Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 220, 27 July 1914 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, JULY 27, 1914

BOND WANTS BRICK JURNEDJI Nil City Attorney Cites Need of Repair Due to Increased Traffic At the meeting of the board of public -works this morning City Attorney Bond expressed the opinion tbat the Street Car company should be required to repair the paving on Main street In proximity to its tracks. He was informed that the company intended to do this when It completed the other improvements now In progress. Mr. Bond also said that Main street, which has been pared for a quarter of a century, was now showing the effects of the Increased traffic caused by the city's growth, and he thought that in a short time it would be necessary to turn over all the bricks between Fourth and Eleventh streets. When this is done, he said, a concrete base should also be put down. A petition was received for the permanent Improvement of an alley south of South O street between Eighth and Ninth Streets. This will be investigated. The primary assessment roll for the new Sheridan street sanitary sewer

was presented and approved. Thev cost of this improvement was $1,242. The petition of Paul Comstock to have a water main extended along South Seventeenth street a distance of two blocks to his new home in the Reeveston addition, was again considered. The .Water Works company would have'to be assured a revenue of 164.50 a year from this extension, and as there is only one residence it would serve at the present time the city would have to assume the burden of this expense by ordering a fire hydrant, paying for it an annual rental of 55. The board was of the opinion that it might be a wise plan to order the main extension as it would be an inducement for the upbuilding of that section of the city, and City Attorney Bond was ordered to enter into a contract with Mr. Comstock. The Frler-Bramcamp sewer controversy was renewed again, and the city attorney will make another effort to untangle this troublesome North Seventh street problem. Frier wants a sewer run through property owned by Bramcamp, and the latter objects. An effort to get the disputants together will be made by Mr. Bond. Marketmaster McKinley reported he had condemned eleven hampers of cucumbers brought to market Saturday night by a commission man. He was aTso ordered to provide more trash recepticles for the market house. HEAT IN DETROIT KILLS ONE MAN DETROIT, July, 27. One death and four prostrations was the the toll of the heat in this city Sunday. The highest temperature on the street was 98 degrees at 2 p. m. A drop of 3 degrees was recorded from 23 to 8 p. m. Ben Eldridge, 50, was the victim who died. All previous records were broken at the bathing beaches on Belle Isle, no fewer than 12,000 bathers donning suits during the day. REDMOND DEMANDS PROBE OF MASSACRE LONDON, July 27 The "Dublin massacre" of Sunday precipitated parliamentary excitement in the house of commons this afternoon. John Redmond, the Nationalist leader, requested Augustine Birrell, chief secretary for Ireland, to give the names of the officials who gave the order which resulted in men and women being shot down in Dublin yesterday. Secretary Birrell stated that the assistant commissioner, who acted upon hie own responsibility, has been suspended pending an investigation. EMPEROR WILLIAM OPPOSED TO WAR BERLIN, July 27. While mobs paraded the streets today crying for war with Russia, Emperor William arrived home and immediately went into conference wit hthe secretary of foreign affairs. Later men prominent in official circles declared their belief that the Kaiser would personally intervene to effect peace between Austria and Servia. I. Q4 7

MI83 ETHEL ESTE8. pho Appears Here with the Jack Lewis Stock Company.

Troubled Hayti Threatened With American Intervention

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G. 0, P, SEEKS PEACE PACT WITH MOOSERS IN CENTRAL WEST CHICAGO, July 27. The first step toward the amalgamation of the Progressive and the Republicans of the middle western states will be taken next Sunday and Monday at a conference called for Chicago by Will H. Hays, chairman of the Indiana Republican state committee. Chairman Hays has incited the committees of Illinois, Missouri, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Ohio, Iowa, and West Virginia to meet with him next Sunday at the Congress hotel to discuss the plan of placing Progressives on the Republican ticket for the November election. The plan is to have the Republican county committees in the various states called Into conference to induce the Republican county candidates to resign in favor of the Progressive candidates, the names of the latter to be substituted on the Republican ticket at the November election. CONFIRM MOVEMENT. INDIAINAPOLIS, July 27. Republican state leaders here confirmed today the report sent out from Chicago that an amalgamation of the Progressive and Republican parties was to be sought. TO MAIL PROGRAMS The first of the Chautauqua programs will be mailed from the Commercial club rooms Thursday morning, when they will be received from the printers. These programs, window cards and banners will be used in Richmond and surrounding towns to advertise the assembly which opens Sunday, August 16. Window cards and banners will be distributed over a radius of twenty-five miles by men working in an automobile. MOBILIZES ARMY ROME, July 27. Montenegro is mobilizing her army. 10,000 men already have left for Servia. If Austria hurls her troops forward she will find armies of both Servia and Montenegro before her.

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Scenes in revolution-troubled Hyti. Upper left hand picture, typical Haytian native. Upper right hand picture, President's palace at Port Au Prince. Below, street scene, Port Au Prince. Long conferences on the Haytian situation with navy officials now occupy much of Secretary Daniels' time and although the secretary is not yet ready to admit that marines will be landed in Hayti he makeB no secret of his hopes that developments may make Intervention unnecessary. Pour hundred marines under Col. Charles A. Doyen are ready to sail on the transport Hancock as soon as the word is given by Secretary Daniels. Reports received in Washington Indicate that conditions are growing no better in the black republic. Hundreds of British refugees have already left San Domingo and the exodus still continues. The U. S. Washington i8 protecting the embarkation of British subjects on a British steamer chartered to carry them to Turks Island. Hayti is at present in the throes of a many-sided revolution and hopelessly in debt to Germany. Germany is standing out against .American intervention however.

BOARD TO IGNORE PETITIONJT POLICY Commissioners Declare Paper Does Not Cite Specific Road Case. The petition submitted to the county commissioners by a number of prominent men of this county asking the commissioners to refuse to grant any more road petitions within the county until the present bonded indebtedness of the county is relieved to some extent, will not have much effect on the commissioners, according to their statements today. The petition, which was submitted Saturday, has no legal status because it bears upon no specific case, but merely requests the commissioners to follow a policy of no more road construction. Several hundred names are on the petition, many of which are names of persons now living on Improved roads, which the county is paying for. A large number of them, however, are local business men who believe that the county ought not spend any more money on roads until the present roads are tested out and paid for. The county commissioners are in a quandary to know what to do when a petition is . submitted to them under the three-mile-road law. By law, the road has to be built if there are enough signers for it. A petition under this law can overrule the expression of the commissioners, although it has never been put to a test. The commissioners stated today many of the roads that have been built would not have been built if the commissioners had had the exclusive right to accept or reject the petitions. They are, in favor of submitting the question to the people and making the building of roads a matter of public policy. Saturday afternoon the commissioners appointed Minus Fox of Hagerstown and F. M. Jones of Milton to act as viewers on the South Twenty-second street road, which was petitioned for early last month. The petition asks for a concrete road from Main to South E street. August 15 is the date set for the report of tho viewers. GUNMAN SHOOTS IN PENNSY CAR When a man apparently under the Influence of liquor became peeved and shot a hole through the roof of a rapidly moving Pullman coach of Pennsylvania train No. 20 Saturday afternoon, passengers huddled in a frightened group at one end. Greenfield police were sought. The man was arrested and placed in a Green field jail. He boarded the train at Indianapolis and had a ticket for New York. AUSTRIAN KILLS MAN IN WAR DISCUSSION INDIANAPOLIS, July 27. In a quarrel over the war situation in Europe, George Wise, an Austrian, was stabbed to death by Tom Dorak. also trian. Dorak is under arrest charged witn tne killing, which was done with a long bladed hunting knife. Excitement in the foreign colony here is at a high 'pitch over the . tense situation In Europe

City Statistics

Births. John and Clara Haisley, 519 North Twenty-second street, boy. DEATHS AND FUNERALS. BILDERBACK Mrs. Eliza E. Bilderback, 60, died at her home 421 North Sixteenth street, Sunday evening. She is survived by her husband, William A. Bilderback and several children. The funeral will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the home. Interment will be in Earlham cemetery. Friends may call at any time. M'MINN Mrs. Anna E. McMinn, 66, died at the home of her brother, 52 South Fifteenth street, Saturday after noon at 4:30 o'clock. The funeral will be held Tuesday morning from the house. Rev. E. E. Davis will have charge. The body will be taken to Logansport Tuesday morning for bur ial. Friends may call Monday after noon and evening. The deceased Is survived by one son, two brothers and two sisters. DUNHAM The body of Edwin O Dunham, who was cremated in Los Angeles, Cal., have arrived here and will be interred in Earlham cemetery, Tuesday afternoon at 4 o'clock. There will be a short burial service for rela tives and friends at the grave. Engineers estimate the available water power of Oregon as more than thirteen million horsepower. RICHMOND PEOPLE GOOD DRESSERS Very few cities in the United States can show as many well-dressed people as Richmond, a large per cent of them having their clothes made to order. The man who gees to a tailor haf many advantages he is able not onlj to choose from a very wide range of patterns, but to have his suit cut and fitted exactly to his individual requirements. We have city tailors who know how to put correct style into a Suit. You can try on the Coat in course of making. This gives you an oppor tunity to see how the garment leeks before it Is finished. You can tell a wearer of Simmons Tailoring It 'Is- classy and up-to-date We make fine suits $15.06 to $30.00. This wtok Fall Goods are being re ceived: Early buyers please take notice. Make your selection now. Cemer Main and Ninth Streets.Try Cooper's Blend Coffee CarlF.Weisbrod Piano Tuning and Repairing. Phone 2095.. .

LATE MARKET NEWS

CHICAGO GRAIN furnished by Correll and Thompson, I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1446. WHfeAT ; . Open. juiy r..v.:. 84 September 4 4 pecember ........... I7H - CORN July ................. 73 September 70 :' December ........... 60 14 r oats July ........ ...i. 36 September . , . . : . 36 December ........ . . 37 . Close. ' 84 83 . :- 73 69 , 59 S5 :?: 36 37 QUO- ' Close I ' t4 ; . .64 64 69 5- 95 f 120 134 83 106 109 160 93 124 NEW YORK STOCK TATIONS ; i - - ' Open." American Can 26' Amalgamated Copper. '65 American Smelter ..." 64 U. S. Steel 59 St. Paul ........ i.... 84 Atchison 94 Great Northern ......119 Lehigh Valley 133 N. Y. Central 83 Northern Pacific ....105 Pennsylvania 109 Reading 160 Southern Pacific 93 Union Pacific 124 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO. July 27. Hogs: Receipts 29,000, market 5 to 10c higher, top price $9.05, bulk of sales $8.70 9.00. Cattle: Receipts 13,000, market 10 to 15c higher, beeves $7.7010.00, calves $9.7611.00. Sheep: Receipts 10,000, natives and westerns sd.ZoQ) 5.85, lambs $6.008.00. PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG, July 27. Cattle: Supply 120, market dull, choice beeves $9.009.25, tidy butchers S8.008.25, veal calves $10,000 10.75. heep and lambs:' Supply 20, market higher, prime sheep $5.755.90, lambs $5.00 8.15. Hogs: Receipts 50, market lower, prime heavies $9.209.30, pigs $9.459.50. CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK CINCINNATI, July 27. Cattle: Receipts 2,000 market slow, choice steers $.9.00, calves $5.0010.00. Hogs: Receipts 2,800, market active, top. prices 9.30. Sheep: Receipts 2,800, prime $4.65, lambs $6.50(38.65. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK INDIANAPOLIS, July 27. Hogs: Receipts 2,000, market 5c higher, tops $9.15, bulk of sales $9.059.15. Cattle Receipts 1,000, choice steers $9.25 (9.75, other grades $8.50(319.25. Sheep and lambs: Receipts 300, market 25c higher, prime sheep $4.00 4.60, lambs $7.258.00. INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN INDIANAPOLIS, July 27. Wheat, cash No. 2 red 84; corn, cash No. 3 white 80; oats, cash No. 2 white 35. RICHMOND MARKET LIVE STOCK (Corrected daily by Anton Stolle. Phone 1310) HOG3. Primes (average 200 lbs.) per 100 lbs. $8.65, heavy mixed, per 100 lbs., $7.u07.25; roughs, per 100 lbs., $5.50 6.00; light $8.15(8.20. CATTLE Choice steers, per lb., 7c to 8c; butcher steers, per lb., 77c, cows, per lb., 36c; bulls, per lb., 5 6; choice veal calves, per lb., 9c to 9c. PRODUCE (Corrected daily by Ed Cooper. Phcue 2577) Old chickens dressed paying 20 to 22c; selling 25 to 28c. Young chickens dressed paying 25c; selling 30c. County butter paying 15 to 25c; selling 25 to 30c. Creamery butter, selling 33c. Country lard paying 11c; selling 15a Eggs paying 18c; selling 22c. FEED QUOTATIONS Timothy hay, paying $16. Straw, paying $5. Oots, paying 37c. New oats, paying 32c. Corn, paying 72c. Red clover seed, paying $7.60 bu. GENNETT THEATRE The two young dancers, Ahern Bros., appearing this season with Tom Powell's Peerless Minstrels, are past masters in the art of footology. There is j a language of flowers and a language j of feet that is understood by the stu-1 dent as clearly as the click of the telegrapher's key. The Ahern Bros, talk with their feet so clearly and deftly that all can understand. Without music to furnish them time, they do all sorts of stunts in a dancing act, the like of which has never been seen before. They make a feature of a comedy scarecrow dance, for which they carry special scenery. Tom Powell's minstrels show at the Gennett theatre Thursday night and will no doubt prove the season's musical treat. Adv.

TOMGHT

itfmY TIME Everybody's Favorite

JACK LEWIS And His Excellent Company

"ran oitw&phc' Try to Get In

Timothy seed, paying $2.50 busheL ... Cracked corn, selling $1.76 buahoL Bran, selling $28 ton. -Middlings, selling $2 ton. Chop feed, selling $1.(0 cwt.' Corn meal, selling $1.60 cwt. Salt. $1.40 barrel. - GRAIN MARKET . Corrected daily by Richmond Roller . ' Mills. Phone 2n9) Wheat, paying 75c, oats paying 35c; corn, paying 75c; rye, paying. 56c; bran, selling $28 cwt; middlings, selling $30 cwt. FISH AND SEA FOOD (Corrected by Richmond" Fish Market. Phone 1535.) Fresh fish WhitefUh 20c lb; pike 20c lb; boneless herring 15c lb; Spanish mackerel 25c lb; lake trout 18c lb; large pickerel 18c lb; small pickerel 16c lb; perch 15c lb; white bass 16c lab; catfish 18 to 20c lb; halibut 20c lb; salmon 20c lb. Frogs Live and dressed 35c apiece. , Spiced fish Sardeles 75c bucket Turtles Live 12c lb; dressed 20c lb. Salt fish Holland herring 3 for 10c, salted mackerel 6 to 25c apiece. COAL MARKET. (Corrected daily by Hackman. Klefoth Co., Phone. 2015.) Anthracite nut, $8.80; Anthracite No. 4 and egg, $8.05; Pocahontas lump or egg, $5.25; Pocahontas mine run, $4.25; Pocahonta slack, $4.00; Jackson lump or egg, $5.75; Winifrede, $4.75; Jewel, $5.00; Hocking Valley, $4.50; Indiana, $3.75; coke, $7; Tennessee, $5.26. GROCERY PRICES (Corrected by Ed Cooper, phone 2677.) Apples, new, 15 20c quarter peck. Bananas, 10 20c doz. Beans, green, 1518c peck. Beets, 5c bunch. Blackberries, 15c qt Cauliflower, 1525c bunch. Canteloupes, 10c, 3 for 25c. Carrot, new, 2 bunches, 15c. Celery, 6 10c bunch. Cucumbers, 6c each. Cocoanuts 10c.

Dates, 10c lb. Dewberries, 15 20c qt. Egg plant 10 to 20c. Pigs, 20c lb. Grapefruit 610c each. Gooseberries, 15c quart. Honey, 20c comb. Kale,- 10c 4-peck. Lemons, 2 for 5c. Lettuce, heads, 5 10c; winter lettuce, 5 8c bunch; leaf, 20c lb. Lima beans, 35c quart. e Mangoes, 3 for 10c. Maple sugar, 20c lb. Onions, spring, 2 for 6c; Bermuda, 10c lb. Orange, 30 60c doz. Peas. 20c peck. Pineapples, 16c each. Parsley, 5c bunch. Parsnips, 6c bunch. Red peppers. 15c pint. Radishes, 3 bunches 10c. Raspberries, 15 25c qut. Potatoes, new 15c M peck. Rutabago, 6l0c each. Spinach, 5c 4-peck. Squash, 510c each. Sweet potatoes, 20c -peck. Turnips, 10c peck. Tomatoes, 10c lb. Watercress, 6c measure. Watermelons, 30c to 60c. Nuts Hickory nuts, 10c quart; walnuts, 10c -peck; Philippine cream imt8, 20c lb.; English walnuts, 25c lb.; chestnuts, 20c lb. New corn, 20c dozen. Peacues, 20c to 25c peck. Plums (Cal.) 15c quart. HEAT KILLS THREE CHICAGO, July 27 Three deaths and many prostrations resulted from the torrid wave here today. There Is no relief in sight. "TIZ" FOR ACHIHC, S0RE.JP FEET Good-bye sore feet, burning feet, swollen feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tightness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. "TIZ" is magieaL acts right off. "TIZ" draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the fees. Use "TIZ" and for get your foot misery.. Ah! how comfortable your feet feel. Get a 25 cent box of "TIZ" now at any druggist or department store. Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never swell, never hurt, never got tired. A year's foot comfort guaranteed or money refunded, PARASOLS UMBRELLAS REPAIRED AND RECOVERED DUNING'S, 43 North Eighth St.

HIS RESERVE BOARD NOMINATION KILLED

ft. O n r:vtvr mm In the refusal of the senate to confirm T. D. Jones, the president's nominee for member of the federal reserve board, the opponents of the administration see the entering wedge that will in a few months cause a wide split between the executive and the senate. They say President Wilson withdrew Jones' name just in time to prevent an immediate break. RESINOL CURES A PIMPLY SKIN BRIDGEPORT. Conn.. June 1, 1914. "I suffered with pimples on my face for about four years, which I thought I could never cure, as I tried to heal them with , , , prescriptions, and many other things, but they only got thicker. They looked like small boils and were very sore after a while scabs formed on my face. They itched awfully. I tried Reslnol Ointment and Resinol Soap, was relieved after a few applications, and I have no more pimples on my face my skin is now clear. I, was so glad that I at last found a cure for my pimples, as my face looked a sight." (Signed) i Miss Bertha M. Turfay, 1161 Iranistan j Ave. j Prescribed by doctors for 19 years, j sold by all druggists Resinol Oint- ; ment, 50c. and f Resinol Soap, 25a. ! For trial free, . rite to Dept. 24-R. Resinol, Baltimore. Md. (Advertisement! Richmond Lodge, No. 196, F. and A. M will give a social to Masons and their families, commencing at 7:30 Tuesday evening, July 28. As the Days Go By It won't be long 'till you'll be eating delicious EATMOR BREAD It's fresh, good, also wrapped In 5c and 10c packages. Insist upon Eatmore. ZWISSLER'S 904 Main. 28 S. Fifth. MONEY Loaned on household goods, pianos, teams, fixtures, etc. t without removal at the Legal Rate. We loan from $5 to $100. See us before bojv rowing. T' If unable to call, write or phone and our agent will call at your home. The State Investment & Loan Company PHONE, 2560 , Room 40 Colonial Bldg., Richmond, Ind.