Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 246, 29 July 1919 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1919.
PAGE THREE
OUTLAWS BAND IN CONTROL IN MEXICO, CLAIM
Government Enemy of Own People First and America Second, House Told.
WASHINGTON, July 29. Carranza's rule over Mexico is "not a government, but a band of outlaws, both tecnlcally and practically," and "today It la utterly Impossible, an enemy of Its own people first and America second." William Gates, of Baltimore an archeologist, told the House Rules Committee today In its hearing on the Gould resolution proposing a congressional Inquiry into Mexican affairs. Although asserting that President Wilson was misled in making his decision to recognize Carranza, believing
the Mexican to be a people's champion," Gates declared In favor of leaving the solution of the Mexican prob
lem with the President. President Misinformed
The President, he Bald, had been not
Informed fully of conditions In the Southern republic. Gates said his opinions were based on a first-hand study of Mexican conditions for about a. year beginning in July, 1917, during which time he visited parts of the country usually not seen by a traveler, Including the states of Yucatan. Vera Cruz, Pueblo, Morales and Oexaca. Carranza's control Includes the main ports and the railroads, with adjoining territory for a mile on either side the transportation lines, Gates asserted. This control, he said was "that a body of soldiers who are ready to shoot at a moment's notice in a country where nobody else has, any guns." Camden, 0.
Laurel, Ind., Men Held For Auto Theft At Oxford OXFORD, O.. July 29 Earl W. Hoff
man, 30, and Harrison Davis, 29, of Laurel, Ind., were arrested yesterday by Marshal Sheard upon suspicion of having been implicated in the theft
of two automobiles in this village on the night of July 19. The men were well supplied with money, and strongly protested their innocence. They claimed that they were here to purchase an automobile from the Rev. J. W. Clokey. Chief of Police Strieker," Safety Director McGreevy and Detective Herman, of Hamilton, came to Oxford and questioned the men at length, but were unable to break down their story. Finally, as Mayor Hughes wae about to discharge them. T. H. Woodruff and members of his family positively identified the bed of the machine in which the men came to Oxford as a part of his automobile stolen on July 19. Among the marks of identification found by Woodruff were the initlalB "P. F." scratched in the Japan in an out-of-the way place. These were there by Woodruff's nephew, Paul Fouts, of Middletown. Davis claims that he bought the machine in Cincinnati at 2 p. m. on the 19th of July, and that he was in Cincinnati all of that day and night. There are, however, three persons In
this village who will swear that Davis was in Oxford from 10 a. m. to 9
p. m. on that day. The men Jved examination in Mayor Hughe's court, and were bound over to the grand Jury in bonds of $3,000 each. In default of bond they were taken to the Hamilton Jail. Village officials believe that these arrests will prove the beginning of the breaking up of a "fence" which is known to have existed in the vicinity of Laurel for several years.
ELOQUENT SERIES OF PAINTINGS SHOW RED GROSS WORK IN FRANCE
Disease Kills Hogs In Henry And Hancock NEWCASTLE, Ind.. July 29 Many hogs are dying in Henry and Hancock counties of a new disease which has not been identified.
PARIS, July 28. The art world of Paris, which is always in search of something new, haa found a real novelty in a series of eight large decorative paintingB of American relief work in France. The pictures are the work of Cameron Burnside, a lieutenant in the American Red Cross, who was a member of the American art colony in Paris before the war. H1b Red Cross activities inspired in him the idea of perpetuating the work of the American Red Cross on canvas. His recently completed paintings have set Paris agog, and the. foremost French art critic, M. Leonce Benedite, curator of the Luxemburg museum, saya in a magazine article: "It is an eloquent series of paintings, a selection of veracious pages of modern history. This officer artist in his war-time work, did not forget his professional standpoint. All the time, through professional habit and instinct he was looking, looking. Artists, trueborn artists. Bee pictures everywhere; they look upon the world's spectacles with an eye single to the transposition of these spectacles into paintings. Thus Cameron Burnside, at his wartime Red Cross work, was observing;
he saw interest In what he did and what was done around him. He grasped the picturesque side of all war's events, of all its maneuvers, of all lta manipulations. By and by, slowly, ready-made pictures began to form In his imagination and he found rising in his mind a whole series of images epitomizing the scenes with which he
had been associated. Refused to Stay Out of War. Cameron Burnside, rejected for army service when America entered the war, was assigned to work at the American Red Cross central warehouse in Paris. There he unloaded camions, shifted cases, opened boxes, unpacked supplies, until the difficult manual labor made him ill. He was asked what else he could do besides warehouse work. "Paint pictures," he said, and outlined a plan for a series of paintings which should ilustrate all
study of a Red Cross nurse by the bedBide of a wounded soldier, complete the list of subjects. The series of paintings are to be hung on the walls of the American Red Cross headquarters in Washington.
the phases of American Red Cross activities. The authorities of the organization saw the value of the idea and suplled him with canvas, brushes and oils. All the Bummer and fall of the German bombardment of Paris, Burnside kept at his painting. Once his models were panic stricken by the explosion of a bomb In the street outside his
studio. He completed first the study of the warehouse with which he was
thoroughly familiar, a humdrum enough grouping of men and camions and packing cases, but vibrant with energy and the clear vivid color that became the dominant quality of the entire series. The Refugee Canteen He haunted the Gare de l'Est for the second picture, a view of the refugee canteen in the corner of that gloomy station. Canteen workers with bowls of oup, desolate groups of motherless children and homeless women, hands clutching lumpy bundles, re reproduced them all. Then he went to the great surgical dressing warehouse at tho Rue St. Didier, and painted the army of ' women In white, working feverishly at bandages under the high blue arch of the roof. He painted American Red Cross workers at a line of communications canteen, doughboys about steaming cans of cocoa and sunshine streaking the white kerchiefs of the girls. An outpost canteen behind the front lines gave him material for one of his most
striking studies, a Red Cross man filling cups for American soldiers, whose rifles and helmets gleam from the somber shadows in the light of the one candle. Wounded Doughboys Military hospital No. 5, with a group of wounded doughboys a telling stories against a background of white tents and green trees, vivid in the Bunshine; the interior of an American Red Cross
children's clinic, with American wo
men doctors examining the under
nourished bodies of French babies, and, finally, a simple but compelling
Woman And Two Sons Tried For Murder
ATra W M Patton and dauKbter.
Naomi, of Piqua, O., are visiting her eon Harry and wife and former friends here Dr. W. A. Scott of St. John, Mich., who is well known in this community, has arrived from overseas... Harvey Thornburg of Detroit Sunday joined his wife, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Drum- j
mond, last week Mrs. iancy contick has gone to make her home with her daughter, Mrs. Franch Baldwin, of Alexandria, Va Mrs. F. R. Yealland and children are visiting her mother, Mrs. Cora McCord, and her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bohn Tom Shafer, who has been visiting Indiana relatives, is home Mrs. Nellie Graham is spending several days with Mrs. Huber Peeling of Dayton Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kenworthy and daughter Melva spent Sunday with Mr. Kenworthy'B sister, Mrs. Skinner Jordan of West Elkton. Mrs. Mary S. Robinson and daughter. Miss May, are spending the week with Howard Scott and family Ed. Bonner is assisting lnthe post office while Beveral employes take their vacations Supt. Dennison and familv left Thursday for their
new home H. T. Scott ana ram-j ily were Richmond shoppers Wednes-i
day Levi Shoemaker ana iamily will start for an auto trip to Mrs. Shoemaker's former home, near Mt. Vernon, Virginia, to visit her brother, George, next week Mrs. Laura Miller entertained several friends Sunday, in honor of her mother's, seventy-fourth birthday. The guests were: Mrs. Mary Brown, guest of honor, her son Will Brown, Robert Wobua of Hamilton, Levi Shoemaker and family, J. P. Scott, and Harry Reed and wife of Sugar Valley. Tax Appeals From Henry And Fayette Counties Heard The state board of tax commissioners at its meeting in Indianapolis, Monday, completed the date schedule for the hearing of appeals on assessments which have been certified to the state board from the various counties. Appeals from Henry county are being heard today in the offices of the commission and appeals from Fayette county will be heard Friday. When the hearings at the state office are finished, the members of the commission will visit thirteen counties to conduct local hearings. Commissioner S. N. Cragus will hear appeals in Wayne county. INJURED IN AUTO COLLISION
SBAZflFu"
GREENSFORK. July 29 Mr. and Mrs. Milton Adams and son were in
jured in an automobile accident which occurred Sunday three miles north of here at a crossroads. The Adams car collided with an automo
bile driven by Mr. Anderson, an undertaker of Millboro. A cornfield is said to have obstructed the view of the drivers. Mr. Adams sustained two torn ribs, and Mrs. Adams and the son were bruised and cut. Mr. Anderson was unhurt.
So Easy to Heal Your Skin With Poslam
Don't let those eruptions remain to blemish and annoy any longer than it takes Poslam to heal them. And Poslam is best equipped to do the work because its healing powers are concentrated. Relieves itching at once. Apply Poslam at night and leave it on in the daytime too, when convenient. It acts quickly. You can soon see benefits. Poslam is harmless. So effective is Poslam that a little of it will cover a large surface. It Is the QUALITY, not the quantity of It, that does the work. Sold everywhere. For free sample write the Emergency Laboratories, US West 47th St., New York City. Poslam Soap, medicated with Posllaxn. brightens, beautifies complex5rtW. Adv.
EF you buy a tire here, another there, you cannot expect uniform tire mileage and service. Making Firestone Gray Sidewall Tires standard for your car means you can forget the tire question. And after that decision, the renewal question will come up far less frequently. You can easily prove this by equipping with Firestones now.
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SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, July 29. Mrs. Alice J. Harris, her two sons, Leland " and Eugene, and Edward L. Tackmar, were charged with murder by a coroner's Jury which held an inquest at Trout Creek in the killing of Jesse H. Cone, a Juab county rancher, shot to death July 22 on the Harris ranch, 12 miles southeast of Salt Lake City. Tackman was arrested at the
time of the murder and brought here to be held as a witness for the Btate.
According to testimony at the In
quest Tackman played a part in the killing.
Italians To Collect
Money For Memorial Funds will be collected in this city
by Louis Salzarulo and Amedeo De Laura, both of whom are prominent
Italians and members of the Wayne
County Italian organization, for the
purpose of raising a memorial to Christopher Columbus. The men received their appoint
ment to aid In this county from the
officials of the state Italian organi
zation which is raising the memorial
Mixed Summer Foods The Cause Of Much Indigestion SUMMER days are days of careless living, kitchens too hot for cooking, cold lunches at the homes of friends, open-air picnics, with the result that many a family is down with indigestion.
Give the stomach and bowela a new tart by taking a dote of a good laxativetonic like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Then put variety into your diet by eating more warm food. It is more easily digested. A bottle of Syrup Pepsin can ha bought at any drug store for 50c and $1, the latter the family size. It acts so gently and safely that it can be given even to a baby in constipation, indigestion, "summer colds" and similar ills. The formula on which Syrup Pepsin
is based was written by Dr. Caldwell over 30 years ago. It is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin that trains the stomach-muscles to do their work naturally so that medicines can again be dispensed with. Over 6 million bottles of Syrup Pepsin are sold by druggists every year. That is recommendation in itself. 4 If you have never used Syrup Pepsin, send your address for a free trial bottle to Dr. W. B. Caldwell. 480 Washington St Monticello, I1L
S DP CALDWELL'S Tl" yrtip Pepsin
PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS
Iff
Flies Cut Down Milk Yield There's no rlnnrir nhrmr if F1i nnt nnlv wnrrv th
cows and the milker, but they keep you from getting
all the milk vou should.
And there'9 no doubt about this either. The one wav to tret
rid of flics at milking time and the sure way to get more milk is to use
Pratts FlyChaser Spray it on just before milking. PRATTS does not taint the milk. PRATTS dots not burn or blister the hide. PRATTS does not take off or gum up the hair.
Give your cows a chance to give more milk. Give your work animals a chance to get their rest. Give PRATTS a trial.
" Your Money Back If You Are Not Satisfied.'1 A. G. LUKEN & CO.
630 Main Street
79
o
32c
Women's Burson Hose, 44c Full fashioned, knit to fit lisle hose, black, grey or brown A with coupon rrrC
39c Chambray Ginghams, 32c
27 inches wide, plain colored Amos
keag Ginghams, pink, blue or grey; with coupon
Boys' 85c Khaki Pants, 74c Sizes 6 to 14 years, Khaki and Palm Beach cloth. Double stitch- rj A ed Beams; with coupon I rC
Two Star Naptha Powder, 8c None to children; two boxes Star
Naptha Washing Powder, in self-
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Five Bars Ivory Soap, 40c None to children, 5 bars Ivory in Self-serve Grocery; with Afr coupon 4rUC Colgate's Shaving Stick, 8c Read our ads, it pays. Colgate's Shaving Cream with the Q coupon OC
Men's 75c Silk Hose, 54c Extra quality Silk Hose, double heel and toe; all colors ffil with coupon 0iC
8c
j a rm r"i hi ii jsl n w .
g Women's $5 Sweaters, $3.98 Novelty Slip-over, all-Wool Yarn In n nu'pot eVtarloa a wnnilorfnl "hot.
gain; with this cou ) pon for
BOYS WASH
Up to $1.75 Values Sizes 3 to 8 years. Linens. Galatea, duck and Madras, novelty models, extraordinary value
35c Comfort Challie, 29c 36 inches wide, pretty patterns light and dark colors; buy now and save; with this coupon OQ yard aCaO
10c
15c Bottle Vaseline, 10c Blue Seal, carbolated "Cheese-
borough" Vaseline, we always un
dersell with this coupon for
$1.00 Voile Shirt Waists, 73c White Voile and Marquisette with
neat embroidery trimmed collars
and cuffs; with this coupon for
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i These Bargains Should Crowd Our Store Wed. j
ft o a a a a a e & a o o
& & & & o s 6 o a o a 8
$3.98
o o & a o o o o 8 i o o a $ 9 O 8
Women $1 House Dresses 59c About 15 In this lot; less than cost of material; Percale House PTQ Dresses at OaC
35c Huck Toweling, yd. 29c 17 inches wide American Bleached Huck Toweling, good quality OA with coupon, yard aCtC
35c Cheviot Shirtings, yd. 29c 27 inches wide, dark blue and grey striped Cheviot Shirting OQ with coupon, yard mdUL
Mavis Face Powder, 44c You always save money at the Grand Leader; Mavis Face Powder
all tints with this cou pon for
44c
Crisco Shortening, 37c
Visit our Belt-serve Grocery, It pays. Crisco with this nrr ' couDon for Of 1
Hood's Mustard, Jar, 8c In glass far, guaranteed pure. Save
money In our Self-serve Groc- Q ery; with coupon OC
$2.25 Bed Sheets, $1.69 Size 81x90 deep hemmed 4nds. seamless steam bleached ?Q Sheets, with coupon .... DX07
75c Bath Mats, 55c Turkish Bath Mats with fast colored designs, less than mill price; with coupon ODC 19c Kitchen Crash, yd. 12c Bleached Crash Toweling at less than wholesale price with i n coupon, yard .LC
15c Embroidery Edging, 7?2c Neat patterns, Swiss emDroidery edging 2 to 6 Inches wide rfTt with rnnnon. yard f 2 C
i uuipcian xtigui cream, ZZc Price this elsewhere first. We save you money; on sale Wednes-rtrt day with coupon . . . ? C
73c
Calumet leaking Powder, 23c One pound cans, none to children. Save money, visit our Self-serve Grocery with this cou- OQ pon at mdtJKs Six Bars P. & G. Soap, 48c None to children, buy now; Soaps are advancing in price, sixe bara P. and G. Naptha with AQf coupon for rrOl
EES
Sozodont Tooth Paste, 22c We sell the best of everything. Van Buskirk's Sozodont rt) Panto, with oonnon tkj
Mrs. Rorer's Cotfe, Pound 42c One lb. cartons. In bean, not ground limit 2 lbs. to a customer in with coupon rraC Men 12c Colored Kerchiefs, 9c Fast colored red or blue, less than wholesale price with this de coupon for J C
Pears Toilet Soap, 17c Unscented transparent Soap, always for less here, Wednes- - da, with coupon Xl
32c Bleached Muslin, yd 29c Firm woven, 36 Inches wide bleach ed Muslin, a good bargain, cotton market Is advancing with OQ the conpon C
o Read Our O Ads. Lowest O Prices Our 2 Chief At- 9 traction.
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We buy for Less and Sell for Less
