Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 89, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 August 1921 — Page 3

GOMPERS SAYS LABOR PRICES MUST NOT DROP Declares Workmen Will Fight Wage Cut to Last Ditch. RAPS SOCIETY IDEAS Special to Indiana Dally Times and Philadelphia Public Ledger. ATLANTIC CITY, X. J., Aug. 24.—Defending the toiler who “rid#* to work In bis own automobile and send* out for ice cream” to top off his dinner pail lunch, Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, speaking for the executive council of the federation, now in conference here, declared last night that organized labor will resist efforts to reduce wages because It would act as a "bootrercng” and further stagnate industry. “Wbq is It, in all this talk about re adjustment and construction that the pressure is always brought to bear upon those whose standards of life and every day existence would be demoralized and deteriorated by a reduction in wages and why this drive to reduce wages first?" he asked in a siatement that came with the conclusion of the first day’s deliberation of the council. •‘Wouldn’t it be mors humane to start with ‘them as have’ and whose profits or incomes derived from their surplus cavings would be the only factors agfected? The question Is between profits In dollars or the demoralixation and deterioration of the American wageearners' standard, and who Is there who can point out a workman and truthfully *aj: “That man’s family Is living letter than a decent American citlsen’s family should live and Is receiving wages more than commensurate with the cervices he renders society?” “These are only a few of the things I hear being discussed and are asked me as I come in contact with the rank and file on my travels throughout the Cnlted States. They cannot understand how readjustment and reconstruction can only mean a reduction In their wages. 1 have been asked: “ ‘Who among the capitalists has suggested a reduction in the rate of Interest on a loan or a reduction of profits or even simultaneous reduction of wages and profits?" BATS V MMPI.OTMEST AFFECTS MARKETS. “There are over five and a half million unemployed In the t'nired States, according to the report of the Department of Labor. “Thu subtracts from the purchasing power of our home markets an amount equal to the wages lost, or $27,500,000 a day. or almost o billion dollars a month. The fact that these men. willing and anxious to work, are forced Into Idleness. Is an indictment, is an economic crime. “Force down wages as a way out and yon will further curtail our domestic purchasing power, more factories will close because the people haven’t the money to buy their products and the present depression will become even more acute and the reduction. If it can be forced upon ns. will not only prove a boomerang to the employer, but a menace to our economic, financial and political structure. “I answer most emphatically ‘yes’ to the question as to whether organised labor will resist attempts of capital to reduce wages. "A few of the reasons why we shall are: Organized labor is not a separate and distinct species of animal inhabiting this mundane sphere. They are human. Just as you and I. God placed in their breasts the germ of aspiration and imbued them with that natural instinct of self-preservation and the germ of thav Instinct can not be isolated, torn out or annihilated by law or tyranny. “In spite of the old concept of master and slave, there is taking place In the entire world today, a revulsion of feeling against that condition of society which prevents one’s standard of life bearing any relation whatever to the service rendered society. Instead of being a direct ratio. It is In inverse ratio today “The war proved among other things that the workers are the producers of all wealth and that It is their service upon which our national strength and prosperity depends. Why sbou’dn’t there be some better relation between the standard of life and the all-essential service they render? Why shouldn’t they have an ever increasing share in the product of their toil and some voice in the determination of the conditions upon which they sell their labor, without which toil, society and civilization would shrivel and perish ? TARES HOT SHOT AT RENT GOL'GERS.

“Why, X remember right here !n this hotel before It was entirely finished, some of the guests declared In amazement: 'What In the world are we coming to?’ some qf the carpenter! came to work In their automobiles and sent out at lunch time for ice cream. That Is a dangerous concept of the day among all too many. Automobiles and Ice cream are all right for those who don't serve society and who produce nothing, but the tollers must enjoy none of the good things of life, they must aspire to nothing. Theirs is but to drudge. This Idea Is inhuman. Who has the right to say ‘you shall have no more than Just enough to live on ?' "Is that what society expects the redblooded American of today to be satisfied with? Should I be mealy-mouthed or apologetic when I demand for them a little better share day by day In the product of their toll, that a little light and happiness may be brought into their lives and that they first may be able to bring decent children Into the world and then be able to keep them in schools where they may he fitted to take their places as the future guardians and protectors of our institutions of democracy and freedom ? "The women know the cost of living has not come down. Instead with profiteering renting unchecked and unrestrained, it Is going up, especially rents.. Ninety per cent of the homes !r the United States were built before the war, but the exorbitant rents gouged out of the tenants by the profiteering nd unscrupulous landlords Is blamed on the high cost of lahor during the w/.r." —Copyright, I9‘_T, by Public Ledger Cos. Wednesday Nights Set for Obligation Although the next big formal inltia tion meeting is set for the nlgbt of Wednesday, Aug. 31, it is announced that kusinees meetings of Ben Harrison Camp No. 356, Sons of Veterans, are to be held every Wednesday evening at the Denison Hotel, parlor floor, either by the camp or by the woman’s auxiliary. It Is stated that persons wishing to take the obligation will be accommodated at the business meetings. At the headquarters booth of Ben Harrison Camp, Pennsylvania and Markets streets, it is stated that the membership campaign of the esmp thus far has obtained more than 650 new membership anpiicstiens. It la from the big waiting list thus created that a large class Is expected to be drawn for au Initiation ceremony the evening of Aug. 31, and for another the night of Monday. Sept. 26, at the time of the opening of the cotnmandery In chief encampment to Indianapolis of the Sons of Veterans, C. S. A,

IN THE REALM WHERE WOMAN REIGNS

KEEPING HOUSE WITH THE HOOPERS

(The Hoopers, an average American family of five, living In a suburban town, on a limited income, will tell the readers of the Daily Time* how the many present-day problems of the home are solved by working on the budget that Mrs. Hooper has evolved and found practical. Follow them daily in an interesting review of their home lire and learn to meet the conditions of the high cost of living with them.) WEDNESDAY’. The morning mail had brought the first news from the campers. The letter was from Henry and began: “Dear Mary—We reached our camping ground late yesterday afternoon, after spending the night on the road. Vie had a wonderful trip and no accidents as Billy is a careful driver. We are all un packed and settled for housekeeping and let me say right here I do appreciate having our things all separate, as you insisted on packing them in spite of my protests. Helen and Anne have begun to plan the work of the camp in a way that would surprise you. F don’t think you hsce done Helen Justice when you say she hates housekeeping, and that you are sometimes In despair about her in spite of all your pains. My only f**or is that she will begin to run the camp kitchen on a schedule and upset all my plans for cooking—how and when and what I rlease. And especially as Roger and I had decided to eat all the things w* were fond of first and leave what we didn't care for so much to be eaten up in one mess at last. I am rather worried over her activities. I suspect that 1 am not to be permitted to have a free hand. I cooked the dinner last night after we arrived. It consisted of bacon and eggs, potatoes, boiled rice, bread and jam, and ooffee. And although we ate up every scrap, Helen observed wbea she and Anne were clearing away the dishes thst It was not a well balanced meal, which of course discouraged m< greatly and would have amused you Immensely. I was quite prepared therefore when Helen took me aside and told me very gently that perhaps she and Anne had better do the rooking after this. I •hall help them, of course, but It looks as if they had some Idea of planning ths meals that will keep them busy while the boys and I are fishing. We have found a beautiful spot for our camp. It is near a stream with plenty of shade trees, and the weather Is not at all hot here In the heart of the woods, though out on the dusty roads It Is sweltering. “I hope you are having a pood time Be sure and go places, and can't you have some of your club friends visit you if It seems loneome? Roger has asked me not to write too long a letter, as It might set an example that you would expect him and Helen to follow. So 1 imagine theirs to you will be brief. “Lovingly yours. “HENRY."

Mrs. Hooper could picture Henry and the children in their woodv nook at meal time and thought delightedly of the pleasure they were having. As she looked at the letter again she pondered on Henry's suggestion That she have tome company to help make the two weeks pass pleasantly at home. Her j first thought was to do nothing of the kind, as It would only make more work —which had been reduced to a minimum since the departure of the family and was still growing lighter and lighter. The question of entertaining their friends came up frequently for discussion be- j tween Mr. and Mrs. Hooper, especially on those occasions when Auntie Belle was with them on one of her brief visits. Mayfield, like most small towns, main - < tained that social Intercourse nmong its members should consist in calling on neighbors often, and In entertaining small groups of friends informally or ' in family fashion at dinner. Mrs. Hooper had never accepted this mandate. She i called on each of her neighbors once a year, and it was only on the rarest oc casions that she asked any one to dine in their home. She was not an unsocial person, hut she had decided that cue I had neither time nor inclination to do so nor the extra money that entertaining, i even on a very small scale, demanded, j | She and Henry hsd many old friends in town, who she knew felt slighted by her attitude, bnt she hsd always re- I fused to take on the burden of having people In to Hinch or dinner, ss a means of keeping In touch with them. i'he tad a circle of favorites among the Woman’s Club members who dropped in on her occasionally at the tea hour, but outside of this Informal function tlat always went on whether any one can: < In or not. there bid never been much enetrtaining In the Hooper household, Henry and Belle both contented that she had less social life than any woman in Mayfield and that as satisfactory as she considered her housekeeping methods, In their opinion, there was room foi improvement in any schedule that tied her down so closely that she had no ’ time for frequent exchange of visits with her neighbors and that consequently deprived her of the recreation that was coming to her. In refuting their argmmenfs that she had no time for amusement or entertain- i tnent she pointed to her club meetings on S Friday' and the social functions of the j club, which beside the garden party In the summer and the dame in the winter' Included a members' luncheon in October when the new president took office. Then there were the Thursday night lectures and musicals at the town hall, provided for by an endowment fund, which she j and Henry attended regularly. Her own birthday as well as Henry's was inval- j uably celebrated by a trip to the city and the evening spent at the theater, and beside that she went to one matinee with the group of ten club women with whom she was assigned when their turn came to attend a play. This assured her of see’ng three of 'the best things of the season. But she knew perfectly well that this was not what Henry and Belle meant even before her Indignant sisterin law closed the discussion by saying: | “It’s positively heathenish, Mary, j never to have any company in your own i home. The wav this house runs on j from one month's end to another, with never a soul coming in to lunch or din ner, shows thst you haven’t the proper idea of sociability for all your housekeeping is so perfect.” And now. here was Henry suggesting that she have “company" while she was at home aione. The menu for the three meals o Thursday is: . BREAKFAST Stewed green gages. Dry cereal Waffles Coffee. LUNCHEON. Egg and Ijettnee Sandwiches. Blackberry Jam Rye Bread and Butter. Iced Tea. DINNER. Baked Stuffed Egg Plant Sliced Tomatoes Fruit Jelly and Whipped Cream Iced Coffee. BAKED STUFFED EGGPLANT. Select a firm eggplant, wash and boll in salted water for fifteeen minutes. Cut. In halves and remove the pulp, leaving about one-thtrd of an Inch thickness next to the skin. Place in a frying pan one tablespoonful of bacon fat and half a small onion chopped and half a green pepper also chopped. Cook, stirring fre quently for five minutes and turn into a bowl. Add one amall cupful of grated bread crumbs, three tablespoonftils of tomato catsup, a quarter of a teaspoon j ful of poultry seasoning, half a tea 1 spoonful of salt, a quarter of 3 tea- 1 spoonful of paprika, the minced egg-| plant pulp and three tablespoonfulg of rnaltad !•. Fill Inti the vegetable

shells. Cover with buttered crumbs and bake half an hour. —Copyright, 1921. WAFFLES. Two cups of flour sifted twice, with one taaspoonful of baking powder and the same of salt. Three eggs, one tablespoonful of butter or oottolene or other fat. Two cupfuls of milk. Beat the yolks smooth, add the milk, and turn this upon the prepared flour. Whip lightly and quickly for one minute, add the stiffened whites and drop by the spoonful into heated and greased waffle irons. EGG AND LETTUCE SANDWICHES. Mash the yolks of hard-boiled eggs to a powder and moisten with olive oil and a few drops of vinegar. Work to a paste, add salt, pepper and French mustard to taste, with a drop or two of tabasco sauce. Now chop the whites of eggs as fin<* as possible (or until they are like a coarse powder* and mix them with the yolk paste. Add half as much crisp lettuce chopped fine. If more seasoning is necessary, add it before spreading the mixture upon sliced graham bread. FRUIT JELLY’ WITH WHIPPED CREAM. Soak a cupful of prunes all night: drain and stew them until tender in three cups of water. Before taking them from the fire add a cup of sugar. Drain the prunes, keeping the sirup; chop them and stir into thorn two dozen blanched and chopped Almonds. Soak two-thirds of box of gelatine in a eup of cold water for two hours, add a cup of boiling water and the prune liquor. Stir over the firs until the gelatine Is dissolved; then remove. add the Juice of a lemon and two tnblespoonfuls of sherry. Turn Into a glass dish, and when partly congealed stir In the prunes and nuts. Every few minutes stir the Jelly until It becomes firm enough to prevent the prunes from sinking to tho bottom. Eat very cold with sweetened whipped cream. Any fruit may be nsed In place of the prunes (or a combination) and the nuts and sherry may be omitted. WHIPPED CREAM. The easiest and most rapid way to whip cream Is with an ordinary, oldfashioned wire egg-whip. Put the cream Into a shallow dish and set In the Icebo* until thoroughly chilled. Into a half pint of double thick cream stir two teaspoonfuls of sugar and begin at once to beat with regular, steady strokes, not removing the froth as It forms, but whipping until the eream Is a thick, stiff, smooth mass. If the cream Is cold. If the utensils are chilled, and the room Is not too warm, the desired effect may be produced in ten minutes or less. When the sillibub has reached the right consistency add a teaspoonful of such flavoring as you desire. A half pint of cream whips to a pint.

PUSS IN BOOTS JR. 'By David Cory You remember In the last story Puss had landed in China aid had met a little Chinese boy named Tee Sin. Well, as he and Puss rode along on the great farm buffalo toward the little ihatehed cottage where lee Sin lived with lis mother and father. Puss looked nt the fields of flaming poppy flowers which wore In full bloom and lay about the shabby little gray bouse Uk a red carpet. 1 guess le thought by this time that China was almost like a flower garden, for Just beyond the poppy field* wild flower* grew In all directions, fragrant pink clover, yellow rape and golden but tercups, and underneath the old bridge which they had Just crossed were red geraniums and forgot-me not* ami wild rose* of crimson and white, pink and yellow. • But as they cam# near the little cottage, Tee Sia turned to one side and stopped beside some lovely blue-blos turned klri shrubs. Then he pointed to a huge bunch of evergreen that hung over the front door. “I hare a little brother.” sold Te Sin "but until he Is a month old no one but my mother's nurse may enter our house Thst is the reason we hang the bunch of fir over the door.” Well, after that Tee Sin brought nnt his kite, for Chinese ’ oys are as skll ful as Japanese boys in kite flying, and when he and Puss were tired of that, little Tee Bin told Puss to follow him. and together they ran down the hill, past the hawthorn trees that grew In little clump* at the edge of the road, where the sweet throated cuckoos sang *0 merrily, until they came to 0 good-sized pond. Here In a little thatched cottage lived a little Chinese hoy friend with his old, lame father. „ And then this little hoy, whose name was Oyaraa, showed Puss how he raised ducks. Near the pond was a small hut with a very low roof, and In the Summertime the sun beat down so fiercely that it hatched the eggs, which were spread upon the floor, and the litt'e ducks would come out of the shells and waddle out to swim on the pond. “Look in and see.” said Tee Sin to Puss. So little Puss Junior peeped Inside the hut and saw the eggs wrapped in coarse nankin* on the floor. And this made Puss laugh, for he had always seen Mrs. Duck sitting on her eggs In a npst until the little ducks came out of the shells. Well, after that. Puss remembered that the Stork had told him always to return to the Magic Boat before night. So Puss asked Tee Sin to show him the way back to the seashore. The Magic Rost was

WOMEN WHO OVERWORK “Man may work from sun to sun. but woman's work is never done.” In order to keep the home neat and attractive, the children well dressed and tidy, women continually overdo and suffer in silence, drifting along from bad to worse, knowing full well that they need help to overcome the pains and aches which daily make life a burden. Lydia K. Pinkhara’s Y’egetable Compount? is a medicine with specific value which overcomes many of the worst forms of female complaints, as the letters constantly being published in this paper will prove.— Advertisement.

Just a touch s'- RESINOL Soothing and Healing and the itching f Estops Kc smarting even if the skin is only cool comfort.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1921.

Mem You May Marry By E. R. PEYSER Has a man like this proposed to you? Symptoms: Well built, well dressed, about 45, Van Dyke beard, talks like a lady, walks like a lady, uses his little finger in curves like a debutante, is a landscape architect, I3 very sociable, likes you because you were in the garden crowd at So and Si’s. Knows how to please the ladies, serve tea, suggest and design your clothes, order a meal, plan villas, graft flowers. IN FACT Its the only thing he could graft. He adores his work. Prescription to his bride: f\ Digest “How to know the wild flowers,” etc. V Get your men friends elsewhere. Absorb This: IT TAKES TWO TO MAKE A GARDEN OF EDEN. Copyright. 1921, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate.

still on the beach, so Puss shoved off and waved good-by to his little Chinese friend, Tee Sin. And pretty soon it grew dark, so Puss lighted bis Japanese lantern and hung It in the bow, and the evening breeze sprang up and began to sing: "Sweet and low, low aDd sweet,. The Mermaids are singing bemrath the see; But, little Puss Junior, you must go Wherever tho Magic Boat sails, you know; And soon to another land you'll find Your Magic Boat has been blown by the Wind. Copyright, 1921. by David Cory. To Bo Continued. \ ~ HOROSCOPE “Tho stars Incline, bnt do not oompfll" THURSDAY. AUt). 23. Again an unusually lucky day has dawned, according to astrology. Neptune, Jupiter and Saturn are all In benefle aspect. There Is a sign that promises calmer judgment on queations affecting the pen pie than has been encouraged In recent aspects of the stars. Neptune In friendly sway seems to Indicate the spread of saner Ideas on many problems affecting the everyday life of the people, and this kindly Influence may even reach the mind of women who wear immodest clothing. Jupiter presages increase of foreign trade and revival of many lines of bualness. Saturn In benefle power is read as auguring a big movement back to the land. Many colonization schemes will be tried and success seems to be foreshadowed. Persons whose birtbdato it Is may be too susceptible to romance In the coming year. Business and financial affairs should bo satisfactory. Children born on this day have the forecast of success and prosperity. Girl* may marry unhappily. DUKE’S BISON SLAIN. LONDON, Aug. 24.—The American bison presented to the zoo by the Duke of Bedford has been killed. The animal suffered Incurable Injuries on its voyage from the United States.

The Truth About Indianapolis LADDERS SINCE the first ladder was manufactured for sale in the city of Indianapolis, enough ladders have been produced in the city to reach all the way to Salt Lake City, Utah, and extend several miles into the lake. Os these, over thirty miles of ladders were produced in Indianapolis last year and shipped to practically every city and town in the country, while many were sent abroad. Among the diversified uses for which specific types of Indianapolis-made ladders are produced are those for household use, painting. interior decorating, fire fighting, building’ fruit picking, etc. In fact, Indianapolis produces every type of ladders from the heavy extension ladders which permit the fireman to scale the sides of buildings several stories at a time, to the little combination chair and ladder which milady keeps in her pantry to he used in reaching the higher shelves. Fletcher American National Bank of INDIANAPOLIS Capital and Surplus. $3,000,000.

LABOR LEADER REPORTS PRICES ARE ADVANCING Economist for Rail Unions and Miners Argues Wages Can Not Come Down. Special to Indiana Dally Tlm and Philadelphia Public Ledger. WASHINGTON, Aug. 24.—The pre dictions made by economists and labor and Industrial experts Immediately after the close of the war to the effect that there would be no reduction In prices, are being reiterated by the same authorities. W. Jett Lauek, formerly of the War Labor Board and more recently economist for tho railroad labor unions and the miners, is one of the first in the field with the assertion that prices now are advancing and will continue to advance, A return to tho pre-war levels. Mr. Lauck regards as merely a futile expeclatbin “horn of the blindness of men who always are looking into the past for the golden nge.” That view Mr. Lauck advances as the basis for another opinion that there can be no further reduction in wages. “There is no doubt, that prices now are advancing,” said Mr. Lauek, "and it Is perfectly clear that the advances are inevitable. It Is a hard, cold fact, that no Important scaling down of profits is to he expected in the near future.” Contrary to the general view, he explained. wages have fallen to a surprisingly amall extent, due to tne ability of organized labor to fight re du.-tions and to a moro alert public conscience, which feels the average* wage cnru*>r !s entitled to retain his hotter standard of living. The present indus trial depression, Mr. I.stick regards, as financial rather tiisu Industrial, a period of liquidation from war time inflation that shortly will be brought to un end. —Copyright, 1921, by Public Ledger Cos. DID IT RAIN FROGSf BASLE. Aug. 24.—After a severe storm in Western Switzerland tho ground was fonnd covered with frogs. Superstitious Swiss believe this an omen of great national disaster.

AMERICANS PLAN CEMETERIES IN FRANCE , ENGLAND Purpose to Perpetuate Record of U. S. Participation in World War. Special to Indiana Daily Times and Philadelphia Public Ledger. WASHINGTON, Aug. 24—Plans for the establishment of five permanent American cemeteries In France and England have been submitted to President Harding by Charles Moore of Detroit, chairman of the Fine Arts Commission. The plans call for cemeteries at Suresoes. Roinugne, Beileau Wood and Bony in France, and at Brookwood, near London, in England. Presidential approval of the arrangements is expected shortly. Originally there were approximately 2,400 burial places and 15,000 isolated graves of American soldiers and marines in Europe, and on Dec. 1, 1919, there were 75,663 registered graves. Requests for removal to the United States have amounted to nearly 70 per cent of the total number. PLANS RESULT OF INSPECTION. The plans before the President, Mr. Moore said, were the result of the inspection of American cemeteries in Europe made by him and the other two members of the commission. William Mitchell Kendall and James L. Greenleaf. The commission was accompanied by Col. C. Pierce, chief of the Graves Registration Service. “The cemeteries,” said Mr. Moore, "should be maintained permanently la all those places where American valor was

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conspicuous. Otherwise, our participation in those historic tattles Is in danger of being lost sight of both by our own succeeding generations and by our associates in the war. “This is even more apt to be the ease owing to the fact that due to our entry late in the war, our losses are small when compared with the losses of France and England. COMMISSION’S RECOMMENDATIONS. “The same reasons which apply to maintaining cemeteries at the strategic points of the war also apply to the necessity for adequate treatment in the ease of the cemeteries themselves. Unless the area of land included within them shall be increased appreciably and that land treated according to a well considered plan, our participation in the war, in so far as it is visible to the eye will be negligible. “This does not mean that large areas shall be taken and highly developed. The highest estimate of the cost of all the lands needed for the four cemeteries already decided upon falls well within JIoO.OOO, and the treatment recommended involves only plantations of trees traversed by convenient roads. In fact the commission believes its recommendations probably will be found more moderate and more modest than the American people will come to demand. For the present, however, they are deemed adequate.’’—Copyright, 1921, by Public Ledger Company. WOMAN M. D. HONORED. LONDON, Aug. 24.—Dr. Satyapriva Ghosh, graduate of Calcutta University and only 26, has' been admitted into the fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons. She is the first Indian woman physician to receive this honor.

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MEN AIDED GIRL FROM CLERMONT Two Employes Sentenced and Prisoner Taken Back. Frank Walsh. 25, and Clarence Toler, 30, employes at the Indiana Girl's School at Clermont, who *ere arresl id early yesterday morning by Sheriff George Snider and Detectives Rugensteln and Hynes on a charge of assisting Elsie Fry, 18, to escape from the school, were fou'id guilty by Judge Walter Pritchard *n city court late yesterday. Each was f! ,ed SIOO and costs and sentenced to lod days on the Indiana State Farm. Miss '/ry was returned to the school by Dr. Kenoska Sessions, superintendent. Walsh, a night watchman at the school, admitted his guilt to the court. Toler admitted taking the girl to Indianapolis, accompanied by Walsh, but said he did not know she had escaped as she wrs not using the usual uniform. Toler appealed his case to the Criminal Court and was released on a SSOO bond. Walsh has not appealed his case. According to testimony, the Fry girl was being held in the detention ward of the school late Saturday when Walsh went to the building and cut a heavy screen in one of the windows with a bolt cutter. Toler admitted taking the girl to where Walsh was waiting with a machine, and they drove to this city, where the girl was placed in a rooming house on North Illinois street. When the girl was arrested on a charge of being a fugitive from justice she was well dressed. She had a fur coat and a suitcase containing other dresses and wearing apparel. Detectives are Investigating the ownership of the clothes.

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