Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 295, 28 October 1916 — Page 10
FAGE TWELVE
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCT. 28, 1916
GEORGETOWN RETURNED VICTOR If STRUGGLE AT EARLHAM
Georgetown, 12; Earlham, 0. Georgetown was the first to score, sending Quarterback Adams over for the marker after the half backs had brought the ball to the shadow of the goal posts by end runs. After the Kentucklans scored In the first quarter, Earlham took the ball In the second period and waded through the lighter line of their opponents for what appeared to be a touchdown, but lost the ball on a fumble. Two styles of football were represented, the heavier Quakers hitting the line, the plunges of Fullback Mill9 netting more ground than those of any other Quaker backfield men. Georgetown dazzled the Quakers with mysterious and speedy shifts and forward passes. Georgetown added another six points In the third quarter on what appeared to be a fluke, but which was passed by the officials. Ideal football weather and the largest rooter assembly of the season were among those present at Reid Field, Karlham, this afternoon, when the Quakers and Colonels, of Georgetown "U", trotted out onto the gridiron for the big game of the Earlham '16 schedule. The crowd was swelled by the Influx of Earlham alumni here for the "Home-Coming" game. Some thirtyfive enthusiasts from the Blue Grass state were also on deck. Karlham took the field amid a prolonged round of applause. El Mills, the giant full back, out of the game ORDER EXPERT TO FILE m ON MAIN . PAN John W. Harrington, of Kansas City, bridge expert hired by the board of county commissioners, will receive instructions from County Attorney HoelBcher early next week to proceed with his report on the Main street bridge. Attorney Hoelscher received orders from the board today to write to Harrington. Harrington, the board members said, had been unable to get from the C. and O railroad the positive statement made here by the railroad attorney, John Starr, three weeks ago, that the railroad company would neither alter the grade of its tracks nor move them to concur in a plan to go around West Richmond. The bridge expert will be asked to forward his report at his earliest conveni.nce without future regard to the railroad company. WRECK IS AVERTED WARSAW, Ind., Oct. 28. James Patton, a Big Four railroad crossing watchman prevented a wreck by risking his own Mfe in pulling away a crossing gate that had fallen across the track. GETS INTO QUARREL NEWCASTLE. Ind., Oct. 28. Mrs. Lula Stewart and Mrs. Daisey Euring got into police court after it was alleged that Mrs. Stewart slapped her neighbor's baby during a quarrel.
BUSINESS COLLEGE EVENTS
A very interesting letter was received from John O'Conner, who is now employed by the Locomobile Company in Chicago. He asked to be remembered to his many friends here in Richmond. Marjorie Meagan has accepted a position with the Davis Motor Car company, and began her work there Monday. Earl Huette, who is a former student of this school, was in the city on business this week and called at the college office. Walter Fulghum, who is a former teacher of the Richmond Business college, and is now Sales Manager of the Victor Talking Machine company, of Camden, N. J., is spending a few
Something To Do Conducted By A. S. Bbnnbtt
Something To
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Three-Face Town No. 13
Here is the Three-Face Town Grandmother. Paste the drawings on a stiff piece of white paper. Color Grandma's dress pink, the t tocking gray, collar white and hair gray. Sometimes you will find it easier to copy these drawings much larger on another piece of white paper before coloring. After Copyright by Qtotf
for the last few days, was back at his old position. Hunt, the Chicago recruit, was in Reese's stall at right half. Clyde Little supplanted Don Calvert at center. Georgetown, with - a team heavier than at first reported, impressed the bugB with its unusual speed. The Lexington boys were fast and got their plays away with a vim and dash that forecasted trouble for the Quakers. , On the kick-off, the teams lined up as follows: Georgetown. Earlham.' Bonar ........ L.R.R Cutrell Jenkins (O...L.T.R.. H. Mills Stout L.G.R......... Gordon Bastile C... Little Craft ..R.G.L Johnson Moss R.T.L. ...... Wlldman Taylor ..... ..R.E.L.. Hutton Adams .Q (C) Calvert Harris L.H.R. D. Mills Blackburn ... . R.H.L Hunt Anderson F E. Mills Coach Whiteside, of the Quakers, planned to alternate Johnson and Walt Wildman at left guard while Cy Pitts was scheduled to relieve Cutrell at right end. Pennington was on the side line waiting his turn in Wildman's place.
MASONS DEDICATE THEIR STATE HOME FRANKLIN. Ind., Oct. 28 With solemn dignity, the Masons of Indiana today dedicated their home for indigent and aged members of the lodge. In the presence of several thousand Masons from every part of the state, the officers of the grand lodge turned the $250,000 home over to Superintendent Macember with an Injunction to administer it for the benefit of its inmates. The local Masonic lodge acted as a reception committee for the thousands that witnessed the elaborate ceremonies. A special train from Indianapolis brought 2.500 Masons from that city. Special cars were run from several cities and automobiles brought the Masons in by the hundreds. The dedication ceremonies, scheduled to begin at two o'clock, were to be under the direction of Judge Harry B. Tuthill, who was to deliver an address. A special session of the grand lodge brought all members of that body to the dedication, and all present and past high officials in Indiana Masonry were included as guests of honor. FALL CAUSES DEATH NORTH MANCHESTER, Ind., Oct 28. Mrs. Marry Miller, 82, is dead here as a result of a fall downstairs. She was found unconscious by members of the family and died without being able to explain to them how the accident occurred. SHOWS CO-OPERATION COLUMBUS, Ind., Oct. 28. An unknown farmer gave Edward Zuckschwerdt an example of co-operation that the latter will not soon forget. An automobile struck the buggy of Zuckschwerdt and smashed it. The autoist hurried on but another farmer pursued him and secured the license number. days with his mother and brother, of this city. Mr. Campbell made a business trip to Connersville Tuesday. The report from the Employment Department of the Indiana Business College shows that eighty-four positions were filled and that there were twenty-eight other calls during the past week. A letter was received this week from Alice Miller, who attended Busi ness College last year and who is now private secretary for the president of Oakland City College, Oakland City, Indiana, in which she states that she enjoys her work very much. In ad dition to her secretarial duties she is Hlso registrar for the college. Cut And Paste coloring, cut out each 3gure separately. Now fold on the center as shown by the arrows and paste each figure "back to back." so that yon will have three "Grandmas" made into one which stands alone like this A. Next week comes the "Old Well of Three-Face Town." Mattkaw Adam
UNVEIL TABLET BEARING VERSE BY MIIJOULKE As a surprise to William Dudley Foulke, a meeting was held at 4 o'clock this afternoon to unveil in the public library a bronce tablet on which is inscribed ' his verse, "In the Public Library." The tablet has been set in place on the west wall of the first room on the second floor. Mrs. Foulke arranged for the tablet and a grandchild of the Foulkes, Janet Urie, : will unveil it. The unveiling and the meeting will be a surprise to Mr. Foulke, although he knew of the tablet. Mrs. George Knollenberg will then formally present it to the library and W. B. Bradbury president of the board, will acknowledge it. The verse follows: In the Public Library. Whatever be thy fortune or thy state The way to high companionship is free; Here are they all the wise, the good, the great And their best thoughts they offer unto thee. How canst thou give thy life to sordid things While Milton's strains in rhythmic numbers roll, -Or Shakespeare probes thy heart, or Homer sings. Or rapt Isaiah wakes thy slumbering soul? If these "king's treasuries" were scant and rare How wouldst thou yearn for all that they contain! But they are spread before thee free as air, And shall their priceless Jewels
shine in vain? The choice is thine, the fancies of a day, Or the bright gems that shall endure for aye. W. D. F. Morrisson-Reeves Library, 28th of Oct., 1916. BAKER RENEWS HIS CAMPAIGN WASHINGTON, Oct. 28. The excitement caused by Secretary Baker's charge that Interests unfriendly to President's Mexican policy were seeking to stir up new border trouble, has subsided. Reiteration by Mr. Baker and Secretary Lansing that the war dennrtment announcement did not intend to imply that trouble was being foster ed by Americans served to allay au anxiety. Mr. Baker, who was in town a fw hours vesterday. has resumed his campaign and Secretary Lane has settled down to await the arrival or the British blacklist note. ASSASSIN BLOCKED IN FUTILE EFFORT TO MURDER PREMIER LONDON, Oct. 28. A frustrated at tempt to assassinate the Australian premier was reported in a dispatch from Victoria today. An assanani, me dispatch says, broke the window of Premier Hughes' bedroom and shot at the sleeping statesman. The shot went wild, however. BOMBARDS ROMANIA LONDON, Oct. 28. A dispatch from Bucharest says that a German aviator has bombarded Siniai, Roumania. A woman was wounded. Siniai is in the Transylvania Alps ten miles south of the Hungarian boundary. SEE METEOR HERE A number of Richmond people last night witnessed the flight of a meteor, which flashed through the heavens from the southwest and disappeared in a blaze of glory In the northwest. Those who witnessed the brilliant spectacle report that the meteor had an exceptionally long "tail." It appeared low in the skies and inMts wake was a distinct odor of burned gases. BANK IS LOOTED. LITTLE RIVER. Kan., Oct. 28 The Little River State bank was robbed pnrlv todav and it is reported the Tacksmen eot away with $4,000. Tele graph and telephone wires were cut. Letter List The following letters remain un claimed at the local post office and will be sent to the Dead Letter Office if not called for within two weeks. Women Mrs. Nellie Allen, Miss Anna Conkey, Mrs. Dora Cooper, Miss Ruth Ellman, Mrs. Ruby Fackson. Mrs. Chas. Fish, Mrs. Forest Ford, Mrs. Cora Gilchrist, Mrs. Cecil Glunt, Miss Mary Hannan, Mrs. Rebecca J. Harriman, Mrs. Sarah Hughes, Miss Sarah Kel ly, Mrs. Harry Lett, Miss Lois Nelson, Mrs. Margaret Smith, Miss Stella Smith, Mrs. Alice Stephens, Mrs. J. F. Stlkeleather, Miss Clara Stlllwell, f2), Miss Nell Wentworth, Martha White, Mrs. Adel Whitney. Men David Boggs, Jack Bowers, Jack Branen, Jas. Brown, Alex. Coalter, Garth Diehl, Walter Elstro, P. J. Flannagan, Ralph Herbst, Ralph Hockett John Jackson, Billy JenKlns, J. U. Lindsey, Harvey Neeley, Mild Pitcher, Guy Reynolds, Carmine Loprivre DiRocco. Eddie Sharps, FTed smitn, F. J. Smith, Walter E. Steckel, George H. Thomas, Walker Turner, Clarence Willhite, Spec. Del. Miscellaneous Crown Piano Co., Eastern Ind. Motor
rCar Co., R. O. Franze & Co.
FRANK WALSH SPEAKS HERE AT COLISEUM
Frank P. Walsh, chairman of the Federal Industrial Relations Commission, arrived in Richmond late today and was greeted by a reception committee composed of members of the various local trades unions. This evening Mr. Walsh will deliver the principal address at a Democratic meeting to be held at the Coliseum. Preceeding the meeting there will be a parade and it is expectd there will be sereval hundred men participate in it WILSON SPEAKS TO NEW YORKERS SHADOW LAWN, N. J., Oct. 28 Before a throng of several thousand including hundreds of Tammany "braves" from New York, President Wilson this afternoon delivered his "Wilson Day" address, which also was read at scores of meetings throughout the United States simultaneously. American laws have not kept pace with American sentiment, the President declared. "The laws have held the country rigid until class has begun to be arrayed against class," he added. Co-operation, he said, must be the motto from now on, declaring the interests of mankind can never again be served by aggression. An American egg-preserving plant has been established in China and is handling 300,000 eggs daily.
BRITISH REPLY IS RECEIVED TO MAIL SEIZURE PROTEST
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28. The state department today received by mail from the American ambassador in London the British government's reply to the protest against the blacklist of American business firms.
Here Are Both Sides of National Campaign
By Vance C. McCormick Chairman of the Democratic National Committee The reason the farmer Is for the President, as I have shown, may be succinctly stated in a single sentence: He is for Wilson because Wilson is for him, and he KNOWS it. That, however, doesn't suffice for the city man, who is familiar with the work of the Wilson Administration as it af fects the farmer. The farmers agree with an influential, independent New York newspaper that the Farm Loan Law "is a piece of constructive legislation which is designed to supply something long and notoriously lacking in our financial system something in respect to which most other countries have been far in advance of the United States. It remained for a Democratic Administration to write this important law on the statute books. Taken with the Federal Reserve Act and the establishment of a Federal Trade Commission, it makes up a record of legislation which no Republican Administration of recent years came anywhere near matching. Of itself it constitutes a powerful claim of President Wilson upon the approval of the nation." "Cheap" Money for Farmer The Rural Credits legislation is, indeed, one of the big accomplishments of the Administration. It is one of the big things the Administration has done for the farmer and for the country. The law facilitates the flow of money to the land and gives the farmers as "cheap" money as possible, saving him the commissions and usurious interest fees to which he was sub jected for years under Republican rule. The average rate of interest under the old system was S1 per cent, per annum. TMK JUMM Watchful Richmond 19 South 7th St. Free inspection of any
HOME PEOPLE CHEER HUGHES EARLY TODAY
NEWARK, N. J.. Oct. 28. Hughes crowds turned out to greet Charles Evans Hughes as he swept across his home state today. Hundreds and thousands got up before day light to greet the Republican nominee and hear him speak. Mr. Hughes preached a vigorous Americanism and repeated his warning against a "false prosperity." "You must excuse the rather harsh quality of my voice," he laughingly told a crowd here. "It represents some very earnest work in a good cause." The candidate urged a business like administration, so that in the expanding of the activities of the government the country will not be overwhelmed by the burden of taxation. VILLA BANDITS FIRE ON TRAIN KILLING FOUR JUAREZ, Oct. 28. Four persons were killed today when Villistas who had attempted to hold up a passenger train between Pedro de Las Colonias and Monterey opened fire into the cars as the engineer opened his throttle and sped up the train to safety. Between Saltillo and Monterey another passenger train was held up and all the passengers robbed. It is not known whether there were any casualties. The British government refuses to discontinue the blacklist in principle, to agree to remove certain firms from the provision of the order. The reply Is not expected to be given out for several days. By William R. Willcox Chairman of the Republican National Committee The Democratic camp in East Forty second street is exhibiting joy these days over what are described as evidences of popular interest in their candidate. This interest supposedly is shown by th great number of con tributions to the Wilson campaign fund arriving day by day. Gleeful stories are told of the enormous length of the deposit slips made up each morning, and the number of adding machines and special clerks it has been necessary to employ in taking care of this kind of mail. Coupled with these cheerful ebullitions there is always a little sermon on the great moral virtue of having a campaign financed by so many of the dear common people. Typical Bunk, He Says It is a typical Democratic bunk. From many parts of the United States the evidence has come that shows exactly how the Democrats are really raising their funds. The letters written by Mr. R. Bonna Ridgway, of Texas, who seems now to have dropped into his cyclone cellar, was only one of a very large number of that kind of attempts to extort cash from office-holders. These attempts have been made in many states, in accordance with a general and carefully laid plan. The Democratic National Committee, despite Mr. McCormicks show of virtuous indignation when he was caught with the goods, has been engaged in a deliberate effort to squeeze office-holders. Now the returns are coming in. There has been just about the right lapse of time since the various Ridgways, most of them more expert in concealing their instructions from ! headquarters than the blunt and frank gentleman from Texas, got busy in their bailiwicks and began rustling among the federal placemen. AEOETEME. Waiting
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Eleetrie Co. Phone 2826 battery at any time
TEACHERS ELECT PURDUE DAH PRESIDENT OF STATE eODY
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct 28. The Indiana state teachers association today rejected the recommendation of the nominating committee and elected Prof. George Roberts, head of the educational department of Purdue University, president of the association. The nominating committee had recommended F. A- Hite, of South Bend. It was stated Hite was not a member of the association. A standing vote on the question overwhelmingly favored Roberts. Mrs.. Julia Walker and J. B. Peary were the elected recording secretary and secretary-treasurer, respectively. TOWNS ISOLATED FROM CHIHUAHUA JAUREZ, Mex., Oct. 28 Santa Ro salie, site of the electric and water plant supplying Torreon has been isolated by the Villistias who have burned the bridges north and south of the town and are preparing to attack it, according to advices received by Carra&za authorities here. The main body of Villa's forces is marching on oania nosana irom me nortn wnile a smaller body is approaching it from the south. ROSSO-ROUMANIAN RESISTANCE BREAKS BEFORE THE TEUTON BERLIN, Oct 28. Russo-Rouman-ian resistance in Dobrudja has now broken down, the war office announced today. Five hundred more prisoners have been captured there by Field Marshall Von Mackensen's arm group. In Transylvania the advance of the Austro-German forces continues. South of Kronstadt the German allies have reached Partsuza valley. ALLIES' AIR RAIDS CAUSE BIG LOSSES AMSTERDAM, Oct 28 Press dispatches say that $600,000 damage has been done to German ammunition factories in Luxemberg by the Allies air raid. FUNERAL FOLLOWED BY HAPPY WEDDING ELWOOD, Ind., Oct. 28. Tears turned to joy here when immediately after he had preached a funeral Rev. Lewis Land, 76, announced his marriage to Mrs. Sarah Tiner, who sat with him in the pulpit while the funeral sermon was being delivered. An informal reception was conducted in the church until the mourners returned from the cemetery and gave their blessings. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
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Hite did not attend the convention and did not seek the office. The teachers displayed considerable interest in voting. The clause recommending that the office of superintendent of public Instructions be taken out of politics was defeated. The convention approved suggestions for reorganizing the country school system.
HUGHES' NAME NOT UPON LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS WASHINGTON, Oct. 28. The Republican national headquarters here today filed with clerk of the House of Representatives a campaign contribution statement showing a fund of 51,667,775.29. obtained from 22,236 contributors. Harry Payne Whitney was the largest contributor, giving $30,000. Each of the following gave $25,000: New Jersey state committee, R. P. Crane, Jr., Chicago; Arthur C. James, George F. Baker, Jr. Clarence H. McKay, W. R. Allen and Edward S. Harkness gave $20,000 each. Charles E. Hughes' name was not shown on the list of contributors. J. P. Morgan, Cornelius Vanderbilt and Louis F. Rothschild gave $10,000 each. MISS WHITE LOWERS PRICE FOR TAGORE Esther Griffin White, under whose auspices Tagore, the great Indian poet will lecture at Lindley Hall, Earlham, next Wednesday evening, announced today that the price of admission would be only $1.00. Tagore, a native of Indiana, received the Nobel prize of $40,000 for the most beneficial literary productions. He is now making a tour of the United States. Tagore will speak in Richmond on "The New Nationalism." WEATHER FORECAST FOR COMING WEEK WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 The weather bureau today issued the following forecast for the week beginning Sunday, Oct. 29: " Region of Great Lakes The week will be one of overcast weather with high temperatures. the first half and much colder weather the latter half of the week. There will be rain by Tuesday and Wednesday probably changing to snow in the upper lakes region. So that it need not be carried in the daytime a new motor tr,uck headlight is designed so that it can be easily lifted from its stand. have ever had to offer. models priced for you at these now. - & Malsby 11 NORTH 10TH STREET A New Face for Anyone IRoflne 921 Main Street
