Indianapolis Times, Volume 32, Number 259, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1920 — Page 3
‘AMERICANISM,’ TOPIC FOR WOOD [Subject Chosen for Speech Here Friday Evening. Americanism is the subjpot selected by MaJ. Gen. Leonard Wood when he addresses the Society of Actual Past Mastres in the banquet room of the Scotish Rite cathedral on South Pennsylvania street Friday avening. Gen. Wood and his staff will arrive in Indianapolis Friday morning. They will visit Ft. Harrison in the morning and Gen. Wood will speak at the Columbia club at noon. The afternoon will be devoted to visiting points of interest In and abont tbe city. At the banquet table, seated with Gen. Wood will be Gen. Chauney Baker, Lieut. Wood, officers from Ft. Harnis< n, George Jackson, president of Society of Actual Past Masters; Judge Charles Orblson, the toastmaster; Calvin Prather, grand secretary of the Grand Lodge of Indiana, F. & A. M.; Judge Gov. James P. Goodrich, Mayor Charles W. Jewett, Gen. Harry B. Smith, and a few selected guests of Gen. Wood. At another table in front of the speaker’s table will be the active workers of the Society of Past Masters, and the following committees: Reception. George O. Jackson. Frank G. Laird, Clyde E. Titus and Edson F. Folsom ; program, L. Herbert Griswold, Arthur L. Evans, Charles A. McConnell, Miles V. Moore and Eph Levin. WORK BUREAU MAY CLOSE UP Appropriation by City Necessary? Says Director. Indianapolts will lose Its free employment bureau, SS and 40 South Capitol avenue, unless the city council appropriates money to cover half the bureau's expenses before March 15, Fred Kleinsrnith, director of the state employment service, announced today. Similar agencies in Hammond. East Chicago, Ft. Wayne, Muncie, Lafayette and Evansville are supported by tie state and the cities on a “50-50” basis. STATE AID LIMITED TO MARCH 15. Gor. Goodrich has issued an order that the agency here will cease to receive state aid after March 15 unless the city assumes half the burden. At present the Fnited States government contributes S2OO a month toward the support of the establishment, but that does not cover half its eperating expenses. The sum of $425 monthly Is said to be needed from , tbe city. From the date of the armistice signing, Nov. 11, 1918. until March 1. 1920, the bureau received applications for jobs from 37,679 persons, of whom 13.903 were former soldiers, according to Mr. Kleinsmith. MORE THAN* 75 IN* 100 GIVEN EMPLOYMENT. More than 75 per cent of that number were given employment through the bureau’s efforts. One man was placed in an SB,OOO a year position. Mayor Jewett said the city probably would not appropriate money for the employment bureau because a lack of funds has already caused embarrassment in the operation of -the City hospital and other institutions. Farmers Vote for Chicago Headquarters National headquarters of the American Farm Bureau federation, will be established in Chicago as a result of a decision of-the executive committee of the organt lzation made in Washington Saturday, y according to word received here. The organization has a membership of 1,060000 from twenty-eight of the leading so a producing states. Indianapolis lost the national headquarters by one vote, the final ballot showing five votes for Chicago, four for Indianapolis and three for St. Louis. Indiana had no representative on the committee. Mile. Spinelly Here With New Perfume NEW YORK, March S.—Mile. Andre Spinelly. who arrived on the Baltic to day. to sing in tbe Ziegfleld Nine O’clock Review, is said to have the shapeliest pair of limbs known to the Parisian public. She is a singer and dancer. Another of her attractions is said be a perfume which she has concocted herself. It is called “The Seven Sins.” Girl Opium Fiend Kills Her Father BERLIN, March B.—Baron von Koppen s death is said to have been caused by a hypodermic injection of morphine given by his 15-year-old daughter at the suggestion of her mother, a former American. The baroness vanished and the girl, a morphine addict, has been placed in a sanitarium.
America's Most Beautiful Motor Exposition Cars — Trucks — Tractors — Airplanes—Accessories ) """ Opens at 7 o’clock tonight at the State TP LJ ET Fair Ground. One million dollars worth ■ mam of the nation’s leading automotive prodAi m mam ucts displayed in a setting made charm- * I tJI mg by entertainment to waft you back to the days of the troubadour and decoraffllj tions designed to make you gasp with EP wonder at first glimpse, then glow with hhhhiappreciation at their colorful splendor. Indianapolis Automobile Trade Association CHILDREN UNDER 15 Special Car Service | adi™?ftftycknts Ample Parking Space * WAR TAX PAID ■
Belgian War Hero Picks This City in Which to Learn MICHEL DEES. Os all the United States Michel Dees, 22, former soldier in the Belgian army, picked out Indianapolis as the city In which to be educated, and today he is
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War Photographer Meets Death in Taxi NEW YORK, March S.—Adrian <’. Duff, one of the most daring news photographers of the country, aft:',” attaining a reputation ,of having a "hundred lives” while rt war photographer in Europe, Is dead here today. A taxicab in which he was riding In (Brooklyn yesterday crashed into a telephone pole. Duff d:o<fca short time afterward of a fractured skull. under the tutelage of Zella O'Hair, head of the English department of Shortridge High school. Dees was one of tbe soldiers picked by Belgium to visit the United States during the war, and he came 4n Indianapolis. Ha was impressed with the spirit of the city, and after he went back to Europe he made up his mind to return here as soon as the war was over, and learn Americanism in the Indianapolis schools. WON DECORATIONS AT MACHINE GUN. ITo is a modest war hero, wearer of three military ribbons, and said very little about two war medals pinned on him for bravery. Asa member of a Belgian machine gun company he served in the war since May, 1915, and in’ remembrance of his valor the Belgian military medal and the Serbian silver military medal were presented to tbe youthful soldier. Shyly he admitted that he had brought
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, MARCH 8, 19A).
down a German airplane with ills machine gun as the iron-crossed airman s\jept down over Belginh lines. Dees , was boi n In Brussels, Belgium. His father was a French tea merchant in Moscow. His mother was born in Russia. When the war broke out lu* was studying, and left his school work to help whip the kaiser’s forces that invaded Belgium. \ STRANGER ADMIRED BV ST I’DENTS HERE. in the minds of the students of Shortridge High school, Dees has been a>corded an enviable place of honor. The students admire the manliness of ins hearing and repeatedly ask him to teli them of his war experiences. Just why an Indianapolis newspaper should insist upon taking his picture and printing I*is story, Dees does not understand. It’s much of an enigma to him. *‘ln Paris only the big men are told in ze papers,” said Dees. He knows French, Russian, Belgian and German. Dees is staying with I/. O. Fuller, Sit East Twenty,seventh street, until life completes his work at the north side high school. Holland to Join League of Nations THE HAGUE, March B.—The first chamber of the Dutch parliament has voted, 31 to 2, for the adherence of Holland to the league of nations. The second chamber cast an affirmative vote on Feb. 19.
SEES DRY WORLD KEY IN AMERICA Col. Smith Says Other Countries Will Have to Follow. America can make the whole world dry, Col. Dan Morgan Smith declared in an address at Roberts Park M. E. church yesterday. “If we enforce prohibition in this country the whole world will ultimately go dry,” he asserted, “because the -world will have to go dry to compete with a dry and alert America.” “Prohibition must be enforced,” the speaker declared. “If you don’t enforce prohibition you'll have bolshevism rampant in America'” he declared emphatically and added that if the police won’t catch bootleggers the Anti-Saloon league will catch the police. “We've got to keep an eye on congress.” he continued. “For twelve months congress has obtained and kept the approbation of all thinking people in the United States by its strict enforcement measures. But if the liquor Interests ‘get <o’ congress just oue hour prohibition will be lost." Col. Smith, who is a Chicago attorn iy and Is touring Indiana under th,-: auspices of the Indiana Anti-Saloon league, also told the audience of his experiences with the A. E. F. in France, he having been in battle in the war. He declared the best memorial to the
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fallen heroes would be to make America a clean and wholesome place to live, and this can dot be done, ho said, without prohibition. PASTOR’S VIEW ON WAR RESULT The doctrine of the survival of the fittest wrought Germany’s downfall, Dr. Frederick E. Taylor, pastor of the First Baptist church, asserted in his Sunday morning sermon. “The reason Germany died wss that she believed in the survival of the fittest, and did everything she could to sustain that belief,” he said. “She sought to save herself rather than the world.” No nation can stand, the pastor declared, when it forgets the teachings of Jesus Christ and makes self-aggradize-ment uppermost. GOSPEL IN INDIA WINS THOUSANDS Conversions to Christianity are being made by thousands in India, Rev. A. E. Rassmann, recently returned missionary, told an audience in the Meridian Street M. E. church forum last night. "During the seven years I was there you could count the number of conversions on the fingers of one hand,” he said, “because my work was merely pioneer work. In other regions, however, where the missionaries have been working for fifty years or more, the conversions are being made by thousands.
with whole villages and castes being converted to Christianity at one time.” There still are millions of inhabitants of India who have never heard of Christ or seeil a white man, he said. EXPECT TO CUT DIPHTHERIA. NEW POItK, March 8. —Experiments by Dr. William H. Park, director of tbe ’Research laboratory of New York, are expected to decrease the present 10 per cent morality from diphtheria. Success with the Shlck test will enable mothers to learn if their babies are Immune.
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World’s Oldest Elk Has 90th Birthday VALPARAISO, Ind.. March B.—Alfred Brown, the world's oldest Elk, has just celebrated his ninetieth birthday. Joseph Brown, his father, was a neighbor of the Lincoln family in Kentucky end moved with the Lincolns to Spencer county, Indiana, by flatboat. His mother attended Nancy Hanks Lincoln when Ab was bom,
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