Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 130, 11 April 1914 — Page 1

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T AND 8UN-TELEQRAM RICHMOND, IND SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 11, 1914 SINGLE COPY 2 CENTS VOL. XXXIX. NO. 130

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SIX DAYS TO BRIGHTEN UP RICHMOND FOR

1914 ""Spotless Town" Committee, With John McCarthy at Head, Announces May 1 As Opening Day. SCHOOLS WILL HELP & CLEAN-UP CAMPAIGN 6,000 Plants for Pupils Doing Five Hours' Work Street Department Prepares for Work. System in the superlative, will prevail when Richmond gets its annual Spring training. John F. McCarthy, chairman of the Commercial club civic improvement committee, met with representatives of the South Side, West Side and FairView Improvement associations, the Aftermath and the Domestic Science Association and members of the Commercial club, besides city officials and fther interested persons, and announced his committees to carry on the cleaning up work, yesterday afternoon. Richmond will be systematically cleaned for six days. Cleaning wiill etart May 1, which is on Friday. The special period will close the following Thursday night, but the committees hope to bring about a feeling of civic pride which will keep the citizens cleaning up for the rest, of the cummer. Work Through Schools As it is difficult to reach the parents personally, much of the work will be done through the schools. Superintendent Giles will have talks outlined for the teachers to present to their classes. Themes will be written and classes will give time to hear suggestions from the pupils. In high school and Garfield, outside speakers v ill be brought in to speak at chapel Services. - . , More than 6,000 plants will be given as awards to school children, one plant being given for each five hours of cleaning work done. The plants will be donated to the civic improvement committee or purchased by the Commercial club. Donations of potted rose bushes, scarlet sage, geraniums and other small plants numbered 3,000 last year. Whitewater school will put up the fight of its history to retain the silk flag which was given the school last year as a trophy for having accomplished the most good in yard cleaning week, because its pupils spent the most time in cleaning up Riverdale. Street Commissioner Knollenberg, Health Officer Smelser and George Mansfield constitute a committee to appoint times in which the city's trash Wagons will be rushed to one section cf the city to remove the dirt. The Jlan is to have the city cleaned by 6ections and as rapidly as the sections ere cleaned, the dirt will be removed before it scatters. The duties of the committees and Iheir members and chairmen as appointed by John McCarthy, follow: Printing and Public Notice Phar6ba Stephens, chairman, Mrs. J. B. Hush. The committee will have charge of publicity affairs and of ftrinted matter to be distributed over he city. Invitation to public officials: E. A. Fulle, chairman, Frank Waidele and Frank Roberts. City council, the board of works and other city departments will be asked to pass resolutions favoring the cleaning up movement and Mayor Robbins will be asked for a cleaning week proclamation setting aside the week of May 1. Plants: Ira C. Wood, chairman, Fred R. Charles, Frank Roberts. Mrs. E. K. McDivitt and Miss Ellen Thomas. The plant committee will obtain and award the plants after the awards committee has decided the winners. School Work: J. T. Giles, chairMan, William Duning and Charles W. Jordan. Junior League Committee: Mrs. George Chrisman, chairman. Mrs. Allen D. Hole, Mrs. ' James M. Judson. Mrs. George Hayes, Mrs. H. L. Monarch and Herbert S. Weed. The committee will be interested in any part the schools may take and will probably bring the Junior League into use again. Removing Collected Material: Geo. J. KnollvMiberg. chairman, Dr. S. G. gmelser and George W. Mansfield. Awards: Frank G. Pickell. chairman, H. H. Steinbrink, 11. L. Monarch, J. E. Thompson, C. B. Hunt and Mrs. Ifarry Dalbey. The judges of the work done during the week will be the members of the awards con .mittee. To whom prizes and the tropliy will go will depend on the decisions of the committee. PRECINCT BOOKS IN ROBERTS TRIAL TERRE HAUTE, Ind., April 11.

SEASON

The registration books of Precinct B;virftmpn Crl,nnl Patrons Get of the Third ward were produced to- VVOmen CIlOOl -Taironh

day in the trial of Mayor Donn M. Roberts, indicted cn charge of election frauds, and one by one the application blanks filied out with alleged fictitious names were submitted to the jurors that they might see wheth - er the hand writing was the same. In this precinct the prosecution alleges thirty-two Illegal registrations were made. Everett Sanders, a young Re publican lawyer-politician, who testified yesterday that Roberts had given orders that he be slugged while he was a challenger at the polls, was recalled to the witness stand this morni ine to give more details of the assault by "Tuffy" Butler. He repeated his I statements that Roberts bad ordered

Y" WANTS MEN

AND- HOT SAYS E. LEARNER Secretary and Directors Place Emphasis on Religious Work at Regular Session of Board. 2,500 BOYS IN BIBLE CLASSES Physical Director Roach Reports Increasing Interest Among Shop Men in Gym Work. "The Y. M. C. A. wants the soul and not the pocketbook. We are after the man and not the dollar," was the way Ellis Learner, secretary of the Y. M. C. A. expressed the desire of the association officers and board of directors to have the newspapers feature religious work done in the association rather than the good financial showing which was made the last six months or the budget the directors adopted last night. "Of course we need the dollar after we get the men but that is not why we are existing. We are an arm of the church and our purpose is to provide a good clean place for men to congregate and receive spiritual betterment. As side features, we introduce educational work and physical training," Mr. Learner added. The general secretary reported that the work in the religious department has been successful during the last year and the members of the board are favoring plans of the religious committee to extend the work as was done last year, by conducting a series of twelve meetings to begin next November. The meetings will be held on Sunday afternoons in a theatre or auditorium. Arrange Conference. The religious extension work wiH not be conducted on the tentative plans of last year, but expert advice will be obtained. To get this. Dr. A. L. Bramkamp has secured from the international association corps of religious experts, Dr. C. A". Barbour and Dr. David G. Latshaw, who will hold a two days' religious conference with the association religious department on the future plans. The Richmond associafioiTTs one of 'six in Indiana' to secure the men for conference work. They will remain in this state for twelve days, coming here May 15 and 16. The relation of the church and the association and the best methods of co-operation between the two will be inquired into especially. The Bible class methods used here are evidently good, the directors decided from the successful showing made this season. One line of extension work will be the shop meetings. At Robinson's shop successful noon meetings are held every Wednesday. Although these meetings have been discontinued at other shops, they will again be taken up later. Shows 2,500 Gain. H. A. Pettijohn, boys' work director, who also has charge of the Bible class work, showed a gain of 2.50C in total attendance in Bible classes this year (Continued on Page Three.) TEACHERS TO HEAR MARGARET HALEY Militant Chicago Educator to Speak for Women Teachers' Club at Westcott. Miss Margaret Haley, business manager of the Teachers' Federation of Chicago, militant educator who forced the ring in the National Educational Teachers' association, to respect the worth of Ellen Flagg Young, superintendent of the Chicago schools, and elect her president of the organization, will address the Women Teachers' club of Wayne county at the Westcott hotel next Saturday at 1:00 o'clock. Her coming is coincident with the annual luncheon of the teachers' club at which its new officers are elected. Miss Haley will speak on "Federation." Miss Haley is one of a list of noted educators, whom the Wayne county women teachers have brought to this city to speak to them on the broad principles of education. Miss Haley has a national reputation as a leader among women, and her services as a lecturer are in general demand. Recently she led the campaign of the women of California for the right jof suffrage. She is in the forefront of the movement to give to women rights they now do not possess. FORM SOCIAL CENTER Together. Useef Warner school building as a 1 social center was the keynote of the 1 parents-teachers meeting last night. ! Many patrons of the school attended, j Closer relations between home and scnooi were urgea Dy superinienaent Giles and Miss Thompson, principal who extended a sweeping' invitation to the people of the community to make the building a place for holding educational and social gatherings. Care of the teeth and their relation to the child's health was the subject considered by Dr. N. S. Cox, who gave the principal address. Other meetings

MONEY

PETTI JOHH LEAVES . FOR LARGER FIELD Boys' Secretary of Y. M. C. A. Accepts Similar Position in Muncie Association's "New Modern Plant.

MADE A GOOD RECORD Departing Official Instituted Honor System and Built Up Membership Among Younger Children. After four years' work among the boys of the city as boys' secretary of the Y. M. C. A., Herbert A. Pettijohn last night tendered his resignation which was accepted by the board of directors. Mr. Pettijohn leaves Richmond the first week in May to take charge of the boys' department of the association at Muncie. The Muncie association has a new plant with separate quarters and equipment for the boys, over which Mr. Pettijohn will have complete charge. "I hate very much to leave the boys of Richmond and the many friends I have made here," said Mr. Pettijohn. today, "but feel that the opportunity for future advancement is too great to be turned down. I am not leaving because I am dissatisfied with the work here." Since coming here Mr. Pettijohn has made the boys' department one of the big features of the association instead of a side issue. When he took charge of the department 131 boys were enrolled in the Bible classes; today more than 400 are enrolled with a total attendance for the year of over 9,000. Under his direction the association has won places on the honor rolls of the country contesting against organizations in the largest cities. Last year Richmond was second on the Bible class honor roll; this year Pettijohn believes the boys will rank second to none. Forms Honor Roll In this connection he instituted the honor roll for the boys who made the greatest development, physically, morally and mentally, trying to produce all-around men. Recruiting from among the boys who had never been worked with by the association, Pettijohn has increased the membership of his department to over three hundred. His great work has been among boys who have not the best of home sur roundings, who are not reached by the Sunday schools, and who have hitherto been allowed to run wild on the streets, without any one earring particularly what became of them. "Father and son" banquets to create closer filial relations were instituted by him. Boys hate to see "Petty" leave, and so do their parents and citizens who have watched his work building up the coming generation. Secretary Learner and the director express regret to lose Mr. Pettijohn, but congratulate him on the greater opportunity before him. Before coming to Richmond Mr. Pettijohn was boys' secretary of the Y. M. C. A. at Dallas, Tex. Mr. Pettijohn is a graduate of Wabash college and of the L. C. A. Training School at Chiacgo. "I am glad, to be able to get into a new building and introduce some work along lines I have in mind," said Mr. Pettijohn. "I shall keep on the Bible work as it has been conducted here but I will also introduce educational work for employed boys. I have been unable to introduce this work here." MEXICO TO APOLOGIZE FOR INSULTJO FLAG Rear Admiral Mayo Demands Salute for Arrest of U. S. Marines by Huertistas. WASHINGTON, April 11. Rear Adiral Mayo, commander of the American squadron at Tampico, has demanded of General Zaragoza the Mexican federal commander at that port, and immediate apology and a salute to the American flag because the I

Mexican Federals arrested a party ; from Richmond at that time and had of American marines and paraded been influential in securing the conthem through the streets of Tampico. ! solidation of the Fifth Street M. E.

Secretary of War Daniels made this announcement today, but said that he had no information as to whether the apology had been made. Secretary Daniels said: "Rear Admiral Mayo reported Rear Admiral Fletcher that a landing party of American Marines had been arrested without cause Thursday and had been marched publicly through a portion of Tampico. He also reported that he had demanded an apology and a "salute to the American flag to be given within twenty-four hours. We h ive W heard anything since the first dispatch." 'The navy department was without additional information up to noon today concerning the situation at Tampico and Torreon. . WEATHER FORECAST FOR INDIANA Partly cloudy in the north. Unsettled in south portion tonight and Sunday. Probably rain or snow. Colder tonight. .TEMPERATURE.

LIBRARY COMMITTEE ASKS FOB MUNICIPAL LIBRARIAN POSITION

New Post, Incumbent "Preferably to Be a'. Man," to Look After Business Men and Workers. COMMISSION WILL REPORT MONDAY Pleads for Segregation of Child ren's Department, Branch Depots and Increase of Tax Rate. To prepare for the meeting with Charles N. Sanborn, of the state library commission, the library committee of the Commercial club met last night and decided to bring before a mass meeting at the club rooms Monday night the proposition of boosting the library tax rate from four cents on the $100 valuation to six cents, thereby increasing the annual revenue $3,000. Without this additional revenue, the committee decided, the changes which Sanborn has recommended to popularize the library and those he will recommend, cannot be carried out. The meeting Monday night will be for the public, although the committee will not issue invitations to any organizations or individuals. The meeting will be thrown open and the public is wanted. Piatt Robinson will preside. Text of Report. The following report will be made of the resolutions adopted and recommendations made by the committee: That a reference librarian be secured and that the present reading room be transformed into a reference library room. That a municipal librarian be employed, preferably a man who could have charge of the department devoted especially to the interests of business and working men and who could also assist the librarian in the city and township extension work. (Continued on Fage Ten.) SHOOTS Ji SISTER French Woman Actuated by Calmette Murder. NANTES, France, April 11. A sensational shootine affray in which a J young society woman was probably I mortally wounded by her sister, caus ed tremendous excitement today. Mile. Genevieve de la Fleuraye, of the Chateau Rocheguyon at Savenlerres, was shot five times by her sister, Mile. Marie de la Fleuraye. The tragedy occurred in the street when the sisters chanced to meet. After upbraiding her sister for causing discord in the family, Mile. Marie suddenly drew a revolver and began firing at her sister. An immense crowd gathered and threatened to lynch the shooter, but she was rescued by the police and arrested. Mile. Genevieve was taken to a hosptial in a dying condition. At the police station. Mile. Marie, who is 30 vears old. made mention of the recent killing of Editor Calm ette by Mme. Caillaux, and the authorities believe she was influenced' by that tragedy. FIRST TALK Rev. Mr. Bridge Fills Pulpit Sunday. Rev. Arthur Cates, formerly pastor of the Grace M. E. church here, left today to take charge of the church at Tipton, where he will preach his first sermon tomorrow. Rev. Bridge will arrive from Portland tomorrow to take charge of the church. Rev. Cates will vacate the A street parsonage Monday and Rev. Bridge will move his family nere next Thursday. It is understood the congregation will not make any fight to have Cates restored to the Grace pastorate, because he explained to the conference that his rk is completed here and he can do no more good by remaining in Richmond. Cates was changed last year but a strong remonstrance on the part of the congregation brought him back. He had also asked to be transferred church and the Grace church, of which he has had charge for the past year. SCHEDULE CHANGES C. and O. Announces Time Card. New Five trains will change time on the C. and O in accordance with an order issued to become effective tomorrow. No. 5, a local northbound train, is the ! only train re.taflfling its old schedule. ! Train No. 4 will be known as No. 8 local, and limited No 6 will be known as Limited No. 4. No. 1, northbound limited leaves at 12:44 instead of 12:38; No. 3 northbound local leaves at 8:23 instead of 7:50 p. m.: No. 2 southbound local leaves at 8:25 a. m. instead of 8:55; No. 8 local southbound leaves at 4:09 p. ra. instead of 5:50 p. m.; No. 4 lim lite ited southbound leaves at 6:19 ji m. ia-

MAKES

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ARNOLD GIRL DYING NEW, YORK HOME Pittsburg District Attorney . Says Missing Heiress Was Inmate of "House of Mystery" 2 Years Ago. MENTALLY WEAKENED Parents Shield Girl Nearing Death, After Friends Find Her Wandering Aimlessly Over Country. BULLETIN NEW YORK, April 11. "The statement is absurd. It is a lie. I believe my daughter is dead. How can Mr. Jackson know that she is here when he has remained In Pittsburg far from New York. I am preparing a letter to Mr. Jackson demanding that he tell me the evidence on which he makes such a wild statement." This statement was made today by Dorothy Arnold's father when he was asked about the statement from Pittsburg that District Attorney Jackson of that city had evidence that the missing girl had been in her home for four months. Mr. Arnold invited the reporter to follow him through the Arnold home. The reporter went through the house from cellar to garret but no sign of the missing heiress could be found. After the search, Arnold again demanded that Jackson be termed a liar. PITTSBURG, April 11. District Attorney Jackson created a sensation here this afternoon when he issued a remarkable statement declaring that Dorothy Arnold is now at her father's home in New York weakened physically, and mentally unbalanced. Jackson declares that on the strongest kind of evidence he knows that the heiress, who has been missing for several years, returned home four months ago and that her parents are doing all they can to keep the matter quiet. The district attorney said that the Arnold girl came to Pittsburg Immediately after her disappearance and was an inmate of the maternity hospital known as the "House of Mystery." As the result of an unprofessional operation, it is said, her mind was (Continued on Page Three) STATE DELEGATES Blf G. 0, P, Joint Meeting of Dalton and Perry Attended by Fifty Adherents of Republican Party. SELECT CANDIDATES Ward Meetings in City Poorly Attended With Only Nine Workers Out in Two Precincts. Ward meetings were held by Richmond Republicans last evening for the purpose of electing delegates to the state convention. This afternoon Republican township meetings are being held for the same purpose, except in Dalton and Perry townships, which held a joint meeting yesterday afternoon. Over forty people attended this joint meeting, the largest Republican gathering in recent years. Besides electing a delegate and alternate to the state convention, respectively, Charles Hennicut, Perry, and Frank Thornburg, Dalton, the Dalton Republicans nominated candidates for township trustee and township assessor. Alexander Abbott was nominated trustee without opposition; Harry B. Macy was nominated assessor over OUb Baldwin. The ward meetings last night were poorly attended. Only five attended the meeting in the Second ward and only four were at the Fifth ward meeting. Chairman Bowman and Secretary Meyers had not received a list of the various delegates at noon today. "The time and place for holding the various district conventions will be decided at the state convention week after next, when the district chairmen hold a caucus," said Mr. Bowman today. "A call for the election of delegates to the Sixth district convention will not be issued until the time and place for holding this convention has been determined. "During the first week in May the Republican central committee of this county will hold a meeting and at that time it will be decided when to hold the county convention, which is to nominate a county ticket." FREIGHT WRECK DELAYS TRAFFIC

NAMED

The C. and O. northbound train due here at 7:55 o'clock last night, was delayed five hours by a wreck of freight cars in the Cincinnati yards. Several Richmond persons were on the' passenger which was behind the wrecked freight. No damage was done the passenger train which stopped in time to prevent a collision. The passenger firaia.wxii4 feast iftigjffllnlrMi

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Robbins Censures To Discredit His

In Progressive Party Principles Republican County Chairman Bowman and Progressive Chairman Price Deny Either Party Will Go Over to the Other, and Brand Report Idle Dream of Reporter Hard Pressed for Copy. Mayor Robbins Denounces Desertion of Mayor Batchelor of Marion and Mayor Watkins of New Castle as a Political Trick.

Mayor W. J. Robbins today gave out ; a signed statement to newspaper men emphatically branding as false a statement appearing yesterday in a local newspaper that, "Mayor Robbins will undoubtedly be among the hundreds of Progressives in this county who will flop (to the Republi- , cans) when the reunion movementgets more definitely under way." j Mayor Robbins, in commenting onj his statement, took occasion to pay his : respects to Mayor Batchelor of Marion and Mayor Watkins of New Castle, who have just announced their deser tion of the Progressive party and their return to the Republican fold. "I don't believe either Batchelor or Watkins were ever Progressives," said Mayor Robbins. "The Republican party is the same boss-ridden, re-j actionary organization it was prior to , the Chicago convention of 1912, and J any man who bolted that party then, f and can countenance it now, never has i been a Progressive. The Progressive party is better off without thoe kind of men. The Republicans are welcome to them. Amused by Watkins. "Watkins' statement that there is no further necessity of a Progressive party because the old, hide-bound' j Republican bosses are 'no longer in control, is amusing to me. The old ; party is still managed by the same j crowd, the crowd which caused WatI kins at that famous Republican dis trict, convention at onnersviue in the spring of 1912 to heap reproaches upon their heads and take his place in the foremost ranks of the insurgent Republicans, who later went over to the Progressive party." The assertions of the local newspaper that there would be a reunion of the Republican and Progressive parties in Wayne county cause Republican County Chairman L. S. Bowman and Progressive County Chairman Clifford Price much amusement. Bowman Laughs. "I know of no such movement," said Mr. Bowman. "Prior to the Progressive primary election in February I suggested reconciliation and merger to certain Progressive leaders, who would not consider such a plan. It would be too late now to consider it." "Why merge?" laughed Mr. Price. "The Progressive party is the strongest in the county, and we have nothing in common with the Republicans. This reunion talk is merely hot air." Robbins' Statement. Mayor Robbins' refutation of the charge that he intends to flop back to the Republican party follows: To the Voters of Wayne County: . In a news story in last evening's Item in speaking of the possible union of the Progressive and Republican parties in this county, the statement was made that I was only waiting for a favorable opportunity to flop over to the Republican party along with hundreds of "others. I noticed that the heading of this article had a question mark after it, and I hope that this alone would make the whole story questionable on the face of it. I can

Sartorial Vexations Arise When Women Decide to Visit Cabinet Meeting of Mayor

"What I wanta know is whether we will have to rent dress suits for the cabinet meeting Monday night?" This was the question Harry Hodgin, city building inspector, was anxiously addressing to other disturbed city officials today. The concensus of opinion, however, was that it would be perfectly proper for all members of the mayor's cabinet to attend the April meeting attired in neat business suits and "boiled" shirts. ! The cause of all the agitation was I the announcement made by Mayor : Robbins that a delegation of thirtyj five or forty representatives of the I Federation of Women's Clubs of Rich- : mond had signified their intention of attending the cabinet meeting to see how the officials transact city business. Women Interested. Members of these women's clubs ; are very much interested now in the question of city government, especially since Mayor Robbins invited the j federation to be represented on his ! citizens' advisory committee, now beling organized. This is the first time the women of Richmond have been invited to take a hand in assisting in the administration of city affairs, and they appreciatee the compliment thoroughly. - "The announcement that there will be a big delegation of club women at. the cabinet meeting Monday night shows that they are taking a great deal more interest in city affairs than a good many of their husbands, fathers and brothers," said Mayor Robbins today. ... Set Civic Example. T have been urging the people of this city to attend these monthly cabinet meetings ever since they w ere in-

Enemies' Political Effort Faith say In my own behalf, and I believe of those several hundred others, that the story is without foundation, and I for one, want to repudiate it, that the voters of this city and county shall not be deceived. I fully believe in the principles as laid down in the last State and National platforms of the Progressive party, and in the party's leaders who so valiently fought to have those same principles adopted as part of the government of our state end nation. I believed in those principles two years ago. and I believe in them now. I believed in the leaders of the progressive party two years ago. and I firmly believe in their sincerity at the present time. Same Leaders Control. I voted to repudiate the leaders of the Republican Party two years ago and the principles which they upheld. and I find that these same leaders are before the people today, (although some of them have retired from the fighting line to the underbrush and simply waiting for a favorable opportunity to come out); I say that these same leaders are before the people today with outstretched right hands in the pose of welcome, while in the left is the same dirk which by its dastardly thrusts, they let out the life blood from the Grand Old Party and left it a bleeding corpse on the floor of the Chicago Convention. With the fall of the gavel at the end of that convention came the overthrow of political bondage, and the birth of independent thought and independent voting. Thousands upon thousands of men believing in advanced and progressive principles, which had been repudiated by the Republican Party, united by one common impulse, and in four months time became the second party of the land, and one of the greatest factors in American State and National politics. The men who believed in those principles two years ago believe in them now, and are anxiously waiting to cast their ballots for the advancement of those principles. Idea Ridiculous. Of all things ridiculous is the idea of even thinking that men will throw down principles in which they sincerely believe, and adopt those of an entirely contrary nature; or of repudiating leaders in whom they have the greatest confidence and in adopting new ones who have knifed them in the past, and with the firm belief on their part that the same will occur again. On account of the fact that some might construe the article in last evening's paper to be true. I am addressing this letter to the public that all may know that I am still a firm believer in the Progressive Party and of its future, and that I have the utmost confidence in the honesty and ability of such men as Theodore Roosevelt and Albert J. Beveridge. and of the numerous other leaders who are now at the head of the Progressive Party. Very truly yours. Will J. Robbins. very few cltiezns have attended. Now that the ladies are setting the example maybe we will have large crowds at our cabinet meetings in the future." It is probable several of the women Monday night will discuss with the city officials plans for "yard cleaning week." the first week of May. Mayor Robbins would like to have the prisoners at the county jail for alley cleaning purposes that week, but he is not sure whether the sheriff would have the authority to order them to do this kind of work. CULL0PJ1S OUT Bert Hunt Starts Campaign For 1916. VIXCEXNES, Ind.. April 11. Congressman William A. Cullop today was oeclared winner of the Democratic primary fight for the congressional nomination in the Second Indiana district. His majority over Judge ChasT D. Hunt of Sullivan, Ind., Is officially twenty-three votes. Judge Hunt issued a statement when the official returns were completed, pledging his support to Congressman Cullop an declaring he would defeat him fr the nomination in 116. ELKS OPEN HOME.

EAST ST. LOUIS. Ill, April 1XJ State and national officers of the Elks Lrfjdge arrived here today to attend tha formal opening of the Elks' ntw f Ann - "fr 1

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