Indianapolis Times, Volume 32, Number 203, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1920 — Page 3
■LSHEViK FALL Ely hope for ■ - § SAD RUSSIANS " Plight Gradually Becoming Worse in Country Overrun \ by Radicals. , IGNORANCE TO BLAME LONDON, Jan. 2. —Writing on Ituseia In the Westminster Gazette, Herbert L Bailey says: “While the British governb Is still floundering in the morass I of the Russian enigma, bolshevik Russia Bjgji'.ains enshrouded in a pall of mystery. sp*casionally a timid hand lifts a corner ; curtain and reveals what some of suspected and none of us knew, fltthin rays of knowledge pierce the and Illuminate a small part of the stage to earn our surprise or A halting and sparse proof well-meaning gentlemen peneinto the interior of bolshevik Ruswith much of the intrepidity and of the glamor with which Living - penetrated into darkest Africa, and more safely beyond the long arm of or his irresponsible commissaries our wonderment and confuse our by their contradictory facts conflicting impressions. W “One gentleman, a musician of un- ■ doubted talent, as I can personally af- ’ firm, and very impressionable—%s a good musician should be—paints for us a very Intimate and truly human picture of the terrorism of Ignorance and the tyranny of communal government. Another, a professor, becomes a voluntary member of a Lenine cavalcade. He is permitted to gaze with rightful astonishment upon the creations of the bolsheviki. He speaks in tongues not Russian with those who with much sagacity are directing the bolshevik movement. He is like a child at an eastern bazar. Amazement*and enchantment bring happiness to his eyes and rejoicing to his soul. We listen dubiously or wonderingly to his stately revelation of bolshevik virtues, endeavoring to dissect cold fact from warm impressions. TALSE STORIES GAIN CIRCULATION. “Then there are hosts, like vultures, who wait on the outside of a dark Interior for news that might escape the dual vigilance of the bolsheviki and the allied blockade. The fantastic responsibilities of a local commissary are their special victims. Their lurid stories win credence’by repetition, and one’s impression is that of a Petrograd or Moscow of dying people, of dirty streets, of walls stained with human blood, of noisome houses where the handicraft of Surajah Dowlph is surpassed and of bedrooms gvitb naught but ‘nationalized’ mts,/their lovers and their children. *tie to be wondered, Indeed, that who do reach thesj cities, and to mrprlse find that these pictures of lsheviki are mere pictures, become iiuuucuiately sympathetic toward their slandered hosts. Calumny Is ever a vicious boomerang. “Now, In most of the stories of th* bolsheviki there is some truth, but to discover what is true and what is false is a task of great difficulty. Some of those who enter Russia speak Russian; others do not. Some are visiting a country with which they are already familiar; others a country on which their feet have never previously trod. Now, the presumption would be that he who speaks Russian among these hosts should > be best qualified to speak authoritatively ; on the question of Russia, but know- j ing Russian is only too often one thing | and knowing Russia is quite another. That insidious allurement for the Eng- ; llshman which Russia offers is the enemy of all cool Judgment. Men become her chivalrous protector from tfcc perils they Imagine. Her distress earns their tears, her oppressors their malediction. They live in a world of noble prejudices and Mtlt. desires, which direct their vision their Judgment. WKlßus. even as late as July. 1017, when forces were being silently HKged, most of the correspondents of [ftFwspaperß in Petrograd were Hrylng ttSMally that “Russia must be any making fond hope a politl forecast. What we want are facts Bind political prescience, but these are too seldom forthcoming. What we do not know about the bolsheviki is Infinitely more interesting this moment than what we do know. Yet with information so sparse, with informants so blessed or impressionable, the government apparently acts upon Hon that the bolsheviks of today have learned nothing since the autumn of 1017. Thus we have Lord Curson Joined l>y Mr. Winston Churchill in favor of the fullest intervention, opposed by Mr. Lloyd George, who, unmindful of what Russia’s armies achieved In 1914, and ! v hat would have happened to us in the west if she had not preserved her lines Intact at an appalling cost of 1915, remembers only the turgid disappointment of 1917, detests the name of Russia and all things Russian, supported by Mr. Balfour, who says, “I refuse to believe there is any patriotism in Russia while Leniue sits in Moscow.” SYMPATHIES ARE WITH ILLITERATES. | “Now I have no sympathies for the L bolsheviki as exponents of pure bolI shevik principles. My sympathies Me I with the bewildered illiterate Russian I peasantry* who know not who to choose for leaders or what to and, and whose heads are lost amid a whirl of conflicting claims and promises. But it is time that we thought clearly about the bolsheviks as they are today. “From all the various reports that
come to Land, one fact emerges in perfect clearness. It is that Lenine is experimenting. at the expense of Russia, in an idea and all ideal of communist government which he has all his life expoused , and desired to put into force. This govi ernment has two main characteristics, k All must wor# in Russia, to work not is bio starve, l/here are no trade unions, ■fcl nothing lis known of strikes. A exists similar to that which jnSotQßGrait employed for the buildLenine. indeed, is in a modern IVter. In a counlaainess is notorious and if CSSKjSMKnarck justly remarked that tim 3HES9V”nouid he unite a good fellow Mfegpe worked eight hours a day,” W&uEj^m imagine what tills "no work no tV'AfyFictim of Lenine. hacked by the the ved guard, really means, r may, be, of course, that Lenine has L found the only road to Russia's salvaI tion. But it is tyranny very much unashamed. Then trading competition is eliminated, the profiteer exists only under the cloak of secrecy—bj the communal shopping establishments. Now in this idea there is something very Russian. Co-operation lias always been one of the springs of Russian life, and in no country in the world do co-operative societies flourish with such vigor as in Russia. The peasant is accustomed to them, as his father was, and he naturally finds in communal shopping something not altogether foreign to his ideas. Lenine argues, if he troubles to argue, that his Ideas of government are for the good of the Russian people. They may be too ignorant to appreciate such benefits, too “dark” to comprehend the magnificence of this scheme. Ignorance Is met by the sword, “darkness” by extermination. This, added to the continual panic of the fear of a counter-revolution account for the atrocities of which we so often read, and which would happen in any event, In any disturbance in a country such as Russia. Asa matter of fact, many cases, has only the do what Kerensky had not the to perform. CHANGES ■me. government, such as jBBKSJSS9bs established can not survive at least drastic moderation is
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clear. Competition is a principle of human nature, and however primitive life in Russia may be, this competition must eventually assert Itself. All agree that the only abiding characteristic of the government, too, is its dullness and, though Russia is a gray country still, no people, and particularly women, will for long tolerate the absence of the <lor of life. “Bolshevism was inevitable after Kerensky had neither the character nor the qualities to lead Russia on the right path. It will be eventually transformed or eliminated, but that It will leave its definite mark upon the history of Russia, that, in the midst of all Its vices, it will have created some good by its stirring of %. e minds of the Russian, there is not the slightest doubt. If, for instance, the bolsheviki have Introduced a system of education for Russia, history will only remember that they Instituted what no others dared to Introduce, and their crimes and follies will be forgotten in the midst of the splendor of this greit achievement. “What we have to remember is that Russia is an eastern empire with her head and shoulders Projected into Europe surveying all the great ments of western nations, envyin,, th.ra their progress and striving to outranthem as a civilized power, but conscious that to look east means stagnation and death, and that a gulf of 300 years of civilization divides her from the west It is the continual striving to b.idge that gulf, It is the searching desire to assume a civilization greater than ours, allied to the temperamental extremism of the Russian, that makes them choose the path of revolution to evolution and bring inevitably such disillusion, dark and heartless, in its train. “Lenine. Just like other bolsheviks, is striving to find a way out to bridge this gulf. Without scruples, wtth enmity towards all that is constructive in the western world, he plunges on his career. His experiments are the life of bolshevik Russia today and It is the duty of the governments to which these attentively and closely by calm and unprejudiced observance, to see from time to time Just at what stage Russia is passing in her destiny, and act accordingly. But we must have better information than we possess at present before the errors of the present policy entirely cease.”
WARNS AGAINST BOOTLEG DRINK Don't Take Any Chances, Says Surgeon General of United States. WASHINGTON, Jan. 2. —The following exclusive interview with Surgeon General Rupert Blue. head of the United States Publie Health Service, was obtained especially for The. Dally Times: “There Is such an alarming Increase In the number of victims of wood alcohol poisoning, caused by unscrupulous persons using it in the manufacture of “bootleg whisky,” that it is wise to issue a word of warning. “There is only one safe course, and that is to leave it alone, for even the very smallest quantity, such as a teaspoonful, taken internally, is enough to cause blindness and a larger quantity, such as a good swallow, is sufficient to cause death. After it is taken it is too late, usually, for the physician to save the eyesight. WOOD ALCOHOL QUICK POISONING. “The effect of wood alcohol poisoning is quick. Within a few hours after drinking there is an acute headache and attacks of vomiting, pains in the body, particularly about the kidneys, with accompanying dizziness. The symptoms are certain and unmistakable. “Wood alcohol is made from the distillation of wood. Until recent years it could be very easily distinguished from grain alcohol, but refinements in its manufacture have made it look and smell much more like grain alcohol. It is intended for a commercial, use otUy, and under no" circumstances can It be taken internally without grave consequences. In fact, its external use Is attended with grave danger. DENATURED PRODUCT FROM TAX-FREE GRAIN. “Denatured alcohol Is a tax-free grain alcohol to which usually about 10 per cent wood alcohol is added, to make it unfit for drinking. That 10 per cent wood alcohol is enougjh to cause blindness. “Medicated alcohol is grain alcohol to which carbolic acid, formaldehyde or bichloride of mercury has been added. These it poisonous if taken internally, but do not Impair its efficiency for external use, such as rubbing. “Don't take any chances. “Better be safe than sorry, blind or worse.” BEARS CHASE CHILDREN. JOHNSONBURG, Pa., Jan. 2.—When about twelve children of Bear Creek came out of school recently they were startled by two bears that came running out of the woods near by. The children rushed back into the building and the bears wandered slowly over ths playground, peering through the windows of the school.
THRILLER BRINGS VOICE BACK TO STRICKEN GIRL Child Bursts Into Speech as She Sees Actor About to ‘Brand’ His ‘Enemy’. LOS ANGELES, Jan. | “Great floods have flown i From simple sources; and great seas have dried | When miracles have by the greatest been denied.” But there is no denying the miracle of little Lillian Ostersetzer here—the t “Miracle Maid of Tempo Street” she is railed —a child dumb almost from birth who burst suddenly into speech as her emotions were powerfully stirred by a dramatic motion picture film. The strange story, repeated in awed whispers from household to household in the neighborhood, stands today everywhere eonfirmed—by the parents of the child, her playmates and the family physician, who is astounded at the remarkable rase. During the eight years of Lillian Os tersetzer’s lonely life the sad-eyed child with golden-brown curls has lived in the land of silence—dumb, when other children prattled of thc-lr pleasures: dumb when her playmates laughed at their fun. It was to ease the sorrow of her isolated little soul that her mother led the child to a picture show, and it was j there In the silence and darkness of the , theater that her dumbness was overcome. Scarcely had the mother and the child i been seated when a film player on the screen struck another actor with what appeared to be a red hot iron pipe. | Horrified, the child jumped to her feet. i “Don't do that!’’ she cried. Lnknowing patrons laughed at what they thought had been childish fear. | But an amazed mother, scarcely call-* I enough to believe her ears and feel her | wild delight, rushed home with Lillian | to break the news to her father, Louis j Ostersetzer. And Lillian hasn't stopped talking yet: I She even prattles in her sleep. “I want a mundolin and a doll with j yellow curls and green shoes and a pink i parasol and red blocks and stick candy j and a kewpie and a music box and ” The pentup longings of little Lillian have broken loose. Verily has a great | flood flown from a simple source, and the j sea of her life’s sorrow has dried! No
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INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1920.
longer must she lock fond desires in her lonesome little heart. She can talk! And more the wonder, greater the miracle: She articulates amazingly well for one who has Just spoken for almost the first time since birth. Lillian came here with her parents eight months ago from Chicago. Heretofore a timid child and therefore more or less lonely, she Is today the pet of the neighborhood. From far and near visitors flock to see the miracle child. She is the object of scientific Interest from medlea! men. “Lillian had torn glands at her birth,” Mrs. Ostersetzer explained today. “We were never able to get her to talk. Once in a great while she would try to say a few words but she has always been practically dumb. Since we came to Los Angeles she has not utttred a sound: “Doctors always told nie that perhaps a sudden fright or some powerful emotion might, restore normal speech. And sure enough it has. What a miracle! “She is so inappy now—so, so happy!’* Like the wife In Anatole France's story, “The Man M ho Married a Dumb Wife,” who suddenly found her speech and chatted incessantly, Lillian prattles, and ratUes on ail day. “And we shall never tire of hearing her," her father smiled. “It is beautiful music to our ears.” What? Borah for ‘League of Nations?’ WASHINGTON, Jan. 2.—No dogs allowed ! This sign hangs out at the whltehouse. If it didn't President Wilson might find himself swamped with canine gifts. It seems that every one wants to give bis best dog to the president. The latest proffer of a ranine gift was that of two Chinese Chow pups, which were offered to the president by I*. T. Burnum, grandson of the famous showman. When the president was abroad he was presented with a dog which was named “League of Nations,” because its donor admired the work the president had done for the league of nations. The president gave the dog to Secretary Tumulty. Secretary Tumulty's Airedale wouldn’t stand for the European canine. Secretary Tumulty gave “League of Nations” to a friend. The friend’s cat objected to “League of Nations,” and so the European doggie was presented to Mrs. William K. Borah, wife of the senator from Idaho. Senator Borah is the original enemy of the league of nations, but he Is a lover of animals, and little “League of Nations” is his pet, despite its name.
SAYS CRIME IS RUNNING RIOT OVERGERMANY Demoralization Following War Has Left Permanent Stamp, Jurist Declares. PILLAGING CHIEF TRADE BERLIN, Jan. 2.—The effects of the demoralization resulting from the German methods of conducting the war are still apparent, and a Berlin Judge declared recently that “we are living in an age of rapine and of extortion." Nothing of any value which is not carefully guarded is safe in Berlin today, and burglary has become a species of sport that is eminently remunerative. The blockade has rendered carpets, clothing, bed linen and boots and anything made of silver aud leather, to mention only the most Important articles, of immense value, and stolen goods of this nature are easily disposed of. One day’s police report (and the daily report mentions only the more important burglaries) records that blouses, silk, and other material to the value of 300,000 marks were stolen from a blouse shop, that two synagogues were broken into and vestments, silver and brass candlesticks, candelabra, and stocks of candles, valued at a very large sum, removed, and thnt a thief engaged a room in a boarding house and disappeared the same evening with all the clothes of a member of the Finn legation. who occupied an adjacent room. TRAINS PILLAGED WHILE IN' TRANSIT. Goods trains are boarded near small stations and cars and trucks pillaged, and a few days ago a chemical factory in a Berlin suburb had to close down because during the night every motor, even that for working the lift, was removeu. The loss entailed by the postottiee and the state railways during the last year owing to pilfering and wholesale thieving is not yet estimated, but must be enormous. The disorganization of the food supply has resulted in the enrichment of large numbers of so-called Scbleber, who buy np or smuggle into the country eatables of all kinds not Included In the ration* and gain immense sums by sale to the puo11c. This practice can be carried on only by underground means, and a socialist deputy stated in the national assembly at the end of October that 80.000,000 marks were paid monthly in bribes to railway officials In order to secure the passage and unloading of the ears carrying goods under false declarations. PEOPLE CAN EXIST, Bl'T THAT IS ALL. The outcome of the present economic system is that people can exist on the rations doled out by the government, but that is all that can be said. Bread ana war jam for breakfast, pearl barley or oatmeal soup, followed by boiled potatoes and cabbage, for dinner, and bread pnd war Jam for supper will keep a person alive, but -will hardly fit him for making strenuous efforts. Many thousands of Berlin families have not seen fresh meat for months, in spite of the fact that supplies to the armies have ceased. The weekly ration of nine ounces of meat with bone per person has consisted of frozen beef, and Instead of It seven ounces of very poor corned beet %avo frequently been given. For this week’s meat cards oatmeal can be obtained, and owing to the fact that many thousand tons of potatoes have been frozen In transit or while awaiting transport, the weekly ration of seveu pounds per person Is reduced to flour. The sugar ration of one and onehalf pounds per person per month is maintained, as also the butter ration of three-fourth ounce per week. Geese are fairly plentiful at 12 marks per pound, and a substantial portion of roast goose or hare of excellent quality can be obtained at most good restaurants without a meat card for 13 marks. Most things can be obtained in Berlin today if one likes to pay for them, except fresh milk, which one never sees, and cheese, which is again exceedingly scarce. Trices have increased of lats very considerably, however. American condensed milk, for example, which was freely offered two month* ago at b marks per tin, now costs 13 marks per tin, and has to be sought even at that price. HUNGER NEVER SATISFIED FOR MANY THOUSANDS. The consequence is that while a number of people, especially foreigners who change their money into German marks, can live quite well if they choose to spend enough, there are thousands of families iu Berlin who are longing for a good meal and whose huuger is never satisfied. Some of this Is due to bad management, for there is undoubtedly plenty of food in the country districts, and some is due to the determination of the ruling powers to use all their resources in order to gain a victory. For example, it is now admitted that huge quantities of sugar produced in Ger-
BY ALLMAN
many were used for the manufacture of glycerine. In view of the great increase in wages and the greatly enhanced price ana scarcity of materials, the master tailors have announced that they can not make ■a new suit of clothes to measure for less than 1.200 marks. Clothing of every description, particularly women’s wear, is bringing unheard of prices. Shoes are still practically unobtainable, owing to the scarcity of leather and raw materials. The people are suffering greatly but make few public complaints. Many are imploring their friends and relatives In the United States to send them foods, shoes and clothing. Recently the steamship Kerwood, whicn was loaded with articles for the suffering Germans, struck a mine in the North sea and went to the bottom with everything on board. HUNGARY SHUNS AUSTROBREAK New Premier Acts to Prevent Open Trouble Over Slaying Case. VIENNA, Jan. 2.—M. Huszar, the new Hungarian premier, in an interview in the Neue Frele Presse declared that the question of the extradition of the Hungarian people’s commissaries now interned in Austria might lead to differenees between Hungary and Austria if the latter should refuse to band over the bolshevik commissaries guilty of nonDolitical crimes to the Hungarian courts. The premier did not mention the names f those Hungarian commissaries whose extradition will be demanded, but there !b no doubt that Poganyl will be among them, as this man seems to have been j one of the murderers of the ex-premier | and well-known Magyar statesman, Count j Tisza, on Oct. 28, 1918. Recently seventeen persons, most of them members of the former soldiers’ | •ouncil, were arrested, of whom two con- i fessed their complicity and stated that j Poganyi and three other men, whose names they mentioned, assassinated Count Tisza. Poganyl, who was the first •to enter the hall of the ex-premier’s villa, shouted to Count Tisza when the latte* j came from his dining room with his wife j and Countess Almassy: “You are the author of the world war I in which eo many men shed their blood.” j Poganyi's companions then called, upon Count Tisza to remove his revolver, and immediately afterwards Poganyl fired the lrst shot. Thereupon the other three nen in the hall—Dobo, Horvath and szantykovsky—likewise used their fire- j inns. In the Interview M. Huszar states that >ver 90 per cent of the population of Hungary are royalists and demand the ! restoration of a monarchical form of government. He has not the slightest doubtthat the elections will take place on j Jan. 2fl, and that a referendum on the question of kingdom or republic, which will be taken shortly afterward will j prove that his opinion Is correct. The \ nation, however, will not be called upon ’ to elect a king by referendum. The question who is to ascend the throne will be decided by the national as- ; sembly. •
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AMUSEMENTS. LAST THREE PERFORMANCES. I SHI BERT MuraT™ IviwnH I go] SHARP! MATINEE TOMORROW, 2 P. M. ■ C E. H. U U JULIA r OOTHERW WARLOWt Tonight: TAMING OF THE SHREW; Tomorrow Matinee, TWELFTH NIGHT; Tomorrow Night, HAMLET. Prices Evenings—s3 to $1; Mats, $2.50 to ft. Seat# Selling—Two Box Offices. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday MATINEE WED. 2 P. M. F. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest Present Biggest Drama Spectaclo on Earth COMPANY C-J$H3 FLOCK OB OF 100 SHEEP Greatest all-star cast ever organised in history of the American Stage. Prices oO<*, 75<, fl, f 1.50, *2. SEATS NOW SELLING ENGLISH’S— Tonight SATURDAY MAT. AND NIGHT DeWolf Hopper IN THE BETTER ’OLE A Comedy with Music. Prices, Night, 50c to $2.00. Mats., 50c to $1.50. Seats ready. Week Commencing Mon., Jan. 6th. Matinees Wednesday and Saturday. The Season’s Snappiest Musical Play La La Lucille A Riot of Color, Melody and Laughter. Prices, Nights, 50c to $2.00. Mats., 50c to $1.50. Seats Ready Today. IT'S CONTINUOUS 10—20-30 8 All Star Feature n Vaudeville Acts 0 SEE YOURSELF IN THE MOVIES.
See Announcement OF FAIR STORE'S Big Removal Sale Pages 10 and 11 —X
MOTION PICTURES. I Thousands of Indianapolis theatergoers saw Clara Kimball Young In “Eyes of Youth” at the Ohio Theater New Y'ear’s day and gave it their unanimous approval. “Eyes of Y'outh” is one of the most sumptuous productions ever screened, being the film version of Max Marcin and Charles Gnernon's stage success that ran one solid year at the Maxine Ellitot Theater In New York City. A story that has charmed millions, a story that visualizes the spiritual experiences of a young girl on the threshold of her life, her dreams, her desires, her hopes, her ambitions. -<2
(JOStfilr**** its. BILLIE BURKE in UUUmna “WANTED A HUSBAND" CHRISTY COMEDY FOX NEWS AMUSEMENTS. i i RIALTO It’s Continuous!^ 1 1 “LOST MONEY” I IkS ■ A DRAMATIC STORY IN WHICH A WOMAN FINDS THAT LOVE 18 g, p MOKE THAN LUXURY AND MONEY. 11 fi na Vaudeville Acts 6 j IWw FOR FRIDAY EVENING I This ten cents “THE JAZZ BABIES” —WITH—FRANK X. SILK AND AN ALL-STAR CAST OF FUNSTERS In Iggarra 1 ggarra iga PfllLY at 2!15 Bnd B!is * T 9 AfFWAI SPECIAL BARGAIN MATINEES SB3HSv!!3BB3B3BHCSSSS?ar. S WBBBKBBHBWi ROBERT HYMAN and VERNON STILES VIRGINIA MANN in NOTED TENOR “$5,000 A YEAR” rice and werner COMEDY PLAYLET JOE TOWLE JAZZLAND NAVAL EIGHT REALSAILO R BO VS FROM OVERSEAS PIEBI-OT ANIL SCOFIELD > LA FRANCE BROS, dmJp _ COHTIHUOUS VAUDEVILLE I J&j A Happy New Year’s Festival of Joy ZARROW’S REVUE ball room 20—PEOPLE —2O 11 BEDFORD TROUPE, EMPIRE COMEDY FOUR, “THE REM- B M SAffTS," LOVETTE DALE, LESTER * VINCENT. ROSALIE ~• **•
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