Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 201, 3 July 1914 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1914

PAGE 71IRC2

CITY TO ADVERTISE FOR LIGHUYSTEM When Bids Come in Board Will Determine Style of Lamps. Bids for - 375 street lamps will be advertised for some time next week and until these bids have been received no decision will be made as to the type of lamp the city will purchase, although the city - officials strongly favor the luminous arc lamps. At the present time the city has 325 street lamps which are not only antiquated and provide poor illumination but are also not located to the best advantage in many instances. It is the understanding of the board members that the1 company which secures the contract for the city's new street lamps will provide an expert to locate them in the most advantageous places without expense to the city. The board is about determined not to place ornamental posts on Main street or any other of the prbicipal streets and will suspend lamps in such places to trolley poles by the use of brackets. These brackets will be of ornamental design and when they and the posts are painted will provide a most attractive appearance. Placing arc lamps on ornamental posts on Alain street is opposed becausuch a plan would double the nunef of poles now on that street, noif Xoo wide at the best, and not only givMit a fenced in appearance, but provide a handicap to firemen in the event of a blaze. At Akron, O., one of the best illuminated cities in the country, city officials told Mayor Robbins and members of his party on their recent visit there, that if the lighting system of that city was to be rearranged, lamps on business streets would be attached to trolley poles and the ornamental posts removed.

Order now your ice cream for 4th of July at Price's. 2-2t POLICE CHIEF GIVES ADVICE TO GIRL Chief Goodwin today gave a fourteen-year-old girl some fatherly advice the child had never received at home. He told her that no good would be derived by her running the streets and keeping company with a man who is said to be thirty-five years old. In tears the child told him that in the future she would be a good girl. Police say there are many other young girls in Richmond badly in need of such fatherly advice. Chicago has a new golf club limited to 150 members, each of whom must pay $1,500 entrance fee. SON OF ARCHDUKE; AND HEIR TO THRONE m Upp: Charles Maximilian, eldest ion oft the slain Archduke Francis Ferdinand. Lower: Archduke Charles, the recbgnized heir to the Austrian throne, j (j strong party is being organized to pusl forward young Prince Maxmlian, i as pretender to the throne. Tie position of the young prince is a 6tange one. Ilis father, the murdered Achduke was heir to the throne of I tte aged Emperor Francis Joseph. IWore the Archduke married his morgviatic wife, he swore that be would nter try to confer royal rank on her or to make any children they night hfre heira to the throne.

Nobleman to in Fight

" ii Ijj

That the Di:e of Manchester will aid his father-in-law, Eugene Zi mmerman, of Cincinnati, in defending the suit for $100,000 for breach of promise brought by Miss Icy Zimmerman, the dog fancier, is the story now in circulation in New York city. The photograph shows Miss Zinmerman and one of her champion dogs.

SEEK LOWER RATES ON FIREJNSURANCE Commercial Club Launches Campaign to Reduce Cost of Protection. A campaign for lower fire insurance rates in Richmond was launched last night at a meeting of the insurance committee of the Commercial club. A 13 per cent decrease in basic rates and lower general rate probably will be the result. A campaign of publicity to teach the citizens of Richmond how to secure lower rates under the present rating system will also be undertaken. This includes the promotion of such movements as fire prevention day and clean-up week. Little improvements, costing almost nothing can be made on property and lower rates obtained, it was held. Cleaning of cellars, woodsheds and dumps aid in bringing about the awer rate. Within a short time the insurance men of the city will be asked to meet with the committee and co-operate with it in the movement. The Indianapolis bureau of insurance of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce has offered the Commercial club its managers to aid in the campaign. Later, E. M. Sellers, head of the Sellers Insurance bureau, will meet with the committee members and the list of recommendations he made in 1909 will be gone pver. The committee will be able to show him that every recommendation but one has been carried out. This is the purchase of an aerial truck, which is not a pressing matter. COLLECTSjTATISTICS Committee -Ready for Hos pital Campaign. Because of the absence of the Commercial club health committee chairman, Will Quigg, who is spending his vacation in the north, no meetings of the committee will be held for a short time. When Mr. Quigg returns, the matter of petitioning the county commissioners for the erection of a tuberculosis hospital will be taken up again. The committee has its data complete, even to the dimensions and cost of the buildings and the upkeep expense of the hospital after it is ouiit. Statistics regarding the number of persons in the county affected, also have been gathered and there is really little to do except present the matter to the official body. KNIGHTS SELECT SET OF OFFICERS At the semi-yearly election of officers of the Coeur de Lion lodge. No. 8, K. of P., the following officers were named: Chancellor commander, George Hurbst; vice chancellor, Herbert Boyer; prelate, Fred Bayer; master of work, C. M. Lyons; master at arms, Irwin Suits; inner guard, Forest Maple; outer guard, Benjamin Whaley. Representatives to the grand lodge session to be held at Indianapolis in October are Frank C. Roberts, Harry Mills and A. B. Ranks.

Aid Zimmerman Against Dog Fancier

HOLD CITHEACHERS School Officials Lose Only One. Richmond was fortunate in keeping almost all teachers in the public schools this year. Only a few resigned or left for other positions. There is only one vacancy in the whole teaching force of the city. Miss Belle Bishop, shorthand teacher at the high school, who is regarded as one of the most successful instructors in the high school commercial department, has resigned and her place is unoccupied. She will teach at Kankakee. Miss Florence Ratliff of this city, a teacher in the Anderson schools, was elected by the school board as teacher in the Joseph Moore school. She fills the teaching corps of the school. The various teachers at the new school have not been assigned to their grades. LONG LOVE LETTER. DENVER, July 3 Theodore Reeves and bride, a former Denver school teacher, now on their honeymoon admitted that they wrote 1,450 love missives during their two years engagement. ENGLISH BARRISTER . . WILL PROBE WRECK LORD MERSEY. Lord Mersey, one of the foremost members of the British bar, is now en route to Montreal, where he will preside at the inquiry into the causes of the Empress of Ireland disaster, in which more than nine hundred persons lost their lives in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Mersey, it will be remembered, conducted the investigation into the Titanic disaster.

V$IllS f ; -''

NEGRO WILL CAOSE NEXT WAR OF 0, S

"Racial Harmonization" as a necessity to the future peace of the United States will be the subject of the Rev. Mr. Jonah at a meeting of the Citizens' Union tonight at the colored Masonic temple at Sixth and Main streets. Having just returned from a tour of the northern part of Mexico, where he became acquainted with conditions in entire Mexico and especially in Villa's army, Jonah is prepared to give some startling facts of the danger of the United States and particularly of the southern states. The Welshman declares the southern people with their disdain of the negro, as their refusal to see him in any light other than as a servile creature, will be the cause of another civil or revolutionary war. It will be a repetition of the rebellion, he says, but instead of fighting for the negro, it will be against the negro and some other nation. Jonah says his investigations have shown that the Japanese, Mexicans and Chinese are working to estrange the negro from the white people of the United States. The meeting is open to the citizens of Richmond who are interested in learning more of the racial question as applied to the whole United States. TRAIN GETS BOTH. PUTNAM, N. Y., July 3 Bertram Emlinger fell under a train and lost his right leg 'in the same manner as his left was cut off 14 years ago. Your Stomach Bad? JUST TRY ONE DOSE of Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy and Be Convinced That You Can Be Restored to Health 1 WorvWfal Stooiadifiemedy (mm

I $L TFT

You art not asked to take Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy for weeks and months before you receive any benefit one dose is usually required to convince the most skeptical sufferer of Stomach Ailments that this great remedy should restore anyone so afflicted to good health. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy has been taken by many thousands of Etople throughout the land. It has brought eaith and happiness to sufferers who had despaired of ever being restored and who now proclaim it a Wonderful Remedy and are urging others who may be suffering with Stomach. Liver and Intestinal Ailments to try it. Mind you, Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy is so different than most medicines that are put on the market for the various stomach ailments it is really in a class by itself, and one dose will do more to convince the most skeptical sufferer than tons ot other medicines. Results from one dose will amaze and the benefits are entirely natural, as it acts on the source and foundation of these ailments, removing the poisonous catarrh and bile accretions, and allaying the underlying, chronic inftamation in the alimentary and intestinal tract, rendering the same antiseptic. Just try one dose of Mayr's Wonderful Stemaeh Remedy put it to a test today you will be overjoyed with your quick recovery and will highly praise it as thousands of others are constantly doing. Send for booklet on Stomach Ailments to Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg. Chemist. 154-1S6 Whiting St. Chicago, XU. Qulgley Drug Store. ,

PARTY OF FRIENDS MEET TO CONFER . English Visitors Discuss Future Plans With Nicholson and Hobson.

The party of seven Friends from Great Britain were met by big audiences last night when they held meetings at the four Friends churches of the city, the East' Main street, South Eighth Street, West Richmond and Whitewater Friends meeting houses. At a conference this morning in which the members of the party discussed future plans for a conference there was a good attendance of local people. Timothy Nicholson, of this city, Leanah Hobson, of Fountain City, Milo Hlnkle, of Lynn, and Dr. J. H. Stewart, of Minneapolis, were among the prominent Friends present. The visiting party is being well en tertained by the Friends of this city. This afternoon they were taken over the city in automobiles and later played several games of tennis at Earlham college. An informal reception is planned for the party members tonight at the North A Street Friends church. The reception will open at 7 o'clock. Members of tne West Richmond Friends church will have charge of the party tomorrow noon. At that time, a camp lunch will be held at Ciear creek. The big social event of the visit will be the basket supper and Fourth of July celebration at Earlham tomorrow night. At 4 o'clock the picnic parties will gather on the campus. Not only Friends but others interested may attend. Prof. Elbert Russell will make a short address of welcome before the evening program. Those who attend are requested to bring well-filled baskets, silverware and cups. The Sunday assignments have been made as follows: East Main Street Friends church, James Douglass and Margaret Thorpe; South Eighth Street Friends church, Thomas E. Jones, Sylvia Marriage; West Richmond Friends church, Raymond Whitwell and Ethel Crawshaw; North A Street Friends church, George A. Walton, principal of the George School of Pennsylvania and Margaret Jenkins. It is calculated that in 1950 there w.. be no coal in Great Britain within two thousand feet of the surface. Unceda Biscuit Tempt the appetite, please the taste and nourish the body. Crisp, clean and fresh 5 cents in the moistureproof package. Barorct Biscuit Round, thin, tender with a delightful flavor appropriate for luncheon, tea and dinner, xo cents. ZuZu Prince of appetizers. Makes daily trips from Ginger-Snap Land to waiting mouths everywhere. Say Zu Zu to the grocer man, 5 cents. Buy biscuit baked by NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Always look for that name At Legal Rate 2 Per Cent Per Month on Household Goods, Pianos, Livestock, Etc., from $10 to $250. Home Loan Co. 220 Colonial Bldg. Phone 1509, Richmond Indiana.

NEWHE-RTOTHE AUSTRIAN THRONE

ARCHDUKE CHARLES JOSEPH. Since the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand and his wife, the Archduke Charles Joseph is heir to the Austria-Hungary throne. He was a nephew of the assassinated Franz Ferdinand. City Statistics Deaths and Funerals. SURFACE The funeral of Nancy J. Surface will be held from the resi dence, 121 Richmond avenue, Sunday arternoon at 3 o clock. Rev. Stovall i and Rev. Parker will have charge of j the services. Burial will be in the 1 Earlham cemetery. Friends may call J at any time.

A Great Season of While

Is this summer, and the

Mew Millfiiwy Is by far the most beautiful we have ever shown. Come in and see the new things in Felts, Corduroys, Ducks and Panamas. - Very Extra Specnafl All Trimmed Hats $1.00 and Up 39 North 8th Street

ON

Patent Medicines

A FEW Carter's Little Liver Pills 15 Castoria (Fletcher's) 25 Listerine 20c 80c Ross' Peroxide Hydrogen ..4's, 10c; yz', 15c; Lbs., 25c

ROSS' CARBOLIZED CREAM, Liquid (greaseless) IMMEDIATE RELIEF FOR SUNBURN Twenty-five Cents the Bottle W. H. Ross Drug Company PHONE 1217 The Place for Quality 804 MAIN ST. Ross' Perfection Tooth Brush Guaranteed 35c

Established 1890.

Spring Chickens, Smoked Beef Tongues, Sweet Pickled Beef Tongues, some Mild Cured Hams, Bacon and Shoulders, any weight or kind, smoked with hickory wood. y PROMPT DELIVERY.

Oeo.C.Scliuep MEAT MARKET

Phone 2204.

AUXILIARYBODY

PLANS BIG PICNIC The second annual . picnic . of tb woman s Auxiliary w u- -: institute association will be held at MeKinley's grove, tnree mue. nonu at Centerville, Tuesday, July 7. All members and their families should attend. If possible, and help to make this a day to be remembered In the farm life of the community. The committee in charge of the entertainment is arranging for a general good time. Come with well filled baskets and enjoy the day. RING IN SNAKE. t ivivr.QTrw v T Jul- 2. IfunBon Kent's Collie dog killed a garter . . . . l m snaae. insiae 01 waica iuuuu m wedding ring inscribed. "From M. J. F. to M. M., June 17, 19W9. okirca made wellby No matter how long you harre been tortured and diafipired by itching, burning, raw $c scaly skin humors, just put a little of that soothing, antiseptic Reainol Ointment on the sorest and the suffering-tops right there! Healing begins that very minute, and in almost every ease jyour akin gets well so quickly you feel "ashamed of the moneyyou threw away on useless treatments. Beatenl Ointment and Itsslnul Soap dear awar pimples. brhh ds. and dandruff. Sold by aIMraraists;f or trial sixa of each fro, mica tat Rasfaiol. Dapt. W-S. BalUmora. Md. Ad tmitstiotM. ALL SAMPLES: Colgate's Toilet Water, regular "5c size 50 Colgate's Turkish Bath Soap, 12 cakes in box for ...-50 Tetlow's Complexion Powder, regular 15c value XO Established 1890. 309 Soath Fourth Street

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