Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 198, 7 July 1916 — Page 12
PAGE TWELVE
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1916 The Returning American Troopers-First Photograph NO MORE DREAMS i OF LIFE IN ARMY 1 a FOR THESE BOYS J : 1 --ry"f -'Cr"JT 'vw. pyMi pijp ;"fwt vr:;,.
4 fMmmmX t- '-'A 1.-." Jf ' v. - fu m fMJrtyg ' i
0
1 :( V "- -
"Mother, if they get me In the armr now they will have to draft tne," declared Walter Vogelsong. alrnosi eighteen, son of Police Officer and
Mrs. Henry Vogelsong. upon his re
turn home from Dayton, in company
with his father, last evening. The young man had gone to Day
ton Wednesday and was on the point of enlisting in the Ohio National
Guard vith Irl Kinc. son of Arthur T.
1 King, this city, when the two boys
were found by their fathers walking
toward the Dayton recruiting office. ; The youngsters were greatly sur
prised to meet their parents and It was not difficult to persuade them to abandon their plans of joining tht army Vogelsong could not have legally
! enlisted uatil next Tuesday, his eigh
teenth birthday.
Young King works in Dayton. h told his father, after a heart-to-heart talk, that he was going back to work
again.'
'if your country needs you Jo!n te regulars or enlist with the volunters,'.'
wai the advice both boys received from their fathers.
Pennsylvania mines last year yielded 246,797,781 tons of coal.
Troopers of the Tenth Cavalry returning to the United States, after Carrizal and prison. The cavalryman on the right has n o shirtbecause some Carranza soldier wanted it.
At1 !"
t ' ! I :
DICKIIlSOfJ TRUST FIRM DATES BACK TO 1 870
It is doubtful if there is a banking institution in existence which has a more interesting hiBtory than does : Dickinson Trust company, which will on nc::t Saturday throw open to the public for Inspection its new banking ho!iio at Eighth and Main streets. The beginning of this company, which has since grown to be one of the strongest and mo.st influential baakins institutions in this section of the coua'.ry. rbtcs back to the year 1870 forty-six yaars j:so v. hen Joseph Dickinson, now deceased, and one of IMchmond's n:i?st highly respected and esteemed eitizeustogether with Paul V. Washburn, now living in Seattle, Wash., enKa;:ul in the business of making real estate first mortgage loans, and in turn sold them to investci'3. Open First Quarters. They opened their first ott'ica 'n a Finall room on North Eighth street, in thr rear of where the Second Natioral bunk building now stands. For a number of years they continued in these i jarters, when they removed their offices to the Dickinson building, now kxated at the southeast corner of Main and Ninth streets. Here they occupied a suite of three rooms on the second floor, where the business was continued. At that time there was taken into the business the two sons of Joseph Dickinson, Samuel Dickinson and Joseph J. Dickinson, and Charles A. Francisco, a son-in-law of Joseph Dickinson. The business at
that time was operated inder the firm
name of J. Dickinson & t o., as a pn vate partnership business. Seek New Officers.
Up to that time they had confined
their operations to the sale of mort gage paper, principally to English cli pnt livlne in EnKland and Ireland,
where the Dickinson family enjoyed a
wide acouaintance. under tne new
firm thp huslness continued to grow
and they were compelled to seek larger
quarters to care ror tneir rapmiy ex nandinc erow th.
In the year 1893 they built and removed to the present building, soon to
be vacated by the Dickinson irust
com nan v. on South Eighth street, bet
ter known an the Safety Deposit building, for it. was in this building that the first safety deposit vault in Rich
mond was installed. Comoanv Encoroorates.
In !Sft the company was incorporated under the laws of the state of
inrMans. as Dickinson IiOan company.
Its first officers were Charles A. Fran
cisco, president; Samuel Dickinson, vice president, and Joseph Dickinson, fsecretary. Up to that time the company conducted an exclusive mortgage loan business, which business riad steadily grown from year to year, and not. only did they continue to invest much foreign capital, but their clients were numbered by the score throughout the New England states, particularly throughout New Hampshire, Vermont, Maryland, New York and Massachusetts. Add Trust Feature. For six years the business was conducted under the firm name of Dickinson Loan company, when in 1S99, after seeing the growing demand for a banking institution, doing the many classes of business which trust companies are permitted to do, they organ
ized what is now known as the Dickinson Trust company, with a capital of $30,000 and shortly afterward increased the capital of the company to $100,-000.
At that time every department of modern banking was added to the company's business. Perhaps the most popular, department added by the Dickinson Trust company was the savings department, which institution has the honor of being the first bank in Richmond to offer to the public the modern' savings account. Handles 15XC0 Acounts. The first, depositor in this department was Louis Francisco, with an initial deposit, of $10. Since that time the company has opened over 15,000 savings accounts, and has paid its depositors nearly one-half million dollars in interest alone on their accounts. The company now has savings deposits of more than one million dollars. In 1908, in order to care for the company's rapidly expanding business, and more safely to safeguard the many large trust estates which had been entrusted to it, the capital of the company was increased to $200,000, which is the present capital stock of th9 company. Erect New Bank Home.
Because of the inadequate facilities to care for the company's business in its present quarters, and particularly because of the Dickinson Trust company's desire to give its constantly increasing list of clients a more centrally located and modern banking home.
the company has just completed and ! will on next Monday open to the pub- j lie for the transaction of business its' new home at Eighth and Main streets, j which is recognized as one of the j
nanasomest and Dest equipped banking houses to be found anywhere. The officers of the company state that with their present equipment and facilities they believe it entirely possible to care for the company's business for years to come.
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO ST. ANDREWS HELD DEDICATION SERVICE
Today is the fifteenth anniversary of the dedication of St. Andrew's church by Bishop O'Donaghue. The church had been rebuilt at that time at a cost of $60,000, following the fire which destroyed a part of the building. Since that time the debt has been entirely removed, and a great part, of the expense of the $70,000 school house has been paid. Today there are about six hundred families in the parish, and it is considered one of the strongest Catholic parishes in the state.
CARR PROTESTS
Continued From Page One. that such charges shall be paid only in the event the amount of water consumed is less than the minimum charges. ; "If I have placed the correct interpretation upon this order," he said, "our company will not be affected. We will have to install three sprinkler system meters for three six-inch mains and the minimum charges for these three additional meters would amount to $540 a year. However, the water we consume for general purposes per annum averages about $1,200, or nearly $700 in excess of what the minimum fire protection meter charges would be. "As I understand from Terre Haute manufacturers they are not required by the commission to pay minimum meter charges in addition to their bills for water used for general purposes. So why should wre Richmond manufacturers be expected to pay min
imum charges in addition to paying for water actually consumed?" Mr. Bavis said that he could obtain no other meaning from the commission's order than that such an injustice had been inflicted upon patrons of the water works company who maintained fir protection systems. . Bavis further declared that he would onpose the city assuming the fire protection tax placed upon the several local manufacturing and business concerns because, by so doing, the city would "officially recognize the justness of the water rate order established by the state commission." May Install Cistern. Mr. Carr intimated that in the event the commission required a tax on private fire protection the American Seeding Machine company would put in a cistern with pumping capacity to supply the plant all the water needed. "I think the only way to. protect our citizens from the , water works company is to do like the city did in the case of the electric plant of. the Light, Heat & Power company that is municipalize it,", the board president added. "I favor the introduction of a bill in the next legislature which would permit the extension of the city's credit so that It would be possible to purchase the water works plant." Mr. Carr states that the local plant
CORNS LIFT OUT Dr. Hunt's New Corn Cure CURES BY PENETRATION No Corn ever went so quickly, easily or surely as by Dr. Hunt's New Way, the PENETRATION principle of curing Corns. Dr. Hunt has devoted a life of study to this one nibject. The final result is this entirely New Method; a Method by which Corns GO forever in two days. . Guaranteed or money refunded.
Corns have been cured by Dr. Hunt's New Corn ' Cure. All druggists 10c and 25c per box. or send i
stamps to American Chemical Co., Sidcsy, Ohio
of the American Seeding Machine company has been paying fifty percent more for water than paid by the Springfield plant, which is larger and usc more water. "And now if we have to pay the water works company $540 a year additional I will have a hard time making a satisfactory explanation to our New York directors," he concluded.
Palladium Want Ads. Pay.
Auto Lamps -.' To Fit Any Car Also Flashlight And Battery Lamps. At
43 N. Sth St.
D9EI
PANTS 2 PAIRS FOR
$5.00 Made to
Order
a i t .
Ai itOSl Panic Proof Tailor Made. 14 N. 6th St
tot
ssayi
WAIST
FECIALS
Jap Silk, rjlain design, $1.50 value $1.00 Jap Silk with lace ruffle, S2.00 value $l-2o Jap Silk, large Org. collar, $1.50 value .$1.09 Crepe -de Chine, plain and with ruffle, $5 value $2.98EXTRA SPECIAL Two Different Lots of Odds and Ends tip to $2.no Values Special 50 and 75 Cents.
CASH PRICE CREDIT STORE
15 and 17 North 9th.
CLARA BEESGN WILL FILED FOR PROBATE
The will of Clara Beeson, who died at Dublin, June 30, 1916, was filed with the county clerk and approved byj Judge Fox this morning. ! Mrs. Beeson left personal property!
valued at ?400 ana real estate appraised at $500. The estate goes to her daughter-in-law, Eva Beeson and her grandson, Robert J. Beeson. both of New Lisbon. Dickinson Trust company is named as the executor. Since the will was made, Nov. 4, 1912, the son William, husband of Eva and father of Robert Beeson died. The will was never changed and reads that the son and daughter-in-law shall receive share and share alike of the estate. The son of the deceased man,
Robert, will receive two-thirds of the
father's half and the wife will receive one-third of it In addition to her half.
1
TP
Gibraltar is the smallest British
possession and measures less than two square miles.
New Havana Cigar Better than Imported Sold by Arlington Hotel Cigar Stand, Westcott Hctei wlgar Stand, & V. "eltmar,. Ene9 & Eatow. Quisle Drua Stores. J
The Low Cloverleaf Gives the Manure Two Healthy Beatings used to think that if we threw manure onto the ground any old way and plowed it under, we were doing a good job. But now -a .
we know that won t do. 1 o do any real good, the manure must be broken up into' small pieces and spread evenly. The Low Cloverleaf spreader is the one that does this work best. It gives the manure two healthy beatings, one with the regular beater, the other with the wide spread disks. When the manure reaches the ground in that condition your soil gets all the good there is in it, and gets it quickly. The Low Cloverleaf is one spreader it will pay you to see before you buy. . See the local dealer who has one set up for you to look at International Harvester Company of America (Incorporated) Low Cloverleaf spreaders are sold b" JONES & WILLIAMS Richmond, Indiana
3
What We Ha
we For
2 "ii H
Just (he Thing lor July SowingNavy Beans, Timothy Seed CLOVER SEEDS Little Red, English, Alsike. Crimson and Alfalfa
El
SATU
10c a Lb.
FECIAL
BAY and MONDAY
We. Lb,
We want to boy Corn. We want fo do your Grinding. We have a New Grist Mill located rigM uptown.
Oner Co Mhdffl
The Feed
31-33 S. 6th St.
IVfan Phone 1679
1
r. t
fa
hi
33
UflsU
