Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 106, 16 March 1917 — Page 11

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, MARCH 16, ISA 7

PAGE ELEVEN

RICHMOND WINS IM FIRST CLASH IN STATE LISTS

t (By Associated Press) BLOOMINGTON, Ind., March 16. Richmond won Its first game In the state basketball tournament here this afternoon by defeating Columbus, 29 to 20.. Richmond played a fast game. Richmond's line-up was O'Neal, Jessup, Parker, McBride and Shelton. : Columbus' line-up was Turner, Cook 'corn, Taylor and Grim; Referee, Mowe. , f.L Richmond had a shade on her oppchents and held the big end of an 18 to 11 score at the end of the first half. Among students of Indiana univer-

REVOLT MEANS MORE VIGOROUS POLICY FOR WAR

(By Associated Press) BOULDER. Col., March 16. Count Ilya Tolstoi, brother of the noted Russian novelist, who la here today on a tour of the United States said he believed the result of the overthrow of the Russian government and the abdication of Emperor Nicholas would be a more vigorous prosecution of the war, mora liberal government for the people and an end to fears England once had that Russia might conclude a separate peace. "This Is very bad for Germany," said the count. "It ends her last hope, that of a separate peace with Russia." "This is the best type of revolution, for It is carried out by both upper classes and common people in response to a demand of the people generally."

OFFICERS TO ACT FOR RAILROADERS AT CLEVELAND, 0.

(By Associated Press) CLEVELAND, O.. March 16. Three railroad brotherhood national officers, Martin Carey of Port Huron, Mich., vice-president of the conductors, Edward Corrigan of Texas, assistant grand chief of the engineers, and David Robertson of Youngstown, vice president of the firemen's organization, are here today, empowered to etct tor all four, railroad brotherhoods and take charge "of strikepreparations In this section. Acting Mayor Fitzgerald was asked by the Fig Four railroad company today to furnish police protection In the event of a strike tomorrow. If the 6trike order goes into effect tonight, '1,600 men on the New York Central lines, 300 on the Baltimore & Ohio, and 100 on the Nickel Plate will be affected on local divisions.

SALE FOR RECITAL BREAKS RECORDS

Another record-breaking advance sale was recorded today at the GalliCurci reserved seat plat. Several hundred tickets were sold during' the day, which was the first the general public has been permitted to freAerve seats, and indications point now' to a capacity house March 26, when the celebrated soprano sings in tho Coliseum. Mall orders continued to arrive today from all points in this section of the state and in western Ohio.

SENATE ARRANGES FOR ADJOURNMENT

(Ey Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 16. Arrangements for adjournment sine die were made when the senat at 1:40 p. m, opened its doors and adopted a resolution to inform the president that unless he has further business it was ready to adjourn. Senator Martin of Virginia, and Warren of Wyoming, were appointed the committee to inform the president.

VESSEL FOUNDERS OFF THE COAST

(Ey Associated Press) NEW YORK. March 16. The arrival here today of the captain and 15 members of the crew of the French freight steamship Georgetown disclosed that the vessel foundered at sea on Feb. 27 when about 700 miles east of New York on her voyage toward Havre, France. The entire crew of 24 officers and

men were rescued and those who did not reach here today on the French line freighter La Perouse from Havre were taken into Halifax on the British tank steamship Strombus after being transferred from La Perouse. The Georgetown earring oil in barrels left New York Feb. 23. Four days later 6he encountered stormy weather, spranf; a leak and sank. Twenty minutes before she went down the crew was taken off by the American tank steamship Illinois, Port Arthur, Tex., for London, which transferred the rescued men to La Perouse. In a public park of Tacoma, Wash., the stump of a huge cedar tree has been hollowed out to form a shelter for "picnickers; the top of the stump is capped by a platform which 13 now jsed as a bandstand. i

6lty, Richmond is considered as having one of the best team3 on the floor. Goal shooting was good among tha Richmond players.

Early Results in State Meet

BLOOMINGTON, Ind., March 16. Muncie, 31; Lizton, 8. Kckomo, 19; South Bend, 16. Bloomington, 23; Lafayette, 13. Washington, 24; Martinsville, 27.

DIPLOMATIC CORPS WILL REMAIN SAME

(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 16. No official advices on the situation in Russia has reached either the Russian em'bassy or the British embassy here today. Disorganization at Petrograd was believed to be the cause of the

Russian foreign office's failure to

notify the embassy here. It Is believed no change will be made in the Russian diplomatic representation here or at other foreign capitals.

RUSSIAN TROOPS DISLODGE TURKS

(By Associated Press) PETROGRAD, March 16. Russian troops have dislodged the Turkish forces from their fortified position on the summit of Narleshkian, to the west of Kermanshah, in northwestern Persia, says an official statement Issued today by the Russian war department. .

RUSSIAN REFUGEES TELL EXPERIENCES

(By Associated Press) ? COPENHAGEN, Via London, March 16. A dispatch to the Extrabladef from Stockholm says: "A number of persons have arrived here who left Petrograd on Tuesday night after witnessing :the opening scenes of the revolution. They report that the police at first fired on the crowds, killing or wounding 20 persons. Monday night was calm, but on Tuesday morning fresh rioting occurred. The first rioting was on Monday afternoon, when crowds near the Nara Arch plundered a number of bake shops. Flour store houses also were plundered and there was an attempt to rifle the commissariat storehouses near the Alexandernevsky Abbey but the police and Cossacks dispersed the crowd. "During Tuesday, morning, it was said, 40 persons were killed and 120 wounded. On Tuesday afternoon 3 large wholesale bread bakeries were destroyed and the workers In a majority of the largest factories declared their intention of inaugurating a strike unless the food situation was remedied. By Tuesday night, however, the new government had relieved the bread situation , by opening a number of extra shops."

LEAVES FOR PHILADELPHIA

(By Associated Press) PHILADELPHIA, March 16. Jame3 W. Gerard, former ambassador to Germany, spent last night in Philadelphia and left today for New York. He registered privately at a prominent hotel and refused to see any callers.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

Advise Embargo on Foodstuffs , - (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, March 16. As one of the first steps to deal with the disorganization of transportation which will be caused by the railroad strike the national conference committee of railway managers has informed the individual railroads that an embargo on all perishable freight is advisable. Orders were issued here today by the New York Central instructing agents to notify all shippers that on account of threatened labor trouble no freight traffic would be received until further notice.

STRIKE STARTS SATURDAY NIGHT AFTER COMPROMISE IS REJEGTEI

NATIONALIST PARTY MAY CAUSE APPEAL

(By Associated Press) LONDON, March 16 In discussing the Irish situation in the house of com

mons today Andrew Bonar Law, chan-

cellor of the exchequer, declared tne attitude of the nationalists might compel an appeal to the country on the ground that the nationalists were unwilling to permit the government to get on with the war.

(By Associated Pross) NEW YORK, March 16. Peace negotiations between the railroads of the United States and the employes' brothehroods have failed. The country today faces the prospect, of a strike of. conductors, engineers, firemen and trainmen that will tie up railroad transportation from Maine to California. At 7 o'clock Saturday night unless President Wilson successfully intervenes or the railroad managers and their men make an unexpected compromise, the strike will begin with the freight end yard employes of the New York Central, the New Nickel Plate, and the B. & O. lines in the switching yards at Chicago and at St. Louis. Call Out Freight Crews

Strike orders call at first for a cess-!

ation of work only on freight trains

The employes expect that their first display of strength will bring the roads to terms.. If it fails to do this the- strike will be extended on successive days to freight employes throughout the country, until by Wednesday, all the rr.ilroads will be affected. On Wednesday if the railroads still bold out, the brotherhood men will begin to leave the passenger twins and locomotives. - If the men carry out their program, every mile of railroad in. the country, both freight and passenger service, will feel tho effects of the strike by Monday, March 26.

LOCAL SHOPS CLOSE BECAUSE OF STRIKE

SOCIALIST DEPUTY IN STORMY SPEECH

(By Associated Press) ; LONDON, March 16 The German submarine campaign was denounced as inhuman and the German peace offer of last December characterized as ridiculous . in a , stormy speech by Deputy Hoffmann, Socialist, in the Prussian Diet after Chancellor Von Bethmann-socialist, Hollweg had delivered his speech promising internal political reorganization and reform of the franchise after the war, according

to a Berlin dispatch transmitted by i the Central News correspondent ail

Amsterdam. Deputy Hoffmann, after being thrice called to order, was forced to leave the chamber. Hoffman, according to the dispatch, declared that the military despotism In Germany was causing mad and unnecessary shedding of blood. The Germans, he added, should make known their peace terms, for a

mere blank peace offer, without terms,

was ' ridiculous. Submarine warfare, he insisted, was absolutely opposed to the laws of humanity. '

ADVANCE IS MADE ' BY FRENCH SQUAD

(By Associated Press) PARIS, March 16. A French detachment advanced last night between the Avre and the Oolse and occupied a number of points, taking prisoners, the war office announces. German raids on the Verdun front were repulsed. Artillery engagements occurred in the Champagne.

' Dr. F. S. Anderson, an official of the K. D. Kitchen cabinet factory and of the Richmond Furniture company announced today that if a complete freight embargo results from the threatened nation-wide railroad strike, both factories will be closed down tomorrow night. This will throw about one hundred and fifteen men out of work. All store room is exhausted. Starr Piano company stopped 'shipments two days ago because, it did not want to run the risk of having valuable musical instruments destroyed. This company will make no decision about closing down the factory until Monday after the situation has been thoroughly sized up.

SERBIA PROTESTS

(By Associated Press) - WASHINGTON, March 16. Charges that Bulgaria has adopted a policy of forced recruiting of Serbians in the Morava river valley, not with the expectation of adding Serbians to their army but "in order to be able to exterminate them under the pretext that they are deserters," were made in a statement here today by the Serbian legation.

The most northern grove of big trees in California is a five-acre tratc in Placer county, containing six trees, on the middle fork of the American river, and many miles north of any other big trees. ,

COX WILL SEIZE RAILROADS OF OHIO

(By Associated Press) COLUMBUS, O., March 16. Governor Cox today issued a statement saying the state of Ohio was ready for any emergency in connection with th threatened railroad strike and then, "if it becomes necessary to avert a food famine, or to give the president of the United States that cooperation in a crisis which he deserves. I will make . martial law the law of the state take over the railroads and run them."

) ! el U t tU . THAT'S THE POLISH

SHOE POLISHES

0$ -BLACK-WHITE-TAN- 10

F.FDalley Co f NevAbrki.

iuffklo.NY.

BRIEFS

- NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss.: Estate of Martha A.- Aluertson,; Deceased., v " ' Notice is hereby given that the' undersigned lias been appointed by the Wayne Circuit Court, Administrator with the Will annexed of the estate of Martha A. Albertsqn, Deceased, late of Wayn'e County. Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. DICKINSON TRUST CO., Administrator with the Will Annexed, . Gardner, Jessup, Hoelseher and White, Attorneys. Mar. 9-16-23

Goat Supper, Grace church Saturday 5 to 8. 25c. mar-14 16 TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box. 25c. Adv.

Goat Supper, Grace church Saturday 5 to 8. 25c NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss.: Estate of Albert F. Rost, deceased. Notice i3 hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Wayne Circuit Court, Administratrix of the estate of Albert F. Rost, dedeased, late of Wayne County, Indiana. . Said estate is supposd to be solvent. MARY LOUISE ROST, Administratrix. Freeman & Freeman, Attorneys. marl6-2.3-30

Turtle Soup all day Saturday. Leu Knopfs. 161t Wanted Reliable young man to drive Ford delivery car in the city. Adam H. BartelCo. .

f Turpo is good for many things besides loosening coughs end breaking colds. Try it for headaches, neuralgia, pains and lameness. The turpentine penetrates. The menthol and camphor cool and soothe. Try it alto for cuts, burna, bruises, sprains snd sores. Turpo is good for, so many things that the prudent housewife keeps it always on hand.' '25c, SOc, $1.00 at four Druggist's.

THE TUBPCNTIHC CHMTMtWT f

Gome Out This Easter

The balmy days of Spring will soon be here and you will feel like wearing your new Spring Clothes almost any time, Easter Sunday, April the Sth will soon be here. See the new line, $15 up. Now on display. Emmon's Tailoring Co., Cor. 9th and Main.

Jus! Receiveda new shipment of 11-inch imported . , Double Disc Records the best MUSIC and selections. SPECIAL 85c each or 3 for $2.00 Come in and hear them National Bluebird Phonographs and , Wonder Talking , Machines on sale on easy terms. Will play all makes of records $8.00 and up. We are agents for EMERSON and OPERAPHONE 7 and 3-in. Double Disc Records, 25c and 35c each. Bring your Records to' Our Exchange and get New Titles. Indiana Record Exchange Hdqrs. Railroad Store, Richmond, Ind. We Buy, Sell and Exchange Records

he Gar That Convinces

Monroe Motor Cars are designed and built to harmonize with the conviction of their manufacturers that the motoring public's increasing knowledge of motor car values creates an ever growing demand for a moderate priced automobile in which pleasing appearance is combined with great mechanical efficiency. The two do not always go together. Pleasing first impressions are not always followed by that sustained performance which is necessary to convince the motor car owner of the soundness of his investment. Monroe specifications found below, reyeal. specific reasons for the beauty, comfort, durability, economy and efficiency of the newest Monroe Touring and Club Roadster. - ' , Specifications M-4 Touring M-5 Club Roadster

MOTOR High speed, four-cylinder, cast en-bloc, four cycle, 3 1-4-inch bore, 44-inch stroke, piston displacement, 150 cubic inches. Removable valve-in-head, large valves, easily adjusted. Cam shaft ' hardened and ground. Fully counter-balanced crank shaft, counter-weights and crank shaft one solid forging. Front crank shaft bearing, 1 3-4 inches diameter. by 2 7-16 inches long. Rear crank shaft bearing, 2 1-4 inches diameter by 3 3-16 inches long. "Oil gauge on side of crank case. CLUTCH Multiple disc. Eight dry plates. Raybestos and steel. LUBRICATION Force feed circulation with gear pump, through crank shaft to all bearings. Pressure gauge on dash. CARBURETOR Zenith Automatic Venturi type with set adjustments. Hot air attachment. IGNITION Connecticut ignition driven from cam shaft. U. S. L. storage battery. Auto-Lite generator, belt driven. ELECTRIC STARTER Electric Auto-Lite starting motor, equipped with Bendix drive, operating on fly-wheel. COOLING SYSTEM Thermo Syphon. High-grade cellular radiator with auxiliary tank, fan belt driven from front end of crank shaft. TRANSMISSION Selective sliding gear three speeds forward and reverse. Double heat-treated, nickel steel gears, ball bearings. Unit power plant. CONTROL Friction retained spark and throttle lever on top of 17inch corrugated walnut steering wheel. Foot accelerator, left-hand drive, center control. Service brake operated by right-hand pedal. Emergency brake lever in center of body. AXLES Front axle I-beam section drop forged. ' Roller bearings. Thirst bearing steering spindles operating in self-contained oil bath. Rear axle Rear axle housing of pressed steel with nickel , steel reinforcing tubes. Silent spiral bevel gears to insure a very quiet reduction. Rear wheels keyed directly to outboard end of live axle shafts, lightening the construction while increasing its reliability pinion shaft and gear one solid forging. Pinion gear supported both sides by double row ball bearings front and single . rov ball bearings rear. Liberal sized axle shafts. Gear ratio 4?4 to 1, M. & S. type of differential. The advantage of this differential is that you obtain traction of both rear wheels at all times. BRAKES ON REAR WHEELS Service brake, foot pedal to external contracting. Emergency brake, hand lever to internal expending, bands lined with 1-inch asbestos acting on 12-inch drums. Equalizer oh emergency brakes, WHEELS Artillery type, 32-inch, wood wheels with twelve 1-inch selected hickory spokes, front and rear. : Firestone demountable rims. . --

TIRES 32x4-ineh Goodyear straight side on demountable rims. Nonskic on rear. . . : . . SPRINGS Half elliptic front. Rear snrinss are of the comnound can

tilever type, mounted across the rear of the frame and axle, elim- PRICEinating side sway and giving perfect spring action and balance. All spring shackles are self-lubricating.

FRAME The frame Is of extra depth, being six Inches. The steel running boards, hot riveted to side members, form a part of the frame. The frame design makes it unnecessary to use heavy sills in the body. Also does away with the step hangers and sideshields, making a much more rigid construction with less weight and positively preventing squeaks. GASOLINE TANK Carried on rear of frame. Capacity 14 gallons. Stewart-Warner vacuum feed. Gasoline gauge. TREAD 56 inches. WHEELBASE 115 inches. BODY Five passenger double cowl touring body, pleasing in design and of extraordinary roominess. Electric light in rear right-hand door, for lighting rear tonneau apd entrance and exit of passengers. Carpet in rear tonneau. Space under front seat for jack, pump and heavy tools. All doors having pockets, trie front lefthand door being made to carry an assortment of small tools. Four passenger Club Roadster, individual front seats with wide center aisle between. Rear seat accommodates two passengers without crowding. All doors have pockets the front left-hand door being made to carry an assortment of small tools. Carpet in rear tonneau. Liberal carrying space back of rear seat. UPHOLSTERING High grade No. 1 machine-buffed over Marshall coil springs, making soft and easy riding cushions. FENDERS Crown fenders, curved steel running boards, with linoleum pads, metal bound. COLOR AND FINISH Dark blue body, black hood, radiator, fenders and chassis with white wheels or gray satin body, black chassis and fenders with light blue wheels. Lamps black, nickel trimmed. ELECTRIC LIGHTING High grade electric, double-bulb bead lights. Tail light in combination with license bracket. Current supplied by Auto-Lite generator and U. S. L. storage battery. WINDSHIELD Slanting windshield, two-piece, double ventilating, rain-vision, clear plate glass. Top glass projects over lower glass to keep out rain. REGULAR EQUIPMENT Silk mohair one-man top, front end supported by windshield; Blair top holders; full set Collins side curtains, including curtain carrier for right hand doors; dust cover. Leather hand pads on doors; windshield; robe rail; foot rest; electric generator; U. S. L. storage battery; electric lights; electric Auto-Lite starting motor with Bendix drive. . Electric horn with push-button in center of steering wheel, - Firestone demountable rims, one extra with carrier. Nonskid tires on rear. Eight day clock; oil pressure gauge; Connecticut lock switch; dash light, and Stewart-Warner speedometer, all mounted on instrument board within easy reach of the driver. Muffler cut-out; Boyce motometer; complete set of tools. .

-Touring Car $985.00 F. O. B. Pontiac, Michigan M-5 Club Roadster. . $985.00 F. O. B. Pontiac, Michigan Five wire wheels . $70.00 net extra.

Words cannot describe this splendid car. You must see it and ride in it. Call Us for Demonstration. J. MORRIS JONES .

1024 Main Street

Telephone 1850

MONROE 5-Passenger M-4 TOURING CAR

V 0'

PRICE $985 F. 0. B. PONTIAC