting at the Commercial Club Rooms on tomorrow, Friday evening, Nov. 14, at 7:30 o'clock. The object of the meeting is to elect a Trustee. Money on hand will also allow a dividend to be declared. RICHARD SEDGWICK, 1 GEO. II. KNOLLE.NBERO, , EX. COMMITTEE
Corner Sixth and Alain Streets
m store
Corner Sixth and Alain Streets
Hoosier Shoe Bargains are the Talk of ttie Town.
JF s J Shoe y Shoe
v r TT . IT
Ends Saturday Night
Ends Saturday Night
V3
Oily 1 iay Left Take advantage of this Sale now, as it comes jast at the time you are needing your winter shoes
Ladies' Tan, Gun Metal and Patent Leather Boots in High or Low Heels, with cloth tops, all sizes and widths, $2.50 values, Sale price
J "1
Ten Styles selected for this. The assortment includes: Fine Mat Kid with Kid Top, Button; Patent Colt Kid or Cloth Top Button; Dull Calf Kid or Cloth Top Button; Dull Calf English Lace Boots ; Tan Calf Lace or Button. Women's S3.00 Boots S2.48 These are made with heavy soles on the new stub toe last. This model is extremely popular a it has a rather wide, high toe and has medium height heels. Sale price
$3.50 Values. Sale Price: $2.98
J3H
x3
i&7 z
Men's Gun Metal, BIucher or Button Shoes Shoes, heavy weit sewed soles, values to $3.50; Sale price
MEN'S $2.50 SHOES, S1.9S These come in Gunmetal, Patent and Tan, Button or Lace, in rather wide toes and flat heels, Sale price BOYS' TAN HIGH CUT BOOTS S3.00 values for S2.48, made with good heavy soles and extra high tops; sale price
1.98
52.48
LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S RUBBERS, All Sizes, 37
Sale Ends Saturday.
HoosiQ Store
Night
s..2.-r.
?!
1 i
3iiill
Richmond, Ind.
1ST
Sale Ends Saturday Night
i
3 1.
