Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 102, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1921 — Page 3
AMERICA NOT REPRESENTED AT SESSION Geneva Meeting of League of Nations Has No U. S. Observer. HOOSIER MAY GET POST Special to Indiana Daily Times and Philadelphia Publto Ledger. WASHINGTON. Sept. 8. —America is neither officially nor unofficially represented at the League of Nations assembly meeting now in session at Geneva. Suppositions current abroad that David Jayne Hill, who was in the extensive America ‘‘Gallery" at the opening session on Monday, sat there as an observer on behalf of President Harding or Secretary Hughes are without foundation. Dr. Hill used to be a resident of Switzerland, even after ending his career ns United States Minister to Berne, for he and Mrs. Hill owned a chateau near Lake Gaueva. It is more than probable that the former ambassador to Germany will communicate his impressions of the assembly to highlyplaced friends in Washington, but if he does so it will be wholly of his own volition and in a strictly informal and private capacity. The Stato Department, of course, is keenly interested iu league developments at Geneva, but purely by way of keeping abreast of International events All West Point cadets are now athletes. For the first time in the history of the military academy athletics have been effleially introduced into the regularly prescribed curriculum. Addition of athletics to the academy course is the direct result of the World War and discovery that Uncle Sam is far from breeding a race of physically perfect sons Henceforward, West Point graduates not only will be trained athletes, but equipped to act as physical trainers when they leave the academy for the Army. It has been intimated in official quarters, that anew gheaf of diplomatic appointments may be expected soon. One of the former members of the service who iray be redrafted is Heury Lane Wilson, of Indiana, who was ambassador to Mexico from 1909 to 1913. Mr. Wilson was appointed ambassador to Turkey by President Taft, but was transferred to Mexico beofre . taking charge at the Golden Horn. He is said to aspire now to le sent to Constantinople. One of the first tills likely to be introduced in Congress when the session is resumed is the foreign service reorganization act, sponsored by Representative John Jacob Rogers of Massachusetts. The bill was drafted to a considerable ex tent by Robert Peet Skinner, the veteran American consul general at London. Its principal feature is one providing for an amalgamation of the diplomatic and consular services. T. nder that provicion consular officers would become eligible for transfer to the diplomatic branch, as in nearly every other foreign service in the world. Members of the Washington real estate board declare they are being maligned throughout the country in connection with rent profiteering during the armament conference. Board officials state that far from encouraging gouging, the organization has placed itself at the disposal of the State Department and foreign embassies and legations with a view to prevent profiteering.—Copyright, 1921, by Public Ledger Cos.
HERE’S ONE WAY TO GET FREE RIDE But the Taxi Driver Is Out Two Fares. ‘Two is company and three Is a crowd,” must have been the thought of the man who rented a taxi from Albert Richter, 21, 328 Warnan avenue, last night. The man, accompanied by a young woman, hired Richter at Illinois and Washington streets, to drive him north on Illinois street. When the taxi reached Illinois and Fifty-Fourth streets the man ordered Richter to turn the car around and drive south. He did and just before reaching Illinois and Forty-First streets the taxi driver heard the command, ••atop.” Looking around he saw the stranger covering him with a big revolver. “Get ont, and bent it,” ordered the man and Richetr deserted hi* automobile and started a hurried hike in the direction of Meridian street. The police emergency squad was called to 4170 North Meridian street, and met Richter. He told them the story of the ••hold-up," but sc id the man made no attempt to rob him. The police found Richter's automobile parked on Illinois street where the ‘’hold-up'' occured, but the man and woman had disappeared. OPEN WARONBOOTLEGGERS Forces Under Haynes Raid 19 Places in New York. NEW YORK, Sept. S. —Preliminary skirmishing in the impending nationwide war on bootleggers was reported here today. White Commissioner Roy Haynes was arranging reinforcements of the Eastern and Middle-Wont forces, n series of raids was reported along the Eastern coast. A gaurd was set up along the New Jersey coast line on a tip that rum running vessels were planning to laud. New Federal investigators brought to New York raised nineteen places In the Bronx and Harlem The fall offensive against liquor—the supreme effort to make America day—probably will be launched in every big city simultaneously. Information on which nation-wide raids iwill be made is being gathered in all parts of the United States, it was learned. Clear Two of Charge Desertion From Army Charges of desertion from the Army against two men who were found to have served in the World War have been dismissed at headquarters of the Fifth Army Corps Area. Fort Benajmin Harrison. It was discovered that Herbert S. Carpenter. registered at local board No. 3 Indianapolis, who was listed as a deser- ! ter, had served In the Army from Oct. 24. to Jan. 14, 2919. Th“ name of Frank H. Shipp, registered under local board ! No. 5, Indianapolis, also is cleared, he having served in the Navy from July 17 1917 to Aug. 15. 1019 Muncie Man Charged With Robbery of $1,200 Special to The Times. MUNCIE, Ind., Sept. S.—Accused of! betag the daylight robber who broke into I tthe Standard Oil Company’s safe here last Monday afternoon, taking $1,200. Otto F. Skeen, who formerly was employed by the company, has been arrested. He denies being implicated in the robtvry.
IrSouth Australia
King William street, the princlp al traffic artery of Adelaide. Booth Aus tral'a, laid out In 1839.
Adelaide, south Australia. Australia.—When first you step off the train In Adelaide, capital of the state of South Africa, you are struck with the idea that here is a modern city. Its streets are broad, exceedingly so. and down many of them runs a parkway of j trees. World travelers assert that Adelaide is laid out in almost duplicate of Turin. Italy. It is somewhat of a surprise to discover that Adelaide was not laid out within the last few vears. that its broad I streets and squares are fulfillments of | the plan made in 1837 by Col. William j Light, who was sent out from England as the first surveyor general. There was a great deal of objection when Light chose the site for the future capital, but he appears to have been a firm man who was convinced the beautiful, rising ground was an ideal spot, even though it was six miles from the best port in the neighborhood. Residents of Adelaide today are inclined ! to bless the forethought of Colonel Light. | He laid out a tract of land a mile square and all around rt he reserved a strip of j woodlands for park reserves, which now are splendid breathing spots for the population of 50.000 in the city proper and four times as many in the suburbs. These park lands total 1,900 acres, while the area of the land enclosed by them is 1,042 acres. Through the center of the city runs a pleasant little stream, the River Torrens, which effectually divides the business part of Adel de, south of the river, from the residential section. THEROMETEBS SHOW 110 IN THE SHADE. Adelaide is 35 degrees south of the I equator, about the same distance as Memphis, Tenn., Is north of it. It is six miles from the Gulf of St. Vincent and | hemmed In by the mountains of the Mt. | Lofty range. So it was no surprise to find it very warm there, even in March, w’hlch .s the beginning of the fall season in Australia. But we were not prepared for the excessive humidity. The average temperature of Adelaide in summer over a period of sixty years has been only 171 degrees. The average winter temperajture is 50 degrees. It was somewhat stag- ' gering to find the thermometer at 110 degrees in the shade and 30 degrees hotter lin the sun. Residents assured us this was unusual; that in Melbourne—or Syd- | ney. perhaps—such heat would not be out jot the ordinary (this is their little Jokel. | However, the official figures revealed j that on one day in the eitv's history , the shade temperature was il6 degrees i and that once upon a time, in 1882, the
* / * • '*
View of North Terrace, a fine exam pie of th fine street® to be found In Adelaide.
j temperature in the sun was ISO degrees. We are wondering what it will be like in | New Guinea, 10 degrees south of the equator. ! With these figures in mind it was easy jto understand the tropical dress 'of the people. Light, white dresses and widebrimmed bats adorned most of the womj en, while with helmets and white duck • were worn by the men. AND MOSQUITOS (SWARM AT NIGHT. At night the mosquitoes attacked us In swarms and it was a case of cover up your head with a sheet or be unmercifully stuug. By day the attack was kept up by pestiferous droves of flies. Again we thought of New Guinea. The people of Adelaide protect themselves by veils or nets around their hats, but the newcomer is well bitten before he seeks refuge in a generous anointment of oil from the nearest drug store. I was told. too. that this was not usual, but was due to the sultry weather and the proximity of the vegetation, along the banks .of the Torrens. * j Getting back to the streets of Adelaide, King William street, the principal business thoroughfare, is as fine a street as ; one could wish to see. It. Is 132 feet wide j and is lined with splendidly kept stores : and business buildings. The business | portion of Adelaide lies within four wide J spaces, or terraces, facing the cardinal points of the compass, adn all the streets meet each other at right angles. In VicArchle Blarkmore, an aged aborigine. He belongs to a race that is fast dying ont because It is unable to stand civilization. There are only a few hundred of these black fellows left In the southern port of Australia. Although these aborigines are said to have the lowest intelligence of any race in the world and it is hard to believe in view of the fact they are the boat trackers known. They can follow at a run a trail that would baffle one of our keen American Indians.
toria square, one of the principal squares, one finds most of the buildings in which the offices of the state government are housed. Several blocks north, at the end of King William street, is the governor's city home, surrounded by a neat park. Nearby are the libraries, museum, art buildings and other structures which have given Adelaide Its nickname of the Athens of Australia. It is hard to realize that in the early days the city was divided into acres which sold at the price of $3 each, each purchaser being limited to an acre. The site on which the town hall now’ stands was bought for that price in 1840. Today It is worth $260,000. The original price was regarded f.s high in those early days but It was fixed by law as the price of all land, good or bad. in the then colony. DIVERSIFIED PEOPLES MET ON THE STREETS. The people that you meet on the streets of Adelaide are a diversified lot, and an ancient “sundowner,’ or tramp, from the bush and desert districts, Is not uncommon enough to attract attentiou. He comes Into town with his “swag, or bundle of clothing, on his back and a tin pail for the boiling of tea in his hand. A battered slouch hat shields his weath-i er-beaten face and a long growth of whiskers rambles down his vest fronL He has come to town for a few days of carousing before he again takes to the Ascertain seasons, just before the beginning of winter, whole tribes of blackfellows, or aborigines, visit Adelaide to get the blankets which the government gives out. They might just as well receive these blankets on the reservations which are maintained for them, but many of these original inhabitants still live in the wild places from choice and prefer a trip to the city, even though it involves many weary miles of trudging on foot. I saw one of these aborigines, an old man who must have been 70. and who said his white name was Archie Blackmore. He tried to tell me his native name and even made a brave attempt to spell it in English, but we never connected. He was ragged and unkempt, and his whiskers were flourishing when he first appeared, shrewdly sized up those of us who were sitting on the hotel veranda and then wished us “good day, kind gentlemen and ladies." and passed around his hat. He had made a good collection before the porter spied him ; and booted him off the steps. He’s got enough now for a good one,” j said the porter "In about two hours he’ll be back, drunker than a lord, and
the police will have him again.” George was back in less than two hours, but was a transformed aborigine. He had fallen Into the hands of a barber. Gone were his whiskers, gone tho straggling locks of hair and the batterecr ; hnt had been replaced by a Panama with ! a bright blue ribbon. One of the street ! shoe shinersbad labored hard on George's I boots and he was a veritable dandy. And Ibe was still sober! It ;s against the law I for liquor to be served to an aborigine. but there always is some Individual who, | for the sake of a drink, will buy the I olaokfellow a bottle. I There are not many of these aborigines left in South Australia. Most of them are of the four mission stations, which are partly maintained by private l organisations and partly by state government subsidy A few hundreds are scattered out through the bush, living |ln the primitive style of their forefathers, and quite content because the government feeas and clothes them. At toe mission stations food and clothing Is given in exchange for work on the farms. At least that is the theory, but I was told that work and aborigines do net f fit well together and that there are morn natives than there Is work for them to do. Some of the residents, too, are hnlf--1 castes, snd they seem to have absorbed all of the vices and faults of both blacks and whites nnd have appropriated the virtues of neither. NO WOODEN HOUSES* FOUND IN THE CITY. Driving through Adelaide in a motor car on the way to the country the fact that all of the homes are of brick or stone and none of wood Is striking. This is the result of a law which forbids the erection of a vooden structure inside the limits of the city proper. The heat Is usually so great and the rainfall of twenty inches a year, mostly In the winter, eo l'.gbt that wooden buildings are considered too great a fire menace io be permitfed. One who has seen other parts of Australia notices, too, that corrugated Iron roofs are scarce In Adelaide, that tile Is more favored. This probably is due to the fact pottery is one of South Australia’s industries and that brick and tile making is another because the clay Is to be found right there, and It mokes brick and tile cheap. Stone, too, Is plentiful and many houses are a combination of atone and brick The California bungalow type of home seems to be the favorite and a majority of them have nice front gardens and hedges. The streets of Adelaide are well paved with asphalt or wood blocks, and most of t'le roads In the surrounding country are exce.lent and wide. They lead to splendid dairying and vineyard and orchard farms, and it was our pleasure to see what Is called the best Jersey herd In the at Llndeu Park, the country estate ,>f Mr. Peter Wood. The herd
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1921,
boasts both past and present State champion milk cows and the best cow In the State. PORT ADELAIDE GOT ITS START IN 1832. Following a stretch of broad asphalt road six miles brings you to Port Adelaide. on the Gulf of St. Vincent, the place through which South Australia ships the bulk of its exports of $50,000,000 a year and receives Its imports of $26,000,000. It was in 1852 that the first shipping of any consequence came to Adelaide from England by way of Cape of Good
Left—The Education building, which stands at the end of King William street, near the governor's city home. Right—The government postofficr, also located in King William street. <
Hope. In those early days Adelaide was the place from which onost of the mails for England and the •utlnent were dispatched and the incotuFtg malls for Victoria, New South Wales, and South Australia received. Today the same condition prevails to a large extent and four of the largest steamship companies which handle the malls make Adelaide a stopping point from which the cherished letters from “home” are dispatched overland to the eastern const. Until 1998 the facilities at Port Adelaide were quite inadequate. Big ships were forced to anchor and unloud their cargoes to llghttr boats. Today they can come right up to wharves, with a total length of 3,200 feet, built on what Is known as the Outer Harbor, with an entrance 499 fret wide. The smaller vessels come into the Inner harbor, which in realty 's the mouth of a river which some of tha early settlers characterized ns a miserable little creek. Since those days It has been dredged out until it can be ued by fair sized vessels. The site of Adelaide was chosen more because it was a good place for a city than because of Its harbor facilities. To Port Adelaide and to a half a dozen other suburbs there Is maintained splendid street car and suburban train service. The street cars are modern affairs which only a few years ago replaced the horse-drawn cars which were the first to give a service of this kind In oil Australia. Power is obtained from the plant at Port Adelaide, which supplies voltage through two stations which can be operated together or separately if one Is put out of commission. The suburban train service Is frequent and runs out of the union station ’at Adelaide over well-ballasted roads. It is said few of the 260.000 persons in the metropolitan area of Adelaide and Its suburbs need walk more than a mile before they can get a ride into the city. The street car service Is operated by the Tram Trust, as it is culled, and is governed by a board of eight members, two of whom represent the state government and the others the city and the suburbs. MANY CHILDKEN AND OLD PERSONS NOTICED. Adelaide’s city government is headed by a lord mayor, six aide-men and a dozen councilors from the six wards of the city. One thing that I votlced was the large number of children in Adelaide and the large number of old peraons. Three facts to be found In the govern-
Physician Explains Who Should Take Nuxated Iron Practical Advice on How To Help Build Up Great Strength, Energy and Endurance
“Lack of iron in the blood not only makes a man ft physical and mental weakllcg, nervous, Irritable, easily fatigued, but it utterly robs him of that virile force, that stamina nnd strength of will which are so necessary to success and power in every walk of life,” says Dr. James Francis 8 u 111 van, formerly physician of Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor Dept.), New York, and the Westchester County Hospital. "It may also transform a beautiful, sweet-tempered woman Into one who is cross, nervous and irritable. I have strongly emphasized the great necessity of physicians making blood examinations of their weak, anaemic, rundown patients. Thousands of persons go on year after year suffering from physical weakness and a highly nervous condition due to lack of sufficient iron In their red blood corpuscles without ever realizing the real cause of their trouble. Without iron in your blood your food merely passes through the body something like corn through an old mill with rollers -o wide apart that the mill can’t grind. “For want of Iron you may be an old man at thirty, dull of Intellect, poor In nv'T'-'M'i- nervous, irritable nnd all ‘run
iftIVATCn THE BLOOD-GIVES VIUAAI CU IKUH YOU NEW STRENGTH AND ENERGY
West by Southwest New Zealand, Australia and South Sea Islands BY W. D. BOYCE. Organizer and Leader of the Old Mexico Research and African Big Game Expeditions, author of “Illustrated South America,” “l nlted States Colonies and Dependencies” and “The First Americans—Our Indians of Yesterday and Today.”
mont statistics are significant. South Australia leads the commonwealth in the percentage of marriages according to population, its death rate i* low and at one time the second lowest In the j world, and its birth rate is around ' twenty-five to the thousand of popula- | tion. Iu connection with the fact that Ade- j lalde ia the place where many mar- i riagea take place I was told that it had been the principal reason why almost every motor car which ia for hire in the city is painted either white or cream colored. The first auto owner who had white car* was in such demand for weddings that he threatened to get a monopoly of the business. So the other ■ taxi owners painted their cars white | and they have been doing it ever since. ; Even though the autos are plentiful and the rates reasonable the average resident of Adelaide seems to prefer to ride in an old fashioned carry all such as formerly met the trains in the villages of the United States. They struck me I as queer vehicles to be on the streets i of so progressive a city, particularly as I most of them are drawn by diminutive ponies which seeiu all the smaller when hitched to such big vehicles.
Have you thought sometime you’d like to go to Australia, buy up some farming land, and try your fortune in the wide spaces of the Island-continent? Mr.
Hoy re, in hi* West by Southwest Kxpeditoin article next week, will tell of the richness of sol] and favorable farming ■ audition* in South Australia, and how the problem of getting more persons to buy up the land and settling down is confronting that state. The government offers good land at reasonable price*, and gives forty years in which to pay for the farm. It also advances the money for Improving lands and for building homes. U. S. DESIGN'S SO GOOD PARIS COPIES STYLES American League on Women’s Fashions Gives Outline of Proper Wear This Winter. CHICAGO, Sept. S. —Faris Is stealing America’s Ideas on style*, designers of women’s wear here declared today. The dearest child of (lie American Fashion Art’s I-eague the skirt measuring ten inches from the ground has been adopted by the Parisians and claimed a* their own, members of the league declared. Representative* of the league’s 3,000 members will meet here next week to decide on new styles and modes for the coming season. ‘’American designers cater to the conservative taste, while the Paris styles are created for actress or deml mondaine and consequently are more or less freak lsh,” Mine. Alla Ripley, president of the league, said. The ankle effect left in gowns will have adherents among the willowy, graceful women. Mine. Ripley stated, but the "canny ones will strike a happy medium and follow the most gracoful outline.” "There is a tendency to the Princess effect, not closely fitting, but following lines of the figure," she continued. ‘‘Sashes will not be so smart on. as off, snd the strnight line silhouette is her to stay. “Fuschla shades, from cardinal to deep purple, will be to the fore in whole gowns or trimmings. Fringe Is still holding sway, and. of course, tassels follow.” DROWNED BY TIDE. DUBLIN, Sept. 8. —While rending on the Black Rocks of Ballybunlon, Miss Florence Nolan was swept away by the suddenly rising tide. She was drowned.
down. 1 while at 50 or 80 with plenty of iron in your blood you may still be young in feeling, full of life, your whole being brimming over with vim and energy. But be sure the iron you take Is organic iron—Nuxated Iron—and not metallic Iron which people usually take. Organic Iron—Nuxated Iron—is like the iron In your blood and like the Iron in spinach, lentils and apples, white metallic Iron Is iron Just as it come* from the action of strong acids on small pieces of iron tilings and is therefore an en (irely different thing from Nuxated Iron. Nuxated Iron represents organic iron hi such a highly concentrated form That cue dose Is estimated to be approximately equivalent (In organic Iron content) to eating one half quart of splnch, one quart of groen vegetables or half a do*on laked apples. It Is like taking extracts of beef instead of eating pounds of meat. Over 4,000,000 people annually are using Nuxated Iron. It quickly helps make rich red blood, revitalize wornout exhausted nerves and give increased strength and energy. Your money will be refunded by the manufacturers if It does not produce satisfactory results. For sale h’- all dructrists
HAS PRAISE FOR AMERICANS IN NEAR EAST AID Greek Prime Minister Speaks of Heroism of Workers. MEDALS ARE AWARDED By PAXTON lIIBBEN, SMYRNA, Asia Minor, Sept. -6 (by mall). —Back of the Greek front in Asia Minor, where the great struggle of six hundred years between Turk and Greek Is being decided, one would say the United States was engaged in the war some way, from the number of American flags that are to be seen everywhere. On the Fourth of July every Greek warship was dressed in honor of the day, and the old Mississippi, now the Greek Battleship Lemnos, had an American flag as big as a tablecloth at her masthead in honor o fthe fact that one flew there for many years before the white and blue of Hellas. Prime Minister Gounaris of Greece expressed the feeling of the Greeks for the United States when he said to me: “What I like about you Americans is that when you start a thing you go through with it.” He was speaking of the American reJlef work being carried on by the East Relief throughout Asia Minor, back i of both the Turkish and Hellenic battle fronts* of which he had personal evidence during his recent tour of inspection of the Greek lines near Brussa. AMERICAS RISK LIVES IN WORK.
“Last March during the active military operation between the Greek and Kcmalist armies,” be went on. “the operations became much more extended than had at first been contemplated. The result was that all the available military hospital facilities were soon exhausted. Everything possible had to be taken over by the military for hospital purposes, and there was nothing left In which the Greek civil authorities could care for the thousands of refugee women and children who had fled from the war zone Into Nicomedla, Brussa, Mr.dnnia and other centers. "But the Americans of the Near East Relief were equal to the occasion and hundreds of children’s lives were saved by the energy and devotion of those American women. At one time one of the Near East Relief buildings, by the rapid shifting of the two armies, found itself for a brief period between the lines, subject to fire from both sides. But the American workers were undismayed, and went on with their work of mercy as if nothing unusual were happening. “I personally know of the work of the Near East Relief hospitals and orphanages back to the Greek front, and am very glad to say that I know them to be admirable In every respect. The selfsacrifice and devotion of the workers displays true heroism of the highest type. It is In recognition of this that his majesty. King Constantine, has Just awarded the gold cross of the order of the Redeemer of Greece to Dr. James L. Barton, chairman, and Edwin M. Bulkley, chairman of the executive committee, and the silver cross of the Order of the Redeemer to Charles V. Vickrey, general secretary of the Near East Relief, as a symbql of the profound gratitude of the Hellen'c people to those American* who have given so generously of their substance and of the work of their hands and their hearts to the rescue of a suffering people overseas.” INVITE RECIPIENTS TO ATHENS. The Queen of Greece has written to Mr. Vickrey, who is on tour of inspection ‘of tha relief work, asking him to come to Athens to receive the decoration# In tierson, on his own behalf and that of Dr. Barton and Mr. Bnlkley. Mr. Vickrey, Dr. Barton and Mr. Bulkley have loug been active in relief work in the Levant. The former two were among the group that organized
New Prices for i Prices soar in war times. Prices drop when war ends. They drop quickly or slowly, according to the quantity of high priced stocks that are still on hand. Throughout the high price period the Heinz policy was to make and sell enough goods for current needs only. Now that costs are reduced we and your retailer are able to reduce prices without delay. Nearly all grocers in Indianapolis are announcing the following prices on Heinz goods:
Oven Baked Beans Peanu' Butter Tomato Ketchup Cooked Spaghetti Tomato Soup Apple Butter Prepared Mustard Vinegar
the American committee for Armenian and Syrian relief, which later grew the Near East relief. Dr. Barton is secretary of the foreign department of the American board of commissioners of foreign missions. Mr. Bulkley is a prominent New York banker and philanthropist. He is a mealier of the banking firm of Spencer Trask & Cos. EMBEZZLER NOW MAKING TWINE Million-Dollar Packing House Man Also Writing Book in State Prison. STILLWATER, Minn.. Sept. B.—Ransom J** (Cy) Thompson, million dollar embezler in the capacity of controller of the liormel Packing Company at Austin, Minn., now is making string at the penitentiary here, having been assigned to the twine factory by Warden Sullivan. This, with the writing of a book which he started in jail at Austin, will constitute his jvork for the next fifteen years, if he serves the full term of his sentence. He will be entitled to a parole, however, after serving one year on each of two counts, one for embezzlement of $39>,u00 and the other $85,090, ! these being the only direct charges under which he was convicted and sentenced.
Plan for Games of Acme, Bell Teams The athletic committee of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce met yesterday to promote plans for the amateur championship baseball games between the National Acmes of Cleveland, and the Indiana Bell Telephone Company of thlß city, at Washington Park next Saturday. George B. Wellbaum. chairman of the athletic committee called upon Hemv E. Harris, president of the Indianapolis Amateur Baseball Association, to give a report of the game at Cleveland which was won by the Indiana Bell team. A program of reception, entertainment and publicity was agreed upon and committees were appointed to carry out the various phases of the work. Try Again to Get U. S. to Recognize Mexico MEXICO CITY, Sept. B.—A report was current here today that new negotiations have been opened relative to recognition of the Obregon government bv the United States. The report is not officially confirmed.
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COOPERATIVE ORGANIZATION MARKET NEED Congressman Says Results Can Not Be Obtained by Political Action. AID FARMER AND PUBLIC WASHINGTON, Sept. B.—A marketing organization, absolutely free from politics, is the greatest need of the American farmer, Representative Anderson, Minnesota, chairman of the Joint Congressional Committee of Agricultural Inquiry declared today. A cooperative marketing organization would increase quality, quantity and prices of farm products, he said in characterizing as “bunk” attempts to get these results by political action. “Too many organizations are builded along the lines of political action, and. instead of endeavoring to work out their own problems, occupy their time largely in passing resolutions and making recommendations to Congress,” Anderson said.
“They’re past masters of passing tha buck. Frankly Congress is passing that sort of buck back to them.” Anderson was equally frank concerning organizations which attempt to bring about an agricultural mllllneum by legislation. That type of organization, he* said, ends in an inevitable smasb-up. fl Three outstanding benefits that would! result from a marketing organization® cited ’ey Anderson, are: 1. The cost of grading prodocts make them marketable would eliminated. mF 3. Better distribution, enabling farmer to deliver his product ah time and at the place >vhen and it is Deeded. * y “The first thing to do Is to maJe v thorough study of the production end, that Is, get an efficient unit of production and then relate that unit as definitely an possible to a market,’’ Anderson said. Ku-Klux to Sue Papers Using ‘World* Expose ATLANTA. Ga., Sept. S.—Suits aggregating $10,000,000 will be filed by the Ku-Klux Klan against newspaper* throughout the United States carrying a series of articles compiled by the New York World "exposing” the order, ac | cording to a statement issued here to- , day by E. Y. Clarke, Imperial Kleagla j of the Klan.
MEDIUM 18 oz.—lsc. 6/4 oz. —20c. 16 oz. —18c. 16 oz.—lßc. 16 oz.—3oc. QUARTS 35c. •
LARGE 30 oz.—2sc. 12 oz. —30c. 14 oz.—3sc. 30 oz. —30c. 30 oz.—3oc. 32 oz—soc. HALF GALLONS
3
