Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 221, 28 July 1914 — Page 7

Terry on the Job-And Now the Jokers on? . v",.; ' .v. ',,,. VY;-. ' Byjjobap

C, 10, 1 TO HWIDLETRAFFIC Extensive Repairs on line In dicate Prospects for Rcc ord Business. The C. and O. Railway of India Mi Is preparing for a rushing business, this fall and winter. Freight conditions are better than they have been f cr several months and a large nuEoier of road improvements are beinr made between Chicago and Cincinnati! . The company recently begqn work on laying one hundred pound trails between Cincinnati and Summfflt, O., and is working north. Officials plan to place ninety pound rails frcau Summit, O., to Chicago and have a Jarge force of men working on this Joty; The largest shops and yards of therailroad are located at Summit, O. ; ; Contracts are being let for building a new station at Bost, Ind., which burtied to the ground 1-ife spring. Beside the construction ,f the station, new yard offices will be built there. The new station at Liosantsville, Ind., is completed. Ditching trains are working at various places along this division and the tracks from Cincinnati to Chicago are being reballasted. Extensive improvements are also being made at Peru. Sees BrigWI Prospects. According to Ohrarles Blair, general passenger agent at the local offices, business is better than it has been for months and indictitions point to a rushing business thyi fall and winter. It is not expectgrl, however, that any more passen&e' trains will be added. The company Is running especially large freight trains to handle the increase freight traffic. A large number of the freight trains that pass through Richmond are double headers. Coal transfer from the Kanawha dis tricts in West Virginia composes the bulk of thie freight through Richmond. In order to handle the increasing shipment of coal, the rail road has made extensive improvements at Newport Xows, which is in the center: ef thf ( rr.l producing region through vhicb n large part of the coal is handled. Re orts .received at the local offices state ihat 4,000 additional coal cars have V een ordered by the company to take iae of the business through Cincinnati and the north. German East Africa has in the t ourse of fifteen years built up an in iiustry in sisal hemp producing for ex'urt to the annual value of $3,000,000 The better organized plantations are earning 25 to 50 per cent, on the capital invested. FEDERAL OFFICERS HONOR AMBASSADOR In honor of Ambassador Pa&s and the members of the American colony a reception was held on board tfhe Battleship Missouri by the officers of that vessel and the Illinois Monday. Many British naval officers and foreign naval attacnes attended the reception. Dickinson Trust Compariy, administrator with the will annex-rid, of estate of King D. Hadden, deceased, vs. George W. Hadden, et ali la the circuit court ofwayne county, Indiana, April term,il914 To George W. Haddfin. India Haden, Oliver H. Hadden land Ella Hadden, his wife. Tou are severally, hereby notified that the above naWed petitioner, as administrator with, the will annexed, of the estate aforjesaid, has filed In the circuit court of Wayne county, Indiana a petition, maktec you defendant thereto, and praying therein for an order anddecree of said court, authorising the ale of certain real estate belonging Ito the estate of said decedent and in said petition described, to make asefets for the payment of debts and liabilities of said estate; and that tMf petition, so filed .and pending. Is sector hearing In said circuit court, at rate court house In Richmond, Indiana, on a Judicial day of the April te?K 1914, of said court, the same beinglthe 24th day of August, 1914. Witness J the clerk and seal of said court, this 20th day of July, 1914. George Matthews, Clerk. OardnerJessup White, Attorneys.

MPROVES

Ship to Share Fate of Old Texas

Am - v v f y' hs TO'" JS ' j Ail "A-- w IIC r -f T J f . - ws Sjr - -r " mi

Battleship Texas, renamed the San Marcos, after having been used as a target. Either the Iowa or the Indiana will next be sacrificed to the giant guns of the newer warships now that the old Texas has been shot to pieces. Naval officers say that the training that results from the Use of a ship as a target is far more valuable than any cash sum that might come from the sale of such antiquated ships to junk dealers or second class naval powers.

Notes Tell Progress of Panama Exposition SAN FRANCISCO, July 28. Two the Panamar-PacifiC Exposition' have more special days have been decided arrived on the exposition grounds. upoj tpf be Panama-Pacific Interna- "The Grand Canyon of Arizona" is the

tionat exposition in i3it Illinois aay wil be July 24, and.- Chicago day October 6. Governor Edward F. Dunne will come on a special train for Illinois day, and the Fipst regiment of the National Guards of Illinois, with ten military bands will be his escort. . For the first trae in the history of expositions China has applied for space for machinery In the Panama-Pacific International Exposition. Two thousand square fept of space in the palacrj of machinery 'has been requested by China, and th space probably will be granted. Tlis makes China an exhibitor in trery exposition department. The. new republic's appropriation is $750000 in gold. Officials of the Panama-Pacific Exposition feave received a cablegram announcVRg that France, through its chamber of deputies, has appropriated $400,000for the exposition. The num - ber of foreign nations participating and th? number of states is thirty-nine. 1 Chir-ago has promised $50,000 to the fund beinsr raised for a British-Ameri-can pavilion at the Panama-Pacific Exposition. New York city is expected to raise a similar amount, and a large sum will be given by citizens of Great Britain. Great Britain's participation with the presence of the great fleet promises to be greater than if the action of parliament had been favorable. The last of the 237 national and in ternatinnal ponereases and conven tions to choose San Francisco for the 1915 session is the National Association of Machinery Jobbers. Other late organizations that haVe chosen San Francisco are the Michigan Agricultural College association and the National Association of Dental Examiners. Eight beautiful standard guage observation cars, specially constructed for the "Grand Canyon of Arizona" at State of Indiana, Wayne county, ss: William Barton and Opal Barton vs. Samuel G. Vanneman, Clara Barton, Anderson Trust Company, executor of the estate of Minnie O. Dietz, deceased. Wayne circuit court, April term, 1914. No. 16,837. Be it known, that on the 21st day of July, 1914, the above named plaintiff, by their attorneys, filed In the office Of the clerk of the Wayne circuit court their complaint against said defendant in the above entitled cause for partition, together with the affidavit of a competent person, that said defendant is not a resident of the state of Indiana. Said defendant, Clara E. Barton, therefore is hereby notified ' of the filing and pendency of said complaint against her and that unless she appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of the said cause, on September 15, 1914, a day of this term of said court, which was begun and held at the court house in the city of Richmond, on the first Monday of April, 1914, said complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be taken as true, and the said cause will be heard and , determined in her absence. Witness, the clerk, and the seal of said court at the city of Richmond this 21st day of July, 1914. George Matthews, Clerk, Luther F. Pence and Shiveleyfe Shiveley, Attorneys for Plaintiff. tfl-28-4

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGHAM,

$3iu,uou concession or the Santa b e railway.and in making the trip through it, visitors will be passengers on the big obeervation cars for half an hour. The Panama canal zone, which is to be connected with the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in so many phases, from cause to the title of the concessions district, "The Zone" may have another distinction. Athletes of the canal zone are anxious to enter the exposition games and contests. They believe they can capture some medals. The athletic department of the exposition has asked Colonel Goethals to grant permission to the athletes to attend the exposition, and it is probable that tbe men who built the canal will be represented in another feature of the-expositlon. ' The year 1915 at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition promises to ! be "Frat Year." Already thirty-three i national conventions of Greek letter college fraternities are scheduled to meet here. The last two that have come to the scheduled list are grand lodges of the Theta Xi and the council j CITY ADVERTISEMENT. Department of Public Works. Office of the Board. Richmond, Ind., July 23, 1914. To Whom It May Concern : . Notice is hereby given by the Board f Public Works of the City of Richmond, Indiana, that on the 23rd day of July, 1914, they approved an assessment roll showing the prima facie assessments for the following described public improvement, as authorized by the 'Improvement Resolution named: Improvement Resolution No. 4161914. For the improvement of North 10th street from North "F" street to the north line of North "H" street, by con - structing cement curb and gutters on both sides of street and paving the roadway the full width thereof with concrete, between the points named. Said improvement is intersected by the following named streets and alleys: North "F," "G" and "H' streets and the alleys running east and west between North "F" and "H" streets and the following named streets and alleys are parallel with and within one hundred and fifty (150) feet of said improvement: Alleys running north and south between North 9th and 10th streets and North 10th and 11th streets. Persons interested in or affected by said described public improvement are hereby notified that the Board of Public Works of said city has fixed Monday, August 10, 1914, 9 o'clock a. m., as a date upon which remonstrances will be received, or heard against the amount assessed against each piece of property described In said roll and will determine the question as to whether such lots or tracts of land have been or rwlll be benefited In the amounts named on said roll, or in a greater or less sum than that named on said roll. ; Said assessment roll showing said prima facie assessments, with the names of owners ' and descriptions of property sujbject to be assessed, Is on file and. may be seen at the office of the Board t of - Public Works of said city. Alfred Bavis, ; Charles E. Marlatt, , John McMinn, 2-7t - oard of Public Works.

of the Phi Delta Kappa, which will meet in July, 1915. : A pretty ceremony participated in by waternymphs and a personification of Old Neptune himself was held on the ground of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition Saturday,

July li, when the "Natatorium" of the exposition lone was begun with offi- I grouiiu ureKiug. rrewy swimming and diving girls had a part In the aft ernoon event. ill MILTON 1 Mrs. S. Hoshour was at Richmond Saturday and spent the evening with her son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hoshour. Miss Ruby Moore was home to spend Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Moore. Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Moore were at Richmond Sunday to attend the funeral of Mrs. Joseph M. Jones. George Borders was at Richmond Saturday. Frank X,eibbardt was home from Richmond Sunday to visit his brother, George Leibhardt. Misses Irene Crook and Augusta Miller who were week-end visitors of Miss Mary Sills, a student at the Muncie Normal institute, report a fine visit with her. Mr. and Mrs. Benton Wissler were guests at dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Benton Wagner Sunday. Visits Her Brother. Miss Ada McCormick was the guest of her brother, Rev. F. C. McCormick and family Sunday. Miss Lorinda Mills is very low and it is believed she will not recover. She is a sister of the Rev. Mary Mills. . Mr. and Mrs. Colbert Crownover entertained an auto party at dinner Sunday. ' x Their guests were , Mr. and Mrs. Cicero Kingen, Mr. and Mrs. Will Warner and Mr. Parish of Greenfield. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs.. Theo. Keever and family of near Jacksonburg, Mrs. John Ingerman and children and Mr. and Mrs. Ott Crownover and family. . Frank Myers of Kendallvtlle was the guest of Miss Hazel Murley Sunday. Mrs. Gus Kinsinger and children spent Sunday with relatives at Williamsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Williams of Richmond spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Williams. Wire Penetrates Foot. Homer DuGranrut stepped on a piece of wire which penetrated his foot, causing an ugly wound. Virgil Hoffman of Straughn was in Milton Saturday. Louis 2auf of Cambridge City was nOW DO YOU DO Tomorrow will be Dollar Day CITY ADVERTISEMENT. Department of Public Works. Office of the Board. Richmond, Ind., July 23, 1914. To Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given by the Board of Public Works of the City of Rich-i July, 1914, they approved an assess - ment roll showing the prima faeie ! assessments for the following described public improvement, as authorized by the Improvement Resolution named: Improvement Resolution No. 3941914. For the construction of cement roadway in the alley between South 12th and 13th Btreets from South "F" street to the north line of South "H" street. Improvement Resolution No. 397-1914. For the improvement of North 18th street by constructing cement curb, gutter and 5 foot sidewalks on both sides of street, from Main to North "E" street. Persons interested in or affected by said described . public . improvement are hereby notified that the Board of Public Works of said city has fixed Thursday, August 6, 1914, 9 o'clock a. m., as a date upon which remonstrances will be received, or heard against the amount, assessed.. against each piece of property described in said roll and will determine the question as to whether such lots or tracts of land have been or will be benefited in the amounts named on said roll, or in a greater or less sum than that named on said roll. Said assessment roll showing said prima facie assessments, with the names of owners and descriptions of property subject to be assessed, is on file and may be seen at the office of the Board of Public Works of said city, - - . - ' , Alfred. Barls, Charles E. Marlatt, John McMinn, 23-7t , oard of Publio Works.

J .'W A. m w I

TUESDAY; JULY 23, 1914

the guest of his sister, Miss Amelia Knauf, Saturday. Mrs. Joe Gause and son "harry were at Kennard Friday to attend the funeral of her aunt, Mrs. William Boren. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fink,, a daughter, Thursday at their home in Columbus, O. The little girl has oeen nam A1 ' TTolon Pontine Rha la tha (tranddanghter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Kuhns of Milton. Rev. F. C. McCormick held ah interesting service at twilight Sunday evening on the parsonage lawn of the Christian church. . Dr. Sweney and Miss Anna Gingrich have received cards from Miss Emma Gingrich, now in Naples, telling of her sight seeing.. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Wallace accompanied Dr., and Mrs. Cassius Witmer and son on an auto trip to Niagara Falls Monday. Master Cassius McCor mick of Albany, who was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace, has gone to Centerville to visit his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Grlgsby. W. H. Brown and Frank Rotherma! were at Richmond Sunday to see the ball game. Thin People Can Increase Weight Thin men and women who would like to increase their weight with 10 or 15 pounds of healthy "stay therefat should try eating a little Sargol with their meals for awhile and note results. Here is a good test worth trying. First weigh yourself and measure yourself. Then take Sargol one tablet with every meal for two weeks. Then weigh and measure yourself again. It isn't a question of how you look or feel or what your friends say or think. The scales and the tape measure will tellytheir own story, and most any thin man or woman can easily add from five to eight pounds in the first fourteen days by, following this simple direc tion. And best of all, the new flesh stays put. Sargol does not of itself make fat, but mixing with your food, it tarns the fats , sugars and starches of what you have eaten, into rich, ripe fatproducing nourishment for the tissues and blood prepares it in an easily assimilated form which the' blood can readily , accept. . All this nourishment now passes away from your body as waste. But Sargol stops the waste and does it quickly and makes the fat ! producing contents of the very same meals you are eating now develop pounds and pounds of healthy flesh between your skin and bones. Sargol Is safe, pleasant, efficient and inexpensive. Leo H. Flhe and other leading druggists in Richmond and vicinity sell It in large boxes forty tablets to a package on a guarantee of weight increase or money back. (Advertisement! PALLADIUM WANT ADS Telephone Number 2565 ONE CENT A WORD 7 Days for the Price of 5 WANTED TATOOING Wanted every one to know that tattooing can be done any afternoon or evening at the Wigwam Cigar Store, 502 Main st Sundays at Morton Lake Park. 24-7t RESPONSIBLETparties want three or four furnished rooms, good location. References. Arlington Hotel, Room 224. 18-lt WANTED Place as nurse or attendant by experienced man. Private ! cHeJ1?5d?; !!l i WANTED Unfurnished room or light housekeeping room. Address W. M., care Palladium. 28-lt WANTED Work as janitor. Address J. W. H., care Palladium. 28-2t WANTED Work as janitor or night watchman. 907 Sheridan st. 28-2t WANTED Piano tuning and player repairing; prompt attention; expert work. W. B. Watson, 9 S. 7th St. WANTED Men to learn the barber trade. We prepare you in few weeks. Can earn while you learn. Tools given. Jobs waiting. Big demand for our barbers at surprising wages. . .Write today. Moler Barber College, Indianapolis, Ind. 25-6t FOR CARPET Cleaning phune $W0, . . may-15-to-aug-lo WANTED Screen doors and windows made and repaired, lawn mowers sharpened and repaired, large Hue new bicycles, baby cabs re-tired," pictures framed. We repair everything. Call for and deliver. 1020 Main st BrownDarnell Co. Phone 1936. WANTED Agent to handle high class automobiles. Address J. Y., Palladium. 24-7t WANTED To buy household, furniture for our big auction sale next Saturday, which is to be the best yet Colonial Auction Co., 15-17 S. 7th st WANTED If you need screens, furniture repaired, crated or any kind of carpenter work. E. M. Blue & Son. Phone 2622. . ..... . 27-7t WANTED Partner in manufacturing business, Richmond. Ind. Wm. E. Hoover. Gen. Delivery. 27-7t

WANTED Continued

WANTED Cisterns to clean. 225 S. 13th. Phone 1518. 27-"t WANTED You to know that we repair bicycles, furniture, baby cabs, wringers, almost everything. Wesley Brcwn ft Son, N. W. 2nd and Williams tf. Phone 3086. FOR RENT FOR RENT Modern furnished room. . 203 S. 11th st. 21-7t FOR RENT House. Phone V078. 21-7 FOR'RENT A desirable apartment In the Ardsn. Phone 2070. 18-tf yOR RENT Furnished modern room. 214 N. 12th street. lt-tf FOR RENT Modern 6 room house, corner First and Pearl; finest location in the city. Phone 2477. 23-tf FOR RENT Furnished N. 9th st. rooms. 101 8-30t FOR RENT Two six room houses, reasonable terms. Call at 719 N. W. 5th st. 8-tf FOR RENT Third floor flat In Dickinson Trust Company Building, consisting of five rooms strictly modern. Inquire Dickinson Trust Com pany. i FOR RENT 6 room modern house, 419 S. 14th st. . 27-7t FOR RENT6th st. -3 room house. 634 8. 27-2t FOR RENT Partly furnished 6 room modern home. Call 2305 N. P st. 27-7t FOR RENT House 616 8. A st Inquire 48 S. 7th st 27-7t FOR RENT Furnished flat Main. 415 27-7t FOR RENT Two 112 S. 12th st furnished rooms, 28-7t FOR RENT New six room modern house, N. 21st st Phone 2015 or 3655. 28-2t FOR RENT Five room houBe, east end. no children. Phone 1833. 28-lt FOR RENT Modern furnished rooms. 29 S. 12th St. 28-7t FOR RENT 6 room house. 436 S. 11th st. 28-7t FOR RENT 2 furnished rooms. Phone 1054. 28-7t FOR SALE FOR SALE Restaurant confection ery and ice cream parlor In Centerville. Price $900. Will invoice $1,300. Addres 900-X, care Palladium. 28-7t FOR SALE South 10th sL lunch stand, good business, owner retiring 28-7t FOR SALE Wednesday $ day, your choice of any sewing machine $1 down and $1 a week. H. D. Lacey, 9 S. 7th st Phone 1756. AUCTION SALE Saturday, August 1, at Colonial Auction Rooms 15 and 17 South 17th Street A large stock of select furniture, consisting of dining room suites, bed room suites, ranges, kitchen cabinets, rugs, davenports, In fact, everything in household furniture. Also a stock of hardware and paints. Large stock of window screens. Hundreds of useful articles. DON'T MISS THIS SALE. BUT WHERE YOU CAN SAVE .MONEY. YOUR . PRICE IS OURS. COLONIAL AUCTION CO. 15 and 17 South 7th Street FOR SALE Second hanS National - cash register, good condition. Address X. Y., care Palladium. 18-tf FOR SALE OR TRADE 10 horsepower traction engine. Thos. Turner. Phone 4333. 6-eod-tf PUBLIC SALE OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS On Commons road, south of Easthaven, two squares east of Easthaven car line, Thursday, July 30, 1914, At 1 O'clock.P. M. Consisting of all kinds of furniture necessary to equip a 6 . room house. Tables, beds, bed couch, rockers, secretary, dining chairs, base burner, pic tures, curtains, a lot of good carpets, also a fine lot of quilts, comforts, pillows and feather beds. All in fine condition. Dishes, kitchen utensils, canned fruit etc. THIS IS A NICE CLEAN LOT OF GOODS AND MUST BE SOLD ON THE ABOVE DATE. , TERMS MADE KNOwff ON DAY OF SALE. MRS; EYLAH DYE. H. H. JONES.1 Auctioneer.

PAG3 83VET1

FOR SALE Continued REAL ESTATE FOR SALE Richmond Homesa Specialty PORTERFIELD Eighth and Main. FOR SALE Match team of Geldings, ' coming three, broke. Weight about t.700 lbs. Call Walter Beeson, Webster. 7t FOR SALE PALLADIUM PAPER ROUTE This route is located north of Main street and south of Pennsylvania railroad,in good paying district For Information seeCirculatlonManager. FOR SALE Registered Hampshire sows and spring pigs. Popular prices. R. W. Warren. Milton. Ind. 21-7 FOR SALE New and second hand models la Excelsior Motorcycles at special bargain prices. SEE ELMER SMITH, "The Wheel Man." 426 Main St Phone 1806. FOR SALE OR TRADE 5 passenger Studebaker automobile, first class condition for roadster. 412 N. 17th st Phone 2768. 27-81 FOR SALE Twin cylinder Indian mo torcycle, good condition, tolly equip ped. Call No. 1 Hose House. N. 8th st 27-71 FOR SALE Small grocery cheap, and cheap rent 28 Sheridan at 23-71 FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE New double house, modern, rents $40. good for 10 per cent, 8. 10th st New double, 8. 9th st rents $80. 12 per cent New double, west side, rents $30. $3,200. Six rooms, bath and furnace, $1,900. 12 new bungalows from $2,000 to $5,000. A general store te trade for city property. Lot 60x280 In Reeves torn, two squares Main, with five room modern house. Very cheap. 2 acres, close to city, fair improvements, $800. 17 acres, cloee to city. Improved. $1,500. C. E. SELL Real Estate, Loans and Insurance. Over 710 Main Street v Phones: Residence 3078; Office 2962. FOR SALE 5 room brick house, bath and furnace: best of location. Ad dress. Bouse, care Palladium. 24-tf FOR SALE Two lots In Reeveeton. Address Reeveston, care Palladium. . 24-tf FOR SALE An Ideal home. strlcUy modern. Immediate possession. Phone 3247. FOR SALE 7 room house wit turnace. Phone. 4447. ,N FOR SALE 6 room cottage, one lot 45 foot front fine investment splendid location. Address B. care Palladium. . 20-tf FOR SALE The biggest bargain ever offered in a good home. Phone 4347. FOR SALE A good Phone 3234. modern BUSINESS CLASSIFIED H. H JONES Auctioneer I sell anything at auction Real estate, stock sales and household goods. Satisfaction guaranteed. Phones Office 1439; Residence 2170. 124 and 126 North Sixth St ' SEE MOORE A OGBORN For all kinds of Insurance, bonds and loans, real estate and rentals.. Room 16, L O. O. F. building. Insurance Loans. Real Estate, Rent Collections. O. B. Fulgham, over 710 Main St Phone 2233. A. M. ROBERTS. REAL ESTATE City and farm properties. Liberty ave. R. No. 1. ' Phone 4171. Office Keys' Harness Store. 616 Main st LOST LOST $5, between Second National i i. J vfc. TJMeKsi aImp at-wA Return td Palladium. " 14-tf LOST Gold open face watch, brown fob With gold baseball. Wabash "12." Earl N. Stanley inscribed on fob. Return to Earl N. Stanley. Liberty, Ind.. or Palladium office. Reward. . 22-7t LOST A day' book on the 9 o'clock car containing $4.26. Phone 6117-B. - . - . 27-2t 1X)ST Automatic oil cup for Thor motorcycle. Return to Brown 4k Darnell. llt VkC9r timeisk KastwasMftM Ufltae - mwtA Doddridge. Mrs. Charlee Wuaon. Centerville. Ind., Route 12. . ' 28-2t LOST Dost cap for auto hob. .phone 4814.' ' -V