Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 286, 15 September 1919 — Page 8
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, SEPT: 15, 1919.
DEMOCRAT SPLIT IS FORECAST RY HAMILTON LEWIS
Foreign Policy to Involve Administration Party in Break is Prediction. WASHINGTON. Sept. 14 A distinct division within the Democratic party, one branch standing for the traditional American policy, with isolation from European entanglements, and the other standing for President Wilson's policy of making the United States a distinctive world-Power, in touch with all parts of the globe, is growing more imminent every day. The cleavage is expected to become pronounced before the opening of the 1 residential campaign next year. From all indications the most spirited fight in the Democratic National Convention will be in regard to the question of whether the policy of a century is to be reversed and the United States become a "world figure," with its activities projected into foreign lands. One element of the party is determined that the United States ought to "keep its nose out of the foreign affairs" and heed the advice of Washington and the other "fathers of the country" in regard to "entangling alliances." Forces are Active. The forces that are determined to put the Democratic party on record as favoring the traditional policy alreadv are active. The prospective line of ! cleavage was forecast in an interview with former United States Senator James Hamilton Lewis. The former Senator prefaced his statement by saying that in the Middle West party lines are "shot to pieces." He said, in part: "The Middle West is one camp of insurgency against everything that heretofore was a political institution. ' It is in revolt against extortionate prices for living. It has no fixed affiliation with any party. "It will elect the next presidential ticket by a personal vote for the man. There will be no concrete party organization of any party on old party lines. Everything of the past is broken up." NEWSPAPER MEN IN NEW HAVEN STRIKE FOR HIGHER WAGES (By Associated Press NEW HAVEN, Conn.. Sept. 15 Three afternoon newspapers here, today prepared to issue their editions under unusual conditions, a strike of news writers having gone into effect on these publications following a strike on the Morning Journal Courier at last midnight managing editors and editorial writers who were not members of the newly formed News Writers' Equity association took uo duties of city editors and copy read-1 ers, while the places of street men were filled by substitutes--. The strike is said to be the first of its nature in the country. It follows refusal of publishers to increase wages of street and desk men. The equity association claims that virtually all j statf and street men on the four daily I papers here are members and had endorsed the proposal to strike in the event of the failure of the publishers to fix a definite, scale of compensation. j Circuit Court Records V. Benjamin Crawford, colored, was made guardian of his mother's estate. Mrs. Malinda Crawford, of Milton, by Judge Rond in circuit court Monday morning. The charges were that Mrs. Crawford was getting old and unable 1 o look after her own interests. Crawford is a farmer near Greensfork. The verdict in regard to the inheritance tax of the Emily P. Yoe estate will be handed down at a later date in circuit court, as the case involves some legal matters that will be taken under advisement. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Wiley M. Vaughn to Chauncey Cranor. part, of south west quarter of sec tion o4. township 1, range 15, -l't i acres, $1. ! Old Wayne Realty company to! James IS. Eckel, lot JO Meridian Securities company's addition to Hagerstown, $150. Hagerstown Improvement company 1o Daniel 1. Hoover, part of northease and northwest quarter of section JP, township 17, range 12. consideration $2,000. Paul V. Price to Everett J. Ackerman, lot 41, Reeveston Place addition Richmond, $1. Kate Van Dusen to John K. Deem, lot 4l." in part of city laid out by Elizabeth Starr. $1. John K Deem to Solomon Kothermei part of lots G4 and 65 in Haynes addition, $1. Samuel Rakestraw to Leroy E. Hamilton, lot o3 in Christian Fetta's addition. $1. Le Roy E. Wicket t to W. Floyd J. Stout part of lots lo. 14 and 15 in Hannah A. Leeds addition, $1. William W. Reek to Sylvester Lindsey, lot 175 in Earlham Heights, $1. Korean City Again Quiet; Reforms Asked by Saito 1 (By Associated Pres?) SEOUL, Korea, Sept. 15. The city has been quiet since the attempted assassination of Baron Saito, governor of Korea, on Sept. 2. Baron Saito has made public a list of proposed reforms and has expressed his determination to carry out his program without wavering, adding that In so doing he "will be endeavoring to make even enemies loyal citizens." A Korean suspected of being tha person who threw the bomb at the governor has been arrested. Somebody figures that the money ; this country Bpent on munitions during the war would be sufficient to rebuild New York twice. . ...
SNAPPED AT HAMMOND STRIKE RIOT THAT
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Crowd in Hammond 6treet during riot, one of the armed strike guards at corner of car company building, and Joe Lash, president of striking union.
Three were killed and a score of persons, including several policemen, were injured in the recent strike riot at the Standard Steel Car Co., Hammond, Ind. The riot occurred when police attempted to
CARDINAL MERCIER OF BELGIUM, ONE OF HEROIC FIGURES OF WAR. REACHES U. S.
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Cardinal Mercier, at left, and Archbishop Hayes of New York, watching parade of First division in New York a few hours after the cardinal'! arrival in U. S. Cardinal Mercier of Belgium, one of the outstanding figures cn the world war, has arrived in the U. S. to personally thank America for the aid given Belgium. When the Germans entered Belgium and pillaged and ransacked that country the aged primate called upon them to stop. "If yo-J have no regard for the laws of civilization have regard for the laws of God," was his word to them. His first public appearance inthe U. S. was as one of the manv thousand spectators who paid tribute to General Pershing and his gallant First division in the parade in New York the day the lardinal arrived.
Mrs. Samuel Ball is Dead at Fountain City Mrs. Samuel Ball died one mile east of Fountain City, Sunday morning at four o'clock. One sister. Mrs. Wash Study of Williamsburg, and one brother, William Miller of Lynn, alone survive. Mrs. Ball had been ill for several National Crop Improvement Service 1 IN" the summer time when the thunder caps appear in the sky and the sfbrm sweeps down on the farm, the farmer thinks less of his safety than he does of his live stock. When the stock is In the field during the storm It may happen that the animals drift against the wire fence, which may be heavily charged with electricity, and are shocked to death. The ordinary fence built on wooden posts should be grounded every sixth post. To. "ground thejtence' means
Killed
escort a group of employes into the factory yard. Striking employes tried to halt them. Bricks were hurled at the returning employes. Someone opened fire with a revolver and then strikers and
months, but recently seemed better, and was able to be up and around the house. She was stricken with paralysis last Saturday morning, shortly became unconscious and continued so until her death. Funeral services will be held frofn the late residence Tuesday at 2 p. m. The Rev. Ira Johnson, of Lynn, .will conduct services. Friends may call at any time. ram to twist a piece of wire six or eight feet long around nil of the line wires of the fenco and then dig a hole in the ground near the post and bury the other end of the wire. The hole should be dug deep enough so that the wire comes in contact with moist earth. A fence so grounded offers- no danger to live stock during the thunderstorm. The wire fence built on galvanized steel fence posts Is already grounded at every post and no thunderstorm with its discharge of lightning can Injure the cattle inclosed by snch a fence.
COST THREE LIVES f
employes clashed. Police and ttrike guards used automatic revolvers and rifles. The fire was returned. Trouble at the plant had been brewing for two months, it is said. OLD ORDER ENDING, SAYS LLOYD GEORGE (By Associated Press) LONDON, Sept. 15 Premier Lloyd George has issued a message lo the people of Great Britain in "The Future," which will be distributed free throughout the country. The premier says: "Millions of gallant young men have fought for the new world. Hundreds of thousands died to establish it. If we fail to honor the promise given them we dishonor ourselves. "What does the new world mean? What was the old world like? It was a world where toil for myraids of honest workers, men and women, purchased nothing better than squalor, penury, anxiety, wretchedness; a world scarred by slums, disgraced by sweating, where unemployment, through the vicissitudes of industry, brought despair to multitudes of humble homes; a world where, side by side with want, there was waste of inexhaustable riches of the earth, partly through ignorance and want of forethought, partly through entrenched selfishness. Old World Dead. "If we renew the lease of that world, we shall betray Ihe heroic dead. Wc shall be guilty of the basest perfidy that ever blackened a people's fame. Kay! We shall store up retribution for ourselves ond our children. "The old world must and will come to an end. No effort can shore it up much longer. If there be any who feel incliaed to maintain it. let them beware, lest it fall upon them and their households in ruin. "It. should be the sublime duty of all, without thought of partisanship, to help in the building up of the new world, where labor shall have its just reward and indolence alone shall suf fer want." Cambridge City, Ind. i Mr. and Mrs. J. U. Morgan spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. George Stombaugh. Mrs. Stombaugh entertained a number of relatives in honor of her birthday anniversary Mrs. Alice Myers visited Mrs. Henry Myers at Dublin Sunday. .. .Miss Grace Kiess was home over Sunday from Indianapolis .... Mrs. Nellie Manlove is visiting her mother in Kentucky. Miss Jennie McGreen visited friends at Indianapolis over Sunday. .. .Mrs. Forrest Danner went to Richmond Wednesday to see her husband at Reid Hospital. He recently underwent an operation for appendicitis. ....Mrs. Mollie Jackson is very ill. Harry Elliott, of Mobile. Ala., came to visit relatives here.... Mrs. Lenora Carpenter is ill.... Will Wissler of Richmond visited M. L. Young and family Saturday Mrs. Carrie Murray of Porto Rico will visit her sister. Mrs. Hahn....Mrs. Frank Parson of Richmond visited Mrs. Laura Richie Saturday. .. .Mrs. Ida Sullivan of Indianapolis is visiting Mrs. Clara Riegle this week. . HERE'S HEALTH Tell your grocer you want the genuine Economy Creamery Butter
MANY FRIENDS TO ATTEND MEET AT PLAINFIELD
PLAINFIELD, Ind.. Sept. 5 The 6ixty-second annual jfssembly of Western Yearly Meeting of Friends will convene here next Tuesday and continue until Sunday evening. The membership is composed of Friends of central Indiana and eastern Illinois. Among the ministers and speakers from other yearly meetings who will be present are J. W. Harvey Theobold of England; Wilbur K. Thomas of Philadelphia, secretary of Friends service committee; Levi Pennington, former president of Pacific College, Newburg, Ore., who has been released to take the position of director of the Friends Forward Movement; Mrs. Leanah Hobson of VanWert, O., and Clarence Pickett of Richmond, Ind. Interest is centered in the reconstruction work of Friends abroad and also in the appointment of representatives to the proposed peace conference in London in 1920. The official program includes the preliminary meeting of the ministers and elders Tuesday afternoon. The Western Yearly Meeting School of Missions will meet daily. The leaders will be B. Willis Beade of Richmond, field secretary; Clyde O. Wat son and Alvin T. Coate. The program I Friday morning will be in charge of j the student volunteers. The meeting of the permanent board will be held Wednesday morning, when the opening of Western Yearly Meeting proper will take place. There will be a missionary dinner Friday evening. Emory J. Reese, returned missionary from British, East Africa, who has translated parts of the Bible for the African natives, will give a stereopticon lecture on "Africa" Friday evening. The public missionarv meetine will be held Saturdav morning. The program will include j "Echoes From Our Mission Fields by returned missionaries, also a summary of the year's work by Willard O. Frueblood of Indianapolis. Missionary Conference. Charlotte E. Vickers of Chicago. and Isabella DeVol of China, will j speak Thursday at the annual missionary conference. The Woman's Mission Union will meet daily from 1 ; to 1:45 p. m. An important report to' be given will be the report of the i evangelistic ind church extension committee Friday morning. Levi T. j Pennington of Newburg, Ore., will j give an address Friday atternoon on "The Forward Movement of Friends in America." The Young Friends will have charge of the Saturday evening program. Following reports of the Christian Endeavor Union and Young Friends activities will be an address on "An Open Door for Young Friends." by Wilbur K. Thomas of Philadelphia, Pa., and an address by Clarence C. Pickett of Richmond. Renorts on Earlham College and the Beitha Ballard Home will be read at the session. The devotional meetings each evening will be conducted by visiting ministers and on Sunday, commonly known as "Big Sunday," the services j wil' be entirely devotional. A large attendance is expected on this day. Army Seeks Enlistments for Instructors at University Sneeinl efforts are belne made bv the local army recruiting affice this week to enlist men with previous service in the field artillery, for soecitl service at the University of Illinois, as instructors in the field artillerv school there According to information sent out by the state recruiting officer, the men will receive, in addition to their regular pay, approximately $65 a month for rationss and fuel. POULTRY MEN TO MEET. 'Bv Associated Press) LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sept. 5 Arrangements are being made at Purdue University for the meeting of members i.f the Indiana Poultry Association which will be held here Oct. 3 and I. During the winter a toad becomes torpid and takes no food. Visit the Thistlethwaite stores for bargains in Medicines and Groceries. These are every day prices that will interest you. "Don't neglect that cough and cold."
60c Vicks Vap-o-Rub 49C 30c One Day Cold Tablets 24c $1.20 Kings New Discovery 98c 60c Listerine 49c 35c Tonsiline 29c 35c P. D. Q 29C 3 bars Zanol Peroxide Soap 25C 30c Woodbury's Soap 24c Every Day Grocery Prices Jello or Jiffy Jell, per box. -IOC 1 lb. box Calumet Baking Powder for 25C 12-oz. box Royal Baking Powder for 43C 50c Instant Postum 43c Pet Milk, tall can 15c Pet Milk, small can 7'C Campbell's Soup IOC Crisco, per lb 37C
Bio-ferren is indicated for tha treatment of general weakness, weakness following infectious diseases, lack of appetite, and loss of weight. For sale and recommended by the Thistlethwaite Stores
MOST DECORATED WOMAN TO MARCH WITH GEN. PERSHING
Miss Cora E. Van Xorden. Miss Cora E. Van Norden, New Yorker and Salvation Army worker, will parade with General Pershing and the other veterans of the First division when they march in New York to celebrate the return of the commander and the division. She was attached to the Eighteenth infantry of the First division and established the first canteen with it at the frcnt, August 20, 1918. She wears the Croix de Guerre, Saloniki Cross, a Serbian and a Greek decoration, and a Victoria ribbon studded with four bronze stars and two silver ones. She has been called "the most decorated woman of the war."
American. Potato (JIoup
National Crop Improvement Service. BAKERS who use potato flour are enthusiastic In its praise. The commercial value of potato flour, owing to its water absorbing and moisture retaining qualities, exceeds its food value considerably because when It Is added to other flours It produces better bread and more loaves per barrel, and besides the bread keeps fresh longer because It does not dry out so readily. The food value of one pound of natural potato flour is 8 cents when wheat flour Is worth 6 cents. In making Op a three-barrel batch of dough, with and without American potato flour, the recipes would compare as follows : No Potato Flour. 600 lbs. flour No potato flour 336 lbs. water 9 lbs. yeast 10i4 lbs. salt
Now is a Good Time to Drive Out Catarrh
!t May Not Be Troubling You During the Warm Weather, But is is Still in Your Blood. Catarrh is not only a disgusting disease but is a dangerous one, and you should never let up in your efforts to get it out of your system until you have done it thoroughly. Get rid of it, whatever it costs you in trouble and money. Mild weather will aid the treatment and this is an excellent time to thor oughly cleanse the blood of the germs of Catarrh and be forever rid of the troublesome sprays and douches that tan only relieve you for a time. S. S. S. is a purely vegetable blood'
Pure candy that the children can eat and eat with no ill effects is what we offer you. The best and purest Cane Sugar, flavored with natural Fruit flavors, makes a healthy food full of energy and nourishment. Keep a supply of our Pure Candy in the house all of the time. Everyone will enjoy it and the economy of buying in larger packages is well worth while. We have Just received another 500-lb. shipment of Fresh Buttered Chocolate.
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OWEN KUHN CHOSEN TO WRITE HISTORY OF ITALY IN WAR
Oliver Owen Kuhn, formerly city editor of the Palladium, of the Washington Star's staff, writer on foreign affairs and that paper's representative at the Paris peace conference, has been designated by the Italian government to visit Italy and compile a history of that country's efforts in tha war, and her activities at the peace conference. Kuhn will sail from NewYork on September 15 and will be gone several months. He was invited on this special mission by former Premier Orlando and the invitatio was renewed by Premier Nitti following the resignation of Premier Orlando. Premier Nittl. who was Joined In the invitation by Foreign Minister TittonI, selected Kuhn from the many American correspondents who visited the country during the last winter and spring to present Italy's late war history from an. American standpoint. Sails on La France. Kuhn sails on La France for Harve, and will have a conference with TittonI at Paris before proceeding to Rome, where his headquarters will be. He has been connected with the Washington papers for nine years in editorial capacities and as a special writer on foreign affairs. Before going to Washington he served as news editor of the Palladium, which paper produced Strickland Gillilan. author and poet, and Carl' Ackerman, war correspondent and special article writer. Mr. Kuhn was afterward news editor of the Oklamoma City Oklahoman, managing editor of the former In-dia-napolis Sun, and he also erved in varnapolis Sun, and he also served In var. 9 lbs. sugar 6 lbs. malt extract lbs. milk powder 9 lbs. lard With Potato Flour. 582 lbs. floui 12 lbs. American potato flour 336 lbs. water 86 lbs. yeast 104 lbs. salt 7 lbs. sugar 5 lbs. malt extract No milk powder 7 lbs. lard While the batch containing American flour would make a few more loaves. It would also save something like $2 in the expense of Ingredients per three barrels douh at presenf prices. In making potato flour bread at home, , use one heaping tablespoonful of American potato flour to each quart of wheat flour. Potato flour 6hould be added to the mixture after the wheat flour. remedy, made from roots and herbs direct from the forest, which combat disease germs in the blood. This great remedy has been used for more than fifty years, with most satisfactory results. It has been successfully used by those afflicted with even the severest cases of Catarrh. It relieves Catarrh, for it treats the disease at its tource. S. S. S. Is sold by druggists everywhere. For the benefit of those afflicted with catarrh we maintain a medical department in charge of a specialist skilled in this disease. If you will write us fully, he will give your case careful study, and write you just what your own individual case requires. No charge is made for this service. Address Swift Specific Co.. 262 Swift Laboratory. Atlanta, Ga. Adv. Treat the 1919
