Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 254, 7 August 1919 — Page 10
PAGE TElx
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 1919.
EATON TO HAVE BASEBALL TEAM; FANS ANXIOUS
Nine Will be Organized foi Season Flying Start in 1920.
EATOX. O., Aug. 7 Eaton will have a baseball team if preaont plans carry. It is realized the present baseball season is far advanced, but it is hoped to organize a team for the remainder of tho season and get matters in such Bhape that tho team can get off with a flying start at the opening of the next season. In a meeting Tuesday evening of local baseball enthusiasts, plans were laid to get together a team of local players and put Eaton on the baseball map. Another meeting1 will be held Friday evening, probably in the council chamber, to which all local ball players have been invited. Probabil
ities are a team will be organized at
this meeting.
It is expected to finance the team at the outset by soliciting contributions from business men and citizens. A solicitor was out Wednesday in tho city. He said tho support given so far had been very encouraging. A
committee was out "Wednesday trying to locate suitablo grounds for a ball park. Success of the solicitor for funds and the committee on grounds
-will be reported to the meeting Friday
evening.
Long and Morgan, operators or a
local shoo repair shop, are leading
spirits in organization of the ball
team and reviving baseball in Eaton
They have played in semi-pro basa ball. Although base ball has a large following in Eaton, the city has not had a ball club for the last two
seasons. No Clue To Thieves No clue to about $350 worth of hides stolen here from I. O. Baker, meat market operator, has been found, although tho ' pollco have worked diligently upon tho case. Baker offers a reward of $100 for information that will load to the arrest and conviction of the Uweves. Tho theft was kept quiet in hopes of aiding the police in their efforts to locate the thieved. The Uakcr storage house, just outside the cny corporato limits, on the Brookvillo road, southwest, was broken into and the hides carried away. The job was done several nights ago. No Bids For Firehouse Presumably because of a pending injunction in the courts, no bids were submitted for the contract for building a structure for the village motor fire truck at Lewisburg. A property owner of the village obtained a teniorary injunction some days ago against the village council carrying out the building plan. He averred the building would obstruct an alley. Carnival Voted Down Applications made to council for permit t& stage a carnival on the streets the woek of August 18 was voted down by a vote of four to two. The application was filed by Fire Chief deorgo Shaver, in behalf of the fire department. Dr. Silver Is Home Dr. IT. Z. Silver, wlfo and daughter, Arrived home Wednesday from Ft.
C? .-.11 1 n Ti,-r, V,.-,, frtr 1Vio last n.-fa r !
or outer D ,S WeV was in arge h "the result of the war . .u v-i.li . ,v, T't ii- En and the possibility that the Lmted H.t ga uphi pctlcrhere aTd ftes may adopt a radically new PolL' ' i (,'-,. a t ti, icy on this subject. The proposal is
time of his discharge, just before leaving for hLs home here, he held
tho rank of major, v.-hleh commission ho received a year or longer ago. j
Ills wife and daughter had been with him at the Fort isinco last fall. Dr.
TOLEDO MOTHER OF RICHMOND SOLDEIR SENDS POST NAME
All the way from Toledo, Ohio, Mrs.
George Culbertson, a mother whose
son enlisted in the world war from Richmond, has sent the suggestion
that the Wayne legion be called the
Triumph legion. Her son is in the
first division, which is still overseas. "I suggest this name because it means victory and joy oversucces in our world war," says Mrs. Culbertson. "It will mean more to our maimed and crippled soldier boys returning to their homes in Wayne county. Panic Proof Legion. "The Wayne Panic Proof Legion," is the name suggested by Mrs. D. D. Home, of 66 South Sixteenth street, Richmond. "The boys of Wayne coun
ty, by their courageous deeds on the field of battle, as well as the soldiers at home, namely, the farmer, the shopman, the railroad man, and housewife, as well as the smallest school child that denied itself candy to contribute pennies to the Red Cross, have proven beyond a doubt that Wayne county is the panic proof county," says Mrs Home. "Our boys fought for all mankind and for the best interests of all hum
an beings, so I think Humanity Council would be a very appropriate n;tmc for the post," says C. II. M., of Richmond. "Humanity means mankind collectively, and council means an assembly called together for deliberation and advice." Only 11 Days Left. Only eleven more days remain for the submission of names, any one of
which may be the winning one for the Wayne county American Legion post. All names must be in by midnight of August 18, in order to be considered for the prize of $50 by Will Homey, furniture man. The winning mime will be chosen by the full membership of the local legion at a fall meeting.
Korean Educator Is Held By Japanese
Koreans Flogged For Part In Revolution
(By Associated Pres) SEOUL, Korea, Aug. 7. For drawing up a petition to the Japanese government praying for the restoration of independence to Korea, and for distributing it to Tokio newspapers, Viscount Kin In-shoku, Viscount Rl Yoshokn and three other Koreans have been arrested on charge of violating the law for the preservation of peace, have been found probably guilty in the Seoul district court, and committed for trial. Viscount Kin is president of the Kfirkuin colleee. One of the petl-
. . . . il ,n fk. TonorAOA I
premier with a request that the matter be brought to the attention of the emperor.
Connersville Police
Chief Goes After Gang
TOKIO, Aug. 7 Japanese officials in Korea, in discussing the punishment administered to Koreans In the independence movement there, say that the old Korean custom of flogging has been continued by the Japanese authorities. "One reason given by the Japanese for this was that the prisons were insufficient to lodge the large number of prisoners arresttd in the revolutionary movement. Tho Japanese officials also declared that the Koreans, themselves, sometimes preferred flogging to paying a fine. Foreign newspapers have published statements from foreigners in Korea alleging that several Korean men who were flogged in pursuance of court sentences were afterward in serious physical condition. Mention was particularly made of five men who had entered a local hospital at Seoul, who had received for three consecutive
ft At. TL'n..-. days thirty blows each. It is declared
VI nuiu m mcvra; that the fle
Ang. 7.-
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VL L H6t - THE FW5 T TflE HE TOO.X HS BEST GTL BUGGY RDM6
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CONNERSVILLE. Ind
Chief of Police Koch, of the local police department, with three detectives from Hamilton, O., Wednesday made a long automobile trip into the southwest part of Ohio and the southeast nart of Indiana, in search of evi
dence of an organized gang of auto j thieves which they think have been i
operating many months. Several cars have been found and several arrests made, out of 29 thefts at Hamilton in the last few weeks.
sh was terribly swollen and
discolored and that gangrene had set
In. One of the officials showed The Associated Press correspondent the instrument with which flogging is done under the orders of the court. It consists of two slender pieces of wood
tightly bound with hemp twine. The convicted person is tied to a wooden bench which is built something in the form of a cross.
U. S. S. SALES SPIRIT
COLUMBUS. Ohio, Aug. 7. The sale of war saving stamps in Ohio has taken a tremendous spurt. Last week Warren county alone sold more than $50,000 of war stamps, Licking county $60,000, Ross County $25,000 and Franklin county $20,000. Tho sales of war savings stamps in Ohio to date total $125,000,000.
REWARD FOR TYPHUS CURE.
DR. GULICK'S PLAN TO REGULATE IMMIGRATION HELD IMPRACTICAL
.By H. H.
( Editor's
Powers, in the Kansas We will pass the point that the proCity Star posal would handicap our problem of Note Dr. Sydney Gulick, meaningless restrictions, that it would
whose plan for dealing with the prob-j admit the Irish or exclude the English lem of Japanese immigration i-i dis-'as effectively as the Japanese, that it
tcussedintho following article, was would admit the Russian Bolshevik j one of the speakers at the Young ! without limit, but exclude the FrenchFriends' conference held at Earlham j man, that it would favor the Syrian, college la.-t year. He discussed the; the Armenian, and the Neapolitan at
unbounded, but unless it ended in exclusion, the result would be inevitable. He would displace us. Possibly someone will say, why not, esneciallv if ho is as sood as we are?
Are not his thrift, his mastery of the! motored to Dayton Sunday Several
art of living, an asset? The argument; from here enjoyed the missionary picIs plausible. Such displacement is go-j nic at Fountain City. Monday evening on all the time. It was exactly m j ir.g . . The Rev. Sarah Burr will preach this manner that the Germans ousted '. here Sunday morning and evening at
New Garden, Ind. Miss Gladys Bailey is visiting relatives at Wilmington. Ohio, this week ....The Rev. and Mrs. Logan Hunt and family were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Chenoweth Snuday . . . . Mr. and Mrs. Luther Siebold wore entertaining relatives the first of the week. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Nate Hunt motored to Hamilton, Ohio. Sun
day.... None cf our young people at-' tended the Young Friends Conference' that has been in progress at Earlham j Misses Blanche Williams, Eva i Rothermel, Irene Knoll, Goldie and! Gladys Gifford and Messers, Harold I Brinkley, Leonard Brown. Elmer Hill, j Clarence Brown, and Ralph Knoll
By making 3,100 doughnuts in a single day Mrs. John C. Smith a brigadier in the Salvation Army, won the international championship.
CBy Associated Press) MEXICO CITY, Aug. 7. El Universal has offered a prize of 25,000 pesos to the person who discovers a cure for typhus.
ITES-STINGS
V1CKS VAP0RU1
Y0URB0DYGUARD"-30?.
Wash the affected surface with household ammonia or
warm salt water; then apply
phases of the Japanese problem in his address here.) Dr. Sydney L. Gulick. long an American missionary In Japan, and a recognized leader of pro-Japanese
the expense of the Swiss or the Hol
lander that it would, in short, put a taboo cn any effort to deal with the tremendous problems of post- war emigration from Europe as exigencies
may require. e will connne ou
opinion, Is the author of a proposal ! so lv2s for the present solely to its ef
now before Congress for the regulation of Immigration which suggests the new Importance that this subject
and Japanese imini-
resume his
j simply that immigration from all i countries be limited henceforth to a
certain small percentage 3 or 5; the number Is immaterial of those al-
! ready here from the countries in quesi tion.The essence of the scheme Is to
devise a uniform rule aplieable to all countries alike, and the reason for this uniformity is avowedly to spare the sensibilities of the Japanese. Dr. Gulick concedes frankly the
Inecessity of virtually excluding Jap
anese Immigration, recognizing as
Silver will Immediately
practice here. Swisher on Vacation. Samuel Swisher, of Campbeilstown, president of the Eaton National bank, expects to leave about Aug. 15 for
Hon He w 1 be accompanied less familiar with Japanese con- , .' ., ..' ti, n iditions have tailed to do. the danger
Saylor to Minnesota. County Prosecutor Phiiip A. Saylor
Z a, Vxfr to em Sa urday tor omg this in a way that will not r,.: " ini. v,. 'Knuv wound Japanese sensibilities. Hence.
..it..- ,w ' ll,;, of,,,.. , f,,l o r.l-.ll Ml of c!,.!l
I of our being overwhelmed by an unreI strictod Oriental immigration. But j he is deeply impressed by the necess-
fect on Japan
gration.
No doubt Doctor Gulick has received Japanese commendation for
his plan. But I
anese other
equality actually offered is worthless, as any Japanese can see. But it concedes the principle of equality. It quite obviously strains a point to do
so, adopting to that end provisions! and limitations that would be prepos-1 terous, but for the sake of this nomin-j al equality. It thus establishes a prece- j dent. The other and more substan- j tial applications of this urincinle !
the New Englanders from the Middlewestern town where I was born. ousted them to tho last man. Why not the Japanese? The Japanese are a pronouncedly divergent race. There is a popular belief that the intermingling of divergent races produces an undesirable blend and that the aversion which such races feel for each other (the Japanese feel it for us as we for them) is Nature's warning of a limit not to be passed. I- do not know whether there is any scientific basis for this belief. But this much mooted question is quite beside the mark. The blend might be good or bad. but
there will be no blend. Some slight
the regular hour. Sunday school at ' nine-thirty. Everyone is welcome. ... ...Several have been picking black-i berries south of Richmond this week i ....Mrs. Perry England and children j of Hamilton, Ohio, are visiting her; parents. Mr. and Mrs. Nate Hunt this! wepk Mr and ATps Tcn-ir YVtnr,mt
and family spent. Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Kem near Webster.
Oldest.Largest and Strongest Trust ComDanv
in Eastern Indiana
liilliliiifes
. ' to I 1 i c-'iaf .
CAPITAL AND
SURPLUS
F$350,000.06;
LADIES' ACCOUNTS
One of the greatest industries cf Finland is that of dairying, which developed during the decade immediately preceding the outbreak of the war.
The Dickinson Trust Company makes a special effort to be of the greatest service and assistance to its. many women depositors, a specially appointed room being equipped for their exclusive use. ' Our officers and employees are at all times pleased to explain banking rules or customes with which ladles are unfamiliar, and courteous, personal attention is invariably rendered to them. Both Checking and Savings Accounts are invited. $ In
terest being paid on savings.
iancy me suutle Jap- i,c,,,,;,.,,,,e nm.r mtlv under
;ee in it possibilities qaiteL.ii,;,, nf3rm-,w tn t;m nmriiirt
than those mentioned. The I v..V .i ... ..".,-. ,,.!, v,
race as with the other will keep the : races apart. This will normou.-ly . increase the friction of displacement and insure lasting rare feuds'. A Japanese element, retaining its race consciousness and predominant in the West would inevi'ably lean upon Asia for moral and physical support, upon Japan today and upon China tomor'i-,- flm vtljtinn Ai-!rli thric: Tliltirtn
Japan will look out for m due time, hvouU1 thu? inevitably become far and the time will not be very long in , more tr0Ublesonie than thev now are. coming. The very purpose of this pro-, This . the reason the Japanese can. posal is, theretcre, to recognize that net come. rJct because they are un-
vuamj- oinw oainu tuusui in wiiii -rt nr.f hfrsinr. iv( refuse. tr
peace conference, an equal- kH. n,.r nBnnrt,,nit!... hut hfitauss
ts to translate ; the annot fuse with us and make al benefits.
from the
wtn snenn a month or loneer nunnng
fishing and camping. They will be Joined later by B. A. Landis, of Eaton, and Edward McCord, of Camden. Kline Services Held. Funeral services for Mrs. Jacob D. Kline, GTi. who died Monday at her home near New Hope, were held Wednesday afternoon in the church at New Hope. Her husband and one daughter. Mrs. MarKey, wife of Dr. E. B. Markey of Dayton, survive. She was a sifter of Joseph L , Dan H. and W. R. Deem, Mrs. Georo Hickman. Mrs. William John and Mrs. Flora Walker Fry, all of Eaton, and Mrs. J. S. Benr.er, of New Paris. Ulrich Is Horse Judge. Dan S. Ulrich. of Ingomar, member of the Preble county fair board, is judging show horses this week at the Greene county fair. He also will officiate In tho same capacity at the Carthage fair, Hamilton county.
into the most substanti
Let me say at this point t'.iat I do not share the opinion commonly held in this country aiul especially in the west, regarding the Japanese. I havesome acquaintance with the Japanese people from four fairly eomprehtn-
Mancie Newspaper Man Boomed For Governor
MFNCIE, Ind.. August 7 George B. Lockwood, editor of tho Muncie Press and the National Republican, published at Washington. D. C. as the official ore an of tho National Republican Committee, may become the Republican candidate for governor of Indiana, but the boom launched for him Tuesday by friends at Indianapolis was without his knowledge, according to telegrams received today by Wilbur E. Sutton, managing editor of the -Press. "Big scoop on me. This is the first I knew of it," wired Lockwood from Washington in answer to a query concerning the Indianapolis boom. Lockwood has told friends that his business Interests at this time would preclude his being a candidate for any office, but that was before Will II. Hays, Republican National Chairman, had definitely withdrawn from the race. It Is known that Lockwood, If ho decides to enter the race, will have the support of many prominent Republican leaders.
The kingdom of Italy has 23 per cent, of its soil represented by pas turo land, while the correspondins proportion for Sardinia is 59 per cent.
effective without involving invidious discrimination. As there are few Japanese now here, the admission of a
low percentage would bo no menace, j sive visits to that country supplewhile with the much larger repre-j mented by some acquaintance with mentation of European countries, the 'Japanese in America. I have not allowance would meet all require-, found them trickv and untrustworthy.
They may be unreliable in labor con-
ments. In short Dr. Gulick sfes in the Japanese situation primarily a problem of sensibilities and he would regulate tho immigration from all countries primarily with a view to soothing these sensibilities. Problems That Arise. We may assume that the basis upon which this percentage is to bo calculated would be actual immigrants
one people.
Tho best way to de?l with the sor.?ibilities of the Japanese is to tell them the truth. We may frankly recognize their equality in intelligence, education, capacity for culture and moial trustworthiness. But we may remind them that instincts of which they are as conscious as ourselves, make the fusion of the races impossible, and the presence of two unfusrd, but virile and energetic races in one country means race feud and a fatal r,ViC: t fi rl Ci tn r- i i-i 1 i 7 1 t : ri n TM-r-.v -ill nnt
maintain an even quality in the run of h;k; it ,m. thAV ,. L n,,m..'niti,s
that our count rv offers. But. our
I words will contain no insult, no treach
erous recognition of an inadmissable
tracts, alone.
but in this they are not quite Their manufacturers mav not
their product or fill orders accordin.
to sample. Newness has something to do with that. No country has ever known a transition so tremendous as that of the last fifty years in Japan, and our own much milder experience
and not th cir descendants. Otherwise : should teach us the difficulty of main-
It becomes unworkable and militates , taining ethical standards throush fatally ;;?ainst the Europeans, who in-. such a time of reconstruction. I betermarry with our people and with ! lieve there 13 absolutely no proof that
each other. For instance, how would , the Japanese are unworthv of our con-
policy, no offer of a sham and illusory equality.
the lady be counted with whom I have just been talking? Her father is a Scotchman and her mother a German. The Japanese, on the other hand, who do not intermarry with us and whose rate of increase is said to five times the , American average, if allowed to couiht their American increase. The plan as proposed seems to have contemplated ihls loose interpretation which hardly bears discussion if we are to restrict Japanese immigration at all. But in this more conservative form what are the merits of this proposal? The merit claimed Is equality of treatment for all nations, effectual exclusion without discrimination. It must bo clear at a glance, however, that this equality is extremely specious and artificial. The Japanese are to be admitted, not in proportion to their' importance as a nation or to their education or their morality, or their efficiency, or their merit in any pennse. but simply in proportion to their numbers already here. And these numbers, determined for other nations by free immigration, have been limlled In the case of Japan by a policy of exclusion extending over years. The proposed equality, therefore, is merely the impartial perpetuation of the Inequalities under which Japan is alleged to have chafed. If the Japanese find in such inequality a solace for their wounded sensibilities, they are of all old birds the moat
! easily caught by chaff.
fidence as a people. Meanwhile their nation with its heritage of the Incomparable Samurai tradition has as unblemished a record of probity as our own. Japs Would Take It All. But the Japanese must be excluded for reasons not disparaging but rather complimentary. They can displace us. That is all there is to it. In an
American Oil Interests Want Intervention , Claim NEW YORK. Aug. 7 American oil interests are charged with manufacturing State3 into war with Mexico in a report on the Mexican situation, made public here today by the board of foreign missions of the Presbyterian church. The report was prepared
i by Samuel G. Inman, executive secj rclary of the American section of the commitee on co-operation in Latin-
area smaller than California and cf i America, representing the American which, only one-sixth is or ever can b ' and Canadian mission boards. i cttliivated, they are compelled to raise! Wr- Inman charges that the Amerifood for over 50 millions of people, j can people are being deceived by in-; Moreover, this number is increasing i spired propaganda and that "inter- j at the rate of nearly a million a year, j vention in Mexico is coming just a3 The most strenuous efforts on the I fast as certain interests can possibly part of the government to check this ! force it." The oil men whom Mr. In-j increase have hitherto been unavail-;man accuses are declared to have i ing. The instincts and habits upon i large offices In Washington and New! which this increase depends are ! York and unlimited supplies of money. !
among the last to yield to control. Intervention, Mr. Inman maintains.
would mean the destruction of all American mission work in Mexico.
1 ne pressure is immense, i neir rer-;
tility unlimited. Meanwhile this pressure, continued through centuries, has enabled them to master the art of living as we have not done and cannot do. Whether the Oriental live in squalor as in China or in dainty refinement such as rarely fails even in the humblest cottage in Japan, is all one. He lives, thrives, and multiplies on terms that we have rejected, must reject, term3 which would mean for us physical extinction. If hp comes, therefore, we go. We should not go peaceably. There would
be riot And bloodshed and race hatei.
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Won its Favor Through its Flavor KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO. BATTLE CREEK, MICH., July 30, 1919.
Mr. G. W. Brenizer, Adv. Mgr.. Palladium and Sun Telg., Richmond, Ind. Dear Sir: We are pleased with the way you are treating us. You are giving our advertising good position, and I believe your organization is alive to the advantage of seeing to it that our advertisements, as well as all others in your paper, are well printed. We always have been advertisers. We believe in advertising because we know it pays. We select what we believe to be the best mediums and endeavor to arrange our advertising so that the medium has every chance to produce the best results. In our advertising we follow the same principles as in the manufacture of Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes, Kellogg's Shredded Krumbles, Kellogg's Cooked Bran, Kellogg's Drinket and all other products of ours. We use the best raw materials under the best conditions, and follow methods which our experience proves to be the best and most satisfactory. Right now one of the biggest, needs of this country is more advertising. Advertising makes more business for manufacturer and retailer. More business means more labor utilized, and that in turn means more money put into circulation. Every time a package of Kellogg's products is sold it means a betterment of general business conditions. And it will intere-st you to know that at this time we are producing and shipping over six hundred thousand waxtite packages of our products every day, and that even with this great volume we are at this writing over three hundred and fifty carloads behind on orders. Our advertising in your paper has helped bring about this healthy business condition. We pay you your full price for the space, but just the same I do not feel that you are completely paid unless I write you this expression of our appreciation. I am sure that every advertiser who can possibly use space with you will find you anxious to co-operate with him as you do with us and thereby increase the earning power of his advertising. Yours very truly, KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO., (Signed) John L. Kellogg, Secretary.
