Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 7 October 1926 — Page 3
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1926.
CORNER STONE OF NEW STATE HOME LAD) BY PYTH1ANS
Thousands Attend Program at Lafayette Despite Inclement Weather.
Lafayette, IncL, Get. 5.—Visiting members of the Knights of Pythias were given a cordial welcome by residents of the city as several thousand congregated here for the corner stone laying of the new State Home for orphans and aged members. Threatening rain kept those in charge of the program in a worried state of mind, but despite the showers the event took place. Much loyalty and enthusiasm was shown in carrying out the program centered about the new home, representing an outlay of $250,000. The parade prior to the corner stone laying was an impressive formation as it marched through the business district and then to the site of the structure. The_parade was headed by the Purdue university military band and R. O. T. C. unit numbering 1,300. Four Bands March Following in order were the uniform rank, Dokeys, supreme and grand lodge officers, subordinate 'lodges, Pythian Sisters and guests. In addition to the Purdue band, Newtown, Attica and Indianapolls each supplied bands. Also there were drum corps from Indianapolis and Danville CIU.) Dokeys. Maj. Gen. A. L. Trabue ufc Rushville, national uniform rank head, was grand marshal of the affair. With Grand Chancellor Lane in general charge, the following program was held: Flag raising and singing of “Star Sipangled Banner,” with Harry Wade .chairman of the home building committee, presiding; introduction by Mr. Wade of Elmer Bassett of Shelby ville, past grand chancellor, as permanent chafirmian; addresses, John J. Brown, Vendalia, ill., past supreme chancellor, representing the supreme lodge; Governor Ed Jackson and Harry M. Love, Minneapolis, Minn., supreme keeper, of records and seals; placing of copper receptacle, com ruling historical documents a ml photographs, grand lodge officers, with Carl S. Mitchell, grand keeper of records and seals, in charge; placing of corner stone. WMSLEAGUE TO DECIDE WAR DEBT PROBLEM
Sir Austen Not Fascist Convert London, Oct. 4.—Sir Austen Chamberlain, British foreign secretary. has not been converted to fascism, he told interviewers on returning to London, last night, from his Mediterranean pleasure trip, in the course of which he had an important conference with Premier Mussolini at Leghorn. Sir Austen does not consider fascism suited to Great Britain. He has the greater regard and admiration for Mussolini, as a man “of great force, character, charm and shrewdness,” SUIT BROUGHT AGAINST PUBLIC SERVICE COMMIS.
Logansport Believes the City Has Some Rights; May Effect Portland.
Logansport, Oct. 8.—The city of Logansport yesterday filed suit in the Cass circuit court, against the Indiana public service commission, seeking to enjoin the recent order of that body requiring a cut in rates of the Logansport municipal light plant. The complaint alleges the order is contrary to the constitution of the state, and also avers that when the legislature passed the public service commission act, it was not the intent that the law should affect municipally owned utilities.
French Legislator Thinks S. Should Join In Payment Discussion.
U.
Portland city officials will watch this case with a good deal of interest, this city owning a municipal electric light and power plant. Some time ago the city council, following the submission of a report concerning the earning ability of the utility, made a substantial cut in the light and power rates, believing they had the right to do so under power granted by the state constitution. Following this reduction and upon complaint of former Mayor C. O. Mitchell to the state public service commission, the commission ordered a hearing, which was held last summer. Nothing has ever been heard regarding the rates. A number of attorneys of this cjty have contended all along that the city had the right to fix rates for light and power where the city owned a utility. It is their belief that the constitution confers this right and the action of the legisture creating the public service commission does not take this right away. It is likely the Logansport suit will determine the right of a city regarding public utilities. Able attorneys have argued that the city had the right to fix rates to be charged by a public .utility and if not satisfac'ory, the matter could then be taken up with the public service commission. The right of the gas company now operating in this city to carry the subject of a change in rates to the commission has been questioned, and the city council some time ago, refused to waive its rights when asked to do so by the gas company. SETS 5-DAY WEEK AS GOAL OF LABOR
American Federation Council to Lay Plan Before Convention.
Detroit, Mich., Oct. 4—The fiveday week for a.'l workers came to the fore as a definite goal of the American Federation of Labor program yesterday in the final meeting of the federation executive, council preliminary to the fortysixth annual convention, which
opens this morning.
President William Green and his cabinet, composed of international officers of affiliated unions, agreed upon the five-day, fortyTronr week as the cardinal point in the ad-
ey ^o U 4tl**iior'eirdauffe'r X 'tjiie U lii , iend" j•^ ll0en * en ' t m^ram of organized ship of two countries.” ;ab ' or - f, lld ^ermined to recomM. Dariae. who is preparing a re- ,Tlend the ^ lo a11 01 :
port on the Washington debt agreement for presentation to Parliament when it reconvenes, said •there, were only two alternatives—rejection of the accords or ratification with the insertion of guaran-
tee and transfer clauses.
A Ion con, France.—That the enFre problem of interallied debts should be referred to the League of i a Lions for settlement, was the suggestion made by Adrian Dariae, deputy president «.f the debt comi lission of the French Chamber of Deputies, in an address to political leaders of the department of Orne. “The league,’ ’he said, “has settied frontier questions and other disputes where national honor was at stake. We are asking ourselves why a problem of much less importune*- from a moral viewpoint— liquidation of the interallied debts — should not be referred in its entirety to a conference at Geneva or other international tribunal.” Speaking, For Self. M. Dariae emphasized that he was speaking only for himself as ] res dent of the commission and did not desire lo involve the responsibility of the other members,
lie added:
"America, owing to the political doc Tine which made her great and powerful, is present at Geneva only as an observer, but she wou’d abdicate nothing of that political doctrine by joining us some day on the shores of Lake Leman to discuss our debts, a hundred times
acknowledged.
“The miserable question of mon
DIVORCES NOT TO BE RECOGNIZED BY THE LUTHERANS
Birth Control Is Also Declared To Be A Crime And Placed Under Ban.
Fh. D„ of Eastoo, Pa., chairman; Rev. J. W. Horine, D'.'D., QolumMR, 8. Rev L. S. Keyset, D. D, Springfield, Ohio; Rev E. C. pinwiddie, D. D., Washington, D. C.; Rev. G. E. Hipsley, D. D., Red Hook, N. Y.; L. R. Alden, Esq., Washington, D. C.; Rev. J. H. Harms, D. D., Philadelphia, Pa.; Senator E. M. Rabenold, New York City; Rev. P. H. Heisey, Fh. D., Springhead, Ohio; Prof. E. E. Fischer, D. D., Philadelphia, Pa.; Rev. G. Dorn, Omaha., Neb., and Rev. H. W. Tope, D. D., Philadelphia, Pa. The Rev. Eu P. Pfatteidher, D. D., Ph. D., of Reading, Pa., was chairman of the Committee until his assumption of the presidency of the Pennsylvania Minister him on September 1st caused him to relinquish his duties with the Oomanittee. Authenticity guaranteed, News Bureau, National Lutheran
Council.
437 Fifth Avenue, New York City. AUTOS BLAMED FOR LIGHT VOTE IN ELECTIONS
Curiosity As To Visit of Queen
Washington, Oct. 4.—AJ though it, is customary iu this democratic land to welcome visiting royalty with open arms and no questions asked, Washington can’t help wonder ng what Queen Marie is up to with her American tour. ITosideut and Mrs. Cool id ge have made it known that if she desired to call at the White House she would he received—that is just about the way the state department put it in the official anrumcement. The regular state department major dome is being dis pat'ohed to the pier to do the usual honors when her majesty lands. ■' ' - 1 — 1 -o— ! ” • At the final session of the Indiana Real Estate Association in their state convention just held at Fort Wayne, Clafence H. Sommers of Gary, lnd„ was elected president. , i . ,
'anizat’ons as a basis for contract •enewals and employment. “The i'orty-hour week is inevitable in \ineiican labor,” Mr. Green said n a public statement after the meeting, “for the simple reason that it is eeono^nically sound and profitable. It ts profitable for the worker and for the employer, and it has beep tremendously successful in the numerous crafts in which it is already partially effective. High pressure production and the physical demands of modern industry are such that only with the shorter day can we attain notable progress in mechanical production. In the printing crafts, garment trades and building trades, where the five-day week is effective in some sections of the country, the results have increased production as much as 40 per cent on certain operations with an actual decrease
in the unit.
Paul Tarascon, French aviator, will not attempt to fly across the Atlantic for at least eight months. It was announced Thursday that delay in construction of the plane, and the imminence of bad weather, is the , cause of the postponement.
New York, Oct. *2.—-“The guilty party to a divorce” cannot In the future be remarried by a minister of the United Lutheran Church in America, and instructions to that effect will be inserted in the order for marriage in the Lutheran Common Service Book, if the special report on “Marriage and Divorce,” prepared by the lOommittee on Moral and. Social Welfare for presentation to the church is adopted at the United Lutheran biennial donvention in Richmond, Va., the third week in October. Further, the Committee asks the olrurch to recognize no ground for divorce save that of adultery, and adds a rider opposing all contraceptive devices on the ground of their use being contrary to the teachings of the Christian Church. The last convention of the United Lutheran Church held two years ago in Chicago, 111., referred to the Committee on Moral and Social Welfare the entire question of "Marriage and Divorce” with instructions to draft a statement for the guidance of ministers, whidli should be presented to the 1926 Convention for discussion and adoption. The Committee, after a serious and careful consideration of all references to the subject of divorce and re-marriage appearing in both the Old and the New Testaments, has prepared a clear line of forceful argument, leading up to twelve theses, whiich it asks the church to assert. In these theses it, is evident that the Lutherans consider marriage “a covenant indissoluble for life,” apd the marriage relationship a problem largely unsolved by the individual, to Which both home and church must give immediate attention. A distinction is drawn between legitimate divorce through the unfaithfulness of one parly to the marriage and legitimate separation, which does root permit a second marriage. Emphasizing the necessity of spiritual and physical control in marriage, based upon both love and understanding, the Committee asks the church to declare all artificial means of birth limitation to be "anti-Christian.” The twelve theses embodying these views, as offered by the Committee are as follows: 1. That marriage is monogamic and as such is a covenant indissoluble for life. 2. That marriage is one of the most important problems of the home and the Church, and that plain teaching should be given: (1) Concerning the necessity of both spiritual and physical selfcontrol ; (2) Concerning the sanctity of married life based on love and understanding. 3. That we recognize only one standard of morality for both sexes., 4. That a chief aim of the married life is the b rth of children and that the greatest blessing of God is often granted through chil-
dren.
5. That the limitation of birth by artificial means is anti-Oiristian. 6. That divorce is legitimate only when the marriage covenant has been broken by adultery on the part of the husband or the wife, and that re-marriage is scripturally lawful cully to the innocent party. Matt. 5:32, 19:5-6. 7. That it is also a legitimate divorce in cases where judicial decrees deciare that the marriage had nev er had a valid existence as in instances where the marriage covenant had never been 'completed by cohabitation or where a manifest fraud has been perpetrated. Th : s is not properly divorce, but rather a declaration' that in the union there was no conjugal bond. Such a divorce is in harmony with Matt. 5:32, 19:5-6, although it must be surrounded by the most rigid safeguards, if abuses are to be pre-
vented.
8. That “mardous desertion,” according to 1 Cor. 7:15, is considered a legitimate cause for separation but such separation does not carry with it the right of a second
marriage, 1 Cor. 7:11, save where j states grant absentee vo ing to all the desert ng party has been found i classes of qualified electors, Miche-
guiliy of adultery. | let comments.
9. That where either the husband 0 or the wife has been guilty of adul-j * > m f . fi tery and a decree obtained, the in-j jjfy A^CHtS MUSt !\C'
r ooent party is freed from the mar- ^ c
riage covenant and has the right of |
a second marriage.
10. That the decree of divorce, j in freeing the innocent party, does | not give the right of remarriage to ! the one who caused the covenant
to be broken.
1J. That no minister shall olliciate at the marriage of any person who has a husband or a wife living, unless such person has been divorced by due process of law from such husband or wife for the cause of aduhery. ) In that cji.se, pastors shall consent to marry only the innocent party to such divorce, ft is the judgment of the Church that at least a year intervene between the granting of a divorce and remarriage of the innocent
party.
12. \ That the United Lutheran Church instruct the Common Service Book Committee to insert the substance of Sections Six (6), Seven (7), Eight (8), and Eleven (11),
=«=
WASHINGTON — Simon Michelet, political analyst of Washington and president of the National Get Out the Vote club, offers a novel explanation of the increasing falling off in the number of voters who exercise the right of suffrage. The automobile has converted a part of the population formerly “fixed” into a “floating” population, he says. Voting has declined as the use of automobiles has increased, Michelet points out in a statement issued today. Moreover, Europeans who have shunned the automobile are zealous in the matter of vot-
ing.
“The first outstanding fact, connected with the 30-year decline in. American voting and corresponding increase in the so-called ‘stay-at-home vote, is the country-wide use of automobiles,” Michelet’s statement reads. “In the presidential elections of 1876 to 1896, before the first automobile, 80 per cent of American qualified voters went to the polls and voted for president. “In 1900, when there were only about 5,000 automobiles made, ; there was little change in the v\)'.ing percentage. From that year forward, autos rapidly multiplied until 1,500,000 were made in 1916, andt the percentage of voters' actually voting declined to approximately 65 per cent. “Motor vehicle registrations reached in 1924, when only onehalf of the America*- voters went to the palls and voted for president the total of 17,591,981, or at the ratio of three automobiles for five presidential voters throughout the United States. “The automobile and the development of interstate highways has made the American people a nation of highway travelers, drifting here and there over the 48 states. “Voting requires as ils foundation a stable residence. A voter can not register and qualify himself for voting unless he maintains a fixed residence. He must be on the ground on registration ami election days with a mind attentive to his duties as an elector. But a workman tinlay owns an automobile and accepts work in Flor'da in winter and in New England in summer. He is not at home on registration and election days. “Moreover, election clay may be a sort of hoiJday to thousandrs who take the family on a trip in the car and no one tn the car gets home tc Vote. Thus the nu omobile has been an active factor in cutting down
the vote.
“The American people use more cars than all the rest of the people on the globe. That is the secret of the absentee voting problem. In England, Germany, Holland, Nor i way and Sweden, where there ore j comparatively few cars in use, 75 i pen- cent to 80 per cent of the qualified voters go to the polls and ears' | their ballots. The. United States has the greatest number of auto mobiles in v popular use and the highest percentage of the so-called ‘stay at home’ vote. The two go;
hand in hand.”
Forty-five states have election laws extending .he voting privilege to voters absent from their precincts on election day but only 29
Their Smiles Will Cost You Nothing
It is important for every voter in Delaware county to know that Ira Wilson, candidate for re-election to the office of county treasurer, is , a trained and obedient servant of Billy Williams. Ira graduated out of Karl Oesterle’s bank, where, for years, he had cultivated a constant ingratiating smile, which stood him in good stead in his campaign. He smiled so beniignantly throughout his first campaign in 1924, that he succeeded in convincing independent republicans that he was entirely too nice, and too good, to take orders from Billy. No sooner had he been elected, however, than it was at once discovered that his smlile didn’t mean any more than the grin of Harry McAuley, who kidded the Paris crowd into putting him across for sheriff against Readle, the machine candidate, and then double crossed everybody who had anything to do with Ms successful campaign. Wilson’s first move was to employ as one of his deputies a son of Nina Sample, under orders from his postmaster boss. Jobs for all the rest of the Samples had been provided and in order that none might be kept from the public pie counter Wilson was compelled to place Nina’s son on the payroll. When the Riverside taxation matter came up in court, Billy Williams, boss of the republican machine, and nonresident postmaster of the city of Muncie, amazingly appeared as Ira’s personal attorney of record. (Everybody knew that Billy had run a (blind tiger at Selma and grew fat and sassy as superintendent of the county infirmary, hut Ms appearance in court with Ira Wilson tagging at his heels, was the first intimation to the general public that he was also a lawyer. Billy has become successful as a politician because of a peculiar facial contortion which is interpreted by the unthinking as a smile. He grins continually. So does Harry McAuley and so does Ira Wilson. It will.not speak well for the intelligence of the voters of Delaware county if they, allow themselves to be grinned out of thetir votes in November. If you want to see Billy's grin turn into derisive laughter at your stupidity, play his game for him and elect Wilson and McAuley. If you want to erase Billy’s smug smile and slart him talking to himself, give them the skinning that is dine all henchmen of his machine. Keep in mind all the time that the Post-Democrat is giving it to you straight. We have been fighting Billy’s aggregation of trained acrobats too long not to recognize and catalogue theih properly. Wilson and McAuley both thanked the Paris crowd for the buggy ride in 1924. We sincerely hope that they will not be fooled a second time. It was not their fault in 1924, for they believed both to be sincere. But it will be their fault if they allow themselves to be two-timed. Candidates who give their own friends the double double should he shown the way to go home. Lot's clean bouse and fill the court house with men who will not take orders from Billy Williams. The Post-Democrat has been saying this regularly for six years. When we began saying it Delaware county was solvent and had a large surplus of cash in the treasury. As a result of not taking our advice Delaware county is bankrupt today and taxes are higher than ever before. Don't vote for men because they give you a pleasant smile. TbosC cheerful highbinders have reason to smile. Get rid of all of them, as quickly as possible.
SYNOD CF INDIANA WILL CELEBRATE ITS CENTENNIAL
The American Bankers’ Assoc'a i tion holding their annual convan- ! tion at Los Angeles, Calif., have ! selected Melvin A. Traylor of Chii eago for their president.
A special train will leave the
j Union Station at Indianapolis Sat-
• ____ urday afternoon at 3:30, which
I will arrive in Philadelphia about
Dr. J. A. Dunkel lo Preside at noon Sunday carrying the Indiana \
Presbylcrian Meetings
NEED ECONOMICS SAY ENGINEERS
Answers To Survey Indicate Many Problems Must Be Solved.
NEW YORK—Knowledge of economics is essential today to engineering, according to a survey made by a committee of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, which has been sending questionnaires to leading engineers to discover the class of problems in which questions of general and practical economics arise. ; Answers were received from 127 men. They indicated that a knowledge of general economics is essential in dealing with questions of valuations, price tendencies, labor problems, cost of public utility service, rates, transportation, engineering, legislation, taxation, manu facturimg, water power and works, salaries, personnel, ibufsiness law, city planning, traffic estimates, finance, wealth and its distribution, corporation finance and the teaching of economics. Practical economics, the answers showed is essential to the solution of problems occurring in cost analysis, fixed charges, railroad operation, manufacturing, designs, bridges, reports, appraisals, rates, transportation, tonnage, city planning, speed, telephone engineering, water supply, sewage disposal, drainage, plant operation, valuations, financing, personnel problems and business administration.
Rescue workers Tuesday were attemptiong ot penetrate an underground stretch of nearly three miles, part of which is infested with deadly “after damp,” in an effort to reach the twenty-four miners believed to have been killed in an explosion in the Rodgers entry of the Roame Iron Company’s coal mine near Rockwood, Tenn.
President and Mrs. Coolidge celebrated their twenty-first anniver•ary of their wedding Tuesday. They received many congratulaory messages but no deviation Tom the day’s routine at the Vhite House was made.
The regents of the University of Washington Monday night demanded the resignation of President Henry Suzzalo and declared that Dean David Thomson of the col'ege of liberal arts and faculties vould be named as his successor.
PAYNE REOPENS FLORIDA CLASH
Washington, Got. 5.—Re-empha-sizing' Florida’s storm sufferers are in greater need “than the interests there would have us believe,” John Barton Payne, chairman of the American Red Gross, told the annual convention of that organization yesterday, that the time had come for decisive action against the propaganda activities of “officials and special interests.” The night session was set aside for the annual address of President Coolidge who is president ot the Red Gross. Mr. 'Payne in his speech asserted’ there was going on in Florida, a 1 “conflict between humanitarian efforts” and “selfish business interests.” The first intimation he had about “what was going on,” the chairman said, was when the Chairman of the Chicago chapter ‘‘called me on the telephone and read me the message Governor 'Martin had sent to the mayor of Chicago, /thanking him for offers of aid, and assuring the mayor that he, the Governor, Would let him know if further assistance was necessary.” Could Scarcely Believe. “At first,” Mr. Payne asserted, “I could scarcely believe that a Governor would make such a statement, right at the height of a campaign to raise money for the relief of the poor people of his state.”
Real Bargains! IN Good Used Cars 1924 Ford Coupe. 1924 Ford Touring. 1923 Chevrolet Sedan. 1923 Chevrolet
Richard Franklin .Pettigrew, 'ormer United States senator and me of the outstanding statesmen h (he history of the pioneer north .vest region, died at his home in Roux Falls, S. Dak., Tuesday norning at the age of 78 years.
A bushel of wheat needs almost c pound of nitrogen for its growth.
1922 Chevrolet. Touring. PRICES RIGHT EASY TEl'.rviS Cooper Sales Co. 200 North Walnut Street. Phone 186
spcct Citizen Rights
Washington, Oct. 4.—Proliibficn agents must respect the constitution »1 rights of ci izcns in seeking bootleggers. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Andrews has warned his dry corps, in a special letter
just sent out.
“It would be better to let a man. carrying a quart of liquor, escape arrest, than to make an arrest and (hen he unsuccessful in prosecuting hi m,”fAndrews said in commenting on the instructions. Dry agents, under no circumw'ancos 'should enter private dwellmgs. without having obtained search warrants in advance, he de-
clared.
at Vincennes.
Vincennes, Ind., Get. 4.—The centennial of the Snyort of Indiana Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, is to be celebrated at Vincennes, beginning today and lasting through Friday. The Snyod itself will meet in the First Presbyterian Church. Vincennes. of which Dr. J. W. Boyer is pastor'. The Women's SnyodicalSo-
Ameriean Legion boys attending | the national convention of the American Legion to be held at
Philadelphia.
A total of $152,633.97 in unexpended appropriations for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, svill l>e returned to the state general fund as a saving in the administration of the Indiana school for feebleminded youth at Fort Wayne and the Butlerville farm colony.
A delegation of timber land own
eiety will meet in Bethany Presby-1 ers and representatives of forestry
The public school at Greenville, ten miles north of New Albany, Ind.. was closed Wednesday by the county health commission on account of'the, development of infantile paralysis among the pupils.
in the rubrics in .the Order for
Marriage in the Occasional Ser-1 Four carpenters, working with a vices, i New York Central railroad conTbe Committee of Moral and So-itetmction crew north of Gibson qial Welfare of the, United Luther- yards in East Hammond, were killan lOhurch, which thus makes a . pd instantly Thursday noon and a serious effort to solve one Of the fifth was injured seriously -when a most puzzling problems confront- fast Michigan Central train struck
ing present civilization, is com- ; the gasoline speeder posed of Rev. Franklin K. Fretz, | they were riding.
tertan Church. Vincennes, of which Dr. John Welsh is pastor. The sessions of the synod will be presided over by in*. J. Ambrose Dunkel of Indianapiplis, moderator. Dr. S. A. Stewart of La Porte, will act as stated clerk. Mrs. Will H. Adams of Indianapolis, will officiate as president, of the Women’s Synodi-
cal Society .
In preaching the opening sermon Monday at 7:30 p. hi., Dr. Dunkel will use the same text that was used by the Rev. John M. Dickey at the meeting 100 years ago, which marked the organization of the synod. The text is from Gen. VXIH 19, and is as follows: “For 1 know Him. that He will command His children and His househiald after Him, and they shall keep the. way of the Lord, to do justice and judgment; that, the Lord nifty bring upon Abraham that which He hath
spoken of him.”
Unveiling Of Tablet.
The centennial address will be
Indianapolis in raising her Flor- delivered Thursday afternoon, Oct. ifla relief fund has passed the '7, by Dr. William Chalmers Covert $20,000 mark. of Philadelphia, Pa., general secre-
tary of the Presbyterian board of
association called upon President Coolidge to urge au increase of $845,000 in the Federal appropriation for co-operation with private companies and the states in reforestation work outside the nationa' forests and for fire prevention work iu the national forests.
The Range You’ve Always Wanted. No. R-40 New Process Gas Range Complete with Instantaneous Lighter and Lorain Oven Heat Regulator, only Easy Term Payment or Liberal Discount for Cash. Central Indiana Gas Company
Phone 751.
300 East Main St.
Authority for the first extensive overland flight of the airship Los Angeles since the Shenandoah disaster has been granted by the navy department. The ship will start on a flight to Detroit some time after Oct. 11.
Christian education, following the unveiling of a centennial tablet at* 2:30 p. m. This tablet is a memorial presented by the three original churches which comprised the local mission field wheh the synod of.liidkima, was organized- 1A)0 years
on which ago; the. Fr'sU the-,Indiana and the
Upper Indiana churches.
Vice-President Charles G. Dawes is resting at his home in Evans ton, following his arrival Wednesday in Chicago after a week’s vacation in Nebraska. On Monday he will le^ve for Philadelphia to address jtfie American Legion at its annual convention.
Forest and bush fires were threatening ranches, homes, resorts and watersheds in the Escondido district of California Thursday. Five hundred men were on the fire Rn'es. 1 i.
. Queen Marie of Roumanla has arrived in Paris and on October 12 will sail aboard the Leviathan for the United States. On October 19 she will be the .gud’st-dl‘ President and Mrs. Coolidge at a dinner at. I the .White, House. „ . .j,
At the Same Old Stand Hoyt Avenue and Council Street Order now. Best grades Kentucky, West Virginia Block, Pocahontas Lump, Anthracite and Coke and Kentucky Retort. Randolph Coal Supply Co. ■ ' ' J : r t t *: •> •* f N ? V ' •• ■ . !• '. ’ J r 7 - .-"L‘ . j I ’* -i TELEPHONE 2081 t •
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