Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 251, 4 August 1919 — Page 9
PAGE NINE DREADNAUGHTS ARE SHAKEN BY QUAKE IN WEST LIVING COST STILL Building To Be Affected English speaking raonarens have reigned on an averageof twenty-three , years each. . ,t STATE MILITIA QUELLS RACE RIOTING IN CHICAGO If Gravel FreigM Rates Rise Again, Skys Mueller That a raise In the ftlaight rates of SOARS IN CANADA (By Associated Press) OTTAWA, Ont., Aug. '. Despite washed gravel and sanc'J predicted for the next few weeks, wtJS cause much JERSEY Goitl Makes This Pjfckfegk is waiting fovernment efforts to reduce prices, the cost of living in Canada continues to soar. The high prices were cited as the cause of unrest In every dis trouble and may seriottajy affect the smaller contractors, is flie statement made by John Mueller, .county highway engineer. Crew of Pacific Vessels Called to Quarters as Ships Tremble From Shock. trict, according to Investigators of the recent strikes throughout the Do Mueller says that if, any further advances are made in the cost of sand and gravel to the consumer it will minion. practically eliminate ay further concrete construction, unless of an extremely emergency character. All of the building cedes require the use of washed sand and gravel in all structural concrete, hie said. A local gravel company, has been able to supply local requirements, and their operations do not iurolve any railroad transportation, therefore it would not seem necessary 'to anticipate any further Increases' locally, however, he said. for you anl-y our Family Government officials stated that the high cost of necessities was responsible for the dissatisfaction of thouson yo,ur Grocers Shelves. Phon tor it tion of thousands of conservative worklngmen. They also asserted this subject gave radicals an excuse for trying out more ambitious schemes. The average cost of 29 staple foods In sixty cities in June was $13.72, as compared with $13.53 in May, official statistics show. In June, 1914 the average was $7.35.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1919.
ON BOARD U. S. S. NEW MEXICO. Aug. 4. By Wireless to the Associated Press. Six dreadnaughts of the Pacific fleet were Bhakeu severely by a double earthquake shock at 4:18 o'clock Sunday afternoon when ,20 miles off the west coast of the State of Coloma, Mexico. None of the warships were reported to have been damaged. The New Mexico trembled from-bow to stern as if she had struck an uncharted reef, and the navigation officer sounded "collision quarters" on the flagship's siren. Sailors in the foretop said the basket masts of the warships swayed like poplar trees in a gale. Officers on the quarter deck hurried to their posts and the crew and the marines took their places. Meanwhile all water tight compartments on the New Mexico were closed and inspection parties were sent into the holds to see if the hull had been damaged. Taken as Routine. Wireless telephone messages were received soon from the five other dreadnaughts reporting that they felt the shock. The Mississippi, which was further off shore, reported heavy vibrations. "Just what I thought an earthquake," Admiral Rodman said. When the first tremor of the ship was felt those below hurried on deck. The faces of some of the recruits showed alarm as the men stood at quarters awaiting orders, while the flagship rolled and pitched in the
neavy sweiis mat rouowea tne shocks
Troops marching to armorjes in Chicago for riot duty.
Thanks to the presence in the city of 6,500 militiamen, race war terror and bloodshed have abated in Chicago. There are still sporadic outbursts of violence, however. As a consequence of Chicago's race war more than thirty persons are known to be dead, while hundreds have been badly hurt. There has
also been considerable damage te property. State militiamen have drawn a cordon about the black belt, within which whites are not permitted to . go. The presence of the troops has calmed the negroes' fears and has had a salutary effect on the hoodlums who have been responsible for the riots.
WHITLOCK COMING HOME.
BRUSSELS, Aug. 4. Brand Whit
lock, U. S. Ambassador to Belgium, left for the United States by way of
Rotterdam.
ONEGA IS CAPTURED.
WIRELESS BEAM, TO MAP SKY, LATEST FRIEND OF AIRMAN
NEW YORK. Aug. 4. By the invention of a new wireless transmitter "beam" like a searchlight without a light can be projected into
the air, conveying automatically and
Admiral Rodman kept the crew at I Intermittently the name of the place
quarters for 15 minutes and then or
dered the "secure signal" to be sounded. He took the whole Incident as if it were a matter of routine, giving his orders nuietly on the quarter deck while officers and men were running to their posts In the tense excitement of the first few moments. One of the officers reported that he believed the earthquake came from an old crater in the Sierra Mountains which frinpe the coast line near here, dropping off into the sea.
Ohio News Flashes
COLUMBUS A net gain of over $100,000,000 in authorized capital of Ohio corporations or more than $3,000,000 for every day, or $4,000,000 for every business day was registered for July. Cincinnati has half of this sum in her own corporations. CHILLICOTHE Lawrence Ottley, 5 years old, was run over by an automobile here and killed instantly. DAYTOX For the purpose of promoting International trade the Chamber of Commerce is endeavoring to have Italian and Belgian Missons which are soon to come to this country visit Dayton.
HAMILTON As a result of an attack of influenza last winter, Mrs. Julia Millsbaugh. 56 years old, wife of Charles H. Millsburgh, railway mail canier, died of heart disease here.
DAYTOX A large number of farmers of Indiana and Ilinois have been visiting the farm lands of the Miami Conservanicy district, with a view of purchasing the land for farming purposes. The land is selling for $150 an acre. CIXCIXXATI Fifteen men were arrested here in a raid on clubrooms at Pearl and Broadway, 14 of whom were charged with participating in a game of chance and one charged with permitting a game of chance to be played on his premises. VENICE A score of young people of Glendale and Reading, O., are re
covering from bruises and slight Injuries, received when an automobile truck in which they were returning from a dance, went through a wooden bridge southeast of here. The water in the creek was 6 feet deep and In the struggle that ensued several were almost drowned.
over which an airman is passing, so that it will be as easy to tell In the skies where you are as to see where i you are when traveling. , This is what Godfrey S. Isaacs, head of the Marconi Wireless Company in England, said the other day in an address in Manchester, England, before the Aldwych Club. Mr. Isaacs is a brother of Lord Reading, lord chief justice of Great Britain and recently special commissioner to the United States. According to Mr. Isaacs, this wide divergent beam will extend over whatever area is required, as well as to designate some certain place. It will have concentrated beams one, two or more. Bombard Sky. These beams will convey to the man
in the skies his location, so that if he
is passing over Kansas City, from the moment he traverses the region over which the beam is playing, he receives the signal, "This is Kansas City," and he will continue to receive that signal so long as he is over .Kansas City and no longer. In just the same way, if he be passing over San Antonio, Tex., and wanted to land at Kelley Field, he would receive the signal, "Kelley Field." "It wants but little imagination," says Mr. Isaacs, "to see that a little
while hence some thousands, ten3 of thousands, of names will be projected into the skies, so that whatever part of the world the airplane may travel the passenger is being -automatically told where he is. Similarly, these beams can be equipped to lightships or buoys in fixed and defined positions, so that when the airman flies over the seas he may know exactly where he is. When that position is developed pilots will no longer lose themselves, wherever they may be in the skies."
14,870,000 Women In Work During World War Statistics now are available on the number of women employed during the world war. In the Liberty Loan drives, 700,000 women gave their volunteer services, and a million more
worked in the Red Cross, Y. M. and Y.
W. C. A. canteens, and for draft boards without pay. Those who actually worked for pay are classified and numbered as follows: Mechanical and manufacturing jobs, 2,000.000; agriculture, 2,000,000; transportation, 200,000; merchandise, 600,-
ooo ; puDiic service, 50,000; professional, 70,000; clerical, 700,000; domestic and personal service, 2,500,000; unclassified, 6,750,000 total, 14,-870,000.
WALL TO CALIFORNIA
Herbert W. Wall, well known Richmond man and a resident of the Y. M. C. A. dormitories, left Monday for San Bernido', California because of the critical illnes of his father, who has been in ill health for several weeks.
LONDON. Aug. 4. The town of
Onega on the north Russian front has
been bombarded and captured by Anti-
Bolshevik forces according to reports
received here.
ITES-STINGS
American-made dyes are now chief source of supply in Brazil.
the
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BYCURUS Herbert Dodds, 27 years old, sales manager, Louis Wilson, 23 years old, and Sergeant Bail Jacobs, 27 years old, of the air service, all of Dayton, are held here by the police for having run dawn and killed with a machine, John C. Kraut?r. 73 years old, farmer, living near here.
Blondes Warned To Keep Oat Of Sun By Doctor COPENHAGEN, Aug. 4. "Sunlight is often the cause of skin disease and especially of epithelial cancer, that is, cancer of the skin, or mucous membrane," declares r. Haxthausen, Danish physlcan on the staff of the National Hospital here. "Protection against sunlight," the
physician adds, should be a part of the treatment of that disease. People of fair complexion are more liable to the disease than brunets and should be careful to wear hats and gloves. "The idea that veils ofTer defense against the rays of the sun is, however, entirely wrong, because they are of no use."
Poor digestion and assimilation mean a poorly nourished body and low vitality. Poor elimination means clog-Red bowels, fermentation, putrifaction and the formation of poisonous gases which, are absorbed by the blood and carried through the body. The result is weakness, headaches, dizziness, coated tongue, Inactive liver, bilious attacks, loss of energy, nervousness, poor appetite, impoverished blood, sallow complexion, pimples, skin disease, and often times serious illness. Ordinary laxatives, purges and cathartics salts, oils, calomel and tho like may relieve for a few hours, but real, lasting benefit can only coma through use of medicine that tones up and strengthens the digestive as well as the eliminative organs. Get a 25c box of Nature Remedy KNR Tablets) and take one tablet each' night for a week. Belief will follow the very first dose, but a few days will elapse before you feel and realize
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