Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 261, 19 September 1916 — Page 8

Tilk KlCiiMOiMb fAL.UAliUM AND SUN-TELEGKAM, TUEbJJAX, SEtT. Ill, itfltf

POPE DEPLORES ATTACKS MADE ON OLD TOWN

ROME. Sept 19. Pope Benedict XV today sent to La Fontaine, patriarch of Venice, a letter deploring the repeated attacks made by the Austrian aeroplanes on that city, "dear to the ' papal heart and precious to religion and art." The letter states that the Pope has remonstrated vainly with Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria, but exhorts the inhabitants to show courage and ! patience at the same time expressing i the hope that the raids will decrease. ; In conclusion, the pope gives his blessing to Venice and assures the patriarch that he prays for the city's safe ty. TOWNSHIP ENTERS STATE DAIRY TEST Boston township has been entered in the State October and . November Dairy, contest, by C. Tuttle.. town. hin agricultural sUDervisor. Any boy or girl is eligible. The rej qulrements are that all food which is ! given the cow during these two months ; be weighed and recorded. The dairy products which the cow produces are also tabulated. At the end of two months the contestants are required to write essays incorporating all these facta. The highest scorer in the townhlp will submit their essays for the state contest. NEW YORK EXPECTS HEAVY RALLOTING IN PRIMARY RACE NEW YORK, Sept. 19. Indications ! today pointed to a heavy vote through out the state In the direct primaries. The balloting places open at 3 p. m. and will close at 9 o'clock this evening. The biggest interest centers in the gubernatorial nomination of the Progressive and independents. The contest that is exciting the most Interest is the one between William U Caldar and. Robert Bacon for the Republican nomination for United States senator. Caldar is the vairiiiap rAndlflate while Bacon will be backed by the independent voters within the Republican ranks. William S. McCoombs is opposed by Thomas Conway for the Senatorial nomination on the Democratic ticket but McCoombs is regarded as a certain winner. MACHINES REPLACE OLD HITCH RACKS AT MEETING HOUSE Recognition of the horseless age'.' was given today by the Whitewater quarterly meeting in a request to the Yearly Meeting of Friends. Only two horses were hitched in the long sheds in the rear of East Main Street Friends church while Fifteenth. Sixteenth and Main streets were parking places for scores of automobiles. "The small use made of the hitching spaces provided for the meeting doe3 not justify reserving it for the purpose," said a request. "We desire that the ground be placed at the disposal of the Whitewater meeting." May Sell Two Lots. It is understood negotiations are on foot for the sale of two valuable lots fronting on Fifteenth and Sixteenth street if the yearly meeting representatives grant the request. The most important session of the finance committee in years will be held and 100 per cent attendance, regardless of other meetings, has been ordered. Grover Hartley was made chairman and Odessa Rayle, of Muncle, secretary at the organization meeting in which it was decided to cut the printing bill 20 per cent. Alexander Pvrdy, new head of the Ea rlli am Biblical department, open since Prof. Elbert Russell left a year ago, was greeted today with Edgar Hole, returned missionary to Africa. Both will speak later. Leander J. Woodard of Spring 3rove was made chairman of the per manent committee which held its first meetings today. JUDGMENT GRANTED. By default, Dr. Arthur J. Whallon was granted judgment of $60.50 from Lottie McCleery Resor by the circuit court today. City Statistics Deaths and Funerals. KIPLER John Klpler, aged 64 died this mornine after a hrW The body is at the home of his mother, Mrs. Margaret Schultz, 200 North Jrutn street. Funeral arrangements will be announced tomorrow. Friends may call at any time. Marriage Licenses. William Lloyd Cromis, 21, machinist, Hagerstown, to Rhoda May Barnard, 16, Hagerstown. , Augustus C. Lephart, 38, auto assembler, to Lorena Sittloh, 24, Centervine. WARRANTY DEEDS Harley U. Koonts to Harry E. Burns Pt. 84, G. Boulevard sub. Allen W. Oler to Samuel Wolfe. Pt. S. E. 25-18-13 and Pt. S. W. 25-18-13. Harley Koontz to Mary E. Koontz Pt. 84 G. Boulevard sub. Mary S. Mason to William H. Aug ur, 45-6 J. Fohls Western addition, Dublin. Fred W. Drifmeyer to Robert R. Morrey et al, 115 Men-Price. Noah Myers to Fred H. Ohmit, PL 29 and 28, W. R. W. R., Cambridge City. Eliza W. Howard to Lillian A. Howard, Und. one-half interest, Pt. 136, C. W. Starr.

Kaiser

A Roumanian machine gun crew operating one of the pjeces furnished King Ferdinand's army by : German munitions plants before the Balkan nation cast its lot with the Entente Allies. These machine guns are playing a considerable part in the Roumanian invasion of Hungary. , jp

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BANKRUPT ESTATE PAYS TRIAL COSTS INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. 19. The cost In the Terre Haute election conspiracy case which resulted in Mayor Donn Roberts and other Terre Haute politicians being sent to prison will be paid by the creditors of Morris Walsh, bankrupt. Albert Rabb, referee in bankruptcy today announced that the government had levied on the bankrupt estates of Walsh who was one of the defendants for $4,027.52, the unpaid amount of the costs. VIEWS BRIDGE PLAN John L. Harrington, bridge expert of Kansas City, John Mueller county bridge engineer, and a representative of each of the two Main street bridge factions went over the various bridge plans this afternoon. Later in the afternoon Mr. Harrington will discuss the bridge question with the commissioners at a public meeting. MOVES GRAVEL DIP The county gravel dip has been moved to the Mrs. B. Johnson farm, Fountain City. For some time it has been on the Jim Harris farm, west of Centerville.

Thai is the. wonderful tribute paid lo- Sweet Caporal cigarette

oy we LOnaon Lancet, the recog

nized medical authority of the

ivorld This decision was the result of an official test of Sweet Caporal by medical experts No Other cigarette ever received such remarkable endorsement , Sweet CaDoral miritv is nnu, h-

ng snow n to smokers

FOR 0 ANA Sweet peen on t decades. itiay than rtcord hd by any Ihese ye (cigarettes Cweet C in favor of Sweet being gK Ucmonstr: Smoke pu'e, i5Trrcss4ration caporal paperuovel

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pest in the world lnsures"Wt pure, natural tobacco flavor of

wet Caporal cigarettes, which ' , pas made- Sweet-.Cagoral famous

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POSTPONES OPENING OF ACADEMY CLASSES Caroline Nicholon, daughter of S. E. Nicholson, received a telegram this morning instructing her that the opening of Westtown, Pa., academy in which she will teach German this year has been postponed until October 3, because of several cases of Infantile paralysis in the community. Francis, a brother to Miss Nicholson, will enter the academy this year. REIGN OF TERROR EXISTS IN MEXICO LAREDO, Tex., Sept. 19. A veritable reign of terror exists in the state of San Luis Potosi due to the activities of legalistas, according to reports arriving here from Mexico. They declared that villages had been looted and many persons killed there in the past week. BANKERS INDICTED CHICAGO, Sept. 19 Four private bankers, through whose failures, hundreds of poor immigrant depositors lost their life savings, were indicted by the supreme court grand jury today. BREAKS AUTO RECORD The McConaha company, local agents for the Hudson Super Six automobile, received a telegram today stating that a super six had broken the transcontinental record between San Francisco and New York by fifteen hours.

THE PUREST FORM HI WHICH

TOBACCO CAN BE CONSUMED

interesting demonstration. The demonstrator burns a piece of ordinary paper, which leaves a black ash. Then burns a oiece of the hierh-CTade. imported French cig arette paper used on Sweet Caporal, and calls smokers' attention to the pure, white ash. Tims' is the pure tobacco in Sweet Caoora protectea dv Amert carried their love for Caporal to all Darts of thel Deen iTtaMr wona ana introduced sweets" to of cigarette sinoKers ot other natrons. burnin? tests THE FIRST SMOKf Nearly everv roan has started ACpcraJ. ttcuriaal si&tsits

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ODD FELLOWS ELECT CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Sept. 19. The election of national officers was the chief Item of business before the Southern Grand lodge of Odd Fellows in annual session here. Ft. Worth and Omaha are making an active fight for the 1917 meeting of the grand lodge. STORM RUSS FORCE BERLIN, Sept. 19. Teutonic forces took by storm the Russian bridge-head position on the Stokhod at Carecze, the German war office announced today. Thirty-one officers and 2,500 men were taken prisoners by the Germans. The report states that the Russians and Roumanians have suffered heavy losses in the Carpathians. $382 JUDGMENT GIVEN. Bradford supply house was granted judgment of $382.90 from Ramus H. Brant by the circuit court this morning. The suit was for $500 for oils and other mechanical supplies which were purchased by the defendant. KOONTZ DIVORCE ISSUED. Mary E. Koontz was granted a divorce from Harvey U. Koontz by the circuit court , today. The wife was granted the custody of the three children. - WORLD-WIDE : POPULARITY ' Wherever tobacco i

JFAMOOSWEETCAPS

Many thine? haw hn

proved in 40 years Candle-light I has given way to eleetricitv thJ

throughout the world. Sweet Cap-stage-coach orai cigarettes are smoked. Americans who travel over Europe,' Asia, Africa and South America the express sweet Caporal, arette, remains in four decades nnaM I can alwavs obtain Sweet Caonral cigarettes as easily as in the United

i fiuuui-e a Detter ciga rette. More popular todav thsiJ

states, sweet Caporal is the only crearette that has this world-wide is jweet c saie ana popularity. decades

av 1 I I

unaoie to produce a better' cigarette. More popular tgdaj than ever is Sweet Capdra

United Caooral is the ontv that has this world-wide le and popularity.

MANY GRADES 0FTAPE

THE PIONEER BRAND Sweet CaDoral is the original USED OH The lower cigarette that populamed cigarette I smoking over forty yeiars ago. It is the ereat-erandfather of alt the dinary paper, black, soot-like oral cigarettes billions of cigarettes made today and outstrips them all in popular

D O " 1 V -. oaoer the purest and beat in thi

ity, i ne oest-ioved of all cjgaworld which trctui iiSwccUCaeeai. A i- c r i pfiutcaah.

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FRIENDS OPPOSE MILITARY TRAINING A strong fight against military training in schols will be started by Indiana Yearly Meeting of Friends Thursday when Allen D. Hole, chairman of the peace committee will read a report advocating a vigorous opposition to conditions which "throw to the wind the teachings of God." Valuable training in discipline, physical culture and moral training will be suggested and representatives will be asked to , furnish information of schools where war preparation through pupils seems to be in operation or is contemplated. TEBBETTS TO RETAIN POST FOR ONE YEAR Although he will not be able to be at the office, Charles E. Tebbetts will hold his position as General Secretary of the American Friends Missionary society which has its national headquarters in this city until the next Five Year Meeting of Friends which will be held here October, 1917. Mr. Tebbetts will move to Whittier, Ca, within-a few weeks. The office duties of the secretary will be performed by Ross Hadley, Mr. Tebbetts assistant. ENTERS DEAF SCHOOL Trustee Edgerton today took Lena Norton to Indianapolis and entered her in the deaf and dumb school. MR tlMi has vanished before? tram hut orA the original cigl the same because the world has been . . ' l.annra lr the per l eet CapoV r cigaretto pure to-t Caporal ture-mada hat is why back tJ x cigarette hovment. he interest-! tonstratioa differentj some or Im. whiclk hen bun imported used oii Ieave4.j, original: s smokersi ' iginal cie the wnrM -ft m-wm CIGARETTES!'' erades resemble on iuic on U wit tt Cap in th which burns ash. Sweet are rolled bums with a ouni . .. .. ."

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TEUTONS SHOW FIGHT

PETROGRAD, Bept 10. Stubborn flghtinc on the Riter Narayurka, in the region of Halici, It going on between the Russian and Teuton allies, the Russian war office announced today. TROOP3 PA8S THROUGH ON WAY TO BORDER Twelve, car loads of troops from Eastern states passed through Richmond early this morning on the way to the Mexican border. These recruits are gathered from various points and will be used to fill up the vacancies in the National guard regiments caused by the discharges which are being granted to college students and married men. CARDER AWAITS WIRE FROM HIS FATHER George L. Carder, son of a' wealthy Washington state ranchman, who left home seven years ago and who now threatens to kill himself unless his father sends funds for hira to return home, was Btlll awaiting a reply today, at police headquarters, to a telegram sent to his father yesterday morning asking him what he intended to do for his son. ' LODGES CONSIDER HOLDING INITIATION All Richmond L O. O. F. lodges are this week considering the proposal of W. H. Leedy, general state secretary, to send a degree staff here from Indianapolis to put on drill work at an Initiation some time daring the ixt two months. MRS. EGGEMEYER TO DIRECT THE CANVASS On the return of Mrs. George Eggemeyer to Richmond, officers of the Ladies Aid Society of Reid Memorial hospital will organize forces for Hospital day, Saturday, September 30 when Red Cross tags will be sold. Mrs. Eggemeyer is expected to return in two or three days and as chairman of the board of managers, to call a meeting of girls and women who will be in charge of stations. BRIDGE ISSUE FACES SOUTH SIDE BOARD The South G street bridge appropriation and the two Three Mile road petitions which are pending before the county commissioners will be the most important business before the South Side Improvement association tonight. SUPERVISORS CO-OPERATE Closest possible co-operation Is being effected between C. O. Tuttle, agriculture supervisor of Boston township, and Ivan Back, supervisor in Wayne township. Mr. Tuttle is a live stock expert and Mr. Beck is a fertilizer expert. Brazil's independence will be in 1922. centenary

Richmond's Exclusive "Popular Price" Specialists Is Ready to Supply Hundreds of Well Dressed Women and Misses with Their

MESSES of Navy Serge This Season's Favored Fabric Dozens of Styles of Navy Serge $5.98, $10.98, $14.98 OF SATIN AND CHARMEUSE $10.98,$12.98,$19.75 Our Dress department will prove a revelation the exquisite ' new styles the vast assortments tthe wonderful values will strongly appeal to alL Models for street, afternoon and evening wear sizes 14 to 44.

WILLIS ESTABLISHES j HOG CHOLERA DEPOT

) One of the four Federal stations in Indiana to fight bog cholera and to assist farmers in stamping out the disease will be established. in Richmond this week. It will be maintained here Indefnitely. Dr. W. R. Willis, who win have charge of the station, is already here. The state superintendent will arrive this week to select suitable headquarters and get the work started. Dr. Willis will work out of Richmond In Wayne, Union and Fayette counties. His work will be mostly along educational lines. Dr. Willis will answer calls for help from farmers and In this way will give private assistance. He win also give public demonstrations. THEY COST MORE NOW Be sure you have a dime in your pocket before you order a hot chocolate this cool weather. Most of the candy kitchen men have discontinued their practice of putting out five cent hot chocolates. ASSIST OLD SOLOIERS ; L. A. Handley announced today that hereafter the Richmond Patriotic association will assist in the entertainment of old soldiers who are here attending reunions. . BRIEFS LOST Pocketbook, black, 2 one-dollar bills and small change. Return to Palladium. Reward. 16-tf Notice Young Republicans! All young Republicans, aged from 18 to 80, and especially first voters, are cordially invited to be present at headquarters, room 321 Colonial, building, .Wednesday evening Sept. 20th, for the purpose of electing officers and perfecting the organization of the HUGHES HUSTLERS for the campaign of 1916.. By order of Republican Central Com. 19-2t . CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank the many friends and neighbors who remembered us in our sad bereavement of the death of our little son and grandson, and especially to Rev. Murray and singers. Also the Tlrazh Aid of Ben Hur lodge. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Schyler Snider.

New Fall Suits Specially Priced at

8-fl 00

Far handsomer models than you would ever expect to find at this low price more than ever upholding or leadership In value-giving. Vast stocks of Fall's choicest styles scores of models including the fashionable long coat effects, many TRIMMED WITH FUR. Large Assortments of Exquisite Suits Special at $17.50 to $32.50

Marvelous Waist Values 98c, $1.98, $2.98 It is hardly possible to conceive of the beautiful styles we offer at the above prices tremendous stocks of charming models at the lowest prices in New York. Choose from Voiles, Crepe de Chinee, Georgette and Chiffon in all the new Fall coloring and combination.