Indianapolis Times, Volume 32, Number 309, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1920 — Page 2
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KNOX BRINGS UP PEACE MEASURE Flays Wilson in Urging Resolution in Senate . WASHINGTON. May o.—Declaring that President Wilson preferred to “keep the country in an alleged state of war rather than abate one jot or tittle of the full measure his isolated Trill has set for the nation,” Senator Knox of Pennsylvania today opened debate iu the senate on his [Va-'e resolution. “The welfare and safety of the nation imperatively demand that we now nave peace,” Knox. "The whole world seethes with revolution. VOur own nation is in ferment and turmoil. “Force and strife are rampant and threaten the destruction not only of our property, but of our free institutions, and eren of our very lives. “And yet we stand, and have stood, for months as a rudderless ship foundering in the trough of tremendous seas. “We must not dare longer to delay a return to the ordered government of peace: we must not hazard a further postponement In turning our undivided deliberations -to our home problems. “They are great enough to tax the utmost wisdom we possess. •’MUST RKTt RN TO PEACE BASIS.” “Asa preliminary step the executive must be returned to bis peace time powers and prerogatives. “Internationally we are at peace ”0P national executive, with a stub born Irresponsibility, continues to declare we arc at war. “Bnt as a practical matter, the nr.ly war which be wages is against American citizens and American industry. "The situation Is so anomalous and so fraught with injustice and with posslbllitv of disaster that one can not reconcile it with the operations of sane statesmanship. “It Is not only legally unsound, but economically, morally and patriotically necessary and indispensable that w eat once repeal the declaration of war and so immeditely end the despotic war powers with which a power-maddened administration continues to misrule this great people.” WILL TARRY CARE TO HIGH COURT. Knox Indicated that the supreme court will be asked to rule on power or congress to declare peace by resolution. Knox said he was sorry it was necos ary for him to "make observations which I wish were not needful: to advert to certain conditions and situations which it were infinitely pleasanter to Mink or ignore, for it is an unwelcome task to judge one who has fallen in the public estimate. “But the time ha* come when we must speak plainly. “I entertain only sympathy for the president in his illness and sympathy for the country which must suffer under him because of it. “We must proceed now in the rescue of the people from their present unhappystate. leaving the weight of censure and responsibility for past errors and mis adventures to fall where it may.” Bible Club to Hear Lecture on Turks Hr. Charles H. Winders, executive secretary of the Church federation, tonight will address the members and guests of the Bible Investigation club, at the Y. M. C. A. building His subject will be 'The Turks in Europe,” the first of a spries of addresses on the general topic. "Challenging Problems of World Relationships. ' \ Dr. Winders will speak to the club every Wednesday night during May, June. July. August and September on various sociological and eronwrilems in world’ reconstruction work The usual "bean supper ' at 6:20. served to the member* and visitor*, will pre i.-eed the address tonight. Editor Will Address Chamber of Commerce Dr. George H Maxwell, editor of tb Talisman, will he the speaker at the regular weekly membership meeting of the Chamber of Commerce Friday noon. His topic will be “The Patriotism of Peace.” He will dtsens* with national officers of the American legion the plans for the adjustment of soldier compensation while in the city Dr. Maxwell recently was called before the honse ways and means committee on the compensation subject recently. Births Russell and Nora Roark, l<Cis Cornell. girl Charles and Nellie Roach, 3324 East Vermont, girl. John and Emma Grindstaff, 1137 Dawson, girl. Joseph and Marie Swallow. 146 Sontb Arsenal, girl. Martin and Rosa Schasnlk. 7fi7 North Haugb, boy. Glen and Alma Gary, Deaconess hog pital. girl. Henry snd Beatrice Miles. 0736 Cornell, girl. William and Mary Walters. 3338 North Tacoma, boy.. Leslie and Leona Hatfield. 613 North Alabama, boy Cora and Ethe] Joseph, 1118 East Michigan. gif Thomas and Clara Combs. 1102 Persh ing, girl. Lee and Nellie Hughes, .120 West Six-
teentb. girl Chester and Sylvia Leltngruber. hospital, girl. 4tnos and Edwards. 743 Center, girl Sam and Pearl Turbman, 32ft South Illinois, boy. John and Gertrude Qnillraan. 1128 Sooth Sheffield, boy. John and Anna Karsnak. lft3S Division, v hoy. Washington and Anna Shane, 75S Lexington, boy. John and Lora Miller. .W 2 Station, girl. Emmal and Kstei Beach. 122.5 Spann. boy Albert and Nettle Vaught, 1214 T'dell, boy. Frank and Lydia Harman. 2029 Cooper. bo*. Albert and Abhie Fishero, Thirtieth and Lafayette, girl. Oren and Ada .Tames, 517 Chadwick, girl. James and Mable Graham. 135 Linwood. girl. Walter and Ida Lynn, 513 North Alabama, boy. Adalbert, and Mabel Rawlison, Long j hospital, grlrl. Robert and Ruth Neff. Long hospital, boy. Leo and Della Eskew, 1127 Hoyt. girl. William and I.ueile Humphrey. Fl3 j Sooth Ritter, hoy. Si Monroe and Antonia Ferdon, 1242 Ash- j land. boy. Alvin and \ellie Kemper, 4257 Gullford. girl. i fgDonald and Rose Ryner. 511 Villa, girl. Samuel and Lula Glen. 737 Drake, boy. Albert and Alice Stevens, 136 East LaGrande. toy. Norris and Rosa Terrell, 316 Redmon, girl. Bert and Mayoma Holman. 417 Agnes, boy. Otto and Clara Johnson, 1802 Singleton, girl James and Lola MrClary. Ifif>o Ashland, boy. Everett and Irene stone, boy. i Charles and Rose Millholiand, ?fi I,in i coin, i>oy. ?. Grover and Etnina Stamhaugh. 142 De trolt, boy , Merrill and Lena Rhodes. Methodist ' hospital, boy. James and Ruby Freed. Methodist hos pitaL boy U Albert and Mary Hofmann. Methodist hoapltal. girl. Bay and Dorothea Bridgman. Methodist |lMUal, boy. Harry and May Rum rill. Methodist hos-
Claims Indiana for Wood lg& h Ws LEONARD WOOD.
Wood's Indiana campaign manager, Harry G. Hogan, this afternoon cla lined the general had won the stue by a pin
Germany Tries 14 Out of 290 Rebels BERLIN. May 5. V, joint commission ' or army staff officers and civil officials, which is Investigating the cases of 290 participants in the ill fated Knpp revolution. have completed fourteen of them. It was learned today. The commission recommended that seven he indicted for criminal offenses, four be cashiered from the army snd that the eharges against three be dismissed. Asks $2,500 Damages for One Black Eye MUSKOGEE. Okla., May •'•.— If som "unkind" individual should swing a right on your eyebrow cauisng on*- of your optic* to "go in mourning.' would you consider It worth $2.500.* Well. George Randall, of this place. * does. At least, that's the price h- set when he filed a damage suit ugainst R. D. Richard here the other day. Deaths Marr E. Okey. 67 . 2200 Ashland. - hronic inters! ittal nephritis John Gillespie, sc. 1943 Broadway, arl terio sclerosi*. , i Marv Catherine Han ok. SI. -t-s °r noil, mitral Insufficiency. George W Pier-e. ", Brill and Sum-n%aurhn-h uSl"n' n ’ <>' '“SKSfISrt w =• -• '"WS'm.- . vtn~nl. “yjSS- >* ho'piwi. .<* v,., Twentv seventh, sclerosis of liver. 1 Nettle rollleou. 28, De.u oness hospita. acute cardiac dilatation Southern Minola f*. Pierce. 1, 114 Meat Southern. “Margaret D’Bf.en. • I’A v '”' th A,a bam a arterio sclerosis RHlefon William F. Johnson. It. tab*** Hnrsall* . Infant Lowd.r, hour* ho*. P, Er , „ea a t ,e, AM a .mla. . IM* "rookside. *op ad °Spencer°'wtide. 21. 1142 Knox. Fayette, pni- ( monary tuberculosis v nr th Leonard V. Mebring. f>. 436 Nnr "’ °Mary h T^nr% P *=*• hronr^e P r U H on H,imphrey. 13. 2144 Shelby. ,o p"e? n F. m Gul:ier. . IM4 Hall place. 3 Ha diner Boniakl. 7 days. 752 Haugh. non closure of .-foramen ovale George Warms n Earl. 18. 1113 West. Twer tv-eighth, neutes cardla- dilatation, Anna C Rhodes. 60. 39 Oxford, broncho i pneumonia Mary France* Swallow. 4 dais. 143 South Arsenal, non closure of foramen i ovale. Robert Lee Thompson. 31. 136 North East, pulmonarr tuberculosis. Georgia A Judy, 72, 2101 College, cerebral hemorrhage. Mary A. Flrestinc. 77. 4015 Cornelius Irownlng (accidental).
Coffee Didrit Taste Right This Morning? Possibly your digestion is off" That sometimes follows coffee drinking, you know. Isn't this a pood time to try Instant Postum "There's a Reason n Made by \ Postum Cereal Company. Battle Creek.. Mich.
ralitv of 5.000. This Hiram Johnson' manager. Zell c. *w-.-un. refused to ion ppoi saying flip off' -n 1 ‘returns in a not give Wood a lea 1 at dll.
i RIGHT y^INDIANA^^ Rl SHHI-LK-lUrold Pittman. 2 years j old.was run down and killed Instantly J by an automobile driven by Glenn SomI raerville, 16 years old, last night. The 1 accident happened at Glenwood. seven | miles east of here. ANOERSON—Because of the shortage of r.:w material' the Ic-al Keniy plant ■ has dosed "down. It is expected It will | not reopen for two weely* The railroad 'trike is given as the cause of the ahdrt age of materials. I.\F.\Y KlTE—George Lartiart. an oil ■ salesman, dropped dead while on a husi ! ness trip to .ludwiile. His bom* was in Mulberrt where be ifave* * widow and three children. Mil l4t BENl*—Mr*. Marie May. wife of Mlrade Man" Harry .May. nt New, Carlisle, u In Kpworth hospital here with a broken ankle. The powers of the miracle man were unable to' reduce the ' fracture. MOINT LIBERTY— Mra. Belle l*. 79 was burled in Hobbs' cemetery to- ! day. She died Monday. Rev Lee .lack ; son 'if Jtoekfield conducted the services. EX \N"\ I 1.1. E. Ind., M.v Sf. —furniture making cam to a complete standstill here today when son more factory work or* Joined the 2.200 already on strike Those w-ulktng nut closed the laat two of the tw-tneyt Evansville furn.ttire sacThief Carries Key and Ransacks Home C R, f’bapman. 3464 Blrchwnod avenue, today told the police a burglar had entered Ills home, using a key to unlock tlm front door while the family was away. Two matches and a small sum of money were taken. A burglar entered the residence of L. W. I,uckey. 3302 Ruckle street, by fore Ing h window, some time during the night, ransacked the house and stole a rug valued at sls from the front room. L. B Mathews, a guest nt the Spencer House, told the police that he was robbed of sls last ntgbt. Mathew’s Is a traveling passenger agent of the Missoni? Pacific railroad. Californian Named on Mines Bureau WASHINGTON, May 5.- President Wilson today nominated Frederick G. t'ottrell of California to he director of the bureau of mines, to succeed Van H. Manning, whose resignation was accepted last week.
INDIANA DAILY TlBUfiS, WtiUivESDAY, MAY 5, 1920.
FIRE DAMAGES SEVEN HOMES (Continued From Page One.) out on the roof of the Peoples Outfitting Company storage house, 419 South Illinois street. This lirp was extinguished with a loss of about S2OO. ■ Mrs. E. C. who live* nt the home of Mrs. Amelia Mayers. 910 South Noble street, discovered the Noble street fire and telephoned tan alarm. "1 called central and asked that the fire department be sent to 910 South Noble street," said Mrs. Koblinan. “It was at least five minutes later I heard the phone ring and ran into the house and answered It. “The operator said: 'Did you want the fire department?'" The delay caused the spread of the flames, firemen declared.
FOILS PLOT TO MOB BLUEBEARD Sheriff Rushes Confessed Slayer Out of Town. LOS ANGELF.S. May s,—"Bluebeard" Harvey, confessed murderer of five of his two dozen "wives.” escaped tuob violence at El Centro, where cries of “shoot him ' and “lynch him ' sent shivers through bis wasted form. He was taken to K! Centro yesterday to direct authorities to the grave of Nina Lee Deloney, one of those whose murder he admitted. ' Bluebeard'' was smuggled out of El Centro in an automobile when the crowd became menacing, and Sheriff fltne, of Los Angeles county, was "tipped ' that a mob plot was afoot. He wm raced to Imperial, a small town below El Centro, and placed ou the train there. A coroner's jury charged Harvey wirh the murder of the Deloney woman last nigtif after Hanev had conducted a searching party to her grave near here. | The body was found by searchers after they had dug out two or three shovels | of dirt. Harvey spent a restful night after his erewsoine experience He sat In his private compartment on the Pullman car and chatted glibly with i newspaper men and deputy sheriffs, lis-c-'tslng current subjects and o> aslonnlly I teferrlng to hi- <-ae He w* returned today to face ati j arraignment In ourt on a charge of murder in the first degree, to which lie has said he would plead gulltv with the assurance from Dltrl • IrtnrThomas Lee Woolwlne that l*f< senten<e would he recommended to save him from ( the noose | Today Woolwlne is doubtful as to what he will de. Asked If. In his opinion, it was no* sible for the court to disregard his r.% oinmendatlon of life sentence instead of death penalty. Woolwlne replied "I don't know what I'm going to do shout tha* ; 1 haven't fully ma le up niv mind yet.” The reply was taken as -n indication 1 that Wool-wipe may not recommend any thing with regard to the penalty Blue heard' must pay for hi* rime The body of Nina Lee Deloney will he held by the authorltlm here pending in structlons from her people in Kentucky
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U. S. WARSHIPS HEADED SOUTH (Continued From Page One.) tlence beyond all limits in exercising its diplomatic intercourse with Carranza, and it is indeed a shame that the masses of Mexico must be made to suffer for the acts of one who has clothed himself with the ‘robe of the invincible.' "Time will prove to the world whether the declarations of the liberal constitutionalists are sincere and made in good faith. “A majority of rhe state executives
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TV nunvmv hi us t lakh mnrt / iuhu net f Moused if and Tf* / to locANsrvtT , i f r- I t H.M4UIWO Si j' 1 Sr\ Ji T* • 1 roAMB$S(m\ Dandy 1 rail U 1 //-r s Ride With The Hoosier Motor r S niles of delightful, picturesque motor ride, and at no time. B - * from the Monument. Selected, thoroughly marked and pre- m inapolis by the Hoosier Motor Club. ( days (May 0 and May 16i have been set 'aside by the club 9, - } Indicate the DANDY TRAIL and get Indianapolis acquainted li, with this delightful, convenient motor trip. The trail passes many fine chicken dinner places—or you can take your * EVERYBODY INVITED 4” /gSSW May 9- -Starts at 10 a. m. from University park, on Meridian ' street. Moving pictures at start. Tour takes in north half oft“ 9 trail. Those wanting to go all the way around will have ample t time. (For afternoon only, a second pilot car leaves University '" 1 • May 16—Starts at 2 p. m. from University park. Takes In south half of trail. (Another pilot car leaves at 10 a. m. for those who wish to go and make a day of It.) • / To Ttffki haute | This is a Pleasure Trip—Not a Race . "f- Everybody Come! ' mdnh - * ’ - iCAU ib MtLCS ~ "* -• —— JZ t>*r.9\ IftßWi \ \ | • —.TtAM ntrr** ** ‘ flWfc 1 / — |TRtAMS ( I AT * nrtAUKLt* I q ewsbia-MK* • mvmd i T * * wo—!■ MOT*M CtlU *WM l>Llt . _ C , ~ ...... ,
of (he country, despite Carranza, seek to cultivate more thoroughly the friendship of the people of the United States and to Induce American capitalists to come to Mexico and assist us in developing our vast resources.” The execution of political prisoners will not be tolerated in territory controlled by the revolutionists, Gov. de la Huerta said. THIRD MEMBER OF FAMILY SLAIN EL PASO, Tex,, May s.—Mexican bandits near El Oro, state of Mexico, murdered Ralph Greenlaw Monday, according to word received here. Greenlaw wjs a son of Francis Green-
law who, with another son, was murdered at El Oro Monday by bandits. The capture of Torreon, in the wealthy ootton section of Mexico, was partially confirmed by reports reaching here today. GONZALES GOES OVER TO REBELS WASHINGTON, May s.—Gen. Pablo Gonzales who has been regarded as the most staunch military supporter of President Carranza, is,- in the state of Texico, near Mexico City at the bead of military forces ready to move on the Mexican capital, according to advices received here today at the agency of the Sonora revolution. The downfall of the Carranza govern-
ment is imminent because of the tion of Gen. Gonzales, it was predid^B at the agency. President Carranza will be permitt#* to flee from Mexico by way of Vera" Cruz, it was intimated at the revolutionary agency here. Rebels now hold control of the lines to Vera Cruz. Gen. Gonzales was called to Mexico City several weeks ago and reports thaU he would desert the Carranza governmeift were strongly denied. He ha* taken command of the troops which were under Gen. Manuel Gonzales in Texcoi-o. Gen. Obregon Is in Cbilpaneimo. Guerrero, and has issued a proclamation declaring himself under the orders of President dc la Huerto of Sonora.
