Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 298, 29 September 1919 — Page 8

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FRIENDS CLOSE YEARLY MEETING; EARLHAM REPORT IS RECEIVED

Drawing his sermon from the text,! "'I beseech you brethren by the merges of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice, which Is your ! reasonable service," Dr. Theobald, the visiting Friend from London , Yearly Meeting, delivered an impressive sermon Sunday morning at Yearly Meeting, followed by a short 'sermon by Levi T. Pennington, who drew his words from the same text. A musical program was rendered "by a choir of young Friends of the fcity. Mrs. Emma Hadley and J. C. iHutchins sang a duet and Miss Corrine Nusbaum gave two solos. William Kitch, of Iowa, delivered the sermon of the evening and the 'final session of Indiana Yearly Meeting was ended with an open 15 minJTites during which several members ispoke briefly. Albert J. Furstenberger said he believed the next meeting In 1920 would be filled with even more encouraging '.reports than those given in this successful session. Nicholson Asks Unity. S. Edgar Nicholson, clerk of the imeeting, said: ; "Let's quit putting all the burdet of our progress on the minister; don't 'let's make our ministers do all the rgetting together, and don't let the minister have all the responsibility." The offering was $138.43. Evangelist Reeves, representing the Friends' Rescue Home at Columbus, Ohio, received $321 for that institution. The request of Entiat and Tacoma Monthly Meeting to ally themselves in the future with Oregon Yearly Meeting was granted Saturday evening. Clarence Pickett, general secretary of the Young Friends Board of the Five Years Meeting made the principal address Saturday evening Mead Kelsey also made a plea for increased interest in the Armenian and Syrian Relief organization wjiich is now taking caro of 300,000 orphans. The address of Willard O. Trueblocd, pastor of the Friends church in Indianapolis, before the meeting Saturday afternoon, and the reports of Farlham College and Fairmount and Splcelar.d Academies were the outstanding features cf that session. Earlhcm Asks Support. Owing to the illness of President Ja,vid M. Edwards, the annual report '. of the President of Earlham College was read to the meeting by the vice-j president Saturday afternoon. ! "The only solution to Earlham's j problem is increased loyalty of its j alumni, old students, and other friends, j to whom we must look for adequate support," said the report. "With some students occupying 'looms off of the campus," "and with pcores of other students obliged to go elsewhere, the necesity for additional :space is urgent. I "If the dining room, kitchen, storage and refrigerator departments could he put elsewhere, sufficient dormitary ;ioom for the girls in Earlham Hall 'could be temporarily taken care of. Addition to Bundy. "But a new addition to Bundy Hall 'the boys' dormitory, will have to be imade." A fire-proof building for the Joseph '.Moore Museum was also a necessity, said the report, this museum Is duplicated by very few institutions in Ithl3 country. A Science Hall where all the science ! departments could be housed is still 'another building necessity. $4,000 will have to be expended In ihuildir.g a second stack level in the illbrary to accommodate the annual addition of 10,000 books (o the library. The necessity for the $7)00,000 bundling program was apparent, said the treport, when it was known that the largest senior and largest freshman class in the history of the Institution was recorded this year. All Return. Every boy who went to a college for the S. A. T. C. has returned to Earl.ham this year. Referring to the proposed campaign for an addition to the college endowment fund of $500,000, thus running VP the endowment fund to $1,000,000, ahp report said: fhe nature of the times has had its effect on faculties as well as students. "To keep a faculty of high scholastic rchieveinents, salaries must be increased. "Manifestly the rresont low level of compensation cannot continue. Salaries must be increased to meet the In

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creased cost of living. No college can depend entirely upon attendance. Having been presented Saturday afternoon and disapproved in certain parts and sent back to the committee for changes, the resolutions on the League of Nations, compulsory military training and intervention in Mexico, as follows were accepted by Indiana Yearly Meeting Saturday evening and have been mailed to both houses

of congress. President Wilson and Secretary of State Lansing: The League of Nations Believing that the foundations of the world order and of all international fellowship must be moral and spiritual; that a better social order must be realized by an extension to national and international society of those moral standards of deportment which govern individual relationships; and that nations can no longer hold themselves aloof from the affairs of others, but that together jnust accept full responsibility in the spirit of fraternity for formulating an international compact that will regulate and govern their inter-relationships upon the basis of peace and mutual good will; Therefore, the Indiana Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends in session at Richmond, Indiana, with approximately 15,000 members, from September 22 to 2S, 1319, hereby declares itself in favor of a League of Nations, and respectfully petitions thp senate of the United States to take such action as will secure the formation of the best paesible league which can be devised that will properly safeguard the rights of nations, and therefore more certainly Insure permanent peace for the world. Mexico Indiana Yearly Meeting of Friends, In session at Richmond, Ind., Sept. 222S, 1919, believes that the United States has no just cause for military intervention in Mexico. Until our own country can guarantee protection to life and property at home, both of Americans and Mexicans, we are in no position to demand by force of arms such guarantees from Mexico relative to our citizens residing in that country. Friends, in common with other religious denominations, through extensive missionary operations in Mexico, are doing constructive work in that country, which the tragedy of mili tary intervention would absolutely destroy. We therefore earnestly petition the administration at Washington and the congress to continue their efforts to find a peaceful method of settling all differences which either now exist, or may arise hereafter. Military Training Believing that the world is facing a new order of human society in which, as shown by many public utterances of recent months, the overthrow of the militaristic spirit throughout the world is implied; and recognizing that educators generally protest against military training in our schools and colleges; that the philosophy of Jesus negatives it emphatically; and that the common welfare revolt against its enormous expense and the moral delinquency which it involves; The Indiana Yearly Meeting of tha Religious Society of Friends, comprising approximately 15,000 members, in session at Richmond, Indiana, from Sept. 22 to 23, 1919, therefore petitions the congress to defeat all bilLs now pending, or to be introduced, which provide for universal compulsory military training in thi3 country. Modern American Painting Is Sold at Large Figure NEW YORK, Sept. 29. The Jlao Beth galleries have just sold to a New England collector tho "Coast in Winter," by Winslow Homer, for $33,000. This is one of the highest prices ever paid for a modern American painting, and is only surpassed by the S75.000 for which the Knoeriler eallprv ies sold a Gilbert Stuart portrait of Washington to Henry C. Frick last winter, and the $45,000 reported realized for Innes' "Autumn Woodlands" in 1917. The "Coast in Winter" was bought in 1S99 by Chauncey Blair of Chicago for $2,525. It remained in his possession until his death. The MacBeth galleries bought it from the Blair estate. Ten thousand people have visited the Longfellow home in Portland this season.

P05TOM

Urges Representative of Bankers at Conference in Washington of Labor Heads ST. LOUIS, Mo., Sept. 29. The steel strike, and the general prevailing unrest, together with the elements entering into the high cost of living wilt be discussed at the forty-fifth annual convention of the American Bankers' association which opened a four-day session here today. Local bankers say that the failure of President Wilson to invite the associa

tion to appoint delegates to attend the industrial conference to be held at Washington on October 6, will also come before the general convention. In an interview Richard S. Hawes, first vice-president of the association, said: "Strange as It may seem that although the bankers of America are the men who finance business and are trustees of the savings of the working classes and the bulwark of the industrial progress of the country, Washington authorities did not deem It wise to invite the great American Bankers' association to appoint delegates to the Industrial conference to be hied at Washington on October 6 "The association, composed as it is of about 20,000 banks out of the 30,000 banks of the United States, representing a personnel of the most prominent financiers of America, estimated to be in excess of 500,000 men, certainly should demand a voice in a settlement of the delicate problem of the relations between labor and capital.". U. S. Can Carry Coal; Europe Makes Profits WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 European nations, although threatened with ccal famine this winter, are using their own tonnage to carry high-priced cargoes and are leaving to the United States the less profitable coal shipments, the Shipping Board asserts in a statement issued today. While the statement asserts that In the past the Shipping Board has made every effort toward reducing the European fuel shortage, it is intimated that fewer ships will be allocated for coal shipments to Europe in the future, unless there is satisfactory evidence that the countries requiring coal make an effort to relieve the situation by using their own tonnage. Liberty, Ind, Albert Post lost a diamond ring somewhere in Liberty last week. The ring is valued at $100. Two mail and passenger trains from Chicago to Cincinnati, have been scheduled through here. These trains were taken off during the war. James Craft, a brick mason, prominent in his profession, is very ill with paralysis of the lower limbs, neutroc and other troubles. Mrs. Cress Beard, Miss Nellie Beard, Miss Esther Hamilton, Miss Sophia Macy and Miss Elizabeth Drapier took an auto trip to Oldenburg, southwest of Brookville, Sunday. On Friday evening the members of the Delta Theta Tau sorority entertained a large number with a pledge party for four new pledges. The meeting was held in the basement of the public library. The rooms were decorated with late garden flowers and golden rod. Miss Kate Husted, Miss Ruth Rariden, Miss Ruth McCarty and Miss Francello Miller received the pledge. Fresh Sacrifices Demanded of Italy by Buffer State Plan, Says Italy Journal (By Associated Press) ROME, Sept. 29. Commenting on President Wilson's project of a buffer state for Fiume, the Giornale D'ltalia says that in substance the plan "does not vary much from the old scheme which aimed at sacrifices not only at Fiume but also at Triest. "It is true the new state would bear some relation to Italy," the newspaper says, "but in all ways it would be a part of Jugo-Slavia and ultimately condemned to fall under Jugo-Slav influence, as the Italians in Fiume would be a small minority In a buffer state which comprises a vast Slav territory. Official organs, speculating, perhaps, on the geographical ignorance of the public, attempt to make the people believe the new project is very advantageous. They hide the fact, how ever, that the mountainous part of Istria with Mount Maggiore, remains detached from the mainland, thus leaving the doors of our house completely open on thi.t side, but the league oi nations will defend us after having despoiled us of the fruits of our victory-" CAMPAIGN AGAJNST PARALYSIS IS BEC'JN (By Associated Press) TOLEDO, O., Sept. 29. Infantile paralysis has reappeared here after an absence of three years, according to Health Commissioner C. W. Waggoner, and a campaign is being mapped out for its suppression or treatment The cit" offers free vaccine for all cases reported. Tho TlHTnhpr nf mntnr pari in tia Hyogo prefecture ofh Japan ir. 1908 was 4. In 1912 there were 14, in 1916

Reduction in Numbers Is Chief Danger of Farmer (By Associated Pressl CHICAGO, Sept. 29". Chief dangers to the American farmer at present are through reduction in numbers and therefore in voting strength, and the accumulation of farm wealth in the hands of a comparative few, in the opinion of Robert Lynn Cox, third vice-president of the Metropolitian Life Insurance company. Addressing the convention of the Farm Mortgage Bankers' Association of America here this week, he deplored any tendency toward creation of "landed estates" in this country, and also farm tenancy, which he said Is on the increase. "The evils of the absentee landlordism must be prevented," he said. "We must not repeat European mistakes. The day of wealth and power of the American farmer has begun to dawn. Let us hope he will not use his growing strength to obtain special

privileges for himself and his class, either by way of statutory enlargements of his opportunities or to escape a fair sharing of his prosperity with less fortunate co-workers." "Because of increased population and higher living requirements, Mr. Cox thought there was little question of the value of the lands which must grow the necessary products. LUXEMBOURG TO FRANCE LUXEMBOURG, Sept. 29. The plebiscite held here resulted in a majority in favor of the retention of Grand Duchess Charlotte as ruler, and for a customs union with France. The United States coast guard has adopted the "tank." with suitable modifications of course.

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Ex-German Officer Admits Blowing Up Bridge in Canada (By Associated Press) JERSEY CITY, N. J., Sept. 29. Werner Horn admitted before James G. Carpenter, Jr., United States commissioner here Saturday that he blew up the Canadian Pacific railway bridge over the St Croix river in McAdam Parish, New Brunswick, February 2. 1915, but insisted that it was a military act committed in a hostile country during war time. "Yes. I did it," said Horn to the commissioner. "I did it in behalf of my country, my fatherland, as an officer of the German army in war time. I caused the explosion that blew up the bridge." The admission was made at a hearing on a petition of the British gov ernment for Horn's extradition to Can ada. Horn was brought here under Beautify the Complexion IN TEN DAYS Nadinch CREAM The Uaeqocled Betatifier Ud and Endorttd By Thousand Guaranteed to remove tan, freckles, pimples, liver-spots, etc. Extreme cases 20 davs. Rid3 pores anT tisiues of impurities. Leaves the skin clear, soft, healthy. At '.eadtng toilet counters. If they haven't it, by mail, two sizes, 60c. smd $1.20. NATIONAL TOILET CO.. Pari. Tmn. Sold by Thlstlethwaite's Six Dru Stores and other toilet counters.

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