Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 302, 3 October 1919 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, OCT. 3, 1919.
TROOPS SEARCH FOR FIREARMS AMONG NEGROES
Many Rifles Taken From Hid ing Place Sixteen Dead in Riots. (By Associated Press) HELENA, Ark., Oct. 3. Federal troops from Camp Pike and local possemen and state otilcers on Riot duty at Elaine, a small town near here, where race disturbances have occurred intermittently since Tuesday, resulting in sixteen deaths early today prepared to resume a search for arms and ammunition secreted by negroes in that locality. The race trouble, late reports indicated, was fomented by agitators who had aroused the negroes to participate in an organized uprising and the authorities were determined to prevent lurther trouble by obtaining possession of all fire arms in the hands of negroes in the district. To accomplish their purpose they sent parties of men through the negro quarter searching houses and outbuildlugs where gun caches were suspected. Rifles Confiscated. An announcement made at military headquarters in Elaine said that about 150 rifles had been taken from negroes who had been arrested, or at the homes of negroes searched by troops. Wholesale arrests of negroes have been made according to officials who announced today that 2S5 prisoners had been taken to date. Of that number 225 were under guard by federal trops at Elaine, and sixty had been brought here. The known white dead in connection with the fighting remained at five, including one soldier, Corporal Luther Earles, whose father lives in Btotesbury, W. Va. Five white men have been wounded. Eleven negroes are known to have been killed and officials said that number probably would be increased when outlying spots where skirmishes took place have been searched. The feeling prevailed among officials here today that the worst of the trouble was over. Missionaries Eliminate Misunderstandings Between Nations, Says S. Jones "The United SJates and Her Nearest Neighbors" was the subject of an informal address by Sylvester Jones, former missionary to Cuba, Jamaica, and Mexico, before the members of the South Eighth street missionary i society and their husbands, Thursday evening. About 200 were present, i The speaker not only discusses the actual missionary work, but explained the way in which the feeling of friendliness born in this work grows into better political understandings. In 1902 when the first president of Cuba was elected, Jones was appointed on the reception committee to welcomo him to Cuba upon hi3 return from the United States. "If good feeling had not already been growing, I should never have been honored by that invitation," he eaid. POSTPONE SESSIONS. (By Associated Press) FARIS, Oct. 3 No sessions of the supreme council will be held either todav or tomorrow, it was announced
this morning. Frank L. Polk, Ameri-I Twenty-six baby boys were born In can representative on the council, 1 the county during September and 10 leaves this aftern on for a visit to in the city; while 12 girl babies were Coblenz. He will return to Taris, ; born in Richmond and 15 girls in the Monday. i county. The total of 03 babies was not unusually large. INDIANS ADOPT PRINCE ! The reports for the last week folj low: (By Associated Press) Mr. and Mrs. James E. Wilkinson, LETH BRIDGE. Alberta. Oct. 3 Earlham Heights, a boy ; Mr. and Mrs. Indians of the Lethbridge district have ! Helen Lane, Williamsmurg, a girl; Mr. bestowed upon the prince of Wales ! and Mrs. Harlan Reece, Fountain City, the title of "Red Crow", or "Chief j a boy; Mr. "and Mrs. Walter Ruh'.in, Many Smiles." All the old Indian i Wayne township, a boy; Mr. and Mrs. ceremonies were used in the proceed- i Thomas A. Greenstreet, 405 National ings which took p'aee yesterday when' Avenue West, a girl; Mr. and Mrs. Victhe prince and party stopped here. itor M. Prokofieff, North Eighth street, j a girl. SOUSA'S BAND PERFORMANCE ' TO BEGIN AT 2 30 O'CLOCK ;FR1ENDS WAT WQRD
The matinee performance Saturday of Sousa's Band at the Murray, will begin promptly at 2::H0 o'clock. There has been a t: light misunderstanding as to the time, and the manager has announced that the concert will begin promptly, as the band is scheduled for! an evening conc ert in another city. OFFICES ARE CLOSED. (By Associated Pros?) WASHINGTON. Oct. 3 The United; States employment service today no- j lified its federal directors to close j the state federal employment offices : on October 10 because of lack of, funds. EVENING SCHOOL MONDAY. With 60 additional enrollments at Thursday evening's session of the evening school, the total enrollment of the school is now 160 people. Final enrollments will be made Monday, when regular class work will start.
NINETY-SIX U. S. SENATORS DISPLAY 96 KINDS OF ORATORY TO GALLERY
"Washington Correspondent to the New York Evening Sun) Variety is the spice of life everywhere but in the United States senate. Oratory is the spice of life in the senate, but it does not necessarily follow that there is no variety in the oratory. There are ninety-six senators and there are ninety-six varieties of oratory, ranging from the spectacular spread-eagle down to the unobtrusive variety that reminds one of the recitations of the last day of school, and there are senators who are not orators. For oratory Robert Marion La Follette, of Wisconsin, is recognized as without a peer in the senate. If Senator La Follette had gone into the show business instead of the senate he would probably have made far more than the $7,500 a year that Uncle Sam pays him, at least in the days when hypnotists were good drawing cards. The La Follette brand of oratory i3 hypnotic. Perhaps it is the rippling fingers-Senator La Follette has a peculiar manner of rippling his fingers in the air as he speaks, and this seems to sooth his audience and hold their attention. Fourth of July Dramatic oratory is Senator La Follette's forte, so much so that in the long winter evenings the La Follette children often invite their friends into hear him. The senator from Wisconsin uses every bit of his energy when he is speaking and all of his body, from the fluffy gray hair to the little feet which he manipulates much after the fashion of Louqokova. Fourth of July oratory is rather passing out in the senate. It doesn't make the appeal to the galleries that it used to and the senators are learning it, too. But there are still two in Funeral Arrangements Graham Samuel J. Graham, 54 years old and a former resident of this city, died in Cincinnati, Ohio, Thursday morning. Funeral services and burial will be in Cincinnati. Cox Funeral services for Otto Cox were to bo held at the Church of the Brethren in Ilagerstown at two o'clock, Friday afternoon. Burial was in the church cemetery. Marshall Funeral services for Henry Marshall were to be held in the Concord church of West Florence, O., and burial in the church cemetery. Buhl Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Ellen Buhl were held from the I home of her niece. Miss Anna Ward, j 200 North Ninth street, at three o'clock Friday afternoon. Burial was in Earlham. r i nt I If til TS, leoeCCa Itienaennail, gt wr II J r j i OZ I COTS Uld, IS Ueaa i
Mrs. Anna Rebecca Mendenhall, 62sPeech in the back row of the Repub-
years old, died at her residence, 416 North Nineteenth street, at six o'clock Friday morning. She is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Lawrence, New Madison, Ohio; Mrs. Walter Morgan, and Mrs. William Childs, of Richmond. Funeral services will be held at two o clock, Sunday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Walter Childs, 113 North Seventh street, with the Rev. George Brinley, officiating. Burial will be in Webster cemetery. 63 Babies Were Born in County Last Month FROM SOUTHLAND. ARK. As Southland Institute is located near Helena, Ark., the scene of rioting during the past two days, considerable anxiety is fehi by local Friends for the safety of tho teachers in the ! school. No word has been received from the school this week. EVERYBODY WANTS TO DO BUSINESS IN BRAZIL ( Hy Associated Press) RIO DE JANEIRA, Brazil. Oct. 3 That countries other than the United States realize the growing commercial importance of Brazil and the advantage of establishing new or more extended relations with the largest and perhaps the richest of all South American countries, is indicated by the large number of foreign concerns establishing offices or agencies here. liver steamer from Europe and the United States brings its quota of representatives.
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the senate, who follow the old school. Senator James E. Watson, of Indiana, and Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, can wave the American flag, rattling good Fourth of July oratory verbally in such a manner as to make George M. Cohan to seem an apprentice. There are but two senators who have mufflers on their oratory. These are Senators Henry Cabot and Lodge and Senator WTalsh, of Montana. Both are masters of dignity and diction and they have non of the fiery sort of oratory. Johnson Machine Gun. Hiram Johnson, senator from California, has his own style of oratory, and there has never been another senator who had just the same style. The Johnson 6tyle is full of pep. He speaks more rapidly than a machino gun barks and in very much the same sort of manner for each word is snapped out staccato fashion and is followed immediately by another. Senator Johnson attains a high pitch of voice and keeps it there. Modulation in his voice is a feat that he is still untrained in. The very unusual manner of his oratory is sufficient to assure him of an audience, and he also has a reputation of saying things that count. The oratorical surprise party for visitors to the senate is Senator Borah of Idaho. No gallery fan ever suspects the long-haired, rather wild west looking individual of being an orator; but he is. Senator Borah is of the thundering school of oratory. He can make his words rumble through the long corridors all of the way to the house of representatives. He also uses his hands to good advantage in making emphatic those things that he wants to impress upon his auditors, and at times he resorts to a shaking of his long-haired head until his brown locks sweep down into
his eyes. Drawing a long breath he sweeps them back and begins anew. Billy Sunday Style. Senator Borah follows the Billy Sunday style of keeping attention. He follows one line of thought that he desires to impress until he finds his auditors wearying, and then he bursts an oratorical bomb, shocks every one into attention and jumps back to the same train of thought that was boring every one a few minutes before. Many of the senators were district attorneys at some time in their careers and some of them have never recovered. Senator Pat. Harrison, of Mississippi, is one of those who have not thrown off all of the traits, for he resorts to every known appeal to the emotions in his orations and stamps about a good deal and shakes his fin gers in the faces of those about him, and generally conducts himself vptv much after the fashion of the sort of a prosecutor who first then cajoles the jury. attacks and Senator France, of Maryland, is the only Marathon orator in the senate and because he uses up a great deal yJL oi".. ocueiiur r rum o runs ana walks several miles in the course of an hour of oration, and if he starts his lican side of the chamber he generally finishes it in the back row of the Democratic side of the chamber, onlyafter he has covered every part of the floor several times. WTien Senator France speaks they give him room. Senator James Reed, of Missouri, is another orator who needs a good deal of room for he is a pacer. Senator Reed picks out an open space of about ten feet in length and paces up and down that space while he talks, and it is claimed that he has worn a path in the green carpet of the senate near his desk. Durable oratory Is also one of Senator Reed's characteristics. He can make a little hit of oratory last longer than any other member of the senate and still keep his audience. Senator Reed is a famous criminal lawyer when he isn't a senator, and he talks as if he were at a murder trial, for his whole manner of speaking is similar to that employed by men who are fighting for the life of a client or fighting for conviction. Church May Deny Any Remarriage in Divorce DETROIT, Mich., -Oct. 3. Revision of the Book of Common Prayer of the Episcopal church, adoption of a new ranon touching church unity, and revision of the canon on matrimony are three of the mort important matters to be brought to the attention of the delegates at the triennial convention of the church that will ope here on October 8. It is anticipated that upwards of 3.00 delegates and many of the leading churchmen of this and other counties will attend the convention, which will last two weeks or longer. The proposed revision of the canon on matrimony would make it impossible for an Episcopal clergyman to remarry divorced persons, even the innocent party to a divorce It has been anticipated that this question will provoke much debate. The proposed new canon on church unity, it is stated, would make it possible for a minister of another communion to be ordained in the Episcopal church without first giving up his origial church affiliation. The revised and modernized prayer book is expected to take up much of the time of the gathering. Reid Memorial Saturday. Hospital Tag Day,
DESERTED FROM OLD 10TH INFANTRY .YEARS AGO; FOUGHT WITH IT IN WAR
He was little and old and gray, what part of his head wasn't bald; his blue eyes smiled dimly from behind a film, like an aged man's; his behavior was anxious ami conciliatory. "I ain't as old as I look, sir," said Private (first class) Charles Sims. "I'm only 46. I didn't look this old when I went acrost." It was a matter of a tangled allotment to a wife and child that had brought Private Sims to' the orderly room of Company K, 10th Infantry; a casual question about the name of a beneficiary that brought his story tumbling out, a story dammed up by twenty years of silence and fear, j Fear! No mistakig It. And yet Private Sims had taken part in five battles, had been cited for distinguished bravery under fire and still carried a shrapnel scar. His service record showed that. "Bravery?" said Private Sims. "Why, no, sir. I don't know why they gave me that citation. It stands to reason an old feller like me that knows the game is going to be a mite cooler than them boys that was seeing it all for the first time. They was awful green, them boys, lieutenant. "Didn't know enough to save their own lives, they didn't. Many a one of m I've shown how to go around the endof a rise, 'stead of over the crest where the bullet3 was coming. Awful green. But game, lieutenant; yes, sir." How Sims Was Wounded. The lieutenant, not properly stiff and military, encouraged the man to talk. Private Sims told, in halting phrases, that painted curiously vivid pictures of things that had happened, of the morning he was wounded. "I said to my bunkie I was going to get it that day," he said. "I coul tell. I had been cold for weeks; and that day I was hot all over. And I saidI'll get mine today, and I did. But not bad, though. I could walk to the dressing station. What a long way back it seemed. And I was hot still, though the weather was cold. That was In the Argonne." Then a question or two about the allotment, and why the person who was to receive this allotment was down as Mrs. Yates instead of Mrs. Sims? the whole story came. "My name's not Sims, sir," he said. "I've been aiming to get this thing straigntened up tor twenty years. Guess you know all about it, sir, you and the colonel?" the lieutenant knew nothing on earth about it, but he didn't say so. "Suppose you tell me, Sims," he said. Relieved to Tell Story. He began with the air of a man in great relief. Here was a story that had wanted telling for a long time. Twenty years ago he had enlisted December, 1899, it was and they sent him to Fort Crook, Neb Not much of a place to be. And along in May, when the prairie breezes and the spring smells make army discipline irksome to the new recruit, he had "gone over the hill." Hadn't aimed to desert; but he got in with a no-account gang, and there was plenty of whisky mixed up in the affair and they went absent without leave, and by the time he had been gone three weeks, he was afraid to return for fear of facing charges of desertion. And yet he didn't want to stay away and be a deserter. And so he did what hundreds of soldiers have done before him went to a recruiting station where he wrasn't known, gave a name that wasn't his, and re-enlisted. Now by the law of the army, a deserter who again enlists under another name is automatically convicted of desertion, as well as being guilty of fraudulent enlistment. Went Through Without Arrest. They never caught Charles Sims, whose name is Yates. Nineteen years of honorable service trying to "square the thing." Finally the chance, hard fought for, to go abroad. They told him he was too old ;but he persuaded company comanders and medical oflicers he was fit got into a replacement outfit, went to France. And went through Cantigny, Soissons, fially the Argonne. "showing rookies how to save their lives" distinguished bravery, the citation called it. And he came back, battered and dim eyed and old before his time, with a bunch of "casuals," and was transferred to the 10th Infantry at Camp Custer. "I want to get it straightened out." j lie said. "I know they can send me to j Leavenworth. They can do what they ' want, lieutenant, send me to Leavenworth or restore me to duty. I ain't. ; going to run away. But I hope they don't send me to this guardhouse here." "Sims," said the lieutenant, "we'll see what can be done for you." He began jotting down dates and regiments. "What," said the young lieutenant, of Company K, 10th Regiment, "what was your first outfit the company that you deserted from?" The old man straightened up and smiled. His First Outfit. "Company K, lutn im.....ry. sir," he said. "It always was a dandy outfit." The officer gasped. "Company K, 10th Infantry," he said. "Why, Sims, there can't be a man alive in this company today who was in it when you were." ---".' "No, sir," said Sims, "nor in the regiment, sir. But when I got a chance to come back to the 10th, I thought I'd like to be in my old outfit, sir." They didn't send Private Sims to Leavenworth. A colonel, who wore
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on his breast the ribon of the French Legion of Honor, the Croix de Guerre and the Distinguished Service Medal, recommended that "the charges of desertion standing against Charles Yates" since May 10, 1899, be set aside, and that "he be restored to duty without trial." The thing was done. As for Charles Yates, late Sims, he doesn't talk much about his twenty years of atonement; he doesn't talk much about Cantigny or Soissons, or shrapnel or the Argonne. But he will
discuss with all comers the profits to be made in the barber business, and how, had he only stuck to a shop he had in St. Paul once in the 90-day period allowed between enlistments, he might be a rich man today. Two Balloonists Land Safely in Ontario, Can. (By Associated Press) KANSAS CITY, Oct. 3. George M. Myers, referee of the national championship balloon race which stalled at St. Louis today, received the following telegram from Captain H. E. Hunnewell and Roy C. Donaldson, pilots of the Kansas City 2d: "Cardinal, Canada, Oct. 2. Landed safely two and one-half miles north of Cardinal, province of Ontario, Canada, at 6 p. m., tonight, after dodging storms on Lake Michigan, Lake Huran and Georgian bay. Leaving for home tomorrow. Hunnewll and Donaldson." EMMA GOLDMAN'S CASE POSTPONED INDEFINITELY (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Oct. 3 Emma Goldman, anarchist writer and lecturer, recently released from Missouri penitentiary, who was to have appeared today before United States immigration officials on Ellis Island to answer to the charge of being an "undesirable citizen," has had her case indefinitely postponed upon orders from Washington, it was stated here today at the offices of the commissioner of immi gration. MEN IN UNIFORM PLAY "CON" GAME IN LONDON (By Associated Press) LONDON, Oct. 3 Confidence men here have a newer means of victimizing credulous persons. Dressed in an army officers' uniform these tricksters produce papers purporting to show that thev are entitled to a monthly allowance payable the fol- I lowing day and offer to sell the paper! at a reduced figure. i A desire to render a service man ! some return has led many persons to the exchange of $75 or $100 for one of these worthless allowance forms, ac cording to police reports, warnings have resulted. Public A SPLENDID DRESS IN ONE-PIECE STYLE j 20SO As here shown, serge and satin are combined. The design would ; also be good for crepe de chine and i satin. Block satin and velvet with a i bit of color used as piping, would bo i nice. Taupe gabardine with old blue , is effective, or serge with braiding. The dress measures about 1& yards at the foot. The Pattern is cut in 7 Sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure. Size 38 requires 4Vfc yards of 40-inch material. j A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 i cents in silver or 1 cent and 2 cent stamps. Name ., Address City ... Size . . . Address Pattern Department, Palladium.
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Printers' Strike May be Settled in New York
(By Associated Press) NEW YORK. Oct. 3 The wage committee of the employer printers and the local typographical unions held further conferences today in an effort to reach an agreement in the controversy that resulted Wednesday in the employers' locking out pressmen end feeders who are members of the four unions, declared to be seceders by the International printing pressmen's and assistants union. It was expected that Marsden G. Scott, president of the Internation Typographical Union, would attend the conference. The 700 or more compositors who yesterday went on a "vacation" and further complicated the situation, were expected to be ordered to return to work by President Scott. The vacationists, members of Typographical Union No. 6, quit work without the consent of their union. High School Students Seek Tennis Honors The first matches to select the Richmond high school tennis team for
v L , P'ayeu asi f-ninK.:narold Saurer, Leslie Sinex. Nelson Keith King defeated Howard Dietrich. Sinex, Wilbur Vogelsong, Walter Vot J "afte" th 'atIr had won from! gelsong, Carl Lindstrom, Stanley John Edwards, b-0; 6-0. , Lindstrom, Alfred Sudhoff. Edmund Robert Hawekotte is scheduled to : sudhoff , Carl Sieweke. Marlowe H. play King this evening and the win-:Kiuter Edward F. Rodefield. Charles ner will be one member of the team. I chappel, Herbert Dalbey, Carl HanOther matches to be played before i i.u.i9 r- t-1r,iAv fi,.m rfrnn.
tl V ...,., 1 . TI'Jl 1 T I T t j jtjvl vr-r:n. are u.on vs. winner "I'l - rtouinson matcn; LeHunt vs. henumaker; Thornburgh vs. Roy Hawekotte. A match probably will be scheduled with Hamilton high school for Saturday morning, Oct. 11. The Richmond nigh school football team will play w-m- saraf a"ern?,n ..aujinuii. wLuei maiciies win u scheduled with Shortridge ianapolis and Muncie. of IndBritish Ambassador Arrives in Janeiro (By Associated Press) RIO JANEIRO, Oct. 3 Sir Ralph Spencer Paget, first British ambassador to Brazil, arrived here today on board the British battle cruiser Renown. It was announced in Brazil last year when the mission under Sir Maurice DeBunsen was visiting that country that It had been decided to raise the Brazilian Legation in Lorifton to an embassy with corresponding action bv Great Britain toward Brazil. Great Britain had previously been represented in Rio Janeiro by a legation with Sir Arthur Peel as minister. THIRD BROTHER OF FAMILY KILLS SELF (Bv Associated Prss) COLUMBUS, Ind. Oct. 3. John E. Moslenkamp, 24, a farm laborer, committed suicide at his home in Jonesville last night by swallowing poison. Moslenkamp is the third brother in his family to commit suicide in a little more than a year. Fountain City, Ind. Rex Overman left Thursday evening for Indianapolis where he 'resumed his school work in the blind school. Mr. and Mrs. Will Bond and daughter, Helen Virginia, motored to Dayton, Ohio, Wednesday and visited with relatives at that place. Ernest Fahien is improving from his recent severe illness. C. L. Gifford is attending the Eaton fair this week. Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Hatfield attended the fair at Eaton Thursday. Miss Gladys Gifford spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs C. L. Gifford. Mr. and Mrs. Will Thornton made a business trip to Portland Thursday. An evangelistic meeting was held at the Methodist church Thursday afternoon and evening. Several ministers from the surrounding country were present at the meeting. Should be one of utility
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GOVERNOR GOMES TO WELCOME BOYS OF 1ST LUTH. CHURCH
Governor James P. Goodrich, who Is to be the principal speaker at the honor banquet given by the Brotherhood of the First English Lutheran.' Church at 6:30 this evening for the service men of the church, was to arrive in the city late this afternoon, probably in his own automobile. The governor has not announced a-' set speech but will deliver the message he considers appropriate. As toasts Major Paul Comstock will give a Message from a "Soldier Over There"; Lieut. Roland Nusbaum will speak on "The Service Men in the Church," and the Rev. F. A. Dressel. pastor of the English Lutheran church, will respond with "A Message from the Church." Special mention will be made of Everett Shelton, the only member of the church who made the supreme sacrifice. Places have been laid for 35 former service men including the following: Paul Roman Saurer, Walter Saurer, laha ' J ' Fred Hugo, Markley Lahrman, Roland L. Nusbaum, Kent Lemen, Lee Genn, Walter Engelbrecht, Raymond Fossenkemper, Forrest Klute, Dr. A. L. Bramkamp, Warren Hubble, Lester Leiter, Karl Haner, John Livingston, Elmer A. Herzler, Miss Irene Steea. ladies of the church, and a string orchestra will play throughout the ban I quet hour. Belgian Royalty May Attend War Mothers' Baltimore Convention (By Associated Press) Baltimore, Md.. Oct. 3 An effort isbeing made to arrange for the visit of the king and queen of Belgium to this city to coincide with the sessions of the Becond annual convention of the War Mothers of America, which is to be held here October 7, 8 and 9. Addresses by A- Mitchell Palmer, attorney general of the United States, and William Mather Lewis, director of the savings division of the United States Treasury, will form a principal part of the program. It is expected that the convention will attract a large number of women who are not affiliated with the War Mothers as it is proposed to discuss during the sessions the amalgamation of the various organizations of women relatives of men and women who were in the United States army and navy during the world war. Mrs. Robert Carlton Morris, of Toledo, O., the first national president of the organization, will conduct a memorial tree planting in one of the local parks as one of the features of the convention. Many Americans Go To Canada to Live (By Associated Press) OTTAWA, Oct. 3 Approximately 7,000 more Americans immigrated into Canada in the first eight months of 1919 than in the corresponding period last year, according to official figures made public here today. Of the 38,222 persons who this year crossed the border, more than half were farmers. PHOTOS 722 MAIN 3T RICHMOND. If of beauty and individuality
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