Indianapolis Times, Volume 33, Number 105, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1920 — Page 9

THIS MAY PROVE BOLSHEVIKI CURE Sent to Russia Put to ffWa Work. ! WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.-The state i department learned today from sources It regards as official that the Russian . bolshevik sympathisers and undesirables deported to Russia some months ago by the United States were at once put to work by the soviet authorities. They were unwilling to perform the tasks assigned to them by the bolshevik officials and were informed that there was In existence in Russia machinfry, operated by the extraordinary commission, for dealing wlta such cases, an institution that deals primarily with incipient rebellion and other movements dangerous to Bolshevism. Most of the deportees thereupon were set to work repairing the railroad beds, but some escaped under assumed names while others are under arrest and in \ the hands of the extraordinary commission for punishment. Acordlng to intelligence received by the government, most of the atrocities ill Russia have been committed by or | at the instigation of the extraordinary commission, which is characterised by officials here as a high handed and secret tribunal. i Until today's advices were received | there was doubt as to the exact fate of the deportees, who sailed from America ■ln seemingly high spirits and many of whom expected to bs received by the bolshevik authorities as martyrs and heroes. Among the deportees were Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman. SI,OOO, PRISON FOR ASSAULT ON GIRL ’Claude Wilbur Gets 30 Days for Auto Theft. One man was sentenced to the Indiana •rate prison and two young men were sentenced to Jail today by judge James A. Collins of the criminal court. Claude Wilbur was given thirty days and James J. Carr twenty-four hours in Jail when they ' were found guilty of charges of stealing an automobile belonging to the Fisk Automobile Company on May 12. Edward Rist, 45, was found guilty oi criminally assaulting a 13-year-old girl end was fined 51,000 and sentenced to serve from two to twenty-one years in the Indiana state prison. Charges of criminal assault against William Oliver were dismissed In the criminal court, but be will face charges ©f contributing to the delinquency oi A child in the juvenile court on Sept. 2b, it is announced. Many Women Serve as Assistant Hostesses The assistant hostesses at the tents at the republican state and national committees at the state fair yetserday included Mrs. Isaac Wolf, Camden; Mrs. Ernest Hope, South Bend; Mrs. Homer Tyler, Laporte; Mrs. Frank Howard, Remington; Mrs. William F. West, Peru; Mrs. M. C. Garber, Madison; Mrs. Bruce Wheatcraft, Whiteland; Miss Gladys Trueblood. Salem; Mrs. Edward F. Nelson, Munele, and Mrs. J. F. Barnhill, Mi-s Dorothy Cunningham, Dr. Amelia Keller, Mrs. Mary P. Kiddle, Mrs * “orgia Rosch. Mrs. Thomas J. Gardner, V ■ Joseph B. Kealine. Mrs. Ovid 3. Dunn, Mrs. James P. Goodrich, Mrs. B. t-. I.es’.i, Mrs. Charles L. Smith. Mr*. 11. Vo.vlea, Mrs. R. Harry Millar, MM. J. Andprson. Miss Eleanor Barker. Mrs. Henry Knud sen, Mrs W. A. Reagan, Mrs. Hattie Lambert and Mrs. R. . I Juggler. IddiatiHpollS. The Huntington ladles’ quartet furnished the music yesterday, and will l>e heard the remainder of the week. The quartet includes Hope Uhenowith, Ress Brown, Annette Purviance, and Frances L ShideDr. and the-accompanist is Esther Davis. Mrs. W. A. Roach has charge of the Teg tratjbn at the committees' booths end report' that hundreds of women have xc?istered during Hie week. Democratic Meeting Changed to Tonight A reception for the democratic county candidates will be held tonight at the lari f na Democratic club, instead of Thursday evening as was announced previously. Fred VanXuys will be she principal speaker. Roosevelt’s Uncle Is Killed by Train POUGHKEEPSIE. N. Y., Sept. 10.— "Warren Itelano, uncle of Franklin Roosevelt, was killed at the Barrvtown station f the New York Central when his horse Sashed on the tracks In front of an express train, carrying him to death.

CA %jfaj the values are the best obtainable. In a word, this is the store 7-jwi Elgin or I *A l I wf that firmly believes in the Square Deal. Every customer must \ I ai“ P TiiM rl C ome7 B 9 i • ml be pleased. You can have every confidence in Rite’s. Ask any- \ | ca B < n e * r^ t J, and T °£ |f I Beautiful full cut I? body—any bank—any business house in the town—they’ll tell you \ I £hou n id ca tftke , ‘a'dvan- || B brilliant stones of ■ } hat Rite’s not only believes in the Square Deal but puts this belief l I tuniV°to ow'd p ? °n a | good color rings B practice. If inconvenient to pay cash, open a charge account I I watch.

BRYSON GIVES INDIANA TOTAL QUOTA $450,000 (Continued From Page One.) have a mind to and use it to help In the national campaign. “I suppose they could.” Pomerene asked Uphum to furnish specific detailed figures concerning the use of lecturers to spread G. O. P. propaganda with the names of the speakers. “The audience who heard these Chautauqua speakers did not know who was paying for the lecturers?” asked Pomerene. “I don’t know,” said Upham. Upham demurred at furnishing figures on expenditures, since the convention. “Is it quite fair politics,” he asked, “to have us furnish that information during the campaign; that will give the enemy considerable Information. Pomerene said, “The other side can get the same facts about the MOORE AGREES REQUEST UNFAIR. E. H. Moore asked the committee’s permission to say that he agreed with Upham that the request was unfair. .Pomerene insisted and the committee backed him up. Upham said he would produce the Information. Upham was followed by Moore, who was questioned by Kenyon regarding democratic plans to raise money. The witness said no plan has been worked out. Democratic activities are just commenc- j ing, he said. Sloore had not heard of efforts by an ; antl-prohlbitlon organization to help the i democratic ticket. “The use of your name In the pros- j pectus of the anti-prohibition society as one of the patrons of the body is unauthorized?” asked Kenyon “It is,” Moore said, COMMITTEE TO CONTINUE IN' SESSION. The committee's plan to recess tonight was upset by failure of South Dakota witnesses to arrive today. Senator Kenyon announced, following an executive session of the committee, that the hearings here will end tomorrow night and will be resumed Sept. 22 in some eastern city to be decided on later. Moore denied knowing anything about fund raising by New Jersey liquor Interests in behalf of Co*. The committee has twice subpoenaed George A. Carroll of Elizabeth. N. J., to tell of a letter he wrote asking for funds, but Carroll has not appeared. “We are going to get Carroll before ns before we are through,” said Kenyon. Moore denied knowledge of activities by the Ohio Liquor league. So far as he knew, Moore sal<l. no "wet” organizations ever contributed te Cox's campaign fund. Kenyon put into the records a statement of 51.400 campaign expenses of the league in Cox’s 1016 campaign for governor. Kenyon asked nbout the league of nations propaganda. Moore said both parties were spreading such propaganda, but the democratic national committee had nothing to do with It. Reverting to the liquor question, Moore slid if “wets” used his name they did It as a means 'to get money out of suckers.” “I hope this committee isn't trying to inject a wet and dry question into the campaign,” said Moore. “No liquor organization contributed to Cox's pre-convention campaign, and so far as I know none has contributed to the democratic fund since.” Miners in Colorado Threaten to Strike DENVER. Colo , Sept. V>. Another coal strike In Colorndo is threatened today as a result of the action of 3,000 miners serving notice on operators yesterday that they would walk out in thirty days unless they were given an Increase of 51 .50 n day. The miners belong to the United Mine Workers of America. Auto Hits Boy, 4 Joseph Martin, 4 years old, 242 North Jefferson street, was injured today when he was struck by an automobile driven by Edward Pchnoe, 3702 East New York street, at Jefferson and New York streets. The boy was taken home. v RUSH VILER PASTOR AUTO VICTIM. RUSHVILLE. lnd., Sept. 10—The Rev. George F. Sheldon, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, died late Thursday in a hospital at Ft. Wayne, as a result of Injuries sustained In an automobile accident there Monday. PROMINENT EI.K DIES. MARION, lnd., Sept. 10.—James Bock:us, 50, a charter member of the Marlon lodge of Elks and at one time Us exalted ruler. Is dead In Baltimore, Md. The body will be brought here for burial.

MRS. HYLAN DOES OWN HOUSEWORK Wife of New York Mayor Says It’s Fair. NEW YORK, Sept. 10—The wife of the mayor of the great city of New York does her own housework. She enjoys doing her own housework. A report that Mrs. Hylan was taking care of her own home and cooking her meals occasioned considerable flutter among that part of femininity which spends Its leisure hours retailing the idiosyncrasies of the “last cook.” But It Is true. Mrs. Hylan herself verified It. She handed out some advice as follows : “Knqjr how to serve yourself and your own family. This is the only safe answer to the servant problem. “I have been without a servant since early In May. The Judge Hylan) and myself have suffered no discomforts because of our lack of home help. On the contrary, we are enjoying ourselves, having a regular picnic. “When we dine at home there is no maid to interrupt the freedom of our chat and confidence by her presence. If we dine out, all we do is shut up the house and go on our wny. “We have had a great many problems facing us every day, but tbe servant problem is not one of them. We wait on ourselves and each other and like it.” WOMAN’S PARTY PLANS NEW MOVE Propose Board to Pass on All Political Candidates. PORT WASHINGTON, N. Y.. Pept. 10. —Establishment of a woman s political censorship board was to be discussed here today. The executive committe of the na-! tional woman’s party, In sesaion here, j was to consider the future of that or-. ganization. The general impression was that the committee would decide to recommend reorganization of the party as a sort of censorship body which would Indorse or reject candidates of the old parties or, In case none of these was acceptable, to put up candidates of Its own. Othei possibilities were disbanding of : tbe party or lta establishment as a separate political x>arty. Both of these, however, were believed to be remote. The meeting was to be held at the home of Mr. sO. H. P. Belmont. Credit Men Have 2 Tickets in Field The following nominating committees for the annual election of the Indianapolis Association of Credit Men have been announced : For the regular ticket: W. V. Bosell, chairman; William E. Emerson. Edwin Manouge, M. E. Needier and Charles E. Wagner. For the second ticket: O. A. Farthing. Paul R. Jones, A. W. Macy, G. A, MUlett nnd Byron J. Smith. The nominating committee for the second ticket will elect it* own chairman. Foresight Costs Man SSO on Booze Charge Harry Freyn, 1709 West Vermont street, used a little foresight April 1. 1918. On that tint", according to his story in ■ city court yesterday afternoon, he bought most of the sixty quarts of , bonded whisky, six qusrts of gin and three quarts of cognac found in a trunk at his home. Freyn said the liquor was for tncdic- , inai purposes. Judge Pritchard fined Freyn 550 and ! costs on the charge of receiving liquor from a carrier. New Enrollment Since Tuesday Reaches 700 Approximately 700 new pupils have been enrolled in Indianapolis elementary ■ schools since Tuesday, according to rej ports received today in the office of 1 Supt. E. U. Graff. [ The total number of paplla now in tbe grade schools is 34,171, with two schools j .vet to report. No reports from the three high schools were received. Accused Burglar Escapes at Lebanon B. M. Lewis, Boono county sheriff, notified the Indianapolis police today that Wilbert King, 24, who waa being held for burglary, escaped from the Lebanon Jail last night. The Indianapolis police were asked to watch for him.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10,1920.

FAMOUS BUDGET ELUDES REPORTER (Continued From Pag® One.) piled and had never seen it, and so did not know Just what it looked like. The reporter described it, as best he could, never having gotten any closer to it than the distance between the reporter's table and the city clerk’s desk at the public hearing. “It’s a bjg, brown, cloth-bound looseleaf book,” said the reporter, who was as helpless In this instance as would be any average citizen on a similar mission. The employe searched the mayor's office diligently but failed to find any “big brown clothbound looseleaf book.” “He must have it locked up in his desk and I have no key,” the employe explained. WOULD TRY CONTROLLER. "All right, I’ll try to see the controller's copy,” the reporter answered, sucto fate, as all good reporters must sometimes. So to the controller's office the reporter went, only to be fbld by a deputy controller of whom he inquired if Mr. Bryson was in: “I haven’t seen him since lunch.” It was then 4 o’clock. Collecting his rapidly waning hopes of seeing the famous budget before nightfall the reporter explained his desires to the deputy. But it was not to be. Nothing could disinter that deeply burled document. The deputy didn’t know where it was kept, but thought it was in the controller's desk and of course that was locked, and wouldn't the reporter come back tomorrow? Leviathan Is Left to Rot at Hoboken WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Shipping board officials admitted that tbe great trnns Atlantic liner Leviathan, formerly the Hamburg-American line Vaterland, sale of which was blocked by an injunction obtained by William R. liearst last January, may never be seen again on the high seas. This ia due to the fact that the great liner, cow aground in the mud of its Hoboken dock, has deteriorated to so great an extent that It will require an outlay of almost 58,000,000 to put It again into condition for sea service. When the liner recently was offered for sale by tbe shipping board not a single bid was received. Cruiser Pittsburgh in No Danger, Report WASHINGTON, Sept. 10—Tbe United States cruiser Pittsburg, which la on the rocks in the Baltic sea off Libau, la In no imminent danger. Vice Admiral Huse today Reported to the navy department. The vessel Is In four fathoms of water and two of her double compartment# are flooded. The destroyer Broome is standing by. GRANT COUNTY TAX RATE UP. MARION. lnd.. Sept. 10.—Grant county's tax levy for 1921 will be 3Ha cent*, according to action taken by the county council late yesterday. Thia is an Increase of 14Vi cents over the 3920 levy. After you eat—always as® ATONIC —one or two tablet*—eat like candy. Instantly roiievesHeartburn. Bloated Gassy Feeling. Stops indigestion, food souring, repeating, headacheand the many misertea caused by Acid-Stomach E ATONIC U the best remedy, it takes the harmful acids and gases right ont of the body and, of course, you get well. Tens of thousands wonderfully benefited. Guaranteed to satisfy or money refunded by your own druggist. Cost a trifle. Please try it I You Needn't fear an Attack of Epilepsy if you wRI take the Kosine Treatment for Epilepsy or Fits. Begin right now to build up and reatore your Injured nervous system so that you will feel that old time freedom from danger. Kosine will tone, strengthen and renew the whole nervous system. Prevents return attacks If taken in time. Large bottle, 53. We'll refund your money if you are not satisfied. Write for free treatise. Sold by Henry J. Huder. Washington and Pennsylvania etv., Indianapolis. Kosine Company, JI2B 15th St. N. W. Washington, D. C.

AIR MAIL BIDS OPENED TODAY Specified Service Must Be Cheaper Than Rail. WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Otto Preager, director of the mall service, at 4:30 p. m. today was to open bids from private companies for carrying the air mall over four new routes. All air mall now Is operated by the postoffice department. The new routes are from Cleveland to Detroit; Pittsburg to St. Louis via Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis; New York to Chicago, through Harrisburg, Pittsburg and Ft. Wayne, ana from New York to Atlanta via Washington, Raleigh and Columbia. Bids have been received for each route up to this morning at the postoffice department. Under the regulations ' the bids must provide for service cheaper than that furnished by the railroads, Prager said. CORRECT AGES MUST BE GIVEN (Continued From Page One.) guilty of refusing to reveal their* ages! according to registration officials. The women are the most frequent offenders, however, the officials say. It was reported that forty of tbe 300 women who registered at the headquarters of the League of Women Voters refused to reveal thei£ correct ages. SOME OF ’EM TOLD THE TRUTH! GREENSBURG, lnd.. Sept. 30.—"1 am over 21” and ”21 plus” was the manner in which some women'who registered here stated their age*. Some of the women were Just as exact in stating their ages as if they were writing the same in the family Bible and others clipped off a few years from their exact ages. It la said the average age of tbe women voters of the county is fifty years, but that the statement could not be verified by tbe registration blanks.

The National Store Closes 6:00 P. M. sh Iyt •&% *£* ts V* u Store Closes 6:00 P. M. I Saturday 1 UmilUT CJ \L'U. Saturday ~ —* n ‘^ b, ‘“ d Experiment Warm A.IT A | stall your ' furfll jlHii e pS | g comfort of your fa J Sold''on Easy Pay- - I Estate j McDougall /£ * *> " * *. '• ’ l lar a week secures one • 9 or at th, store. This stove is h > , , ~ A m nt , * mT/™ * t Al 1 i v ~ . ~ ~ , j of these cabmets. THE NATIONAL II ..‘j 0* sold by the National on easy > Introduced the McDougall y. payments. s SI.OO WEEKLY Indianapolis. Electricity Is Life jl You will save time, work and doc Beatltifv YoUT Home Bv We Suggest JeWelrM F tor bills by doing your housework ; ueauiiry A OUT nomc vy 66 '■ -V ;: electrically. The National carries jj Beautiful RugS |i 2lt W-*^- > a com P lete llne of machines and ;j ;j The Katlonal . g big daylight rug department has a full as- ;! m( " t beautiful drslgaa Get^D ;! sells them on easy payments. sortment of beautiful rugs and on easy payments, too. > ; you want on easy P&raMHgd£gg| NA TIONA L FURNITURE Jgj Out of the High Rent District A 335-337-339-341-343 West Washing

ESCHBACH RAPS SCHOOLBOARD (Continued From Page One.) not less than 510 nor more than 5500, and Imprisonment in the county Jail for a period not to exceed six months. A second, or *n> subsequent offense, places the offender Itahle to a heavier fine and Imprisonment and to disfranchisement for any determinate period. Mr. Eschbach, in his statement, took the school board to task for the apparent lax manner in which business has been transacted for some time past, when he said: ‘For years It has been tbe practice for the business director of tbe board of education of the city of Indianapolis to place at the desk of each member of said board Just before the convening of tbe regular business meetings a formal approval for the expenditure of public moneys—sometimes thousands of dollars. “The Member is expected to sign such approval and has done it for years, sometimes without any adequate conception of how much money has been expended—whether legally or illegally—sometimes without regard as to whether the echoo’. city bas had value received. This was a violation -'f the oaths of the members and the statutes of the stats, und exceedingly poor business. “The school city each year, for a number of years, has bought thousands of

Granulated Eyelids To cure Granulated Eyelid*, apply DR. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL to the tower Ud* just at the base of the lashes. Pull the lower Ud away from the eye so that you can get at It better and avoid touching the eyeball. It relieves Instantly, takes out all Inflammation and heal* and care* the sores. A Healing Antiseptic of the highest quality, Recommended by every druggist. 30c par

dollars of manual training equipment. “There la no inventory in existence sot all of this equipment; no one could come within thousands of dollars of giving an itemized or detailed list of this nor where much of it conld be found. “The business of the school city of Indianapolis for years baa been conducted inefficiently and in many eases in an illegal and wasteful manner and those responsible without regard to politics or position should not be shielded by biased Interviews or unreliable and colored reports.” George C. Hitt, business director of the school board, refuses to comment on Mr, Eschbach's statement, declaring that It is a matter for the president of the board to take up.

Select Your “HOT BLA‘2g Soft Coal Stove Now! a|H —Select your stove now—make ~ ; ' ralgyHß a payment down—and get vour A^ra^B|||Eg|§ stove at last year’s price. mmk t| —Stoves coming in will necessar- fismjSM i ily be higher in price. Why pay LaPV jWpl more when you can select your L’mlkal “Hot Blast” now, and it will be LcSyi ♦, delivered to you whenever you wish it~at last year's price. —We .sell for cash or payments ■—and deliver the stove when you are ready for it. Come in soon. Priced from $20.00 up. £f LILLY HARDWARE CO.

school board, In a statem Bgjpg Mr. Eschbach, said that the present year the state t counts was invited by the to Investigate certain charg^H He said that the school authorized the expenditure oIH violation of the law, “but th4B prevent an executive official tV something about which the bo* nothing,*! he added. i Fiiume Independ FIUMB, Sept 10.—Gabriele d| has proclaimed the indei>en| Flume and adjacent territory n state of Quarnero.” ll